Rachelle Dekker

Rachelle Dekker (born June 6, 1986) is the author of several novels, including the Christy Award Winning,[1][2] dystopian, fantasy novel The Choosing, the first novel in The Seer Book Series. She is the eldest daughter of New York Times best-selling author, Ted Dekker.

Rachelle Dekker
Born (1986-06-06) June 6, 1986
California
OccupationNovelist
GenresFantasy, Speculative Fiction, Science Fiction, Dystopian
Notable worksThe Choosing, The Calling, The Returning
RelativesTed Dekker (father)
Website
www.rachelledekker.com

Biography

Dekker was born to author Ted Dekker and Lee Ann Dekker, and spent most of her early years in the mountains of Colorado before relocating to Tennessee where she graduated with a degree in communications and spent several years in marketing and corporate recruiting before transitioning to writing full time. Rachelle was inspired early on to discover truth through the avenue of storytelling. She writes full time from her home in Nashville, where she lives with her husband, Daniel.[3]

Dekker's debut, The Choosing, released in May 2015, and is listed as the first book in the Seer Series.[4] USA Today describes The Choosing as a "quest of the heart", saying "its message will resonate within any reader who has ever been made to feel 'less than.'"[5] According to Publishers Weekly, "The strong female heroine will appeal to teen readers, and adults and teens alike may also enjoy the themes of corruption and religion, absolute human power, and government as god."[6]

Bibliography

Seer Series

  1. The Choosing (May, 2015)
  2. The Calling (March, 2016)
  3. The Returning (January, 2017)

Standalone Novels

  1. When Through Deep Waters (July, 2018)
  2. The Girl Behind the Red Rope, co-written with Ted Dekker (September, 2019)

Awards and nominations

  • 2016 Christy Award Winner in Young Adult category for The Choosing
  • 2016 Christy Award Finalist in First Novel category for The Choosing
  • 2016 INSPYs Short List in Literature for Young Adults category for The Choosing

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.