Some preview pages for The New Prophecy Graphic Novel #1 have been released!
Courtesy of the official website.
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Some preview pages for The New Prophecy Graphic Novel #1 have been released!
Courtesy of the official website.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Prologue When Allaweigh was two years old, he cast his first fireball. Proud, his mother contacted the Tower of Shadows, and they told her t
So I started writing a book and then I got in my own head and scrapped some of it and started over. So if you've read this before, chapters 2 & 3 are revised, 1 is completely rewritten, and the prologue is all the same.
If you haven't read it before, then
Here's a 3-chapter preview of my book about a failed wizard and the band of colorful characters he recruits in his quest to save his world from an unimaginable threat.
To read the full text, find my e-book on Amazon and Kindle. I invite you to seek, feel, purchase, and read with your whole heart and soul.
Available Now on LINK pinned to my profile.
For sensitive souls, seeking answers, meaning, reflection and poetry
It certainly is, August.
GO READ THE PREVIEW!!
Tamlin wrapped his arms around her tiny body and buried his face in her hair. He was silent for a long minute. âIt will tear you to shreds, FeyreâŚloving me. Iâve yet to meet someone who can withstand my demons.â
âIâm not sure whatâs chasing you, Tamlin, but Iâll give it hell before I run.â Feyre buried her nose in his chest. âI have yet to find a monster without some kind of weakness.âÂ

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
New short for y'all!
Heeeeeyyyyyy I wrote a little story about the characters from my next book.
It's an F/NB romance about Jessie and Mads, two minor characters from Someone to Build Me Up. You may recall that Mads was one of Zack Carter's besties in high school.
The prologue is a throwback to 2007âtheir first meet cute at their senior prom, when Mads still identifies as a girl. You can download it here, and I'm including an excerpt below.
(Also, go ahead and read me to filth for naming my character MadsâI wasn't super into Hannibal yet, but now there's no going back).
Head over to my Substack for a snippet from my first book, Bloodloss. Don't forget, there's an ebook sale starting next week. Happy Thursday, or if you're a third shifter like me, Happy Friday. đ¤đď¸ ~E.L.F.
Enjoy a snippet from my first novel
Embers and Sparks preview
So I said in my pinned post about my new book that the Bella website has a preview of Embers and Sparks. But truth be told it's just plain text on a little popout and it can feel a bit unwieldy. So I thought I'd also share it to Tumblr if anyone is interested or prefers reading on here. Please enjoy, and maybe even share!
Prologue
Penny
Someone is trying to break down the front door of our apartment.
The sound is intense enough to jolt me out of my deep sleep. A shotgun blast, I think at first, or maybe some kind of battering ram threatening to burst through the cheap wood separating us from the chaos just outside.
But with each strike, it sounds less like an invading force and more like steady hammering.
I piece things together slowly. It takes a lot of brainpower, which is currently in short supply, but I finally finish processing it. What my poor, hungover mind had taken for cataclysmic danger is merely someone trying to get one of us to answer the apartment door.
I groan dramatically from where Iâm sprawled out on the living room couch and look around for someone more lucid to put a stop to it. I attempt to say something coherent, like âAh, I believe we have a visitor, but it would seem that I am presently indisposed! I should very much like to show them the socially acceptable level of warmth, to greet them with a smile, but to move from my current situation would no doubt cause me undue pain and stress. Please, could someone check on them, perhaps ask them to return at a later time such that we might be able to host them properly?â
What comes out is a pathetic, garbled noise, something between a groan and a whine.
From the floor next to me, with his head resting on a balled-up sweatshirt, comes a similar noise. My poor twin brother, Theo, is in much the same state as me. Heâll be no help either.
I see our roommate Kai walk past to answer the door. My friend. My savior. Thereâs a good lad. A sweet, young boy of twenty-and-nine, with his dark tousled hair and his almond eyes. Heâll know just what to do.
âMr. Callahan, hey, what can I do for you?â
âYou can pay me the rest of your rent.â
Ah. Crap.
Kai is silent for a few moments. âSure thing. Let me rouse the troops and see what we can do. Uh, whatâs ourâŚtimeline?â
I hear our landlord give a beleaguered sigh. âFriday, end of the business day. After that, wellâŚâ He lets the unspoken threat hang silent for a moment.
âYeah, I got you. Donât worry, youâll have it.â
âThatâs what they always say. But youâd be surprised.â
The door shutsâanother noise that feels apocalyptically loud. Kai walks into the living room and looks down at me and my brother in our sorry states and lets out a sigh of his own. âPenny, Theo. You two were out getting plastered while weâre on the edge of eviction? Real classy.â
âIn our defense,â I reply groggily, my voice coming out like gravel, âmost of our drinks were courtesy of other people. Birthday libations. Gifts from friends.â
âPretty sure thatâs not the point heâs trying to make, Penny,â my brother says from the floor, sounding equally gravelly.
