Genevieve Wheeler is an American writer and communications director. Her bylines have appeared in publications including Cosmopolitan, Vice, Vogue Business, Teen Vogue, Elite Daily, and PopSugar, and her work and words have been cited in The New York Times, Vox, the BBC World Service, Cheddar News, Jezebel, and beyond. She holds an M.A. in marketing communications from the University of Westminster in London and a B.S. in advertising from Boston University. She’s currently based in London. Adelaide is her debut novel.
Follow her on Instagram at @geewheeler.
Genres: Literary Fiction
Genevieve Wheeler recommends
The Most Famous Girl in the World (2024)
Iman Hariri-Kia
"Whip-smart and laugh-out-loud funny, The Most Famous Girl In The World had me flying through its pages for so many reasons. This genre-bending novel will make you swoon, cackle, and gasp all at once, blending sweet (and silly!) romantic moments with razor-sharp social commentary and thriller-worthy twists. If you've ever found yourself eyeballs-deep down a rabbit hole about modern scammer culture (and let's be honest, who among us hasn't?), this is the book for you. I inhaled it."
But How Are You, Really (2024)
Ella Dawson
"Moving, sexy, and painfully relatable, Ella Dawson deftly captures that lost and longing feeling we all experience in our twenties, particularly when faced with the ghosts of our past selves. Set at a college reunion, But How Are You, Really is a story of second chances and rediscovering one's self that will have you cringing, crying, and nodding in recognition. I absolutely adored it."
Better By Far (2024)
Hazel Hayes
"Heart-wrenching and healing in equal measure, Better by Far offers a double-edged (and incredibly poignant) look at what it means to grieve - stinging one moment and soothing the next. Hazel Hayes' characters and prose have that innate capacity to make the reader feel truly seen, tackling themes like love and loss with immense grace, warmth, and nuance. On the first page, Hayes notes that 'we wear our feelings, wrapping them around ourselves like cloaks...' I'd argue this story is equally engulfing, wrapping itself around you until the very last chapter."
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