Helman, Andrea (Jean) 1946-
HELMAN, Andrea (Jean) 1946-
(Andy Helman)
Personal
Born September 15, 1946, in Columbus, OH; daughter of Sam (a business proprietor) and Adelle Helman. Education: Ohio University, B.S. (journalism), 1968. Politics: "Independent." Religion: Jewish.
Addresses
Home— 10710 35th Ave. S.W., Seattle, WA 98146.
Career
WOUB Radio, Athens, OH, writer, talent, and producer, 1964-68; Columbus Citizens Journal, Columbus, OH, city desk reporter, 1966; Jewish Chronicle, Pittsburgh, PA, reporter, 1968; Halle Brothers (retail chain), Cleveland, OH, advertising copy writer, 1970; KDKA-TV, Pittsburgh, public affairs assistant director, 1970-72; Entertainment Services, Inc., Columbus, promotions director, 1973-74; freelance writer for print, broadcast, and industrial video, 1974—; Warner-Amex QUBE, Columbus, writer, talent, producer, 1977-81; WCMHTV, Columbus, writer, talent, producer,, 1982-83; KING-TV, Seattle, WA, writer, talent, producer, 1983-86; University of Washington, television executive producer, 1990-95. Author in the Schools, 2004—.
Member
Pacific Northwest Writers Conference (trustee), American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.
Awards, Honors
Emmy award nominations for Outstanding Achievement, individual craft, and writing, National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, for P.M. Magazine series; N.C.T.A. Ace Award; ABC Building Blocks Catalogue selection, and Young Hoosier Picture Book list, 1997-98, and Washington Children's Choice Picture Book award nomination, 1998, and Washington Reads Summer Quarter selection, 2005, all for O Is for Orca; Kids Pick of the Lists, Bookselling This Week, and Top Ten Science Books for Youth designation, Booklist, both 1998, both for Northwest Animal Babies.
Writings
O Is for Orca: A Pacific Northwest Alphabet Book, Sasquatch (Seattle, WA), 1995.
1, 2, 3 Moose: A Pacific Northwest Counting Book, Sasquatch (Seattle, WA), 1996.
Northwest Animal Babies, Sasquatch, 1998.
C Is for Coyote: A Southwest Alphabet Book, photographs by Gavriel Jecan, Rising Moon (Flagstaff, AZ), 2002.
Wild Colors, photographs by Gavriel Jecan, Sasquatch Books (Seattle, WA), 2003.
Contributor of articles and essays to periodicals, including Cosmopolitan, Left Bank, McCalls, Redbook, and Christian Science Monitor.
Sidelights
Writer Andrea Helman has enjoyed a versatile career in the field of print and broadcast journalism and as a visiting author in the schools. A graduate of Ohio University, Helman worked variously as a feature reporter, copywriter, scriptwriter, talent, and producer at a number of newspapers and television and radio stations in Ohio and Pennsylvania before moving to the state of Washington in the early 1980s. A decade later she published the first of her nonfiction books for children. Offering an exploration of Helman's Pacific Northwest home and the natural world. O Is for Orca, an alphabet book, was soon joined by Northwest Animal Babies and 1, 2, 3 Moose, a counting book, all of which have garnered praise for containing informative, fun texts designed for reading at home as well as for use in elementary schools.
O Is for Orca, illustrated with color photographs by acclaimed nature photographer Art Wolfe, highlights the land, animals, and native people of the Pacific Northwest region. Helman's text "helps youngsters to identify the ecology, habitats, and geography" of this ecologically diverse region, according to School Library Journal contributor Mollie Bynum. A reviewer for Publishers Weekly praised O Is for Orca, citing its "piquant regional flavor" while adding that the book's "appeal shouldn't be limited to a single corner of the country."
1, 2, 3 Moose focuses on the wildlife and other natural features of Helman's adopted home that are celebrated both in the author's text and in Wolfe's accompanying photographs. In this work, "the counting often takes a backseat to science," according to Booklist reviewer Lauren Peterson, as Helman describes the ecology of the region, habits of its wild creatures, and the distinct characteristics of its plant life. The result, Peterson claimed, is a counting book that will be just as useful in teaching science to young children.
Northwest Animal Babies provides animal lovers with fabulously detailed photographs of over two dozen animal offspring of the Pacific Northwest. Kathleen Squires commented in a review of the work for Booklist that "Animal lovers won't be able to resist this natural history treat, with photos that catch animal babies at their cuddly best."
Helman has produced several volumes in collaboration with photographer Gavriel Jecan. C Is for Coyote: A Southwest Alphabet Book focuses on the southwest region of the United States, providing readers with photographs of animals, their habitats, and the natural landscape of this more arid climate. "Full-color photographs of unique natural formations and seldom-seen wonders of nature will invite reflection and discussion among children, parents, and teachers" stated Childhood Education reviewer Jeanie Burnett in a review of the book. Wild Colors, an around-the-world look at the role color plays in nature, contains what a Kirkus Reviews contributor described as a "lavish exploration" of the many plants and animals whose vivid hues are crucial to their survival.
Biographical and Critical Sources
PERIODICALS
Booklist, November 1, 1996, Lauren Peterson, review of 1, 2, 3 Moose, p. 503; September 15, 1998, Kathleen Squires, review of Northwest Animal Babies, p. 233; December 1, 1998, Carolyn Phelan, review of Northwest Animal Babies, p. 676.
Canadian Children's Literature, spring, 1998, pp. 84-85.
Canadian Review of Materials, April 26, 1996, Carol Carver, review of O Is for Orca: A Pacific Northwest Alphabet Book.
Childhood Education, winter, 2002, Jeanie Burnett, review of C Is for Coyote: A Southwest Alphabet Book, p. 108.
Kirkus Reviews, November 15, 2003, review of Wild Colors, p. 1360.
Publishers Weekly, October 2, 1995, review of O Is for Orca, p. 73.
School Library Journal, February, 1996, Mollie Bynum, review of O Is for Orca, p. 95.