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| photo: Noah White |
Kiersten White is the author of dozens of books for readers of all ages, including the And I Darken trilogy, Star Wars: Padawan, Hide, Mister Magic, Lucy Undying, and the gothic supernatural thriller The Fox and the Devil (Del Rey Books, March 10, 2026), which follows the daughter of Abraham Ven Helsing, Anneke, on a quest for revenge. White also has an extremely large tortoise named Kimberly, which isn't relevant, but she wanted you to know.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
In 1890s Europe, Anneke Van Helsing is hunting the woman who killed her father. But is the killer sending her threats... or love letters? Also, vampires.
On your nightstand now:
The Slough House novels by Mick Herron, about a dispirited group of reject British spies. The character and setting descriptions are astonishingly good, and I like taking breaks with very different genres than what I'm writing. I also have an early copy of Melissa Albert's adult debut, The Children, which looks delicious. I love her weird brain so much.
Favorite book when you were a child:
Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery made me feel seen and valued. The Redwall books by Brian Jacques made me a fantasy fan for life. And The Boxcar Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner made me dream of using a cleverly dammed river as a fridge to keep my milk cold. I still dream of it, and I don't even drink milk.
Your top five authors:
Mary Shelley for being a badass goth genius; Shirley Jackson for her astonishing way with words; Stephen Graham Jones for being my modern introduction to the power of horror; Mariana Enríquez for reminding me to write boldly and without fear; and Susanna Clarke for delivering two wildly different but completely perfect books.
Book you've faked reading:
It by Stephen King. I'm sorry, Stephen. It's just so long.
Book you're an evangelist for:
Agnes Aubert's Mystical Cat Shelter by Heather Fawcett. I'm not saying reading it will fix you, but... maybe it will, for a few hours. While I have nothing but respect for the genre, cozy-style books don't often hit the spot for me. This, however, was one I want to live in. Well-paced, absurdly charming, enough stakes and plot to keep me engaged, and a love interest reminiscent of Howl Pendragon. A deeply kind protagonist like Agnes is the kind of escapism I needed right now, and I suspect many others do, too.
Book you've bought for the cover:
When I was in Munich a couple of years ago, I bought a beautiful German edition of The Neverending Story by Michael Ende. I can't read German, so it wasn't very practical. But it's one of my all-time favorites and I had to own it in the original language. (If you only know the story from the '80s movie, read the book! Read the book!)
Book you hid from your parents:
I didn't hide any from my parents, but I hid Wait Till Helen Comes by Mary Downing Hahn from myself. As a child, I read it once a year every year, and then pushed it behind other books because it was too scary to look at.
Book that changed your life:
Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. But for a really practical reason! When I read it, I thought... I could do this. So, I switched from trying to break into middle-grade to writing YA, and that's where my author career started.
Favorite line from a book:
When I'm reading, I take photos of lines I love. (I had to stop doing this while reading The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson, because I was basically just photographing every single page.) But my favorite line that I return to again and again is from a collection of Emily Dickinson's poetry, "Tell all the truth but tell it slant" (Poem 1263). It's how I feel about genre writing. We tell the truth. We just tell it sideways, so it sneaks up on you. Sometimes with fangs.
Five books you'll never part with:
Our fancy leather-bound copy of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy that I saved up to buy my spouse our first Christmas together; my tiny, adorable Japanese edition of my first book, Paranormalcy; the illustrated copy of Anne of Green Gables a neighbor gifted me when I was a child; my beat-up childhood copy of Redwall; and an advanced reader edition of Lola and the Boy Next Door by my best friend Stephanie Perkins. The original cover wasn't the right cover for the book, but it is one of my oddest small-world experiences. It randomly features the only male model I know. Hi, Tim!
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir. I've often said reading it is the most fun you'll have being deeply confused for hundreds of pages. I stand by that statement, and I'd wipe my memory and do it again in a heartbeat. Conversely, I think Harrow the Ninth, the second book in the Locked Tomb series, needs to be read twice in order to be appreciated. (And deserves to, too. It's brilliant.)
Books you're most looking forward to this year:
New Murderbot! Martha Wells fascinates me with her ability to write so well in different genres, and Murderbot got me out of a big reading slump a couple of years ago. I can't wait to hang out with it again in Platform Decay. I'm also very excited for the next Dungeon Crawler Carl book, A Parade of Horribles, by Matt Dinniman, as well as Operation Bounce House. (I'm curious to see what a slightly less unhinged story from him is like.) And I've been trying to get my hands on early copies of Japanese Gothic by Kylie Lee Baker and It Looks Like You in the Dark by Mathilda Zeller, two upcoming horror releases that sound phenomenal.