Suzanne Berne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suzanne Berne is an American novelist known for her foreboding character studies involving unexpected crimes and violence in bucolic suburban settings. Her debut novel, A Crime in the Neighborhood, published in 1997 by Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, won Great Britain's prestigious Orange Prize. Told through the eyes of a ten-year-old girl, the book chronicles a child's murder in a sleepy suburb of Washington, D.C. against the backdrop of the unfolding Watergate scandal. Her second novel, A Perfect Arrangement, published in 2001 by Algonquin Books, tells of a seemingly perfect nanny who comes to terrorize a dysfunctional suburban family.
Berne was born in Washington, D.C., attended the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and received a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship. She presently lives near Boston and has taught at both Harvard University and Wellesley College.