A woman with medium-length brown hair smiling at the camera, wearing a white dress with spaghetti straps and a gold necklace with a small figure pendant.

Natalie Haney

Tilghman

Award-winning writer and co-author of A 52-HERTZ WHALE, which was short-listed for an ALA Schneider Family Award and a finalist for the Green Earth Award.

Currently working on a historical novel inspired by her family’s encounters with fascism in Italy during World War II. This initial draft was honored with a Rona Jaffe Writer’s Award.

AS SEEN IN

The image contains a colorful artwork or painting with abstract shapes and vibrant colors.
The word 'TriQuarterly' written in large black letters.
Orange background with a white cicada illustration and the word "CICADA" below it.
Logo for the Santa Clara Review, featuring a stylized owl and text for a poetry, prose, and art publication.

PUBLICATIONS

2015

Reviews of A 52-HERTZ WHALE

“Told through the exchange of conversational emails, Sommer and Tighman’s debut features relatable characters in a slightly fantastical yet wholly realistic series of situations. James Turner is a socially awkward high school freshman in Philadelphia, caught between his obsession with whales and a disintegrating childhood friendship. When his sponsored juvenile whale, Salt, breaks away from his pod and engages in abnormal behavior, James blindly reaches out to Darren Olmstead, a former volunteer from his middle school Resource Room. Darren is a recent college graduate with a film degree, working in Los Angeles and struggling to recover from a failed relationship. What follows is a vibrant, in-depth exploration of the parallel paths the lives of these two young men take, highlighting the relative anonymity of computer communication in contrast to the facades presented to the world. The voices and stories of secondary characters lend depth and a more well-rounded perspective. Flashes of humor and empathy are interspersed with exposition from others’ viewpoints, creating a cohesive, emotionally intimate story that sensitively handles loss, grief, accomplishment, and the not-so-simple act of growing up. Ages 14–up. Agent: Sara Crowe, Harvey Klinger. (Sept.)”

-Publisher’s Weekly

“An open-ended meditation on loneliness and connection, told in crisscrossing email threads.”

-Kirkus Review

“This debut work is an appealing read with memorable characters and an interesting format.”

-School Library Connection Archive