Jennette McCurdy is so not a child actor anymore. She's an author with a capital A.
USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change.
Jennette McCurdy is so not a child actor anymore. She's an author with a capital A.
Clare Mulroy, USA TODAY January 21, 2026 at 10:23 PM
0
NEW YORK â When youâre talking to Jennette McCurdy, itâs easy to forget her career started as a Nickelodeon actor, not during a highbrow MFA creative writing program.
McCurdy may have grown up in the spotlight on shows like "iCarly" and "Sam & Cat", but she has the soul of a writer. Sheâs more comfortable alone at her desk than she is getting glitzed up for TV interviews like those sheâs done for her debut novel, âHalf His Age.â Writers are recluse creatures, I agree. We bond over how strange it is to talk in front of a four-camera setup. We decide weâll look at each other and ignore the publicists, stylists and camera crew watching beyond the lights.
McCurdy's not content to be the sole participant in an interview conversation. When we talk about her protagonist self-isolating in her relentless pursuit of a relationship, she wants to know if that's ever happened to me. When she explains that she put down another writing project to work on âHalf His Ageâ because the story erupted out of her â she calls it âa vomit draftâ â she wants to know the last thing that I wrote that made me feel like that.
USA TODAY Books Reporter Clare Mulroy sits down with Jennette McCurdy to talk about her new book "Half His Age."Meet Jennette McCurdy, the author
McCurdyâs press tour is inherently different from that of a writer who got their start writing books. Her 2022 memoir âIâm Glad My Mom Diedâ was unflinching in its portrayal of abuse, eating disorders and the dark sides of childhood stardom. Readers are as hungry to know about her personal life as they are about her new work.
I thought of this while I listened to a recent "Call Her Daddy" podcast episode featuring McCurdy. Early in the conversation, host Alex Cooper paused their discussion on the book's power dynamics and asked if McCurdy would go âback to childhood" first.
âHavenât spent enough time in childhood in therapy, so might as well do more,â McCurdy said to Cooper.
At this stage in her career, McCurdy has made a conscious, deliberate shift to be known not as a former child actor, but as an author with a capital A. I ask her to explain that to me. What were her intentions in defining this new era of her career?
âCan I just say I really appreciate this question, really, on a heart level?â McCurdy says from a couch in USA TODAY's New York studio. âBecause it was intentional, but it also wasnât me just going like, âHmm, you know what? I want to be a writer, Iâm going to be a writer.â Itâs something Iâve done my whole life. Itâs something that, as a child, has always been the way that Iâve processed the world.
âActing was my momâs dream. She literally wanted to be a famous actress and her parents wouldnât let her. So then she lived sort of vicariously through me, but writing was always the thing that I wanted to do.â
Jennette McCurdy speaks at Spotify's The Future of Audiobooks event Oct. 3, 2023 in New York City.
Since her memoir published, she's noticed a change in her interactions with fans â "a 180," she says. She appreciates conversations with "kindred spirit" readers that are rooted in respect and dialogue. She grew up with fans shouting at her and grabbing her with "an uncomfortable amount of squeeze," making their kids take pictures with her.
"I feel more of a sense of belonging in the literary world than I ever, ever did in Hollywood," McCurdy says. "(I've been) finding my people and feeling like I've got lifelong friends and they're authors. These are my people. These are my friends."
A âseedâ of truth in McCurdyâs inspiration for âHalf His Ageâ
"Uncomfortable," however, is a word McCurdy embraces when it comes to the book itself. "Half His Age" follows Waldo, a high schooler who initiates an obsessive, entangled sexual relationship with her creative writing teacher.
Waldo is very different from McCurdy. Sheâs bolder and less naive than McCurdy was at 17, she says. McCurdy tells me she felt she missed out on the teenage years she describes in âHalf His Age.â But thereâs a grain of truth in the age gap relationship plot. McCurdy herself was in a âcreepyâ relationship with an older man when she was 18. All writers put a degree of themselves into their work, even if itâs fiction.
âHow could you not? I don't know how it could be done without having some piece of yourself, some seed of it,â she says.
Jennette McCurdy, bestselling author of âIâm Glad My Mom Died,â is set to publish her debut novel next year.
Writing Waldo was healing for her, she says.
â(Writing) is a way to process unprocessed feelings and that really was the thing that drove the book out of me,â McCurdy says.
In a way, âHalf His Ageâ does exist in the afterglow of her memoir. If you felt uneasy laughing at McCurdyâs humor between harrowing childhood stories in âIâm Glad My Mom Died,â just wait until you read the sex scenes between a 17-year-old and her 40-something, married creative writing teacher.
Thatâs purposeful, McCurdy tells me.
âI think the value of discomfort is another conversation that I hope surfaces,â McCurdy says. âIt can be a sexy read, but at times it can really be, to your point, an uncomfortable one. I think being uncomfortable is so useful and so valuable and it's an indication that there is a conversation to be had. I can't really think of many times when I'm comfortable and there's a juicy conversation and there's something to dissect.â
One firm foot in publishing, one toe back in Hollywood
A week after she finished the manuscript for âHalf His Age,â McCurdy wrote it into a screenplay. Itâs now been confirmed for adaptation, and sheâs attached to direct it.
"Half His Age" by Jennette McCurdy will publish in January.
Stepping into the writerâs room instead of an actorâs trailer is a more appealing Hollywood access point now. McCurdy is eager to tackle adaptation, a task she thinks best suited for authors themselves.
âHow often do you hear âOh, well, the movie was better than the bookâ?â McCurdy says. âThere's a reason for that. It's because the author has that story in them and they've articulated it already once, beautifully. Why wouldn't we assume that they could do it again in a different format? It only makes sense. They have that voice, they have that vision. I think so often the thing is handed off to another pair of hands and then the voice gets muddled, the vision gets lost.â
âIâm Glad My Mom Diedâ will soon be a 10-episode Apple TV+ dramedy starring Jennifer Aniston as the titular mother. McCurdy will act as writer, director and showrunner on the series.
In both projects, sheâll inevitably work with child actors. They may feel the same pressures she faced as a young person in Hollywood. Does she see herself as a mentor or have a concept of what working with young actors in Hollywood will be like?
âI honestly never considered that,â McCurdy says. âI see Hollywood as kind of the background piece. I'm writing my books and that's really my primary focus and then Hollywood can be its noisy circus that I kind of dip my toe in here and there, but books really are my focus and where I feel the most comfortable and where the world makes the most sense. My experience at the publishing world is that it's not insane, which is great.â
Clare Mulroy is USA TODAYâs Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what youâre reading at [email protected].
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jennette McCurdy makes clear career pivot from actor to author
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