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  1. Sir Michael Andrew Bridge Morpurgo OBE FRSL FKC DL (né Bridge; 5 October 1943) is an English book author, poet, playwright, and librettist who is known best for children's novels such as War Horse (1982).

  2. Sir Michael Morpurgo OBE is one of Britain’s best loved childrens authors. He has written over 150 books, has served as Children’s Laureate, and has won many prizes, including the Smarties Prize, the Writers Guild Award, the Whitbread Award, the Blue Peter Book Award and the Eleanor Farjeon Lifetime Achievement Award.

  3. www.michaelmorpurgo.com › about-michael-morpurgoAbout - Michael Morpurgo

    About - Michael Morpurgo. Much ado about… me. I was born a really long time ago. 5th October 1943. In St Alban’s in Hertfordshire. My mother was there too, strangely enough, but my father was away at the war, in Baghdad. I had one older brother, Pieter. We both were evacuated to Northumberland when we were little, away from the bombs.

  4. Michael Morpurgo, author of over 100 books, could in many ways be described as an ‘old-fashionedwriter. Unlike many of today’s authors for young people, Morpurgo rarely features contemporary family issues such as divorce, inadequate parents or urban social problems.

    • Harpercollins Publishers
  5. Well, that’s just about all the much ado of my life, summed up in nutshell. If you do want to find out more, then read Maggie Fergusson’s biography of me, called War Child to War Horse. Michael Morpurgo – A Lifetime in Stories Seven Stories Event – War Horse Wooden Horse. I was born a really long time ago. 5th October 1943.

  6. Michael Morpurgo is an English childrens writer. He has written more than 120 books. Morpurgo and Ted Hughes, a popular English poet, helped to establish the post of children’s laureate in the United Kingdom. They wanted to highlight the importance of children’s literature.

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  8. Nov 7, 2018 · Michael Morpurgo takes us on a journey behind the scenes of five of his own books. He talks about his convictions as a writer and how he weaves fiction out of truths—experiences, accidents, history and memories—and why getting lost is often the best way to make a remarkable discovery.

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