Tucker Reed

Novelist

Birthday October 15, 1989

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Los Gatos, California, U.S.

Age 34 years old

Nationality United States

#43991 Most Popular

1989

Aisling Tucker Moore-Reed (born October 15, 1989), known by her pen name Tucker Reed, is an American novelist and former civil rights activist who has been found liable for defamation and who was convicted of manslaughter in May 2020.

2009

In 2009, at age 19, Reed persuaded her mother to collaborate on a novel.

Reed's sister Larkin was later included in the collaboration as well.

2010

In 2010, Reed attended the University of Southern California, where she studied broadcast journalism, theatre and cinema.

She was a reporter and assistant editor for the university's student newspaper, the Daily Trojan, in 2010.

2011

In 2011, the trio negotiated and received a reported six-figure financial deal with the Arthur A. Levine imprint of Scholastic Press for the North American rights to their planned Amber House Trilogy.

2012

Reed co-authored the young adult novel Amber House published in October 2012 and its sequel Neverwas, released internationally in January 2014.

Reed's allegations of being raped resulted in her liability for defamation.

Reed and younger sister Larkin, with their mother Kelly Moore, co-authored Amber House, the first installment of the Amber House trilogy, which was released by Scholastic's Arthur A. Levine Books imprint on October 1, 2012.

Amber House received a positive critical reception, with Publishers Weekly praising the book's plot and originality, dubbing the story "rich, strange, and utterly fascinating."

Kirkus Reviews singled out the book's heroine as being a "strong, admirable character" for young female readers, contrasting her with Bella Swan from the Twilight franchise.

Since late 2012, Reed has blogged for xoJane.com and the Huffington Post, and written for Cosmopolitan magazine.

2013

According to Reed's blog, in 2013 the USC Student Judicial Affairs and Community Standards office deemed "the burden of proof was not reached to find that a violation of the Student Conduct Code occurred."

The case was later rejected by the LAPD, a private investigator, and the LA District Attorney.

Reed was found liable for defamation in a counter-suit.

In September 2013, Reed spoke out as a proponent of "mandatory exit surveys" at college campuses, designed to better monitor the efficacy of policies and programs regarding student safety.

Such surveys would, according to Reed, prevent internal corruption and dismissal of valid student claims because they would create an external reference monitoring whether colleges remain in compliance with the Clery Act and their own safety policies.

In 2013, Reed aided students at multiple institutions in filing Office for Civil Rights complaints against their colleges.

In September 2013, Reed was recognized for her activism by the Veteran Feminists of America when she was awarded the Lucy Burns Challenger Award at the organization's 20th anniversary celebration.

Reed received her honor alongside feminist icons such as attorney Gloria Allred, singer-songwriter June Millington and Grammy Award-winner Helen Reddy.

Reed helped to organize college students in support of women's rights and to raise public awareness about the issue of gendered violence, appearing on CNN, CBS, NBC, HuffPost Live and other news programs.

Reed founded the Student Coalition Against Rape (SCAR), originally a sub-org at the University of Southern California and now a national organization.

Reed has stated her hope "that, ultimately, sexual aggression will become as socially unacceptable as smoking in a crowded room."

2014

In 2014, Reed dropped out of USC.

Amber House was a finalist for the 2014 Oregon Book Award for Young Adult Literature, and was selected for the Texas Library Association's 2014 TAYSHAS List.

Reed acted as narrator of the audiobook edition of Amber House and its sequel Neverwas, which was released on January 7, 2014.

Reed is also co-author of the series' forthcoming titles Ever Shall and Otherwhen.

2015

Australian criminologist and feminist Anastasia Powell identified Reed in 2015 as one of several women who used the internet to engage in what would traditionally be deemed "vigilante" behavior in "resistance to rape culture" in Rape Justice: Beyond the Criminal Law.

2016

In early 2016, she worked as a reporter for The Grants Pass Daily Courier before quitting in the spring.

2020

In May 2020, she was convicted of manslaughter for killing her uncle after shooting him in July 2016.

She was sentenced to six years and three months in prison.

Aisling Tucker Moore-Reed was born in Los Gatos, California, Santa Clara County.

She is the daughter of New York Times best-selling authors Kelly Moore and Dan Reed.

Through her maternal grandfather, United States Navy Commander Lundi Addison Moore, she claims descent from Plymouth Colony settler and Mayflower Compact signer Stephen Hopkins.

She attended Ashland High School in Oregon.

As a teenager, Reed gigged with an alternative rock band as a singer-songwriter, and performed lead roles in, as well as designed sets and costumes for, school and community theatre productions.

She also served as a reporter, web designer and editor-in-chief for her high school's newspaper, The Rogue News.

Reed went on to be recognized on the national level for her essays and short stories during her junior and senior years at Ashland High School.

Reed also played the lead role in an independent horror movie released November 20, 2020, titled From the Dark, under the stage name Wyn Reed.

Reed first gained notoriety as an opponent of gendered violence (specifically sexual abuse against women) when she published the name of her alleged rapist to a blog.