âHeâs right, itâs not. I feel like we go through this every month.â Kai moves over to the recliner and slumps into it. âAre we screwed, or can you two cover your half of the rent?â
Kai is so good at just saying this stuff outright. Itâs not a skill Theo or I ever really learned. Growing up, it just wasnât the Hartwell way to talk things out. You could talk around things, tiptoe daintily in a circle about them. But having A Talk was a thing that required a great deal of buildup, pomp, and circumstance. Weâre at even more of a disadvantage because heâs the only one in the room who isnât hungover.
âMy next paycheck drops Thursday, and Iâve got some commissions Iâm finishing up in the next few days,â I say, already knowing itâs not that easy but trying to offer something so Kai wonât give us that pitying look.
Theo somehow manages to push himself up to a seated position. âMm. Iâll move some funds around. Besides, the band was gonna do some busking this week. The leech will get his share of lifeblood.â
Itâs not much, but itâs enough to put a relieved smile on our friendâs face. âCool. Thank you.â He looks both of us over for a moment. âSorry, I know this stuff isnât fun, and doing it on your birthday stings worse. JustâŚyâknow. None of us can really afford to get evicted. Meagan and I could probably crash with family for a bit, but you twoââ
He leaves it at that, thankfully letting the rest go unsaid. That we could never find a place as cheap as this one without moving into a shadier neighborhood. That weâd probably be forced to move back home. That moving back home would be monumentally traumatic. Weâre already having one hard conversation, better not segue into family shit.
With no small amount of effort, I manage to get myself off the couch and onto my feet. The room only spins a tiny bit, so thatâs probably good enough for now. âWater. Meds. Art.â
âHell yeah,â Theo says weakly, doing his best to cheer me on.
I go into the hall bathroom and grab my pill divider, carefully removing the small collection of medication from the Monday slot and tossing them into my mouth, chasing it with water from the tap. Then, very hesitantly, I take a look in the mirror to survey the damage.
Frankly, itâs not as bad as I feared. I feel worse than I lookâthough I definitely look thirty. My eyes have noticeable bags underneath, and theyâre a tiny bit bloodshot. The green of my irises seems like itâs faded over the years, but thatâs probably just me being dramatic. Once upon a time, my black hair had been a pretty decent fringe bob, but now itâs growing out weird and uneven. And I didnât do itâor my spineâany favors crashing on the couch like Iâm still in college. Iâm going to be feeling this particularly stupid decision for the next few daysâor, more realistically, weeks.
All in all, could be worse. Could be a lot better, granted, but you get out what you put into it, and I havenât exactly been taking the best care of it. Her. Me.
Thatâs probably just about all the self-examination I can do before the dysphoria sets in, so I leave the bathroom and swing through the kitchen. I grab two bottles of water and the painkillers from the top of the fridge, and go back to join Theo.
Kai has already disappeared back into his bedroom, and my brother is sitting on the couch cradling his face in his hands. âI feel like an asshole.â
âDitto,â I say, popping two pills before passing two more over to him with the other bottle of water.
âWe gotta do better, Penny,â he mutters, taking them with a large glug.
âHow?â
âTerra Vertebrae is taking some more gigs, and like I said, weâll try to play more in the stations downtown, or out at Boston Common. The battle is coming up, and we have a really good shot of getting in this year. First prize would be a big dealâwe could get some actual studio time, maybe put out a real album.â He looks at me with a shrug. âAnd youâve always got your commissions and shit. You could take on a few extras. I know you can knock them out in no time.â
Like itâs all so easy. I can do them when Iâm not exhausted from work. And the only way I can get people to buy my art is by charging a fraction of what itâs worth, drawing the things they want, not my own stuff.
Besides, I remember us having this same conversation five years ago. Has anything really changed? Weâve just been coasting by. Debt and late rent are enough to light a fire of desperation under you. But theyâre not really conducive to making good art. Itâs all justâŚgetting by. Cinders by comparison.
Itâs enough to make a woman wonder if mumsy and papĂĄ were right. Being a starving artist is all fun and games when youâre a twenty-something, but it doesnât have quite the same ring to it when you hit the next decade marker. âSo we just doâŚmore?â
âArt harder,â he says with a serious nod.
âArt smarter?â
âArt like the wind.â
âFart out that art.â
Thereâs a beat, and then weâre both laughing like itâs the funniest thing in the world, even knowing that weâre just hungover and loopy. We slump back on the couch and continue to giggle together like weâre kids again. All these years later and itâs still the really stupid stuff that gets us going.
Only after weâve gotten out all of our giggles and weâre only occasionally bubbling with light chuckles do I finally relent. âOkay.â
âOkay?â
âOkay. We got this.â
âThe only other option isââ He stops and shakes his head. âWell, itâs not an option.â
With another herculean push, I manage to get myself up to my feet. My task is before me, my path laid clear.
Time to fart out that art.
