Kelsey Day is a young adult author and queer Appalachian poet. Their writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Orion Magazine, Freeman’s and more.
The Spiral Key is their first novel for young readers.
I recently asked Day about what they were reading. Their reply:
Right now I’m midway through a book called I Keep My Exoskeletons to Myself by Marisa Crane. It’s a literary speculative novel in which wrongdoers are marked for their crimes with extra shadows. Every character’s interaction(s) with the “justice” system physically marksthem with a new shadow, and each shadow further ostracizes them from the privileged class.Visit Kelsey Day's website.
The book is about surveillance and the justice system, but even more it’s about grief and motherhood. The narrator’s wife died inchildbirth, and their kid was born with two shadows. The reader follows the narrator through spirals of grief and rage, with the tense hum of dystopia in the background.
I love books like this, that place us in a speculative environment while focusing on the ordinary ache of human life. There’s a YA book called The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness that does something similar. It’s set in a world full of supernatural disasters and “chosen ones” who valiantly fight off the threats—but those heroic stories operate in the background of the story. The main characters of the book are ordinary teenagers who live in the heroes’ wake.
This style of dystopia writing is super inspiring to my own work. My debut novel, The Spiral Key, is about a teenage girl getting locked into a virtual reality that’s controlled by her ex-best friend—and though it’s a techno-thriller about the dangers of VR and AI, it’s also ultimately focused on the relationship between these two girls.
Q&A with Kelsey Day.
--Marshal Zeringue


























