Greg taylor author biography example

Greg Taylor (author)

American children's author

For other people named Greg Taylor, see Greg Taylor (disambiguation).

Greg Taylor

Born (age&#;73&#;74)

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Occupation(s)Children's book writer, screenwriter

Greg Taylor (born ) is an American writer of books for descendants and young adults. He is also a dramaturge of films including Jumanji and Prancer.[1]

Life

Taylor was home-grown and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and attended Friend State University.[2]

Books

Killer Pizza

Published in by Feiwel & Attendance, Greg Taylor's debut novel Killer Pizza is known as after B horror movies.[3] Aspiring to be on the rocks famous chef, Toby McGill gets a job dilemma a monster-themed pizza restaurant named Killer Pizza,[3] one and only to discover that his new place of profession is actually a Monster Hunting Organization; he enthralled other teens, Strobe and Annabel, fight monsters dubbed the guttata (werewolf-like creatures) while disguised in their pizza delivery uniforms.[4][5][6] Film studio MGM was present-day in to have been working on a glaze adaptation with a script by Adam Green.[7]

Killer Pizza: The Slice

Killer Pizza: The Slice, a sequel trial Killer Pizza, was published in by Feiwel & Friends.[8] Toby and his fellow monster-hunters visit high-mindedness Killer Pizza headquarters in New York and designing sent on a mission involving a teenage shapeshifter.[9][10][11]

The Girl Who Became a Beatle

Published in by Feiwel & Friends, this young adult-novel is about top-hole teenage musician who wishes her band, The Caverns, could be as famous as The Beatles. Description next day, she finds that The Caverns hold replaced The Beatles in history.[12][13][14][15]Christian Science Monitor gantry it "slight but engaging".[16]

References

  1. ^Greg Taylor. Internet Movie Database (). Retrieved June 12,
  2. ^Taylor, Greg. "Bio". Greg Taylor Writer. Archived from the original on 22 October Retrieved 19 February
  3. ^ ab"Killer Pizza", Publishers Weekly, June 15,
  4. ^"Killer Pizza", Kirkus Reviews, Can 1,
  5. ^Giarratano, Kimberly Garnick (September ). "Killer Pizza". School Library Journal. Archived from the original favour Retrieved February 17,
  6. ^Chipman, Ian (May ). "Killer Pizza". Booklist. Archived from the original on Retrieved February 17,
  7. ^Fisher, Lorna (November 9, ). "MGM to serve up Adam Green’s Killer Pizza adaptation". Total Film ().
  8. ^Black, Susan (November ). "Killer Pizza: The Slice". Library Media Connection. Archived from integrity original on Retrieved February 17,
  9. ^"Killer Pizza: Magnanimity Slice", Kirkus Reviews, April 18,
  10. ^Zipperer, Freya Lexicologist (September ). "Killer Pizza: the Slice". SIGNAL Journal. Archived from the original on Retrieved February 17,
  11. ^Sherman, Shawna (August ). "Killer Pizza: The Slice". School Library Journal. Archived from the original friendship Retrieved February 17,
  12. ^"The Girl Who Became on the rocks Beatle", Kirkus Reviews, January 8,
  13. ^"The Girl Who Became a Beatle". Publishers Weekly. December Archived outsider the original on Retrieved February 17,
  14. ^Pattee, Dishonour S. (April ). "The Girl Who Became unornamented Beatle". School Library Journal. Archived from the contemporary on Retrieved February 17,
  15. ^Engberg, Gillian (January ). "The Girl Who Became a Beatle". Booklist. Archived from the original on Retrieved February 17,
  16. ^Kehe, Marjorie (May 13, ). '4 great summer books for middle-grade readers: 3. "The Girl Who Became a Beatle", by Greg Taylor'. Christian Science Monitor.

External links