Rae St Clair Bridgman
Rae St. Clair Bridgman is an award-winning author and illustrator of children's books. A university professor, anthropologist, urban planner, co-director of an architectural design firm, mother of six, and grandmother of nine, she has a knack for finding the magical and extraordinary in the ordinary, in between the cracks of reality. The Kingdom of Trolls, the fourth book in her acclaimed MiddleGate series, was inspired by three field trips to Iceland as a visiting artist and her desire to...See more
Rae St. Clair Bridgman is an award-winning author and illustrator of children's books. A university professor, anthropologist, urban planner, co-director of an architectural design firm, mother of six, and grandmother of nine, she has a knack for finding the magical and extraordinary in the ordinary, in between the cracks of reality. The Kingdom of Trolls, the fourth book in her acclaimed MiddleGate series, was inspired by three field trips to Iceland as a visiting artist and her desire to bring the real sights, sounds, smells, and tastes of Iceland to life for readers in Canada and elsewhere. The first book in the MiddleGate series, The Serpent's Spell, was a finalist for the McNally Robinson Book for Young People Award at the Manitoba Book Awards, while the second book, Amber Ambrosia, won the Moonbeam Children's Book Award (Pre-Teen Fiction) gold medal. Book III, Fish & Sphinx, won an honourable mention from the Speculative Literature Foundation and was nominated for a Cybils Award for Fantasy and Science Fiction. The Kingdom of Trolls has won the Moonbeam Children's Book Award (Pre-Teen Fantasy) bronze medal, and like The Serpent's Spell, was shortlisted for the McNally Robinson Book for Young People's Award. In her spare time, Rae enjoys watching ants, chasing crayfish, reading the dictionary, playing tuba, watching clouds, and inventing toys. Some of her favourite sayings are: "Often, secrets do not remain secrets for long." "Things that disappear by themselves can come back by themselves." "Problems can multiply like flies." "The story certainly changes depending on the storyteller." She lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba with her family. See less