Jennifer Weiner is the author of six books that have spent over 150 weeks on the New York Times bestsellers list and been published in 36 countries, including Certain Girls, Goodnight Nobody, Little Earthquakes, In Her Shoes, which was released as a major motion picture in 2005, and Good in Bed, as well as the short story collection, The Guy Not Taken. She is widely regarded as one of the most popular, intelligent, and funny author/bloggers. Weiner was one of the forerunners in the blogosphere, having started her blog “A Moment of Jen” in January of 2002. A graduate of Princeton University, Weiner lives in Philadelphia with her family. To learn more, visit her website at www.jenniferweiner.com.

Blog Entries by Jennifer Weiner

Don't Ask Alice

2 Comments | Posted July 1, 2009 | 04:04 PM (EST)


By now, everyone in Lit-Land has heard about the unhappy affair of Alice Hoffman.

Hoffman, a popular and prolific novelist, was unhappy with the review she received in the Boston Globe, her hometown paper, and took to Twitter to complain, calling reviewer Roberta Silman a "moron" and an "idiot,"...

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To Boldly Go...Backwards

311 Comments | Posted May 12, 2009 | 06:05 PM (EST)


I can't remember wanting to love a movie as much as I wanted to love the new Star Trek.

I grew up watching the original series in re-runs, entranced by the hard-charging, womanizing captain of the Enterprise, his coolly logical (but underneath the exterior, tormented and passionate!) first officer, and...

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R.I.P., Jade Goody

Posted March 25, 2009 | 11:29 AM (EST)


In preparation for my UK book tour last week, I did what any good chick-lit author would do: bought new shoes and boned up on British pop culture, a process that made me feel every minute of my age. Evidently, Bob Geldof's daughter is now a Paris Hilton-style star-slash-train wreck...

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Why Can't a Woman (Writer) Be More Like a Man?

Posted March 12, 2009 | 11:16 AM (EST)


Last year, Stephen King gave an interview to USA Today in which he was asked to account for his critical renaissance. How did he make the move from pulp-peddling horror hack to an award-winning capital-A Author?

King was brutally frank. "Most of the old critics who panned anything I...

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