Background
She was born Elizabeth Balliett, but her family started calling her Blue shortly after her birth.
She was born Elizabeth Balliett, but her family started calling her Blue shortly after her birth.
Chasing Vermeer, released by Scholastic Press in 2004, is her best-known and most highly praised book Illustrated by Brett Helquist, it concerns the fictitious theft of a painting by 17th-century Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer. A sequel, The Wright 3, was released in April, 2006, and a third, The Calder Game, was published two years later, in April 2008.
The Danger Box was published in August 2010.
Her next book, "Hold Fast" was published in 2013. Soon after, in 2015, Balliett published Pieces and Players.
Balliett has also published two oral histories involving Nantucket ghost stories in the 1980s, which have been consolidated into one book, "Nantucket Ghosts" released by Down East Books in 2006. Before releasing Chasing Vermeer, she taught third grade at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools.
During her tenure, she coordinated with National Aeronautics and Space Administration astronaut and University of Chicago alumnus John M. Grunsfeld (Master of Science, ’84, Doctor of Philosophy, ’88) to send her pupil"s literature and creative artwork into space during a routine Hubble space telescope mission on the Columbia space shuttle.