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Cressida Cowell

British writer


Summary

British writer

FieldValue
honorific_prefixThe Honourable
nameCressida Cowell
honorific_suffixMBE FRSL
imageCressidaCowell-byPhilipRomano.jpg
captionCowell in 2025
birth_date
birth_placeLondon, England
occupationWriter
alma_materUniversity of Oxford
notableworksHow to Train Your Dragon series
module{{infobox person
embedyes
fatherMichael Hare, 2nd Viscount Blakenham
motherMarcia Persephone Hare
signatureCressida Cowell signature.svg
website
childrenMaisie Cowell
Clementine Cowell
Alexander Cowell
spouseSimon Cowell

Clementine Cowell Alexander Cowell

Cressida Cowell FRSL (née Hare, born 15 April 1966) is a British author. She is best known for the book series How to Train Your Dragon, which has subsequently become a media franchise as adapted by DreamWorks Animation. As of 2015, the series has sold more than seven million copies around the world.

In addition to her other publications, Cowell works with illustrator Neal Layton in the ongoing series of Emily Brown stories. The first in the series, That Rabbit Belongs to Emily Brown, won a Nestlé Children’s Book Award.

Personal life

The Hon. Cressida Cowell was born on 15 April 1966 in London. She is the daughter of Michael Hare, 2nd Viscount Blakenham. Her uncle, by marriage, is former U.S. Supreme Court justice Stephen Breyer.

As a child, Cowell states she "grew up in London and on a small, uninhabited island off the west coast of Scotland," and that it was during summers spent on the Inner Hebrides, where she first began to develop her writing and drawing skills:

:"I spent a great deal of time as a child on a tiny, uninhabited island off the west coast of Scotland...By the time I was eight, my family had built a small stone house on the island, and with the boat, we could nearly fish for enough food to feed the family for the whole summer." :"From then on, every year we spent four weeks of the summer and two weeks of the spring on the island. The house was lit by candle-light, and there was no telephone or television, so I spent a lot of time drawing and writing stories." Cowell attended Keble College, Oxford where she studied English, and she also attended Saint Martin's School of Art and Brighton University where she learned illustration. She studied at Marlborough College (1982–84).

Cressida Cowell presently lives in London with her husband Simon, a former director and interim CEO of the International Save the Children Alliance; daughters Maisie and Clementine; and son Alexander.

List of works

''How to Train Your Dragon'' books

Main article: How to Train Your Dragon (novel series)

  • How to Train Your Dragon (2003)
  • How to Be a Pirate (2004)
  • How to Speak Dragonese (2005)
  • How to Cheat a Dragon's Curse (2006)
  • How to Twist a Dragon's Tale (2007)
  • A Hero's Guide to Deadly Dragons (2008)
  • How to Ride a Dragon's Storm (2008)
  • How to Break a Dragon's Heart (2009)
  • How to Steal a Dragon's Sword (2011)
  • How to Seize a Dragon's Jewel (2012)
  • How to Betray a Dragon's Hero (2013)
  • How to Fight a Dragon's Fury (2015)

''Emily Brown'' books

  • That Rabbit Belongs to Emily Brown (2007)
  • Emily Brown and the Thing (2007)
  • Emily Brown and the Elephant Emergency (2010)
  • Cheer Up Your Teddy Bear, Emily Brown! (2011)
  • Emily Brown and Father Christmas (2018)

''The Wizards'' books

  • The Wizards of Once (2018)
  • The Wizards of Once: Twice Magic (2019)
  • The Wizards of Once: Knock Three Times (2020)
  • The Wizards of Once: Never and Forever (2020)

''The Treetop Twins Adventures'' books

  • The Twins Take on T. Rex (2019)
  • The Twins Discover a Diplodocus (2019)
  • The Twins Meet a Massospondylus (2019)
  • The Twins Climb a Camarasaurus (2019)
  • The Twins Play with a Plesiosaur (2019)
  • The Twins Help a Hadrosaur (2019)
  • The Twins Have a Picnic with a Spinosaurus (2019)
  • The Twins Track Down a Triceratops (2019)
  • The Twins Meet a Mystery Dinosaur (2019)
  • The Twins Save a Stegosaurus (2019)
  • The Twins Meet a Hatzegopteryx (2019)
  • The Twins Meet Two Tyrannosaurs (2019)

