Carol Matas | |
---|---|
Born | November 14, 1949 |
Occupation | Author |
Genre | Children's literature |
Carol Matas is a Canadian writer. She has had more than forty-three books for young people published over several decades, including science fiction, fantasy, historical, contemporary, realistic fiction, historical fiction and foods science. Her novels often reflect a Jewish perspective, and her best-known are set during the Holocaust. Her books have been highly honored, including having been shortlisted for the Governor General's Awards twice.[1]
Bibliography
- After the War
- Cloning Miranda (1999)[2]
- The Second Clone (2001)[3]
- The Dark Clone (2005)[4]
- Of Two Minds (with Perry Nodelman)
- More Minds (with Perry Nodelman)
- Out of their Minds (with Perry Nodelman)
- A Meeting of Minds (with Perry Nodelman)
- The Freak
- The Garden
- Jesper
- Kris's War (formerly Code Name Kris)
- Lisa's War
- Past Crimes (2007)
- Sparks Fly Upward
- Visions
- The War Within
- Daniel's Story
- The Primrose Path
- Footsteps in the Snow: The Red River Diary of Isobel Scott (part of Dear Canada series)
- Turned Away: The World War II Diary of Devorah Bernstein (part of Dear Canada series)
- A Season for Miracles: Twelve Tales of Christmas (contributor, part of Dear Canada series)
- Pieces of the Past: The Holocaust Diary of Rose Rabinowitz (part of Dear Canada series)
- A Time for Giving: Ten Tales of Christmas (contributor, part of Dear Canada series)
- Behind Enemy Lines: World War II, Sam Frederiksen (part of I Am Canada series)
- Greater Than Angels
- The Lost Locket
- In my Enemy's House
- Past Crimes (Fictive Press, 2020)
- Cloning Miranda (Fictive Press, 2017)
- Tucson Jo (Fictive Press, 2014), National Jewish Book Awards Finalist
- When I Die: A meditation on death for children & their families (Fictive Press, 2013)
- A Struggle for Hope (Scholastic Canada, 2021)
References
- ↑ "Member Profile".
- ↑ Golke, Darleen (November 12, 1999). "Cloning Miranda". Canadian Review of Materials. VI (6).
- ↑ Pike, Christina (March 15, 2002). "The Second Clone". Canadian Review of Materials. VIII (14).
- ↑ Pike, Christina (November 10, 2005). "The Dark Clone". Canadian Review of Materials. XII (6).
External links
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