About Me & Interviews
Bios:
Donna Janell Bowman is an award-winning author of books for young readers, including Wings of an Eagle: The Gold Medal Dreams of Billy Mills, a collaboration with Olympian Billy Mills and illustrated by S.D. Nelson; Step Right Up: How Doc and Jim Key Taught the World About Kindness, illustrated by Daniel Minter; Abraham Lincoln’s Dueling Words, illustrated by S.D.Schindler; and King of the Tightrope: When the Great Blondin Ruled Niagara, illustrated by Adam Gustavson. Donna’s books have garnered such accolades as a Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award Honor from ALA, starred reviews, Library of Congress Great Reads selection, NCTE Orbis Pictus Recommendation, a Carter G. Woodson Award Honor from NCSS, inclusion on ALA/ALSC and NCSS Notable lists, multiple best-of-the-year lists, Junior Library Guild selection, Writers League of Texas book awards, and book fair inclusion. Her books have also won state book award nominations and awards by about a dozed states, including Texas. Donna has an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. When not writing from her Central Texas home, she can be found freelance editing or speaking at schools around the country.
Shorter bio:
Donna Janell Bowman is an award-winning author of books for young readers, including Wings of an Eagle: The Gold Medal Dreams of Billy Mills, a collaboration with Billy Mills (Oglala Lakota); Step Right Up: How Doc and Jim Key Taught the World About Kindness; Abraham Lincoln’s Dueling Words; King of the Tightrope: When the Great Blondin Ruled Niagara; and others. Donna’s books have garnered such accolades as starred reviews, state book awards, a Robert F. Sibert Award Honor from ALA, and awards and honors from NCTE, NCSS, ALSC, TLA, Oprah Daily recommendation, Library of Congress Great Reads, Best-Of-The-Year lists, and more. Armed with an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts, she writes and edits from her Central Texas home, and she enjoys speaking at schools around the country.
Snarky bio:
Donna Janell Bowman is a Central Texas author. Please don’t hold that against her. Long ago, she was a horse-crazy kid on a ranch. At that time, her job was to scoop poop, fill food and water buckets, train for horse shows, sneak stray animals into the barn, annoy her brother, and check out as many books as possible from the bookmobile. She was an overachiever! Then she grew up. It doesn’t matter how. She simply did. Now, her books have earned awards and accolades, many from organizations with names that are more easily remembered by their acronyms and their brilliant literacy champions. It all makes her smile.
Donna’s favorites (In no particular order after the first fave)
Her two grown sons
Books that maker her laugh, cry, or think
Animals & nature
Hiking
Outdoor activities like paddleboarding, camping, swimming, zip-lining, kayaking
Chocolate
Kind people
A great chicken or salmon dinner (Or a stupendous entree salad)
Cooking
Travel
Beautiful colors, like purple, turquoise, blues, peach
The sound of laughter
The smell of rain or freshly-baked cookies
Time with friends and family
Yoga
A completed first draft of a new book
Research
More about Donna
As a ranch kid, wide-open spaces provided an incubator for a vivid imagination and a fascination with words. Stories, poems, questions, and plays spilled from Donna’s #2 pencil while she sat in a tree, or from a manual typewriter in her pink and purple bedroom (to the annoyance of her brother next door).
Even at six years old, after a bicycle accident left her with a broken jaw, missing teeth, and her mouth wired shut for weeks, Donna was certain she would grow up to be a veterinarian, movie star, writer, and princess—all at the same time. She did not write herself into the corporate family business as an adult, but there she landed until she could no longer ignore her inner storyteller. She started writing for newspapers and magazines, and then she launched into a years-long self-study of writing craft that later inspired her to pursue an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She considers herself a puzzler of plots, a virtuoso of voice, and a sucker for stories that pierce her heart, wallop her funny bone, or rattle her thinking.
She now spends her time as a writer, editor, writing teacher, and a speaker at schools and conferences. She still lives in central Texas, not far from the wide-open spaces of her childhood, but not close enough to her two favorite (and only) grown sons.
Random ramblings from a ranch kid
- Donna was allergic to horses. Yes, seriously! Yet she spent hours every day training for competitive western and English riding events.
- The childhood horse Donna was most bonded with was Dee Dee. Read about how Dee Dee inspired her to write Step Right Up.
- When she made a pet out of a calf, gave it the name Cola, and loved it like a dog, her parents eventually stopped referring to it as hamburger or T-bone.
- The only time her father took her on a hunting trip, Donna brought home a baby goat instead. He grew up to be a big-horned billy goat named Billy the Kid—a rascal of a soda thief!
- When her parents brought home a chick that someone in town abandoned after Easter, Donna taught him to sleep on the family collie and to follow her around the house.
- Lots of newborn and sick animals (including foals) were nursed to health in the house.
- When a guinea hen abandoned her eggs, the eggs were placed under a sitting duck that later taught the guinea babies to swim. Sort of!
- On Donna’s birthday, her new gerbils got loose in the station wagon and were impossible to find.
- Donna had a pet skunk named Stinky who lived in the house until he chewed all the electrical cords.
- Donna and her family took her cat, Chester, camping in the Colorado mountains. And let him out of the RV to explore. He returned to the RV in the nick of time.
- Donna spent her 16th birthday competing at a long, cold, rainy horse show. Yay, sweet 16!
- As a child, Donna’s favorite place to write stories was in a tree.

England residency during grad school
- Donna and her brother on ponies
- Young Donna
Interviews & some articles of interest to writers
(See each book’s page for book-related interviews)
Crafting Throughlines in Narrative Nonfiction
Customize Each Character’s Voice
Begin with a Plan: Narrative Nonfiction Picture Books
Choosing a structure for your picture book biography.
Article in the Seguin Gazette, January 2019
Interview: Melissa Stewart’s Nonfiction Authors Dig Deep series. (I get a little personal.) May 2019.
Article: Highlights Foundation: 10 Things to Consider when Writing a Picture Book Biography. July 2019.
Interview: Writing Barn. Rejecting Rejections. November 2014.
Interview—author profile: Austin SCBWI. July 30, 2015.





