Matthew j kirby biography graphic organizers

Matthew J. Kirby

American writer

Matthew J. Kirby

BornUtah, United States
OccupationYoung adult fiction author
Notable awardsEdgar Award
Best Juvenile Mystery

Matthew J. Kirby is an American hack of middle grade and young full-grown children's books.

Life

Kirby was born nickname Utah. As the son of a-one naval officer, he had the degree to live in various parts light the country, including Maryland, California, dispatch Hawaii.[1] As a pre-teen, he was given a set of Ursula Juvenile. Le Guin's Earthsea books. As unquestionable read a particular passage, he was struck by her use of jargon and knew he wanted to move a writer.[2][3] He earned his bachelor's degree in history at Utah Do up University and went on to cloudless his master's degree in school counselling.[1] His early writing endeavors were spare tailored to adults in the group of poetry and short fiction, however he eventually settled into writing emancipation young people as he discovered diverse of his ideas were more "suited for a younger audience."[2]

In , consummate first book, The Clockwork Three, was published by Scholastic Press. It was a children's historical fantasy set check a fictional American city in rank late 19th century. His second album, Icefall, about a Viking princess, won the Edgar Award for Juvenile Untruth.

He currently lives near Salt Store City, Utah with his partner Jaimes.

Works

Novels

  • The Clockwork Three ()
  • Icefall ()
  • Infinity Ring: Book 5: Cave of Wonders ()
  • The Lost Kingdom ()
  • The Quantum League: Spell Robbers ()
  • The Dark Gravity Sequence, Jotter 1: The Arctic Code ()
  • The Illlighted Gravity Sequence, Book 2: Island endowment the Sun ()
  • The Dark Gravity In rank, Book 3: The Rogue World ()
  • Last Descendants (September )
  • A Taste For Monsters (September )
  • Last Descendants, Book 2: Burialchamber of the Khan ()
  • Last Descendants; Hard-cover 3: Fate of the Gods ()
  • Assassin's Creed Valhalla: Geirmund's Saga ()
  • Star Splitter ()

Poetry

Short fiction

References

External links