Park Slope Authors & Illustrators Library

Hi & welcome to the Park Slope Authors & Illustrators Library! Sourcing, assigning themes, and adding author bios has taken me 40+ hours — and I’m not done yet! If you’d like to support this project and the work that has gone into it so far, there are a couple things you can do: (1) become a paid subscriber — pretty please! or (2) buy me a coffee. If neither of these options is right for you, you can recommend or share my newsletter. Any of these would be greatly appreciated! Thank you so much for being here!


The Park Slope Authors & Illustrators Library is a list of all the authors and illustrators who call(ed) Park Slope home, with links to their work. While this is a Park Slope-specific library, you will see some authors/illustrators listed here who don’t currently live in Park Slope (e.g. Mo Willems). I’ve included these people and their work because they’ve had an impact on the community, and the library just wouldn’t feel complete without them. Below the “shelves” is a bonus section featuring books that take place in Park Slope.

This library isn’t comprehensive yet — but that’s my goal! And I need your help to get there, so please share this with your network and leave a comment on this post with any new information.


Housekeeping

  1. The library will be updated as new information is brought to my attention, either through direct contact or as comments on this post, so please get in touch with me if you see something that needs to be edited or if you know an author/illustrator to add to the shelves.

  2. If you are not happy with the representation of your work, let me know by emailing kelleymacdonald19@gmail.com, and I’ll update your info.

  3. Below each author’s name is a list of their work, and each book is linked to where you can buy it. I linked to local, independent bookstores whenever possible. If a book wasn’t available at a local bookstore, I linked to Amazon. These Amazon links are affiliate links, which means I may earn a (very) small commission if you click one of these links and buy the book. This doesn't affect cost on your end in any way, but it does support me, my family, and this project. Thank you so much for your support!

  4. Also, many of these books can be checked out from the Brooklyn Public Library. Use the search function to look up a title.

Searchable Themes (Key Words)

Below each author’s name is a brief description of their work and life, links to their books, and the themes they explore in their work. There are currently 37 themes, and I’ll add new ones as needed. Using these theme words, you can navigate the themes you’re interested in; you can also navigate using an author’s first and/or last name.

To search on a Mac, press and hold “command” and “f” on your keyboard; to search on a PC/Windows machine, press and hold “ctrl” and '“f” on your keyboard.

Here’s the list of the key themes you can search across the shelves:

animals, art, children's book, comedy, cookbook, culture, fantasy, fiction, finance, food, graphic novel, health, history, horror, identity, loss/grief, memoir, mental health, music, mystery, nature, nonfiction, parenthood, poetry, politics, race, relationships, religion, romance, science, science fiction, sex, sexuality, sports, thriller, travel, writing

Want to support this work? Please consider becoming a paid subscriber. Thank you so much!


A

Alko, Selina

The Case for Loving: The Fight for Interracial Marriage, B is for Brooklyn, Can I Touch Your Hair? Poems of Race, Mistakes, and Friendship, Daddy Christmas & Hanukkah Mama, Every-Day Dress-Up, I is for Immigrants, I'm Your Peanut Butter Big Brother, Joni: The Lyrical Life of Joni Mitchell, My Subway Ride (illustrator), My Taxi Ride (illustrator), One Golden Rule at School, Shaking Things Up: 14 Young Women Who Changed the World (illustrator), Sharing Shalom, Stars of the Night, The Talk: Conversations about Race, Love & Truth (contributor), Two Friends, and Why Am I Me?

Selina Alko is an award-winning author-illustrator from Vancouver, British Columbia who has lived in Brooklyn for over 20 years. Her awards include the SILVER Medal - Society of Illustrators, Bank Street Books Best Children's Book of the Year, New York Public Library Best Books for Kids, Mills Tannenbaum Award for Excellence in Children's Literacy, and many others.

Key themes: children's book, fiction, identity, parenthood, relationships, and religion.

Alperin, Jody Drezner

All American Boys (playscript)

Jody Drezner Alperin is an author and the Artistic Director of Off The Page, an arts education and theatre company. She graduated from Northwestern University, where she studied theatre, and has performed on stages all over the United States. Jody, along with her co-author, Vicky Finney Crouch, are recipients of multiple grants from the Brooklyn Arts Council, Brooklyn Community Foundation, Chipstone Foundation shatterCABINET, and are 2019-20 New Victory LabWorks Artists.

Key themes: identity, race, and relationships.

Auster, Paul

The New York Trilogy (City of Glass, Ghosts, The Locked Room), Moon Palace, Baumgartner, 4 3 2 1, The Brooklyn Follies, The Music of Chance, The Book of Illusions, Invisible, Sunset Park, Winter Journal, The Invention of Solitude, The Red Notebook, Report from the Interior, Talking to Strangers: Selected Essays, Prefaces, and Other Writings, 1967–2017, Mr. Vertigo, Timbuktu, Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane, Leviathan, White Spaces: Selected Poems and Early Prose, Bloodbath Nation, Oracle Night, The Collected Writings of Joe Brainard: A Library of America Special Publication, Groundwork: Autobiographical Writings, 1979–2012, A Life in Words: In Conversation with I. B. Siegumfeldt, The Notebooks of Joseph Joubert, In the Country of Last Things, Three FilmsSmoke, Blue in the Face, and Lulu on the Bridge, Travels in the Scriptorium, Man in the Dark, Hand to Mouth, Hunger, Joan Mitchell, I Thought My Father Was GodAnd Other True Tales from NPR's National Story Project, Here and Now: Letters, 2008–2011, The Kinds of Poetry I Want: Essays & Comedies, A Tomb for Anatole, Long Live King Kobe: Following the Murder of Tyler Kobe Nichols, Squeeze Play (written under pseudonym Paul Benjamin)

Paul Auster (1947-2024) was a writer, novelist, memoirist, poet, and filmmaker. Many of his novels were New York Times bestsellers, and in 2006, he was awarded the Prince of Asturias Prize for Literature and inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters. His work has been translated into more than 40 languages. Many of Paul’s more notable works are listed above, and you can explore his other work here.

Key themes: culture, fiction, identity, loss/grief, mental health, mystery, nonfiction, poetry, relationships, romance, travel, and writing.

