When Calista Jacobs, whose young son Charlie already shows signs of his father's scientific brilliance, discovers that her husband has been murdered, she sets out to track down his killer in this novel of murder and Harvard University politics.
Kathryn Lasky is the Newbery Honor author of over 100 fiction and nonfiction books for children and adults. Her books range from critically acclaimed nonfiction titles such as Sugaring Time and historical fiction in the Dear America series to the wildly popular Guardians of Ga'hoole fantasy series about owls. She was born and grew up in Indianapolis, Indiana. She received a bachelor's degree in English from the University of Michigan and a master's degree in early childhood education from Wheelock College. When she was in elementary school, she was labeled a "reluctant reader." The label was only half right, as she explains: "The truth was that I didn't really like the kind of books they had you reading at school ? the 'See Dick, see Jane' books. So I made a voluntary withdrawal from reading in school. But I loved the books my mom was reading to me, books like Peter Pan and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz." It was stories like these that led her to think up her own stories, although she says, "I never told anyone or showed anyone my stories."Lasky's interests as a writer range far and wide. To do research for her nonfiction books, she's been everywhere from a sheep-shearing farm, to a doll maker's workshop, to a small sailboat crossing the Atlantic, to a paleontology dig in Montana. She says that whatever she's writing, fiction or nonfiction, "the most important thing is if a story is real. Even in my nonfiction books, telling a story is more important than reciting the facts. I am sure a lot of folks must think I'm rather scattered doing all these different books. But to me, the whole point of being an artist is to get up every morning and reinvent the world."She is married to Christopher Knight, who has photographed 18 of her nonfiction books, and lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her New York Times bestselling series "Guardians of Ga'Hoole" is the basis for the Warner Bros. feature film "Legend of the Guardians."Her awards include:2011 Anne V. Zarrow Award for Young Readers' LiteratureMaine State Library Katahdin Award for lifetime achievment in childrens' literatureThe Washington Post / Children's Book Guild Award: for the body of Lasky's non-fiction workOrbis Pictus Honor for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children: The Man Who Made Time Travel & John Muir: America's First EnvironmentalistBoston Globe Horn Book Award: Weaver's GiftNewbery Honor: Sugaring TimeBank Str...