Cherie Dimaline
| image = Cherie Dimaline - Eden Mills Writers Festival - 2016 (DanH-0612) (cropped).jpg | alt = Cherie Dimaline at the Eden Mills Writers Festival in 2016 | caption = Dimaline at the Eden Mills Writers' Festival in 2016 | genre = Fiction, Young adult | occupation = Author | website = }} Cherie Dimaline () is writer and a member of the Georgian Bay Métis Council of the Métis Nation of Ontario. She is most notable for her 2017 young adult novel ''The Marrow Thieves'', which explores the continued colonial exploitation of Indigenous peoples.Dimaline won the award for Fiction Book of the Year at the Anskohk Aboriginal Literature Festival for her first novel, ''Red Rooms''. She has since published the short story "Seven Gifts for Cedar", the novel ''The Girl Who Grew a Galaxy'', and the short story collection ''A Gentle Habit''. She was the 2019 editor of ''Little Bird Stories (Volume IX)'', published by Invisible Publishing and featuring winners of the annual Little Bird Writing Contest run by the Sarah Selecky Writing School.
She was the founding editor of ''Muskrat Magazine'', was named the Emerging Artist of the Year at the Ontario Premier's Awards for Excellence in Arts in 2014, and became the first Indigenous writer-in-residence for the Toronto Public Library.
Her novel ''VenCo'' was published in 2023. Provided by Wikipedia
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