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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.

Blake - Author Photo.jpg

Author Photo © Michelle Terris​

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Represented by 
Amelia Appel, Triada US

Keep in touch

New releases

Currently Writing

Currently Reading

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Forthcoming Releases

Aug. 11, 2026

Dreamland. A Santa Ana winds-inspired novel of romantic suspense.

March 2, 2027

Clara & The Devil, Vol. II. The next installment of a Faustian graphic novel collaboration with Little Chmura.

Currently . . .

Currently Writing

Writing

  • 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. Currently drafting. 

Currently Reading

Reading

  • BLACKTAIL by Scott Hawkins. One of the books I think is probably the best and most influential of the 2010s SFF boom is THE LIBRARY AT MOUNT CHAR, which was, for quite a long time—ten years, I think?—Scott Hawkins's only book. It falls under both sci-fi and horror, it's twisty and mind-blowing, a real contender for the best to ever do it, something I've said enough times that Scott Hawkins's editors have zeroed in on my devotion and taste. I was really excited to read BLACKTAIL, which is a strange book—when I was telling my husband about it, he said, "Oh, like WHITE FANG," which is probably true, but I read WHITE FANG in sixth grade and can't remember. So: Yes, there are talking animals. Yes, it's oddly fable-like, and in many ways an indictment of humankind on the whole. But it's also so funny and strange and violent. I was a little apprehensive for a second when there was recently a mountain lion on the loose in my neighborhood, but then I was like meh, Blacktail was right in the end. Do you, big cat. Do you. 

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  • RENTAL HOUSE by Weike Wang. I picked up this relatively spare novel about marriage while I was on tour for CLARA & THE DEVIL and read it in pretty much one sitting on the plane. It's charming, very familiar—it's about the socioeconomics of being a first generation Asian woman married to a white man of a working class background, and my god, both sets of parents were shockingly familiar. I think I've had some of these exact conversations, up to a point. I found it to be very helpful for the novel I'm currently writing—also low-key about a mixed-class marriage, give or take some multiverse espionage—and also a welcome introduction to Weike Wang, whose recent story "The Dreamdrive" in the New Yorker was also very excellent. Funny, tender, periodically melancholy, all of that and more. Reminded me a bit of THE TEN YEAR AFFAIR for a different (more personally applicable) demographic in terms of its handling of middle age.​​

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  • SPACE INVADERS by Nora Fernández. A very short novella, almost more like a short story in terms of reading experience. This one hops around from different perspectives during Pinochet's regime in Chile. It blurs the space between dream and reality very well, and the surreality was really an accomplishment. In the end, the story is quite simple, the misfortunes and attempted political activism of a bunch of school-aged friends during a time of military rule and corruption. It's strangely innocent—the reference to the game Space Invaders really does a lot of work conjuring nostalgia for a time that should have been simpler, and in some ways, was. 

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  • THE MINISTRY FOR THE FUTURE by Kim Stanley Robinson. This is my husband's favorite book and he's been trying to get me to read it for ages, but there's a lot you need to understand about him in order to grasp the reasons for my delay. One, he's an optimist. Crazy, I know, but he really believes that people are more capable of good than evil and on the whole can be trusted to do the right thing. (Under some conditions I agree, others we argue.) Two, he's a physics teacher and prefers non-fiction or hard sci-fi (though I've gotten him really into the Selin books by Elif Batuman). So, I kind of understood off the bat that this book was probably climate fiction that was relatively utopian, and it is. It's very, very good; well-researched, informative, a perfect plan, which is probably why I'm so depressed. It could be so easy, actually! To fix the world. To assign real, meaningful value to future generations. To act in a way that implies a future at all. I keep dog-earing pages of his copy, which he hates, but I have a system, and there is so much here to absorb into the way we speak of not just climate policy, but economic futures as well. This book presents a plan for casting capitalism aside—and fuck, I hope we do it. But also, the depressing bit: I kind of doubt we will. Still, someone has to have a plan, so why not us? And why not this? 

Currently Listening

Listening

  • The Great Divide by Noah Kahan. This is a carry-over from last month, because of an interesting and kind of unexpected development: my son has discovered the unadulterated pleasure of driving with the windows down. In my mind, if the American Dream had a physical form, it would be this: driving on an open road with the windows down, listening to music. (Gas prices notwithstanding; sorry, I drive an electric car.) Anyway, the music I have curated for him is obviously this album. We get in the car, I hit play on "American Cars," and we vibe, and we daydream, and we cruise. It's perfect. An update to my previous list of favorites: "American Cars," "Dashboard," and "Downfall" still at the top, "23" very near the top, and "Deny Deny Deny" is the one I'm throwing in the playlist for Untitled Assassin Wife. 

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  • Dancing on the Wall by MUNA. This is quite a dance-y album, which I appreciate. I was really into "Wannabeher," one of the early singles, and if I could turn off The Great Divide this album would probably be my next choice. (I won't lie to you, it's all Noah Kahan all the time over here, but for the sake of routine, here are some other things too.) "Eastside Girls" also great ("role-play, ren faire/gender-confirmation care"). And "So What." Great!!

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  • American Stories by Rostam. Remember when Vampire Weekend was good? That was because of Rostam, who left right around the time that Vampire Weekend stopped being good. I like Rostam a lot; his sensibilities are, in my opinion, delicate, ethereal, otherworldly. Sometimes he reminds me a little bit of how I felt when I first listened to The Beatles, though I can't really explain that. My favorite Rostam song will always be "Bike Dream" (maybe also "Wood" from the same album—that style really worked for me, sonically, perhaps because I can hear the traces of Vampire Weekendery; I guess in that case, my favorite Rostam song is actually "Walcott" or "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa"), but this is enjoyable nonetheless. 

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  • NeverAlways (Vol. 2) by The Band CAMINO. The Band CAMINO has a new album, so obviously it's on the list! They are really very reliable. I love "Holly!" I mean, lyrically, it's like, of course. I love your mind and your body! Holly! Why has nobody thought of this one before. Anyway, reliable alt-pop about love that always makes me want to write about love (remember Black Jeans and Daphne Blue? Now that's a deep cut for the real ones). What's not to enjoy? 

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