Maureen Johnson (1) (1973–)
Author of Let it Snow: Three Holiday Romances
For other authors named Maureen Johnson, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Maureen Johnson was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on February 16, 1973. She received an undergraduate degree in writing from the University of Delaware and a MFA in writing from Columbia University School of the Arts. After college and before graduate school, she was the literary manager of a show more Philadelphia theater company. Her first book, The Key to the Golden Firebird, was published in 2004. Her other works include 13 Little Blue Envelopes, Devilish, Suite Scarlett, The Last Little Blue Envelope, and the Shades of London series. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Maureen Johnson at the 2012 Texas Book Festival in Austin, Texas, United States
Series
Works by Maureen Johnson
Life Inside My Mind: 31 Authors Share Their Personal Struggles (2018) — Contributor — 122 copies, 5 reviews
Truly Devious 3-Book Box Set: Truly Devious, Vanishing Stair, and Hand on the Wall (2020) 71 copies, 1 review
Untitled (Shades of London, #4) 32 copies
Untitled (Truly Devious, #6) 9 copies
1776: A Story in Tweets 7 copies
The Sign of Tree 1 copy
Untitled (Scarlett, #3) 1 copy
Associated Works
The World of the Golden Compass: The Otherworldly Ride Continues (2007) — Contributor — 71 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1973-02-16
- Gender
- female
- Education
- University of Delaware
Columbia University - Occupations
- writer
author
novelist
Nerdfighter - Awards and honors
- Queen of Teen (2012)
- Agent
- Kate Schafer Testerman (Daphne Unfeasible)
- Short biography
- Maureen Johnson (born February 16, 1973) is an American author of young adult fiction. Her published novels include 13 Little Blue Envelopes, The Name of the Star, Truly Devious, and Suite Scarlett. Among Johnson's works are collaborative efforts such as Let It Snow, a holiday romance novel of interwoven stories co-written with John Green and Lauren Myracle, and a series of novellas found in anthologies The Bane Chronicles, Tales from the Shadowhunter Academy, and Ghosts of the Shadow Market.
Johnson was born in Philadelphia and attended an all-girl Catholic preparatory high school. She graduated from the University of Delaware in 1995 with a degree in English. Johnson later worked variously as literary manager of a Philadelphia theater company, a waitress in a theme restaurant, a secretary, a bartender in Piccadilly, and an occasional performer in New York City. She studied both writing and theatrical dramaturgy at Columbia University, where she received her MFA in Writing.
Johnson's debut novel The Key to the Golden Firebird was published in May 2004 by HarperTeen. Centered around themes of grief and resilience and set in the suburbs of Philadelphia a year after his passing, the novel depicts three sisters of different age as they individually process and come to understand their father's death, and their paths ahead. The Key to the Golden Firebird entered the market during a resurgence of popular interest in the young adult fiction genre. In 2005, it received starred reviews from both School Library Journal and Booklist. - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
'The Name Of The Star' was one of my favourite Young Adult reads this year. It was fresh and engaging, with a good story to tell, likeable characters, just the right amount of threat and an underlying optimism that I enjoyed.
This is the story of Rory Deveaux, a teenaged young woman from Louisiana, the daughter of academics, who is attending a residential Sixth Form College in the East End of London while her parents are on assignment to Bristol University..
Rory is easy to like. She's funny show more and self-confident without being pushy or self-obsessed. She's excited by being in London but she hasn't fallen into the 'I wish I was English' trap. She's comfortable with and proud of her Louisiana background. London is feeding her curiosity, not changing her identity. I found it a joy to read about a young American who wanted to be in London rather than complaining about their surprise that it's not just like home.
The descriptions of the Sixth Form College were well done and seemed fairly real. I got a kick out of learning what Rory saw as odd (like a school timetable that varies every day). that I'd take for granted. Rory makes some friends and some (mild) enemies. She loves the reading and is horrified by having to play hockey (field hockey to American readers) and ends up being bundled into the massive padding hockey goalies wear.
Grounding Rory in this everyday world and infusing it with humour and her contagious enthusiasm, makes the threat, when it comes, have a much bigger impact.
Two things drive the threat part of the plot: a near-death experience leaves Rory with the ability to see the spirits of the dead and women are being butchered in a way that mirrors the killings by Jack The Ripper.
I won't go into the plot here except to say that it was skilfully done, neither minimising the horror of the killings nor feeding off them and that the plot twists that brought together Rory's news-acquired abilities with the killings and placed her at risk felt plausible and kept ratcheting up the tension.
Dealing with something this gruesome and staying within the bounds of a Young Adult book while still making the deaths of the women and the threat to Rory feel real, was quite an achievement.
I finished the book having had a thoroughly good time. I'll be back to see how Rory fares in the next book in the ' Shades of London' series, 'The Madness Underneath'
I strongly recommend the audiobook version of 'Name Of The Star'. My enjoyment was increased by having a narrator who all the accents right, gave the characters distinctive voices and had the perfect pace in her delivery. Click on the SoundCloud link below to hear a sample.
https://soundcloud.com/audiofilemagazine/promo-for-the-name-of-the-star show less
This was another excellent mystery starring Stevie Bell and her friends from Ellingham Academy.
It's October of their senior year and her friends are busy planning their college applications. Janelle and Vi want to go to college close to each other but not at the same college. So Janelle has made a spreadsheet... Nate is furiously writing every time Stevie sees him which is unusual because he has been avoiding writing since his book was published when he was a young teen.
Stevie is at loose show more ends. She doesn't know what she wants to do for college. She's solved some mysteries and none of the emails about new unsolved crimes are interesting her. And her boyfriend David is studying in England for a semester which means it's harder to communicate with him.
