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'''Malorie Blackman''' (born 8 February 1962) is an award-winning British author of literature and television drama for children and young adults. She | '''Malorie Blackman''' (born 8 February 1962) is an award-winning British author of literature and television drama for children and young adults. She has used science fiction to explore social and ethical issues. Her critically and popularly acclaimed ''[[Noughts & Crosses series ]]'' uses the setting of a fictional dystopia to explore racism. | ||
== | ==Biography== | ||
Blackman has | Malorie Blackman was born on 8 February 1962 in London.<ref name="Penguin authors">Blackman, Malorie, [http://www.penguin.co.uk/nf/Author/AuthorPage/0,,0_1000003969,00.html Malorie Blackman], Penguin UK Authors, Penguin Books Ltd., 1995–2007. Retrieved on 2007-03-23</ref> While at grammar school, in Peckham, she wanted to be an English teacher but grew up to become a systems programmer instead.<ref name="Craig interview">Craig, Amanda, [http://www.amandacraig.com/pages/journalism/interviews/malorie_blackman.htm Malorie Blackman: the world in photographic negative], The Times, Times Newspapers Limited, 2004-01. Retrieved on 2007-03-27</ref><ref name="Penguin authors" /> She earned a Higher National Certificate at Thames Polytechnic and is a graduate of the National Film and Television School.<ref name="Penguin authors" /><ref>[http://www.tate.org.uk/40artists40days/malorie_blackman.html Malorie Blackman], 40 artists, 40 days, Tate Online, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-03-28</ref> Blackman married her Scottish husband Neil in the early 1980s and their daughter Elizabeth was born in 1995.<ref name="Craig interview"/> Blackman has described herself, "I'm just Malorie Blackman – a black woman writer."<ref name="Penguin authors" /> | ||
== | Blackman's first book, ''Not So Stupid'', was a collection of [[horror]] and [[science fiction]] stories for young adults, published in November 1990.<ref name="British Library catalogue">Full Record, [http://catalogue.bl.uk British Library Integrated Catalogue], The British Library Board. Retrieved on 2007-03-28</ref> Since then she has written more than fifty children's books, including novels and short story collections, and also television scripts and a stage play.<ref name="British Library catalogue" /><ref name="multiple awards (first)">[http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth519D6BC107d6922CB1VoU30CEDE6 Malorie Blackman], Contemporary Writers, British Council, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-03-23</ref> Her work has won more than fifteen awards.<ref name="multiple awards (first)" /><ref name="multiple awards (second)">[http://www.randomhouse.co.uk/childrens/grownups/prizes/prizes.htm Awards and Prizes], Kids at Random House, Random House Children's Books. Retrieved on 2007-03-23</ref> Blackman's television scripts include episodes of the long-running, children's drama ''Byker Grove'', as well as television adaptations of her novels ''Whizziwig'' and ''Pig-Heart Boy''.<ref name="multiple awards (first)" /> Her books have been translated into Spanish, Welsh, German, and French. | ||
Blackman has won | |||
Blackman's award-winning ''[[Noughts & Crosses series]]'', exploring love, racism, and violence, is set in a fictional [[dystopia]]. Explaining her choice of title, in a 2007 interview for the BBC's ''Blast'' website, Blackman said noughts and crosses (tic-tac-toe) is "...one of those games that nobody ever plays after childhood, because nobody ever wins..."<ref name="BBC Blast interview">[http://www.bbc.co.uk/blast/about/ask/mblackman_transcript.shtml Malorie Blackman - Children and Young People's Writer], Blast, BBC. Retrieved on 2007-03-23</ref> In an interview for ''The Times'', Blackman said that before writing ''Noughts & Crosses'' her [[protagonist]]s' ethnicites were never central to the plots of her books.<ref name="Craig interview"/> She has also said, "I wanted to show black children just getting on with their lives, having adventures, and solving their dilemmas, like the characters in all the books I read as a child."<ref name="Penguin authors" /> Blackman eventually decided to address racism directly.<ref name="Craig interview"/><ref name="BBC Blast interview" /> She reused some details from her own experience, including an occasion when she needed a plaster (adhesive bandage) and found they were designed to be inconspicuous only on white people's skin.<ref name="Craig interview"/> ''The Times'' interviewer Amanda Craig speculated about why the ''Noughts & Crosses'' series hasn't been published in the United States: "though there was considerable interest, 9/11 killed off the possibility of publishing any book describing how someone might become a terrorist."<ref name="Craig interview"/> | |||
