Picture of author.

Maureen Johnson (1) (1973–)

Author of 13 Little Blue Envelopes

For other authors named Maureen Johnson, see the disambiguation page.

40+ Works 26,905 Members 1,285 Reviews 65 Favorited

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: Author Maureen Johnson at the 2019 Texas Book Festival in Austin, Texas, United States. By Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=84646855

Series

Works by Maureen Johnson

13 Little Blue Envelopes (2005) 3,831 copies
Let it Snow: Three Holiday Romances (2008) — Contributor — 3,604 copies
The Bane Chronicles (2013) 2,887 copies
The Name of the Star (2011) 2,329 copies
Truly Devious (2018) 2,078 copies
Suite Scarlett (2008) 1,191 copies
The Bermudez Triangle (2004) 1,016 copies
The Vanishing Stair (2019) 1,015 copies
The Hand on the Wall (2020) 871 copies
The Madness Underneath (2013) 858 copies
Devilish (2006) 805 copies
Girl at Sea (2007) 704 copies
The Box in the Woods (2021) 570 copies

Associated Works

Tales from the Shadowhunter Academy (2016) — Contributor — 1,702 copies
Zombies vs. Unicorns (2010) — Contributor — 1,315 copies
The Great Glowing Coils of the Universe (2016) — Foreword — 459 copies
Vacations from Hell (2009) — Contributor — 315 copies
Who's a Good Boy? (2019) — Contributor — 171 copies
Who Done It? (2013) — Contributor — 135 copies

Tagged

adventure (129) audiobook (89) boarding school (266) chick lit (89) Christmas (147) contemporary (182) death (95) ebook (206) England (161) Europe (188) family (130) fantasy (380) fiction (1,049) friendship (180) ghosts (261) high school (89) humor (137) Jack the Ripper (141) Kindle (141) letters (85) library (86) London (238) murder (197) mystery (777) own (165) paranormal (252) read (253) realistic fiction (133) romance (487) series (274) short stories (183) supernatural (114) teen (221) teen fiction (94) to-read (2,247) travel (297) urban fantasy (93) YA (1,132) young adult (1,456) young adult fiction (217)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1973-02-16
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
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.

Members

Reviews

I really enjoyed this book. I thought the premise was interesting, and I always love reading about travel, so that was a bonus too. My biggest complaint is that I felt like the main character's personality was a bit weak. Like the story moved because of events and like she didn't really have that much to say about the things that happened.
 
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HRHSophie | 226 other reviews | May 31, 2024 |
Dryly hilarious. Divided into two sections, The Village and The Manor, with subsections under each (e.g. village events, rooms and architecture, frequent guests), complete with Gorey-esque black-and-white illustrations with red spot color.
https://crimereads.com/your-guide-to-not-getting-murdered-in-a-quaint-english-vi...
Stairs are "the xylophones of death"
 
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JennyArch | 28 other reviews | May 28, 2024 |
I love this

I’ve always enjoyed Maureen Johnson’s books, and this one didn’t disappoint. Stevie, the main character, is dynamic and interesting, and I was invested in her story from the first paragraph. The mystery was great, and it ended with a plot twist that I did NOT see coming.
 
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jellybeanette | 94 other reviews | May 26, 2024 |
Really, what would you do? I like to think that I would be adventurous enough to take the envelopes and go, but in reality I know that I wouldn't be able to.
Maureen had me hooked from the first letter. I couldn't put the book down, and at first i was reading it on a tiny little ipod screen through the kindle app. I knew that I wouldn't get the whole effect, so I went out and bought the book. I loved how the letters from Aunt Peg were obviously set apart from the rest of the book text and I was anxiously waiting to see what adventure Ginny would get into next. From landing in London and finding Richard to buying out all of the seats to Keith's shows; I felt like I was right there with Ginny.
I may never get to do the traveling that I really want to, but through this book I have seen so many different places. Loved visiting Rome and the Vestal Virgins, the little Cafe in Paris and Greece were among my favorites.
I have read a few reviews of this book were people don't really believe that parents would let their child roam another country with no contact, but I believe that with Ginny being 17, most parents might be ok with that; looking at it as taking time before college to explore. I like to think that i would let my daughter go, especially if I knew that her Aunt had planned most of it out.
I was worried for Ginny during some of her trip and my heart broke for her at the end of the book. I can't wait to read the sequel to know what else Ginny can get into.
… (more)
 
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chaoticmel | 226 other reviews | May 18, 2024 |

Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

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Malinda Lo Contributor
Dylan Marron Contributor
Sabaa Tahir Contributor
Karuna Riazi Contributor
Dana Schwartz Contributor
Javier Munoz Contributor
Jason Reynolds Contributor
Rebecca Roanhorse Contributor
Jonny Sun Contributor
Jodi Picoult Contributor
Lauren Duca Contributor
Junauda Petrus Contributor
John Paul Brammer Contributor
Jennifer Weiner Contributor
Jacqueline Woodson Contributor
Justin Mikita Contributor
Rosie O'Donnell Contributor
Kate Linnea Welsh Contributor
Maya Rupert Contributor
Shaina Taub Contributor
Ali Stroker Contributor
Daniel J Watts Contributor
Hebh Jamal Contributor
Carolyn Dewitt Contributor
Jeffrey Rowland Contributor
Dan Sinker Contributor
Candace Ganger Contributor
Cindy L. Rodriguez Contributor
Rachel M. Wilson Contributor
Kelly Fiore-Stultz Contributor
Kimberly McCreight Contributor
Tara Kelly Contributor
Dan Wells Contributor
Wendy Toliver Contributor
Robison Wells Contributor
Francisco X. Stork Contributor
Aprilynne Pike Contributor
Cyn Balog Contributor
Hannah Moskowitz Contributor
Melissa Marr Contributor
Sara Zarr Contributor
Lauren Oliver Contributor
Amy Reed Contributor
Sarah Fine Contributor
Amber Benson Contributor
Karen Mahoney Contributor
Cynthia Hand Contributor
Scott Neumyer Contributor
Ellen Hopkins Contributor
Megan Kelley Hall Contributor
Kate Rudd Narrator
Leo Nickolls Cover designer
Cliff Nielsen Cover artist
Barbara Abedi Übersetzer
Cassandra Jean Illustrator
Ann Shen Cover artist
Russell Gordon Cover designer
Nichola Sciacca Cover designer
Dagmar Schmitz Translator
Lizzie Allen Designer
Tom Pollock Contributor

Statistics

Works
40
Also by
7
Members
26,905
Popularity
#769
Rating
3.9
Reviews
1,285
ISBNs
526
Languages
17
Favorited
65

Charts & Graphs