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Alaya Dawn Johnson

Alaya Dawn Johnson is an American writer of speculative fiction.

Career
Apart from short fiction, Johnson has published two urban fantasy novels about "vampire suffragette" Zephyr Hollis set in an alternate 1920s New York City, and two novels set on islands resembling pre-modern Polynesia where people have learned to bind elemental powers to their commands. Her 2013 debut in the young adult fiction sector, the standalone novel The Summer Prince, is set on a post-apocalyptic cyberpunk Brazilian arcology ruled by a nanotech-empowered matriarchy. Love Is the Drug, her 2014 standalone young adult novel, is set in Washington, D.C., and follows a prep-school student whose memory loss may be connected to a burgeoning global influenza pandemic. In February 2021 Johnson was the literary guest of honor and keynote speaker at the 39th annual Life, the Universe, & Everything professional science fiction and fantasy arts symposium. ==Personal life==
Personal life
Johnson was born in Washington, D.C. Johnson lived in New York City She received a master's degree in Mesoamerican studies from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México for her thesis on fermented food and its ritual symbolism in pre-Columbian Mexico. ==Awards and honors==
Awards and honors
World Fantasy Awards Winner, Best Novel for Trouble the Saints, 2021 • Andre Norton Award Winner, Best Young Adult Novel for Love Is the Drug, 2015 • Nebula Award Winner, Best Novelette for A Guide to the Fruits of Hawai’i, 2015 • Andre Norton Award Nominee for Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy for The Summer Prince, 2013 • GLBTRT Top Ten Rainbow List for The Summer Prince, 2014 • Junior Library Guild selection for The Summer Prince, Spring 2013 • YALSA nominee for their BFYA list for The Summer Prince, 2013 • Finalist for the 2011 Carl Brandon Society Parallax Award for the novel Moonshine • Finalist for the 2011 Carl Brandon Society Kindred Award for the novel The Burning City • Top Ten finalist for the 2010 Million Writers Award for the short story A Song to Greet the Sun • Winner of the 2008 Gulliver Travel Grant from the Speculative Literature Foundation • Finalist for the 2006 Carl Brandon Society Parallax Award for the short story Shard of Glass ==Bibliography==
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