ChristineKindberg2

Listen to some podcast interviews with Christine!

  • TCK Care (in which I talk about my experience growing up as a Third Culture Kid and how that’s influenced my writing)

  • Bridge of the Faithful (in which I talk about how faith influences my writing and my creative life)

  • Hope Prose (in which I talk about race, writing, and diversity)

  • Thank You Heartbreak (in which I talk about how singleness has opened up opportunities to do things I might not have done otherwise—including writing and publishing my book)

 

Christine Kindberg is a fiction writer, author of the YA novel The Means That Make Us Strangers.

Christine grew up in Peru, Chile, Panama, Kentucky, and North Carolina. She studied English at Wheaton College and has an MFA in creative writing from Queens University of Charlotte. Now she lives in the Chicago area, where she works as a Spanish-language freelance editor. She’s taught creative writing as guest faculty at Wheaton College, and she serves on the board of directors for Media Associates International.

She’s currently working on a novel about the first white family in Tierra del Fuego and the indigenous people they worked with, amidst the colonization, epidemics, gold rush, and war that reshaped the southernmost part of South America in the 1860s-1970s. She’s sharing bits and beings of the historical research for that book on her Substack “Writing Fireland.”

When not writing, Christine enjoys running, reading in hammocks, cooking for friends, and watching shows that feature British accents. She spends much of her spare time with her husband, Stephen, and their black lab, Kona.

Sign up for Christine’s email newsletter for a monthly-ish summary of her writerly news, and follow Christine on social media for more frequent updates!