McCormick, Patricia
Patricia McCormick
1930-
American diver
Women divers gained popularity in the years before World War I, as much for their attractiveness as for their skill. Until Pat McCormick entered the scene in the late 1940s, displaying remarkable agility and toughness, no one dominated the sport. The first and only woman diver to win two gold medals in two consecutive Olympic Games (the double-double), McCormick earned the prestigious Sullivan Award in 1956 as the nation's top amateur athlete and became the first woman diver inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame. She belongs among the greatest names in Olympic history.
Raised Around Water
Pat McCormick was born Patricia Keller in Seal Beach, California, on May 12, 1930. Living above a grocery store and with little money in the family, she and her two older brothers were raised mostly by their mother, a nurse. Her alcoholic father was a sporadic presence in her life, although his belief in her was an important influence. In a 1999 interview with Dr. Margaret Costa for the Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles, McCormick described her early years: "I worked to help support the family from the time I was 10 years old. My brother was responsible for my involvement in athletics because I wanted to be just like him. We were good little urchins who had a lot of fun."
McCormick spent most of her spare hours swimming around the channels and the harbor and hanging out at Muscle Beach, where she enjoyed being tossed around by the brawny, acrobatic men. This pastime helped her develop strength and flexibility. Her love of competition prompted her to participate in small swim meets against anyone willing to race her. In her first meet, a two-mile pier-to-pier swim, she came in second. (There was only one other girl in the race.) But the trophy she received stoked her desire for more. At fourteen, she won the Long Beach city women's one-meter diving gold cup. A coach from the Los Angeles Athletic Club soon took notice and invited her to join the Club to begin rigorous training.
The training did little to interfere with her academics or social life at Wilson High School, but she was allowed to miss her last class period to take the trolley to Los Angeles. The 5'4", 125 pound diver trained for a year before entering local competitions. She went on to place second in the 1947 National Platform Championship. Her brother borrowed money so she could attend the 1948 Olympic tryouts, where she missed making the team by less than a point.
Determined to Succeed
Robert Condon, in his book Great Women Athletes of the 20th Century, quoted McCormick as saying, "That defeat was the greatest thing that ever happened to me because all of a sudden I knew I could win the Olympics… I realized that at Los Angeles I was working with world-class athletes every day."
She married Glenn McCormick in 1949 and started competing under her married name. Glenn, an airline pilot and aspiring Olympic diver, later became her coach. McCormick's training regimen consisted of 80 to 100 dives a day, six days a week. She persevered despite various injuries—a gash on her head requiring fifty stitches, chipped teeth, welts, a loose jaw, and a cracked rib.
The hard work quickly paid off. That same year, she won the National Platform Championship. She did it again in 1950, adding the one-meter and three-meter springboard titles. She won all five national titles in 1951. In all, she won twenty-seven national titles. She also won three gold medals in two appearances at the Pan Am Games.
The Double-Double
McCormick's biggest splash came as an Olympian. At the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki, Finland, she swept both events, the platform and the springboard. She repeated those gold medal-winning performances at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, even though she was competing just months after giving birth to her son. It wasn't until 1988 that a man, Greg Louganis , was able to replicate McCormick's double-double.
Her Olympic success led to a long list of honors, including the Babe Zaharias Trophy, the Associated Press and the United Press International's Woman Athlete of the Year, Sports Illustrated 's Athlete of the Year, and the Helms Hall of Fame North American Athlete of the Year.
McCormick's daughter Kelly also became a diver. Kelly won a silver medal at the 1984 Olympics and a bronze in 1988, making the McCormicks the only mother-daughter duo in Olympic history to become medal winners.
Sharing the Olympic Spirit
McCormick's persistence paid off while combating another opponent: life after the Olympics. In a profile issued by the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame in 1996, McCormick recalled the empty feeling that can hit athletes once Olympic glory fades: "You see, all our lives we have had someone to tell us what to do, how to do it. Then, your whole life dissolves into that one moment. When you step up on that victory stand, you're going to be deserted. All the support systems you had are going after their next project. They can't tell you how to handle success, they can only tell you how to achieve it. The trick is to stay on that victory stand."
Realizing the need for an education, McCormick enrolled at Long Beach City College in the 1960s, graduating thirteen years later. During an interview with Dr. Margaret Costa for the Amateur Athletic Association of Los Angeles, she explained the reason for her life-long motivation and self-discipline: "Not having the skills to do something I want to do has been the story of my life. Whether it was college or diving or being a parent, I have had to develop my own skills and knowledge on my own in order to be successful."
