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Ecuadorian-American author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zoraida Córdova is an Ecuadorian-American author of children's books and romance, best known for her Brooklyn Brujas series. She also writes romance as Zoey Castile.
Zoraida Córdova | |
---|---|
Born | Guayaquil, Ecuador | June 26, 1987
Pen name | Zoey Castile |
Language | English |
Alma mater | Hunter College, University of Montana |
Genre | Young adult fiction, middle grade fiction, romance |
Years active | 2012-now |
Notable works | Labyrinth Lost |
Website | |
zoraidacordova |
Córdova was born in Guayaquil, Ecuador and came to the United States when she was five or six years old.[1] English is her second language.[2]
She grew up in Hollis, Queens.[3] Her favorite books in high school were In the Forests of the Night and Demon in my View by Amelia Atwater Rhodes, which she first read at age 13.[3] Impressed by the fact that Rhodes was published when she was 14, Córdova was inspired to start to want to become a writer as well.[4]
Córdova attended the National Book Foundation’s writing camps in high school, with the help of a supportive teacher,[5] and the Summer Solstice writing conference at Pine Manor college.[3]
She says that she wrote many unfinished stories in college, accumulating multiple "Part 1s", and completed her first novel at age 19.[1] After college, she interned at PMA Literary and Film management, where she first met the person who would become her literary agent.[3]
Córdova identifies as Latina and is one of the co-founders of the Latinx in Kidlit blog, a website centering fellow Latinx writers.[6]
Córdova wrote her first query letter to a literary agent when she was 17.[7] She wrote two more novels before writing the novel that ultimately made her able to get literary representation.[8]
The Vicious Deep Series
Córdova wrote what would become her debut novel, The Vicious Deep, as part of the National Novel Writing Month in 2010.[1] It sold to Sourcebooks within a week of submitting.[3]
The Vicious Deep follows Tristan, a boy who gets swept away by a tidal wave and lands on Coney Island, having developed strange powers.[3] It was published by Sourcebooks in August 2012.[3]
Córdova says that she has had an infatuation with the sea ever since she was a child, saying that she had been sent a VHS of The Little Mermaid by her grandmother while still living in Ecuador and started to develop an interest in mermaids.[3] While there is one biracial Ecuadorian and Greek side character in the novel, Córdova says that "it all began in Ecuador" for her.[3] She first had the concrete idea for the novel when she spent a summer in Coney Island.[3]
Two sequels, The Savage Blue and The Vast and Brutal Sea, followed in May 2013 and June 2015.[9]
Brooklyn Brujas Series
Her second young adult series, Brooklyn Brujas (Witches), originally began as a Latinx version of Charmed and has been inspired by Córdova's Ecuadorian heritage.[10] Córdova says that she wanted to write about identity, family, and magic, while being inclusive of people of color, without taking from preexisting mythologies, ultimately creating a fictional pantheon of gods, inspired by many different Latin American cultures.[11][12] She worked on multiple drafts of what would become the first novel, Labyrinth Lost, for years before it ultimately sold in 2014.[10]
Labyrinth Lost follows Alex, a bruja who hates magic and accidentally makes her entire family vanish when she performs a spell to rid herself of her own magic.[13] It was published by Sourcebooks in September 2016 and received a starred review from School Library Journal.[14] In April 2017, it was announced that Paramount had acquired movie rights to the novel.[15] As of May 2019,[update] the project is still in early development and no producer or writer has been attached yet.[15]
A sequel, Bruja Born, about Lula, the sister of the protagonist of the first book, whose life is turned upside down after a bus crash, was published in June 2018.[8] Córdova says that she didn't feel the story was complete after the first novel and that she didn't want to "mess up" Alex's ending, so chose the point of view of her sister instead, writing a much more "darker" novel in tone than the first.[8]
A third novel in the series is slated for publication in 2020.[16]
Star Wars
She wrote the short story "You Owe Me a Ride",[17] included in the short story collection Star Wars: From a Certain Point of View, featuring 40 authors' takes on stories taking place during the first Star Wars film, Star Wars: A New Hope, as told through the perspective of supporting characters.[18] The collection was released in October 2017.[19]
Córdova is also the author A Crash of Fate, a Star Wars canon universe novel released by Disney-Lucasfilm Press in August 2019.[20] It tells the story of Izzy and Jules, two best friends on the run from vengeful smugglers and pirates.[20]
She also wrote the short-story "The Lost Nightsister" included in the short story collection The Clone Wars: Stories of Light and Dark released by Disney-Lucasfilm Press in 2020.[citation needed]
Other works
She also writes romance under the pen name Zoey Castile, most notably her Magic Mike-inspired Happy Endings series about male strippers falling in love.[21]
In October 2018, it was announced that she would be co-editing a young adult fantasy anthology featuring called Vampires Never Get Old together with author Natalie Parker, featuring stories by authors Samira Ahmed, Julie Murphy, Rebecca Roanhorse, Laura Ruby, and Victoria Schwab. Publication is planned for fall 2020.[22]
Her middle grade debut, The Way to Rio Luna, about an eleven-year-old who finds a book that transports him to a fairyland, was announced in October 2019 and planned for publication with Scholastic in summer 2020.[23]
Adult
The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina (Atria Books, 2021)
Young adult
Vicious Deep Series
Brooklyn Brujas Series
Star Wars Canon Universe
Hollow Crown Series
Middle Grade fiction
Romance
On the Verge Series
Short Stories
As Editor
Romance
Happy Endings Series
Short Stories
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