Blog Archives

The Concept of a Living World

Author Interview
S. R. Wren Author Interview

Claw & Ember follows a young rider bound to her saber-tooth black panther companion as she navigates treacherous politics, tangled loyalties, and a power simmering under her skin that could remake the world. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Fantasy has always been a genre that appealed to me. As I grew older – and some, not many, would say wiser – I also noticed that a lot of it was quite naive, typically written for a very child-like audience, with very morally black and white characters and situations that are not very “sticky.” I decided that I wanted to tell this story in a Romantasy genre, where you still get the elements from fantasy, but scaled up for adults. That was the first part. The second part flowed from there. I could’ve written a whole series on Nyra’s time at the Academy and have it as a Harry Potter quasi-clone, but I was more interested in discovering and exploring the world, not has a teen in a school setup, but rather as a young adult discovering that the world is not simple and that outside of the walls of the Academy there are situations and people that are not as clean cut as one might think.

Nyra is an intriguing and well-developed character. What were some driving ideals behind your character’s development?

I wanted a strong female. That was important. Someone who takes no bullshit from anyone. She’s her own person. I also wanted someone who had a very strict – but good – upbringing; someone who knew that hard work and sweat were important, even though the easy path is sometimes easier. I also wanted someone who was not ashamed of herself or her thoughts. Someone who would process them and not necessarily assign a ‘good’ or ‘bad’ epithet to them, but rather “these thoughts are me; they are part of me, let’s see where they go.”

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Uniqueness. Friendship. Desire. Politics. Sexuality. Each by itself and intertwined with the others (especially in the subsequent books). There’s also the concept of a living world. Not everything that’s important happens to – or when – Nyra is there. Some events that change the story happen in the background, even though they have a major impact on Nyra.

What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?

Flame & Veil. It is currently on pre-order on Amazon and will launch November 28th, 2025. Then in 2026, we will have Ash & Oath and Crown & Covenant. There are many strings that will lead us to many more stories in this world in the future. We’ve seen this world through the eyes of Nyra from the Felinar Empire which is centered around big cats, but there’s The Voruun around canines, the Glyptan Kingdom around bears and armored Glyptodons, the Keshari Dominion with its woolly mammoths and woolly rhinos, and the Skyborne on their birds, there are other segments as well, mages, nobles, etc. Expect many more stories.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Amazon

MAGIC WAS FORBIDDEN TO RIDERS. HERS DIDN’T ASK PERMISSION.

Riders are made to obey. To patrol the line. To bleed without question.

Nyra’s done her part, bonded to her panther, trained to serve, and hardened to survive.

But when a strange heat stirs beneath her collarbone, it isn’t duty calling. It’s desire, and it answers to Kaedric, the silver-eyed Voruun rider with a voice like a blade and a dire wolf at his side.
One glance, and something ancient wakes.

Forbidden magic. Dangerous hunger. Power that shouldn’t exist in her blood.
If the Towers find out, she’ll be caged… or worse, claimed.
And with war looming, secrets won’t stay buried for long.

For fans of slow-burn tension, shadow-bound magic, and fierce heroines who refuse to kneel. Perfect for readers of Rebecca Yarros, Sarah J. Maas, and Carissa Broadbent. This is your next obsession.

A Second Chance

Lucille Guarino Author Interview

Lunch Tales: Teagan follows a woman grieving the loss of her husband and adapting to being a single parent who, through this crisis, is reunited with her first love, and dares to think she could find love again. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The inspiration for the setup of Lunch Tales: Teagan started with her best friend Suellen’s book, where we first meet Teagan. The inability to have children and the financial burden of fertility treatments were causing problems in Teagan’s marriage. She didn’t think she could ever get over not being able to have a child, while her husband Mike, said that she was enough for him, and thus began a clash in their marital partnership. Eventually, Mike gets on board with Teagan’s wish to adopt, and just as their threesome has blossomed in the best way, Mike is killed in a car accident, and Teagan finds herself a single parent at the start of her story. Since I write realistic fiction, many of my themes come from real-life stories. Teagan’s story is a blend of several occurrences I pondered, and I wanted to give it the respect I would give anyone in a similar scenario. The purpose of my stories is to inspire and instill hope.

There was a lot of time spent crafting the character traits in this novel. What was the most important factor for you to get right in your characters?

I had a head start because Suellen’s book included Teagan’s work friends, which gave me a basis to build upon. As for Teagan’s family, I have Irish friends who helped me with the particular traits of an Irish family. Our closeness, coupled with several interviews, gave me confidence that I would get it right.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Teagan’s experience highlights the strength found in the backing of friends and family, while I also explored adoption as a positive option. The most uplifting and charming theme is a romance that offers a second chance.

