Kate McElderry’s highly anticipated debut – a coming-of-age story steeped in Celtic lore that follows a young man’s mystical journey in Ireland as he seeks roots, self-worth, and transformation – is a deeply personal and resonant story inspired by lived experience, decades of teaching, and a profound connection to place and identity.
At its core, the book explores universal themes of belonging, kindness, and the complexities of navigating the world with neurodiversity.
The spark for Declan Someone (The Journey of Declan Noone) came from a very real moment in an Irish pub that left a lasting impression on McElderry. She recalls: “I was locked out of a friend’s house one rainy Sunday night, feeling lost and anxious about a professional talk I had to prepare for the next day. When I walked into that pub, everyone turned to see me in my sorry, bedraggled state. But then, they just took me in. They bought me a meal, a pint, and encouraged me to practice my talk with them right there and then.” She continues, “One person said, ‘You belong here.’ That moment really touched and warmed me. I wanted to capture that spirit of shared humanity and kindness in Declan —how strangers can become mentors, friends, a kind of family on one’s journey.”
Drawing on nearly three decades of teaching teens with ADHD, dyslexia, and anxiety, McElderry created Declan as a character navigating the complexities of the contemporary world while living with neurodiversity. “Declan has been living inside me for a long time,” she says. “It’s a mix of my old teenage writing and new work. I even found journals and stories my mother had saved, which inspired me to turn these pieces into something meaningful.”
What stands out from the earliest chapters is the vividness of Declan’s voice and setting. McElderry describes, “I could literally imagine Declan wilting in the heat of New York. His voice was there from the start, and U2’s song ‘New York’ played in my mind as I wrote about those hot summers.” Her affection for Ireland also informs the novel deeply. “Ireland, especially the Wild Atlantic Way, feels like a spiritual home to me,” McElderry explains. “My stints there taught me to reframe loss and adversity and find joy and community. The culture and literature of Ireland are woven through Declan’s story.”
McElderry’s personal experiences shape the narrative. She describes her younger self: “If I had to sum up my childhood self with book characters, I’d say I was a cross between Scout Finch from To Kill a Mockingbird and Anne of Anne of Green Gables. Like Anne, I was a free spirit with a big imagination, and like Scout, I was a tomboy who questioned injustices.” She also shares, “I’m neurodiverse myself, living with dyscalculia and synesthesia. Great teachers helped me overcome the anxiety I had around math, and that personal journey gave me insight into Declan’s world.”
Writing remains central to McElderry’s life. “I started writing as a teen, creatively and as therapy, and also as an activist—pleading with politicians to save our planet,” she says with a laugh. Though those letters went unread, her passion for writing deepened. “I’ve worked mostly in educational and technical writing, but fiction always called me back. Despite the differences, all writing involves crafting ideas and connecting with readers.”
An avid reader herself, McElderry believes reading fuels writing. “I’m a big believer in read-alouds for any age because humans are wired for storytelling,” she explains. She’s recently enjoyed books like Cloe Dalton’s Raising Hare and Phil M Shirley’s The Happening of Magic, and is currently absorbed in David Thomson’s The People of the Sea, which explores British and Irish selkie and merfolk legends, underscoring her love of folklore and myth.
At its heart, Declan Someone (The Journey of Declan Noone) is a story about finding one’s place in the world and the unexpected communities that support us along the way. McElderry invites readers to journey with Declan and “rediscover what it means to belong—not just to a place or people but to oneself.”
Declan Someone (The Journey of Declan Noone) is scheduled for release in spring 2026 under our imprint Foreshore Books.
Kate McElderry is passionate about storytelling, art, nature, and their confluence. She finds rocky coasts, tidepools, and the stories that both sides of the Atlantic hold, inspiring. Kate is neurodiverse and as a child was diagnosed with a learning difference. (Neurodivergent thinkers are often associated with ‘out of the box thinking,’ though due to her artist mother and creative teachers, Kate was never presented with a box nor put in a box. Instead, she was provided time, space, and opportunities to explore and create.) From her personal experience and career teaching students with dyslexia and ADHD, Kate is poised to write, speak, and educate about neurodiversity. She is the Director of Outreach and an educator at The Odyssey School in Baltimore County, Maryland. A published author, Kate, has written educational material, but Declan Someone (The Journey of Declan Noone) is her first novel. It weaves in writing from her teen years (a story and an essay) found in her mother’s attic with contemporary writing completed in Ireland. From afar, Kate is a member of the Irish Writers Centre, and other writing associations. When she is not teaching, speaking, or writing, Kate enjoys spending time with her family.