About Olivie
For an official bio, find my press kit.
Olivie Blake, the pen name of Alexene Farol Follmuth, is the author of internationally bestselling speculative fiction for adults. She 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.
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Olivie 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. Her New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling The Atlas Six released in 2022 from Tor Books, with The Atlas Paradox and The Atlas Complex rounding out the bestselling trilogy in 2024. The re-release of her viral literary romance Alone With You in the Ether was followed by backlist titles One for My Enemy and New York Times bestselling Masters of Death, with brand new titles Gifted & Talented and Girl Dinner releasing in 2025. She is also the writer for the graphic series Clara and the Devil with co-creator Little Chmura. As Alexene, she is the author of young adult fiction (alexenefarolfollmuth.com).
Olivie lives and works in Los Angeles with her husband and son. She has trained in boxing for the last seven years and enjoys dinner conversation, art made by humans, and overindulging her sweet tooth.
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Please note: I will never solicit you via social media on any platform. I do not have a Facebook profile, and I do not use or offer any paid services—all of my writing advice is free.

Author Photo © Michelle Terris​
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Represented by
Amelia Appel, Triada US
Keep in touch
Currently . . .
Writing
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NEWPHORIA!, a dystopian satire set three generations in the future of Western technocracy about an archivist, a pop star, a neo-Luddite cult, and clicktivism in the digital dark age. Currently in revision.
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Dead Weight, a play about a complicated pair of frenemies and some priests on LSD. Currently in revision.
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CALL ME WHEN YOU MAKE IT, formerly STARGAZING IS NECROPHILIA, an Alone with You in the Ether-esque romantic narrative about life, disappointment, desire, and the uncertainty of art. Currently in revision.
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UNTITLED ASSASSIN WIFE, a '90s inspired SFF action/adventure about a very healthy marriage. On deck.
Reading
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JAPANESE GOTHIC by Kylie Lee Baker. I’ve been going back and forth about whether I should talk about books when I read them as ARCs or wait to discuss them when they release for the public (sorry to sound so fucking bourgeoisie—when the rest of you riff-raff can read) but the reality is, the brainpower we’re working with here is not able to keep tabs on release dates. So, jot this one down for April! Every holiday season for the last few years I’ve had the privilege of reading a very good horror novel, and this year’s travel accompaniment was JAPANESE GOTHIC, which is atmospheric, dreamlike, labyrinthine, and surreal. It’s beautiful work, with elements that will definitely haunt me for a long time, visually speaking. It’s an interesting interpretation of the romanticism inherent in the Gothic—there’s a play on soulmates that isn’t strictly romantic, but implies something bigger than romance, so to speak? Which is to say, it’s a bit of a break in that sense from “traditional” Gothic works, but a worthy experimentation.
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MURDERLAND by Caroline Fraser. Sometimes, for me, the difficulty in reading non-fiction is that the opening posits something fascinating, and the subsequent evidence becomes too bleak and/or heavy for me to follow it all the way to the end, where presumably there might live a prescription on how to fix or address it. But MURDERLAND’s hook—that the famous serial killers of the Pacific Northwest, specifically Tacoma, all had lead and arsenic poisoning from the smelting plant in their shared neighborhood—only becomes more interesting as the narrative takes shape. What Fraser ultimately concludes with is not just the evidence of what lead poisoning does to the brain—a “robust finding” from the experiments she cites as evidence—but the fact that “Murderland” extends to the smelting industry itself, plus the engineers and politicians responsible for a faulty bridge that killed more people than Ted Bundy. Her own life is woven throughout, and the conclusion is staggering. I will say, she does not spare any details about the very brutal murders; they’re not sensationalized, but they’re hard to read. Still, this is a book that holds accountable the many people with blood on their hands, and comes down as a powerful indictment of capitalism and industry—an interesting narrative turn beyond the usual true crime.
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LISTEN FOR THE LIE by Amy Tintera. Speaking of true crime! I picked this one up from my library on a whim after it was recommended by Veronica Roth, a true person of taste. One thing I share with Veronica Roth is a taste for mess, and oh boy, this heroine bringeth much mess. One book I looooove because it was so juicy and full of atrocious, self-sabotaging decisions was THE VILLAIN EDIT by Laurie Devore—which was also a recommendation from Veronica, go figure—wait, wait, stop. Let me clarify: I enjoy characters who do things not because I would also do them, but rather, because they would be totally problematic and interesting for someone who is not me to do, because it is a fictional situation and I am not harmed by someone else sleeping with someone they shouldn’t. But my point is, this was juicy in the same way THE VILLAIN EDIT was juicy, and I recommend both if you’re looking to relish a messy person’s mess. Though, I will say, I think you might want to talk to someone about the ending of LISTEN FOR THE LIE after reading, and all the better for you if that person happens to be Veronica Roth.