Chronology
1930 | Born May 12 in Seal Beach, California |
1948 | Misses qualifying for the Olympics by less than a point |
1949 | Marries Glenn McCormick |
1950 | Wins the first of 27 national diving titles |
1956 | Gives birth to son Timmy |
1956 | Becomes the first and only woman diver to win four gold medals in two consecutive Olympic Games |
1960 | Gives birth to daughter Kelly |
1974 | Ends marriage to Glenn McCormick |
1984 | One of nine athletes selected to carry the Olympic flag in the Opening Ceremonies of the 1984 Games |
1984 | Begins motivational speaking |
Awards and Accomplishments
1950 | Won the first of 27 national diving titles |
1951 | Gold medal at the Pan Am Games |
1952 | Two gold medals at the Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland |
1955 | Two gold medals at the Pan Am Games |
1956 | Two gold medals at the Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia |
1956 | Amateur Athletic Union's James E. Sullivan Memorial Trophy as amateur athlete of the year |
1956 | Babe Zaharias Trophy |
1956 | Helms Hall of Fame North American Athlete of the Year |
1956 | Sports Illustrated Athlete of the Year |
1956 | Associated Press Woman Athlete of the Year |
1956 | United Press International's Woman Athlete of the Year |
1984 | Inducted into the International Women's Sports Hall of Fame |
1985 | Inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame |
1987 | Inducted into the Orange County (California) Sports Hall of Fame |
1996 | Inducted into the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame |
McCormick still enjoys an active sports life, especially horse riding, scuba diving, golfing, body surfing, and skiing. She has since focused her optimism and resolve on another arena—helping others realize their dream. This generosity of spirit, flowing from her extensive charity work and motivational speaking, is her way of remaining on the victory stand.
FURTHER INFORMATION
Books
Condon, Robert J. Great Women Athletes of the 20th Century. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., 1991.
Periodicals
Day, Mary. "McCormick Did It Before Louganis." Los Angeles Times [San Diego County Edition] (October 22, 1988): 3.
Hicks, Jerry. "McCormick Has the Gold-Medal Touch as a Speaker Too." Los Angeles Times [Orange County Edition] (September 19, 1996): 1.
Stump, Al. "Fancy Diving Only Looks Like Fun." Saturday Evening Post (May 19, 1951): 27.
Weyler, John. "Orange County Sports Hall of Fame: The New Inductees; McCormick Took Plunge to Reach Dreams, Springboard to Success Starts With Failures." Los Angeles Times [Orange County Edition] (February 14, 1987): 1.
Other
"Hall of Fame." Women's Sports Foundation. www.womenssportsfoundation.org/cg…/iowa/about/awards/results.html?record=4 (December 4, 2002).
"ISHOF Honorees." International Swimming Hall of Fame. www.ishof.org/HonorM.html (January 7, 2003).
"An Olympian's Oral History: Pat McCormick." The Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles. www.aafla.org (January 3, 2002).
"Olympic Medal Winners." International Olympic Committee-Athletes. www.olympic.org/uk/athletes/results/search_r_uk.asp (January 7, 2003).
"Pat McCormick." www.sportsstarsusa.com/olympians/mccormick_pat.html (January 3, 2003).
"Pat McCormick." World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame. www.sportshumanitarian.com/induction/pmccormick.htm (January 3, 2003).
"Pat McCormick, Olympic Diver." History's Women—An Online Magazine. www.historyswomen.com/PatMcCormick.html (January 8, 2003).
"Patricia McCormick." International Olympic Committee—Athletes. www.olympic.org/uk/athletes/heroes/bio_uk.asp?PAR_I_ID=503 (January 7, 2003).
"The Sullivan Award." www.hickoksports.com/history/sulaward.shtml (January 7, 2003).
"U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame." www.hickoksports.com/history/olymphof.shtml (January 7, 2003).
Sketch by Carole Manny
McCormick, Patricia 1956–
McCormick, Patricia 1956–
Personal
Born May 23, 1956, in Washington, DC; daughter of A.J. and Ann McCormick; married Paul W. Critchlow (a public-relations specialist), September 11, 1988; children: Meaghan, Matt. Education: Rosemont College, B.S., 1978; Columbia University, M.S., 1985; New School for Social Research (now New School University), M.F.A., 1999.
Addresses
Home and office—New York, NY. E-mail—[email protected].
