In a world of dragons, frostbitten coasts, and reluctant mercenaries, Demi Winters found her voice—not in a bustling writer’s room or MFA program, but at her kitchen table in British Columbia, balancing a toddler on one hip and Norse mythologies in the other hand. Her breakout romantic fantasy series, The Ashen Series, began with The Road of Bones, a novel that arrived not with fireworks but with a steady storm: quiet at first, then impossible to ignore.
Winters doesn’t write heroes who are born strong. She writes women like Silla Nordvig—wounded, quiet, often underestimated—who find strength in survival and power in vulnerability. Her landscapes are forged from fire and ice, inspired by Icelandic sagas and shaped by a fascination with endurance: how people endure grief, exile, addiction, and even love when it arrives at the wrong time, in the wrong form.
A biochemistry graduate turned fantasy novelist, Winters brings a rare precision to her world-building. Magic in Íseldur doesn’t just sparkle—it reacts, changes with temperature, and can just as easily kill as save. That scientific foundation gives her fantasy realism, anchoring the mythic in the tactile. But it’s her characters—flawed, conflicted, deeply human—that keep readers turning pages long after the battles end.
Since publishing The Road of Bones in 2023, Winters has gained a devoted international readership, with translations in Spanish, German, and Italian, and over 72,000 books sold. Her follow-up, Kingdom of Claw, deepens the political intrigue and emotional stakes, threading themes of legacy, betrayal, and found family through each scene like runes etched in stone.
When she isn’t writing, Winters is reading epic fantasy with morally gray leads, hiking the rain-soaked trails of the Pacific Northwest, or cooking elaborate meals she swears are research for future scenes. Her favorite books include The Fifth Season, The Way of Kings, and From Blood and Ash—works that, like her own, blur the lines between fantasy, romance, and survival.
Demi Winters doesn’t just tell stories—she carves them into ice and ash, where love grows in unlikely places, and no one walks away unchanged.