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Jay Asher (1) (1975–)

Author of Thirteen Reasons Why

For other authors named Jay Asher, see the disambiguation page.

5 Works 15,935 Members 998 Reviews 11 Favorited

About the Author

Jay Asher's novel Thirteen Reasons Why, has appeared on the NYT bestseller list regularly in the last nine years. It was also one of the most challenged books of 2017, according to the American Library Association. (Bowker Author Biography)

Works by Jay Asher

Thirteen Reasons Why (2007) 13,267 copies, 769 reviews
The Future of Us (2011) 1,714 copies, 185 reviews
What Light (2016) 796 copies, 33 reviews
Piper (2017) 156 copies, 11 reviews

Tagged

(535) bullying (167) coming of age (57) contemporary (122) contemporary fiction (45) death (143) depression (198) drama (46) ebook (52) Facebook (95) favorites (48) fiction (593) friendship (182) future (56) gossip (50) grief (66) guilt (43) high school (292) internet (50) love (45) mental health (54) mystery (127) novel (52) own (64) rape (65) read (114) realistic fiction (194) relationships (132) romance (129) rumors (45) science fiction (61) suicide (744) teen (127) teen fiction (43) teen suicide (50) teens (59) time travel (54) to-read (820) young adult (751) young adult fiction (117)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1975-09-30
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Arcadia, California, USA
Education
San Luis Obispo High School
Cuesta Community College
California Polytechnic State University
Occupations
children's book author
Short biography
Jay Asher was born in Arcadia, California on September 30, 1975. He grew up in a family that encouraged all of his interests, from playing the guitar to his writing. He attended Cuesta College right after graduating from high school. It was here where he wrote his first two children’s books for a class called Children’s Literature Appreciation. At this point in his life, he had decided he wanted to become an elementary school teacher. He then transferred to California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo where he left his senior year in order to pursue his career as a serious writer. Throughout his life he worked in various establishments, including as a salesman in a shoe store and in libraries and bookstores. Many of his work experiences had an impact on some aspect of his writing.

He has published only one book to date, Thirteen Reasons Why, which was published in October 2007. He is currently working on his second Young Adult novel, and has written several picture books and screenplays. Thirteen Reasons Why has won several awards and has received five stars from Teen Book Review. It also has received high reviews from fellow authors such as Ellen Hopkins, Chris Crutcher, and Gordon Kormon.

Members

Reviews

This book caused my depression to skyrocket.
 
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taliainthetardis | 768 other reviews | Dec 20, 2024 |
Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher connected with me in a way I didn't expect. I read this YA novel because my niece, Kaylee, asked me to. No other reason. I'd never heard of it. I knew nothing about it. Yet, if it was important enough for her to ask me to read it, I felt I needed to. Even with her description of the book, I'm not sure what I expected, but it certainly wasn't what happened. I started reading and couldn't stop. I was already tired when I started and yet I read until exhaustion took over. I felt upset because I couldn't stay awake to finish it. The next day I even broke one of my own rules and recommended the book on social media before I finished reading it or reviewed it. I even emailed a friend to recommend it for his teenage daughter. I found myself on a quest I didn't understand to get this book in the hands of teens and the adults in their lives. When I finished it that night, I cried and cried. I felt pulled and pushed. I recognized a period of time in my life that I'm loathe to admit existed let alone discuss. My heart ached for every person out there struggling to reach out for the help they need... The story isn't that extraordinary or surprising, and that is exactly what makes it so powerful. It is honest and tackles issues without treating teenagers either like they are unrealistically innocent or over the top bad. This is a story about real teenagers without the need to wrap the issues teenagers face in the supernatural or some kind of fantasy world. The realness of Thirteen Reasons Why comes in the fact that it describes situations that happen in teenagers' lives in schools and communities around the world every day of the week. Thirteen Reasons Why reminds us all that the actions we take today have repercussions that we may never anticipate and that may happen long after we've forgotten what we did. In fact, there is also the reminder that inaction can be as deadly as action. Asher weaves a story that is all too believable populated with characters that all too real even making the one or two things the reader may doubt at the beginning quickly seem irrelevant.… (more)
 
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TLCooper | 768 other reviews | Dec 15, 2024 |
What would I say as a 16 year old to my future self? What would she think if she could see only my status updates and try to predict her future life?

what an fun amazing book! I laughed along with a funny crew - Emma, Kellan, Josh and Tyson. My heart broke with Emma as she struggled to find herself and with Josh and he struggled to try to understand the world, his world and all the crazy girls in it.

I thoroughly enjoyed the adventure!
 
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Trisha_Thomas | 184 other reviews | Nov 14, 2024 |
“No one knows for certain how much impact they have on the lives of other people.

A very well told story a about a very tough topic. Suicide is always one of those scares that, as a parent, is hard to fully see, hard to stop and hard to diagnose. But, it's also hard to bring up talking about it and being able to help your child.
This story takes off and leaves you running to catch up the whole way. I thought the overall sadness and anger, some of the stages of loss, were fitting and set the stage but neither were overwhelming.
The author reminds us that we affect people, even if we think we do or don't. It reminds you that each person is an opportunity. Maybe, just maybe, if you tried harder, you could make a good impact and change their lives. Even just by doing something small.
… (more)
 
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Trisha_Thomas | 768 other reviews | Nov 14, 2024 |

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Associated Authors

Alberto Saviello Editor and Curator
Raffael Dedo Gadebusch Exhibition concept
Sarah M. Guérin Contributor
Katharina Trump Contributor
Nanette Snoep Contributor
S. Marek Muller Contributor
Lydia Kitungulu Contributor
Grit Keller Curator
Eboa Itondo Interviewer
Laura Goldenbaum Contributor
Nicholas J. Conrad Contributor
Sibylle Wolf Contributor
Hartmut Dorgerloh Contributor
Fritz Vollrath Contributor
Harald Floss Contributor
Dorothee Wenner Contributor
Kathy Curnow Contributor
David McKee Interviewee
Sabine Frohmader Layout and typesetting
Ai Weiwei Interviewee
Robert Kless Interviewee
Khyne U Mar Interviewee
Debra Wiseman Narrator
Russell Stockman Translator

Statistics

Works
5
Members
15,935
Popularity
#1,423
Rating
3.8
Reviews
998
ISBNs
204
Languages
19
Favorited
11

Charts & Graphs