Career
Journalist and novelist. New Brunswick (NJ) I Home News, crime reporter; New York Times children's movie reviewer; Parents magazine, children's movie reviewer; freelance writer. Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, former adjunct professor; New School University, former instructor of creative writing. The Writers Room, New York, NY, board member.
Member
Authors Guild, Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators.
Awards, Honors
New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age designation, 2000, Quick Pick for Reluctant Young Adult Readers, American Library Association (ALA), 2001, and Best Book for Young Adults, ALA, 2002, all for Cut; New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age designation, 2004, for My Brother's Keeper; New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship; Virginia Center for the Creative Arts fellowship; National Book Award finalist in Young People's Literature, National Book Foundation, ALA Best Book of the Year designation, Chicago Public Library Best of the Best listee, New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age designation, Children's Literature Council Choice designation, and Booklist Top-Ten Women's History Books for Youth designation, all 2006, all for Sold.
Writings
NOVELS
Cut, Front Street Books (New York, NY), 2000.
My Brother's Keeper, Hyperion (New York, NY), 2005.
Sold, Hyperion (New York, NY), 2006.
OTHER
(With Steven Cohen) Parents' Guide to the Best Family Videos, St. Martin's Press (New York, NY), 1999.
Contributor of articles to periodicals, including Ladies' Home Journal, Town & Country, Reader's Digest, More, Mademoiselle, New York Times Book Review, and New York Times. Former contributing editor to Parents magazine.
Adaptations
Cut, My Brother's Keeper, and Sold were adapted as audiobooks by Listening Library.
Sidelights
In 2000 Patricia McCormick made her entrance into children's literature with her young-adult novel Cut. The combination of a New York Times Magazine article about young women cutting themselves and the stress then present in her own life sparked in McCormick the idea for a novel about a fifteen-year-old girl in a residential treatment facility who is kept there because she cuts herself in response to the pressures she feels at home. "I kept the article for months, then I finally threw it away," McCormick told Elizabeth Devereaux in Publishers Weekly. The author continues her focus on young teens in the novels My Brother's Keeper and Sold, the latter a finalist for the National Book Award in Young People's Literature.
McCormick wrote Cut while working toward her M.F.A. at the New School for Social Research in New York City. "I found myself writing in the voice of a girl, addressing her shrink in a loony bin," the author explained to Devereaux. During the writing process, McCormick resisted the urge to over-research and smother the story and her central character in details. Callie, the protagonist of Cut, has chosen to be mute, except to the reader, who is privy to her memories of her family: a severely asthmatic brother, a distracted mother, and a non-coping father. During the course of Callie's narrative, the reader also follows the sequence of events that led to the teen's need to cut herself in order to maintain some semblance of control over her life.
Reviewers found much to praise in Cut, particularly its verisimilitude. Writing in School Library Journal, Gail Richmond described the novel as "poignant and compelling reading" that avoids pathos and stereotypes." According to a Publishers Weekly critic, McCormick does not sensationalize her story, instead presenting a "persuasive view of the teenage experience." "A too-tidy ending notwithstanding, this is an exceptional character study of a young woman," noted Booklist reviewer Frances Bradburn. Horn Book contributor Lauren Adams also found the story's resolution—and Callie's father's sudden understanding of his daughter's situation—somewhat unrealistic, but nonetheless praised McCormick's "sensitive portrayal of a young girl's illness and her difficult path to recovery." "I'd never understood cutting before I read Cut," wrote Elizabeth Crow in her review of the book for the New York Times Book Review. "The story of how Callie and some of the others begin to get well demystifies mental illness, but doesn't oversimplify or sentimentalize it," Crow added. "To McCormick's credit, we care—about the girls and about their clumsy, frightened parents."
"We all do self-destructive or at least self-defeating things—usually at the very times when we need to take
the best care of ourselves," McCormick once told SATA in discussing her first novel. "Most times, the actions are relatively harmless: locking ourselves out of the house, forgetting an assignment, overdosing on Ben & Jerry's. They hurt us more than they hurt anyone else.
"The challenge in writing Callie's story was to make her experience authentic—to render it as truthfully as I knew how—without rendering her actions in a way that would frighten or offend readers. I hope I've done that. I hope that I've approached her story with empathy and integrity."