Azzoni, Elena

A Year Straight: Confessions of a Boy-Crazy Lesbian Beauty Queen

Elena Azzoni is a feminist author and essayist whose work has appeared in The Huffington Post, Elle, make/shift magazine, mom365.com, and The Stephanie Miller Show. She received her MFA from New College of California where she studied under renowned activist poet Judy Grahn, and her BA in Social Thought and Political Economy & Women’s Studies from UMASS, Amherst.

Key themes: comedy, identity, memoir, nonfiction, relationships, romance, sex, and sexuality.

B

Bader, Bonnie

Who Was Martin Luther King, Jr.?, What Is the World Cup?, My Little Golden Book About Sharks, My Little Golden Book About Whales, My Little Golden Book About Bugs, My Little Golden Book About Martin Luther King, Jr., Slow, Slow Sloths, The Startup Squad, Hanukkah: The Festival of Lights, Hedge-Hedgey-Hedgehogs, Who Was Alexander Graham Bell?, Go to Bed, Blue, Curious About Ice Cream, Who Was Jacqueline Kennedy?, Fly, Butterfly, The March on Washington, 100 Monsters in My School,

Bonnie Bader has written over 50 children’s books including six books in the Who Was? Series and many picture books. She serves on the Board of Advisors for the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, and she also teaches classes to published and pre-published authors and illustrators. Several of Bonnie’s books are listed above, and you can find more of her work on her site.

Key themes: art, children’s book, fiction, food, history, nature, nonfiction, politics, relationships, and religion.

Badner, Lisa

Fruitcake

Lisa Badner is a poet and writer. Her work has appeared in online and print publications including PANK, Mudlark, The Satirst, New World Writing, #TheSideshow, and the New Ohio Review. Her poem, “This is Not an Obituary” received a pushcart Special Mention.

Key themes: poetry and relationships.

Barrett, Judi

Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, An Excessive Alphabet, Look What I See, Lots More Animals Should Definitely Not Wear ClothingThe Marshmallow Incident, Never Take a Shark to the Dentist: (and Other Things Not to Do), Old MacDonald Had an Apartment House, Pickles to PittsburghSanta from Cincinnati, Which Witch is Which?

Judi Barrett is a bestselling author of many children’s books, and she teaches art to kindergarten students in Park Slope. Her well-known book Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs was adapted into an animated film in 2009 and a sequel in 2013. Several of Judi’s books are listed above, and you can find more of her work here.

Key themes: animals, children’s book, fantasy, fiction, food, identity, relationships, and science.

Bartz, Andrea

The Spare Room, We Were Never Here, The Herd, The Lost Night

Andrea Bartz is a New York Times bestselling author and journalist whose work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Travel + Leisure, Marie Claire, Vogue, Cosmopolitan, Women’s Health, USA Today, Elle, and many other outlets. Her third novel, We Were Never Here, was a Reese’s Book Club pick and is in development at Netflix.

Key themes: thriller, relationships, and romance.

Beale, Christian

Halos to Heaven

Christian Beale is a musician and author. Halos to Heaven is a collection of Christian’s writing and 35mm photographs that were taken over a six-year period while touring with the bands This Is Hell, Blistered, Extinction A.D., Cro-Mags, Will to Die, and Iron Chic.

Key themes: art, music, nonfiction, and relationships.

Bellamy, Lisa

The Northway

Lisa Bellamy is a poet and author of the chapbook Nectar, which won The Aurorean chapbook prize. Her poems and prose have appeared in several publications, including Triquarterly, Massachusetts Review, and New Ohio Review. She has received a Pushcart Prize Special Mention, the Fugue Poetry Prize, and honorable mention in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror.

Key themes: poetry and relationships.

Bernstein, Richard

The Coming Conflict with China, China 1945: Mao's Revolution and America's Fateful Choice, Dictatorship Of Virtue: Multiculturalism and the Battle for America's Future, The East, the West, and Sex: A History, From the Center of the Earth: The Search for the Truth about China, Fragile Glory: A Portrait of France and the French, A Girl Named Faithful Plum: The True Story of a Dancer from China and How She Achieved Her Dream, Only in America: Al Jolson and The Jazz Singer (releases October 8, 2024), Out of the Blue: The Story of September 11, 2001, from Jihad to Ground Zero, Ultimate Journey: Retracing the Path of an Ancient Buddhist Monk Who Crossed Asia in Search of Enlightenment

Richard Bernstein is a renowned journalist, culture writer, and author of 10 books. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, and Vox. He was a book critic at The New York Times and a foreign correspondent for both Time magazine and The New York Times in Europe and Asia. Two of his books were named "Notable Books of the Year" by The New York Times. Read Richard’s Park Slope Times interview.

Key themes: culture, history, nonfiction, politics, sex, and travel.

Blauner, Peter

Casino MoonThe IntruderThe Last Good DayMan of the Hour, Picture in the Sand, Proving Ground, Slipping Into Darkness, Slow Motion Riot, Sunrise Highway

Peter Blauner is a journalist, television producer, and author of nine books. His novel Slow Motion Riot received the Edgar Award for Best First Novel from the Mystery Writers of America and was named an International Book of the Year by The Times Literary Supplement. He also wrote for New York magazine, covering crime, politics, and culture. Peter was the sole author of a full-length issue of the magazine titled "The Voices of New York."

Key themes: fiction, history, mystery, nonfiction, and thriller.

Bray, Libba

Before The Devil Breaks You, Dear Willie Rudd, The Diviners, Beauty Queens, A Great and Terrible Beauty, Going Bovine, Liar of Dreams, The King of Crows, Liar of Dreams, Miss Tizzy, Rebel Angels, The Sweet Far Thing, Sweet Sixteen #3: Kari, Under the Same Stars (releases February 11, 2025), Vacation from Hell

Libba Bray is a New York Times bestselling author of young adult novels. She’s the recipient of numerous literary awards, including the Michael L. Printz Award New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age, Publishers Weekly Best Children's Book of the Year, and L.A. Times Book Prize finalist.

Key themes: comedy, fantasy, fiction, history, horror, identity, and relationships.