Will there be a third book in the Lunch Tales series? If so, who will the story focus on?

The third installment of the Lunch Tales series will feature Carol and is currently in early development.

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon

Can losing your future give the past a second chance?

Pushing her son’s stroller on a summer day, thirty-six-year-old Teagan Quinn has no reason to think a big change is looming-the kind that happens in a mind-blowing instant. Nothing could prepare her for a shocking heartbreak.

Gripped by the trauma and grief of suddenly becoming a single parent, Teagan leans heavily on her lunch friends and lively Irish family for support. But when something ends, something usually begins-and Officer Luke Pisani walks back into Teagan’s life. Not just any old friend, he was her idealistic first. The man who got away.

As the grieving months go by, Luke is there at every turn, and gradually, old attraction reignites. But as ambivalent feelings challenge Teagan’s new beginning, a series of hurtful anonymous notes arrive, each angrier than the one before it.

With grit and urgency, Teagan must summon her inner sleuth before the letters poison one of the best things that could happen to her-learning to love again.

Always Bravery

Joseph Schwartz Author Interview

The Broken Coil follows a grizzled wanderer dragged into rescuing a mysterious girl, confronting ghosts of his past, and surviving a world of desert peril, pilgrim legends, and a broadsword with a mind of its own. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The inspiration came from two sources: the mythology of the American West and the tradition of the great films depicting that very mythology, particularly the hero (the cowboy) roaming the land, interacting with characters, righting wrongs, and finally, moving on to the next location.

Chloe’s eerie humor and calm presence are striking. How did her character evolve during your writing process?

Ha! Chloe was so much fun to write. She started off as sweet, innocent, and so frustratingly impetuous. By the end of the story, she had revealed her talent for dance and mysticism, integral to the plot. She took a step toward adulthood while keeping her girlish charm.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Themes that drove the story are sacrifice, faith, corruption, family, and above all, bravery. Always bravery.

The world is rich with religions, legends, and threats. Which part of the worldbuilding came first, and which was the hardest to weave together?

Most often, I start with a character idea and develop the world from there. Character takes priority over worldbuilding. Mother Endelyn and the deity named ‘The Noman’ were created first, followed by their backstory. When designing lore, logic, and simplicity are two essential elements. Funny thing about logic and simplicity; they are hard to “weave together!” Once certain threads become too complicated and entangled, they are tossed aside.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

I can never run away from my past, from those who love me or those who wish to tear me apart.

Such as Mother Endelyn, who suddenly appears back in my life decades later, desperate for my help. I give her my solemn vow to escort her and her band of pilgrims as they travel across a landscape of high desert and jagged mountain; to protect her from the feral beasts and cutthroats who want her treasure; to guide her past the giants from long ago and into the arms of her god at the other side of the dimensional coil. My haunted broadsword Wilma and I will fulfill that oath.

Unless a vengeful prison warden gets in my way. Warden Murvel Meacham and her mercenary named the Far Reaper long to hunt me down and take me “back home”. I would rather fall to the Reaper’s unearthly weapon than endure another minute of agony on the warden’s rack.

One woman needs my help: the other needs me dead. The third, Wilma, urges me to kill every enemy in my path.

Will I ever satisfy the women in my life?

The Mourning Locket

The Mourning Locket is a supernatural thriller about an agency called the Inheritance Bureau, a place where heirlooms hold the emotional residue of the dead and where objects literally remember their owners. At the center is Dr. Cassian Vale, an empath whose contact with a Civil War locket sets off a chain reaction of visions, secrets, and dangerous revelations. The book follows him and his team as they uncover the Bureau’s buried experiments, confront its founder, and wrestle with the cost of inheriting pain that isn’t theirs. From the opening scene of Clara Alden’s locket humming at her deathbed to the Bureau’s escalating malfunctions and betrayals, the story blends memory, grief, and identity into a spiraling mystery that ties past and present together.

I was hooked by the atmosphere. The writing carries this heavy, electric hush that makes even quiet moments feel alive. The way the book treats objects as emotional sponges really grabbed me. It’s eerie but tender at the same time, and I kept pausing just to absorb the mood. Scenes like the introduction, where the narrator talks about antiques holding fingerprints and sorrow rather than beauty, hit hard because they feel so human and so haunted at once . I loved that the supernatural elements never felt like gimmicks. They feel like feelings we’ve all avoided or held onto too long. And the characters, especially Cassian and Arden, are written with these little cracks that make them feel both fragile and stubborn. Their connection feels like the kind of closeness born from shared damage rather than romance or convenience.

