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'''Meg Cabot''' (born '''Meggin Patricia Cabot''' on [[February 1]], [[1967]]) is an American author of romantic comedies for teens and adults. She has also written under the name '''Meggin Cabot''', as well as the pseudonyms '''Patricia Cabot''' and '''Jenny Carroll'''. She has written and published almost 40 books, and is best known for ''[[The Princess Diaries]]'', later made by [[Walt Disney Pictures]] into two feature films of the same name. Cabot has more than 2158 million copies of her books — children's, young adult, and adult — in print worldwide. Her website averages about 61,120 unique visitors a month.
'''Meg Cabot''' (born '''Meggin Patricia Cabot''' on [[February 1]], [[1967]]) is an American author of romantic comedies for teens and adults. She has also written under the name '''Meggin Cabot''', as well as the pseudonyms '''Patricia Cabot''' and '''Jenny Carroll'''. She has written and published almost 40 books, and is best known for ''[[The Princess Diaries]]'', later made by [[Walt Disney Pictures]] into two feature films of the same name. Cabot has more than 15 million copies of her books — children's, young adult, and adult — in print worldwide. Her website averages about 61,120 unique visitors a month.


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 02:47, 31 May 2007

Meg Cabot
Born (1967-02-01) February 1, 1967 (age 57)
Bloomington, Indiana
Pen namePatricia Cabot
Jenny Carroll
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
Period1998-present
GenreChick-lit, Mystery, Romance, Science fiction
Website
http://www.megcabot.com/

Meg Cabot (born Meggin Patricia Cabot on February 1, 1967) is an American author of romantic comedies for teens and adults. She has also written under the name Meggin Cabot, as well as the pseudonyms Patricia Cabot and Jenny Carroll. She has written and published almost 40 books, and is best known for The Princess Diaries, later made by Walt Disney Pictures into two feature films of the same name. Cabot has more than 15 million copies of her books — children's, young adult, and adult — in print worldwide. Her website averages about 61,120 unique visitors a month.

Biography

Cabot was born in Bloomington, Indiana to college professor C. Victor and Barbara Cabot. She has two cats, Henrietta (a one eyed cat) and Gem, about whom she often blogs.

In 1991, Cabot received a B.A. from Indiana University.

Meg Cabot married financial writer and poet Benjamin D. Egnatz on April 1 1993. Their wedding date (April Fool’s Day)was a deliberate play on her husband's belief that only fools get married in the first place. The wedding was actually an elopement in Italy. Her novel Every Boy's Got One is loosely based on her own elopement.

Before she published her first book, Meg worked as an assistant dorm manager at New York University. After living in Indiana, California, New York, and France, she now currently resides in Key West, Florida. She splits her time between an apartment in New York, NY and a barn in Bloomington, IN.[1]

In May 2006, the Harvard Crimson released reports that 19-year-old author Kaavya Viswanathan borrowed passages from Cabot's Princess Diaries series, and other books, to place in her novel How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life. Viswanathan's novels were subsequently pulled from the shelves.

Cabot has also written many books for teens, including The Princess Diaries series, which has won many awards, and her recently completed series, The Mediator.

Children Novels

  • Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls, Spring 2008

On February 5, 2007, Scholastic Corporation publishing announced that it had won the rights to publish Cabot's future books, including books for 8-12 year olds.[2] Cabot will finish her contract with Harper Collins and then work for Scholastic with her new children books and two new YA trilogies.[3]

Young adult novels

The Princess Diaries series

File:PrincessontheBrink.jpg
Princess on the Brink, January 2007

The first book in The Princess Diaries series was published in October 2000; the series has spent 38 weeks on the New York Times Children's Series Best Sellers List and has been sold to publishers in 37 foreign countries. As of April 14, 2006, the series was #4 on the New York Times bestseller list.

Illustrated by Chelsey McLaren:

  • Princess Lessons (March 2003)
  • Perfect Princess (March 2004)
  • Holiday Princess (November 2005)

In 2001 and 2004 respectively, the series was brought to the big screen by Walt Disney Pictures as The Princess Diaries and The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement starring Anne Hathaway and Julie Andrews. Cabot has thanked the movies many times in interviews and on her website because she believes that they helped boost her book sales, as well as making her the success that she is today.

