From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canadian writer
Julie Johnston is a Canadian writer. She was raised in
Smiths Falls, Ontario, in the
Ottawa Valley. She studied at the
University of Toronto. She now lives in
Peterborough, Ontario.
[1]
Her first two novels for young adults won the
Governor General's Award for English-language children's literature.
[2]
Works
Awards
References
External links
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1980s | |
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1990s |
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Michael Bedard, Redwork (1990)
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Sarah Ellis,
Pick-Up Sticks (1991)
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Julie Johnston, Hero of Lesser Causes (1992)
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Tim Wynne-Jones, Some of the Kinder Planets (1993)
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Julie Johnston,
Adam and Eve and Pinch-Me (1994)
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Tim Wynne-Jones, The Maestro (1995)
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Paul Yee, Ghost Train (1996)
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Kit Pearson,
Awake and Dreaming (1997)
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Janet Lunn,
The Hollow Tree (1998)
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Rachna Gilmore, A Screaming Kind of Day (1999)
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2000s |
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Deborah Ellis,
Looking for X (2000)
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Arthur Slade, Dust (2001)
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Martha Brooks,
True Confessions of a Heartless Girl (2002)
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Glen Huser, Stitches (2003)
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Kenneth Oppel,
Airborn (2004)
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Pamela Porter,
The Crazy Man (2005)
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William Gilkerson, Pirate's Passage (2006)
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Iain Lawrence,
Gemini Summer (2007)
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John Ibbitson, The Landing (2008)
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Caroline Pignat,
Greener Grass: The Famine Years (2009)
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2010s |
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Wendy Phillips, Fishtailing (2010)
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Christopher Moore, From Then to Now: A Short History of the World (2011)
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Susin Nielsen,
The Reluctant Journal of Henry K. Larsen (2012)
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Teresa Toten, The Unlikely Hero of Room 13B (2013)
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Raziel Reid,
When Everything Feels Like the Movies (2014)
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Caroline Pignat, The Gospel Truth (2015)
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Martine Leavitt,
Calvin (2016)
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Cherie Dimaline,
The Marrow Thieves (2017)
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Jonathan Auxier, Sweep: The Story of a Girl and Her Monster (2018)
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Erin Bow, Stand on the Sky (2019)
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2020s | |
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International | |
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National | |
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Other | |
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