Colorado author Melanie Crowder talks about her book Audacity, a historical fiction novel for young adults about Clara Lemlich, who faught for equal rights in factories. Her efforts led to the Uprising of the 20,000, the largest strike by women in the United States.
Category Archives: Authors
Meet the TRCA 2017 Contenders
Meet the authors of the ten books shortlisted for the 2017 Teen Reader’s Choice Award. This year’s contending novels include a hard-edged, ripped-from-the-headlines book dramatizing police brutality and race relations in America; a novel where sixteen-year-old gay Simon Spier prefers to save his drama for the school musical; and story of a teenager learning to live with clinical depression.
Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely authors of All American Boys

Jason Reynolds didn’t grow up expecting to be a writer: indeed, he was 17 before he read a book from start to finish. But it might be his atypical background that allows him to connect so powerfully with teenage readers.
Jason published several poetry collections before publishing his first novel, When I Was The Greatest, in 2014. In 2015, Reynolds published The Boy in the Black Suit, about a child grieving the loss of his mother and All American Boys, which he co-authored with Brendan Kiely.

Brendan Kiely is the co-author, with Jason Reynolds of the young adult novel, All American Boys, which won the Coretta Scott King Honor Award and the inaugural Walter Dean Myers Award for outstanding children’s literature in the young adult category. Brendan is also the author of the novel The Gospel of Winter, which has been published in ten languages.
Brendan grew up in the Boston area and attended The City College of New York where he earned an MFA in creative writing. He found his enthusiasm for young people working at a high school in New York City for ten years before becoming a full-time writer.These days, Brendan lives with his wife in Greenwich Village
Melanie Crowder author of Audacity

Melanie Crowder is the acclaimed author of several books for young readers. She writes YA historical fiction and Middle Grade novels of all sorts. Audacity,a novel in verse featuring the real-life Clara Lemlich, a courageous, tenacious warrior for workers’ rights in turn-of-the-20th-century New York City, is a 2015 National Jewish Book Award finalist.
Melanie teaches English to non-native-English-speaking students at her local school and holds an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She lives under the big blue Colorado sky with her wife, two kids, and one good dog.
E. K. Johnston author of Exit, Pursued by a Bear

Emily Kate Johnston, publishing as E.K. Johnston, is a Canadian author and forensic archaeologist.
Johnston, who started writing fan fiction in 2002, wrote her first manuscript seven years later. Her first book, The Story of Owen: Dragon Slayer of Trondheim, was published in 2014. Exit, Pursued By A Bear is her fifth novel.
Johnson’s favourite authors include Elizabeth Wein, JRR Tolkien, and Holly Black. She plays the alto saxophone and the clarinet, and currently lives in Stratford, Ontario.
Becky Albertalli author of Simon vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda

Becky Albertalli is a clinical psychologist who has had the privilege of conducting therapy with dozens of smart, weird, irresistible teenagers. She also served for seven years as co-leader of a support group for gender nonconforming children in Washington, DC. She now lives with her family in Atlanta. Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda is her first novel.
Frances Hardinge author of The Lie Tree

Frances Hardinge was born in Brighton, England, and dreamed of writing at the age of four. She studied English at Somerville College, University of Oxford. Her writing career started after she won a short story magazine competition. Her debut novel, Fly By Night, won the 2006 Branford Boase Award and was listed as one of the School Library Journal Best Books, while her 2015 novel The Lie Tree won the 2015 Costa Book Award, the first children’s book to do so since Philip Pullman’s The Amber Spyglass in 2001.
Hardinge is often seen wearing a black hat and enjoys dressing in old-fashioned clothing.
Francisco X. Stork author of The Memory of Light

Francisco Xavier Arguelles was born in 1953 in Monterrey, Mexico and moved to El Paso, Texas at the age of nine. At Spring Hill College, Francisco majored in English Literature and Philosophy and received the college’s creative writing award. After college he attended graduate school at Harvard University and Columbia Law School. Francisco is married to Jill Syverson-Stork. He is the father of Nicholas and Anna and the grandfather of Charlotte.
He lives near Boston with his wife.
Patrick Ness author of The Rest of Us Just Live Here

Patrick Ness was born in Virginia, then moved to Hawaii where he lived until he was six. He then spent the next several years in Washington state, before moving to study English Literature at the University of Southern California. Patrick moved to the United Kingdom in 1999, where I’ve lived (mostly in London) ever since.
Ness is the author of several novels, including The Knife of Never Letting Go, A Monster Calls and The Rest of Us Just Live Here.
Stephanie Oakes author of The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly

Stephanie Oakes lives in Spokane, Washington, and works as a library media teacher in a combined middle and elementary school. She has an MFA in poetry from Eastern Washington University. Her first novel, The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly, was a Morris Award finalist.
You can follow Stephanie on Facebook and twitter.
Susin Nielsen author of We Are All Made of Molecules

Susin Nielsen got her start writing a spec script for the popular television series Degrassi Junior High. She went on to pen sixteen episodes of the hit show and four of the Degrassi books. She has written for many TV series, including Heartland. Her first novel, Word Nerd, was a finalist for the TD Canadian Children’s Literature. Her next two novels, Dear George Clooney, Please Marry My Mom and The Reluctant Journal of Henry K. Larsen, won numerous awards.
Susin lives in Vancouver with her family and two destructive, naughty cats. When not writing, she loves to road bike, be in the great outdoors, read and travel.
Ryan Graudin author of Wolf by Wolf