Brody, Jane

Jane Brody's Allergy Fighter, Jane Brody's Cold and Flu Fighter, Jane Brody's Good Food Gourmet, Jane Brody's Good Seafood Book, Jane Brody's Guide to the Great Beyond: A Practical Primer for Preparing for the End of Life, Jane Brody's Nutrition Book, Jane Brody's Good Food Book, The New York Times Book of Health: How to Feel Fitter, Eat Better, and Live Longer, The New York Times Book of Women's Health : The Latest on Feeling Fit, Eating Right, and Staying Well, The New York Times Guide to Alternative Health, You Can Fight Cancer and Win,

Jane Brody is a bestselling author, and she was the Personal Health columnist for The New York Times from 1976 to 2022. She won a Penney-Missouri Award for Consumer Writing for her column. Jane’s widely read and quoted column, which was syndicated nationwide, earned her the title of “High Priestess of Health” from Time magazine. Several of Jane’s books are listed above, and you can find more of her work here.

Key themes: cookbook, health, nonfiction, and science.

Burandt, Jeffrey

Ghost Planet, Gonad the Ballbarian, Iterations of the Apocalypse, Odd Schnozz and the Odd Squad, Rainbow Boy

Jeffrey Burandt is an author and performer who was the front man for sci-fi, rock band Americans UK. His writing has appeared in many publications, including DC Entertainment, Details Magazine, Devil’s Due Comics, Heavy Metal Magazine, IDW Publishing, Image Comics, Oni Press, Overflow Magazine, and Scout Comics. Jeffery was also a founding editor of the digital salon TripCity.

Key themes: fantasy, fiction, graphic novel, horror, relationships, science fiction, and thriller.

C

Caballero, Ana María

Mammal: Sacrifice Is Not a Virtue, A Petit Mal, Tryst, mid-life, The Wish, Entre domingo y domingo, Reverse Commute

Ana María Caballero is a first-generation Colombian-American poet and artist. She’s received numerous literary awards and is the first living poet to sell a poem to Sotheby’s.

Key themes: parenthood, poetry, and relationships.

Champion, Lindsay

Someday, Somewhere

Lindsay Champion is a writer and editor whose work has appeared in McSweeney’s, PureWow, Taste of Home, Well + Good, and Insider. Her first YA novel Someday, Somewhere was published in 2018.

Key themes: fiction, mental health, relationships, and romance.

Crews, Nina

Below, Extraordinary Magic: The Storytelling Life of Virginia Hamilton, A Girl Like Me (illustrator), I'm Not Small, Jack and the Beanstalk, The Neighborhood Sing-Along, The Neighborhood Mother Goose, Not Done Yet: Shirley Chisholm's Fight for Change (illustrator), One Hot Summer Day, Seeing into Tomorrow: Haiku by Richard Wright (illustrator),

Nina Crews is an award-winning children’s book author and illustrator. She won the 2023 New York State Library Association's Empire State Award, and her work has also been recognized by the ALA Notable Committee, the Black Caucus of the ALA, The Horn Book, Junior Library Guild, New York Public Library, Chicago Public Library, and others. Many of her signature illustrations are inspired by the textures, architecture, and nature of Park Slope. Read Nina’s Park Slope Times interview.

Key themes: children’s book, culture, fiction, history, identity, music, nature, nonfiction, poetry, and science.

D

DeGloma, Thomas

Anonymous: The Performance of Hidden Identities, Seeing the Light: The Social Logic of Personal Discovery

Thomas DeGloma is an author and associate professor of sociology at Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Key themes: nonfiction, science, and identity.

E

Eban, Katherine

Bottle of Lies: The Inside Story of the Generic Drug Boom, Dangerous Doses: a True Story of Cops, Counterfeiters and the Contamination of America’s Drug Supply

Katherine Eban is an award-winning investigative journalist, New York Times bestselling author, Vanity Fair special correspondent, and Andrew Carnegie fellow. Her Vanity Fair article “Rorschach and Awe,” which first identified the architects of the CIA’s torture methods used on 9/11 detainees, inspired the 2019 film “The Report.” Her work has won numerous awards, including: Best Book of the Year: New York Public Library; the National Association of Science Writers science in society book award; the Overseas Press Club of America’s Cornelius Ryan award for best non-fiction book on international affairs; Investigative Reporters & Editors best book; and the American Society of Journalists and Authors general non-fiction book award.

Key themes: health, nonfiction, and science.

Elkins, Kimberly

What is Visible

Kimberly Elkins is a writer, screenwriter, and author. Her work has appeared in various publications, including The Atlantic, The New York Times, Best New American Voices, The Chicago Tribune, The Los Angeles Review of Books, and Glamour. She’s had three plays produced in New York and won a New York Moth Slam.

Key themes: fiction and history.

F

Fabré, Cin

Wolf Hustle: A Black Woman on Wall Street

Cin Fabré is an author and producer. She worked at brokerage firm VTR Capital—an offshoot of Stratton Oakmont, the company where the Wolf of Wall Street, Jordan Belfort, had reigned—and eventually became a high-earning broker at a top firm. In 2023, Apple won the rights to adapt Cin’s memoir, Wolf Hustle, as a feature.

Key themes: finance, memoir, nonfiction, and race.

Federman, Mark

Russ & Daughters: Reflections and Recipes from the House That Herring Built

Mark Russ Federman, grandson of founder Joel Russ, owned Russ & Daughters from 1978, when he took over ownership from his parents, to 2009, when he turned it over to the fourth generation, his daughter and nephew. He tells the story of an immigrant family’s journey from a pushcart in 1907 to the NYC institution it is today.

Key themes: food, history, memoir, and travel.

Foer, Jonathan Safran

Eating Animals, Everything Is Illuminated, Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close, Here I Am, Tree of Codes, We Are the Weather: Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast,

Jonathan Safran Foer is a New York Times bestselling author of fiction and nonfiction. His books have won numerous awards, including the National Jewish Book Award and a Guardian First Book Award. His novels Everything Is Illuminated and Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close have been adapted into films.

Key themes: fiction, food, history, nonfiction, relationships, and science.

Fox, Paula

Borrowed Finery, The Coldest Winter: A Stringer in Liberated Europe, Desperate Characters, The God of Nightmares, A Likely Place, Maurice's Room, A Place Apart, Poor George, A Portrait of Ivan, Monkey Island, The Moonlight Man, News from the World: Stories and Essays, One-Eyed Cat, A Servant's Tale, The Slave Dancer, The Stone-Faced Boy, The Western Coast, Western Wind, The Widow's Children, The Village by the Sea

Paula Fox (1923-2017) was an author of novels for adults and children, and she wrote two memoirs. Her work has received many awards, including the Newbery Medal, Hans Christian Andersen Medal, and Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis. Several of Paula’s books are listed above, and you can find more of her work here.

