Meg McKinlay

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Meg McKinlay
Occupation
  • Children's writer
  • young adult novelist
  • poet
Alma materUniversity of Western Australia
Genre
  • Young adult fiction
  • children's picture books
Notable awardsPrime Minister's Literary Awards YA Fiction (2016) & Children's Fiction (2021)

Meg McKinlay is a Western Australian writer. She has written a number of books for children and young adults, including How to Make a Bird and A Single Stone. She has won two Prime Minister's Literary Awards and three Crystal Kite Awards.

Biography

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Born Megan McKinlay, she spent her childhood in Bendigo, Victoria. During high school she was an exchange student in Japan.[1] She graduated with a PhD from the University of Western Australia (UWA) in 2001 for her thesis "Gender and cross-cultural analysis: The novels of Tsushima Yûko 1976–1985".[2] She subsequently lectured at UWA in Australian literature, Japanese and creative writing and, as of 2016 was an honorary research associate of that university.[3]

In 2010 she won a residency in Japan and in 2020 she won a May Gibbs Children's Literature Trust Fellowship.[1] As well as writing for children and young adults, she has published one book of poetry, Cleanskin.[4]

McKinlay currently lives in Fremantle, Western Australia.[5]

Awards

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Selected works

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  • The Truth about Penguins, co-authored with Mark Jackson, 2010
  • Surface Tension, 2011
  • Ten Tiny Things, illustrated by Kyle Hughes-Odgers, 2012
  • A Single Stone, 2015
  • Duck!, illustrated by Nathaniel Eckstrom, 2018
  • Catch a Falling Star, 2019
  • How to Make a Bird, illustrated by Matt Ottley, 2020
  • Bella and the Voyaging House, illustrated by Nicholas Schafer, 2021

References

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