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Schneider, Robyn

ENTRY TYPE:

WORK TITLE: The New Camelot
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE: http://www.robynschneider.com
CITY: Los Angeles
STATE:
COUNTRY: United States
NATIONALITY: American
LAST VOLUME: SATA 402

 

RESEARCHER NOTES:

PERSONAL

Born May 5, 1986, in Miami, FL; married (husband a film and TV producer); children: one daughter

EDUCATION:

Barnard College, B.A.; University of Pennsylvania, M.B.E.

ADDRESS

  • Home - Los Angeles, CA.
  • Agent - Merrilee Heifetz, Writers House, 21 W. 26th St., New York, NY 10010; mheifetz@writershouse.com.

CAREER

Performer, media host, editor, and writer. Laugh Factory, New York, NY, improv actor; IvyGate, former associate editor; BlogTV, host; writer, producer, and host of Doctor Who Reviewed.

WRITINGS

  • YOUNG-ADULT NOVELS
  • Better Than Yesterday, Delacorte Press (New York, NY), 2007
  • The Social Climber’s Guide to High School, illustrated by Kerrie Hess, Simon Pulse (New York, NY), 2007
  • The Beginning of Everything, Katherine Tegen Books (New York, NY), published as Severed Heads, Broken Hearts, Simon & Schuster UK (London, England), 2013
  • Extraordinary Means, Katherine Tegen Books (New York, NY), 2015
  • Invisible Ghosts, Katherine Tegen Books (New York, NY), 2018
  • You Don’t Live Here, Katherine Tegen Books (New York, NY), 2020
  • “KNIGHTLEY ACADEMY” MIDDLE-GRADE NOVEL SERIES; UNDER PSEUDONYM VIOLET HABERDASHER
  • Knightley Academy, Aladdin (New York, NY), 2010
  • The Secret Prince, Aladdin (New York, NY), 2011
  • “EMRY MERLIN” YOUNG-ADULT TRILOGY
  • The Other Merlin, Viking (New York, NY), 2021
  • The Future King, Viking (New York, NY), 2023
  • The New Camelot, Viking (New York, NY), 2024

Author’s work has been translated into several languages, including Croatian, Czech, French, German, Portuguese, Romanian, and Turkish.

SIDELIGHTS

At age thirteen Robyn Schneider completed her first novel-length manuscript, and five years later, while studying English at Barnard College, she could point to her novel Better Than Yesterday on bookstore shelves. A self-described “nerd girl” who grew up in Southern California, Schneider eventually balanced work earning a master’s degree in bioethics with writing fiction, and she also gained followers for her video blog. “My brain loves to come up with weird hypothetical questions,” she admitted on her personal website, “For any of the questions that I think are interesting enough, I start to imagine the people those things might happen to, and what their lives might be like, and suddenly I have an idea for a novel.”

Schneider went on to write several young-adult novels, alongside screenplays, and also became an actor. In an interview for First Draft, Schneider talked about writing novels versus screenplays, admitting: “I can’t focus on two books at the same time, but when I’m really burned out and I’ve finished writing a novel, what I need to do is just refill my creative well. And a lot of the time I will just binge a TV series. And when I binge TV series, I process TV structure. So it’s really great to have a project that I want to write, like a TV project, lined up in my head after that. Because I can kind of recharge my batteries by watching a lot of TV.”

Schneider wrote Better Than Yesterday after a friend died tragically and a car accident left her with injuries. In the novel, she focuses on the shifting relationships among four teenaged friends as they embark on their senior year in preparatory school. The author “understands her characters’ quirks and insecurities,” noted a Kirkus Reviews critic, while in Booklist, Debbie Carton wrote of Better Than Yesterday that Schneider possesses the ability to capture “realistic teen thoughts and dialogue.”

While Better Than Yesterday showcases the talent of a budding young writer, The Beginning of Everything reflects a more sophisticated perspective in its coming-of-age story about a disillusioned young man. Popular, a good athlete, and a successful student from a supportive family, Ezra Faulkner has led a comfortable life. The introspective teen suspects that he has merely side-stepped his one great tragedy, however, believing that there is one event that will either “make him or break him.” His fear is confirmed when, on the same day, he discovers that his girlfriend is unfaithful, and he is hit by a car, shattering his knee. With his dreams of being a star tennis player dashed, the seventeen-year-old becomes morose and depressed, and he avoids his friends when he returns to school senior year. Fortunately, Ezra is able to rekindle a relationship with his childhood best friend, and a romance with geeky transfer student Cassidy pulls him out of himself and back into life. Although Ezra now believes that he has survived his one great tragedy, it turns out that his view of how life works may be incorrect.