Cabot talks about her inspiration for the series: "I was inspired to write The Princess Diaries when my mom, after the death of my father, began dating one of my teachers, just as Mia’s mom does in the book! I have always had a 'thing' for princesses (my parents used to joke that when I was little, I did a lot of insisting that my 'real' parents, the king and queen, were going to come get me soon, and that everyone had better start being a LOT nicer to me) so I stuck a princess in the book just for kicks… and VOILA! The Princess Diaries was born."[4]

On April 6, 2006, Cabot announced a mistake on the back cover of her new book, Party Princess. In New Zealand and Australia, the picture on the back features Georgia Byng instead of Cabot. She said, "Don't worry. The copies of Princess Diaries 7 with Georgia Byng's picture on the back are being pulled from shops, and swapped for copies of the book with the correct author's photo (mine) on the back."[3]

In December 2006, Cabot announced that a mistake had been made in the front cover summary of Valentine Princess. Since the book chronicles Mia glancing at her old diaries, the characters Boris and Tina were not dating, rather Boris and Lilly. However, on the book flap it says Boris and Tina are a couple. Cabot has announced that this will be fixed by the publishing company.

Cabot has stated that the series will end with its tenth book, when Mia turns 18.[3] However, she has also said that she may drop in on her (Mia) from time to time in the future.[3]

The Mediator series

  1. Shadowland (October 2000)
  2. Ninth Key (February 2001)
  3. Reunion (July 2001)
  4. Darkest Hour (December 2001)
  5. Haunted (February 2003)
  6. Twilight (December 2004)


The Mediator series is about a 16-year-old girl named Suze Simon. Suze is a mediator, whose role is to help ghosts finish their business so they can pass onto the afterlife. In this series, she can see, touch, communicate with, hit, punch, and kick other ghosts. The series begins just after Suze's mother remarries a man named Andy Ackerman, and Suze is shipped off to Carmel, California, to live in an old house complete with three stepbrothers. To make matters worse, her bedroom is haunted by an attractive male ghost named Jesse, who died 150 years prior. Suze realizes that back in New York a fortune teller had told her that she was a mediator and would only fall in love once but it will last for an eternity. The mediator part ended up being correct and according to Suze her one love for eternity just might be Jesse. But does he love her back?

The four books were originally released under her pseudonym Jenny Carroll (this was when Cabot was working with different publishing houses). Haunted was the first title to have Meg Cabot's name on it. The first four books were later reprinted under Cabot's real name in 2005 with new cover art when Twilight was released in hardcover.

1-800-WHERE-R-YOU series

File:1800Missing5.jpg
Missing You, December 2006
  1. When Lightning Strikes (February 2001)
  2. Code Name Cassandra (August 2001)
  3. Safe House (March 2002)
  4. Sanctuary (September 2002)
  5. Missing You (December 26, 2006)

This series revolves around Jessica Mastriani, an ordinary teenage girl given extraordinary psychic powers after being struck by lightning. Her powers allow her to know the exact location of missing children in her dreams. After seeing a picture of a person, they appear in her dreams. The four books chroncile her attempts help missing children while trying to avoid the scrutiny of the federal government.

The first four books were written under Cabot's pseudonym, Jenny Carroll. After poor sales, the series was discontinued. Sales improved when the books were rereleased in 2004 under Cabot's real name. Cabot was unhappy with the discontinuation; she stated that she wanted to take the series up to eight books. Her current publishing house agreed to publish one more installment. Missing You was released in December 2006 and ended the series.

The 1-800-WHERE-ARE-YOU series was the basis for the television show Missing, which aired on the Lifetime cable network for three seasons from 2003 to 2006.

All-American Girl series

Avalon High series

  • Avalon High, December 2005
  • Avalon High: Coronation (three-book manga series)
    • The Merlin Prophecy (July 3, 2007)
    • Hunter's Moon (September 1, 2007; date subject to change)
    • Homecoming (unknown)

An Avalon High sequel is in the works. However, instead of a regular novel, it is part of a new partnership HarperCollins brokered with Tokyopop (a leading United States manga company). It will be released as a three-book manga series, called Avalon High: Coronation. The first manga, titled The Merlin Prophecy, will be released on July 3, 2007 and is being drawn by manga artist Jinky Coronado, who does the Banzai Girl manga.

On August 31, Cabot reported at her website that the original book has been optioned by the Disney Channel for a made-for-television, live-action movie.

Other young adult fiction

File:Pantsonfire.jpg
The cover of Pants on Fire.

