Christelle Dabos was born in 1980 in Cannes on the
Côte d'Azur and grew up in a family of musicians. The author moved across the border to a village near
La Louvière in
Wallonia,
Belgium, in 2005 and unsuccessfully sought work as a librarian. Dabos began writing
The Mirror Visitor quartet in 2007, but shortly after she was diagnosed with cancer in her jaw and had to undergo surgery and jaw reconstruction. In her convalescence, she turned to the website ''Plume d'argent
, a repository for fanfiction and original fiction where writers could exchange feedback. After becoming an administrator on the platform, Dabos was encouraged by her fellow writers to submit her first novel, the first volume of The Mirror Visitor
quartet entitled A Winter's Promise
, to the Gallimard-RTL-Télérama First Novel competition, which she subsequently won in 2013. The title of the series (La Passe-miroir'' in French) is inspired by
Le Passe-muraille, a literary work by the French writer
Marcel Aymé. In 2015, Dabos published at
Gallimard Jeunesse the second novel in the series,
The Missing of Clairdelune, which along with ''A Winter's Promise'' was awarded the
Grand prix de l'Imaginaire in the category Francophone Youth Novel in 2016. The third and fourth instalments of the series were released in 2017 and 2019, respectively. The series was compared by the national press to
Harry Potter by
J. K. Rowling and
His Dark Materials by
Philip Pullman. The novels were subsequently released in English translated by
Hildegarde Serle at
Europa Editions in 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2022. The series has sold over a million copies and has been translated in twenty languages. The book cover illustrations are by
Laurent Gapaillard. In 2022, Dabos published ''Et L'imagination prend feu
as part of the Secrets d'écriture
collection published by Le Robert. In 2023, Dabos published Here, and Only Here
at Gallimard Jeunesse in French and at Europa Editions in English, translated by Hildegard Serle. Writing Here, and Only Here'', Dabos was "strongly influenced by
magic realism", especially South American authors like
Gabriel García Márquez,
Isabel Allende and
José Donoso. ==Publications==