Calling Ezra’s first-person narration both “introspective and funny,” Amanda Fensch added in her Voice of Youth Advocates review of The Beginning of Everything that Schneider’s story is “told with an abundance of wit and heart.” A Kirkus Reviews critic cited the novel’s combination of “smart writing and a compelling narrator,” adding that the author’s “evocative descriptions and subtle turns of phrase make reading and rereading this novel a delight.” “Schneider shows remarkable skill at getting inside her narrator’s head as his life swings between disaster and recovery,” asserted a Publishers Weekly contributor, and in Booklist, Heather Booth concluded of The Beginning of Everything that “this thought-provoking novel … is tinged with sadness, high jinks, wry humor, and philosophical pondering in equal measures.”

In Extraordinary Means, Schneider tells the story of a teenager named Lane, who deals with a life-threatening illness. Lane has a strain of tuberculosis (TB) that cannot be treated by the drugs currently on the market. His parents hope that sending him to a relaxing place in the country will help his symptoms to improve. They ship him off to a boarding school called Latham House, which caters to students with medical problems. Students are allowed to rest between classes, and tests and homework have been abolished, in order to ease stress. A driven student, Lane has always eschewed socializing and focused on his academics, in hopes of being accepted to his dream college. At Latham House, he plans to behave the same way. However, he discovers that his crush from summer camp, Sadie, is a fellow student, and he begins spending time with her. Sadie has been at Latham House for a year, and she has made close friends there. Free-spirited Sadie helps Lane break out of his rigidity. The two develop a romantic relationship, which is made more intense due to their illnesses. Danielle Jones, reviewer in School Library Journal, commented: “Schneider’s subtlety, combined with themes about learning to live life fully, makes this an easy recommendation.”

A teenage girl struggles with the death of her brother in Invisible Ghosts. Sixteen-year-old Rose has been interacting with the ghost of her older brother Logan since he died four years ago. She spends much of her time hanging out with Logan’s ghost and watching movies on Netflix. Rose’s activities begin to change when she reconnects with her old friend Jamie Aldridge. Jamie invites Rose to parties, and she becomes more social. Logan’s ghost is unhappy with Rose’s colorful new life, which makes Rose feel guilty. She must ultimately choose between grieving for Logan and having a life of her own. Meanwhile, a romance develops between Rose and Jamie. “Rose is a likable character. Her struggles are believable and readers will relate to her having to choose between friends and family,” suggested Paige Garrison in School Library Journal. A Publishers Weekly critic predicted, “Readers will readily suspend their disbelief to see how Rose, a relatable heroine, deals with an apparition.” A contributor to Kirkus Reviews remarked, “Logan is a fantastic metaphor. … But a ghost who does nothing but whine and binge on Netflix quickly becomes repetitive.” However, Amanda Shepard, a writer in Booklist, commented, “Schneider accurately represents high-school culture, authentically capturing the sensation of not knowing where you belong.”

In addition to her novels for teen readers, Schneider has also channeled her imagination and love of fantasy into middle-grade fiction published under the pen name Violet Haberdasher. In Knightley Academy she introduces orphaned Henry Grim, loudmouthed Adam, and overly proper Rohan as they begin their first year at the elite Knightley Academy, where knights of the realm are trained. The three friends band together as they face an unwelcoming environment, only to discover that they are in fact pawns of those wielding greater powers. As the neighboring Nordlands prepare for war, Adam, Rohan, and Henry must figure out how to proceed. When they return to school for a second year of training in The Secret Prince, Henry untangles his complicated relationships with several classmates, while concerns build over a rumored war with Nordlands. Teaming up with former nemesis Valmont to defend the realm, Henry and Adam travel into enemy territory where they gauge the force of the rebellion and Henry confirms his own destiny.

Reviewing Knightley Academy, a Publishers Weekly critic asserted that “Henry and his friends are lively and entertaining characters to follow,” while in School Library Journal, Clare A. Dombrowski cited the influence of J.K. Rowling’s “Harry Potter” stories on The Secret Prince. The novel’s “fast-moving plotline” is “wrapped up nicely” by novel’s end, added the critic, “but enough is left hanging and the characters are interesting enough to make readers eagerly anticipate the next” Violet Haberdasher novel.

Schneider published the young-adult novel You Don’t Live Here in 2020, a book she described as her “queer love letter to Gilmore Girls and The OC” in an interview on the Nerd Daily. In the novel, Sasha is forced to live with her wealthy but conservative grandparents in Orange County after a devastating earthquake results in her single mother’s death. Sasha’s loneliness and isolation is aided by making some new friends at the start of her junior year. While Sasha wants to join the art club to spend more time with Lily, someone she is started to feel romantic feelings for, her grandparents want for her to join the debate club and date their friend’s grandson. To be truly happy, Sasha realizes that she must first come out to herself before she can really understand what it is she wants in life.