''Noughts & Crosses'' was #61 on the Big Read list, a 2003 BBC survey to find "The Nation's Best-Loved Book", with more votes than ''A Tale of Two Cities'', several [[Terry Pratchett]] novels, and ''Lord of the Flies''. | |||
==Works== | |||
===Published works=== | |||
====Novels for young adults==== | |||
* ''Not So Stupid!: Incredible Short Stories'', The Women's Press, 1990, ISBN-10: 0704349248 | |||
* ''Trust Me'', Livewire, 1992, ISBN-10: 0704349310 | |||
* ''Words Last Forever'', Mammoth, 1998, ISBN-10: 074972983X | |||
* The [[Noughts & Crosses series]] | |||
**''Noughts & Crosses'',<ref>Also published as ''Black & White'', Simon Pulse, 2007, ISBN-10: 1416900179</ref> Doubleday, 2001, ISBN-10: 0385600089 | |||
**''An Eye for an Eye'',<ref>Also published in ''Noughts & Crosses'', Corgi Children's, 2006, ISBN-10: 0552555703</ref> Corgi Children's, 2003, ISBN-10: 0552549258 | |||
**''Knife Edge'', Doubleday, 2004, ISBN-10: 0385605277 | |||
**''Checkmate'', Doubleday, 2005, ISBN-10: 0385607733 | |||
**''Double Cross'', Doubleday, 2008, ISBN-13: 9780385615518 | |||
* ''The Stuff of Nightmares'', Doubleday, 2007, ISBN-10: 0385610432 | |||
* ''Unheard Voices: An Anthology of Stories and Poems to Commemorate the Bicentenary Anniversary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade'', editor Malorie Blackman, Corgi Children's, 2007, ISBN-10: 0552556009 | |||
====Short stories for young adults==== | |||
* "Humming Through My Fingers" in the multi-author collection ''Shining on: A Collection of Stories in Aid of the Teen Cancer Trust'', Picadilly Press, 2006, ISBN-10: 185340893X | |||
* Short story in the multi-author collection ''The Crew and Other Teen Fiction'', Heinemann Library, ISBN-10: 0431018758 | |||
====Novels for children==== | |||
* ''Hacker'', Doubleday, 1992, ISBN-10: 0385402783 | |||
* ''Operation Gadgetman!'', Doubleday, 1993, ISBN-10: 0385403372 | |||
* ''Jack Sweettooth the 73rd'', Viking Children's Books, 1995, ISBN-10: 0670855391 | |||
* ''The Space Stowaway'', Ginn, 1995, ISBN-10: 060226393X | |||
* ''Whizziwig'' (illustrated by Stephen Lee), Viking Children's Books, 1995, ISBN-10: 067085705X | |||
* ''Thief!'', Doubleday, 1996, ISBN-10: 0552528080 | |||
* ''A.N.T.I.D.O.T.E'', Doubleday, 1997, ISBN-10: 0552528390 | |||
* ''Pig-Heart Boy'', Doubleday, 1997, ISBN-10: 0385406819 | |||
* ''Animal Avengers'' (illustrated by Bill Greenhead and Stik), Mammoth, 1999, ISBN-10: 0749735570 | |||
* ''Dangerous Reality'', Doubleday, 1999, ISBN-10: 0385406800 | |||
* ''Don't Be Afraid'' <ref>Originally published 1997</ref> (illustrated by Bob Harvey), Ginn, 1999, ISBN-10 0602275490 | |||
* ''Forbidden Game'', Puffin Books, 1999, ISBN-10: 0141303212 | |||
* ''Hostage'' <ref>Also published as ''4u2read.ok Hostage'', Barrington Stoke, 2002, | |||
ISBN-10: 184299056X, and as a "Close Look, Quick Look" photocopiable version for teachers, Barrington Stoke, 2004, ISBN-10: 1842992368</ref> (illustrated by Derek Brazell), Barrington Stoke, 1999, ISBN-10: 1902260120 | |||
* ''Tell Me No Lies'', Macmillan Children's Books, 1999, ISBN-10: 0333726456 | |||
* ''Whizziwig Returns'' (illustrated by Stephen Lee), Puffin, 1999, ISBN-10: 0141304588 | |||
* ''Dead Gorgeous'', Doubleday, 2002, ISBN-10: 0385600097 | |||
* ''Cloud Busting'', Doubleday, 2004, ISBN-10: 0385607962 | |||
* ''The Deadly Dare Mysteries'' (contents: "Deadly Dare", "Computer Ghost", "Lie Detectives"; illustrated by Neil Chapman), Corgi Children's, 2005, ISBN-10: 0552553530 | |||
* ''Whizziwig and Whizziwig Returns'' <ref>Originally published separately as ''Whizziwig'', 1995, and ''Whizzywhig Returns'', 1999</ref> (illustrated by Stephen Lee), Corgi Children's, 2005, ISBN-10: 044086657X | |||
====Short stories for children==== | |||
