Rick Yancey
Author of The 5th Wave
About the Author
Rick Yancey was born in Miami, Florida on November 4, 1962. He received a B.A. in English from Roosevelt University in Chicago. Before becoming a full time writer in 2004, he worked as a field officer for the Internal Revenue Service. His first book, A Burning in Homeland, was published in 2003. He show more is the author of several series including The 5th Wave, The Extraordinary Adventures of Alfred Kropp, The Highly Effective Detective, and The Monstrumologist. He wrote a memoir entitled Confessions of a Tax Collector. In 2010, he received a Michael L. Printz Honor for The Monstrumologist. The 5th Wave was adapted into a movie. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Rick Yancey
The Monstrumologist Collection: The Monstrumologist; The Curse of the Wendigo; The Isle of Blood; The Final Descent (2014) 17 copies
De 5de golf (De 5de golf, #1) 3 copies
The monstrumologist 2 copies
Klątwa Wendigo : William James Henry : ciąg dalszy opowieści o badaczu potworów, czyli o Monstrumologu (2014) 2 copies
Die 5. Welle (Die 5. Welle #1) 2 copies
Las extraordinarias aventuras de Alfred Kropp : = The extraordinary adventures of Alfred Kropp (2006) 1 copy
Alpha Dog 1 copy
The Fifth Wave 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Yancey, Richard
- Birthdate
- 20th century
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Roosevelt University
- Occupations
- Internal Revenue Service tax collector
theater critic
playwright - Awards and honors
- Michael L. Printz Honor
- Short biography
- Richard Yancey (born November 4, 1962)[citation needed] is an American author who writes works of suspense, fantasy, and science fiction aimed at young adults.
Rick Yancey was born in a Miami suburb, Florida.
Yancey wrote his first short story in seventh grade while attending Crystal Lake Junior High School in Florida. After graduating from Lakeland Senior High School, he was accepted to Florida Southern College and majored in Communications. After a year at Florida Southern College, Yancey transferred to Florida State University and ultimately graduated from Roosevelt University with a B.A. in English. After graduation, Yancey planned on attending law school.
Ultimately, Yancey decided against law school and began teaching English classes as well as acting and directing in local community theatres. In 1991, Yancey applied for a government job and was hired by the Internal Revenue Service, where he worked as an agent for twelve years.
Yancey also spent 10 years of his life in Knoxville, Tennessee, where two of his books are set.
While working at the IRS, Yancey wrote screenplays in his spare time. At the suggestion of his wife and collaborator, one of his screenplays became his first professionally published book, A Burning in Homeland (Simon and Schuster), published in 2001.
With the success of A Burning in Homeland, Yancey resigned from the IRS in 2004 to concentrate on writing full-time. His memoir, Confessions of a Tax Collector (HarperCollins, 2004), chronicles his days working at the IRS.
After the release of his memoir, Yancey began work on two series of books—one for adults, and one for children.
The Alfred Kropp series tells the story of an awkward teenager who saves the world when he comes into possession of King Arthur's famed sword, Excalibur—pursued by the secret cabal of knights who have hidden it for centuries. Published by Bloomsbury Children’s Publishing in the U.S. and the U.K., and in fifteen foreign language editions, the series comprised three books: The Extraordinary Adventures of Alfred Kropp (2005), The Seal of Solomon (2007), and The Thirteenth Skull (2008).
His Highly Effective Detective books (St. Martin’s Press) are whodunits for adult readers, featuring a charming but barely competent private investigator based in Tennessee. That series consists of four titles: The Highly Effective Detective (2006), The Highly Effective Detective Goes to the Dogs (2008), The Highly Effective Detective Plays the Fool (2010), and The Highly Effective Detective Crosses the Line (2011).
By 2010, Yancey had completed the first book in The Monstrumologist series. The tetralogy tells the tale of a 19th-century doctor and his young apprentice, who race around the world chasing—and being chased by—monsters. This highly acclaimed series, published by Simon and Schuster Children’s Books in the U.S. and the U.K, and in eight foreign language editions, comprised four books: The Monstrumologist (2009), The Curse of the Wendigo (2010), The Isle of Blood (2011), and The Final Descent (2013). - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Miami, Florida, USA
- Places of residence
- Florida, USA
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
Gainesville, Florida, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- Florida, USA
Members
Reviews
I cannot do this. I will not do this.
This book is like when a loved one lays dying in a hospital bed, sickly, washed-out, and hooked up to all sorts of machines. More specifically, this book is like when that loved one asks you not to remember them that way, but rather as the way they were when they lived.
