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Veronica Roth

American Novelist and Short Story Writer
Date of Birth : 09 Aug, 1988
Place of Birth : New York, New York, United States
Profession : Short Story Writer, Novelist
Nationality : American
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Veronica Anne Roth is an American novelist and short story writer, known for her bestselling Divergent trilogy which has sold more than 35 million copies worldwide.

Biography

Roth, who grew up in Barrington, Illinois, began writing at an early age and was an avid reader. She was a fan of the works of writer Lois Lowry, especially of Lowry’s The Giver (1993), often cited as the original young-adult dystopian novel. When Roth reached high school, she became a practicing Christian. Her path to religion was a theme that she often referenced in her novels. Prior to graduating (2010) from Northwestern University, where she studied creative writing, Roth penned Divergent, the first installment in the trilogy, over winter break during her senior year.

Roth took her manuscript to a writers conference in March 2010 and secured an agent. The book was sold the following month to HarperCollins. It debuted in 2011 at number six on the New York Times best-seller list. Insurgent, released in 2012, captured the number one spot on that list. Roth had clearly hit her stride at the right moment—the niche market for dystopian novels was blossoming, and her offerings came on the heels of the popular Twilight and Hunger Games young-adult series. Roth’s fan base grew quickly, and when Allegiant came out in 2013, it became the most-preordered book ever issued by HarperCollins. The trilogy was a huge commercial success, with more than 30 million copies sold by 2015.

The Divergent series features 16-year-old heroine Beatrice (“Tris”) Prior, who does not fit easily into a single faction designated for citizens when they reach the age of 16. The factions are not separated by class or race but by values or virtues: Dauntless (boldness), Abnegation (selflessness), Amity (peacefulness), Candor (honesty), and Erudite (intellectuality). Tris, who is living secretly as a “divergent” (someone who fits into more than one group), decides to leave the faction in which she was reared (Abnegation) for Dauntless. The series follows Tris’s exploration of her identity and her relationship with the character Tobias (“Four”) Eaton, the leader of her new faction. In 2014 Roth published Four: A Divergent Collection, a companion volume that tells the story of the trilogy, as well as events preceding the main narrative, from the perspective of Four. A film adaptation of the first book, also titled Divergent, was released in 2014. A box-office success, it led to the sequels Insurgent (2015) and The Divergent Series: Allegiant (2016).

In 2017 Roth published her first book outside the Divergent series, Carve the Mark. The novel, the first in a two-part young-adult sci-fi series, tells the saga of Akos and Cyra, characters who come from different fictional planets with opposing cultures. The sequel, The Fates Divide, was released in 2018. The next year Roth published The End and Other Beginnings: Stories from the Future, a book of short stories. Chosen Ones (2020), her first novel for adults, follows a group of people who defeated an evil overlord years earlier. The dystopian mystery Poster Girl (2022) is set 10 years after the overthrow of an oppressive government known as the Delegation, and the imprisoned daughter of a Delegation official is offered her freedom in exchange for locating a missing girl.

Northwestern University

university, Evanston, Illinois, United States
Northwestern University, private, coeducational university in Evanston, Illinois, U.S. Northwestern University is a comprehensive research institution and a member of the Association of American Colleges and Universities. Northwestern’s undergraduate, graduate, and professional degree programs are among the most highly regarded in the United States. Total enrollment is approximately 21,000.

The university was founded in 1851 by a group of businessmen and professionals, led by physician John Evans. It was created to serve the area of the Northwest Territory—an area that now includes the states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin and part of Minnesota. Instruction began in 1855, and women were first admitted in 1869. When the university merged with the Evanston College for Ladies in 1873, educator and reformer Frances Willard became its first dean of women.

Northwestern is divided into 11 schools and colleges: the Judd A. and Marjorie Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences (1851), the Feinberg School of Medicine (1859), the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management (1908), the Robert R. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science (1909), the Graduate School (1910), the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications (1921), the Henry and Leigh Bienen School of Music (1859), and the Schools of Communication (1878), Law (1859), Education and Social Policy (1926), and Continuing Studies (1933). The university’s campus in Chicago is the site of its law and medical schools. In 2008 the university opened a campus in Qatar, which offers degree programs in journalism and communications. Research facilities include the Center for Learning and Organizational Change, the Institute for Policy Research, the Center for Public Safety, and the Materials Research Science and Engineering Center.

U.S. Senator George McGovern, U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, Nobel Prize-winning economist George J. Stigler, and author Saul Bellow are among Northwestern’s notable alumni.