Posted in Blog

Rendworld Trilogy- Beginnings, Endings, and Reflections

Last year, I gave myself a challenge. It was an extremely difficult challenge, but one I knew I could handle with the proper amount of planning and care. I wanted to write and release an entire fantasy trilogy in one year. I had an inkling of a story– a grumpy healer, and the assassin who shows up on her doorstep.

And then the grumpy healer sat back, with her hands folded, and said “Say please.” Right there, I knew I was working on something special. Of course, at the time, I didn’t know just how special it would become. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

This Delicate Flame was released March 30th 2025. I had a solid number of preorders, and a good ARC list. It released, and people loved it. It was praised for its unique fantasy elements (rainbow forest my beloved), its botanical illustrations, but most of all, Rylla’s character. Her way of looking at the world, and her very obvious autism. I put a lot of myself and my own experiences into her, and the fact that so many people resonated with the character was empowering and made me feel so seen and understood. Much of Rylla’s love for plants and healing comes from The Prison Healer, and The Apothecary Diaries. Between those and the Arcane season 2 soundtrack, it was easy to put the story to paper.

Then it was time for book 2.

These Unseen Blooms was a difficult drafting process, but the book turned out to be something I’m so proud of. My favorite part to write was obviously the dragons. They’re so needlessly formal and ceremonial about everything. I knew my dragons would be functionally immortal, so I wanted to give them a few things to be extremely picky about. First: food. I watched The Menu and was struck by the absolute ridiculousness of high-class foodie culture. I knew immediately that I wanted my dragons to treat food in a similar way. Balancing that with Rylla’s autism was a great way to highlight some of the difficulties that come from food textures. The second thing I wanted them to be picky about was language. When I was a teenager, I read The Obsidian Trilogy and loved how the elves never asked questions. They would talk about nothing for hours as part of their polite pleasantries before actually getting to the point. I borrowed part of that to write my own dragons, and I think it helped make them feel unique without being too different from genre conventions.

Of course, I have to take a moment to talk about Ceri. Dear, damaged Ceri. From her inception, I knew she would be the narrative foil for Tarinne. More accurately, she would be who Tarinne was without Rylla. She would be the first one to offer Tarinne her old life. She was incredibly fun to write, and I loved the little window she gave into Tarinne’s past.

I can’t talk about side characters without mentioning Ben, Alre, Nairra, or Fenn. The problem is, there’s so much to say. There’s three novellas in those characters alone. How Nairra and Fenn met and fell in love, Ceri’s post-trilogy adventure, and Ben trying to help Alre woo the kingdom’s new queen. Someday, when I release the hardcover omnibus of the trilogy, those novellas will be inside.

I digress. Book 3.

That Flickering Light was the hardest to write. All of the characters were in such dark places. They went through so many awful things, and all I wanted was for them to have their happy ending. But they had to earn it, and earn it they did. There were a lot of things I wanted to accomplish with the ending, but the most important part to me was when Tarinne was offered a better version of her old life. She would have the freedom she craved, and she would be able to help others who were in the same position she was in. She looked at this life, and said no. No, I’m going to Woodhaerst with Rylla. I choose peace. That was the most powerful thing she could have done in that moment.

I cried when I wrote the ending. Knowing I had brought these women through so much, and they finally got the peace they deserved… it was emotional. Book 3 was released into the world, and I sat back and waited to see what would happen. I was scared. I was excited. I didn’t know what was about to happen.

I didn’t know my book sales would triple.

I didn’t know I would smash past 50 reviews on This Delicate Flame.

I didn’t know I would be on so many people’s “Best Books of 2025” lists.

I didn’t know I would meet so many author and reader friends.

Writing and publishing these books in one year was the biggest challenge I have ever taken on, but the reception I’ve gotten for these books… wow. I am so excited to see what comes next. I have a feeling it’s going to be sweet 😉

Posted in Blog

7 Sci-Fi/Fantasy Series by Women You Need to Read.

I love love LOVE the recent push for diversity in the publishing industry, and I thought it would be a good time to bring back some old content I created a while ago, and give it a bit of a fresh face.

Just a note: the links on this post are Amazon Affiliate Links, and I do earn money from any qualifying purchase. With that out of the way, let’s get started!

  1. The Tortall Series by Tamora Pierce

A series of quartets, duets, and trilogies, the Tortall books cover every aspect of high fantasy that you want. They begin with The Song of the Lioness, a quartet about Alanna of Trebond, a ten year old girl who disguises herself as a boy to become a knight. With knights, magic, magical creatures, and dragons, these books are full of diverse heroines and messages that are definitely worth reading.

2. Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor

If you want to be a better writer, read these books. The prose is stunningly beautiful, and the worldbuilding is something to be envied. In three books, Taylor creates a world so vividly imagined that you will cry when you finish the trilogy, if only because you won’t get to read about these characters anymore. Beginning with the mystery of who Karou is and ending with the glory of peace after a war, the Daughter of Smoke and Bone trilogy are easily some of the best books of the decade.

3. Unraveling by Elizabeth Norris

Holy seven hells, these books need to be on your “to-read” list now. The duet introduces the concept of parallel universes that are crashing together because three boys just want to get home. The main character, Janelle, is a breath of fresh air, with a badass skill set and an actual reason for having it, as well as a maternity streak a mile long. The book starts with her dying and being brought back to life, then continues on with a clock that seems to be counting down to the end of the world, and a string of bodies dying from radiation poisoning. Fast-paced and wholly original, Unraveling will sink its hooks into you from the very first page.

4. The Ward by Jordana Frankel

It’s rare that I put down a book and say “this needs to be made into a movie immediately,” but The Ward inspired this immediate reaction. Set against a post-apocalyptic New York, Frankel’s tale of a young street-racer who accepts an impossible mission from the government to save her younger sister is gripping and ambitious. New York City has been flooded, and Ren has been given the task of finding a new freshwater source. In a city full of saltwater, what should be a simple mission turns out to be Herculean in its execution. When she starts looking, she uncovers an astonishing truth about the city and what lies beneath the water’s surface. With a woman of color as the protagonist, and Native American legends to draw on, Frankel’s debut novel is a home run of a work.

5. The Locked Tomb series by Tamsyn Muir

Do you like lesbians? Do you like space? Do you like necromancers? Well, have I got a book for you! Set in a haunting echo of our own solar system, The Locked Tomb follows Harrowhark Nonagesimus, better known as Harrow, and her cavalier Gideon as they vie to serve a mysterious deathless emperor. Full of brevity, bones, and body horror, this series is one you’ll find yourself coming back to again and again.

(This is also my wife’s favorite book series, and she wants more people to read it.)

6. Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor

For those of you who love the Dark Academia trend but want something a little different, look no further. Akata Witch follows Sunny, an albino girl living in Nigeria as she struggles to find her place in the world. Unexpectedly, she find it with a secret magical society and discovers that she herself has magical powers too. Bursting with childlike wonder and a terrifically ripping climax, this book is nothing short of fantastic.

7. Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel

Many people have heard of this book thanks to the television series of the same name, but it’s difficult for TV to properly capture the truly powerful impact of Mandel’s writing. Sliding back and forth across timelines, Mandel uses multiple character perspectives to take us through a deadly pandemic, past to present day. Though it may seem a little on-the-nose, given how we’re currently 2 years into our own pandemic, Station Eleven is a stunning reminder of the beauty and terror of humanity.