The Morning Call (Sunday)

Yarros pours her pain into blockbuste­r fantasy

Author draws on experience with chronic illness, military family life for book series

- By Alexandra Alter

When Rebecca Yarros pitched her publisher a sexy fantasy about telepathic dragons and their riders, she thought it might be a tough sell.

She’d built a career and a dedicated following writing romances, often drawing on her experience as a military wife. What she was proposing was wildly off-brand: an epic fantasy series with dragons, griffins, magic and political intrigue.

To Yarros’ surprise, her publisher, Entangled, loved the idea, and wanted to launch a new fantasy imprint with it. Over a feverish few months,

Yarros crash-wrote “Fourth Wing,” an intricatel­y plotted 500-plus-page narrative that takes place at an elite war college, where two dragon riders feud, then fall in love. She was stunned when she learned they were printing more than 100,000 copies and rolling out an elaborate marketing campaign with limited-edition hardcovers.

Yarros — who lives in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and has a busy home life, with six children, two dogs, a cat, two chinchilla­s and a bearded dragon — was exhilarate­d, but also felt as if she was “in a vise.”

“The pressure was utterly intense,” she said. “I was like, am I going to be personally responsibl­e for dragging down this whole publisher?”

Her publisher assured her it would be a hit. Still, Yarros was unprepared for the frenzy that has erupted over “Fourth Wing” and its sequel, “Iron Flame,” which was released in early November.

Since its release in May, “Fourth Wing” has sold more than 2 million copies globally, according to the publisher. It has been on The New York Times’ hardcover fiction bestseller list for more than six months — with three months at No. 1. It took off in Britain, Australia and South Africa, selling more than 600,000 copies in the United Kingdom and the Commonweal­th, and translatio­n rights have sold in around 30 languages.

On TikTok, hashtags for the author and the series have been viewed more than a billion times. Amazon MGM Studios has optioned the series for a TV adaptation, with Yarros as an executive producer.

“It was a slow, steady build, and then it went absolutely mental,” said Rebekah West, Yarros’ editor at Piatkus Fiction in Britain.

The novel’s runaway success stems in part from the boom in romantasy, a hybrid of romance and fantasy that is drawing fans from both genres. “Fourth Wing” is a steamy mix that blends fantasy elements (elaborate world building, an epic battle between good and evil, fire-breathing winged dragons) with popular romance tropes (the enemies-to-lovers plot, plus explosive sex scenes, including one that starts a literal fire).

“It’s just been massive,” said Shannon DeVito, director of books at

Barnes & Noble, about the response from readers.

For Yarros, the escalating fame has been jarring.

“I’m not comfortabl­e in the spotlight,” she said recently. “I would rather stay home with my kids.”

Navigating bestseller­dom is made even more complicate­d for Yarros by chronic illness; she has Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a genetic connective tissue disorder. It can be difficult for her to stand or talk for more than an hour, which makes marathon signing sessions and fan events a challenge.

“Sometimes I feel like part of my job is to make sure she survives this with her health intact,” said Louise Fury, Yarros’ literary agent.

In “Fourth Wing,” Yarros wrote about her condition for the first time, giving her protagonis­t, Violet Sorrengail, many of the affliction­s she suffers from, including dizziness, brittle bones and joints that easily dislocate. Violet’s mother, the commanding general, pushes her to join the elite dragon rider forces like her older siblings, but Violet struggles at the war college. Her condition, which is never named, leaves Violet so weak that she can’t stay on her dragon, nearly plummeting to her death before she grudgingly accepts a saddle that locks her into place. Other dragon riders belittle her as small and fragile, but Violet’s ruthless antagonist and love interest, Xaden, is won over by her determinat­ion.

“I read fantasy growing up, and I never saw that, I saw these powerful heroines,” she said. “I wanted to tell a story about a girl who should not succeed, and who should not be able to endure an overly brutal environmen­t.”

Yarros grew up as the youngest of four in a military family — her grandfathe­r was a general, and both her mother and father are retired lieutenant colonels. Her family bounced around Washington, D.C., Oklahoma, Kansas, Pennsylvan­ia, Germany and Colorado.

She took up writing poetry and fiction early, and wrote a novel for a high school English project. When she was a college student at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs, she met her husband, Jason Yarros, a young private in the Army, at a karaoke bar one night. They got married and quickly had a child, and Rebecca Yarros dropped out of college.

Her husband, who flew Apache helicopter­s, was deployed five times, with four tours to combat zones in Iraq and Afghanista­n. While he was gone, Yarros worked on her college degree in history. When she graduated, at age 29, they had five children.

In 2003, after her husband was injured by an anti-tank land mine in Iraq, Yarros developed insomnia. To occupy herself in the middle of the night, she read romance novels. Several years later, when Jason Yarros was on his third deployment, Rebecca Yarros decided that instead of just reading novels, she would write one.

In 2011, she wrote her first book, an urban fantasy. She signed with an agent, but no publishers made an offer. Undeterred, she decided to write about a young woman in a military family. The result was her debut, “Full Measures,” a romance about a woman whose father is killed in Afghanista­n. She sold it to Entangled, and it was published in 2014.

It was the start of a prolific career. From then on, Yarros worked at a breakneck pace, releasing two novels a year. But she often felt discourage­d by her stagnant sales.

In the years after she was diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos in 2020, she thought about quitting. A flare-up had left her so dizzy she could barely walk from her dining room to her couch without collapsing. Her four sons were also diagnosed with the disorder. The stress of writing, managing her illness and caring for her family felt overwhelmi­ng.

“I got to a point where I was like, is this worth it?” she said.

Then, in 2022, her pitch for “Fourth Wing” was accepted. She’d written 20 romances, but this was a chance to write fantasy, something she’d wanted to do since her first book failed to sell — and to write an otherworld­ly epic about a heroine with a chronic illness.

“Writing Violet is super cathartic, because she struggles to accept the accommodat­ions that are given to her, and I have that same struggle,” Yarros said.

Soon after she was done with “Fourth Wing,” she wrote “Iron Flame,” the second installmen­t of a planned five-book series that is shaping up to be another mega bestseller.

 ?? JOANNA KULESZA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rebecca Yarros, seen Nov. 1 near her home in Colorado, was unprepared for the frenzy that has erupted over “Fourth Wing” and its sequel, “Iron Flame.”
JOANNA KULESZA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Rebecca Yarros, seen Nov. 1 near her home in Colorado, was unprepared for the frenzy that has erupted over “Fourth Wing” and its sequel, “Iron Flame.”
 ?? ?? ‘IRON FLAME’
By Rebecca Yarros; Entangled: Red Tower Books, 640 pages, $29.99.
‘IRON FLAME’ By Rebecca Yarros; Entangled: Red Tower Books, 640 pages, $29.99.

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