Neal Shusterman

Neal ShustermanNeal Shusterman in 2018, the year that his novel Thunderhead—part of the Arc of a Scythe series—was released.

Neal Shusterman (born November 12, 1962, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.) is an American author best known for writing fantasy and dystopian novels for young adults. Shusterman has also written short stories, essays, poetry, and television scripts. He won the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature for the novel Challenger Deep (2015), and his novel Scythe (2016) was a Michael L. Printz Honor book.

Shusterman began writing when he was young. When he was a teenager, his family moved to Mexico City. After completing high school at the American School of Mexico City, Shusterman attended the University of California, Irvine, where he majored in psychology and drama. In addition, Shusterman was a member of the school’s varsity swim team. Shortly after graduating in 1985, he began work as an assistant at Irvin Arthur Associates, a talent agency in Los Angeles. Within a year, he had earned his first book deal.

Shusterman’s early standalone novels include Dissidents (1989), Speeding Bullet (1991), and The Eyes of Kid Midas (1992). They feature teenage boys involved in action-packed adventures as they navigate their lives. In Downsiders (1999) Shusterman created two worlds that ultimately interact with each other—that of the Downsiders living in tunnels under New York City and that of the Topsiders living in the city. Full Tilt (2003) takes Blake, the main character, on seven carnival rides, during which he must face his worst fears. The Schwa Was Here (2004), about a student who goes unnoticed by his peers, earned Shusterman a Boston Globe–Horn Book Award for Fiction and Poetry. Challenger Deep follows Caden as he fights to recover from schizophrenia. The novel earned Shusterman the 2016 Golden Kite Award for Fiction and was a Boston Globe/Horn Award Honor book that year.

Shusterman also wrote several series of books. In the Star Shards Chronicles a group of teenagers have to learn to adjust to their superhuman powers. The series consists of Scorpion Shards (1995), Thief of Souls (1999), and Shattered Sky (2002). Shusterman’s Dark Fusion series includes Dread Locks (2005), Red Rider’s Hood (2005), and Duckling Ugly (2006). These thrillers combine classic fairy tales and Greek mythology. The Skinjacker trilogy—Everlost (2006), Everwild (2009), and Everfound (2011)—is set within the limbo between life and death. Everlost won multiple awards and honours, including being named to the 2009 ALA Popular Paperback List, the 2009 Garden State Teen Book Award List, and the 2008 School Library Journal Best Books of the Year.

Shusterman wrote the Accelerati series with Eric Elfman. These books include Tesla’s Attic (2014), Edison’s Alley (2015), and Hawking’s Hallway (2016). The series follows a group of teenagers as they encounter ordinary objects with extraordinary powers. The teens must stop a dangerous society of physicists from harnessing the objects’ powers and using them for evil. Shusterman’s dystopian Arc of a Scythe series consists of Scythe (2016), Thunderhead (2018), and The Toll (2019). The series follows two teenagers who must examine their own moral compasses after they are selected to train under a “scythe,” a person chosen to take lives to keep their world from becoming overpopulated. Shusterman also wrote a spin-off to the latter series, Gleanings (2022). Shusterman wrote the novel Dry (2019) with his son Jarrod Shusterman.

Shusterman wrote several episodes of the television series Goosebumps and Animorphs in the late 1990s. During that time Shusterman also wrote several novels based on the TV series The X-Files under the pseudonym Easton Royce. In addition, he published several collections of short stories, including Mindquakes (1996) and Mindbenders (2000). Shusterman currently lives in Southern California and has four children: Brendan, Jarrod, Joelle, and Erin.

Joan Hibler