Cynthia Bond (born 1961) is an American author and actress. Her debut novel Ruby spent six consecutive weeks on the New York Times Bestseller list, [1] and was chosen as a selection for Oprah's Book Club 2.0. [2] [3] She was born in Hempstead, Texas, and now lives in Los Angeles, California. [4] Bond won a journalism scholarship to Northwestern University she then studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City. [5] Bond was a PEN Rosenthal Fellow for Emerging Writers. [6] Bond is also on staff at the Paradigm Malibu Adolescent Treatment Center. [6]
Bond founded The Blackbird Collective in 2011 to, according to their website, "create a nurturing, supportive environment for writers" with an emphasis on "telling truths seldom shared, and using creativity to help others." [7] She taught writing to homeless and at-risk youth for over 15 years at the Los Angeles LGBT Center. [8] Some of the youth she worked with inspired episodes of sexual violence described in her debut novel, Ruby. [3] [8] Bond was inspired by some of her own family's history in writing Ruby, including the story of her aunt who was killed by men rumored to be part of the Ku Klux Klan. [9] She spent ten years working on the manuscript for Ruby. [10] Bond's mother and her agent initially encouraged her to break the 900-page book into a trilogy. Bond initially believed it stood better as a single volume, then eventually agreed that a trilogy would be the best evolution for the novel. [11]
Ruby was considered a "strong first novel" by Kirkus Reviews . [12] Booklist called Ruby a "stark, unflinching portrait of dark deeds and dark psyches." [13] Ruby is in part a "gritty story," but it also contains "mystical elements," according to Library Journal . [11] People Magazine wrote that Ruby was not an "easy read," but it had an important and "compelling" message. [14] Ann Friedman wrote in The Guardian that while the book has evoked comparisons with the work of Toni Morrison or Zora Neale Hurston, "It may be most apt to compare Bond to Gabriel García Márquez. Ruby is woven with magical realism....but Bond's luminous prose is grounded in a sure reality." [15]
Ruby was shortlisted for the 2016 Bailey's Women's Prize for Fiction. [16] [17]
She currently lives in Los Angeles with her daughter. [6] Bond identifies as bisexual. [8] She was once married to actor JB Blanc. [18]
Bond played the lead antagonist in the 1990 horror film Def by Temptation . She is a cousin of the late civil rights activist Julian Bond. [19]
Sonya Sones is an American poet and author. She has written seven young adult novels in verse and one novel in verse for adults. The American Library Association (ALA) has named her one of the most frequently challenged authors of the 21st century.
Deb Baker is an American mystery writer from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, who has created three mystery series.
Martine Leavitt is a Canadian American writer of young adult novels and a creative writing instructor.
Jennifer Lauck is an American fiction and non-fiction author, essayist, speaker and writing instructor. She is the author of four books including the New York Times best seller Blackbird. Her writing has been published in the U.S. and around the world and translated into several languages. Much of her popularity began when she appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show in 2000 and Winfrey held the book up to her audience saying, "This should have been a book of the month book. Read it now."
Amy Sarig King is an American writer of short fiction and young adult fiction. She is the recipient of the 2022 Margaret Edwards Award for her "significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature". She is also the only two-time recipient of the Michael L. Printz Award for Dig (2019) and as editor and contributor to The Collectors: Stories (2023).
Hannah Moskowitz is an American author of young adult and middle grade novels. As of 2021, Moskowitz has published fourteen novels, three short stories, and three non-fiction essays.
Ashley Little is a Canadian author of both adult and young adult literature.
Amie Kaufman is an Australian author. She has authored New York Times bestselling and internationally bestselling science fiction and fantasy for young adults. She is known for the Starbound Trilogy and Unearthed, which she co-authored with Meagan Spooner; for her series The Illuminae Files, co-authored with Jay Kristoff; and for her solo series, Elementals. Her books have been published in over 35 countries.
Stronger Than You Know is a 2014 young adult novel by Jolene Perry, published by Albert Whitman & Company. The story deals with the recovery of a fifteen-year-old girl, named Joy, who has experienced sexual and physical abuse and neglect.
You Will Know Me is a 2016 murder mystery by author Megan Abbott, published by Little, Brown and Company. The book follows the Knox family after a family friend is killed in a hit-and-run car crash before the daughter's gymnastics competition.
Menna van Praag is an English novelist and writing educator. Her magical realism novels include The House at the End of Hope Street (2013), The Dress Shop of Dreams (2014), and The Sisters Grimm trilogy.
Angie Thomas is an American young adult author, best known for writing The Hate U Give (2017). Her second young adult novel, On the Come Up, was released on February 25, 2019.
Andrea Nicole Livingstone, known as Nic Stone, is an American author of young adult fiction and middle grade fiction, best known for her debut novel Dear Martin and her middle grade debut, Clean Getaway. Her novels have been translated into six languages.
Rebecca Podos is an American author of young adult fiction and a literary agent, best known for her Lambda Literary Award-winning novel Like Water.
Renée Watson is an American teaching artist and author of children's books, best known for her award-winning and New York Times bestselling young adult novel Piecing Me Together, for which she received the John Newbery Honor, Coretta Scott King Author Award, and Bank Street Children's Book Committee's Josette Frank Award for fiction. Watson founded the nonprofit I, Too, Arts Collective to provide creative arts programs to the Harlem community. She is a member of The Wintergreen Women Writers Collective.
The Darkest Minds, written by American author Alexandra Bracken, is a young adult dystopian fiction series consisting of four novels and several novellas compiled in Through the Dark.
The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois is the 2021 debut novel by American poet Honorée Fanonne Jeffers. It explores the history of an African-American family in the American South, from the time before the American Civil War and slavery, through the Civil Rights Movement, to the present. Themes include family history, education, and racism, and the prose narrative is interspersed with poetic passages that provide insight into and detail of the protagonist's ancestors, who are people of African, Creek, and Scottish descent.
The Personal Librarian tells of the lifework of Belle da Costa Greene, the personal librarian to J. P. Morgan, as well as the first director of the Morgan Library & Museum. The book, co-written by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray, was published June 2021 by Berkley Books.
Bone Gap is a young adult novel by Laura Ruby, published on March 3, 2015, by Balzer + Bray. It won the 2016 Michael L. Printz Award.
Jen Ferguson is a Michif/Métis Canadian writer, activist, and academic of young adult fiction. She is best known for her Governor General's Award-winning and William C. Morris Award-nominated debut novel The Summer of Bitter and Sweet.