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ABOUT ME

BIO

Novelist and screenwriter,

Purveyor of internet romance,

Village witch.

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Alexene Farol Follmuth, also known under the pen name Olivie Blake, is a lover and writer of stories, many of which involve the fantastic, the paranormal, or the supernatural, but not always. More often, her works revolve around the collective experience, what it means to be human (or not), and the endlessly interesting complexities of life and love.

Alexene tripped and fell into writing after abandoning her long-premeditated track for Optimum Life Achievement while attending law school, and now focuses primarily on the craft and occasional headache of creating fiction. Under her Olivie byline, New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling The Atlas Six released 2022 from Tor Books, followed by its sequel The Atlas Paradox and the re-release of her viral literary romance Alone With You in the Ether. She has also been published as the writer for the graphic series Clara and the Devil and a variety of other adult SFF books. As Alexene, she is the author of YA romance (more here).

 

Alexene lives and works in Los Angeles with her husband and goblin prince/toddler, where she is generally tolerated by her rescue pit bull.

FORTHCOMING EVENTS

  • May 13, 2024: In conversation with Katee Robert to celebrate release of BLOOD ON THE TIDE at The Ripped Bodice LA - Culver City, CA, tickets here

TWELFTH KNIGHT tour (as Alexene Farol Follmuth)

 

Events
Currently Writing

CURRENTLY WRITING

  • FIRE SEASON, previously UNTITLED HOLLYWOOD GOTHIC, a Gothic romance inspired by the Black Dahlia featuring extended immigrant families, the noble sport of pigeon seduction, and some demonic Santa Ana winds.

  • NEWPHORIA, best described as The Hunger Games if it were written by Susanna Clarke, a standalone SFF set three generations into the future of Western technocracy about an archivist in the digital dark age.

  • STARGAZING IS NECROPHILIA, an Alone with You in the Ether-esque romantic narrative about life, disappointment, desire, and the way love shapes us.

FORTHCOMING RELEASES

  • TWELFTH KNIGHT, a YA homage to Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. Another dual POV rom-com, this one features the gender politics of fandom, RPGs, and gaming. Coming May 28, 2024 from Tor Teen under my Alexene Farol Follmuth byline.

  • JANUARIES, a story anthology featuring new short stories and novellas along with some OB cult classics. Think of it as my Eras Tour, coming October 15, 2024.

  • GIFTED AND TALENTED, The Royal Tenenbaums meets Succession meets hot magic nerds in a family dramedy about three magical siblings on the prodigies-to-clinical depression pipeline. Currently in revision for April 2025 release.

  • GIRL DINNER, a satirical exploration of feminine craving, the instinct to devour, and ritualized cannibalism. Currently in revision for August 2025 release.

Currently Reading

CURRENTLY READING

  • DOPPELGÄNGER by Naomi Klein. This book was equal parts reassuring and horrifying to my mental health. On the one hand, it affirmed my anecdotal observations that reality has lost all meaning in recent years, but on the other hand, I am extremely concerned about what is going to happen in this country come November. I'm glad, though, to have language for how diagonalism drove "reasonable" people to alt-right extremism in the wake of the pandemic (part of a much more sweeping phenomenon that I have long considered a form of betrayal). I thought a lot about the pitfalls of the Western individualized sociopolitical ethos while I was writing the Atlas series, which itself features an allegory for the harms of conservative "feminism," and Klein's conclusions here here are the same as mine: self-centered policy won't work. The institutions and systems we have that maximize profit over wellness do not serve us, and the perceptions of reality currently driving extremist views are based on mythologized narratives inaccurately centering the self as underdog or victim. But the flip side of that knowledge (the carnage, so to speak) is okay, so ... now what?

  • LOST ARK DREAMING by Suyi Davies Okungbowa. Much to think about this month! I met Suyi Davies Okungbowa last month at the Tucson Festival of Books and was, put frankly, dazzled by his intelligence, humor, and craft. I'd never met someone with a writing process so closely comparable to mine; I was also delighted to learn that where my background is the built environment via urban planning and social policy, Suyi's is the built environment via civil engineering. He is both an incredible artist and a brilliant thinker, and this novella exemplifies the best of its genre. This post-disaster imagining of climate-affected West Africa as a partially-submerged high rise is an excellent political thought exercise and a valuable centering of the real stakes—which are, again, the value of the collective human.

  • COME AND GET IT by Kiley Reid. Okay, I won't lie to you, this shit is dark; much like SUCH A FUN AGE, the storylines and clever turns of phrase are frothy and un-put-downably propulsive, but this story is much darker than it first appears. Every relationship revolves inescapably around money, the way money establishes power, and the power differentials built into race and class in extraordinarily nuanced (and uncomfortable) ways. I spent much of this book shrinking away from it and cringing (while also rapidly turning pages); much of the time spent after I finished it was deep in thought. A highly worthy read, but it will make you feel sadder than you might expect if you spend any time at all thinking about its implications. I will also be reading all the topical non-fiction mentioned in the acknowledgments.

  • THIS IS ME TRYING by Racquel Marie. Finally, something to feel rather than think about! This is a coming-of-age, resurfacing-from-grief narrative that comes across so wise and deep and grounded. I'm doing an event with Racquel Marie this month and I can't wait to sit down with her and discuss how mental health, self-compassion, and various forms of love factored into her beautiful rendering of how the next best life doesn't exist; there is only this one. 

Currently Listening

CURRENTLY LISTENING

  • Re: This is Why by Paramore. I sort of vaguely knew how political This is Why was as an album, but it didn't hit me quite the same way as this version, with such a buffet of artistic stylings on the table. I love the Jack Antonoff take on "Sanity," and my other favorites are "You First" with Remi Wolf (you know I love Remi Wolf, her single "Cinderella" is playing non-stop) and "C'est Comme Ça" featuring Wet Leg. 

  • GUTS (spilled) by Olivia Rodrigo. I mean, duh. I really enjoy the variation from these new tracks; it valuably diversifies an album whose tracks previously seemed to fall into one of two categories (no shade but any given song was either bop or ballad, and these songs aren't so easily labeled). It's also kind of interesting to see how many artists are currently venturing into country-adjacent stylings? In any case I love all of these new songs for different reasons, and GUTS was already such a strong album to begin with.  

  • Hello Dolly! (Soundtrack to the Original Motion Picture) by Various Artists. This was one of my favorite movies as a kid; I love to bring up that Mr. Blake and I have a sense of humor that was heavily influenced by Walter Matthau, albeit in different forms. This movie was introduced to me by my mom, who loves Barba Streisand, and I had a much-loved VHS from when I recorded it while it played on TV (wow, what a sentence). Now, to my delight, the Goblin Prince is very into Wall-E, which opens with the song "Put On Your Sunday Clothes." Listening to him sing along to the song ("out deeeer!") makes my heart overheat.

  • I'M DOING IT AGAIN BABY! by girl in red. God I love an exclamation point. It's just so enticing! I'm doing it again, baby! Anyway, I was only sort of invested in this release until I heard "You Need Me Now?" and became obsessed. A very verve-y style. I'm also aware Taylor Swift's next album comes out this month, but as it isn't available at the time I'm writing this and we have no singles, that will be May's take. For now, the singles on repeat: "Too Sweet" by Hozier, "Calling After Me" by Wallows, "Shotput" by Still Woozy, "We Don't Wanna Talk" by Friday Pilots Club, "Tough Season" by Bendigo Fletcher, and the aforementioned "Cinderella" by Remi Wolf.

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