CJ Skuse

English novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Claire Joanna Skuse (born 1980) is an English novelist and formerly a senior lecturer in creative writing. She began her career writing young adult (YA) fiction, publishing five novels, and was named a key figure in the "rise of YA antiheroines" by The Guardian.[1] She then moved into adult thrillers with the release of Sweetpea (2017) and its sequels.

Born
Claire Joanna Skuse

1980 (age 4546)
Othernames
  • C.J. Skuse
  • C J Skuse
OccupationWriter
Quick facts Born, Other names ...
CJ Skuse
Born
Claire Joanna Skuse

1980 (age 4546)
Other names
  • C.J. Skuse
  • C J Skuse
Alma materUniversity of Gloucestershire
OccupationWriter
Years active2009–present
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Early life and education

Skuse was born in Weston-super-Mare to parents Jenny and Colin, who ran local pubs and hotels, including the Britannia Inn.[2]

Skuse was 17 when she began writing and trying to pitch to publishers. She went on to graduate with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Creative English Studies and a Master of Arts (MA) in Writing for Young People, both from Bath Spa University.[3] She also has a PhD by Publication, which she received from the University of Gloucestershire in 2025. She previously worked in a nursery alongside her studies and once had internships at the Weston Mercury and the County Gazette in Taunton.[4]

Career

After graduating from university, Skuse landed a job as a publishing assistant at The Chicken House in Frome, through which she published her debut young adult (YA) novel Pretty Bad Things, about 16-year-old twins who go on a petty crime spree.[5] The novel won the inaugural 2011 Dumfries and Burgh Book Award.[6] It was also shortlisted for Lancashire Book of the Year. This was followed by Skuse's second and third YA novels Rockoholic, about a fan of a rock band,[7] and Dead Romantic, a modern Weird Science retelling.[8] The latter was shortlisted for a 2014 BookTrust Best Book Award.[9]

Skuse was credited in The Guardian with pioneering a "YA antiheroine" trend from the publication of Pretty Bad Things,[1] and she wrote a 2015 article in the publication on her penchant for writing "angry girl" lead characters.[10] Via HarperCollins and MIRA Ink, Skuse published her fourth and fifth YA novels Monsters (2015), a boarding school-set thriller,[11] and The Deviants (2016), about an estranged friend group in a coastal town.[12] The French translation of The Deviants won the 2017 Jean Monnet University Student Literary Prize.[13]

In 2016, HQ (a Harlequin and HarperCollins imprint) acquired the rights to publish Skuse's first adult novel Sweetpea in 2017.[14] The dark comedy thriller is told through the diary entries of character Rhiannon Lewis, a wallflower-appearing compulsive serial killer.[15][16] Skuse then published a sequel In Bloom in 2018.[17]

In the interim, Skuse published a standalone adult thriller novel The Alibi Girl, also via HQ in 2020, about a woman who assumes multiple identities.[18]

Skuse returned to the Sweetpea series in 2021 with a third instalment Dead Head.[19][20] This was followed by the fourth and fifth novels in the series Thorn in My Side[21] and The Bad Seeds in 2023 and 2024 respectively.[22]

Adaptation

Ahead of the release of Sweetpea in 2017, See-Saw Films optioned the rights to adapt the novel for television.[23] In 2020, it was announced Sky Atlantic had ordered 8 episodes of the series, with Kirstie Swain attached to pen the adaptation.[24] Starring Ella Purnell as Rhiannon Lewis, the series was released in October 2024 with a second series due for transmission in late 2026.[25]

Bibliography

Sweetpea series

  • Sweetpea (2017)
  • In Bloom (2018)
  • Dead Head (2021)
  • Thorn in My Side (2023)
  • The Bad Seeds (2024)
  • Darling Bud: a companion novel to the Sweetpea series (2026)

Young adult novels

  • Pretty Bad Things (2009)
  • Rockoholic (2011)
  • Dead Romantic (2013)
  • Monster (2015)
  • The Deviants (2016)

Adult novels

  • The Alibi Girl (2020)
  • Untitled (2027)

References

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