Tyne O'Connell

Tyne O'Connell
Born 1960
Occupation Novelist
Nationality British
Period 1996 - present
Genre Romantic Comedy, Contemporary Women's Literature, Teen Fiction

Tyne O'Connell (full name Clementyne Rose O'Connell) is a British author. She has written for publications such as Ms.,[1] Elle UK and Journal.[2] Her short stories appear in Girls' Night Out and Kid's Night In. She is a contributor to Holiday Goddess. O'Connell is The Eccentrics Club's (whose patron is HRH The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh), “Most Eccentric Thinker of the Year” 2015. [3]

Contemporary fiction

O'Connell's first novel, Sex, Lies and Litigation was published in the UK in 1996 by Headline Review. Headline Review published five books by O'Connell, the most popular of which was What's A Girl to Do?. In 2000 she made her US publishing début with The Sex Was Great But..., published by RDI and followed by Sex With The Ex.

O'Connell's stories tend to feature British eccentrics and aristocrats.

YA fiction

In 2003 O'Connell began writing young adult fiction. Pulling Princes published by Bloomsbury US and Piccadilly UK, and translated into 13 languages was the first in the Calypso Chronicles. The series of four books focus on the adventures of a group of privileged and aristocratic teenagers attending two English single-sex boarding schools in Berkshire.

Pulling Princes, Stealing Princes, Dueling Princes & Dumping Princes were published by Bloomsbury US and Piccadilly UK. A further teen novel was published by Bloomsbury US in 2007: True Love, The Sphinx and Other Unsolvable Riddles which the School Library Journal referred to as "This flirty, fun romcom, told from four distinctive points of view, reads like an old-time comedy of errors. O'Connell describes Egypt with such vitality and richness that it shines as a separate character. This novel is a trip worth taking.."[4]

In 2011, coinciding with the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, O'Connell's first two books from the Calypso Chronicles were published together in the UK, US and several other countries in a single volume entitled A Royal Match. This was followed by A Royal Mess a single volume of books three and four in the series.

Publications

Notes

  1. O'Connell, T: Ms. Magazine US, page 92. September/October 1998
  2. O'Connell, T: "Journal", page 46. IPC Magazines, March 2000
  3. http://www.eccentricclub.net/great-british-eccentric.php
  4. School Library Journal, 2008, Reed Business Publications

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, October 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.