Todd Strasser
Todd Strasser (born May 5, 1950) is an American author specializing in young adult and middle-grade fiction, having produced over 140 books that frequently examine social issues including school violence, homelessness, bullying, and authoritarian conformity.[1][2]
His breakthrough novel, The Wave (1981), written under the pseudonym Morton Rhue, fictionalizes a real 1967 high school experiment in Palo Alto, California, where students unwittingly replicated fascist dynamics through escalating group discipline and loyalty demands, serving as a cautionary tale on the mechanics of cult-like movements and totalitarianism.[3][4]
Other prominent works, such as Give a Boy a Gun (2000), dramatize the causes and consequences of school shootings via compiled student testimonies and media excerpts, highlighting failures in peer recognition and adult intervention.[5] Strasser's career trajectory involved dropping out of New York University, communal living, European travel as a street musician, and subsequent advertising and journalism roles before full-time authorship, with his books translated into multiple languages and adapted for film and television.[1][6]