Natalie Guerrero is a writer based in Los Angeles. Her writing has been featured in publications such as Electric Literature, Byline, Goop, and Blavity. Guerrero's long-form work includes ""On Silence,"" an essay published in Hungry Hearts (Dial Press) and Walking in My Joy (Amistad), a collection that Guerrero co-authored with actress Jenifer Lewis. Guerrero previously held positions with HarperCollins, WME Books, and Macro/M88. In her free time, she can be found walking her dog, Tupac, in the hills of Los Feliz.
“Set in Washington Heights, My Train Leaves at Three follows Xiomara, an Afro-Latina singer and actress grieving the loss of her sister while struggling to stay afloat and pursue her dreams of Broadway. Dreams that feel increasingly difficult to achieve while staying true to herself in the face of a shallow industry. The novel explores grief and the challenge of balancing self-authenticity with the pressures of success.”—TODAY “My Train Leaves at Three is an act of alchemy: Guerrero takes the numbness of grief and the mangled aspirations of youth, and transforms them into moments and characters that are searingly alive, achingly gorgeous in their hard-won wisdom.”—Torrey Peters, author of Stag Dance “My Train Leaves at Three is an extraordinary undertaking, and Natalie Guererro has debuted center stage as an unmissable talent. With electric charm and that unmistakable, absurdist wit reserved for New Yorkers born-and-bred, Xiomara weaves us through the tunnels of her grief, the complexity of ambition, and the necessity of hope.”—John Manuel Arias, author of the national bestseller Where There Was Fire “A breezy, verve-y addition to the New York stories canon. Xiomara, the book’s insecure underdog, is a grieving, self-sabotaging train wreck, and while it’s fun to see the many ways she self-destructs, it’s even more rewarding when the hardworking dreamer pushes through to softer places and truer connections. For readers who want to find love and success, Xiomara offers a hard-earned how-to and entertaining how-not-to.”— Quiara Alegría Hudes, author of My Broken Language “With My Train Leaves at Three Natalie Guerrero has entered the proverbial room, belted out her opening number and dropped the mic, leaving the reader not just enthralled and delighted with this debut . . . it contains [a] wondrous piece of magic: the city of New York. My heart sung with this stirring reminder that anything is possible in this wild city.”—Xochitl Gonzalez, author of Anita de Monte Laughs Last