A contributor to Publishers Weekly pointed out that the book’s “protagonist’s constant reflection can slacken the pace” and the author “relies on well-known plot arcs.” However, the same reviewer conceded that “quietly funny Sasha is likable.” A Kirkus Reviews contributor opined that “the first-person narrative is plodding.” However, the Kirkus Reviews writer admitted that “for teen readers who are slowly uncovering their own truths, the pace might feel appropriate.”

Schneider’s “Emry Merlin” series turns the Arthurian legend on its head. The Other Merlin, the first book in the series, focuses on the identical twin Merlin siblings, breaking from the singular Merlin of legend. Emmett and Emry are wizards, and one day Emmet is brought to court to act as court wizard. Unfortunately, Emmett is injured when a spell turns against him. Given that the Merlins cannot afford to miss the opportunity, Emry seizes the moment, dons her brother’s robes, and goes to court in his place. Though Emmett has more training, Emry is more naturally inclined to the use of magic. Once at the castle, Emry apprentices as the new court wizard. She also befriends Arthur, who appears in this series as quite the bookworm. As the story progresses, Arthur and Emry’s relationship evolves into a romantic one. In Publishers Weekly a contributor stated that The Other Merlin is “a highly satisfying, renegade reboot of an old story.” In Kirkus Reviews a critic noted, “Witty banter, engaging characters, risqué references, plus zero devotion to the source material add up to a read perfect for fans of ‘The Lady Janies’ series.” The critic concluded that The Other Merlin is “one part Arthurian legend, one part teen dramedy, all parts enjoyable.”

Following The Other Merlin is the second “Emry Merlin” novel, The Future King. Emry is now allowed to be herself at court, and Emmett is also there as an apprenticing wizard. Meanwhile, Guinevere becomes pregnant—and the child is Emmett’s. Emry and Athur work to keep their own budding romance a secret, which is not difficult because Arthur is often away doing business on behalf of the kingdom. Emry also discovers that she is capable of new tricks that may or may not bring danger to the kingdom. “Less bawdy and much more earnest than the first, this second series entry has a plot that mostly revolves around relationships,” wrote a contributor to Kirkus Reviews, who deemed The Other Merlin “satisfying.”

[open new]Consummating Schneider’s fresh take on Arthurian legend is The New Camelot, which serves to seal the “Emry Merlin” series as a trilogy. While an enchanted quest brings Emry and Arthur to Anwen, conflict presses both on the home front, where Arthur must face down a conservative ruling council, and on the battlefields, where the villainous King Yurien and sorceress Bellicent are aiming for dominion over Camelot. A Kirkus Reviews writer commended the burgeoning array of re-envisioned relationships and identities in Schneider’s series, with Guinevere and Emmett eloping, Lancelot and Percival a picture-perfect pair, and Sir Tor a nonbinary young knight with plenty to teach Arthur and Lance. Appreciating how the “casual acceptance of a range of queer identities is a key component” of the trilogy’s milieu, the reviewer hailed The New Camelot as a “rollicking retelling, wrapping commentary on our world into a delightful ahistorical package.”[close new]

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Booklist, April 1, 2007, Debbie Carton, review of Better Than Yesterday, p. 41; February 15, 2010, Krista Hutley, review of Knightley Academy, p. 75; July 1, 2011, Krista Hutley, review of The Secret Prince, p. 59; July 1, 2013, Heather Booth, review of The Beginning of Everything, p. 64; April 15, 2018, Amanda Shepard, review of Invisible Ghosts, p. 50.

  • Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books, May 1, 2007, Karen Coats, review of Better Than Yesterday, p. 384; July 1, 2010, April Spisak, review of Knightley Academy, p. 483.

  • Kirkus Reviews, December 1, 2006, review of Better Than Yesterday, p. 1226; February 15, 2010, review of Knightley Academy; May 1, 2011, review of The Secret Prince; May 15, 2013, review of The Beginning of Everything; April 1, 2018, review of Invisible Ghosts; April 1, 2020, review of You Don’t Live Here; August 15, 2021, review of The Other Merlin; January 15, 2023, review of The Future King; July 1, 2024, review of The New Camelot.

  • Publishers Weekly, February 1, 2010, review of Knightley Academy, p. 48; July 8, 2013, review of The Beginning of Everything, p. 90; March 26, 2018, review of Invisible Ghosts, p. 121; May 4, 2020, review of You Don’t Live Here, p. 62; November 24, 2021, review of The Other Merlin, p. 111.

