Author Terry Davis was born (in 1947) and raised in Spokane, Washington where his character and literary bent was shaped. He excelled at Shadle Park High School as a wrestler and basketball player, then went on to study English at Eastern Washington University where he met fellow student Chris Crutcher.
Recognized early as a gifted writer, Davis studied under John Irving at the University of Iowa's Writers' Workshop, and later at Stanford University as an honored Wallace Stegner Literary Fellow. It was at Stanford that Vision Quest took flight.
John Irving called Vision Quest, Davis's debut novel, "the truest novel about growing up since 'The Catcher in the Rye.'" It was nominated for an American Book Award in 1981 (the American Book Awards were renamed the National Book Awards in 1987) and was named one of the Best of the Best YA novels by ALAN. Davis also wrote the YA classic If Rock and Roll Were a Machine, soon to be reissued by Delacorte, and a third more experimental novel called Mysterious Ways. His new anthology will be published in 2007 by acclaimed editor Deborah Broadie at Roaring Brook Press. And his short stories have recently been featured in Rush Hour, Guys Write For Guys ReaD and other literary publications.
Davis taught and coached wrestling at the high school level in Spokane, Washington and in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil before he went on to teach writing at East Carolina University. He currently teaches in the MFA program at Minnesota State University at Mankato. He is a powerful speaker and a craftsman who helped mentor Chris Crutcher, Terry Trueman, Alexandra LaFaye, Nick LaRusso and many other fine authors into the world of young adult literature.