I also found myself getting swept up in the Bureau’s darker layers. The Blood Ledger, the Silent Lens, the old experiments Callen buried, those ideas are so unsettling because they twist empathy into a tool instead of a virtue. The Apparatus section especially pulled me in. It’s wild and emotional and messy, and it made me feel that buzzing thrill you get when a story finally shows its teeth. Some chapters hit so fast and sharp that I had to slow down to follow every detail. The book lets consequences linger. It lets the characters stay complicated. And honestly, I appreciated the streaks of humor tucked into tense moments. They feel like how real people actually cope, with snark, with tired jokes, with “I stopped for denial” energy.

By the end, I walked away feeling like I’d read something strange and warm and unnerving, all in the best ways. I’d recommend The Mourning Locket to readers who like emotion-driven supernatural stories, to people who enjoy found-family dynamics with rough edges, and to anyone who loves mysteries that grow teeth as they unravel. If you like fiction that feels a little haunted and a little hopeful, and if you enjoy worlds where empathy is both power and liability, this book will be right up your alley.

Pages: 138 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FW5NDTPV

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Secrets from an Older Generation

Carmine Valentine Author Interview

All Fired Up follows two strangers who meet on the way to a small island in the Pacific Northwest and discover a shared history while trying to solve an old mystery shrouded in dangerous secrets. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Secrets that can’t stay hidden forever. Once they are discovered, they can trigger an avalanche of trouble, including rekindling long-held resentment. In my story, these are secrets from an older generation. My main characters, Jack and Marianne, discover that their grandfathers knew each other and did something long ago that now has repercussions, and another individual feels it’s time to get even.

I enjoyed the slow-burning romantic relationship between Marianne and Jack. How did their relationship develop while you were writing it? Did you have an idea of where you wanted to take it, or was it organic?

It was very organic. Although I knew that in the end, I wanted them to be together, I didn’t want it to be easy or rushed, and I didn’t always know what would happen next. I understood each of my characters, but I didn’t always know how their personalities would respond to each other. I would write a scene and initiate some action, and see how each personality responded to it and to each other. They became real people to me. But I did have some control. 😊 I wanted them to be tempted, but I didn’t want them to play around with each other. They are two mature adults with responsibilities, and they led two very different lives. So, I tried to write about their relationship as it might be in real life, with two people circling each other cautiously, feeling that there is a connection, but also reeling a bit because this came at them out of the blue: this connection. I also wanted them to be aware that it might not work with the others’ lives being incompatible with theirs at present. Jack is used to life in special ops, never being home and he wants to return to the army because it’s a life he is familiar with and one he does best. Marianne is realizing she wants a home life and her own family. I used the comforts of a home, meals together, and a homeless teenager to further connect Jack and Marianne, giving them both another purpose in life other than what they each currently pursue. It’s what could happen in real life for two people, life showing them what really matters and what truly fuels the heart.

Was there a reason why you chose this location as the backdrop for your story?

Yes. I love the San Juan Islands, and Orcas Island is one of those in that chain of islands in the Pacific Northwest. When I was young, my family would go boat camping around these islands. We would go into the Deer Harbor marina on Orcas to use the laundromat and buy supplies. To this day, I still visit Orcas Island for hiking or a weekend getaway. The ferry ride from Anacortes takes just over an hour to get to Orcas, and during that time, the world just slows down, and you are transported to another pace of life. It’s magical. It’s also beautiful with the wildlife, the evergreen trees, and the rocky beaches. I also like the idea that a serene-looking island can have its secrets.

I hope the series continues in other books. If so, where will the story take readers?

The series will continue. There are currently four friends in The Barefoot by Moonlight writers’ group, and each gets their own story. The next book, All You Desire, is set in LaConner and is due out in 2026. In book 1, you met Marianne’s brother Ian Dunaway and her best friend Fiona Sanchez, who is also a member of The Barefoot by Moonlight writers’ group. Ian and Fiona had their eye on each other in book 1, and we’ll see what happens next when a mystery brings them together in the idyllic town of LaConner. Books 3 and 4 are in development, where you’ll meet the other 2 writers in the group, where they, too, will discover a romance and a mystery.

Author Links: GoodReads | Instagram | Website | Amazon

He needs a room. She needs his bad-guy hunting skills.

When Marianne and Jack meet on the ferry to Orcas Island, it couldn’t be more awkward—for Marianne, that is. Jack has no problem with a woman landing on top of him. It’s a case of opposites attract. But they each have their reasons not to get involved.

But on this small island, avoiding each other isn’t to be.