* "Contact" in the multi-author collection ''Out of This World: Stories of Virtual Reality'' (chosen by Wendy Cooling), Dolphin, 1997, ISBN-10: 1858816025 | |||
* ''Aesop's Fables'' (retold by Malorie Blackman, illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Scholastic, 1998, ISBN-10 0590543822 | |||
* "Dare to be Different" (illustrated by Jane Ray) in the multi-author collection ''Dare to be Different'', Bloomsbury Publishing, 1999, ISBN-10: 0747540217 | |||
* "Peacemaker" in the multi-author collection ''Peacemaker and Other Stories'' (illustrated by Peter Richardson and David Hine), Heinemann Educational, 1999, ISBN-10 0435116002 | |||
====Books for new readers==== | |||
* The Betsey Biggalow stories: | |||
** ''Betsey Biggalow the Detective'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1992, ISBN-10: 1853401633 | |||
** ''Betsey Biggalow is Here!'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1992, ISBN-10: 1853401722 | |||
** ''Hurricane Betsey'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1993, ISBN-10: 1853401994 | |||
** ''Magic Betsey'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1994, ISBN-10: 1853402370 | |||
** ''Betsey's Birthday Surprise'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1996, ISBN-10: 0590558641 | |||
* The Girl Wonder series: | |||
** ''Girl Wonder and the Terrific Twins'' (illustrated by Pat Ludlow), Orion Children's Books, 1991, ISBN-10: 0575050489 | |||
** ''Girl Wonder's Winter Adventures'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Orion Children's Books, 1992, ISBN-10: 0575053836 | |||
** ''Girl Wonder to the Rescue'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Gollancz, 1994, ISBN-10 0575057742 | |||
** ''The Amazing Adventures of Girl Wonder'' (illustrated by Lis Toft), Barn Owl Books, 2003, ISBN-10: 1903015278 | |||
* The Puzzle Planet adventures: | |||
** ''Peril on Planet Pellia'' (illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1852139358 | |||
** ''The Mellion Moon Mystery'' (illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1852139366 | |||
** ''The Secret of the Terrible Hand'' (illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1860393705 | |||
** ''Quasar Quartz Quest'' (illustrated by Patrice Aggs) Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1852139382 | |||
* The Longman Book Project (with translations to Welsh): | |||
** ''Rachel versus Bonecrusher the Mighty'', Longman, 1994, ISBN-10: 0582121515 | |||
** ''Rachel and the Difference Thief'' (illustrated by Kim Harley), Longman, 1994, ISBN-10: 0582121523 | |||
** ''Crazy Crocs'' (with Alexander McCall Smith and Sally-Ann Lever), Longman, 1994, ISBN-10: 0582122082 | |||
* ''Elaine You're a Brat!'' <ref>Also published as ''Ellie, and the Cat!'', Orchard Books, 2005, ISBN-10: 1843623919</ref> (illustrated by Doffy Weir), Orchard Books, 1991, ISBN-10: 1852133651 | |||
* ''My Friend's a Gris-Quok'' (illustrated by Philip Hopman), Scholastic, 1994, ISBN-10: 0590558641 | |||
* ''Grandma Gertie's Haunted Handbag'' (illustrated by David Price), Heinemann, 1996, ISBN-10: 0434972258 | |||
* ''Space Race'' (illustrated by Colin Mier), Corgi Children's, 1997, ISBN-10: 0552545422 | |||
* ''Fangs'' (illustrated by Tony Blundell), Orchard Books, 1998, ISBN-10: 1860397344 | |||
* ''Snow Dog'' (illustrated by Sami Sweeten), Corgi Children's, 2001, ISBN-10: 0552547034 | |||
* ''The Monster Crisp-Guzzler'' (illustrated by Sami Sweeten), Corgi Children's, 2002, ISBN-10: 0552547832 | |||
* ''Sinclair, Wonder Bear'' (illustrated by Deborah Allwright), Egmont Books, 2003, ISBN-10: 140520589X | |||
====Picture books==== | |||
* ''That New Dress'' <ref>Also published as ''A New Dress for Maya'', Gary Stevens Publishing, 1992, ISBN-10: 0836807138</ref> (illustrated by Rhian Nest James), Hodder Wayland, 1991, ISBN-10: 0750004428 | |||
* ''Mrs Spoon's Family'' (illustrated by Jan McCafferty), Andersen Press, 1995, ISBN-10: 0862645824 | |||
* ''Dizzy's Walk'' (illustrated by Pamela Venus), Tamarind, 1999, ISBN-10: 1870516419 | |||
* ''Marty Monster'' (illustrated by Kim Harley), Tamarind, 1999, ISBN-10: 1870516427 | |||
* ''I Want a Cuddle!'' (illustrated by Joanne Partis), Orchard Books, 2001, ISBN-10: 1841218235 | |||
* ''Jessica Strange'' (with Alison Bartlett), Hodder Children's Books, 2002, ISBN-10: 0340779632 | |||