  • School Library Journal, April 1, 2007, Heather E. Miller, review of Better Than Yesterday, p. 148; September 1, 2007, Emily Garrett, review of The Social Climber’s Guide to High School, p. 220; April 1, 2010, Alana Joli Abbott, review of Knightley Academy, p. 158; August 1, 2011, Clare A. Dombrowski, review of The Secret Prince, p. 104; July 1, 2013, Elizabeth Kahn, review of The Beginning of Everything, p. 101; March 1, 2015, Danielle Jones, review of Extraordinary Means, p. 162; April 1, 2018, Paige Garrison, review of Invisible Ghosts, p. 138.

  • Voice of Youth Advocates, December 1, 2007, Domina Daughtrey, review of The Social Climber’s Guide to High School, p. 462; August 1, 2013, Lona Trulove, review of The Beginning of Everything, p. 68.

ONLINE

  • Epic Reads, http://www.epicreads.com/ (October 5, 2018), author profile.

  • First Draft, https://www.firstdraftpod.com/ (June 16, 2020), Sarah Enni, author interview.

  • Nerd Daily, https://www.thenerddaily.com/ (June 13, 2020), Ciara Smyth, author interview.

  • Robyn Schneider website, httpw://www.robynschneider.com (July 3, 2025).

  • The New Camelot Viking (New York, NY), 2024
1. The new Camelot LCCN 2024941668 Type of material Book Personal name Schneider, Robyn author Main title The new Camelot / Robyn Schneider. Published/Produced New York : Viking, 2024. ©2024 Description 480 pages 22 cm ISBN 9780593623015 hardcover 0593623010 hardcover CALL NUMBER PZ7.S36426 Ne 2025 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms
  • Fantastic Fiction -

    Robyn Schneider
    USA flag

    Robyn Schneider is a writer, actor, and online personality who misspent her youth in a town coincidentally similar to Eastwood. Robyn is a graduate of Columbia University, where she studied creative writing, and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, where she studied medical ethics. She is also the author of the middle grade Knightley Academy books, written as Violet Haberdasher. She lives in Los Angeles, California, but also on the internet.

    Genres: Young Adult Fantasy, Young Adult Romance

    Series
    Emry Merlin
    1. The Other Merlin (2021)
    2. The Future King (2023)
    3. The New Camelot (2024)
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    Novels
    Better Than Yesterday (2007)
    The Beginning of Everything (2013)
    Severed Heads, Broken Hearts (2013)
    Extraordinary Means (2015)
    Invisible Ghosts (2018)
    You Don't Live Here (2020)
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    Non fiction hide
    The Social Climber's Guide to High School (2007)
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    Omnibus editions hide
    All You Need Is Love (2014) (with Katie Cotugno and Melissa Kantor)

  • Robyn Schneider website - https://www.robynschneider.com/

    Robyn Schneider is the nationally bestselling author of eight young adult novels including The Other Merlin, The Beginning of Everything, and Extraordinary Means. Her books have earned numerous awards and starred reviews, been optioned for film & television, appear on many state reading lists, and are published in over a dozen countries. Robyn is a graduate of Columbia University, where she studied creative writing, and the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, where she earned a Masters of Bioethics. She lives in Los Angeles.

    some fun facts:
    Age: 38

    Star sign: Taurus

    Own voices LGBTQ books: Yes, Robyn identifies as queer/bi

    Hometown: Irvine, California

    Favorite books: The Secret History by Donna Tartt, Theophilus North by Thornton Wilder, Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami, Book Lovers by Emily Henry, A Darker Shade of Magic by VE Schwab, Red White and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston.

    Favorite movies: A Boy And His Samurai, Rushmore, Good Will Hunting, Dead Poet’s Society, Legally Blonde, Midnight in Paris, The Princess Diaries

    Favorite TV shows: The Great British Bake Off, ER, The West Wing, Doctor Who, Bridgerton, The Bear

    Frequently Asked Questions

    General Questions — If you are doing a school report on me, this section is YOUR JAM
    Q. Where were you born?

    A. Miami, Florida. However, I have never lived in Miami, Florida. My parents were staying in a hotel. Clearly I didn’t like the hotel very much. Either that, or I liked the hotel a little too much and wanted to order room service. Yes, that’s probably it.

    Q. When were you born?

    A. May 5, 1986.

    Q. Where do you live?

    A. Currently, I live in Los Angeles, California. I’ve also lived in New York City, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, London, England, and Orange County, California.

