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Sally Gardner
British children's writer and illustrator

Sally Gardner

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
British children's writer and illustrator
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Greater London
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Sally Gardner is an English children's writer and illustrator. She won both the Costa Children's Book Award and the Carnegie Medal for Maggot Moon (Hot Key Books, 2012).

Life

Sally Gardner is the daughter of two lawyers, raised in Birmingham. She has severe dyslexia, diagnosed at 12 and didn't learn to read until she was 14. But she did very well in art college and then in drama college, and worked as a theatre set designer before turning to illustration and writing. She lives in London.

Writer

Her first book as a writer was published by Orion Books in 1993: The Little Nut Tree, a children's picture book that she also illustrated. Her first full-length novel was a breakthrough, as I, Coriander won the Smarties Prize in 2005 (reader category 9–11 years). It is set in Cromwellian London and tells the story of Coriander, the unhappy daughter of a silk merchant.

The Red Necklace: A story of the French Revolution and its sequel The Silver Blade are set primarily in France during the Revolution and the Reign of Terror, also in contemporary London. They feature an aristocratic girl and a gypsy boy who are 12 and 14 years old when the story opens. The boy Yann has been trained to assist a stage magician but has or develops genuine magic powers; a starred review (unusually good) by the American service Kirkus labels even The Red Necklace fantasy.

The Double Shadow is historical fantasy that opens in 1937 Britain. Tinder (2013) is a historical novel set during the Thirty Years War.

Maggot Moon (2012) won the Carnegie Medal from the British librarians, which annually recognises the best new book for children or young adults published in the UK. The alternate history is set in 1950s England during the space race, under the thumb of the so-called Motherland. Kirkus says the unnamed "Motherland's distinguishing features scream “Nazi Germany”" and suggests that we "call it Auschwitz lite". Its reviewer judged that the book must fail between younger and older readers: on the one hand, "short chapters and simple vocabulary and syntax ... oversimplified characters, a feeble setting and inauthentic science"; on the other hand, brutal content. Three months later it was recommended for ages 11+ by the panel of British librarians that named it to the Carnegie Medal shortlist with the comment: "A stunning book with an underdog hero, Maggot Moon offers a powerful depiction of an utterly convincing and frightening dystopia. With clever plotting, conspiracy theory and a truly original concept at the heart of it, this is a real tour de force without a hint of sentimentality."

Books

Awards and nominations

  • 2003 The Countess's Calamity, Nestlé Children's Book Prize bronze runner-up and Kids' Club Award winner, ages 6–8 years
  • 2005 I, Coriander, Nestlé Children's Book Prize winner, ages 9–11 years
  • 2006 I, Coriander, shortlisted for the British Children's Book of the Year
  • 2007 I, Coriander, shortlisted for the Stockton Children's Book of the Year
  • 2012 Maggot Moon, Costa Book Awards, children's category
  • 2013 Maggot Moon, Carnegie Medal

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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