Zoey Dean

Zoey Dean is the pseudonym[1] for the creators of The A-List series and How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls, which has been renamed and turned into a TV show known as Privileged on the CW in September 2008. Zoey Dean's books are produced by the media packager Alloy Entertainment, which created Gossip Girl, The Clique Series, and The A-List and sold them to Little, Brown and Company.[1][2] Books from The Talent Series started appearing in 2008.

Zoey Dean
OccupationWriter
NationalityAmerican
Period2003-present
GenreComedy
young-adult
Notable worksA-List series

According to a biography provided by Alloy Entertainment, Zoey Dean "divides her time between her house in Beverly Hills and lounging around on her favorite small Caribbean islands".[3] In 2006, The New York Times described Zoey Dean as "a pseudonym for a married writing team".[1] The pseudonym has been jointly used by writers Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld.[4]

Bibliography

Young adult novels

The A-List

  1. The A-List (2003)
  2. Girls on Film (2003)
  3. Blonde Ambition (2005)
  4. Tall Cool One (2005)
  5. Back in Black (2005)
  6. Some Like It Hot (2006)
  7. American Beauty (2006)
  8. Heart of Glass (2007)
  9. Beautiful Stranger (2007)
  10. California Dreaming (2008)

The A-List: Hollywood Royalty

  1. Hollywood Royalty (January 2009)
  2. Sunset Boulevard (August 2009)
  3. City of Angels (March 2010)

Talent Series

  1. Talent
  2. Almost Famous (2008)
  3. Star Power (2009)
  4. Young Hollywood (2009) (never released)

Other novels

  1. Privileged (2008) (formerly published under the name How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls)
  2. Hollywood is Like High School With Money (July 2009)
gollark: This is weird, I can't see any information on how zim stuff has full text search.
gollark: Replying to https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/750047961043697774Well, the zim people had to invest effort into writing it, I would not be surprised if it had some security issues, and it likely has worse bindings/higher-level tooling than SQLite3.
gollark: ... an x86 assembly typing test link?
gollark: > sqlite is not less complex than this formatYes. *But*, you don't actually have to interact with the SQLite disk format directly because libsqlite3 exists.
gollark: I suspect SQLite would lose out somewhat in storage efficiency, but it could plausibly be faster for many things at runtime.

See also

References

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