* Contributed to ''A Christmas Tree of Stories'', Scholastic Press, 1999, ISBN-10: 0439011922 | |||
===Television scripts=== | |||
* Episodes of ''Byker Grove'' | |||
* Episodes of ''Whizzywig'' | |||
* Episodes of ''Pig-Heart Boy'' | |||
===Stage plays=== | |||
* 2002, ''The Amazing Birthday'' | |||
==Awards and nominations== | |||
===Body of work=== | |||
* 1997, Excelle/Write Thing Children's Author of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 2005, Children's Book Circle's [[Eleanor Farjeon]] Award.<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
===Novels=== | |||
====For ''Hacker'' (1992)==== | |||
* 1994, W.H. Smith Mind Boggling Book of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 1994, Young Telegraph/Gimme 5 Children's Book of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 1995, Birmingham/TSB Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
====For ''Thief!'' (1996)==== | |||
* 1996, Young Telegraph/Fully Booked Children's Book of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
====For ''A.N.T.I.D.O.T.E'' (1997)==== | |||
* 1997, Stockport Children's Book of the Year Award (Key Stage 3 category).<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 1997, Stockton-on-Tees Children's Book Award (shortlisted).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 1998, Sheffield Children's Book Award (highly commended).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2001, Stockport Schools Book Award (shortlisted).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
====For ''Pig-Heart Boy'' (1997)==== | |||
* 1998, Carnegie Medal (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 1998, UKRA Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 1999, Lancashire Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 1999, Wirral Paperback of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
====For ''Tell Me No Lies'' (1999)==== | |||
* 2000, Stockport Children's Book Award (shortlisted) (Key Stage 4 category).<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
====For ''Dead Gorgeous'' (2002)==== | |||
* 2003, Calderdale Book of the Year (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2003, Salford Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
====For books in the ''Noughts & Crosses'' series==== | |||
* 2002, Lancashire County Library Children's Book of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2002, Red House Children's Book Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2002, Sheffield Children's Book Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2003, Wirral Paperback of the Year Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2004, Fantastic Fiction Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 2005, Berkshire Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2005, Lancashire Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2005, Redbridge Teenage Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2006, Lancashire Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2006, Staffordshire Young People's Book of the Year.<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
====For ''Cloud Busting'' (2004)==== | |||
* 2004, Nestlé Smarties Book Prize (Silver Award) (6-8 years category).<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 2005, Redbridge Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2005, Stockport Schools Book Award (shortlisted).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2006, Nottingham Children's Book Award (shortlist) (10-11 years category).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2006, West Sussex Children's Book Award (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
===Television adaptations=== | |||
====For ''Pig-Heart Boy''==== | |||
* 2000, BAFTA (British Academy Television Awards) Best Drama.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/><ref name="multiple awards (second)"/> | |||
* 2000, Race and Media Best Drama Award.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 2000, Royal Television Society Award (Children's Drama category).<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 2001, Chicago TV Festival (shortlist).<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