When David calls up and proposes that group come to London because he has a friend with an unsolved mystery, they are all eager to go each for their own reasons. They convince the school leader that this will be a great educational opportunity.
In 1995, a group of newly graduated Cambridge students who have been best friends since freshman year go to spend a final week at one of the group's family home. During a drunken game of hide and seek, two of the nine students are brutally murdered. No murderer has ever been found.
Izzy, David's new friend, wants to get Stevie involved because one of the nine was her aunt who said some questionable things about the murder while under the influence of pain killers after knee surgery. Shortly after Izzy brings her friends to her Aunt Ange's to talk about the crime, Ange disappears.
I loved that way the story wove events from 1995, various police reports, and current day activities together. I especially enjoyed the sections from Stevie's point of view because she is a very interesting character. I liked that her inner uncertainties are so different from her outer competence. I loved the setting which ranged from London's tourist sites to a grand English manor. show less
It's October of their senior year and her friends are busy planning their college applications. Janelle and Vi want to go to college close to each other but not at the same college. So Janelle has made a spreadsheet... Nate is furiously writing every time Stevie sees him which is unusual because he has been avoiding writing since his book was published when he was a young teen.
Stevie is at loose show more ends. She doesn't know what she wants to do for college. She's solved some mysteries and none of the emails about new unsolved crimes are interesting her. And her boyfriend David is studying in England for a semester which means it's harder to communicate with him.
When David calls up and proposes that group come to London because he has a friend with an unsolved mystery, they are all eager to go each for their own reasons. They convince the school leader that this will be a great educational opportunity.
In 1995, a group of newly graduated Cambridge students who have been best friends since freshman year go to spend a final week at one of the group's family home. During a drunken game of hide and seek, two of the nine students are brutally murdered. No murderer has ever been found.
Izzy, David's new friend, wants to get Stevie involved because one of the nine was her aunt who said some questionable things about the murder while under the influence of pain killers after knee surgery. Shortly after Izzy brings her friends to her Aunt Ange's to talk about the crime, Ange disappears.
I loved that way the story wove events from 1995, various police reports, and current day activities together. I especially enjoyed the sections from Stevie's point of view because she is a very interesting character. I liked that her inner uncertainties are so different from her outer competence. I loved the setting which ranged from London's tourist sites to a grand English manor. show less
OMG, I really didn't think this series was going to continue and I am so delighted that it has. Especially loving that the mystery has moved on to exploring a horror summer camp situation -- not only is it a perfect fit for the crew, but it's a good standalone. I think what I like the most about these books -- in order:
Really awesome dialogue. Makes me laugh out loud. Is delightful.
The characters are all challenging -- broken in different ways, clear about their limits, interesting and show more driven.
Full of emotion that reads really true. Sometimes repressed, sometimes not. Captures the insanity of teen hormones in a remarkably believable way.
Twisty. This time I saw the ending coming, but I was surprised to be right. Particularly like that the fact that Stevie is a teen is one of the reasons she's succeeding at solving the things she's solving -- it makes sense that she'd be closer to understanding the power dynamics somehow.
Leaves you with a lot of compassion for the victims. Never loses sight of the loss, even when it would be easy to do so. show less
Really awesome dialogue. Makes me laugh out loud. Is delightful.
The characters are all challenging -- broken in different ways, clear about their limits, interesting and show more driven.
Full of emotion that reads really true. Sometimes repressed, sometimes not. Captures the insanity of teen hormones in a remarkably believable way.
Twisty. This time I saw the ending coming, but I was surprised to be right. Particularly like that the fact that Stevie is a teen is one of the reasons she's succeeding at solving the things she's solving -- it makes sense that she'd be closer to understanding the power dynamics somehow.
Leaves you with a lot of compassion for the victims. Never loses sight of the loss, even when it would be easy to do so. show less
Knowing Stevie is to know frustration and ambivalence. Frustration at her bullheadedness and penchant for rationalization, ambivalence between wanting to dope-slap her, or give her a hug. Teens who have a mental illness or personality issue (for lack of a more accurate term) like her can be endearing while simultaneously frustrating as all get out. She's so driven by her inner demons and need to solve mysteries that she can't understand the amount of fallout her bulldozing behavior creates show more for those around her.
Having said all that, this is a dandy mix of recent and older history, romance, friendship, and good old fashioned sleuthing. You are taken back and forth from the fateful night in 1995 when two of a tightly knit group of college students are murdered during a game of hide and seek during a fierce storm. When Stevie gets a chance to spend a week in England where her boyfriend David, is going to school, she's thrilled, but no sooner does she arrive, than he introduces her to Izzie whose aunt was one of the fateful nine back in 1995. You might as well throw up your hands at that point because there's no force on earth that can get between Stevie and a good murder mystery.
What follows is a mix of creepy, painful moments, a gradual reveal, and more death. What really hit me was the last page of the book. It's like Yogi Berra said. "Deja Vu all over again." show less
Having said all that, this is a dandy mix of recent and older history, romance, friendship, and good old fashioned sleuthing. You are taken back and forth from the fateful night in 1995 when two of a tightly knit group of college students are murdered during a game of hide and seek during a fierce storm. When Stevie gets a chance to spend a week in England where her boyfriend David, is going to school, she's thrilled, but no sooner does she arrive, than he introduces her to Izzie whose aunt was one of the fateful nine back in 1995. You might as well throw up your hands at that point because there's no force on earth that can get between Stevie and a good murder mystery.
What follows is a mix of creepy, painful moments, a gradual reveal, and more death. What really hit me was the last page of the book. It's like Yogi Berra said. "Deja Vu all over again." show less
Lists
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1900s: America (1)
Movies/Shows (1)
Christmas Books (1)
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Statistics
- Works
- 45
- Also by
- 8
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- Popularity
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- Rating
- 3.9
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