Charlie N. Holmberg | |
---|---|
Born | Charlie Nicholes Holmberg April 4, 1988 (age 36) Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | English |
Education | Brigham Young University (BA) |
Genre | Fantasy, romance, young adult |
Notable works | The Paper Magician series The Fifth Doll |
Notable awards | 2017 Whitney Award for Speculative Fiction |
Children | 2 |
Website | |
charlienholmberg |
Charlie Nicholes Holmberg (born April 4, 1988) is an American fantasy writer best known for The Paper Magician series. She is from Salt Lake City, Utah, and graduated from Brigham Young University with a bachelor's degree in English in 2010. Her first novel, The Paper Magician, was released in 2014. Holmberg expanded the book into a series, the film rights for which were purchased by Disney in 2016. In addition to her other book series (the Numina trilogy, Spellbreaker duology, Star Mother duology, and The Whimbrel House Series), Holmberg has published seven standalone novels. She is a multi-Whitney Award recipient for The Fifth Doll (2017), The Will and the Wilds (2020), Star Mother (2021), and Keeper of Enchanted Rooms (2022). The Hanging City was a 2023 Goodreads Choice Awards Finalist. Many of her other works have been nominated for literary awards as well. In addition to writing, Holmberg cohosts the podcast Your Mom Writes Books.
Charlie Nicholes Holmberg was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, [1] on April 4, 1988. [2] She has three sisters. [3] At a young age, she enjoyed watching Star Trek: The Next Generation [2] and grew up a fan of Star Trek in general. [4] After seeing an anime series entitled The Vision of Escaflowne when she was 13, Holmberg decided she wanted to write her own stories. [5] She wrote fan fiction during her high school years. [2] She played the French horn in her high school band, and first met her husband in band class. [6]
She attended Brigham Young University (BYU), majoring in English (with a focus on creative writing) and minoring in editing. She took a class from fantasy author Brandon Sanderson while in college, and has cited that experience as helpful in her career. [6] She graduated from BYU with a BA in English in 2010 [2] and published a poem entitled "Aeos" in Leading Edge, BYU's science fiction and fantasy magazine, in December of that same year. [7] Holmberg then worked as a technical editor and freelance editor for several years.[ citation needed ]
Holmberg chose to write fantasy over science fiction so that she wouldn't be bound by the limitations of technology in her world building or writing. [8] Her debut novel, The Paper Magician, [9] was published on September 1, 2014, [10] by 47North, an imprint of Amazon. [11] [12] It was the ninth novel Holmberg completed [2] and was listed on the American Library Association's 2015 shortlist for fantasy. [13] The Paper Magician was also a finalist for the 2014 AML Award for Best Young Adult Speculative Fiction Novel. [14] The book follows protagonist Ceony Twill as she becomes permanently bound to manipulating paper through magic. [11] Holmberg decided to limit her characters in The Paper Magician to be able to manipulate only one man-made material after being taught by Brandon Sanderson that "limits are more interesting than the powers themselves". [8] Holmberg was inspired, in part, by the art of origami in her idea for The Paper Magician. [6] The novel was expanded into a series, including The Glass Magician (2014), [15] The Master Magician (2015), [16] [17] and The Plastic Magician (2018). The Master Magician was featured as a Wall Street Journal Best-Selling Book (under fiction e-books) in June 2015. [18] The complete series was optioned by Disney in 2016. [19] [20]
Holmberg has also written seven standalone novels, [3] including The Hanging City, which was a finalist in the 2023 Goodreads Choice Awards in the romantasy category. [21] She has described herself as "more of a standalone writer than ... a series writer". [22] Her novel Followed by Frost was published in 2015, [23] also by 47North. [24] Followed by Frost originated as an idea Holmberg had while scraping snow off her car. [8] The novel was nominated for a RITA Award for Best Young Adult Romance in 2016. [4] Holmberg then came up with the concept for another standalone novel, The Fifth Doll (2017), while "preparing a class on magic systems for the LDStorymakers conference". [25] The Fifth Doll won the 2017 Whitney Award for Speculative Fiction. [26] Additionally, The Glass Magician, The Plastic Magician, Followed by Frost, Veins of Gold, and Smoke and Summons were all Whitney Award finalists. [9] Veins of Gold made Barnes & Noble's list of "20 Favorite Indie Books of 2018" for its "hidden magic and ... historical western setting". It was called "a unique tale coupled with talented writing". [27]
After being told by her agent that she needed to write another series, Holmberg published her Numina trilogy: [24] Smoke and Summons, Myths and Mortals and Siege and Sacrifice. [28] She pulled together different ideas she'd had previously to write the story. All three books were published in 2019, just months apart. Holmberg has called Smoke and Summons "the best book [she's] ever written". [24] She has stated that "sometimes current pop culture trickles into [her] novels", and cited Downton Abbey and Stranger Things as examples. [8] Her focus in writing is to enable the reader to "feel something". [22] Holmberg has since added the Spellbreaker and Star Mother duologies to her published works and in 2024, released Boy of Chaotic Making, the third installment in the Whimbrel House series.
Holmberg was on the board of directors of Deep Magic, a quarterly science fiction and fantasy magazine. [29] She interviewed Brandon Sanderson for issue 50 of Deep Magic, published in June 2016. [30] She also hosts the podcast Your Mom Writes Books with author Caitlyn McFarland. [31]
Holmberg currently lives in Utah County, Utah. [24] In addition to the French horn, Holmberg plays the piano, flute, and ukulele. [6] She and her husband have two children. [3] [32] She often writes in the mornings and takes care of her children in the afternoons. [3] She enjoys reading fantasy novels by Brandon Sanderson, Juliet Marillier, Rosamund Hodge, Robert Jordan, and Martine Leavitt. [6]
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The Fifth Doll is a 2017 dark fantasy novel written by Charlie N. Holmberg and published by 47North. It follows a dairymaid named Matrona as she discovers a secret collection of Russian nested dolls that are linked to each inhabitant of her village. The novel was awarded the 2017 Whitney Award for Speculative Fiction.