Nancy Werlin writes YA fiction that ranges from realistic fiction
to suspense to fantasy, often breaking the boundaries between
genres. Her books have gathered awards too numerous to mention, but
including National Book award finalist, Edgar award winner and
finalist, New York Times bestseller, L.A. Book Prize finalist, and
IndieBound Top Ten. Nancy's first novel, Are You Alone on
Purpose, was a Publishers Weekly Flying Start pick.
Of Nancy's suspense fiction, Sarah Weinman says, "Chances are, many
of you haven't heard of this author. That would be a shame, because
she's simply one of the best crime novelists going right now.
Period." These titles are where Nancy habitually breaks
genre-separation rules and include The Rules of Survival (a
National Book Award finalist), The Killer's Cousin (Edgar award
winner), Locked Inside (Edgar award nominee), Black Mirror (which
the Washington Post called "an edge-of-your seat thriller"), and
Double Helix (named to multiple best-of-year book lists).
Nancy's unusual fantasy fiction was inspired by the ballad
Scarborough Fair and includes the loose trilogy Impossible (a New
York Times bestseller), Extraordinary (featuring a rare thing in
fantasy fiction: a Jewish heroine), and her personal beloved,
Unthinkable.
For fun, Nancy also writes and draws a graphic memoir in comics,
using her Tumblr to self-publish an episode three times a
week.
Her favorite book in all the world is Jane Eyre.
A graduate of Yale, Nancy lives near Boston, Massachusetts with her
husband.
[werlinÆs] skill in sketching out family dynamics and probing the difficult issues of adolescence mark her as a writer worth watching. (Publishers Weekly)
Alison Shandling and Harry Roth would seem to have nothing in common. "Queen Nerd" Alison sticks with one close friend and stays out of trouble; her parents have enough worries dealing with her autistic twin, Adam. Harry, a bully, runs with the popular crowd and delights in embarrassing his widowed father, a not terribly intelligent rabbi. But a bitter set of coincidences draws Alison to Harry: her mother, infuriated by the rabbi's insensitivity to Adam, tells the rabbi that she wishes his son were handicapped too. When Harry is paralyzed in a diving accident, the rabbi sees it as divine punishment and tries to atone by showering Adam with attention. First-novelist Werlin compensates for the unlikely plot and the even less likely romance that develops between Harry and Alison by investing her characters with rich, strong personalities. She alternates between Alison's and Harry's perspectives to round out the reader's understanding of both families. Her novel has a few too many revelatory moments and too neat a resolution, but her skill in sketching out family dynamics and probing the difficult issues of adolescence mark her as a writer worth watching. Ages 10-14. (Oct.)
[werlinAEs] skill in sketching out family dynamics and probing the difficult issues of adolescence mark her as a writer worth watching. (Publishers Weekly)
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