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Meet The Debut Author Reese Witherspoon Is Obsessed With

Is there any higher praise?

Nine is Kiley Reidโ€™s number. It is the number of years she lived in New York City as a babysitter, spending her evenings hugging other peopleโ€™s children goodnight. Itโ€™s the number of crushing rejection letters she received from every graduate school she applied to in 2015 after finally pursuing her lifelong dream of being a writer. And, amazingly, itโ€™s the number of triumphant acceptances she received from those same nine schools the very next year, culminating in her attending the prestigious Iowa Writersโ€™ Workshop (yes, thatโ€™s the one Lena Dunham attended in Girls).

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It was those three moments of her life that led her to write the summerโ€™s most hotly anticipated debut novel Such A Fun Age. A sharp, observant and sometimes uncomfortable story about power, race and class told through the conflicting perspectives of a 20-something black babysitter and her wealthy, white boss.

โ€œItโ€™s a story about well-intentioned people who sometimes make mistakes and you donโ€™t tell the reader which people are good and which ones are bad,โ€ says the 32-year-old, who grew up in Tucson, Arizona, before moving to New York where she worked as a babysitter and became obsessed with class dynamics.

โ€œI was fascinated by the very strange dynamics of the relationship between parents and the people they pay to take care of their children,โ€ reflects Reid, who after her recent wedding to scholar Nathan Rosenberg moved to the leafy suburbs of Philadelphia, where her novel is set.

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โ€œPublishing a book is a big dream come true, and now as I start novel number two, itโ€™s the best challenge to do it again. But every day Iโ€™m realising how much work I have ahead of me so I might be a few years,โ€ says Reid, with a nervous laugh. Letโ€™s hope weโ€™re not waiting nine.

This article originally appeared in the January issue of marie claire. 

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