Hugh Brewster
About Hugh Brewster
Being able to create books about history is a dream job for me since I’ve always been enthralled by history. When I was growing up in Georgetown, Ontario, our house was just around the corner from the town library. And I haunted its children’s section—reading sometimes four or five books a week. Historical fiction titles by writers like Geoffrey Trease and Rosemary Sutcliffe were particular favourites. I still treasure a copy of Ernest Thompson Seton’s Two Little Savages that I was given as a prize in a library reading contest in 1960.
Since ours was the only house in the neighbourhoood without a TV antenna on the roof, reading was my primary form of entertainment. My parents thought their four children would read more without a television to distract us. And they were right, we did -- though we also showed up at our friends’ houses whenever our favourite shows were on!
Our family had moved to Georgetown from a small town in Scotland in 1956, when I was six years old. When I was thirteen we moved to Guelph, Ontario, and I went to high school and university there. My first real job after graduating with an English degree in 1971 was with Scholastic – then a fairly new publishing company in Canada. As an editor for Scholastic Inc. from 1972 to 1984 in both Toronto and New York, I was involved in the creation of Scholastic’s Canadian children’s publishing program as well as in the selecting of books for Scholastic’s school book clubs. (One of our early discoveries was the teenaged author Gordon Korman and his Bruno and Boots books.)
Between 1984 and 2004 I was the Editorial Director and Publisher of Madison Press Books in Toronto. While there, I helped to create a number of successful books for young readers including Exploring the Titanic, that has sold over one million copies, and two award-wining series: “Time Quest” and “I Was There” which feature such books as Secrets of the Mummies and In the Time of Knights. Other award-winning books that I edited and compiled include Polar the Titanic Bear, On Board the Titanic, Safari, Attack on Pearl Harbor, Secrets in Stone, First to Fly and Journey to Ellis Island.
The first book that I actually both wrote and compiled was Anastasia’s Album: The Last Tsar’s Youngest Daughter Tells Her Own Story, published in 1996. I had been lucky enough to go to Moscow in 1994 to see the last Tsar’s palaces and also the personal possessions of his family – letters, photo albums, diaries and school notebooks – that had been kept hidden in the state archives for over 75 years. When I saw the letters and hand-coloured photographs of Anastasia, the fourth daughter, I knew I had to tell her story. Anastasia’s Album won a number of awards including the Silver Birch and Red Cedar awards in Canada. This made me want to write more books!
In 1997 I wrote the text for Inside the Titanic, which featured amazing cutaway illustrations by Ken Marschall. The next year, with Laurie Coulter, I compiled a book filled with fascinating facts about the Titanic entitled 882 1/2 Amazing Answers to Your Questions About the Titanic. Laurie and I went on to write To Be A Princess in 2001 which was a Silver Birch and Red Cedar nominee. In 2004, the 60th anniversary of D-Day, I wrote On Juno Beach which won the Children’s Literature of Canada Information Book Award in 2005. The success of that book encouraged me to write At Vimy Ridge which appeared in 2007 for the 90th anniversary of Canada’s great World War I battle.
In 2005, I decided to devote myself to writing full-time for young readers and three new books are the result of that: The Other Mozart: The Life of the Famous Chevalier de Saint George published Fall 2006, and Carnation, Lily, Lily Rose: The Story of a Painting and Breakout Dinosaurs: Canada’s Coolest, Scariest Ancient Creatures Return! both for Fall 2007. For more information about all these books, just click on the “Books” link on the left.
