Two of Jill MacLean's novels for middle-grade readers ("The Nine Lives of Travis Keating" and "The Present Tense of Prinny Murphy") won The Ann Connor Brimer Award for Atlantic Canadian Children's Literature, as did her YA free verse novel, "Nix Minus One." Her third middle-grade book, "The Hidden Agenda of Sigrid Sugden," won the Red Cedar Award. The novels received numerous nominations, four of them international.
"The Nine Lives of Travis Keating" is in the Nova Scotia school system, as is her YA novel, "Home Truths," told from the point of view of a bully; Pink Shirt Day originated in Nova Scotia, her home province.
Her poetry collection, "The Brevity of Red," was nominated for two awards.
2023 saw the publication of her historical novel for adults, "The Arrows of Mercy," set in 1348 in Berkshire, the county in England where she was born. While the setting is medieval, the themes of scorched-earth warfare, PTSD and plague are all too relevant in today's world. And yes, she worked on this novel for eight years. She is now writing a sequel.
"The Arrows of Mercy" is one of three finalists in the fiction category of the nation-wide Whistler Independent Book Awards, sponsored by The Writers' Union of Canada, and received excellent reviews in The Miramichi Reader, July 2023, and The Historical Novel Society (US and UK) in August.
I introduce the novel, its time period and setting and a brief description of the protagonist. I do a reading of 12-15 minutes, giving context as required.
I like to have a Q/A session afterwards.