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Clarity, Self-Trust, and Intention
Posted by Literary-Titan

Queen Code is part-memoir, part-mindset guide that uses powerful archetypes and lived experience to help women stop playing the victim, rewrite inherited stories, and rule their own lives with clarity, courage, and self-trust. Why was this an important book for you to write?
I wrote Queen Code: The Book to help readers recognize the stories that are already playing out in their lives, often without them realizing it. The archetypes make those patterns relatable. When you can see the role you’re stepping into, you can also see that the story isn’t fixed. Your perspective can change, your response can change, and the outcome can change, too.
That’s where personal policies become essential. They give you something steady to come back to when emotions run high or old patterns try to take over. Through Queen Code: The Book and my signature Queen Code Mastery™ program, I offer people a way to move from reacting to leading themselves, with clarity, self-trust, and intention. When you understand the story you’re in and have personal policies to guide you, you stop feeling at the mercy of circumstances and start choosing how you show up. That’s where real change begins.
The idea of “personal policies” stood out to me. How did that framework emerge for you, and how has it changed the way you handle conflict or drama in your own life?
The idea of “personal policies” was born from a conversation about business policies. Companies, stores, and banks have standard policies that their customers and/or employees adhere to, so why shouldn’t people also have policies to guide them? From there, my signature Queen Code Mastery™ program was created along with the Queen Code Oracle Card Deck, and of course, this book.
What I realized while creating Queen Code Mastery™ and writing Queen Code: The Book is that I’ve been using personal policies my entire life to navigate challenges and avoid unnecessary drama — not always perfectly, but consistently enough for them to evolve into what they are today.
The archetypes feel playful but also true. Did any of them surprise you or evolve as you were writing the book?
There was a bit of both. In some cases, the story led to the archetype, and in others, the archetype fit the story I was telling. The stories came from my own lived experience and from what I’ve observed in the lives of people around me. As I was writing, a few of the archetypes surprised me and took shape in ways I didn’t expect. They’re playful, yes, but they’re also honest. They reflect how we actually move through life, stepping into different parts of ourselves depending on the season we’re in.
If a reader could embody just one of your principles for the next year, which would you hope it is?
If a reader embodied The Sovereign for the next year, they would be choosing self-leadership and personal responsibility — the starting point and the foundation everything else is built on. Leading yourself first is both a radical choice and freeing. When you stop getting pulled into drama and live by your personal policies, everything shifts. Self-leadership isn’t about perfection, but it requires honesty and consistency. When you stop abandoning yourself in the little things, clarity starts to show up. Relationships improve, decisions come easier, and life feels more peaceful.
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Laura Muirhead, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Personal Transformation Self-Help, Queen Code: The Book, read, reader, reading, religion, Religion & Spirituality, self help, story, Success Self-Help, writer, writing
Queen Code: The Book
Posted by Literary Titan

Queen Code: The Book is part memoir, part mindset guide, all wrapped up in this playful idea of a “Queendom” where you are the ruler of your own life. Author Laura Muirhead uses archetypes like the Sovereign, Warrior Queen, Phoenix, Oracle, Rebel Queen, and more to talk about personal responsibility, boundaries, resilience, intuition, money, and legacy. She keeps coming back to her framework of “question, investigate, heal, and grow” and invites you to create your own “personal policies” so you stop living in old family stories and start leading yourself with clarity and self-trust.
I felt oddly seen by the whole “personal policies instead of boundaries” thing. It sounds simple, yet it really resonated with me. The way she talks about drama, victimhood, fear, and that “spin the bottle of blame” had me nodding and wincing at the same time. Her story about fear twisting a basic business transaction into a full-on betrayal saga really stuck with me, because I have absolutely watched people do that. The chapters on sisu, rising like the Phoenix, and the “fractured fairytale” of her childhood all hit a mix of tender and tough that I liked. I could feel her anger and grief under the surface, and that made the whole Queen Code idea feel like it was earned, not just a cute brand.
The language around vibration, manifesting, and co-creation was totally my jam. I loved how she wove those ideas into real-life moments like the horse stable, the house fire, the two homes, all those tiny choices that became big turning points. Those stories felt grounded and magical at the same time, very “as above, so below” in everyday clothes. When the book leaned into the capital letter concepts and repeated phrases like “Queen Code Mastery,” it felt like she was anchoring a whole universe of meaning. The archetype names genuinely delighted me. They felt playful and potent, like being handed permission slips for different parts of myself instead of just labels. And the short chapters, the relaxed voice, and her raw honesty about messy family stuff made it all land in my heart. It felt like sitting at a cozy kitchen table with a wise friend who believes in energy, destiny, and your power to change your life.
I would recommend Queen Code to women who love personal growth books that feel like a mix of coaching and story time, especially if you enjoy archetypes, oracle decks, and a book that helps you understand that you are the Queen of your life. If you want gentle but firm reminders to stop playing the victim, set stronger boundaries, and trust your own inner compass, you will probably dog-ear a lot of pages. I walked away feeling a little braver about tightening my own “personal policies” and a bit more curious about where I can improve my life.
Pages: 115 | ASIN: B0G7X24WRZ
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Laura Muirhead, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Queen Code: The Book, read, reader, reading, self help, story, writer, writing




