Tuesday, 3 March 2026

#ukteenchat Q&A with Helen Price - author of Kill Me Now

Hello, and welcome to this week's #ukteenchat, where YA Thriller author, Helen Price tells us all about her writing and debut, KILL ME NOW.





1. Could you tell us a little bit about your new YA Thriller, Kill Me Now, please?

School golden boy Riley North had it all: talent, charm, and a stellar future. Now he’s dead.

Guy 'Reaper' Mortimer, the funeral director’s son, stands accused of his murder.

Keen to clear his name, Reaper teams up with cute new girl, Samira; sweet but naïve Betty; and Riley’s two best mates, Bunsen and Snake. Together, they unravel the twisted layers of school, where secrets hide and deception is rife. But what starts as a search for answers soon becomes a fight for survival.

Because the killer knows the truth and is determined to expose it – one deadly sin at a time.

Pitched as Riverdale x One of is Lying, Kill Me Now is about the deeply personal reasons we all have for keeping secrets. It subverts expectations, exploring death honestly and faith in ways readers won’t see coming. It’s a story about secrets, lies, and the seductive promise that dragging the truth into the light will set you free.

But what if it doesn’t?
What if, in the end, the truth isn’t salvation at all . . . but a weapon?

 

2. Was there anything in particular that inspired Kill Me Now?

Yes. Contradiction.

A stranger I met told me she’d found faith but had been rejected by her local church. That stayed with me. Around the same time, I watched a news feature on young people being radicalised, and it struck me how faith, something designed to guide and protect, can be manipulated in the wrong hands.

That’s when the idea began to form. Not as a story about religion, but about control. About who gets to shape young people’s narratives today and what happens when that belief is weaponised.

From there, I layered in the everyday pressures of teenage life: hierarchies, power dynamics, loyalties, betrayal, first loves, first heartbreaks, identity, reputations, and secrets. The story quickly became about truth: who’s hiding it, who wants it, and what they’re willing to do to keep or expose it.

 

3. What three or four words would best describe Kill Me Now?

They’re on the back of the book! Secrets, Lies & Murder. All my favourite things! Not forgetting consequences, of course.

 

4. Did you know from the beginning who the murderer(s) would be, or did the identity shift as you wrote?

Yes. I always know the who and the why before I start writing. I can’t construct a mystery unless I understand its spine. For me, knowing the ending is like knowing the final destination on a road trip. I might detour en route, but I do need to know where I’m headed.

That said, the editorial process sharpened everything. My editor challenged me to “invest in the evil,” which I absolutely loved. The killer’s identity didn’t change, but the depth of their motivations did. They became more layered and more unsettling. The result is a twist that I hope feels both inevitable and shocking.


5. Without being too spoilery, is there a scene or moment, or character in Kill Me Now that you particularly enjoyed writing?

There’s a pivotal moment at the midpoint where the stakes really rise for Guy Mortimer, KMN’s unlikely hero. Poor thing. I really put him through it!

Up until that moment, the danger feels slightly distant. But in the chapters leading up to and just past the midpoint, it suddenly becomes all too immediate, personal, and inescapable for Guy.

He’s forced to face something that up until this point he’s only feared. So, both the emotional and physical stakes collide, and I absolutely loved writing these scenes.

And in the middle of all that tension, there’s a surprising exchange between Guy and Samira, which was especially fun to write, and I know made him very happy. A cute, quiet moment in the eye of the storm. That kind of contrast in a YA thriller is so important, both for your characters and your readers. It gives them a moment to breathe before jumping straight back in.


6. How important is the setting in your stories?

Massively!

In Kill Me Now, Langbury, its fictional town, isn’t just a backdrop; it’s an active character in its own right. I wanted a place that felt beautiful and historic on the surface but hugely claustrophobic underneath. A town steeped in ritual and reputation, where everyone knows everyone. But someone is always watching.

Creating a fictional pilgrimage town allowed me to amplify that sense of scrutiny and expectation. It’s insular, morally conscious, and quietly suffocating. And that atmosphere naturally shapes the characters’ choices – both good and bad.

YA thrillers often centre around schools. But I wanted the tension to bleed way beyond the school gates. And so, in Langbury, there is no escape. The pressure to conform is everywhere.


7. Are you a plotter or pantser?

Haha! When I was starting out, I was definitely a pantser, all the way. But after studying the craft, I now plot more. Though not so extensively, I can’t still be surprised by my characters. I love it when they say or do things I’m not expecting.

Working with an agent and a publisher now means I have to produce pitches and full story synopses for new story proposals. Up until now, that’s been something I’ve usually done after I’ve finished a story, never before. So it’s definitely encouraged me to plot more. But I still think it’s important to leave space for discovery, so these days, I think I’d probably say I now wear my pants half-mast. 

 

8. Do you have any writing rituals or a favourite place to write?

Ha! I wish I could say I light a candle at dawn and write for long, uninterrupted hours . . . but the truth is far less glamorous.

I write when I can and fret when I can’t. Unfortunately, there’s no pause button on life (I wish), even with a deadline.

That said, I do like silence. No music or background distractions. In summer, I like to write outside in a quiet corner beneath a cluster of apple trees that form the perfect shady canopy. It’s peaceful, private, and feels almost secret. There is a downside, though. Come autumn, dodging the falling apples becomes a dangerous game of survival.

 

9. Can you tell us anything about what you’re currently working on?

Right now, I’m preparing for school visits and workshops, which is incredibly exciting. Taking Kill Me Now on the road, and directly to readers, feels nothing short of surreal.

On the writing side, I have three projects in progress: a new standalone thriller, a sequel, and a spin-off. So there are definitely more secrets, lies, and morally complex characters to come. I can’t say too much yet – sorry –  but I can promise a body count is always on the cards.


10. Do you have any writing advice or tips you’d like to share?

Advice: Failure is not the end. Sadly, in this business, rejection is part of the process. The only real failure is deciding to stop. So, please, no matter how hard it gets . . . keep going.

Tips: Pacing is more than just sentence length. Thrillers aren’t about breakneck speed. Yes, they rely on constant suspense, tension, and escalating stakes, but those only work if there’s contrast. Allow your reader to catch their breath between the action, twists, and shocks.

Drip-feed the clues. And play fair. Give readers at least one twist they can guess but several more that make them gasp.

And, above all, invest in your antagonist. Give them layers and motives that make sense. The more they believe they’re right, the more terrifying they become.

 

You can read an extract on the Chicken House website: Chicken House Books - Kill Me Now

Now available to buy: Kill Me Now: Helen Price: 9781917171144: hive.co.uk