![]() ![]() ![]() "But, I’ve been a fan of things for so much longer than I’ve been a writer of things, and I know what I would have wanted if I were a fan of this book. "I don’t think any reader is obligated to take a single word that’s not literally printed on the page as canon," Casey McQuiston tells Bustle. ![]() Casey McQuiston, author of one of summer's hottest books Red, White & Royal Blue, has her own ideas about what to share after the fact - and that's why, in the past few weeks, she has used social media to drop certain "character details" about her beloved protagonists, including their Hogwarts houses, their Zodiac signs, and, in an exclusive interview with Bustle, which books they're reading this summer. Turtles All The Way Down author John Green won't offer up his own theories about his characters beyond what he put on the page, but Harry Potter author J.K. The debate over how much information authors should share about their books after publication is nothing new. ![]()
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