Addressing an issue of international scope, Sold highlights the sex trade in the villages of India and Nepal through the story of Nepalese teen Lakshmi. To research the novel, McCormick traveled to Kathmandu and interviewed girls, women, and men regarding the system whereby thousands of young women are sold to brothels by family members every year. She tells her story in free verse, which "allowed me to deal with the horror in carefully controlled language," the author explained to Booklist interviewer Hazel Rochman. In Sold McCormick's thirteen-year-old heroine is a member of a poor farming family in rural Nepal until her stepfather sells her to a Calcutta brothel called Happiness House in order to make good on a gambling debt. Abused by the brothel's madame, Mumtaz, until she submits to male clients, and living in squalid conditions, Lakshmi narrates her experiences as well as the ironies between her life as a prisoner and the outside world she and her fellow prostitutes see only through television. Noting that McCormick avoids sensationalizing her horrific subject, Rochman praised the author's "beautiful clear prose" and ability to "remain … true to the child's viewpoint." Sold "is an important story," concluded Kliatt contributor Claire Rosser, "and McCormick tells it well." Calling the novel "searing" in her Horn Book review, Christine M. Hepperman predicted that "readers will admire Lakshmi's bravery" and cheer as the intervention of American rescuers lifts Sold from the realm of tragedy.
McCormick focuses on a male protagonist in My Brother's Keeper, which finds baseball fan and high school freshman Toby Malone dealing with his father's abandonment, his distracted mother's love life, and older brother Jake's growing drug-abuse problem. As Toby attempts to keep things from falling further apart by covering for Jake, he also tries to shelter his impressionable younger brother Eli, who is becoming increasingly withdrawn. Toby's first-person narration in My Brother's Keeper is "clever and believable," according to Booklist contributor Holly Koelling, the critic calling the novel's teen protagonist "a responsible, caring, and appealing kid." "One of the best things in the book is the way McCormick captures Toby's isolation, sadness, [and] desperation," noted Lois Metzger in a review of the book for the New York Times Book Review, and a Publishers Weekly writer asserted that the storyline "credibly … demonstrates why playing the role of enabler ultimately does more harm than good." "McCormick has tackled a tough subject in language teens can grasp," contended Diana Pierce in School Library Journal, the critic adding that My Brother's Keeper is "written in a realistic and engaging manner and is a good discussion starter."
"When I read stories, I see, or hope to see, aspects of my life reflected in them," McCormick noted to SATA. "I'm always looking for answers in the books I read; if not answers, at least somebody who has the same question. I hope a book of mine will be that kind of book for some reader."
Biographical and Critical Sources
PERIODICALS
Booklist, January 1, 2001, Frances Bradburn, review of Cut, p. 940; March 15, 2002, review of Cut, p. 1228; June 1, 2005, Holly Koelling, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 1786; September 15, 2006, Hazel Rochman, "Daughters for Sale" and review of Sold, p. 54.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, January, 2001, review of Cut, p. 188; July-August, 2005, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 501; December, 2006, Karen Coats, review of Sold, p. 181.
Horn Book, November, 2000, Lauren Adams, review of Cut, p. 759; September-October, 2006, Christine M. Heppermann, review of Sold, p. 591.
Kirkus Reviews, June 1, 2005, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 640; September 1, 2006, review of Sold, p. 908.
Kliatt, May, 2002, Paula Rohrlick, review of Cut, p. 20; September, 2006, Claire Rosser, review of Sold, p. 15.
New York Times Book Review, November 19, 2000, Elizabeth Crow, "Sounds of Silence," p. 38; October 23, 2005, Lois Metzger, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 20.
Publishers Weekly, October 23, 2000, review of Cut, p. 76; December 18, 2000, Elizabeth Devereaux, "Patricia McCormick," p. 26; August 28, 2006, review of Sold, p. 55.
School Library Journal, December, 2000, Gail Richmond, review of Cut, p. 146; July 11, 2005, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 93; August, 2005, Diana Pierce, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 131; September, 2006, Alexa Sandmann, review of Sold, p. 211; April, 2007, review of Sold, p. 65.
Voice of Youth Advocates, February, 2001, review of Cut, p. 425; February, 2002, review of Cut, p. 409; June, 2005, Rollie Welch, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 134; December, 2006, Vikki Terrile, review of Sold, p. 428.
ONLINE
Front Street Books Web site,http://www.frontstreetbooks.com/ (February 1, 2002), "Patricia McCormick."
Patricia McCormick Home Page,http://www.pattymccormick.com/ (July 25, 2007).
