This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (April 2018) |
Angie Sage (born 20 June 1952)[2] is an English author of children's literature, including the Septimus Heap series, the TodHunter Moon trilogy, and the Araminta Spook series (Araminta Spookie, in the United States).
Angie Sage | |
---|---|
Born | Thames Valley, England, UK | 20 June 1952
Occupation | Author |
Nationality | British |
Genre | Fantasy |
Notable works | Septimus Heap series |
Children | 2[1] |
Life
editAccording to her publisher's biography, Sage grew up in the Thames Valley, London and Kent. She tells how her publisher father brought home blank books, and she would write and illustrate her own stories in these. She began to study medicine, but moved instead to the Art School in Leicester to study graphic design and illustration, using these skills to begin illustrating books.
Her first novel was the first in her Septimus Heap series: Magyk.[3]
Publications
editThe following is a list of books written by Angie Sage. It does not include books she only illustrated.
Board books
edit- 1981: The Nightmare Song – from Iolanthe by Gilbert and Sullivan
- 1998: Alphabet Express
- 1999: Number Bus
- 2000: Rainbow Rocket
- 2000: Animals on Safari
- 2000: Noah's Ark
- 2001: Alphabet Bus
- 2001: Learning Bus
- 2001: Farmyard Families
- 2002: Sea Life Sub
Septimus Heap series
edit- Septimus Heap, Book One: Magyk (Released 2005)[4]
- Septimus Heap, Book Two: Flyte (Released 2006)[5]
- Septimus Heap, Book Three: Physik (Released 2007)[6]
- Septimus Heap, Book Four: Queste (Released 2008)[7]
- Septimus Heap, The Magykal Papers (Released 2009, supplement to the series)
- Septimus Heap, Book Five: Syren (Released 2009)[8]
- Septimus Heap, Book Six: Darke (Released 2011)[9]
- Septimus Heap, Book Seven: Fyre (Released 2013)[10]
- Septimus Heap, The Darke Toad (Released 2013, supplement to the series)[11]
TodHunter Moon trilogy (sequel to Septimus Heap series)
edit- TodHunter Moon, Book One: PathFinder (Released 2014)[12]
- TodHunter Moon, Book Two: SandRider (Released 13 October 2015)[13]
- TodHunter Moon, Book Three: StarChaser (Released 14 October 2016)[14]
Araminta Spook series
edit- Araminta Spook, Book One: My Haunted House (Released 2006)[15]
- Araminta Spook, Book Two: The Sword in the Grotto (Released 2006)[16]
- Araminta Spook, Book Three: Frognapped (Released 2007)[17]
- Araminta Spook, Book Four: Vampire Brat (Released 2007)[18]
- Araminta Spook, Book Five: Ghostsitters (Released 2008)[19]
- Araminta Spook, Book Six: Gargoyle Hall (Released 2014 in the UK)[20]
- Araminta Spook, Book Seven: Skeleton Island (Released 2015 in the UK)[21]
Enchanter's Child series
edit- Enchanter's Child, Book One: Twilight Hauntings (Released 2020)[22]
- Enchanter's Child, Book Two: Midnight Train (Released 2022)[23]
Other books
edit- Rise of the Dragons, Book One (Released 6 February 2019)
- Maximillian Fly (Released 25 July 2019)
References
edit- ^ Sage, Angie. "Angie Sage: My Story". Angie Sage. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
- ^ Birthday tweet from Angie Sage, twitter.com; accessed 23 April 2018.
- ^ "Angie Sage". Goodreads. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
- ^ Magyk at amazon.com
- ^ Flyte at amazon.com
- ^ Physik at amazon.com
- ^ Queste at amazon.com
- ^ Syren at amazon.com
- ^ Darke at books.google.com
- ^ Fyre at books.google.com
- ^ The Darke Toad at books.google.com
- ^ PathFinder at books.google.com
- ^ SandRider at books.google.com
- ^ StarChaser at amazon.com
- ^ My Haunted House at books.google.com
- ^ The Sword in the Grotto at books.google.com
- ^ Frognapped at books.google.com
- ^ Vampire Brat at books.google.com
- ^ Ghostsitters at books.google.com
- ^ Gargoyle Hall at books.google.com
- ^ Skeleton Island at books.google.com
- ^ Twilight Hauntings at books.google.com
- ^ Midnight Train at books.google.com
External links
edit- Angie Sage article Archived 4 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine at Kidsreads.com
- Angie Sage interview at Bookbrowse.com
- Angie Sage at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database