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Susan Juby

Canadian writer

Susan Juby (born March 30, 1969) is a Canadian writer of young adult literature. She is currently residing in Nanaimo, British Columbia, where she is a professor of creative writing at Vancouver Island University.

Juby is most known for her first series that started with Alice, I Think (2000), which was adapted into the television series Alice, I Think by The Comedy Network.

Contents

  • 1 Background
  • 2 Career
  • 3 Personal life
  • 4 Published works
  • 5 References
  • 6 External links

Background

Juby was born in Ponoka, Alberta, and later moved to Smithers, British Columbia at the age of six.

Juby initially attended fashion design school, but dropped out after several months. She subsequently started a degree in English literature at the University of Toronto, transferring to the University of British Columbia after two years. After graduating she became an editor at a book publishing company called Hartley and Marks.

Career

Juby began her first book as a journal which she wrote on the bus on the way to work and at a local coffee shop. Thistledown published her first book Alice, I Think in 2000. The book was named one of the essential 40 young adult novels by Rolling Stone Magazine.

Juby completed a master's degree in publishing (MPub) from Simon Fraser University in 2002. After publishing Alice, I Think (2000), HarperCollins offered her a contract for three books. Her second book Miss Smithers was published in 2004. To complete the trilogy of Alice, I Think all under one publisher, the original book was bought by HarperCollins. Her third book under this contact was Alice McLeod: Realist at Last, published in 2005. The Comedy Network developed Alice, I Think, a television sitcom based on the novel of the same name. The first episode aired in 2006.

Juby went on to write Another Kind of Cowboy (2007) and a young adult detective novel, Getting the Girl (2008). In 2010, Viking Canada published Nice Recovery, Juby's memoir tracing the time between her experience with teenage alcoholism until her sobriety at age 20.

HarperCollins published Juby's next book in 2011, Home to Woefield (also known as The Woefield Poultry Collective in Canada). This was her first book aimed at an adult audience. She would later write a sequel, Republic of Dirt (2015). In 2016, Republic of Dirt won the Stephen Lea* Award.

Other books by Juby include the dystopian young adult novel Bright's Light (2012), as well as The Truth Commission (2015), and The Fashion Committee (2017), a pair of young adult novels set in an art high school.

Juby was inducted into the Royal Society of Canada's College of New Scholars, Artists, and Scientists in 2014.

On February 22, 2020, Juby read excerpts from two as-yet-unpublished works at the Vancouver Island Regional Library's Nanaimo Harbourfront branch. At Your Service is Juby's first crime novel for adults. Me 3 is a middle-grade novel that addresses the #MeToo movement from a child's perspective.

Personal life

Juby is an environmental rights activist in her community. She is a creative writing professor at Vancouver Island University, in Nanaimo, British Columbia.

Published works

  • Alice, I Think (2000)
  • I'm Alice (Beauty Queen?) (2004) (Published as Miss Smithers in the United States)
  • Alice Macleod: Realist at Last (2005)
  • Another Kind of Cowboy (2007)
  • Getting the Girl: A Guide to Private Investigation, Surveillance and Cookery (2008)
  • Nice Recovery (2010)
  • The Woefield Poultry Collective (2011) (Published as Home to Woefield in the United States)
  • Bright's Light (2012)
  • Republic of Dirt (2015)
  • The Truth Commission (2015)
  • The Fashion Committee (2017)
  • Mindful of Murder (2022)
  • At Your Service (Upcoming)
  • Me 3 (Upcoming)

References

    External links

    • Official website
    • Children and Young Adult Literature portal