* 2001, Prix Danube Children's Jury Prize.<ref name="multiple awards (first)"/> | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* [http://www.malorieblackman.co.uk/ Malorie Blackman's official website] | * [http://www.malorieblackman.co.uk/ Malorie Blackman's official website] | ||
* [http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth519D6BC107d6922CB1VoU30CEDE6 Malorie Blackman at the British Council's Comtemporary Writers website] | |||
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/blast/about/ask/mblackman_transcript.shtml Three video clips of an interview with Malorie Blackman with a full text transcription at the BBC] | |||
* [http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/article1006827.ece An article about Malorie Blackman at Times Online] | |||
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[[Category:1962 births]] | [[Category:1962 births]] | ||
[[Category:Living people]] | [[Category:Living people]] | ||
[[ | [[category:Writers by name]] | ||
[[ | [[category:Women writers by name]] | ||
[[Category:Writers for children]] | [[Category:Writers for children]] | ||
[[Category:Writers for young adults]] | [[Category:Writers for young adults]] | ||
[[Category:Black British writers]] | |||
[[Category:British writers]] | |||
[[Category:Television writers]] | |||
[[Category:Playwrights]] | |||
[[Category:Black British people]] | |||
[[Category:British people]] | |||
[[category:Women by name]] | |||
[[category:People by name]] | |||
Latest revision as of 19:26, 29 November 2010
Malorie Blackman (born 8 February 1962) is an award-winning British author of literature and television drama for children and young adults. She has used science fiction to explore social and ethical issues. Her critically and popularly acclaimed Noughts & Crosses series uses the setting of a fictional dystopia to explore racism.
Biography
Malorie Blackman was born on 8 February 1962 in London.[1] While at grammar school, in Peckham, she wanted to be an English teacher but grew up to become a systems programmer instead.[2][1] She earned a Higher National Certificate at Thames Polytechnic and is a graduate of the National Film and Television School.[1][3] Blackman married her Scottish husband Neil in the early 1980s and their daughter Elizabeth was born in 1995.[2] Blackman has described herself, "I'm just Malorie Blackman – a black woman writer."[1]
Blackman's first book, Not So Stupid, was a collection of horror and science fiction stories for young adults, published in November 1990.[4] Since then she has written more than fifty children's books, including novels and short story collections, and also television scripts and a stage play.[4][5] Her work has won more than fifteen awards.[5][6] Blackman's television scripts include episodes of the long-running, children's drama Byker Grove, as well as television adaptations of her novels Whizziwig and Pig-Heart Boy.[5] Her books have been translated into Spanish, Welsh, German, and French.
Blackman's award-winning Noughts & Crosses series, exploring love, racism, and violence, is set in a fictional dystopia. Explaining her choice of title, in a 2007 interview for the BBC's Blast website, Blackman said noughts and crosses (tic-tac-toe) is "...one of those games that nobody ever plays after childhood, because nobody ever wins..."[7] In an interview for The Times, Blackman said that before writing Noughts & Crosses her protagonists' ethnicites were never central to the plots of her books.[2] She has also said, "I wanted to show black children just getting on with their lives, having adventures, and solving their dilemmas, like the characters in all the books I read as a child."[1] Blackman eventually decided to address racism directly.[2][7] She reused some details from her own experience, including an occasion when she needed a plaster (adhesive bandage) and found they were designed to be inconspicuous only on white people's skin.[2] The Times interviewer Amanda Craig speculated about why the Noughts & Crosses series hasn't been published in the United States: "though there was considerable interest, 9/11 killed off the possibility of publishing any book describing how someone might become a terrorist."[2]
Noughts & Crosses was #61 on the Big Read list, a 2003 BBC survey to find "The Nation's Best-Loved Book", with more votes than A Tale of Two Cities, several Terry Pratchett novels, and Lord of the Flies.