The Monstrumologist series has been such an incredible ride, full of growth and beauty and pain and horror. I want to remember it as being as fantastic as I know it is, not the way The show more Final Descent is shaping up to make it. It takes two of the most complex, interesting characters I've ever had the pleasure to read of and shoots them into a very bleak future- it seems that none of their qualities that I've come to know and love have survived. Will Henry is a brutish, melodramatic teen; Warthrop is bitter and on the brink of death.Kearns' death by Will's hand is treated almost cavalierly. I DNF'd at page 55.
I realise Yancey's intent here. This series was never supposed to end happily. It is about monsters, maybe even narrated by one, and it showcases the worst of humankind. However, I can't take this perversion of the characters I've grown to root for. I've come a long way with Will and Warthrop, and I can't help but feel like this abrupt, 180 degree change in their personalities, ideologies, as values throws away the hundreds of pages of subtle, moving growth I've enjoyed so much in the previous three books.
Not to mention the writing: in the introduction, Yancey's talks about how "incoherent" the "original folios" were, and how he felt betrayed by the ending. I would argue that they still are quite incoherent. Obviously, this is intentional (Will wrote them towards the end of his life, when it seems he went insane- or more insane than he already was). Still, it's pretty infuriating. Scattered, and not in a good way; rife with confusing sentences and broken paragraphs and tense switches. The lush, gorgeous prose from The Monstrumologist, The Curse of the Wendigo, and The Isle of Blood is gone as if it never was; so too is Will Henry's distinct voice, wondrous and worried and tinged with the nostalgia and regret of old age. He seems crazed here, and ragingly bipolar. In many ways, this feels like a totally different book than its companions in the series.
I assume that Will Henry's true identity (and perhaps Warthrop's as well) is revealed here, and so is how he found himself dead in a ditch, as is whatever grand monster Warthrop's been keeping in the Monstrumarium, but I don't care enough to let those things sully the pure glory that was The Isle of Blood. Honestly, I prefer the mystery to whatever truth might be unveiled- whether Will Henry was who he claimed to be, or just a particularly imaginative lunatic, it does not matter. Perhaps he was a bit of both, like the Wendigo, like Kearns. The mystery does not bother me in the slightest.
If The Isle of Blood wasn't as perfect as it was, I would probably continue with The Final Descent. But it was perfect- perfectly written, perfectly told. I feel like both Will and Warthrop's characters completed a very meaningful, very touching arc in that story, and it may well may be the best novel I've ever read. And it's not that I can't handle sad endings; it's just that that book felt so complete. Nothing more needs to be added- it's like creating a sequel to a movie that maybe didn't tie up every loose end, but was enjoyable and didn't need to be continued.
Will Henry says early on- it may be the first book, or possibly the second- that it is the reader's blessing that they are able to turn away, because he could not. So I am choosing to do so. Call it cowardice, but I call it doing a service to a loved one. I choose not to remember them as a sickly shell of what they once were, but as the vibrant soul they always will be.
We are, all of us, monstrumologists. show less
This book is like when a loved one lays dying in a hospital bed, sickly, washed-out, and hooked up to all sorts of machines. More specifically, this book is like when that loved one asks you not to remember them that way, but rather as the way they were when they lived.
The Monstrumologist series has been such an incredible ride, full of growth and beauty and pain and horror. I want to remember it as being as fantastic as I know it is, not the way The show more Final Descent is shaping up to make it. It takes two of the most complex, interesting characters I've ever had the pleasure to read of and shoots them into a very bleak future- it seems that none of their qualities that I've come to know and love have survived. Will Henry is a brutish, melodramatic teen; Warthrop is bitter and on the brink of death.
I realise Yancey's intent here. This series was never supposed to end happily. It is about monsters, maybe even narrated by one, and it showcases the worst of humankind. However, I can't take this perversion of the characters I've grown to root for. I've come a long way with Will and Warthrop, and I can't help but feel like this abrupt, 180 degree change in their personalities, ideologies, as values throws away the hundreds of pages of subtle, moving growth I've enjoyed so much in the previous three books.
Not to mention the writing: in the introduction, Yancey's talks about how "incoherent" the "original folios" were, and how he felt betrayed by the ending. I would argue that they still are quite incoherent. Obviously, this is intentional (Will wrote them towards the end of his life, when it seems he went insane- or more insane than he already was). Still, it's pretty infuriating. Scattered, and not in a good way; rife with confusing sentences and broken paragraphs and tense switches. The lush, gorgeous prose from The Monstrumologist, The Curse of the Wendigo, and The Isle of Blood is gone as if it never was; so too is Will Henry's distinct voice, wondrous and worried and tinged with the nostalgia and regret of old age. He seems crazed here, and ragingly bipolar. In many ways, this feels like a totally different book than its companions in the series.