McCormick, Patricia 1956–
McCormick, Patricia 1956–
PERSONAL:
Born May 23, 1956, in Washington, DC; daughter of A.J. and Ann McCormick; married Paul W. Critchlow (a public relations specialist), September 11, 1988; children: Meaghan, Matt. Education: Rosemont College, B.S., 1978; Columbia University, M.S., 1985; New School University, M.F.A., 1999.
ADDRESSES:
Home—New York, NY. E-mail—[email protected].
CAREER:
Writer, journalist, critic, and educator. I Home News, New Brunswick, NJ, crime reporter; New York Times, children's movie reviewer; Parents magazine, children's movie reviewer. Freelance writer. Formerly an adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, New York, NY, and an instructor of creative writing at the New School University, New York, NY; taught as an after-school literacy teacher at PS 189 in Queens, NY.
MEMBER:
Authors Guild, Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators, Writers Room (New York, NY; board member).
AWARDS, HONORS:
Books for the Teen Age, New York Public Library, 2000, Quick Pick for Reluctant Young Adult Readers, American Library Association (ALA), 2001, and Best Book for Young Adults, ALA, 2002, all for Cut; Chicago Tribune Best of the Year, Editor's Choice Award from Booklist, and National Book Award finalist, all 2006, all for Sold; also recipient of New York Foundation on the Arts fellowship and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts fellowship.
WRITINGS:
(With Steven Cohen) Parents' Guide to the Best Family Videos, St. Martin's Press (New York, NY), 1999.
Cut (young adult novel), Front Street Books (New York, NY), 2000.
My Brother's Keeper, Hyperion (New York, NY), 2005.
Sold, Hyperion (New York, NY), 2006.
Contributor of articles to periodicals, including Parents, Reader's Digest, Mademoiselle, Ladies Home Journal, Town & Country, More, Reader's Digest, Mademoiselle, and the New York Times Book Review.
SIDELIGHTS:
In 2000 Patricia McCormick made her entrance into juvenile literature with her young-adult novel Cut. The combination of a New York Times Magazine article about young women cutting themselves and the stress of her own life sparked in McCormick the idea for a novel about a girl in a residential treatment facility, kept there because she cuts herself in response to the pressures she feels at home. "I kept the article for months, then I finally threw it away," she told Elizabeth Devereaux in Publishers Weekly. While working toward an M.F.A. at the New School University in New York City, McCormick found a voice. "I found myself writing in the voice of a girl, addressing her shrink in a loony bin." She traced the genesis of the idea back to that discarded article. During the writing of the novel that became Cut, McCormick had to resist the urge to over-research and smother the story and character in details. The protagonist, Callie, has chosen to be mute, except to the reader, who is privy to her memories of the family—a severely asthmatic brother, distracted mother, and non-coping father—and the events that led to her need to cut herself in order to maintain some semblance of control over her life.
Reviewers found much to praise about Cut, particularly its verisimilitude. Writing in School Library Journal, Gail Richmond called it "poignant and compelling reading" that "avoid[s] pathos and stereotypes." According to a Publishers Weekly contributor, the author does not sensationalize her story, instead presenting a "persuasive view of the teenage experience." "A too-tidy ending notwithstanding, this is an exceptional character study of a young woman," noted Booklist contributor Frances Bradburn. Lauren Adams of Horn Book found Callie's father's sudden understanding of his daughter's situation somewhat unrealistic; yet she praised McCormick's "sensitive portrayal of a young girl's illness and her difficult path to recovery." "I'd never understood cutting before I read Cut," wrote Elizabeth Crow in the New York Times Book Review. "The story of how Callie and some of the others begin to get well demystifies mental illness, but doesn't oversimplify or sentimentalize it," she added. "To McCormick's credit, we care—about the girls and about their clumsy, frightened parents."
McCormick once told CA: "We all do self-destructive or at least self-defeating things—usually at the very times when we need to take the best care of ourselves.
Most times, the actions are relatively harmless: locking ourselves out of the house, forgetting an assignment, overdosing on Ben and Jerry's. They hurt us more than they hurt anyone else.
"It was at a time of great stress in my life that I began this book. I didn't cause myself bodily harm with a blade—I did do some stupid, panicky things—but all of a sudden a young girl appeared in my writing—a girl so lost she was seriously hurting herself. Obviously, I deeply identified with her.
"The challenge in writing her story was to make her experience authentic—to render it as truthfully as I knew how—without rendering her actions in a way that would frighten or offend readers. I hope I've done that. I hope that I've approached her story with empathy and integrity.