Key themes: animals, children’s book, fiction, history, memoir, relationships, and travel.

Frux, Gregory

Brooklyn Plein Air: Art of Gregory Frux, Climbing Death Valley Peaks, Three Artists In the Andes: The Ghosts of Licancabur - A True Story, Utah Sketch Journal: On the Way to Unnamed Places

Gregory Frux is an author and adventure artist who is known for his paintings of both urban and wilderness subjects. He has climbed the eleven highest peaks in Death Valley over a thirteen year period, and his newest book, Climbing Death Valley Peaks, describes how to safely travel in Death Valley's remote and dangerous environments.

Key themes: art, nonfiction, and travel.

G

George, Michael

Life at the Zoo

Michael George is a photographer and writer. His work has been published by National Geographic, The New York Times, Teen Vogue, and others.

Key themes: animals and children’s book.

Gigante-Brown, Catherine

Brooklyn Roses, The Bells of Brooklyn, Cry of Silence, The El, Paul and Carol Go to Guatemala, Better than Sisters, Different Drummer

Catherine Gigante-Brown is a writer of fiction, nonfiction and poetry. Her works have appeared in a variety of publications including Ravishly, Industry, Essence, and Time Out New York, as well as in fiction anthologies. A freelance writer of fiction, nonfiction, poetry and other media, Catherine’s works have appeared in a variety of publications. Her essay “Autumn of 9/11” was awarded first prize in The Brooklyn Public Library’s “My Brooklyn” contest.

Key themes: fiction, music, nonfiction, relationships, romance, and science fiction.

Guskin, Sharon

The Forgetting Time

Sharon Guskin is an author writer, and producer. She has worked as a writer and producer of award-winning documentary films, including Stolen and On Meditation. She’s been a fellow at Yaddo, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Blue Mountain Center, and Ragdale, and has degrees from Yale University and the Columbia University School of the Arts.

Key themes: mental health, mystery, and relationships.

H

Hamill, Pete

The Christmas Kid And Other Brooklyn Stories, The Deadly Piece, Diego Rivera, Dirty Laundry, A Drinking Life, Downtown: My Manhattan, Flesh and Blood, Forever, The Gift, The Guns of Heaven, A Killing for Christ, Loving Women, Snow in August, The Subway Series Reader: Mets - Yankees 2000, North River, Tabloid City, They Are Us: A Plea for Common Sense about Immigration, Tokyo Sketches: Short Stories, Why Sinatra Matters

Pete Hamill (1935-2020) was a celebrated journalist, novelist, essayist, and editor. He was a columnist for the New York Post, New York Daily News, New York Newsday, Village Voice, New York magazine, and Esquire, and he served as editor-in-chief of the Post and the Daily News. During his career as a New York City journalist, he was described as "the author of columns that sought to capture the particular flavors of New York City's politics and sports and the particular pathos of its crime." Pete received numerous awards throughout his career, including the Ernie Pyle Lifetime Achievement Award, Louis Auchincloss Prize, and George Polk Career Award. He also appeared on several television and film projects. Pete was born in Park Slope, and a stretch of Seventh Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street is named "Pete Hamill Way." Several of Pete’s books are listed above, and you can find more of his work here.

Key themes: culture, fiction, memoir, nonfiction, politics, relationships, sports, thriller, and travel.

Hanlon, Abby

Chester van Chime Who Forgot How to Rhyme (illustrator), Dory Fantasmagory, Dory Fantasmagory: Can't Live Without You, Dory Fantasmagory: Dory Dory Black Sheep, Dory Fantasmagory: Head in the Clouds, Dory Fantasmagory: The Real True Friend, Dory Fantasmagory: Tiny Tough, Ralph Tells a Story

Abby Hanlon is an author, illustrator, and former teacher in the New York City public school system. Her work has received several awards, including: a 2015 Cybil award; Best Book of the Year by Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and Parent's Magazine; a Golden Kite Honor for Fiction; and an American Library Association Notable Book. Her books have been translated in 24 languages.

Key themes: children's book, fantasy, fiction, and relationships.

Harris, Lizzie

Stop Wanting

Lizzie Harris is a poet whose writing has appeared in many publications, including The New Yorker, VICE, Cordite Review, PANK, The Offing, Painted Bride Quarterly, and DIAGRAM. Her debut collection, Stop Wanting, came out in 2014, and she’s currently writing her second collection about the tension between capitalism and motherhood, intimacy and virtual existence. Read Lizzie’s Park Slope Times interview.

Key themes: mental health, parenthood, poetry, and relationships.

Harris, Zakiya

The Other Black Girl

Zakiya Harris is a writer and New York Times bestselling author. Her debut novel The Other Black Girl was adapted into a Hulu Original Series. Zakiya’s other writing can be found in Esquire, Cosmopolitan, Guernica, the Rumpus, and the New York Times.

Key themes: race and relationships.

Harrison, Colin

Afterburn, Bodies Electric, Break and Enter, The Finder, Grange Villa Football Club: The History, The Havana Room, Manhattan Nocturne, Risk, You Belong to Me

Colin Harrison is Vice President and Editor-in-Chief at Scribner and a novelist whose books have been selected as Notable Books by The New York Times Book Review. His 1993 novel Bodies Electric has scenes in Park Slope and Sunset Park. Colin’s book Manhattan Nocturne was adapted into a film titled Manhattan Night.

Key themes: fiction, history, mystery, relationships, sex, sports, and thriller.

Harrison, Kathryn

Envy, The Seal Wife, The Binding Chair, Poison, Exposure, Thicker Than Water, Enchantments: A novel of Rasputin’s Daughter and the Romanovs, The Kiss, The Mother Knot, The Road to Santiago, Saint Therese of Lisieux, Seeking Rapture, On Sunset, While They Slept

Kathryn Harrison is an author and essayist. Her novel Enchantments: A Novel of Rasputin's Daughter and the Romanovs was a New York Times Notable Book. Her essays have appeared in numerous publications, including The New Yorker, Harper’s Magazine, Vogue, O Magazine, and Salon. She reviews regularly for The New York Times Book Review.