An old tale of stolen jewels has resurfaced, revealing a dangerous secret kept by both of their grandfathers. It will take Marianne and Jack together to uncover the truth before one of them gets hurt. But solving the mystery means working out an arrangement. Jack needs a place to stay. Marianne has rooms to spare.

In close quarters, it’s soon apparent that solving the mystery might be easier than trying not to fall for each other as they realize that they both long for the same thing.

Who says nothing ever happens in a small island town?

Romance and mystery readers alike will love this page-turning romance set in the ruggedly beautiful Pacific Northwest where an island slowly gives up its secrets.

How Identity Survives

Dan Uselton Author Interview

My Twelve-Year-Old Wife follows a desperate man searching for his missing wife, who has a twelve-year-old girl with his wife’s memories show up at his door, claiming to be her. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The initial spark came from a simple, unsettling question: What if the person you love most disappears… and then returns as a child, still believing they are your wife? That idea gripped me because it collides love, memory, morality, and time in a way that instantly creates emotional and ethical tension. I wasn’t interested in explaining it with heavy science fiction rules. I wanted to explore how far love stretches, where it breaks, and how identity survives when reality bends. The premise let me push a psychological and emotional boundary in a very human way.

Were you able to achieve everything you wanted with the characters in the novel?

For the most part, yes. Dan and Celia evolved as I wrote them. They stopped being just “characters” and started behaving like people with real trauma, confusion, loyalty, and fear. What surprised me most was how much restraint I actually had to show—what they don’t say or do often carries more power than what they do. There are still layers I’m continuing to explore more deeply in Book Two, but I feel I created honest, flawed, believable people in an impossible situation.

When you first sat down to write this story, did you know where you were going, or did the twists come as you were writing?

I had a few major anchor points in mind, but the story very much revealed itself as I wrote it. Certain scenes appeared suddenly in my head, sometimes late at night, and demanded to be written. The twists weren’t plotted on a board — they came from asking myself, “What is the most emotionally honest (and disturbing) thing that could happen next?” In many ways, the story surprised me while I was writing it.

What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?

I’m in the middle of an intense release window and will be launching three books within the next several months. The first is My Twelve-Year-Old Wife 2: Erased Memories, which expands the timeline fracture and deepens the emotional and psychological consequences introduced in the first novel. The second is Memoirs of a Serial Killer: Book Two, continuing the disturbing and introspective descent of the series. The final release is a reimagined and expanded edition of Chloroform Wars, retitled Rhea’s Game — which was a runner-up at the Paris Book Festival — now featuring several additional chapters and a sharper focus on Rhea’s perspective within the dystopian world.

Together, the three books continue to explore identity, power, memory, and moral collapse in different but interconnected ways.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon

His wife vanished without a trace.


By morning, a twelve-year-old girl stood on his porch — carrying his wife’s memories.
Finalist — 2025 American Writing Awards (Fiction, Psychological)

From Dan Uselton, author of Chloroform War — Runner-Up (Wild Card), Paris Book Festival
Updated Edition – November 2025: Revised timelines, refined pacing, and new author edits for the most immersive reading experience yet.

Dan Fox can’t explain it. The girl knows intimate details from his marriage—things no one else could possibly know. She remembers everything.

As Dan hunts for answers, he’s dragged into a twisting psychological nightmare where memory and identity fracture and:
A masked predator stalks them through shifting realities
Every revelation spirals into deeper deception
One impossible choice could erase the woman he loves forever

My Twelve-Year-Old Wife is a dark psychological thriller about grief, devotion, and the terrifying grip of the past. Fans of The Silent PatientVerityGone Girl, and Behind Her Eyes will be hooked until the final page.

Take My Hand

Take My Hand follows Trina, a guidance counselor in the magical and queer-rich Dark District, as she navigates danger, desire, identity, and the messy, tender work of becoming who she is. The story swings between an attack at a local bar, her growing attraction to a new teacher named Robert, and the deeper, rawer layers of her identity as Timothy. The book blends urban fantasy, queer longing, Filipino culture, and personal history into something that feels both intimate and loud. It’s a story about wanting connection. It’s a story about fear. It’s a story about what happens when desire and truth keep bumping into each other until something finally gives.

The writing feels hungry. Emotional. A little chaotic in the best way. The scenes in the school had me smiling. The quiet moments in Trina’s office hit me harder than I thought they would. And the flashbacks to the orphanage knocked the wind out of me. I felt the ache in her voice. I felt the weight of all those years she kept her real self tucked away. The book swings from funny to sensual to heartbreaking with this almost reckless energy. I loved that the author just lets the story breathe and swell without trying to make everything neat.

