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newCode[0]="<p><span class=\"i\">The Color of Water</span> has sold almost two million copies worldwide, spent more than two years on the <span class=\"i\">New York Times Bestseller List</span>, and is published in more than 16 languages.</p>";
newCode[1]="<p>James McBride\'\s second book was <span class=\"i\">Miracle at St. Anna</span>. The book became a Disney/Touchstone film in 2007, directed and co-produced by Spike Lee.<br /><br />James McBride has also written for the <span class=\"i\">Washington Post</span>, <span class=\"i\">People</span>, the <span class=\"i\">Boston Globe</span>, <span class=\"i\">Essence</span>, <span class=\"i\">Rolling Stone</span>, and the <span class=\"i\">New York Times</span>.</p>";
newCode[2]="<p>James McBride is a graduate of Oberlin College in Ohio. There he studied composition at The Oberlin Conservatory of Music.<br /><br />James McBride received a Master\'\s in journalism from New York\'\s Columbia University at the age of twenty-two.<br /><br />James McBride is also a Distinguished Writer in Residence at New York University.</p>";
newCode[3]="<p>James McBride has also written <span class=\"i\">Song Yet Song</span>, a powerful story about a runaway slave and a determined slave catcher.<br /><br />McBride\'\s April 2007 <span class=\"i\">National Geographic</span> story \"Hip Hop Planet\" has been regarded a respectable piece on African American music and culture.<br /><br />McBride has 11 siblings. He is now married with three children.</p>";
newCode[4]="<p>In addition to being a highly successful author, James McBride is also an accomplished musician. He has written songs (music and lyrics) for Anita Baker, Grover Washington, Jr., and Gary Burton, among others.<br /><br />In 2005 McBride released his first album, \"The Process - Volume 1,\" part of an upcoming documentary about the lives of \"ordinary\" jazz musicians.</p>";
newCode[5]="<p>McBride also served as a tenor saxophone sideman for jazz legend Little Jimmy Scott. His \"Riffin' and Pontificatin\" Tour, a nationwide tour promoting reading through jazz in high schools and colleges, was featured as a Comcast documentary in 2003.</p>";
newCode[6]="<p>For his accomplishments as a composer in musical theater, McBride has received the American Musical Theater Festival\'\s Stephen Sondheim Award for his jazz/pop musical Bobos. He has also won the Richard Rodgers Foundation Horizon Award.</p>";
newCode[7]="<p>McBride\'\s The Color of Water initially began as a tribute column for the <span class=\"i\">Boston Globe</span> in 1981 for Mother's Day. In response, McBride was flooded with letters from readers, thus spawning the initial idea for the book.</p>";
newCode[8]="<p>In 1984 McBride followed Michael Jackson's \"Victory\" tour for seven months for <span class=\"i\">People</span> magazine. He later indicated that they highest point for him was meeting Michael's mother, not Michael himself. Said McBride, \"Beneath her outward shyness is a woman of fierce pride, resolve and character. She holds that family together. America needs a few more mothers like that.\"</p>";

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