Adult novels

Size series

  1. Size 12 is Not Fat, January 2006
  2. Size 14 is Not Fat Either, November 28, 2006
  3. Big Boned (tentative), December 2007

Size 12 is Not Fat is an adult mystery series that features former pop star Heather Wells. Heather was once a teen star, but was fired by her recording company when she asked to sing songs she had written instead of the ones they composed for her. The book opens just after Heather has gotten a job as a residence house coordinator at New York College and quickly discovers that young girls in the dorm are being murdered.

The second book was originally titled Phat Chick, but this was changed by the publishers to It's Not Over Until The Size 12 Chick Sings, and finally, Size 14 is Not Fat Either, which will continue with Heather's amateur sleuthing adventures.

The title of the third book, Big Boned, is tentative and may be changed.

Queen of Babble series

File:QueenofBabble2.jpg
Queen of Babble in the Big City, June 2007.
  1. Queen of Babble, May 2006
  2. Queen of Babble in the Big City, May 2007
  3. Queen of Babble Gets Hitched, May 2008

Queen of Babble debuted at #27 on the New York Times Bestseller List, the highest debut of any of Cabot's adult books; it was also the first of her adult books to be released in hardcover. The series focusses on Lizzie Nichols, a lover of vintage fashion - and of talking. In the first book, her big mouth gets her into trouble with her British boyfriend, Andrew, and Lizzie ends up rushing off to France where her good friend is vacationing and helping out with a wedding. Like most of Cabot's books, the plot is primarily based on romance, but it also deals with the aftermath of Lizzie's tendency to babble. The series is currently contracted as a trilogy.

Romance novels

These novels were written under Cabot's pseudonym, Patricia Cabot.

  • Where Roses Grow Wild, March 1998
  • Portrait of My Heart, January 1999
  • An Improper Proposal, November 1999
  • A Little Scandal, June 2000
  • Lady of Skye, December 2000
  • Educating Caroline, November 2001
  • Kiss the Bride, May 2002

Other novels

Other works

Short stories

  • "The Christmas Captive" (as Patricia Cabot), included in the adult romance anthology A Season in the Highlands, which was published in November 2000.
  • "Girl’s Guide to New York through the Movies," included in Metropolis Found: New York Is Book Country 25th Anniversary Collection, published in August 2003.
  • "Kate the Great," included in Thirteen: Thirteen Stories That Capture the Agony and Ecstasy of Being Thirteen, published October 2003.
  • "Party Planner," included in the adult short story collection Girls' Night In, published September 2004.
  • "Connie Hunter Williams, Psychic Teacher," included in the teen short story collection Friends: Stories About New Friends, Old Friends, and Unexpectedly True Friends, published August 2005.
  • "Allie Finklestine's Rules for Boys," included in the CosmoGIRL! short story collection Shining On, published April 2006.
  • "Reunion," included in the adult short story collection Girls' Night Out, published June 2006.
  • "Cry, Linda, cry: Judy Blume’s Blubber and The Cruelest Thing in the World," included in Everything I Needed to Know About Being a Girl I Learned From Judy Blume, published Spring 2007.
  • "Ask Annie" included in Midnight Feast, published July 2007.
  • "The Exterminator's Daughter" included in Prom Nights From Hell, published May 2007.

Screenplays

  • Early versions of the screenplay for Disney's Ice Princess, released in 2005, were written by Meg Cabot. In her version, the heroine was a hockey player turned figure skater, not a physics whiz.

Awards

  • Romantic Times Reviewers Choice Award for Best British Isles Historical Romance, 1999, for An Improper Proposal
  • Top Ten Quick Picks for Reluctant Readers selection, Best Book selection, American Library Association, and New York Public Library Teen Book for the New Millennium citation, all 2001, all for The Princess Diaries
  • Edgar Allan Poe Award nomination, best young adult category, Mystery Writers of America, 2003, for Safe House
  • The Princess Diaries was voted "one of the nation's 100 best-loved novels" by the British public as part of the "The Big Read," British Broadcasting Corporation, 2003.

References

  • "Meg Cabot." Authors and Artists for Young Adults, Volume 50. Gale Group, 2003. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2006.
  • Cabot, Meggin. Meg Cabot Message Board'. 11 Mar. 2006. 14 Mar. 2006. <[1]>.
  1. ^ Biography of Meg Cabot, Meg Cabot
  2. ^ Scholastic Corporation Press Release, Meg Cabot
  3. ^ a b c d Meg Cabot's Blog, Meg Cabot Cite error: The named reference "megcabot.com blog" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  4. ^ The Princess Diaries, Vol I, Meg Cabot