Works
Published works
Novels for young adults
- Not So Stupid!: Incredible Short Stories, The Women's Press, 1990, ISBN-10: 0704349248
- Trust Me, Livewire, 1992, ISBN-10: 0704349310
- Words Last Forever, Mammoth, 1998, ISBN-10: 074972983X
- The Noughts & Crosses series
- The Stuff of Nightmares, Doubleday, 2007, ISBN-10: 0385610432
- Unheard Voices: An Anthology of Stories and Poems to Commemorate the Bicentenary Anniversary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade, editor Malorie Blackman, Corgi Children's, 2007, ISBN-10: 0552556009
Short stories for young adults
- "Humming Through My Fingers" in the multi-author collection Shining on: A Collection of Stories in Aid of the Teen Cancer Trust, Picadilly Press, 2006, ISBN-10: 185340893X
- Short story in the multi-author collection The Crew and Other Teen Fiction, Heinemann Library, ISBN-10: 0431018758
Novels for children
- Hacker, Doubleday, 1992, ISBN-10: 0385402783
- Operation Gadgetman!, Doubleday, 1993, ISBN-10: 0385403372
- Jack Sweettooth the 73rd, Viking Children's Books, 1995, ISBN-10: 0670855391
- The Space Stowaway, Ginn, 1995, ISBN-10: 060226393X
- Whizziwig (illustrated by Stephen Lee), Viking Children's Books, 1995, ISBN-10: 067085705X
- Thief!, Doubleday, 1996, ISBN-10: 0552528080
- A.N.T.I.D.O.T.E, Doubleday, 1997, ISBN-10: 0552528390
- Pig-Heart Boy, Doubleday, 1997, ISBN-10: 0385406819
- Animal Avengers (illustrated by Bill Greenhead and Stik), Mammoth, 1999, ISBN-10: 0749735570
- Dangerous Reality, Doubleday, 1999, ISBN-10: 0385406800
- Don't Be Afraid [10] (illustrated by Bob Harvey), Ginn, 1999, ISBN-10 0602275490
- Forbidden Game, Puffin Books, 1999, ISBN-10: 0141303212
- Hostage [11] (illustrated by Derek Brazell), Barrington Stoke, 1999, ISBN-10: 1902260120
- Tell Me No Lies, Macmillan Children's Books, 1999, ISBN-10: 0333726456
- Whizziwig Returns (illustrated by Stephen Lee), Puffin, 1999, ISBN-10: 0141304588
- Dead Gorgeous, Doubleday, 2002, ISBN-10: 0385600097
- Cloud Busting, Doubleday, 2004, ISBN-10: 0385607962
- The Deadly Dare Mysteries (contents: "Deadly Dare", "Computer Ghost", "Lie Detectives"; illustrated by Neil Chapman), Corgi Children's, 2005, ISBN-10: 0552553530
- Whizziwig and Whizziwig Returns [12] (illustrated by Stephen Lee), Corgi Children's, 2005, ISBN-10: 044086657X
Short stories for children
- "Contact" in the multi-author collection Out of This World: Stories of Virtual Reality (chosen by Wendy Cooling), Dolphin, 1997, ISBN-10: 1858816025
- Aesop's Fables (retold by Malorie Blackman, illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Scholastic, 1998, ISBN-10 0590543822
- "Dare to be Different" (illustrated by Jane Ray) in the multi-author collection Dare to be Different, Bloomsbury Publishing, 1999, ISBN-10: 0747540217
- "Peacemaker" in the multi-author collection Peacemaker and Other Stories (illustrated by Peter Richardson and David Hine), Heinemann Educational, 1999, ISBN-10 0435116002
Books for new readers
- The Betsey Biggalow stories:
- Betsey Biggalow the Detective (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1992, ISBN-10: 1853401633
- Betsey Biggalow is Here! (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1992, ISBN-10: 1853401722
- Hurricane Betsey (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1993, ISBN-10: 1853401994
- Magic Betsey (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1994, ISBN-10: 1853402370
