Elle McNicoll
Elle McNicoll | |
---|---|
Born | 1992 Edinburgh, Scotland |
Occupation | Bestselling Children's Author |
Nationality | Scottish |
Alma mater | University College London |
Notable works | A Kind of Spark Show Us Who You Are |
Notable awards | 2021 Waterstones Children's Book Prize 2021 Blue Peter Book Award |
Years active | 2020-present |
Elle McNicoll (born October 5, 1992) is a Scottish children's writer.
McNicoll's debut novel, A Kind of Spark (2020) follows the efforts of an autistic[1] eleven-year-old girl, Addie, to establish a memorial to the witch trials in her Scottish hometown. McNicoll is autistic herself.[2] The book was children's book of the week in The Times and The Sunday Times.[3][4] and won both the Overall and Younger Fiction prizes at the 2021 Waterstones Children's Book Prize.[5] It also won the Blue Peter Book Award for Best Story, voted for by children.[6] McNicoll was also nominated for the Branford Boase Award [7] and was nominated for the Carnegie Medal. McNicoll's debut was also named Overall Book of the Year by Blackwell's , beating titles in the Adult Market.[8]
Her second novel, Show Us Who You Are, was published in March, 2021, and was Children's Book of the Week in The Times.[9] It was also the Children's Book of the Month, as chosen by Blackwell's.[10] It was nominated for Best Children's Fiction in the 2021 Books Are My Bag Awards, and McNicoll was also nominated for Best Breakthrough Author.[11]
McNicoll was awarded an honour by the Schneider Family Book Award in 2022 for the US edition of A Kind of Spark.
McNicoll has been described as "undoubtedly an outstanding new talent in children’s books [who] will inspire readers young and old for generations to come”.[12]
Her debut novel has also been optioned for a television adaptation and McNicoll is involved in the development of the script.[13]
McNicoll has been an outspoken advocate for better representations of neurodiversity in publishing.[14]
She currently lives in East London.
Works[]
- A Kind of Spark. London: Knights of, 2020.
- Show Us Who You Are. London: Knights of, 2021.
- Like A Charm. London: Knights of, 2022.
References[]
- ^ McNicoll, Elle (6 July 2020). ""I write about anything and everything, but I always write about neurodiversity": Elle McNicoll on being a neurodivergent author". BookTrust. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
- ^ McNicoll, Elle. "Stories from the Spectrum: Elle McNicoll". National Autistic Society. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
- ^ Alex O'Connell, Children's Book of the Week: A Kind of Spark by Elle McNicoll, The Times, 6 June 2020. Accessed 7 June 2020.
- ^ Nicolette Jones, Children’s book of the week: A Kind of Spark by Elle McNicoll, Sunday Times, 7 June 2020. Accessed 7 June 2020.
- ^ "'A Kind of Spark' wins Waterstones Children's Book Prize". Books+Publishing. 2021-07-02. Archived from the original on 2021-07-09. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
- ^ "Blue Peter Book Awards 2022".
- ^ "Getten, McNicoll, Mann and Pearson feature on Branford Boase shortlist | the Bookseller".
- ^ "McNicoll bags Blackwell's Book of the Year | the Bookseller".
- ^ O'Connell, Alex. "Show Us Who You Are by Elle McNicoll review — tween boy-meets-girl love story meets sci-fi horror".
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Blackwell's Children's Book of the Month, March 2021 - Show Us Who You Are. YouTube.
- ^ https://www.thebookseller.com/news/rashford-sethi-and-mcanulty-books-are-my-bag-readers-awards-shortlists-1282829
- ^ "Waterstones prize winner Elle McNicoll: 'I never saw autistic girls in books'". TheGuardian.com. July 2021.
- ^ https://tbivision.com/2021/10/12/bbc-orders-a-kind-of-spark-adaptation-from-canadas-9-story-media/[bare URL]
- ^ "Elle McNicoll on being a neurodivergent author | BookTrust".
- Living people
- Scottish children's writers
- 21st-century Scottish women writers
- People on the autism spectrum
- 1992 births
- British children's writer stubs