    Q. Where did you go to school?

    A. Northwood High School in Irvine, California (I know…suspiciously similar to Eastwood High. I get that a lot). Then, Barnard College of Columbia University. Then, the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

    Q. What did you study?

    A. As an undergrad, I majored in English with a concentration in creative writing, and pre-med. As a graduate student, I studied bioethics, which means that instead of learning how to perform surgery, I studied the history, philosophy and law of medicine. I have an MBE, or Master of Bioethics.

    Q. I’m confused. You’re a doctor?

    A. No, I’m a bioethicist. You know how Sherlock Holmes studied medicine but never intended to practice medicine? I did that. And I also studied Sherlock Holmes. And medical narratives. And the intersection of magic and science.

    Q. Do you have any siblings? Pets? Partners? Children?

    A. I’m an only child. I have a husband who’s a film and TV producer, an infant daughter, and an incredibly frustrating poodle who chews books, and probably this is not in your book report.

    Q. Are you a full-time writer?

    A. Yes. I write books and, occasionally, scripts for TV and film.

    Questions about writing (which might also help with that book report you’re working on):
    Q. What is your writing process?

    A. I use Scrivener, I outline, I start at the beginning and write until I get to the end, and I edit a little as I go.

    Q. How do you deal with writers block?

    A. If I wind up at a place in my story that feels off, and like there’s nowhere to go, that usually means I made a wrong turn. So I go backwards until I find the last possible point where I can confidently say “all of this is good,” and then I go forward differently from there. The problem is usually much further back than I think, and is usually a moment when there needed to be conflict, but I just glossed right past it with nothing going wrong, which of course made bigger things go wrong.

    Q. What are you working on now?

    Watching less Netflix and eating less pizza. But, if you meant in terms of writing, I’m working on my next YA novel, an adult rom-com, and a couple of other secret ideas that have been simmering on the back burner of my mind oven.

    Q. How did you get a literary agent?

    A. I emailed literary agents.

    Q. How did you get a publisher?

    A. My agent emailed publishers. Or maybe she called them?

    Q. You were 18, right? I heard somewhere you got a literary agent and a book deal when you were 18.

    A. Yeah. I’m not the biggest fan of my earlier books (they’re pretty mediocre, my advice is spend your money and time on better things), but they are a thing that happened. All four of them. I can’t believe that’s what I was doing in college instead of staying up until 2am drinking bad wine and stargazing and getting my heart broken. So yes, I had a literary agent and then a book deal at eighteen, and I did it by emailing literary agents just like it said to do in a publishing book I found at Barnes & Noble. No special treatment or friends of the family or online contests or shortcuts.

    Q. Do you have any advice for young writers who want to get published?

    A. My advice for young writers is to write a practice novel or two. Learn how to pace a book, learn what your personal themes are, what it is you write about, and how you write about it, and what your weaknesses are. Then write another book, which will be easier. Evaluate your novels based not on whether they’re good enough to be published, but on whether you’ll still be proud of them in two or three or four years. The rate at which you improve as a writer when you’re young is astonishing. Then set out to land your dream agent, not just any agent. Someone you’d be lucky to work with after you have a couple books to your name. Someone who will guide your career, not just show your book to a couple of assistant editors. Read everything you can about the industry, in a way that makes you more educated about it, as opposed to jealous or discouraged. And remember that social media is a distraction, not a party.

    Questions regarding THE OTHER MERLIN/ THE EMRY MERLIN TRILOGY
    Q. When does the third book come out?

    A. It’s out!

    Q. How many books will be in this series?

    A. It’s a trilogy, and as of 2024, all books in the series are available. Binge away!

    Q. What is this book about?

    A. A young female wizard who’s far more talented than her useless twin brother, and who takes his place as the apprentice wizard in Prince Arthur’s court. Imagine if you put BBC Merlin, She’s The Man, and A Knight’s Tale in a snarky, queer, feminist blender.

    Q. What inspired you to write this book?

    A. I’ve always loved girl-disguised-as-a-boy stories like Mulan, She’s The Man and so many K-Dramas, but there’s usually this moment that ruins them for me: when the male love interest thinks he’s falling for a guy, and panics at the thought. After that happens, I stop rooting for them to wind up together. I always wished I could find a story with this trope that avoided gay panic, and eventually, I decided to write it myself.

    Plus, I’ve never been able to get over my theory that the legend of King Arthur comes into the story too late. You’ve got this straight white boy who’s destined to become king, and who ushers in this golden age of tolerance and understanding. Something had to happen to make a leader like that fight for the underdogs and care about those who are less privileged. So I wanted to write that story — the one where King Arthur isn’t some hero on a battlefield swinging a sword that makes him win every fight. The one where he’s a smart, lonely outsider who sees his friends being mistreated and resolves to do everything he can to fight for them. And that story-behind-the-legend became the focus of this book series.