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THE LOOM TREE by Angela Mi Young Hur. This is what I’m reading right now, which releases later this year and was recently announced, and let me provide some caveats. One, I’m only about thirty percent of the way through, so this may not be an accurate assumption. Two, I know that everything and its mother gets compared to THE SECRET HISTORY and therefore it probably means nothing to you as a comp. But both those things out of the way: it currently reads like THE SECRET HISTORY if the characters were eccentric, mischievous fae instead of malaising Classics majors. Like, there are a lot of academic discussions (also true of THE ATLAS SIX, so I stand by my own comp, which is neither here nor there) but with the added bonus of being magical, rooted in fairy tales, and… I can’t think of a better word than eccentric. There’s some powerful drugs in this, basically.
Listening
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Visions by Alice Merton. I am coming to really love Alice Merton, who is a kind of alt-pop singer-songwriter who shouldn’t really be compared to other people, but I’m going to as a shorthand to convince you to listen to the album, even though quite frankly my word should be enough. Let’s see, of my favorites… “Cruel Intentions” reminds me a bit of The Beaches, especially the Blame My Ex album; “Jane Street” would not be out of place on the album Red, in my opinion; “Joyriding” reminds me of—oh, this might be polarizing to the youths, but old Katy Perry, the one who wrote Teenage Dream; and finally, “Marigold,” which I had to play several times in a row upon first listen, might be filed very loosely in the category of Stick Season. If this has not convinced you, I simply give up!!
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Boycott Heaven by The Format. One of my beloved friends once had the nerve to say to me, “Have you ever heard the song ‘On Your Porch’? It’s by the guy who was in the band Fun.,” as if I was a person who had never heard the song “On Your Porch” by THE FUCKING FORMAT. (For the record, my favorite song by The Format was either “Oceans” or “Let’s Make this Moment a Crime,” but “On Your Porch” is totally its own thing.) He has since been forgiven this oversight, but if you came of age in the aughts and were also a moody teen who liked to look at the stars and wonder why am I here and will I ever be deserving of love, you might also know that song. Anyway, The Format came out with a new album! I honestly did not know what to expect and I will say, the opener sounded more Fun. to me, but by track two I was like hell yeah, I’m 15 again, which is occasionally the goal. (Similarly: “Bedroom Posters” by Yellowcard ft. Good Charlotte.)
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KPop Demon Hunters (Soundtrack from the Netflix film) by KPop Demon Hunters Cast, HUNTR/X & Saja Boys. The other night my son wanted to dress up as knights and hunt demons, so obviously we did that to the soundtrack, and I thought, you know, these are bops, I guess I’ll have to jokingly put this on my list of things I’m listening to because of him, and then the next day I was going for a run and I thought, you know what would really hit the spot? Some KPop Demon Hunters. And I was right. The success of this movie is so wonderfully charming and uplifting to me because it has given me a lot to talk about with so many people. For example, it was first brought to my attention by an adult author whose name I will not drop so as to not be one of Those People, but then later, a child my son is friends with came up to me and said, “Do you know about the demon hunters? My favorite song is ‘Takedown,’” to which I said hell yeah little dude, I like the one they sing at the end to defeat all the demons, which he then informed me was called “What It Sounds Like.” So anyway, we’re friends now. And if that’s not the whole point of life and art, what is?
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Bluey the Album (Music from the Original Series) by Bluey. All right, all right, I know you’re like Olivie, get out of here, and you’re absolutely right, but since we're here, I'll explain. I got all the Bluey albums for my son, who is deep in his Bluey phase, and then would you believe it? After my KPop Demon Hunters run, I thought: you know what would be a great cooldown song? “Creek is Beautiful.” I’m dead serious about the fact that Bluey is substantially improving my life right now. Like, I feel no shame at all about saying that if your comfort show is Bob’s Burgers, you will appreciate Bluey. It happens to be about children, but is really about family life in a way that feels like it’s having two conversations: one with my son and one with me. If you like sports movies (I recently watched Remember the Titans, one of my all time faves, and of course the very best one, Cool Runnings), then whether or not you have kids, I sincerely suggest to you: my favorite episode, “Cricket,” which is 7 minutes long. Okay and for real, fuck it, I might put “I Know a Place (The Creek Song)” on my folklore playlist. That’s where we are right now, spiritually. (The fairies polka is also a banger—and with that, I’ll see myself out.)