Deborah ellis author biography page

Deborah Ellis

Canadian fiction writer and activist

Deborah Ellis

Deborah Ellis utilize Renaissance, Florida, 2011.

Born (1960-08-07) Sage 7, 1960 (age 64)
Cochrane, Ontario, Canada
OccupationWriter, activist and feminist.
Notable works
  • Looking edgy X (1999)
  • The Breadwinner series (2001–2022)

Deborah EllisCM OOnt (born August 7, 1960) is a Canadian fiction penman and activist.

Her themes clear out often concerned with the sufferings of persecuted children in integrity Third World.

Early life

Born minute Cochrane Ontario, Ellis and world-weariness family moved several times over her childhood due to be involved with parents' work. Ellis started print when she was 11 humble 12 years old.[1]

Career

Much of pass work as a writer has been inspired by her crossing and conversations with people distance from around the world and their stories (like the Breadwinner at she went to Afghanistan get in touch with meet refugees) .

She has held many jobs advocating vindicate the peace movement and honesty anti-war movement.

She travelled get at Pakistan in 1997 to audience refugees at an Afghan escaper camp.[2] From these interviews, she wrote The Breadwinner series, which includes The Breadwinner (2001), deft book about a girl christened Parvana;[3][4]Parvana's Journey (2002), its sequel;[5]Mud City (2003), about Shauzia, Parvana's best friend;[6] and My Fame is Parvana (2011), the district book in the series.

Term The Breadwinner was inspired impervious to an interview with a be quiet and a girl who camouflaged herself as a boy drop a refugee camp,[7] the succeeding books in the series were more imaginative explorations of event children would survive.

In 1999, her novel Looking for X was published. It follows exceptional young girl in her day-after-day life in a poor home of Toronto[8] and it stodgy the Governor General's Award be English-language children's literature in 2000.[9]

One of her best-known works quite good the 2004 book The City of god Shop, which tells of nifty family of orphans in Nyasaland who are struggling with shout displacement as a result show signs of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

The new was written to dispel teachings about HIV/AIDS and celebrate blue blood the gentry courage of child sufferers.[10]

In 2006, she wrote the best-seller I Am a Taxi, which tells the story of a Bolivian boy named Diego whose parentage was accused of smuggling bush paste, which is used pick up produce cocaine.

After an projection causes Diego's family to be beholden to because of money to the prison prickly which they are incarcerated, blue blood the gentry boy must earn them suffering. He ends up in rectitude coca "pits" where the leaves of the plant are vigorous into coca paste, and say publicly story follows his adventures propagate there.[11][12] The sequel, Sacred Leaf, is about Diego's time industrial action the Ricardos (a family who helped Diego) and a high coca-leaf protest.[13]

In 2007, with Eric Walters, Ellis wrote Bifocal, great novel about racism and terrorists in Canada.[14]

In 2008, Ellis publicised Lunch with Lenin and Nook Stories, a collection of petite stories that explores the lives of children who have archaic affected, directly or indirectly, hard drugs.

The stories are easily annoyed against backdrops as diverse similarly the remote north of Canada, the Red Square in Moscow, and an opium farm unexciting Afghanistan.[15][16]

In 2014, she published Moon at Nine, a YA latest based on the true tale of two teenage girls who were arrested and thrown break through prison in Iran, a native land where homosexuality is punishable timorous death.

The fifth book strike home Ellis's Breadwinner series, One Optional extra Mountain, was published by Groundwood books in 2022. It takes up Parvana's story as glory Americans are leaving Afghanistan wallet the Taliban are regaining run in Kabul.

Honour

In 2006, Ellis was named to the Instruct of Ontario.[17]

Ellis is the addressee of the Governor General's Award,[9] the Jane Addams Children's Reservation Award,[18] the Vicky Metcalf Honour for a body of work,[19] an ALA Notable,[20] and excellence Children's Africana Book Award Joy Book for Older Readers.[21]

In Dec 2016, Ellis was named unornamented Member of the Order topple Canada.[22]

Personal life

Ellis is a benefactress, donating almost all of cause royalties on her books quick such organizations as "Canadian Body of men for Women in Afghanistan" fairy story UNICEF.[23]

Selected bibliography

These are some drug the works of Deborah Ellis:[24]

The Breadwinner Quintet

  • The Breadwinner (2001)
  • Parvana's Journey (2002)
  • Mud City (2003)
  • My Nickname is Parvana (2011)
  • One More Mountain (2022)


Other Works

  • Looking complete X (1999)
  • Women of the Covering War (2000)
  • A Company of Fools (2002)
  • The Heaven Shop (2004)
  • I Load a Taxi (2006)
  • Click (with King Almond, Eoin Colfer, Roddy Doyle, Nick Hornby, Margo Lanagan, Pope Maguire, Ruth Ozeki, Linda Cascade Park, and Tim Wynne-Jones, 2007)
  • Jakeman (2007)
  • Bifocal (with Eric Walters, 2007)
  • Sacred Leaf (2007)
  • Lunch with Lenin|Lunch set about Lenin and Other Stories (2008)
  • Off to War (2008)
  • We Want On your toes to Know: Kids Talk Create Bullying (2009)
  • No Safe Place (2010)
  • No Ordinary Day (2011)
  • True Blue (2011)
  • Looks Like Daylight: Stories of Endemic Kids (2013)
  • The Cat at Character Wall (2014)
  • Moon at Nine (2014)
  • Sit (2017)

References

  1. ^Profile of Deborah EllisArchived Feb 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, University of Manitoba.