    Q. Your four previous books are YA contemporary. Why did you switch to writing historical fantasy?

    A. I actually never meant to become a contemporary YA writer! I’d always dreamed of writing a YA fantasy series about a girl wizard. The first two novels I attempted back when I was a teenager were fantasy, and my TBR pile is usually an even split between contemporary and fantasy. Since The Beginning of Everything was so popular, my team encouraged me to stick with writing contemporary novels, but I always knew that my heart was off questing with magical swords and wizards and it was only a matter of time before my stories went there, too.

    Q: What are you hoping that readers will take away from The Other Merlin?

    A. I hope my readers know they’d be welcome to join Arthur, Emry, Lance and the gang in Camelot. I remember reading the Harry Potter books when I was growing up, and even though there weren’t any queer Jewish girls at Hogwarts, those stories captured my imagination in a way that left a lifelong impression. I don’t know that I could come back to them in the same way now. So I hope I’ve written a story that captures a little bit of that magic but makes sure readers know that this magic is for everyone.

    Questions regarding Extraordinary Means
    Q. What is this book about?

    A. It’s a love story set at a modern day tuberculosis sanatorium for teens in the last days before the cure.

    Q. So I take it this book isn’t a sequel to The Beginning of Everything?

    A. No, it’s a stand alone novel.

    Q. Is it about a real disease?

    A. No. Well, yes. It’s about a fictional strain of a real disease. It’s completely fantasy, it just doesn’t read like a fantasy novel because it’s supposed to be contemporary realistic fiction, so the vibe is more of a sobby teen metaphor-driven coming of age thing. If you’d like to read an academic explanation of what things in the book are real vs. made up, there’s a handy author’s note in every copy which should help you out (with your school paper).

    Q. What genre is this novel?

    A. I’d call it contemporary realistic dystopian. I’ve also heard this described as alternate timeline fiction.

    Q. How did you come up with the names of your characters? Do they have special meaning, or did you just pick them out because they sounded nice?

    A. Lane’s name is indicative of his tendency to stick on a prescribed path. His last name means ‘of roses’ which I chose to show that he’s flushed or feverish. Sadie’s name, both first and last, is basically the most obvious metaphor of all the obvious metaphors. I mean, her last name is past tense. (I am many things, but subtle clearly isn’t one of them). Nick’s full name, Nikhil, sounds like “heal” or get better. Latham House is named after a famous tuberculosis researcher, Dr. Arthur Latham.

    Q. Why does Extraordinary Means have two narrators?

    A. My favorite thing about the book is something that readers might not even notice: the two narrators don’t tell the same story. Lane tells a coming of age story, which begins the moment he arrives at Latham House and ends when he leaves. His narrative is removed and introspective. And Sadie tells a love story. Her narrative begins the day she first sees Lane, more than a year after she’s arrived at Latham House, and it ends after the question of whether or not they want to be together has been answered. So her narrative is more in the moment, and closer to the story. I think writing it that way helped me to understand which parts of the story belonged to which characters.

    Q. What do you hope readers will take away from Extraordinary Means?

    A. Lane and Sadie are characters who grapple with what exactly counts as living one’s life. For each of them, their TB symbolizes a deeper issue. Lane arrives at Latham House so exhausted from his rigorous coursework that he has become literally consumed by it. Sadie has internalized all of her fears and, instead of taking action, has become afraid of living. But theirs isn’t a story of what it means to be sick so much as a story about how it feels to be an outsider. It’s a story about second chances, and how easily we could miss them. So what I hope readers will find in Extraordinary Means is a story of what it means to have hope that you’ll figure out your place in the world, and that you’ll be strong enough to get there.

    Questions regarding The Beginning of Everything (aka Severed Heads, Broken Hearts if you’re in the UK)
    Q. Is there any chance of a TBoE movie ever happening?

    A. I hope so!

    Q. Why are there two titles? It is the same book but it has two titles and whatttt?

    A. The US title is The Beginning of Everything. The UK title is Severed Heads, Broken Hearts.

    Q. Why?

    A. Why is Carl’s Jr called Carl’s Jr in California, but Hardee’s in every other freaking state in the US? It just is.

    Q. Okayyyy. So, where can I buy this book?

    From anywhere books are sold. There are paperbacks and hardcovers and ebooks and audiobooks. Go forth, and please, don’t pirate. Libraries, not websites, are where the free books live.

    Q. Why did you feel the need to tell this story, and do you know someone who went through a similar accident?

    A. I knew that I needed to write a story about growing up in the suburbs and how it feels to realize that you’re not going to become the person you’d always imagined. I struggled with how to do this until a few years ago, when something terrible happened to a friend of mine while we were on spring break. Our friendship never quite recovered from his personal tragedy, and I eventually realized that so many stories lead up to the disaster and never begin in the aftermath.

