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Why Meg Rosoff's best-selling teen fiction is secretly so Jewish

April 14, 2011 11:03
Rosoff: journeying

ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

2 min read

This is an exciting time for teen-fiction writer Meg Rosoff. Her novel The Bride's Farewell has just been shortlisted for the 2011 CILIP Carnegie Medal. The manuscript for her next book, due for publication in August, is with her publishers and shooting for the film version of her prize-winning debut work, How I Live Now, is planned for the summer. She has also recently returned from a two-week author trip to China.

Rosoff first arrived on the scene in 2004 with How I Live Now. However its success was double edged. Publication coincided with a breast cancer diagnosis, the disease that had already killed one of her sisters a few years earlier.

The Boston-raised Rosoff confesses to a "very long search for identity" and consequently came relatively late to writing. But with it came an urgency "to be the best in a way that I never felt about anything else that I've done".

In 2007 she was awarded the prestigious CILIP Carnegie Medal for her second book, Just in Case, and recalls being "absolutely struck dumb. For me the Carnegie is the big one because it's the prize for literary fiction and I consider myself a literary writer." Since then she has been shortlisted for numerous other awards. To date she has six fiction novels and three picture books to her name.