Harrison, Mette Ivie 1970-
HARRISON, Mette Ivie 1970-
Personal
Born September 13, 1970, in Summit, NJ; daughter of Evan Leon (a professor of computer science) and Betty Jo (a homemaker; maiden name, Beck) Ivie; married Matthew Glenn Harrison (a computer programmer), December 13, 1990; children: Shannon Hope, Hannah Sage, Samuel Worthy, Emily Faith, Zachary Mark. Education: Brigham Young University, B.A., M.A.; Princeton University, Ph.D., 1995. Religion: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Addresses
Home— 931 North 910 East, Orem, UT 84097. Agent— Barry Goldblatt, PMB 226, 320 7th Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11215. E-mail— mette_ivie_harrison@comcast.net.
Career
Writer.
Writings
The Monster in Me, Holiday House (New York, NY), 2003.
Work in Progress
Mirror, Mirror, a young adult fantasy for Viking (New York, NY).
Sidelights
Middle-grades author Mette Ivie Harrison has known since she was in kindergarten that she wanted to be a writer. As she told SATA, her dream got another boost at age eleven, when her older sister married picture book writer Rick Walton, who gave her tips on writing and being published. Harrison even sent a book off to a publishing company when she was in tenth grade. It was not accepted, but in their rejection letter, the company encouraged her to send more works. However, Harrison's father encouraged her to find a "real job" because he did not think that writing was a stable enough career. Not until the grown-up Harrison started questioning her "real job" did she finally decide to try again to become a published writer.
Harrison's first published book, The Monster in Me, is the story of a troubled thirteen-year-old girl named Natalie Wills. Natalie's mother has just gone into a drug rehab program, so Natalie is placed in a foster home with the Parker family. Suffering from years of emotional neglect, the teenager has many problems to work through besides missing her mother. Compounding Natalie's problems are nightmares in which she thinks she is a monster. However, with the help of fellow runner Mr. Parker, her school friend Mary, and the track coach Mr. Landers, she begins to learn how to cope and appreciate the stable people in her life. "While the book is hopeful, it is tinged with resignation, feelings readers will understand and appreciate," concluded Frances Bradburn in Booklist. Considering The Monster in Me "a good choice for reluctant readers," School Library Journal critic Faith Brautigam found Harrison's book "a highly readable first novel."
Biographical and Critical Sources
PERIODICALS
Booklist, April 1, 2003, Frances Bradburn, review of The Monster in Me, p. 1397.
Publishers Weekly, April 14, 2003, review of The Monster in Me, p. 72.
School Library Journal, June, 2003, Faith Brautigam, review of The Monster in Me.
ONLINE
Hatrack River Writers' Groups, http://www.hatrack.com/ (October 16, 2003), "Former Boot Campers Published."
Mette Ivie Harrison Home Page, http://www.metteivieharrison.com/ (November 19, 2003).