Lindsay Currie writes mysteries for young readers, including the Delta Games series and It's Watching. Currie grew up on Nancy Drew, loves a good twisty tale, and enjoys researching forgotten history. She recently relocated from Chicago to a 220-acre farm in downstate Illinois where she finally gets to see stars every night and take hikes every day. X Marks the Haunt (Delacorte Press, January 6, 2026) follows a 12-year-old who must end a haunting.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
When a lost crypt key awakens a dark force at Graceland Cemetery, 12-year-old Will, armed with his graveyard know-how, must end the haunting... before it's too late!
On your nightstand now:
Count My Lies by Sophie Stava. I'm a sucker for a good twisty thriller so I'm excited for this one!
Favorite book when you were a child:
I feel like I traumatize people when I answer this question, but here goes! My favorite book when I was in fourth/fifth grade was Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls. I know, I know. So sad. But also, magical. I was an avid reader, and it wasn't unusual for me to become obsessed with stories and read them repeatedly, but Where the Red Fern Grows was different. I felt that story. Billy Colman's life was so foreign to me, so different from my own, and yet the author created a window that allowed me to understand and respect it. I often wish I could tell Wilson Rawls how much he impacted my childhood with his story of a boy with a big dream living in the Ozarks.
Favorite book to read to a child:
Oh, I love this question! My children are all older now, but when they were young, we read aloud all the time. We also had certain books that we read frequently regardless of everyone's ages because they ushered in a season or simply made us happy. One that pops into my head is Room on the Broom by Julia Donaldson. That book released around the time my oldest son was born, I believe, and we are a big Halloween family, we read that story so many times I could recite it in my sleep. I might still be able to!
Your top five authors:
This might be the hardest question I've ever been asked. No joke! I'd like to start with my critique partners, who are also supremely talented authors: Dusti Bowling and Jenni Walsh. Dusti writes the most beautiful and relatable middle-grade stories. One thing I really adore about her books is that she does not shy away from complicated or difficult topics; she shows so much respect for her young readers, and I love that. Jenni Walsh is an author of middle-grade and adult historical fiction, as well as middle-grade contemporary fiction. Her specialty, in my opinion, is strong women throughout history, especially ones that aren't particularly well-known. Being that I love to weave obscure history into my spooky middle-grade stories, this feature of her writing really resonates with me! And my final three authors would have to be R.L. Stine, for creating an entire career out of scaring children (and being so kind as to blurb one of my early books before I even had a readership!), Katherine Arden, for writing some of the most beautiful prose I've ever seen in my life, and fellow Sourcebooks author Jen Calonita, for seeing the magic in everyday life and breathing that into her stories.
Book you've faked reading:
This one is going to shock a lot of people, I'm afraid. I've never confessed this, but my answer is The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin. I tried to read this book with my kiddos when it was assigned reading in middle school. I frequently get reviews with nods to it on my own mysteries, especially the Delta Games series. That said, I personally struggled with the myriad details in this book. I know many, many readers love it, and that's wonderful! Maybe it's their Where the Red Fern Grows! That's the beauty of reading, isn't it? As LeVar Burton once said, "Every book is not for everybody, but there is somebody for every book."
Book you're an evangelist for:
Sandwich by Catherine Newman features themes that speak to me and many other women my age. It explores what it's like to be a parent to older children while also caring for aging parents and navigating our own changing minds and bodies. I have three children myself--ages 23, 22, and 19--who are in medical school and college, respectively, but I also have a father in his mid-80s who has severe Parkinson's. It's a stressful time in life that no one prepares you for, and few people talk about. Sandwich made me feel seen.
Book you've bought for the cover:
The Macabre by Kosoko Jackson! Holy cow that cover is eye-catching! I haven't started it yet, but I can't wait.
Best book an adult handed to you when you were a child:
Probably Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier. I took an independent reading class in high school that allowed me to read a variety of different genres and my teacher recommended that one based on what she'd gleaned about my taste up to that point. She was so right. I still think about this book and re-read it every few years!
Book that changed your life:
There have been a few of these but I'm going to cite a book I read when I was quite young: The Dollhouse Murders by Betty Ren Wright. This was the first "spooky" book I read as a kid and I'm certain it flipped a switch in me. The jolt of adrenaline I got from the suspenseful scenes was delicious. I credit that book with kicking off a lifelong love of horror in me!
Favorite line from a book:
"Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again." --Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
Five books you'll never part with:
Just five? There are so many books that are meaningful to me for various reasons. Perhaps they remind me of when my kids were young, or a special moment in time, or even just a reading experience I hadn't had before.
Any Elephant and Piggie book by Mo Willams. You'll have to pry them out of my hands.
Rebecca. Are we shocked?
Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing by Judy Blume. Such good memories.
The Turn of the Screw by Henry James. This gothic novella still lingers with me some 25 years after I first read it.
The Hidden Staircase by Carolyn Keene.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott.