Jodi Picoult


Jodi Lynn Picoult (IPA pronunciation: [1]) (born 1966) is an American author. In 2003, she was awarded the New England Bookseller Award for fiction.

Picoult was born and raised in Nesconset on Long Island, New York. Her first story, at age 5 was "The Lobster Which Misunderstood." She studied writing at Princeton University and had two short stories published by Seventeen magazine while still in college. Immediately after graduation, she took on a series of miscellaneous jobs, from editing at a textbook publishing company to teaching eighth grade English classes. Soon after, she attended Harvard University to earn her master's degree in education.

Picoult's novels tend to center around human emotion and complex human relationships. Most of her books' storylines incorporate a criminal or civil case which lasts throughout the book's narrative, concluding shortly before the book ends. In books that don't follow this pattern, an attorney character is still often included.

She became the writer of DC Comics' Wonder Woman (vol. 3) series following the departure of fellow writer Allan Heinberg. Her first issue (#6) was released on March 28, 2007, and her last will be #10.

She is married to Tim Van Leer,[2] whom she met while in college. They, their three children, Sammy, Kyle, and Jake, and a handful of pets, live in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Nineteen Minutes, Picoult's latest novel about the aftermath of a school shooting in a small town, has become her first book to debut on #1 on the New York Times Best Seller list.[3]

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