Writer, verbal strategist
  Praise for       The Boy on the Bus      (Free Press)  “Schupack’s debut novel is at once familiar and eerie, like discovering a bird fluttering recklessly about your living room...a chillingly twisty psychological drama about love and need—one tha

Novels

Dig into a good book

  Praise for       The Boy on the Bus      (Free Press)  “Schupack’s debut novel is at once familiar and eerie, like discovering a bird fluttering recklessly about your living room...a chillingly twisty psychological drama about love and need—one tha

Praise for The Boy on the Bus (Free Press)

“Schupack’s debut novel is at once familiar and eerie, like discovering a bird fluttering recklessly about your living room...a chillingly twisty psychological drama about love and need—one that turns on itself as seamlessly as an elegant Escher.” —Entertainment Weekly

“This is my favorite book this year—an incredible page-turning idea, written with grace, style, and deep, true emotion.” —James Patterson, best-selling author

“Motherhood with all its contradictions has rarely been shown so nakedly. . . . From beginning to end, nothing is ordinary, while at the same time everything is.” —The New York Times Book Review

“With this unexpectedly impressive debut novel of psychological mystery, Schupack boldly announces her presence at the table of writers who deserve to be heard.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

  Praise for   Sylvan Street      (Plume/Penguin)  “The page-turning pace never flags . . . Teeming with plot twists and social unrest, Schupack shows with poignant prose and commendable plotting the good, the bad, and the ugly that money brings out

Praise for Sylvan Street (Plume/Penguin)

“The page-turning pace never flags . . . Teeming with plot twists and social unrest, Schupack shows with poignant prose and commendable plotting the good, the bad, and the ugly that money brings out in people.” —Publishers Weekly

“In this fascinating, sly novel, Deborah Schupack applies the bright scalpel of her prose to … [show] us that even a sweet village on the banks of the Hudson can be, too, one of the dark places of the earth.” — Kathryn Davis, author of Silk Road

“A work of pure magic about money, class, and the daily deceptions among friends and neighbors, husbands and wives.” — Kate Walbert, author of A Short History of Women