Ryan Graudin was born and raised in Charleston, South Carolina. With a severe case of wanderlust, she has travelled to South Korea, New Zealand, Peru and Kenya. When she’s not traveling, she’s busy writing and spending time with her husband and wolf dog.
Accolades: “We Should Hang Out Sometime: Embarrassingly, a true story”

- An Amazon.ca Best Books of December 2014 for Children and Teens Selection
- A YALSA 2015 Teens Top Ten Nominee
- 2015 Goodreads Choice Awards Nominee
Accolades: “The Thing About Jellyfish”

- National Book Award: Young People’s Literature 2015 finalist
- A Booklist Top Ten First Novel of 2015
- A New York Times Bestseller
- Amazon.com Editor’s Pick: Fall Favorites, 2015, and 20 Best Children’s Books of 2015
- Kirkus, starred review
- School Library Journal, starred review
- Publisher’s Weekly, starred review
- Booklist, starred review
- Shelf Awareness, starred review
- Booklist Top Ten Books for Youth 2015
- Book Expo America Middle Grade Editors’ Buzz selection (2015)
- 100 Notable Titles for Reading and Sharing (Children’s Books) — New York Public Library
- Great Reads of 2015 (Staff Picks, Book Club Ideas, Kids’ Books, Realistic Fiction) — NPR
- #4 of Top 10 YA & Children’s Books — TIME
- Best of 2015 — School Library Journal
- Best of 2015 — Publisher’s Weekly
- Bestseller, Notable Book — New York Times
- Bestseller — IndieBound
- #1 on IndieNext Kids’ top ten list, fall 2015
- Selected for 2015 BEA’s Editors’ Buzz Panel, and named a BEA “Early Favorite for Young Readers,”
- Listed as “hot, new YA” selection in Entertainment Weekly
- Junior Library Guild, fall 2015 selection
- Literary Hub, The Great Booksellers Fall Preview selection
Accolades: “Nimona”

- Kirkus, starred review
- School Library Journal, starred review
- Publishers Weekly, starred review
- BCCB, starred review
- NPR Best Book
- National Book Award: Young People’s Literature 2015 finalist
- New York Times Bestseller
- New York Times Notable Book
- New York Public Library Best Book
- 2015 Cybils Awards Nominee
- Indie Next Pick Summer 2015 Top Ten
- Came second in the Goodreads 2015 Choice Awards for Best Graphic Novel. It was beaten by the fourth book in the Saga series.
- Library Journal’s Best Books 2015: Graphic Novels
- Kirkus Best Book
- School Library Journal Best Book
- Publishers Weekly Best Book
- Chicago Public Library Best Book
Accolades: “The Impossible Knife of Memory”

- New York Times bestseller
- 2014 National Book Award longlist
- A Publishers Weekly Best Young Adult Book of 2014
- A School Library Journal Best Young Adult Book of 2014
- YALSA 2015 Best Fiction for Young Adults
- Booklist, starred review
- BCCB, starred review
- School Library Journal, starred review
- Shelf Awareness, starred review
- VOYA, starred review
- Publishers Weekly, starred review
- Library Media Connection, starred review
- YALSA 2015 Best Fiction for YA
- Amazon Best Books of the Year 2014: Teen & Young Adult
- NYPL’s Best Book of the Year for Teens
- 2014 Goodreads Choice Awards
- Capitol Choices 2015
- Amazon.com Best Books of the Year 2014
Accolades: “A Mad, Wicked Folly”

- School Library Journal, starred review
- Booklist, starred review
- Library Media Connections, starred review
- Selected for the American Library Association’s 2015 Amelia Bloomer Project List
- Selected for the Young Adult Library Services Association’s 2015 Best Fiction for Young Adults List
- Selected for Booklist’s Top Ten Historical Fiction for Youth
- Selected for Booklist’s Top Ten Romance Fiction for Youth
- Selected for Booklist’s Top Ten First Novels for Youth
- Indigo Top Ten Reads of 2014
Accolades: “Greenglass House”

- A National Book Award long list 2014
- Booklist, starred review
- Kirkus, starred review
- Winner of the Edgar Award for Best Juvenile Mystery 2015
- Nebula/Andre Norton Award Nominee
- New York Times Bestseller
Accolades: “Everything Everything”

- #1 New York Times Bestselling debut
- Book Expo America Young Adult Buzz Panel selection (2015)
- Indies Introduce Debut selection
- Indie Next Pick Autumn 2015 Top Ten
- Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review
- A School Library Journal Best Book of 2015
- School Library Journal, Starred Review
- Editors’ Favorite Big Fall Books (2015) in YA (list on Amazon)
- 2015 Cybils Awards Nominee
- Amazon Best Young Adult Books of 2015
- A Miami Herald 2015 Best Book for Children
Accolades: “The Crossover”

- Kirkus, starred review
- School Library Journal, starred review
- Publisher’s Weekly, starred review
- Bulletin of the Centre for Children’s Books, starred review
- 2015 Newbery Medal Winner
- 2015 Coretta Scott King Honor Award Winner
- YALSA 2015 Best Fiction for YA
- A Junior Library Guild Selection
- VOYA Perfect Ten
- 2014 Goodreads Choice Awards
- Best Multicultural Book of 2014 (one of 18 books)