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Publication Order of Standalone Novels
| I Hope You Get This Message | (2019) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
| It All Comes Back to You | (2021) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
| If You're Not the One | (2024) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
| The Flightless Birds of New Hope | (2026) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
| Lovestuck | (2026) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
| Sorry for the Inconvenience | (2024) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Anthologies
Farah Naz Rishi
Farah Naz Rishi is a writer and voice actor with a Pakistani American and Muslim background, though she has also spent time as a video game journalist, a lawyer, and an editorial assistant in past roles.
When it comes to writing fiction, Rishi has a real talent for making her characters and main protagonists feel like people you might actually know. She crafts them with care, giving them small habits, doubts, and moments of warmth that make her stories entertaining to read without ever feeling forced or overly complicated.
Another strength she brings to her work is a natural gift for building compelling stories with engaging narratives. The way she moves a plot forward feels smooth and logical, yet she still finds room for small twists and emotional turns that keep readers curious. Her writing never drags, and she has a way of making you want to know what a character will do next.
Rishi entertains readers around the world by writing stories that feel both fresh and personal. She pulls from her own life as a Pakistani American Muslim, but she never turns her identity into a checklist. Instead, she lets her background shape the humor, the family dynamics, and the small cultural details that make her fiction stand out. Readers from different places often find something to enjoy because her characters face ordinary struggles, like fitting in or figuring out what they want, even when the story leans into fantasy or young adult drama.
She stays true to herself by refusing to soften or exaggerate her voice for a wider audience. Rishi writes jokes that sound like jokes she would actually make. She builds romantic tension and friendship fights with the same care she might give a conversation from her own past. None of it feels like a performance. This honesty makes her work feel lighter and more fun to read, because nothing comes across as fake or pushed too hard.
Rishi shows no signs of slowing down, and more work appears to be on the way. She continues to write and develop new stories that fit her voice and background. Fans can likely expect fresh characters, new plots, and the same sharp, honest storytelling in the years ahead.
Early and Personal Life
Farah Naz Rishi grew up as a Pakistani American Muslim with a natural pull toward books and storytelling. Her early interest in reading slowly turned into an interest in writing, though she did not follow a straight path at first. She received a B.A. in English gained at Bryn Mawr College, which gave her a strong base in language and narrative structure.
Her inspiration as a writer came from several places, including formal training at the Odyssey Writing Workshop, where she learned how to weave stories more carefully. She also went on to earn her J.D. from Lewis & Clark Law School, showing that she valued learning across different fields. Each new experience, whether in law or journalism or editing, seemed to feed back into her ability to build better plots and characters.
Rishi kept growing as an author by staying curious and trying different kinds of work, from being a lawyer to a video game journalist to an editorial assistant. She now lives in Philadelphia, where she continues to write and do voice acting. Her journey shows that a writer can grow slowly and from many angles, not just from one single path.
Writing Career
Farah Naz Rishi has published several novels so far, beginning with I Hope You Get This Message in 2019. She followed that with It All Comes Back to You in 2021 and If You’re Not the One in 2024. Her writing career continues to move forward, with more titles already on the way.
Two further books were released in 2026, titled The Flightless Birds of New Hope and Lovestuck. Rishi is represented by Hannah Bowman, based at Liza Dawson Associates, who helps guide her publishing work. She keeps writing without pause, so readers can expect even more stories from her after these upcoming releases.
I Hope You Get This Message
Farah Naz Rishi wrote the book. HarperTeen published it on October 22, 2019. The title falls under Young Adult science fiction and fantasy.
A message from a planet called Alma arrives on Earth, and news reports suggest the end could come in just seven days. Jesse Hewitt, a high school student who often skips class, has never seen much stability in his life, so the possible ending of everything does not shake him much. Cate Collins wants to use that same week to track down her missing father, a man she only knows through tall tales she never fully trusted. Adeem Khan finds coding easy but forgiveness hard, and he struggles to make peace with his sister before time runs out.
Readers going into this book can expect three very different young people with real problems. The seven day countdown makes everything feel urgent without losing the heart of the story. Each character faces something personal, from family wounds to a shaky sense of purpose. It is a fast, thoughtful read that leaves a good impression.
Lovestuck
Farah Naz Rishi is the author of this work. Quill Tree Books published it on July 14, 2026. The title falls under the Young Adult romance category.
Out of all her sisters, Riya is the only one who got the full magic from their peri ancestor, a fey creature tied to emotion and especially love. Riya does not care much about love, though her best friend Mel keeps pushing her to help Mel get together with her crush before senior year ends. When Riya finally agrees to give a small magical push, her powers go wild again, and she accidentally places a love curse on Kian Kho, the school bad boy she cannot stand. If she does not break the curse by the next full moon, Kian’s unreturned feelings could literally break his heart, leaving them both stuck.
Anyone who picks up this book will find a fun take on love magic with real stakes. Riya is a likable lead who does not want the very power she was born with. The accidental curse on Kian leads to silly moments but also some tense ones. It is a light, charming read that moves quickly.
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