Park died Friday after a long battle with ovarian cancer, according to a statement released yesterday by Random House Books for Young Readers. She was a longtime resident of Scottsdale, Arizona, where she lived with her husband, Richard, and raised two sons.
Starting in 1992, Park wrote more than 30 illustrated chapter books about the smart-mouthed girl with an ungrammatical opinion of everybody her parents, her teachers, her friends and her classmate and enemy for life, May, who is so mean she won't even acknowledge Junie's middle initial (which stands for Beatrice: "Only I don't like Beatrice. I just like B and that's all," Junie warned).
"I don't have a problem being 6 years old in my head," Park once explained during an interview with barnesandnoble.Com. "It's almost embarrassing; if I'm talking to librarians or teachers who know my books and they say, 'How do you do this?' It's not a stretch.
Park's books sold more than 55 million copies just in North America, according to Random House, and the series was adapted into a popular musical theater production. Junie B inspired much laughter among families, and a few frowns. Parents and educators occasionally objected to Jones' personalised language and cheeky ways, worrying that she was a bad influence on her fans.
