McClafferty, Carla Killough: - Carla Killough Mcclafferty grew up on an agricultural farm near England, Arkansas.
They have three children, Ryan, Brittney and the late Corey McClafferty..
She lives in North Little Rock, Arkansas, with her husband Pat.
Mcclafferty is a frequent speaker at church, writers\', teachers\' and school groups.
Ms.
There are many biographies of Curie; this one stands out in its shared focus on her discovery and its legacy.
Kirkus Reviews says the book gives readers a terrific sense of Curie\'s state of mind as she worked and loved.
Mcclafferty gives the scientist\'s life and work a fresh telling, one that also explores the larger picture of the effects of Radium in world culture, and its exploitation and sad misuse.
In Something Out of Nothing: Marie Curie and Radium, Ms.
In manuscript form, The Head Bone\'s Connected to the Neck Bone: The Weird, Wacky, and Wonderful X-ray won the 1997 Work-in-Progress Grant from the Society of Children\'s Book Writers and Illustrators.
Through an engaging text and numerous photographs, Mcclafferty tells the history of the X-ray, from its discovery to its applications today, covering such things as the use of X-rays to study art, Egyptian mummies, astronomy, and paleontology, just to name a few.
McClafferty\'s first book of nonfiction for children is The Head Bone\'s Connected to the Neck Bone: The Weird, Wacky, and Wonderful X-ray.
Ms.
I found through that experience that I loved to write and have been writing ever since.
I began writing after the death of my fourteen-month-old son, Corey, which left me struggling to answer impossible questions like \'Why did this have to happen?\' I wrote a book about how God brought me through this difficult period in my life titled Forgiving God (Discovery House, 1995).
After my children were born, I was a stay-at-home mom except for occasional freelance work as a radiologic technologist in orthopedic clinics.
After high school I graduated from Baptist Medical Center School of Radiologic Technology in Little Rock, then worked in local hospitals.
As a matter of fact, I have no background or training to be a writer.
I always loved to read, but it never occurred to me as a child that I would become a writer.
To this day, libraries inspire me with awe and appreciation.
Bookshelves underneath the windows that spanned one side of each classroom were the substitutes.
My elementary school didn\'t even have a library.
McClafferty, Carla Killough: - Carla Killough Mcclafferty grew up on an agricultural farm near England, Arkansas