- Betsey's Birthday Surprise (illustrated by Lis Toft), Piccadilly Press, 1996, ISBN-10: 0590558641
- The Girl Wonder series:
- Girl Wonder and the Terrific Twins (illustrated by Pat Ludlow), Orion Children's Books, 1991, ISBN-10: 0575050489
- Girl Wonder's Winter Adventures (illustrated by Lis Toft), Orion Children's Books, 1992, ISBN-10: 0575053836
- Girl Wonder to the Rescue (illustrated by Lis Toft), Gollancz, 1994, ISBN-10 0575057742
- The Amazing Adventures of Girl Wonder (illustrated by Lis Toft), Barn Owl Books, 2003, ISBN-10: 1903015278
- The Puzzle Planet adventures:
- Peril on Planet Pellia (illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1852139358
- The Mellion Moon Mystery (illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1852139366
- The Secret of the Terrible Hand (illustrated by Patrice Aggs), Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1860393705
- Quasar Quartz Quest (illustrated by Patrice Aggs) Orchard Books, 1996, ISBN-10: 1852139382
- The Longman Book Project (with translations to Welsh):
- Rachel versus Bonecrusher the Mighty, Longman, 1994, ISBN-10: 0582121515
- Rachel and the Difference Thief (illustrated by Kim Harley), Longman, 1994, ISBN-10: 0582121523
- Crazy Crocs (with Alexander McCall Smith and Sally-Ann Lever), Longman, 1994, ISBN-10: 0582122082
- Elaine You're a Brat! [13] (illustrated by Doffy Weir), Orchard Books, 1991, ISBN-10: 1852133651
- My Friend's a Gris-Quok (illustrated by Philip Hopman), Scholastic, 1994, ISBN-10: 0590558641
- Grandma Gertie's Haunted Handbag (illustrated by David Price), Heinemann, 1996, ISBN-10: 0434972258
- Space Race (illustrated by Colin Mier), Corgi Children's, 1997, ISBN-10: 0552545422
- Fangs (illustrated by Tony Blundell), Orchard Books, 1998, ISBN-10: 1860397344
- Snow Dog (illustrated by Sami Sweeten), Corgi Children's, 2001, ISBN-10: 0552547034
- The Monster Crisp-Guzzler (illustrated by Sami Sweeten), Corgi Children's, 2002, ISBN-10: 0552547832
- Sinclair, Wonder Bear (illustrated by Deborah Allwright), Egmont Books, 2003, ISBN-10: 140520589X
Picture books
- That New Dress [14] (illustrated by Rhian Nest James), Hodder Wayland, 1991, ISBN-10: 0750004428
- Mrs Spoon's Family (illustrated by Jan McCafferty), Andersen Press, 1995, ISBN-10: 0862645824
- Dizzy's Walk (illustrated by Pamela Venus), Tamarind, 1999, ISBN-10: 1870516419
- Marty Monster (illustrated by Kim Harley), Tamarind, 1999, ISBN-10: 1870516427
- I Want a Cuddle! (illustrated by Joanne Partis), Orchard Books, 2001, ISBN-10: 1841218235
- Jessica Strange (with Alison Bartlett), Hodder Children's Books, 2002, ISBN-10: 0340779632
- Contributed to A Christmas Tree of Stories, Scholastic Press, 1999, ISBN-10: 0439011922
Television scripts
- Episodes of Byker Grove
- Episodes of Whizzywig
- Episodes of Pig-Heart Boy
Stage plays
- 2002, The Amazing Birthday
Awards and nominations
Body of work
- 1997, Excelle/Write Thing Children's Author of the Year Award.[5]
- 2005, Children's Book Circle's Eleanor Farjeon Award.[6]
Novels
For Hacker (1992)
- 1994, W.H. Smith Mind Boggling Book of the Year Award.[5]
- 1994, Young Telegraph/Gimme 5 Children's Book of the Year Award.[5]
- 1995, Birmingham/TSB Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
For Thief! (1996)
- 1996, Young Telegraph/Fully Booked Children's Book of the Year Award.[5]
For A.N.T.I.D.O.T.E (1997)
- 1997, Stockport Children's Book of the Year Award (Key Stage 3 category).[5]
- 1997, Stockton-on-Tees Children's Book Award (shortlisted).[6]
