Linda Sue Park, author portrait
© Klaus Pollmeier

Linda Sue Park

Linda Sue Park was born and raised in Illinois. The daughter of Korean immigrants, she has been writing poems and stories since she was four years old. Park was first published when she was nine years old—she was paid one dollar for a haiku that ran in a children’s magazine.   During elementary and high school, Park had several more poems published in magazines for children and young people. She studied English at Stanford University and then she took a job as a public-relations writer for a major oil company. This was not exactly the kind of writing she wanted to do, but it did teach her to present her work professionally and that an interested writer can make any subject fascinating. Somewhere between living in Ireland, England, and the United States; teaching English as a second language and working as a food journalist; and starting a family; Park finally realized that what she really wanted to do was to write books for children. Park lives in upstate New York with her husband, their two children, a dog, a hamster, and eight tadpoles.  For more information on Linda Sue Park, visit her at www.lindasuepark.com
The One Thing You'd Save
Prairie Lotus
Fatal Throne: The Wives of Henry VIII Tell All
Keeping Score
Archer's Quest
Project Mulberry
A Single Shard

Books

The One Thing You'd Save
Prairie Lotus
Fatal Throne: The Wives of Henry VIII Tell All
Keeping Score
Archer's Quest
Project Mulberry
A Single Shard