Key themes: fiction, memoir, relationships, and travel.

Hedges, Jason

The Seasonal Cocktail: A Guide to Creative Cocktail Making

Jason Hedges is an author and beverage director with more than 15 years of experience developing and running New York’s finest Michelin-rated beverage programs. He is also the co-founder of Bar IQ, a full service beverage consulting firm. Read Jason’s Park Slope Times interview.

Key themes: cookbook and food.

Hodgman, John

The Areas of My Expertise, Medallion Status: True Stories from Secret Rooms, More Information Than You Require, That Is All, Vacationland: True Stories from Painful Beaches

John Hodgman is a New York Times bestselling author, writer, comedian, and actor. After an appearance to promote his books on The Daily Show, he was invited to return as a contributor, serving as the show’s “Resident Expert” and “Deranged Millionaire.” He has performed comedy for the president of the United States, at a TED conference, and in a crypt in Green-Wood Cemetery. He’s also the co-creator, along with David Rees, of Dicktown on FX/Hulu, and is the host of the popular Judge John Hodgman podcast, in which he settles serious disputes between real people, such as “Is a hot dog a sandwich?” John contributes a weekly column under the same name for The New York Times Magazine.

Key themes: identity, memoir, and travel.

Hoffman, Maggie

Batch Cocktails: Make-Ahead Pitcher Drinks for Every Occassion, The One-Bottle Cocktail

Maggie Hoffman is an author, freelance editor, and digital strategist. Her writing has appeared in several publications, including Food & Wine, Sunset, Rachael Ray Every Day, Wine Enthusiast, and Saveur. She also writes the newsletter What to Drink. Maggie founded the drinks section of Serious Eats in 2011, and served as the managing editor for the James Beard award-winning cooking site. The New York Times named Maggie’s cocktail book Batch Cocktails: Make-Ahead Pitcher Drinks for Every Occassion one of the “latest and greatest books to keep you company as temperatures climb.”

Key themes: cookbook and food.

Holmes, Kathryn

David Dixon's Day as a Dachshund, The Distance Between Lost and Found, How It Feels to Fly, Madison Morris Is NOT a Mouse!, Mia Madison, CEO, The Pop-Up Shop Predicament (releases October 15, 2024, Tally Tuttle Turns into a Turtle, The Thirteenth Circle

Kathryn Holmes is an author of middle-grade and young adult novels. Her debut middle-grade novel The Thirteenth Circle is a STEM-focused sci-fi mystery novel. She also works as a freelance dance journalist, and her freelance writing has appeared in several publications, including Dance Magazine, Dance Spirit, Pointe, and Dance Teacher.

Key themes: children's book, fiction, mystery, nature, relationships, science, and science fiction.

Hustvedt, Siri

The Blazing World, The Blindfold, Embodied Visions: What Does it Mean to Look at a Work of Art?, The Enchantment of Lily Dahl, Living, Thinking, Looking, Memories of the Future, Mothers, Fathers and Others, Mysteries of the Rectangle, A Plea for Eros, Reading to You, The Shaking Woman or A History of My Nerves, The Sorrows of an American, The Summer Without Men, What I Loved, A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women: Essays on Art, Sex, and the Mind

Siri Hustvedt is a bestselling novelist and essayist. She’s released a book of poetry, four collections of essays, and several works of fiction and non-fiction. She’s received numerous awards, including the Los Angeles Book Prize for fiction, Kirkus Prize (finalist), Princess of Asturias award for literature, and the Prix des libraires du Quebec. In 2012, she was awarded the International Gabarron Prize for Thought and Humanities. She has a PhD in English from Columbia University and is a lecturer in psychiatry at Weil Cornell Medical College in New York. Her work has been translated into over 30 languages.

Key themes: art, fiction, health, mental health, nonfiction, parenthood, poetry, relationships, romance, sex, and science.

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K

Kahaney, Amelia

All the Best Liars, The Brokenhearted, The Invisible

Amelia Kahaney is a novelist and writer. Her short fiction has appeared in Best American Nonrequired Reading, One Story, and Crazyhorse, among other publications.

Key themes: fantasy, fiction, relationships, romance, science fiction, and thriller.

Kantor, Jodi

Chasing the Truth: A Young Journalist's Guide to Investigative Reporting: She Said Young Readers Edition, The Obamas, She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement,

Jodi Kantor is a bestselling author and prize-winning investigative reporter for The New York Times. In October 2017, Jodi and Megan Twohey (co-author of She Said) broke the story of decades of sexual abuse allegations against Harvey Weinstein. Their work helped ignite the #MeToo movement. Together with a team of colleagues, they were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for public service, journalism’s highest award. She also received/shared numerous other honors, including a George Polk award and being named to Time magazine’s list of 100 most influential people of the year.

Key themes: culture, nonfiction, politics, and writing.

Kelly, Eileen

Small Wonder

Eileen Kelly is a novelist and writer of development documents for criminal justice and mental health nonprofits. Her stories have appeared in the Tupelo Quarterly and Wrongdoing Magazine. She won the Hopwood Award in the Novel from the University of Michigan’s MFA program. Small Wonder is her first published novel.

Key themes: fiction, identity, loss/grief, and relationships.

Kennedy, Randy

Presidio

Randy Kennedy is an author and the current director of special projects for the international art gallery Hauser & Wirth. Before that, he was a staff member and writer for The New York Times for 25 years. He’s also a freelance writer covering the art world for publications like The New York Times and The Paris Review.

Key themes: fiction, mystery, and thriller.

Kennedy, Janet

The Good Sleeper: The Essential Guide to Sleep for Your Baby (and You)

Janet K. Kennedy, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist and the founder of NYC Sleep Doctor, a consultation and psychotherapy practice dedicated to treating sleep problems in babies, toddlers and adults. She spent eight years at the Manhattan Veterans Affairs Medical Center where she developed the Sleep Disorders Treatment Program. Dr Kennedy runs clinics, sleep seminars, and works with parents to help their children establish healthy sleep habits.

Key themes: nonfiction and parenthood.

