It is no secret that American actress Amanda Peet, who is married to "Game of Thrones" show runner David Benioff is pretty devastated over the surprise death of Kit Harrington's character Jon Snow in the season 5 finale.

Several months after that heartbreaking episode, Peet is still carrying the banner for Snow and is bugging her husband relentlessly for any confirmation that Snow survives the stabbing.

"I've asked for physical evidence that he's there, and that not only is he there, this is what I asked (David) for: I was like, 'I will not divorce you. All I need is physical evidence that he's there, that he has dialogue and he's not just lying on a funeral pyre, and then I will stay married to you,' and he just had a horrifying poker face. I don't know if I love him anymore," she jokingly told The Huffington Post.

Peet said that it is so "hard to believe that (David) and D.B. Weiss could be so cynical" about Snow's passing, and despite the clamor among fans to bring him back, the two aren't giving in.

They have insisted time and again that Snow is definitely dead, and even Harrington himself said that he will not be back next season.

Because of this, Peet said that she will continue threatening her husband with a divorce.

"I feel still betrayed. I feel still betrayed as a fan and as a wife," she admitted.

Meanwhile, Peet is busy launching her new children's book called "Dear Santa, Love, Rachel Rosenstein." It is a hilarious book about a young Jewish girl's desire to celebrate Christmas, even though Jews only observe Hannukah, the Rosh Hashanah, and Passover.

Peet wrote the book together with Andrea Troyer, and she will be donating a portion of its sales to the peace building youth organization called Seeds of Peace.

Peet describes her book as a fun story for all the Jews out there with an "inferiority complex about Christmas."

The actress clarified the assumption that she is actually Rachel Rosenstein, saying that she isn't since she was able to celebrate Christmas while growing up.

The only one who didn't have Christmas is her husband, and after she married him, she observed all of his Jewish holidays as well.

"We do all the big ones (Jewish celebrations)," she shared. "I'm trying to become what Grammie Hall would call a real Jew."