Tracy Chevalier is best known for her historical novels, including the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring and, most recently, At the Edge of the Orchard. She is also editor of Reader, I Married Him: Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre. She lives with her family in London.
Tracy was born in Washington, D.C. and went to an elementary school with a majority of black students. This experience led her to choose to rewrite Othello. 'Othello is about what it means to be the outsider, and that feeling can start at an early age. We have all at one time or another stood on the edge of a playground, with the bullies circling, wondering if we are going to be accepted.'
Tracy Chevalier is best known for her historical novels, including the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring and, most recently, At the Edge of the Orchard. She is also editor of Reader, I Married Him: Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre. She lives with her family in London.
Tracy was born in Washington, D.C. and went to an elementary school with a majority of black students. This experience led her to choose to rewrite Othello. 'Othello is about what it means to be the outsider, and that feeling can start at an early age. We have all at one time or another stood on the edge of a playground, with the bullies circling, wondering if we are going to be accepted.'
Tracy Chevalier is best known for her historical novels, including the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring and, most recently, At the Edge of the Orchard. She is also editor of Reader, I Married Him: Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre. She lives with her family in London.
Tracy was born in Washington, D.C. and went to an elementary school with a majority of black students. This experience led her to choose to rewrite Othello. 'Othello is about what it means to be the outsider, and that feeling can start at an early age. We have all at one time or another stood on the edge of a playground, with the bullies circling, wondering if we are going to be accepted.'
Tracy Chevalier is best known for her historical novels, including the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring and, most recently, At the Edge of the Orchard. She is also editor of Reader, I Married Him: Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre. She lives with her family in London.
Tracy was born in Washington, D.C. and went to an elementary school with a majority of black students. This experience led her to choose to rewrite Othello. 'Othello is about what it means to be the outsider, and that feeling can start at an early age. We have all at one time or another stood on the edge of a playground, with the bullies circling, wondering if we are going to be accepted.'
The bestselling author of Girl with a Pearl Earring returns with a tale of jealousy, bullying and revenge in a 1970s schoolyard.
Tracy Chevalier is best known for her historical novels, including
the international bestseller Girl with a Pearl Earring and, most
recently, At the Edge of the Orchard. She is also editor of Reader,
I Married Him- Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre. She lives with her
family in London.
Tracy was born in Washington, D.C. and went to an elementary school
with a majority of black students. This experience led her to
choose to rewrite Othello. 'Othello is about what it means to be
the outsider, and that feeling can start at an early age. We have
all at one time or another stood on the edge of a playground, with
the bullies circling, wondering if we are going to be accepted.'
High school, with its crushes, insecurities and politics, works as
the perfect backdrop to Shakespeare's original plot... New Boy,
with its angsty teenagers, racial frictions and a magnificently
fleshed out antagonist, is a tense and tight read... It can be read
in a single afternoon and it really is a heady rollercoaster of
emotions, right to the breathless and shocking last line
*Irish Independent*
This is a compact and intense read full of twists, turns and
intrigue. The fast-moving shifting allegiances and rivalries that
dominate the playground provide a backdrop full of heightened
emotion that cleverly reflects the atmosphere of the original
play
*Daily Express*
Chevalier is at her best when describing the tenderness of young
love or conveying the inner thoughts of her protagonists ...
Chevalier deftly and succinctly gives [her characters] all more of
a backstory than Shakespeare ever allowed ... transposing this
story to the playground makes absolute sense. It is of interest as
an exercise in illustrating the universality of the original, and
works equally well as a standalone piece which tells of a tightly
wound, intimately imagined situation hurtling towards inevitable
tragedy
*Scotland on Sunday*
What Chevalier has done is recast the play to illuminate the
peculiar trials of our era... a fascinating exercise ... In
Chevalier's handling, the insidious manipulations of Othello
translate smoothly to the dynamics of a sixth-grade playground,
with all its skinned-knee passions and hop-scotch rules ... How
Chevalier renders Iago's scheme into the terms of a modern-day
playground provides some wicked delight. She's immensely inventive
about it all
*Washington Post*
Chevalier’s modern interpretation of Othello deftly explores race
relations in the schoolyard in 1970s suburban Washington, and
captures how it feels to be an outsider
*i, 2017 Books of the Year*
Othello as a Seventies schoolyard drama? Yes, it works
marvellously. The emotions of emerging adolescence are a potent
brew, with friendships, rivalries, budding sexuality, and the
desire to fit in combining unflinchingly with the racism of the
teachers (and some of the pupils). This is an evocative retelling
of Shakespeare, and his characters’ interactions and motivations
fit surprisingly well into the brutal world of childhood
*Joanne Harris*
Powerful and intriguing
*Sunday Mirror*
To add urgency to an everyday story of high-school bullying,
[Chevalier] compresses the action into the cycle of a school day.
It's a clever strategy, executed with typical aplomb by the gifted
author of Girl With a Pearl Earring... Her New Boy is an often
inspired riff on adolescence and alienation
*The Observer*
New Boy is in the tradition of movies such as 10 Things I Hate
About You or West Side Story, or Toni Morrison's play Desdemona ...
A deft examination of the accommodations a boy such as Osei must
make wherever he goes ... Chevalier is delicate in her description
of the emotional and mental cost of all this careful avoidance
*The Guardian*
Tracy Chevalier's powerful drama of friends torn apart by jealousy,
bullying and betrayal will leave you reeling
*MumsNet*
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