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Erin Bow

Erin Bow is an American-born Canadian author. Among other awards and honors, she won the 2011 TD Canadian Children's Literature Award for Plain Kate, the 2014 Monica Hughes Award for Sorrow's Knot, the 2016 Canadian Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award for The Scorpion Rules, and a 2019 Governor General's Award for Stand on the Sky.

Early life and education
Erin Noteboom was born in Des Moines, Iowa, and raised in Omaha, Nebraska. In her eighth grade year, Noteboom moved from a suburb in Des Moines to a suburb in Omaha. She then attended Mercy High School and graduated in 1990. In high school, she founded the math club and was the captain of the debate team. She graduated from Creighton University, where she studied physics as a major and writing as a minor. As part of her research, she worked a summer student at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) near Geneva, Switzerland. During graduate school, Noteboom was diagnosed with a brain tumor. Though doctors initially thought the tumor was fatal, it was ultimately found to be a removable glioma. This diagnosis contributed to a change of priorities for Noteboom, leading her to drop out of graduate school and return full-time to poetry. == Career ==
Career
Bow wrote poetry and a memoir before focusing on writing young adult works. During this time, she worked various jobs but all related to her passion as a writer. She was the poetry editor for the New Quarterly and organised writing workshops in Kitchener, Ontario. She also worked as a part-time writer at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, As part of St. Jerome University's Reading Series, Bow gave a talk on the intersection between science and literature. Writing influences and themes Bow's novels typically depict young adults in a science fiction and fantasy setting. She has written a defense of young adult fantasy, arguing that fantasy books help young adults to fall in love with reading. Bow's characters rarely have a default race or sexual orientation. doing what is right, and being human. == Awards and honors ==
Awards and honors
Four of Bow's books are Junior Library Guild selections: Plain Kate (2010), The Scorpion Rules (2015), Stand on the Sky (2019), and Simon Sort of Says (2023). Bow's works have landed on multiple "best-of" lists. In 2010, Kirkus Reviews named Plain Kate one of the best books of the year. Young Adult Library Services Association included it on their 2011 list of Best Fiction for Young Adults. In 2013, Kirkus Reviews and Quill & Quire named ''Sorrow's Know one of the best books of the year. In 2015, Chapters and Kirkus Reviews named The Scorpion Rules one of the best books of the year. In 2023, Kirkus Reviews named Simon Sort of Says'' one of the best middle grade books of the year. == Personal life ==
Personal life
In 1997, Noteboom moved to Canada. She writes in a modified backyard shed and enjoys cooking. ==Works==
Works
Fiction Standalone novels • • • • Prisoners of Peace series Prisoners of Peace is a book series set in a future dystopia on the prairies of Saskatchewan. Children of rulers are hostages to be killed if their country goes to war. The hostages are kept together in a school and must obey the governing AIs who manage it. • • Short fiction Collaborating with her husband James Bow, Erin Bow published a short piece of fiction titled "A Stone of the Heart" in 2001. "A Stone of the Heart" was published in Missing Pieces (2001), a collection of Doctor Who stories. Poetry Under her maiden name Erin Noteboom, Bow published two volumes of poetry: • • • Her poetry was also published in other collections, including The Malahat Review, PRISM International, Prairie Fire, Memoir Other In 2013, Bow wrote A Defense of Fantasy: Classical Literature v. Modern YA (2013) for YA Interrobang. She also published short essays for the Perimeter Institute of Theoretical Physics. ==Notes==
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