Kill Your Darlings In 2010, Kent co-founded the Australian literary journal
Kill Your Darlings with
Rebecca Starford.
Novels In 2011 Kent won the inaugural Writing Australia Unpublished Manuscript Award for her novel
Burial Rites. Burial Rites tells the story of
Agnes Magnúsdóttir, a servant in northern
Iceland who was condemned to death after the murder of two men, one of whom was her employer, and became the last woman put to death in Iceland. Kent was drawn to the idea of writing her story after a visit to the scene of the woman's execution at Þrístapar, close to where she stayed for some time as a
Rotary exchange student when she was 18. The novel crafts a more ambiguous, sympathetic image of the life of a woman widely regarded in popular opinion to have been "an inhumane witch, stirring up murder". In 2017, it was announced that
Jennifer Lawrence would play the role of Agnes in the film adaptation of
Burial Rites, directed by
Luca Guadagnino. the film is still "in development". A documentary about Kent's experiences in Iceland and writing
Burial Rites was aired on the
ABC TV as an episode of
Australian Story titled "No More Than a Ghost", on 1 July 2013. Kent's second novel,
The Good People, was published in 2016. Set in
Ireland's
County Kerry in 1825, it is the story of a widow's struggle to find a cure for her grandson who has been struck down by a mysterious inability to speak and who is feared by others in this superstitious community as a
changeling. The novel takes inspiration from the case of the
death of Michael Leahy. It was translated into ten languages and shortlisted for the Walter Scott Award for Historical Fiction (UK) 2017. In 2020 Aquarius Films planned to adapt
The Good People for the screen. Her third novel,
Devotion (2021), set in a fictionalised version of the
Adelaide Hills town of
Hahndorf, is an historical love story between two young
Lutheran women set in the 1830s, "unfurling in a time that doesn't have the language for it". The novel takes place in their
Prussian homeland and the new
colony of South Australia.
Screenwriting Kent had been thinking of writing a novel based on a true story about a Scottish child who remembered a past life, and she started researching similar incidences. When
film producers Anna McLeish and Sarah Shaw asked if she had any ideas for a screenplay, she suggested using such a storyline as a kind of
psychological drama. Kent was interested in imagining "what it would be like to be a parent of this child... in the mother and the alienation she would feel when a child didn't want her". In December 2021,
Sarah Snook replaced Moss as the star. The film, which developed into a
horror film, was released by
Netflix on 28 June 2023 in the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom and other territories.
Memoir Kent's memoir, entitled
Always Home, Always Homesick, was published on 29 April 2025. The first part covers her early childhood through to her time in Iceland as an exchange student in 2003, while the second part is about her return to the country aged in her twenties, when she started researching and writing about Agnes Magnúsdóttir, the last person to be executed there (the subject of
Burial Rites). The third part covers a more recent trip, when she visited the site of Magnúsdóttir's execution, now a memorial, and found that plaques engraved with lines from her novel had been installed. After publication of her memoir, she said in an interview: == Awards and honours ==