Lauren St John Explained

Lauren St John
Birth Date:December 1966
Birth Place:Gatooma, Rhodesia (now Kadoma, Zimbabwe)
Occupation:Author
Notablework:The White Giraffe
Awards:2011 Blue Peter Book Award

Lauren St John (born December 1966) is an author born in Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe. She is best known for her children's novels including The White Giraffe and Dead Man's Cove which won her a Blue Peter Book Award in 2011.

Life and career

Lauren St John was born in December 1966 in Gatooma, Rhodesia (now Kadoma, Zimbabwe).[1] When she was eleven, St John and her family moved to a nature reserve called Rainbow End's farm in Gadzema. It was later the focus of her memoir, Rainbow's End[2] and many of her children's books are influenced by the nature reserve in which she grew up.[3]

After studying journalism in Harare St John moved to London where she was the golf correspondent for The Sunday Times for almost a decade.[4]

In 2011, St John won the Blue Peter Book of the Year Award for her book Dead Man's Cove, about an eleven year old girl called Laura Marlin who becomes a detective. It is the first in a series of books.[5] Dead Man's Cove was also shortlisted for a Galaxy National Book Award for Children's Book of the Year. The book was optioned by Centurion Television in 2016.[6]

As well as writing, St John has also done work with the wildlife charity, Born Free Foundation. She became involved after contacting the Foundation while she was running a school conservation project called Animals Are Not Rubbish in 2009.

Children's fiction

Early Readers series

Animal Healer series

Laura Marlin mysteries

Wolfe and Lamb Mysteries

Stand-alone novels

Young adult fiction

The One Dollar Horse series

Stand-alone books

Adult fiction and non-fiction

Fiction

Non-fiction

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lauren St John. Simon & Schuster. 13 September 2017. en.
  2. Web site: About Lauren. laurenstjohn.com. 13 September 2017.
  3. ≠Web site: How We Met: Virginia McKenna & Lauren St John. The Independent. 13 September 2017. 3 July 2011.
  4. Web site: Lauren St.John books and biography. www.waterstones.com. 14 September 2017. en.
  5. Web site: Mystery tale wins Blue Peter book prize. BBC News. 13 September 2017. 2 March 2011.
  6. Web site: Lauren St John moves to MCB in four-book deal. The Bookseller. 13 September 2017.