I assume that Will Henry's true identity (and perhaps Warthrop's as well) is revealed here, and so is how he found himself dead in a ditch, as is whatever grand monster Warthrop's been keeping in the Monstrumarium, but I don't care enough to let those things sully the pure glory that was The Isle of Blood. Honestly, I prefer the mystery to whatever truth might be unveiled- whether Will Henry was who he claimed to be, or just a particularly imaginative lunatic, it does not matter. Perhaps he was a bit of both, like the Wendigo, like Kearns. The mystery does not bother me in the slightest.
If The Isle of Blood wasn't as perfect as it was, I would probably continue with The Final Descent. But it was perfect- perfectly written, perfectly told. I feel like both Will and Warthrop's characters completed a very meaningful, very touching arc in that story, and it may well may be the best novel I've ever read. And it's not that I can't handle sad endings; it's just that that book felt so complete. Nothing more needs to be added- it's like creating a sequel to a movie that maybe didn't tie up every loose end, but was enjoyable and didn't need to be continued.
Will Henry says early on- it may be the first book, or possibly the second- that it is the reader's blessing that they are able to turn away, because he could not. So I am choosing to do so. Call it cowardice, but I call it doing a service to a loved one. I choose not to remember them as a sickly shell of what they once were, but as the vibrant soul they always will be.
We are, all of us, monstrumologists. show less
Read all 3 paperbacks back to back. Loved the way each flowed into the next. Really hate when a series spends the first chapter or two rehashing the previous and Yancey did not do this. I found all 3 books disturbing on so many levels. After reading volume one I was depressed on the side of hopelessness with no escape or redemption in sight. That pretty much sums up how each book affected me. Yancey's underlying philosophy throughout was based on what seemed to be the possible future of show more human kind regardless of aliens. He shares a brutally real vision of what we are doing to each other and to the earth. Somehow "Silent Spring" comes to mind.
I highly recommend all three. show less
I highly recommend all three. show less
SWEDISH REVIEW
Med står förtjusning gav jag mig i kast att läsa Wendigons förbannelse, uppföljaren till Monstrumologen som jag läste några månader sedan. Jag älskar att läsa gotisk skräck och denna serie har blivit en favorit för min del och jag var nyfiken på vad Doktor Warthrop och Will Henry skulle utsättas för denna gång?
I första boken fick vi lärt känna Doktor Warthrop och Will Henry, deras bakgrundshistoria, varför Will bor och arbetar för Doktor Warthrop. I show more Wendigons förbannels får vi reda mer om Doktor Warthrop förflutna och jag måste erkänna att jag var förbluffad hur tragiskt hans förflutna är. Just att man fick lära känna honom mer gjorde också at jag kände mer för honom och hans kamp i denna bok at rädda en gammal vän mer akut. Som vanligt lyckas Rick Yancey blanda in skräckelement på ett bra sätt i boken. Jag kände dock inte samma obehag som när jag läste första boken, dock så fanns det en och annan obehaglig scen.
Jag tycker att Wendigons förbannels är en fantastisk bok, så otroligt bra och vackert skriven. Yancey har en förmågan att skriva så att jag kan stanna upp mitt i berättelsen bara för att läsa om en vackert skriven mening. Yancey förmågan att skriva tillsammans med fantasin att komma på en sådan fantastisk historia gör boken så otroligt bra.
Nu vill jag bara säga en sak: Läs denna och den föregående boken. Du kommer inte ångra dig!
Tack till Modernista för recensionsexemplaret!
ENGLISH REVIEW
It was with great delight that I started to read The Curse of the Wendigo, the sequel to Monstrumologist that I read a few months ago. I love to read Gothic horror and this series has become a favorite for me and I was curious to find out what Dr. Warthrop and Will Henry would face this time?
The first book introduced to Dr. Warthrop and Will Henry and we got to learn the basic fact about them, their background history, why Will live and work for Doctor Warthrop. In The Curse of the Wendigo, we learn more about Dr. Warthrop's past and I have to admit I was taken aback by how tragic his past is. I found that getting to know him more also made at I felt more for him and his struggle in this book to save an old friend acuter. As usual, Rick Yancey's manage to add in horror elements in a good way in the book. However, I didn't feel the same discomfort as when I read the first book, but there was the occasional unpleasant scene.
I think The Curse of the Wendigo is an amazing book, so incredibly good and beautifully written. Yancey has an ability to write so that I suddenly have to take a pause up in the middle of the story just to re-read a beautifully written sentence. Yancey ability to write, together with imagination to come up with such a great story makes the book so incredibly good.
Now I just want to say one thing: Read this and the previous book. You will not regret it!
Thanks to Modernista for the review copy!
Read this review and others on A Bookaholic Swede show less
Med står förtjusning gav jag mig i kast att läsa Wendigons förbannelse, uppföljaren till Monstrumologen som jag läste några månader sedan. Jag älskar att läsa gotisk skräck och denna serie har blivit en favorit för min del och jag var nyfiken på vad Doktor Warthrop och Will Henry skulle utsättas för denna gång?
