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Englewood Novelist Barbara Wersba Dies, 85

Author Barbara Wersba died on Feb. 18 at the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood. She was 85 years old.

Barbara Wersba of Englewood.

Barbara Wersba of Englewood.

Photo Credit: Boulevard Funeral Home

Wersba has written more than two dozen novels for both children and teens/young adults. She also reviewed children's literature for the New York Times, written play and television scripts and taught writing. 

Born in Chicago on August 19, 1932, Wersba later moved with her family to California. After her parents' divorce, she moved with her mother to New York City, later in Sag Harbor, New York. 

When she was 11 years old, in answer to a family friend's inquiry, she impulsively declared her intent becoming an actress. Soon after, Wersba landed a part in a local play. 

Though she came to decide she didn't actually like acting, she stuck with it because it gave her purpose, and helped her not to feel alone.

She continued as an actress through college and then professionally, until she fell ill in 1960 and was forced into a lengthy recovery. 

On the advice of a friend, she turned to writing to pass the time. The result was her first book for children, The Boy Who Loved the Sea, which was published in 1961. From then on, she continued as a writer.

Her breakthrough novel came in 1968 with the publication of The Dream Watcher. She went on to adapt this novel into a script when her childhood acting idol, Eva Le Gallienne, had read Ms. Wersba's book and wished to play the role of the elderly woman from the story. The play opened at the White Barn Theatre in Connecticut in 1975.

Two of her most popular novels are Tunes for a Small Harmonica: A Novel (1976), which was a National Book Award nominee, and The Carnival of My Mind (1982).

In 1994, she founded her own small publishing company, The Bookman Press.

Wersba will be laid to rest in her family plot at Oakland Cemetery, Sag Harbor.

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