    Q. As a female author, what made you want to write from a male perspective, and is it difficult?

    People are always surprised, when they meet me, that I wrote a book from a boy’s perspective, but the truth is, I wrote a book that was so emotionally autobiographical that I had to force myself to fictionalize it somehow. I was never a star athlete, but I know what it’s like to question the ideas everyone else seems to have about your future. I was never the victim of a hit and run accident, but I know what it’s like when your friends disappoint you. And I never had a mysterious girl break my heart, but I’ve been that girl, and it made me realize just how wrong I was when I wrote about it from the perspective of the lovelorn boy. So I suppose writing from the male perspective isn’t any more difficult than writing from the female perspective. We’re all just stories in the end, and stories don’t have genders.

    Q. Are you more like Ezra or Cassidy?

    A. Ezra’s inner monologue is very much my own. I like to joke that we have the same soul but different stories. I’m always disappointed when people see Cassidy in me, as she’s a girl whom it’s never wise to be: a cautionary tale masquerading as a person.

    Q. I’m from Irvine, and is Eastwood actually Irvine?

    A. Yes, Eastwood is a fictionalized version of a town called Irvine, California, where I lived for six years as a teenager, and where, if you were to go looking, you might find a castle park, some geocaches, a Lee’s Sandwiches, and quite a lot of dreary suburbia.

    Q. You reference Vampire Weekend a lot in the book and your main character is called Ezra so basically what is up with that and are you a big fan of the band or something?

    Here is what you need to know: I went to college with Vampire Weekend. They played in the living rooms of frat row, and they weren’t famous, they were just a really awesome campus band. Most writers are notorious name-borrowers, and I am no exception. For a couple of months in the spring of my junior year, I dated a boy whose cousin was in this campus band. The boy I was dating got upset over a short story I’d written in creative writing class, about a medical student convinced his cadaver was his high school English teacher. The main character was called Ezra. “You can’t use that name,” he said, “because you know my cousin is named Ezra.” I rolled my eyes and asked what other names were “off limits.” He gave me a long list, and I told him that was the stupidest rule I’d ever heard, and the next novel I wrote would have a narrator named Ezra. There you have it.

    Q. How did you come up with the names of your characters? Do they have special meaning, or did you just pick them out because they sounded nice?

    A. I answered the Ezra question above, but regarding the rest of it- Faulkner because William Faulkner wrote about a fictitious place based on where he grew up, and because it’s a last name that doesn’t at all match the idea of a golden boy jock, and I liked the idea of a disconnect between who you thought a boy with a literary last name would be, and who Ezra was for a long time. Cassidy’s last name, Thorpe, means Hamlet. Do with that what you will. Phoebe is the kid sister of the group, a Catcher In The Rye reference. The town is Eastwood, like East Egg from Gatsby. Those are really the important ones.

    Q. Why did you change some franchise names but leave others? For example, you left the HP franchise as it was, but changed the names of some video game series?

    A. Good catch- Quite a lot of things in TBoE are made up. The town. The floating movie theater. Most of the slang they use. When Ezra mentions Harry Potter, he’s talking about something that was a big part of his childhood, and I wanted it to resonate with readers’ own experiences. When he mentions a game he’s playing on his phone, it doesn’t really matter what game.

    Q. Did you ever consider putting in an Ezra and therapist conversation in the book?

    A. There are quite a lot of things that Ezra chooses to narrate around, rather than through. Things that he finds embarrassing, or painful. He downplays his physical limitations and avoids discussing them. He also avoids specifics in sex scenes. A therapist conversation, like a lot of the hospital scenes, are not in the book because they’re not part of the narrative as Ezra chose to tell it.

    Q. I don’t live in the US, Canada, or the UK. Where else is your book available?

    A. Foreign language editions of the book are available in many countries including Spain, Brazil, France, Germany, Turkey, Romania, Czech Republic, Indonesia, Serbia, and possibly a few other places I might have missed. It’s also available in the Philippines in an English language edition.

    Questions about School and Library Visits
    Q. Will you visit my school or library?

    A. Sure! Your teacher or other in-chargeish person needs to arrange it, so please let them know that you would like me to visit and have them get in touch.

    Q. I am a librarian/teacher/etc. How can I schedule a visit?

    A. Please drop me a note through my contact page.

    Q. Do you charge a speaker fee?

    A. Yes, my rates as of 2024 are $350 for a virtual school visit including one presentation and Q&A, $1,500 for an in person full day visit including multiple presentations, classroom visits and book signing, $800 for a half-day, such as two morning presentations or a presentation plus signing, or a smaller honorarium that we can arrange personally, provided there is limited or no funding and the students have purchased copies of my book. If you would like for me to visit in person outside of the Los Angeles, Ventura, or Orange County area, you will also need to pay for travel, food, and accommodations. You are welcome to partner with another school or library in your area and split the cost of travel.