Krass, PJ

My Sixties

PJ Krass is a poet, editor, and writing teacher at The Writers Studio, a independent writing school. His poetry has been published in several publications, including Rattle, Black Rock Review, New Verse News, Adirondack Review, Atlanta Review, Caesura, and South Carolina Review. He’s also a poetry co-editor of the anthology The Writers Studio at 30. PJ also worked as a business and technology journalist. He was a senior editor at Inc. magazine, senior writer and then features editor at InformationWeek magazine, and managing editor in BusinessWeek’s newsletter group.

Key themes: history and poetry.

Krauss, Nicole

Forest Dark, Great House, The History of Love, Man Walks into a Room, To Be a Man

Nicole Krauss is an international bestselling novelist. She has received several awards for her work, including the Saroyan Prize for International Literature, France’s Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger, Los Angeles Times Book of the Year (finalist), Wingate Literary Prize, and Sami Rohr Inspiration Award for career achievement. Her fiction has been published in the New Yorker, the Atlantic, Harper’s Magazine, Esquire, and The Best American Short Stories, and her books have been translated into 37 languages.

Key themes: history, identity, relationships, and science fiction.

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Lahiri, Jhumpa

The Clothing of Books, Hell-Heaven, In Other Words, Interpreter Of Maladies, The Lowland, The Namesake, Only Goodness: Family Snapshots, Roman Stories, Translating Myself and Others, Unaccustomed Earth, Whereabouts

Jhumpa Lahiri is a Pulitzer Prize winning author, essayist, and translator. She’s also the Millicent C. McIntosh Professor of English and director of the Creative Writing Program at Barnard College. She writes in both English and Italian and has translated three novels by Domenico Starnone into English.

Key themes: culture, fiction, memoir, and relationships.

Leahy, Krista J. H.

Nothing But Light

Krista J.H. Leahy is a poet and author. She’s the co-author of Nothing But Light. Her poetry has appeared in several publications, including The Common, Free Lunch, Raritan, Reckoning, and Tin House. Her prose has appeared in Clarkesworld, Farrago's Wainscot, Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, Year's Best Science Fiction and Fantasy, and elsewhere.

Key themes: identity, poetry, and relationships.

LeBow, Cindy

The Secret Tales of Mrs. Chubbly

Cindy LeBow is the author of fiction, non-fiction, screenplays, and comic books. She studied theatre at New York University, and she performed musical comedy on tour in the U.S. and Canada. She’s currently writing the second and third books in her The Secret Tales of Mrs. Chubbly series.

Key themes: animals, fantasy, and relationships.

Lesko, Bethany

Captain Tinycat's Brooklyn Adventure (illustrator)

Bethany Lesko is a designer, artist, and illustrator. Her first illustrated book, Captain Tinycat's Brooklyn Adventure, was released in 2024.

Key themes: animals, children’s book, and relationships.

Lobel, Arnold

The Arnold Lobel Book of Mother Goose, Days with Frog and Toad, Dudley Pippin (illustrator) Fables, Frog and Toad Are Friends, Frog and Toad: A Little Book of Big Thoughts, Frog and Toad All Year, Frog and Toad Together, Grasshopper on the Road, A Holiday for Mister Muster, Mouse Soup, Mouse Tales, Owl at Home, The Random House Book of Poetry for Children (illustrator), Small Pig, Uncle Elephant

Arnold Lobel (1933-1987) was an author of children's books, including the acclaimed Frog and Toad series and Mouse Soup. He wrote and illustrated these picture books as well as Fables, a 1981 Caldecott Medal winner for best-illustrated U.S. picture book. His second book, A Holiday for Mister Muster, was inspired by the Prospect Park Zoo. Arnold also illustrated many books for other authors, including Phil Ressner, fellow Park Slope resident and author. Several of his books are listed above, and you can find more of his work here.

Key themes: animals, children's book, fiction, identity, poetry, and relationships.

Lyons, Amanda

Heartrooted

Amanda Lyons is an author, artist, workshop designer, and facilitator. Through her art, she explores themes of change, end of life, diversity, complexity, and horses. Heartrooted is Amanda’s debut collection, and she’s currently writing her second collection.

Key themes: art, identity, parenthood, poetry, and relationships.

M

Maazel, Fiona

Last Last Chance, A Little More Human, Woke Up Lonely

Fiona Maazel is an author, writer, teacher, and the owner of a consultancy business. She is a 2017 Guggenheim Fellow, winner of the Bard Prize for Fiction, and a National Book Foundation “5 Under 35” honoree, which she says “feels way less potent, even embarrassing, now that she is 49.” Her writing has appeared in several publications, including Best American Short Stories 2017, Harper’s, The New York Times, Ploughshares, Salon, Selected Shorts, and This American Life.

Key themes: identity, mystery and relationships.

McCreight, Kimberly

The Collide, Friends Like These, A Good Marriage, Like Mother, Like Daughter (releases July 30, 2024), The Outliers, Reconstructing Amelia, The Scattering, Where They Found Her

Kimberly McCreight is the New York Times bestselling author of seven novels. Her work has received several accolades, including: nominations for the Edgar, Anthony, and Alex Awards; Best Book of the Summer by the New York Times, People, and Publishers Weekly; Entertainment Weekly’s Favorite Book of the Year; and Amazon Best Book of the Month. Many of her novels have been optioned for TV and film adaptations. Her novel A Good Marriage is about a woman’s brutal murder in Park Slope, and Like Mother, Like Daughter is about a mother and daughter who live in Park Slope.

Key themes: fiction, identity, mystery, parenthood, relationships, and thriller.

Mills, Tyler

The Bomb Cloud, City Scattered, Hawk Parable, Low Budget Movie, Poetry Studio: Prompts for Poets, Tongue Lyre

Tyler Mills is a poet, essayist, and educator. Her memoir The Bomb Cloud earned a starred review in Publishers Weekly, was awarded a Café Royal Cultural Foundation NYC Literature Awardand won the Copper Nickel Editor’s Prize in Prose. Her poems have appeared in numerous publications, including in The New Yorker, The Guardian, The New Republic, The Believer, the Kenyon Review, and Poetry.

Key themes: art, identity, memoir, nonfiction, poetry, and relationships.

Moore, Faith

Christmas Karol, Saving Cinderella: What Feminists Get Wrong About Disney Princesses and How to Set It Right

Faith Moore is an author, freelance writer, and editor. Her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Daily News, and The Federalist. Her book, Saving Cinderella, has nearly 50 five-star reviews on Amazon.

