“So many of our students included quotes from her presentation in their research papers about the writing process.” — Laura Cottam Sajbel, St. Edward’s University

Natalia Sylvester is the Pura Belpré and Schneider Family honor winning author of the young adult novel Breathe and Count Back from Ten, and the award-winning author of the young adult novel Running, which was a 2020 Junior Library Guild Selection and a 2021 Rise: A Feminist Book Project List selection. She is also the author of the adult novels Everyone Knows You Go Home and Chasing the Sun. Her first picture book A Maleta Full of Treasures, (2024) illustrated by Juana Medina, is a warm, gentle ode to cherished visits from grandparents and the people and places that make us who we are even if we haven’t met them yet.

Natalia’s non-fiction has appeared in the New York Times, Bustle, Catapult, Electric Literature, Latina magazine, and McSweeney’s Publishing. Her essays have been anthologized in collections such as A Map is Only One Story and A Measure of Belonging: Writers of Color on the New American South. During Latinx Heritage month, Natalia would love to emphasize the focus on the intersections of being Latina, an immigrant, and disabled, since disability is something that is often left out of the diversity conversation.

Born in Lima, Peru, Natalia came to the US at age four and grew up in Florida and the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. She received a BA in Creative Writing from the University of Miami, was a 2021 Visiting Associate Professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and was formerly a faculty member at the Mile-High MFA program at Regis University.​

Natalia's Featured Titles

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Bodies of Water: Writing our fluid truths

For: Students | Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Breathe and Count Back from Ten
Curricular Connections: Language Arts or General Assembly

It can be difficult to write about our bodies, especially if you’ve ever felt like your body is different from that of people around you. But the safety of the water and its mythical sea creatures can provide a beautiful outlet. In this workshop, Natalia Sylvester shares her personal experiences as a disabled Latina immigrant who experienced bullying, and how writing Breathe and Count Back from Ten was a form of expression and healing. She then guides students through writing exercises that empower them to write their truths.

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The Shape of Language: On words, power, and who gets to decide

For: Students | Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Breathe and Count Back from Ten

Curricular Connections: Language Arts or General Assembly

In this interactive presentation, Natalia Sylvester invites students to journey alongside words whose meanings have changed over time. Together, we ask what shaped their original definitions, and why, and how these meanings influence our everyday realities. We also explore what happens when the power of defining words is shared with people from all walks of life. Inspired by Vero, the protagonist in Breathe and Count Back from Ten who writes her own dictionary definitions, we explore the mighty ways that language can change perception. “I know language doesn’t evolve by accident…words don’t just have meaning, they’re given meaning. It turns out we define things by how we see them. By how we feel about them.” — Vero, Breathe and Count Back from Ten

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Tell me again: Retelling fairytales, legends...and our own stories

For: Students | Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Breathe and Count Back from Ten

Curricular Connections: Language Arts or General Assembly

When stories are retold, they change—but not by accident. In this workshop we’ll look at popular fairytales and how they are mirrors of the people and cultures who retell them. In doing so, Natalia Sylvester will invite students to examine stories they’ve been told and repeated in their own lives, and consider how they might also shape the narrative going forward. Using two stories retold in Breathe and Count Back from Ten (The Little Mermaid and the Peruvian mermaid legend of Huacachina) this interactive presentation celebrates the collective power and responsibility of storytelling.

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See Our Joy: On Seeing The Full Humanity Of People & Characters (educators, advocates)

Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Read all titles

Curricular Connections: History, Social Studies

Geared to audiences serving marginalized communities (of all ages) this presentation invites educators, advocates, and readers to imagine us in all our complex wholeness rather than through the narrow lens of oppression. There’s a difference between working towards equality and inclusion and reducing someone to a singular aspect of their identity. Through her personal perspective as a disabled, Latina immigrant, Natalia Sylvester shares ways that we can truly be more intersectional in our work.

 

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Power, Privilege And POV - Examining How We Teach & Learn Creative Writing (educators, advocates)

Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Read all titles

Curricular Connections: Creative Writing, Language Arts
A workshop for educators and advocates who work with writers of all ages. By examining subtle yet impactful ways that power dynamics and privilege are embedded in the traditional ways we teach (and learn) creative writing, Natalia Sylvester presents alternative, reimagined methods for telling stories in a more inclusive, empowering way.
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“One Day, All of This Will Matter” (educators, youth advocates)

Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Read all titles

Curricular Connections: History, Social Studies
A workshop designed to help us reconnect with our younger selves and honor the memories of our teen years—the joy and hardships—to rekindle an intergenerational understanding of today’s youth.

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“More Than a Heritage Month” (educators, librarians, youth advocates)

Duration: 60 minutes | Preparation: Read all titles

Curricular Connections: History, Social Studies, Language Arts
A talk that interrogates and explores new, actionable possibilities for the ways we teach and present literature during BIPOC heritage months. Who are we centering? Who are we leaving out the remaining eleven months of the year?

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One Day, All of This Will Matter

A workshop designed to help us reconnect with our younger selves and honor the memories of our teen years—the joy and hardships—to rekindle and intergenerational understanding of today’s youth.

Authors-Unbound_icon-web-link.png

More Than a Heritage Month

A talk that interrogates and explores new possibilities for the ways we teach and present literature during BIPOC heritage months. Who are we centering? Who are we leaving out the remaining eleven months of the year?

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Natalia’s Blog

Natalia’s Upcoming Events

Honors, Awards & Recognition

2023 Schneider Family Award Honor Book
2023 Pura Belpré Award Honor Book
2023 Rise: A Feminist Book List Selection
Junior Library Guild Selection
International Latino Book Award Winner
Latinadad Best Debut Book
Real Simple Best Book of the Year
2021 – A Feminist Book Project by the American Library Association
2021 Kansas NEA Reading Circle Recommended Titles selection
2022 Rhode Island Latino Book Awards selection
2022 Isinglass Award nominee
Junior Library Guild Selection, 2020
Jean Flynn Award for Best Young Adult Book finalist, Texas Institute of Letters, 2020

Media Kit

By clicking the link below you will be directed to a Google Docs Folder
where you can download author photos and cover images.

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