    Q. Will you also do Skype or Zoom visits?

    A. Yes. If you are a book club or library group that has read my book, I can offer a limited amount of free 15 minute sessions. If you would like to arrange a longer chat or Zoom or Skype classroom visit, the cost is $200. For either option, please use my contact form.

    Q. Is there a reading guide for The Beginning of Everything?

    A. Yes. My publisher made a book club guide, which you can find here.

    Questions about Bookstore And Conference/Festival Visits

    Q. Will you do bookstore visits?

    A. Yes. I am happy to do a solo visit, a visit in conversation, or a panel. I am also happy to moderate a panel or interview another writer at their event local to Los Angeles/Ventura/Orange County. Please use my contact page to arrange.

    Q. Will you speak at conferences?

    A. Yes. I am happy to keynote, host workshops, or otherwise speak at your event. Please use my contact page to arrange. I charge $500 for a virtual 1-hour writing workshop as part of an online conference or event lineup where presenters are being compensated, and my keynote fee is $2000 for a small conference <5,000 attendees, $2500 for a large conference.

    Q. Will you come to a book festival or fandom/nerd culture festival?

    A. Yes. I am willing to speak on a panel, moderate a panel, do a main stage event, a signing, or a meetup. Please use my contact page to arrange.

    Q. What conferences have you been a guest or panelist at previously?

    A. Many, including Yallwest, Bookcon, San Diego ComicCon, ABA Winter Institute, and LATFOB.

    Industry Questions
    Q. Are the film/tv rights to the The Other Merlin available?

    A. Yes.

    Q. Are the film/tv rights to the Beginning of Everything available?

    A. Yes. There’s an awesome existing screenplay with a small penalty against it.

    Q. Are the film/tv rights to Extraordinary Means available?

    A. Yes.

    Q. Are the film/tv rights to Invisible Ghosts available?

    A. Yes.

    Q. Are the film/tv rights to You Don’t Live Here available?

    A. Yes.

    Q. Do you blurb?

    A. Occasionally. For traditionally published YA authors, please have your agent or editor contact my agent. Again, please don’t contact me directly, it will get buried, and I’ll feel awful for missing it. If applicable, make sure to have your rep list whether or not your book is based on your own lived experience as a marginalized writer (own voices), and whether it has undergone at least one sensitivity read. If I say no to blurbing your book, please don’t take it personally. I owe my publisher a fully-edited 500 page manuscript each year! I do try to blurb 2 or 3 debut novels each year.

    Q. Do you have any available properties?

    A. Yes. You’ll probably want to visit my contact page.

Schneider, Robyn THE NEW CAMELOT Viking (Teen None) $19.99 8, 27 ISBN: 9780593623015

Imagine a world where all genders are equal, merit rather than birth dictates power, and love is love: magic, indeed.

Despite packing in at least two books' worth of content and condensing major portions of the canon into a span of months, this closer effectively wraps up both the trilogy's dramatic (and sometimes bawdy) teen romances and its competing power plays. In this alternate Arthurian world, Merlin is a girl, Guinevere got pregnant by and eloped with someone who is neither Arthur nor Lancelot (who is himself happily involved with Percival), and Arthur would rather read than lead. Arthur and Emry journey to Anwen on a magical quest and fight multiple battles at home, where Arthur's council wishes to keep Camelot static, and in the field, where King Yurien seeks dominion over Camelot and is aided by evil sorceress Bellicent. Many secondary characters have their own meaningful arcs, particularly Guinevere and Morgana. Sir Tor, the young nonbinary knight, serves as a wise mentor to Lance and Arthur in ways that readers may find uncomfortably evoke the trope of the "magical other," but the casual acceptance of a range of queer identities is a key component of the new Camelot. Previous books established racial diversity among secondary characters; class and gender are greater obstacles to acceptance and advancement.

A rollicking retelling, wrapping commentary on our world into a delightful ahistorical package. (Historical fantasy. 14-18)

Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2024 Kirkus Media LLC
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"Schneider, Robyn: THE NEW CAMELOT." Kirkus Reviews, 1 July 2024. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A799332680/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=12ce5d2d. Accessed 9 June 2025.

"Schneider, Robyn: THE NEW CAMELOT." Kirkus Reviews, 1 July 2024. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A799332680/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=12ce5d2d. Accessed 9 June 2025.