Key themes: culture, fiction, and relationships.

Morgan, Janet

Coney Island Awakes: A Phoenix Arises, Quintessence: Three Visions, Three Artists In the Andes: The Ghosts of Licancabur - A True Story (illustrator), Welcome to Death Valley! A Guided Tour Through California's Death Valley National Park, What Art Can Do: A Conversation with Janet Morgan (illustrator)

Janet Morgan is an author and artist who has painted all over the world, from Kyrgyzstan to Antarctica. Her large paintings of deities have been featured at Omega's Women and Power Conference, Burning Man, and the Parliament of World Religions. She taught at the Art Students League and the Rubin Museum of Art in New York, and she completed a public art commission for an Early Childhood Center in Queens. For 18 years, she was an Expressive Arts Therapist with adult cancer patients and Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

Key themes: art, children’s book, nature, nonfiction, and travel.

Myers, Adele

The Tobacco Wives

Adele Myers is an author, marketer, and adjunct professor at Drexel University’s MFA in creative writing program. Her debut novel The Tobacco Wives was called one of the best historical fiction books of the year by Cosmopolitan. It was also named an Indie Next and Barnes & Noble Discover pick.

Key themes: fiction, history, and relationships.

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Napolitano, Ann

A Good Hard Look, Hello Beautiful, Dear Edward, Within Arm's Reach,

Ann Napolitano is a New York Times bestselling author. Her most recent novel, Hello Beautiful, was the 100th Oprah Book Club pick. Her novel Dear Edward is now an Apple TV+ series. She was the associate editor of the literary magazine One Story, and she has taught fiction writing at Brooklyn College’s MFA program, New York University’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies, and Gotham Writers Workshop.

Key themes: fiction, parenthood, and relationships.

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O’Brien, Dan

The Laughing Farm

Dan O’Brien is an author and TV production accountant. He’s also an actor, and has appeared in short films that were shot in Park Slope, including the award-winning, comedy-horror Community Service.

Key themes: animals and children’s book.

Oh, Susie

Soomi's Sweater, Odd Duck Out

Susie Oh is an award-winning illustrator, author, and artist. Her children’s book Soomi's Sweater was the silver medal winner of the 2020 Key Colors Illustrators Competition. Susie’s third picture book, which explores the overwhelming experience of a little pig entering a huge library, was acquired by Tiny Tree and will be released 2025. Susie is also a current Artist in Residence (May-October 2024) at the NYC Bird Alliance (formerly NYC Audubon).

Key themes: animals, children's book, identity, and parenthood.

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Qualls, Sean

Baby Be (illustrator), Before John was a Jazz Giant (illustrator), Emmanuel's Dream (illustrator), Frances in the Country (illustrator), Giant Steps to Change the World (illustrator), How We Are Smart (illustrator), The Idea of You (illustrator, releases September 24, 2024), Little Cloud and Lady Wind (illustrator), Lullaby (For a Black Mother) (illustrator), The Poet Slave of Cuba (illustrator), Powerful Words (illustrator)

Sean Qualls is a Coretta Scott King Honor Award–winning illustrator and artist whose fine art focuses on race, identity, and the intersection of history and mythology. His work is a mixed media combination of painting, drawing, and collage. He has illustrated many books, which went on to receive awards, including a Schneider Award, BCCB Blue Ribbon Book, and an ALA Notable Book. Several of the books Sean has illustrated are listed above, and you can find more of his work on his site.

Key themes: children's book, culture, identity, music, parenthood, and poetry.

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Reed, Kim

Workhorse: My Sublime and Absurd Years in New York City's Restaurant Scene

Kim Reed is the author of Workhorse, a memoir that spanned her seventeen years in the restaurant industry, working for Batali & Bastianich Hospitality Group as an executive assistant. She has a BA from Siena College and an MSW from New York University. Before her work as an executive assistant, Kim practiced social work in New York City for nearly a decade.

Key themes: culture, food, memoir, and relationships.

Ressner, Phil

August Explains, At Night, Dudley Pippin, Dudley Pippin’s Summer, Jerome, The Park in the City

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: art, children's book, and fiction.

Rubin, Lance

Crying Laughing, Monsters Club: Monsters Take Manhattan

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: children's book, comedy, fiction, and relationships.

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Schwartz, Barbara

Any Thriving Root, Nothing But Light: Poems

Barbara Schwartz is a poet and education consultant. Her chapbook Any Thriving Root (dancing girl press, 2017) was a finalist for the 1913 Poetry Prize, the Barrow Street Poetry Prize, and Alice James Award. Her poems have appeared in several publications, including Denver Quarterly, Upstreet, Nimrod International Journal of Prose and Poetry, Carolina Quarterly, Quiddity, and Tinderbox Poetry Journal.

Key themes: identity, poetry, and relationships.

Shearn, Amy

Animal Instinct (releases March 8, 2025), Dear Edna Sloane, How Far Is the Ocean from Here, Mermaid of Brooklyn, Unseen City

Amy Shearn is an author and writer whose work has been published by the New York Times Modern Love column, Slate, Poets & Writers, Literary Hub, Real Simple, Martha Stewart Living, O: The Oprah Magazine, and Coastal Living. She has received several awards, including the Independent Publisher Book Awards’ Gold Medal in Literary Fiction and a Promise Award from the Sustainable Arts Foundation. Her novel Mermaid of Brooklyn is set in Park Slope.

Key themes: fantasy, parenthood, romance, and relationships.

Siana, Jolene

Go Ask Ogre: Letters from a Deathrock Cutter

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: memoir, mental health, and relationships.

Silverman, Laura

Girl Out of Water, You Asked for Perfect, Recommended for You, Those Summer Nights, Up All Night

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: culture, romance, and relationships.

Singer, Allison

What is the President's Job?

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: children's book, nonfiction, and politics.

Sohn, Amy

The Actress, Brooklyn Bailey, the Missing Dog, CBD!, The Man Who Hated Women: Sex, Censorship & Civil Liberties in the Gilded Age, Motherland, My Old Man, Prospect Park West, Run Catch Kiss

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: children's book, fiction, pets, and relationships.