- 1998, Sheffield Children's Book Award (highly commended).[6]
- 2001, Stockport Schools Book Award (shortlisted).[6]
For Pig-Heart Boy (1997)
- 1998, Carnegie Medal (shortlist).[5]
- 1998, UKRA Award.[5]
- 1999, Lancashire Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
- 1999, Wirral Paperback of the Year Award.[5][6]
For Tell Me No Lies (1999)
For Dead Gorgeous (2002)
- 2003, Calderdale Book of the Year (shortlist).[6]
- 2003, Salford Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
For books in the Noughts & Crosses series
- 2002, Lancashire County Library Children's Book of the Year Award.[5][6]
- 2002, Red House Children's Book Award.[5][6]
- 2002, Sheffield Children's Book Award.[5][6]
- 2003, Wirral Paperback of the Year Award.[5][6]
- 2004, Fantastic Fiction Award.[5]
- 2005, Berkshire Book Award (shortlist).[6]
- 2005, Lancashire Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
- 2005, Redbridge Teenage Book Award (shortlist).[6]
- 2006, Lancashire Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
- 2006, Staffordshire Young People's Book of the Year.[6]
For Cloud Busting (2004)
- 2004, Nestlé Smarties Book Prize (Silver Award) (6-8 years category).[5]
- 2005, Redbridge Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
- 2005, Stockport Schools Book Award (shortlisted).[6]
- 2006, Nottingham Children's Book Award (shortlist) (10-11 years category).[6]
- 2006, West Sussex Children's Book Award (shortlist).[6]
Television adaptations
For Pig-Heart Boy
- 2000, BAFTA (British Academy Television Awards) Best Drama.[5][6]
- 2000, Race and Media Best Drama Award.[5]
- 2000, Royal Television Society Award (Children's Drama category).[5]
- 2001, Chicago TV Festival (shortlist).[5]
- 2001, Prix Danube Children's Jury Prize.[5]
Notes
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Craig, Amanda, Malorie Blackman: the world in photographic negative, The Times, Times Newspapers Limited, 2004-01. Retrieved on 2007-03-27
- ↑ Malorie Blackman, 40 artists, 40 days, Tate Online, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-03-28
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Full Record, British Library Integrated Catalogue, The British Library Board. Retrieved on 2007-03-28
- ↑ 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 5.18 5.19 5.20 5.21 5.22 Malorie Blackman, Contemporary Writers, British Council, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-03-23
- ↑ 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 6.19 6.20 6.21 6.22 6.23 6.24 Awards and Prizes, Kids at Random House, Random House Children's Books. Retrieved on 2007-03-23
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Malorie Blackman - Children and Young People's Writer, Blast, BBC. Retrieved on 2007-03-23
- ↑ Also published as Black & White, Simon Pulse, 2007, ISBN-10: 1416900179
- ↑ Also published in Noughts & Crosses, Corgi Children's, 2006, ISBN-10: 0552555703
- ↑ Originally published 1997
- ↑ Also published as 4u2read.ok Hostage, Barrington Stoke, 2002, ISBN-10: 184299056X, and as a "Close Look, Quick Look" photocopiable version for teachers, Barrington Stoke, 2004, ISBN-10: 1842992368
- ↑ Originally published separately as Whizziwig, 1995, and Whizzywhig Returns, 1999
- ↑ Also published as Ellie, and the Cat!, Orchard Books, 2005, ISBN-10: 1843623919
- ↑ Also published as A New Dress for Maya, Gary Stevens Publishing, 1992, ISBN-10: 0836807138