Pintip Dunn

Pintip Dunn is a New York Times best-selling author of young adult fiction. Her Forget Tomorrow series has been translated into four languages. She is a two-time recipient of the RITA Award.

Pintip Dunn
EducationA.B. in English Literature and Language, J.D. in Law
Alma materHarvard, Yale Law School
Genreyoung adult
Notable worksForget Tomorrow
Notable awards2016 RITA Award for Best First Book, 2018 RITA Award for Young Adult Romance
Years active2015-now
Website
pintipdunn.com

Personal life

Dunn is the daughter of Thai immigrants and grew up in Kansas. She attended Harvard University to study English Literature and Language and received her J.D. from Yale Law School.[1]

Career

Forget Tomorrow series

Dunn's debut young adult novel, Forget Tomorrow, the first in a series, is set in a sci-fi world in which people can see their own future, where sixteen-year-old Callie sees herself murder her own sister.[2] It was published by Entangled: Teen in 2015 and hit the New York Times Young Adult E-Books Bestseller List at #4.[3] The second book in the series is set ten years later and follows Jessa, Callie's sister, while she tries to prevent a massacre. It was published in 2016.[4] A prequel to the series, Before Tomorrow, was also published in 2016. The third book in the series, Seize Today, was published in 2017.[5]

Star-Crossed series

The first book in her second young adult series, Star-Crossed, was published in 2018 by Entangled: Teen. It's about a princess who lives on a planet where food is rare and who has to undergo a procedure that takes sixty years off her life but enables her colony to survive via nutrition pills, while her father, the king, is dying.[6]

A sequel, Sky-Kissed, will follow in 2019.[1]

Standalone novels

Dunn's first young adult thriller, The Darkest Lie, is about a teen who investigates her mother's death, who has died by suicide following the accusation that she slept with a high school quarterback.[7] Her second thriller, Girl on the Verge, tells the story of a second-generation immigrant Thai-American teen whose family takes in a white girl who turns her life upside down[8] It was published in 2017 by Kensington.[9] Her third standalone novel, Malice, about a girl who finds out that a student in her school will create a virus that will kill millions in the future, was published by Entangled: Teen in 2020.[6][10]

Awards

Won

2016

2018

Nominations

2016

  • Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award in Young Adult Contemporary for The Darkest Lie (Kensington, 2016)[13]

2017

  • Grand Prix de l'imaginaire in Foreign YA Novel for Forget Tomorrow, translated by Diane Durocher (Lumen, 2017)[14][15]
gollark: No it doesn't. You won't actually *experience* that.
gollark: Have you tried something something mental health support?
gollark: That does sound like it would be a problem, hmmm.
gollark: I see. Do you actually have evidence of an afterlife existing?
gollark: Is the sadness when people you like die greater than aggregate happiness gain though?

References

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