I första boken fick vi lärt känna Doktor Warthrop och Will Henry, deras bakgrundshistoria, varför Will bor och arbetar för Doktor Warthrop. I show more Wendigons förbannels får vi reda mer om Doktor Warthrop förflutna och jag måste erkänna att jag var förbluffad hur tragiskt hans förflutna är. Just att man fick lära känna honom mer gjorde också at jag kände mer för honom och hans kamp i denna bok at rädda en gammal vän mer akut. Som vanligt lyckas Rick Yancey blanda in skräckelement på ett bra sätt i boken. Jag kände dock inte samma obehag som när jag läste första boken, dock så fanns det en och annan obehaglig scen.
Jag tycker att Wendigons förbannels är en fantastisk bok, så otroligt bra och vackert skriven. Yancey har en förmågan att skriva så att jag kan stanna upp mitt i berättelsen bara för att läsa om en vackert skriven mening. Yancey förmågan att skriva tillsammans med fantasin att komma på en sådan fantastisk historia gör boken så otroligt bra.
Nu vill jag bara säga en sak: Läs denna och den föregående boken. Du kommer inte ångra dig!
Tack till Modernista för recensionsexemplaret!
ENGLISH REVIEW
It was with great delight that I started to read The Curse of the Wendigo, the sequel to Monstrumologist that I read a few months ago. I love to read Gothic horror and this series has become a favorite for me and I was curious to find out what Dr. Warthrop and Will Henry would face this time?
The first book introduced to Dr. Warthrop and Will Henry and we got to learn the basic fact about them, their background history, why Will live and work for Doctor Warthrop. In The Curse of the Wendigo, we learn more about Dr. Warthrop's past and I have to admit I was taken aback by how tragic his past is. I found that getting to know him more also made at I felt more for him and his struggle in this book to save an old friend acuter. As usual, Rick Yancey's manage to add in horror elements in a good way in the book. However, I didn't feel the same discomfort as when I read the first book, but there was the occasional unpleasant scene.
I think The Curse of the Wendigo is an amazing book, so incredibly good and beautifully written. Yancey has an ability to write so that I suddenly have to take a pause up in the middle of the story just to re-read a beautifully written sentence. Yancey ability to write, together with imagination to come up with such a great story makes the book so incredibly good.
Now I just want to say one thing: Read this and the previous book. You will not regret it!
Thanks to Modernista for the review copy!
Read this review and others on A Bookaholic Swede show less
Wow.
Seriously, just...wow! Rick Yancey's dark paranoid vision of the aftermath of an alien invasion is absolutely unputdownable.
The 1st wave was an EMP pulse that shut down the power and took out 500,000 people. The 2nd wave killed billions. The 3rd wave killed 97% of those who were left. The 4th wave was when they realized the aliens had hidden sleepers among us and no one could be trusted. Now it's the dawn of the 5th wave.
Oh. My. Dog. Y'all this book is epic. Our main character is Cassie show more Sullivan, surviving (barely) on her own. As we see her day to day life, she tells us the story of how she got to where she is. Her voice is amazing: angry, scared, snarky, hopeful, despairing and paranoid. We feel her struggle as she tries to stay alive one more day in a world where anybody could be the enemy. We get some chapters narrated by others having a different experience, and the true meaning of the 5th wave becomes horrifyingly clear.
This book is gut-punch after gut-punch and I love every page. A sequel is inevitable (perhaps two), and I'm counting the minutes.
(this review originally appeared on my blog, Rampant Biblioholism) show less
Seriously, just...wow! Rick Yancey's dark paranoid vision of the aftermath of an alien invasion is absolutely unputdownable.
The 1st wave was an EMP pulse that shut down the power and took out 500,000 people. The 2nd wave killed billions. The 3rd wave killed 97% of those who were left. The 4th wave was when they realized the aliens had hidden sleepers among us and no one could be trusted. Now it's the dawn of the 5th wave.
Oh. My. Dog. Y'all this book is epic. Our main character is Cassie show more Sullivan, surviving (barely) on her own. As we see her day to day life, she tells us the story of how she got to where she is. Her voice is amazing: angry, scared, snarky, hopeful, despairing and paranoid. We feel her struggle as she tries to stay alive one more day in a world where anybody could be the enemy. We get some chapters narrated by others having a different experience, and the true meaning of the 5th wave becomes horrifyingly clear.
This book is gut-punch after gut-punch and I love every page. A sequel is inevitable (perhaps two), and I'm counting the minutes.
(this review originally appeared on my blog, Rampant Biblioholism) show less
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- 48
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