''The Treetop Twins: Wilderness Adventures'' books

  • The Twins Follow a Polar Bear (2020)
  • The Twins Meet a Quagga (2020)
  • The Twins Help a Pink Dolphin (2020)
  • The Twins Discover a Dodo (2020)
  • The Twins Walk With a Woolly Mammoth (2020)
  • The Twins Track a Tiger (2021)
  • The Twins Meet a Monkey (2021)
  • The Twins Greet a Great Auk (2021)
  • The Twins Pursue a Penguin (2021)
  • The Twins Run After a Rhino (2021)
  • The Twins Watch a Whale (2021)
  • The Twins Seek a Saola (2021)

''The Tiny Detectives'' books

  • Can Trees Talk? (2021)
  • Do Fish Glow in the Dark? (2021)
  • Do Spiders Have Pets? (2021)
  • Do Koalas Have Fingerprints? (2021)
  • Why Do Stars Twinkle? (2021)
  • Can Animals Walk on Water? (2021)
  • Is the Middle of the Earth Hot? (2021)
  • Why is the Sky Blue? (2021)
  • Can Wolves See in the Dark? (2022)
  • Can it Snow in the Desert? (2022)
  • Is There Life at the Bottom of the Deepest Ocean? (2022)
  • Can Butterflies Taste With Their Feet? (2022)

Other books

  • Little Wonder (1998)
  • Little Bo Peep's Library Book (1999)
  • Don’t Do That, Kitty Kilroy (1999)
  • What Shall We Do with the Boo-Hoo Baby (2001)
  • Hiccup the Viking Who Was Seasick (2001)
  • One Too Many Tigers (2001)
  • Claydon Was a Clingy Child (2002)
  • Super Sue (2003)
  • Daddy on the Moon (2005)
  • Super Sue at Super School (2005)
  • There's No Such Thing as a Ghostie (2005)
  • Little Bo Peep’s Troublesome Sheep (2009)
  • The Story of Tantrum O'Furrily (2018)
  • Which Way to Anywhere (2022)
  • Which Way Round the Galaxy (2023)

Awards

  • 2006 Nestlé Children’s Book Prize, Gold Award, 0–5 years category: That Rabbit Belongs to Emily Brown by Cressida Cowell & Neal Layton (Orchard Books)
  • 2018 Blue Peter Book Award, Best Story category: The Wizards of Once (Hodder Children's Books)
  • 2019 Children’s Laureate

Cowell was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2020 Birthday Honours for services to children's literature.

In 2021, she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL).

References

References

  1. "F.A.Q.s - Cressida Cowell – Quick Facts". Cressidda Cowell - Official Website.
  2. [[How to Train Your Dragon (2010 film). How to Train Your Dragon (film)#Accolades]]
  3. [https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/oct/22/cressida-cowell-how-to-train-your-dragon-philosophy-now-award-fight-against-stupidity "Children's author Cressida Cowell scoops philosophers' award for fight against stupidity"]. ''The Guardian''. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  4. "Neal Layton - Illustrator and Author".
  5. "Cressida Cowell | World Book Day".
  6. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/highlands_and_islands/8592461.stm "Secret Scottish isle inspired dragon tales"] BBC News, 30 March 2010.
  7. Cowell, Cressida. (7 February 2020). "Opinion {{!}} I Had a Gloriously Wild Childhood. That's Why I Wrote 'How to Train Your Dragon.'". The New York Times.
  8. "Cressida Cowell | F.A.Q's | Children's Author".
  9. (29 September 2019). "Children's Laureate, and former Marlborough student, entertains at LitFest".
  10. "How to Train Your Pupils - Tes meets Cressida Cowell {{!}} Tes Magazine".
  11. (19 February 2016). "School Memories: Cressida Cowell".
  12. [http://www.davidhigham.co.uk/html/Clients/Cressida_Cowell DavidHigham.Co.UK] {{webarchive. link. (6 January 2010 [https://web.archive.org/web/19960101/http://www.davidhigham.co.uk/html/Clients/Cressida_Cowell Archive.org link])
  13. "Official website – ''About me''".
  14. Hutton, Caroline. (25 April 2021). "Author Cressida Cowell on how she proved her teachers wrong". The Sunday Times magazine.
  15. Chilton, Martin. (8 October 2012). "How to Seize a Dragon's Jewel, by Cressida Cowell: review". The Telegraph.
  16. "Error Page | BookTrust".
  17. "Blue Peter Book Awards 2018".
  18. {{London Gazette. (10 October 2020)
  19. Bayley, Sian. (6 July 2021). "RSL launches three-year school reading project as new fellows announced".
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