Becky Albertalli


Rebecca Albertalli is an American author of young adult fiction and former psychologist. She is known for her 2015 debut novel, Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda, which was adapted into the 2018 film Love, Simon and inspired the spin-off television series Love, Victor. Albertalli has subsequently published seven additional novel-length works of young adult fiction, along with 2020's novella Love, Creekwood, from which Albertalli has donated all proceeds to The Trevor Project.

Life and career

Albertalli was born and raised in the Atlanta metropolitan area, with her sister Caroline and brother Sam, where she still lives with her husband, Brian, and two sons, Owen and Henry. Albertalli was raised in a Reform Jewish household. Albertalli attended Wesleyan University and majored in psychology, before moving to Washington, D.C., and earning her Doctor of Psychology degree from George Washington University. In her psychological practice, she specialized in working with LGBTQ teens and gender nonconforming children. She worked as a psychologist until 2012—when her first son was born—and subsequently decided to try writing a novel. Albertalli cites Australian author Jaclyn Moriarty as her primary inspiration in becoming a novelist.File:AOC_holding_Simon_in_House_of_Reps.png|left|thumb|U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez holding Albertalli's debut novel, Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda, in the United States House of Representatives
On April 7, 2015, Albertalli's debut novel, Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda, was published. A sequel to Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda, titled Leah on the Offbeat, was released in 2018 and won the Goodreads Choice Award for Best Young Adult Fiction. In 2020, Albertalli released the third and final installment of the series, Love, Creekwood, described as an "epilogue."
Additional works include The Upside of Unrequited, Love, Creekwood, and the What If It's Us duology, the latter of which she co-wrote with Adam Silvera. Movie rights to What If It's Us sold to Anonymous Content in 2018, with Brian Yorkey attached as screenwriter. The film rights to The Upside of Unrequited were obtained by Shakespeare Sisters, a U.K. production company, in 2021. That year, Albertalli released her next novel, Kate in Waiting. In 2023, Albertalli published Imogen, Obviously, which became another New York Times best seller and received acclaim from Kirkus Reviews, ''Publishers Weekly, Booklist, and more. In 2024, Imogen, Obviously'' was named a Stonewall Honor Book.

Personal life

In August 2020, Albertalli came out as bisexual in an essay responding to public figures who had criticized her for writing about gay characters as a presumed heterosexual. She stated that coming out was not an "attempt to neutralize criticism of books" and asked her critics to acknowledge that "carelessness in these discussions has caused real harm".

Simonverse

Awards