Solfrian, Joanna

The Mud Room, The Second Perfect Number, Temporary Beast, Visible Heavens

Joanna Solfrian is an award-winning poet and writing teacher. Her 2009 collection, Visible Heavens, received the Wick First Book Poetry Prize. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals, including The Harvard Review, Boulevard, Image, Spoon River Poetry Review, Margie, Rattapallax, The Southern Review, and Pleiades. Joanna has taught writing at the University of Hartford and Southern CT State University, and she’s guest-lectured in various high school, undergraduate, and graduate creative writing programs.

Key themes: identity, loss/grief, poetry, and relationships.

Solomon, Anna

The Book of V, Leaving Lucy Pear, The Little Bride

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: relationships and sex.

Stanberry, Lindsey

Refinery29 Money Diaries: Everything You've Ever Wanted To Know About Your Finances... And Everyone Else's

Lindsey Stanberry is a writer, editor, content strategist, and the founder of The Purse, a newsletter about women and money. She was the founding editor of Refinery29’s Money Diaries, the breakout series that explores women’s personal finance. She was also an executive editor at Fortune, deputy managing editor at CNBC Make It, and served as the editorial lead on CNBC Select. Her writing has been published by Fortune, Yahoo, Refinery29, and others. Read Lindsey’s Park Slope Times interview.

Key themes: finance and nonfiction.

Stein, Triss

Brooklyn Bones, Brooklyn Graves, Brooklyn Legacies, Brooklyn Secrets, Brooklyn Wars

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: fiction, mystery, and relationships.

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Tyre, Peg

The Good School, In The Midnight Hour, Strangers in the Night, The Trouble with Boys

Peg Tyre is an author and award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, the Atlantic, The New York Times, Politico, Smithsonian, Forbes, The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, Scientific American, and others. She was a senior writer at Newsweek, specializing in social trends and education. Peg has won numerous awards, including a Pulitzer Prize, a Clarion Award, and a National Education Writers Association Award. Now, Peg helps run the EGF Accelerator, the country's premier incubator for education-related nonprofits.

Key themes: fiction, identity, mystery, nonfiction, parenthood, romance, and relationships.

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Vizzini, Ned

Be More Chill, It's Kind of a Funny Story, The Other Normals, Teen Angst? Naaah...

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: graphic novel, identity, mental health, and relationships.

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Walker, Melissa

Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust, Let's Pretend We Never Met, Lovestruck Summer, Small Town Sinners, Unbreak My Heart, Violet by Design, Violet in Private, Violet on the Runway, Why Can't I Be You

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: fiction, identity, relationships, and romance.

Welsh, Ronna

The Nimble Cook Cookbook

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: cookbook.

Willems, Mo

Are You Big?, Are You Small?, Be the Bus: The Lost & Profound Wisdom of The Pigeon, Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!, Don't Let the Pigeon Finish This Activity Book!, Don't Let the Pigeon Stay Up Late!, Duckling Gets a Cookie!?, Edwina, The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct, The FRUSTRATING Book!, I Am Invited to a Party!, I Love My New Toy!, I Will Take A Nap!, Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale, Leonardo, the Terrible Monster, Listen to My Trumpet!, Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed, Nanette's Baguette, The Pigeon Has Feelings, Too!, The Pigeon HAS to Go to School!, Pigeon Needs a Bath!, Pigeon Finds a Hot Dog!, The Pigeon Wants a Puppy!, The Pigeon Will Ride the Roller Coaster!, The Story of Diva and Flea, Today I Will Fly!, Watch Me Throw the Ball!

Mo Willems is a New York Times bestselling author, illustrator, animator, voice actor, and playwright. His work includes creating the animated television series Sheep in the Big City for Cartoon Network, working on Sesame Street and The Off-Beats, and creating the children's book series Elephant and Piggie. His work has received numerous awards, including six Emmy Awards, the three Caldecott Honors, two Theodor Geisel Medal, and five Geisel Honor. Mo’s book Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale is set and photographed in Park Slope. In 2019, a permanent 18-inch bronze statue of Knuffle Bunny was unveiled in the garden of the Park Slope Library. Several of Mo’s books are listed above, and you can find more of his work on his site.

Key themes: animals, children's book, culture, nature, and relationships.

Wing, Avra

After Isaac

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: identity, loss/grief, and relationships.

Winter, Molly

More: A Memoir of Open Marriage

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: memoir and relationships.

Woodson, Jaqueline

Another Brooklyn, After Tupac and D Foster, Before the Ever After, Brown Girl Dreaming, The Day You Begin, Harbor Me, Hush, Locomotion, Red at the Bone, Remember Us, Show Way, The Year We Learned to Fly,

Jacqueline Woodson is the bestselling author of more than two dozen award-winning books. She’s a four-time National Book Award finalist, a four-time Newbery Honor winner, a two-time NAACP Image Award Winner, and a two-time Coretta Scott King Award winner. Her New York Times–bestselling memoir, Brown Girl Dreaming, received the National Book Award in 2014. Woodson is also the 2018–2019 National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature and the recipient of the 2018 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award and the 2018 Children’s Literature Legacy Award. In 2015, she was named the Young People’s Poet Laureate by the Poetry Foundation. Several of Jaqueline’s books are listed above, and you can find more of her work on her site.

Key themes: children's book, culture, fiction, health, memoir, music, race, relationships, and sports.

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Yabuki, Akiko

ishi - simple tips from a solid friend

Bio coming soon!

Key themes: art, children's book, and relationships.

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Books Set In or Nearby Park Slope

Alexiou, Joseph

Gowanus: Brooklyn's Curious Canal

Key themes: culture, history, nature, nonfiction, and politics.

Burns, Martha

Across the Narrows

Key themes: history and relationships.

Graham, Carol

Passion! in Park Slope

Key themes: mystery and relationships.

Konen, Leah

Keep Your Friends Close

Key themes: fiction, mystery, and thriller.

Mittelbach, Margaret

Wild New York: A Guide to the Wildlife, Wild Places and Natural Phenomena of New York City

Key themes: animals and nature.

Williams, Tia

Seven Days in June

Key themes: relationships and romance.

Thank you to everyone who helped get the Park Slope Authors and Illustrators Library to this point!

(Top photo by Clay Banks. Second photo by Nattipat Vesvarute.)

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