"When I read stories, I see, or hope to see, aspects of my life reflected in them. I'm always looking for answers in the books I read; if not answers, at least somebody who has the same question. I hope my book will be that kind of book for some reader."
In her next book, My Brother's Keeper, the author features Toby Malone, a thirteen-year-old boy whose father has left his mother, who then slides into depression. At the crux of the story, however, is Toby's observations of his older brother, Jake, and Jake's downfall when he becomes involved with drugs. Toby, who also discusses the confusion of his younger brother, Eli, at first covers for Jake's misdeeds but eventually decides he must intervene and flushes Jake's marijuana down the toilet, which causes Jake to retaliate. As Toby relates his tale, he leads to a climax involving both his younger and older brothers and one that finally sparks his mother to pay attention to a family that has long pretended that their problems do not exist.
Commenting on the moral of the story told in In My Brother's Keeper, a Publishers Weekly contributor noted that the author "credibly develops a plot that demonstrates why playing the role of enabler ultimately does more harm than good." Diana Pierce wrote in the School Library Journal that "this is a story that will grab readers' attention." Several reviewers also commented on the author's use of Toby as the narrator. For example, Holly Koelling wrote in Booklist that "this is a clever and believable first-person narrative." Lois Metzger, writing in the New York Times Book Review, commented: "One of the best things in the book is the way McCormick captures Toby's isolation, sadness, desperation."
For her next novel, Sold, the author researched the worldwide sex trade with a focus on its operation in Nepal and India. Her efforts included traveling to remote villages and cities in both countries and interviewing both working prostitutes and girls ultimately rescued from the sex trade. "Access was easy," the author told Hazel Rochman for an article in Booklist. "An aid worker simply took me down an alley to a warren of rooms where sex workers lived with nothing more than a bed and a curtain across the doorway. I observed them with their children as men came and went."
Sold features thirteen-year-old Lakshmi, a Nepali who narrates through a series of poetic vignettes her own horrific ordeal of ending up a prostitute in an Indian brothel after her stepfather sells her to an "auntie" on the way to the big city. "The author beautifully balances the harshness of brothel life with the poignant relationships among its residents," wrote a Publishers Weekly contributor. Other reviewers also praised the book. "This is an important story, and McCormick tells it well," commented Claire Rosser in Kliatt. Alexa Sandmann, writing in the School Library Journal, referred to Sold as "heartbreaking" and also wrote that the author's "depth of detail makes the characters believable and their misery palpable."
BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:
PERIODICALS
Booklist, January 1, 2001, Frances Bradburn, review of Cut, p. 940; June 1, 2005, Holly Koelling, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 1786; September 15, 2006, Hazel Rochman, review of Sold, p. 54; September 15, 2006, Hazel Rochman, "Daughters for Sale," profile of author, p. 54.
Children's Bookwatch, August, 2005, review of My Brother's Keeper.
Horn Book, November, 2000, Lauren Adams, review of Cut, p. 759; September-October, 2006, Christine M. Heppermann, review of Sold, p. 591.
Kirkus Reviews, June 1, 2005, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 640; September 1, 2006, review of Sold, p. 908.
Kliatt, September 1, 2006, Claire Rosser, review of Sold, p. 15.
New York Times Book Review, November 19, 2000, Elizabeth Crow, "Sounds of Silence," review of Cut, p. 38; October 23, 2005, Lois Metzger, review of My Brother's Keeper.
Publishers Weekly, October 23, 2000, review of Cut, p. 76; December 18, 2000, Elizabeth Devereaux, "Patricia McCormick," interview with author, p. 26; July 11, 2005, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 93; August 28, 2006, review of Sold, p. 55; October 2, 2006, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 66.
School Library Journal, December, 2000, Gail Richmond, review of Cut, p. 146; August 1, 2005, Diana Pierce, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 131; September 1, 2006, Alexa Sandmann, review of Sold, p. 211.
Voice of Youth Advocates, June 1, 2005, Rollie Welch, review of My Brother's Keeper, p. 134.
ONLINE
Front Street Books,http://www.frontstreetbooks.com/ (February 1, 2002), author profile.
Patricia McCormick Home Page,http://www.pattymccormick.com (July 6, 2007).
SAPL Teen Corner Reviews,http://saplteencorner.blogspot.com/ (Mary 19, 2007), review of Sold.
Teen Book Diva,http://thebookdiva.blogspot.com/ (December 14, 2006), Anita Beaman, review of Sold.
Teenreads.com,http://www.teenreads.com/ (July 6, 2006), Norah Piehl, review of Sold.