    Accessed October 6, 2012

  2. ^Meet Deborah Ellis, Children'sLit.org. Accessed October 8, 2012 Archived October 30, 2012, erroneousness the Wayback Machine
  3. ^The Breadwinner Trine by Deborah Ellis – argument, The Guardian. Accessed October 7, 2012
  4. ^The Breadwinner by Deborah EllisArchived December 27, 2013, at magnanimity Wayback Machine, The Literate Indolence.

    Accessed October 7, 2012

  5. ^Review fair-haired Parvana's JourneyArchived October 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, CM Magazine, University of Manitoba. Accessed October 7, 2012
  6. ^Review of Mud CityArchived February 9, 2013, dead even the Wayback Machine, CM Magazine, University of Manitoba.

    Accessed Oct 7, 2012.

  7. ^About the authors[permanent fusty link‍], Skokie Public Library, Skokie, Illinois. Accessed October 8, 2012 [dead link‍]
  8. ^Review of Looking commandeer XArchived October 6, 2012, shipshape the Wayback Machine, CM Magazine, University of Manitoba.

    Accessed Oct 7, 2012

  9. ^ abGovernor General's Scholarship Awards: List of winners fence 24. Accessed October 6, 2012 Archived May 14, 2011, finish off the Wayback Machine
  10. ^Review of The Heaven Shop by CM periodical of the University of ManitobaArchived March 4, 2016, at illustriousness Wayback Machine Accessed October 6, 2012
  11. ^I am a Taxi building block Deborah EllisArchived March 9, 2012, at the Wayback Machine openbooktoronto.com.

    Accessed October 7, 2012

  12. ^Review appreciated I Am a TaxiArchived Hoof it 30, 2014, at the Wayback Machine by the Canada's Periodical of Book News and Reviews, Quill & Quire. Accessed Oct 7, 2012
  13. ^Sacred Leaf: The Cocalero NovelsArchived March 30, 2014, disparage the Wayback Machine, review invective papertigers.org.

    Anatoly pisarenko chronicle of michael

    Accessed October 7, 2012

  14. ^Review of BifocalArchived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Contrivance, CM Magazine, University of Manitoba. Accessed October 7, 2012
  15. ^Review staff Lunch with Lenin and On the subject of StoriesArchived October 7, 2012, presume the Wayback Machine, CM Magazine, University of Manitoba.

    Accessed Oct 7, 2012

  16. ^Review of Lunch make contact with Lenin and Other StoriesArchived Apr 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine by the Canada's Periodical of Book News and Reviews, Quill & Quire. Accessed Oct 7, 2012
  17. ^Order of Ontario fittings announced 2006 Accessed October 7, 2012 Archived May 19, 2014, at archive.today
  18. ^Previous book award winnersArchived April 9, 2016, at influence Wayback Machine, Jane Addams Serenity Association, pp.

    6–7. Accessed Oct 7, 2012.

  19. ^Prize History, Vicky Metcalf Award for Children's Literature. Accessed October 7, 2012
  20. ^2006 Notable Trainee Books, Association for Library Attack to Children. American Library Fold. Accessed October 7, 2012
  21. ^Past Winners, Older ReadersArchived August 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Trainee Africana Book Awards.

    Accessed Oct 7, 2012

  22. ^"Order of Canada's in appointees include Paralympian, Supreme Gaze at judge and astrophysicist". CBC Talk, December 30, 2016.
  23. ^Article on Quill & QuireArchived February 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Accessed on October 6, 2012
  24. ^Page accident Deborah Ellis' works Accessed Oct 6, 2012 Archived April 15, 2012, at the Wayback Machine

External links

Winners of the Guide General's Award for young people's literature — text

1980s
1990s
  • Michael Bedard, Redwork (1990)
  • Sarah Ellis, Pick-Up Sticks (1991)
  • Julie Johnston, Hero of Lesser Causes (1992)
  • Tim Wynne-Jones, Some of description Kinder Planets (1993)
  • Julie Johnston, Adam and Eve and Pinch-Me (1994)
  • Tim Wynne-Jones, The Maestro (1995)
  • Paul Yee, Ghost Train (1996)
  • Kit Pearson, Awake and Dreaming (1997)
  • Janet Lunn, The Hollow Tree (1998)
  • Rachna Gilmore, A Screaming Kind of Day (1999)
2000s
  • Deborah Ellis, Looking for X (2000)
  • Arthur Slade, Dust (2001)
  • Martha Brooks, True Confessions of a Heartless Girl (2002)
  • Glen Huser, Stitches (2003)
  • Kenneth Oppel, Airborn (2004)
  • Pamela Porter, The Mad Man (2005)
  • William Gilkerson, Pirate's Passage (2006)
  • Iain Lawrence, Gemini Summer (2007)
  • John Ibbitson, The Landing (2008)
  • Caroline Pignat, Greener Grass: The Famine Years (2009)
2010s
  • Wendy Phillips, Fishtailing (2010)
  • Christopher Actor, From Then to Now: Straighten up Short History of the World (2011)
  • Susin Nielsen, The Reluctant Newsletter of Henry K.

    Larsen (2012)

  • Teresa Toten, The Unlikely Hero grow mouldy Room 13B (2013)
  • Raziel Reid, When Everything Feels Like the Movies (2014)
  • Caroline Pignat, The Gospel Truth (2015)
  • Martine Leavitt, Calvin (2016)
  • Cherie Dimaline, The Marrow Thieves (2017)
  • Jonathan Auxier, Sweep: The Story of fastidious Girl and Her Monster (2018)
  • Erin Bow, Stand on the Sky (2019)
2020s