Skip To Main Content
Skip To Main Content

Franklin College

Buening 8
Theo Sasso

Buening Hoping To Author Successful Sophomore Season

10/6/2025 8:30:00 AM

As debuts go, winning HCAC Newcomer of the Year in women's basketball is pretty good — and yet somehow, it might not be the most impressive one of 2025 for Erica Buening.

The Grizzly sophomore, who averaged 10 points and a team-leading 6.4 rebounds as a freshman, recently one-upped her on-court performance by publishing her debut novel, "The Atropos Games."

She started writing the story about five years ago during the pandemic, just as she was starting high school up the street here in Franklin.

"Honestly, I was kind of bored during COVID and I was like, 'I'll just try something new,'" she said. "I've always liked to read, so I just wanted to try writing — and I kind of ended up loving it, obviously."

A meaty but deceptively quick 781 pages, "The Atropos Games" follows a group of six teens at a prestigious boarding school in Maine: Lucas Williams, a genius with crippling social anxiety; Vincent Van Doran, Lucas' longtime friend and a budding alcoholic; Eleanor Montgomery, who grew up as an orphan in Europe; Graham Walton, who's spent most of his childhood living in the closet; and wealthy twins Elliot and Liliane Carmine, who couldn't be much more different from one another. The teens get caught up in a scavenger hunt of sorts that becomes more dangerous with each clue they follow. Along the way, all six reveal pieces of themselves while exposing themselves to increasingly grave danger. Friendships are tested and strengthened, and then tested some more, as lives are put at risk over and over again.

With each chapter told from the perspective of a different character, Buening expertly weaves the adventure together and makes it more difficult to put down the deeper into the story you go. It's a Netflix series just begging to be made.

The crazy part is that she didn't really have anything of it mapped out in her head before she started.

"I didn't have a specific plot line; I sort of just wrote as I went," Buening said. "So it kind of took longer because of that, because most of it was just off the top of my head. It was like, 'Oh, I like this idea; I'm going to put this in there.' So it really wasn't super planned out until the second and third book."

Yes, you read that right — second and third. "The Atropos Games" is the first in a trilogy that Buening has already written. Book two, she hopes, will be published within the next few months after the editing process is finished.

"I actually was going to leave it after one, just be sort of a cliffhanger-esque ending," she said. "But then I was sitting on it and I was like, 'No, I don't like that anymore,' so I wanted to just build off of it."

Buening will try to do the same on the court this winter with a Grizzlies team that returns three starters and six of the top nine scorers after a 15-win campaign in 2024-25.

The 5-foot-10 sophomore figures to be one of the main characters in the story once again.

"I'm really excited," Buening said. "I feel great about the team and I feel like we have a really good dynamic just starting off, which is an important foundation for any team to have, so I'm excited to build off of that and get the season started finally."

Though her schedule is plenty busy between basketball and her pursuit of a degree in exercise science, Buening finds time to write whenever she can, noting that "a lot of times when I'm on my phone and it looks like I'm texting a lot, I'm really just editing or writing."

That sometimes-covert process allowed her to catch even those closest to her by surprise; Erica's father, Franklin grad Paul Buening '00, knew that his daughter had been writing but "had no idea she was publishing it until it was out. ... She kept it all pretty quiet."

Buening says that her teammates have been supportive thus far and that a few have started reading the book; one even asked her to sign a copy.

When asked which of her two debut milestones she was more impressed by, Buening — somewhat surprisingly — chose her basketball accolade "because anyone can write, I feel like."

Civilized folks can agree to disagree on that matter. But both on the court and off, Buening's fans are eager to see what the next chapter will bring.

"The Atropos Games" is available to read in paperback or on Kindle via Amazon.
Print Friendly Version