There were moments that made me squirm because they felt too real. The longing for Robert. The guilt. The shame. The humor she hides behind. All of it felt familiar. The writing is loose and bold. Sometimes messy. Sometimes sharp. And the queer representation, especially around desire and gender and the body, felt honest in a way that isn’t common. I liked how the magic sits in the background. Never overwhelming. Just shaping the world the way emotions shape a person from the inside.

By the end, I felt protective of Trina. I wanted her to win. I wanted her to love someone who actually sees her. I wanted her to stop tearing herself apart just to fit into a skin she didn’t choose. The book made me feel a lot, and I liked that. I didn’t want it to be safe. I wanted it to stay exactly as wild and vulnerable as it is.

If you enjoy queer urban fantasy with plenty of heat, heart, and personal struggle, this book will hit the spot. If you like stories that mix magic with Manila vibes and real emotional weight, you’ll feel at home here. And if you want a character who is flawed, yearning, dramatic, funny, and painfully human, Trina is a character you’ll remember.

Although Take My Hand works perfectly well as a stand-alone story, it’s actually the second book in an ongoing series set in the Dark District. Readers who want the full experience can follow the chronology starting with Take Me Now, and even go further back with its prequel Sojourn. Both earlier works were previously compiled as a duology in the Dark District Primer, so new readers can choose to jump in here or enjoy the series in order for a richer sense of the world.

Pages: 400 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DJ7JTG4S

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The Reality of the Broken

Andria Lynn Carver Author Interview

The Demon’s Deceit follows a washed-up addict who wakes up and finds herself under the control of a wealthy, manipulative demon, and is offered a deal: freedom from pain and fear, in exchange for becoming an assassin. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

It all started with the question of what would happen if an average woman suddenly found herself with superpowers. I was getting tired of reading fantasy books with suspiciously capable and barely adult protagonists, so I wrote a book that I wanted to read about older and imperfect women like me. The follow-up question then became: how would she get the superpowers to begin with? I can’t help but challenge religion, so I created a race of twisted supernatural beings who may or may not have inspired most religions and who laugh at humanity from the shadows.

There was a lot of time spent crafting the character traits in this novel. What was the most important factor for you to get right in your characters?

I wanted them to feel authentic and unique. I’ve had the privilege of being inspired by so many people from different backgrounds and ways of life, and I wanted to represent the beauty of the unconventional and the reality of the broken.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Redemption and recovery were the main themes revealed during my writing process. Having struggled with mental illness and addiction myself, I wanted my protagonist to “win” after dealing with grief and substance abuse for so long. It’s cathartic for me and hopefully for readers.

When will Book Two be available? Can you give us an idea of where that book will take readers?

The Angel’s Bane (Divine Evolution Book 2) is coming early 2026:

By all accounts, Jeanie Bennett is living the dream: money, power, love—but happiness comes at a cost. A growing paranoia threatens to ruin everything she’s worked so hard to build, because loving a divine means accepting that death lurks around every corner. And another loss is not something she can endure.

In addition to protecting Sam from demons thirsting for his angelic blood, she’s juggling the launch of two non-profits, working through her unresolved grief, and battling her mental illness and addictions. When the mounting challenges become too much to bear, she goes back to her roots to find the perfect second assistant. He’s more than qualified, but his motives might not be so pure.

Now they just have to contend with demons, rival angels, kidnappers, mobsters, and a mysterious foe who gives Jeanie her greatest challenge yet. Will she be able to stop him from taking everything she holds dear before it’s too late?

Author Links: <a href="http://22 Nov 2025 13:16:47 -0800 Andria Carver GoodReads | Website | Amazon

A mourning widow with nothing left to lose is the perfect pawn for a dangerous game…

Jeanie’s day started off like any other—hungover in a back alley after another epic bender. But the one-way ride on her downward spiral was about to come to an abrupt end. Kidnapped by a bloodthirsty demon, she is thrown into the dark world of the divines, a supernatural species living secretly among humans.

As the new assistant to a divine intent on rising through the ranks, Jeanie is given an assignment: kill an angel so her demon can take his place, or die trying. In order to achieve the impossible, she’ll have to rely on the powers given to her by her new master, along with her quick wit and talent for bluffing.
But not all divines are what they seem, and Jeanie must choose to either defy her morality or die in utter agony. A dangerous incubus steps in and promises to help her, or is he just using her too?
Wickedly funny, unexpectedly moving, and delightfully twisted. The Demon’s Deceit slashes through genre conventions with a bloody dagger in one hand and a smoldering joint in the other. Think Fleabag as Buffy the Vampire Slayer with extra helpings of humor, peril, and passion thrown in.

Contains sexual content, references to drug addiction and abuse, and probably too many curse words (definitely too many)