Doris Jean Buchanan was born June 1, 1934, in
Washington, D.C., to parents Charles A. and Flora R. Buchanan. At age two she began memorizing
nursery rhymes her mother read to her and then inventing stories of her own. At nine, her family moved from the
nation's capital, to
Atlanta, Georgia. Noticing that she had a flair for storytelling, a sixth-grade teacher, Miss Pruitt (to whom
A Taste of Blackberries is dedicated), asked Doris if she planned on becoming a writer one day. The suggestion resonated and a "closet" writer was born. The next year her parents divorced, leaving Doris and her brothers Bob and Jim to be reared by their mother. While attending South Georgia College,
Douglas, Georgia, Doris met R. Carroll Smith. Neither of them completed their courses, and in December 1954 they were married. The Smiths settled in
Brunswick, Georgia, where they raised four children of their own and cared for dozens of
foster children, including one whom they reared from age 12 to adulthood. After the author's youngest child entered
public school, Smith began to focus on her writing, joining a writers group and attending writer's conferences while honing her craft. Smith's first completed novel was never published, but her second,
A Taste of Blackberries, became a children's classic, which has remained in print since 1973. Smith's marriage ended in divorce in 1977, and she remained single until meeting her second husband, Dr. William J. "Bill" Curtis, an
associate professor of education at the
University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, while at a writer's conference in
Hawaii. They were married from 1990 until Curtis died in 1997 from
ALS (Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as
Lou Gehrig's disease). Doris Buchanan Smith succumbed to
cancer in August 2002. Of her 17 books, only
A Taste of Blackberries remains in print. When
Publishers Weekly asked children's editors to name a book they wish they had published, Deborah Brodie, former executive editor of Roaring Brook Press, named
A Taste of Blackberries, remembering its impact; "Near the end of the book, when Jamie's mother accepts the basket of blackberries his friend has picked, she says, 'I'll bake a pie. And you be sure to come slam the door for me now and then.' The slam of that door reverberates still." == References ==