Anthea
Iâm awoken by the shrill ring of my phone, and I strongly consider not answering it. I already know who is on the other end of the call, and I already know what sheâs going to say.
But because of that, I also know a third, much more important thing. She will not stop. Sheâs been waiting ten years, to the day, for this. And despite the fact that we quite literally have all the time in the world, she wonât wait another minute.
Family, right?
Finally, I relent and answer. âHello, Matilde.â
Sheâs several hours behind me, which means itâs even earlier for her. And yet her voice is so bright and chipper youâd never know. âAnthea, darling! Itâs a bright, beautiful world outside and my sister is going back to work!â
âExactly. Iâm going back to work. Youâre not my warden, surely you trust that I wonât shirk my sacred duty.â
I can almost picture herâtowering high with that mane of golden locks, making her trademark little pout, checking her nails as though they arenât already perfectly manicured and painted. âI most certainly am not your warden. Iâm your loving, older sister.â
Sheâs never once let me live down the fact that she has a few decades on me. As if thatâs not the equivalent of a few seconds by comparison, in the grand scheme of things. We canât all be lucky enough to have been born from a song. Some of us had to wait for the discovery of fire. âAnd as such, I am personally invested in your well-being. It was perfectly understandable that you needed to take a constitutional, all things considered. I supported that.â
âYou put a time limit on it.â
âBecause the Work is important, Anthea. Because it gives us life and fills our hearts with song. Youâve spent ten long years denying that.â Sheâs quiet for a surprisingly long time. Matilde doesnât normally go in for long silences, unless sheâs being dramatic, in which case she can go quite a while without speaking. âHow was your time away? Any grand discoveries? Any earth-shattering revelations?â
Thereâs a tone in her voice, because she already knows the answer to that. Or she thinks she knows. In her world, the two are one and the same. âNo, Iâm afraid I did not live, laugh, nor love my way into some kind of nirvana. But it was a pleasant distraction afterââ I stop myself, not ready to say any of it out loud. It was a good vacation, but it didnât actually heal any of my wounds. âWell. After everything. So I hope youâll temper your expectations for the foreseeable future until Iâve found my sea legs again, yes?â
âAbsolutely! Iâm not suggesting you jump into the deep end, to muddy metaphors here somewhat. No, no, find yourself something easyâsomeone easy. Get your feet wetâoh dear, there I go againâuntil youâre ready to buckle down and inspire something truly great again.â
Itâs not a bad idea, really. Start small. Follow the ebb and flow of the city until I find someone worthwhile and give an experimental little push. Simple as that. After all, thatâs the saying, isnât it? All it takes is a spark.
For all my exasperated eye-rolling, I have to give Matilde her due. Most of our siblings would have ignored my pain and encouraged me to get right back out there and play the field again. Matilde was more measured, more understanding, even if she did force me to limit myself to only a decade free from responsibility. Again, seconds on the grand scale of the universe. But hopefully it was enough to clear my head and give me what I needed.
âI can do that. Hmm, I hope Iâm not too rusty.â While inspiring art might be our natural inclination, that doesnât mean itâs easy to do it right. The ideal balance is difficult to find, and itâs different for each artist.
âThere isnât a lick of doubt in my heart. Youâll find your stride again in time, dear sister. Like riding a bike. Oh! No, no, like a duck to water. There, Iâve brought it back around to aquatic theming.â
I just canât help it. When you get past all her ridiculous posturing, Matilde still knows how to bring a smile to my face, and I begin to chuckle. âQuack quack, darling. I promise Iâll give it my all.â
âYou neednât give it one hundred percent immediately. A solid effort is all I ask. Now get to it! Or Iâll have to catch the next flight out to the East Coast and show you how itâs done.â
Still laughing, I perch on the edge of my bed and ready myself to start my first day back on the clock, so to speak. âIâll update you soon, I promise. Now donât let me keep you. Iâm sure you have a full day ahead of you.â Matilde is a busy woman. She runs her own talent agency in Los Angeles, ensuring she has no end of performers she can shower with her gifts. She never could be tied down to one human at a time. Not like me.
Perhaps thatâs why she never developed a complex. Not like me.
âThat line could wrap around the block three times over and I would still make space for you, Anthea.â From anyone else, that would just be a bit of familial hyperbole to sound pretty, but I know she means it.
âLove you.â
âLove you too. Ta.â
As I finally hang up, I think for just a moment about crawling back under my fluffy comforter for a few more hours. Maybe a few more days. I could potentially get away with it. Lie about how things are going the next time she checks in. But I also know sheâd see right through me. Matilde knows me too well. And while Iâm loath to admit it, for all my fears, some part of me is eager to finally try again.
If Iâm going to do this, then Iâll do it right. Start slow. Put on the armor. Keep a healthy distance until Iâm ready for the real thing.
First things first, I need to get cleaned up. I head for the bathroom to get in a proper shower. But I stop long enough to examine myself in the mirror first. Iâve had this particular face for several decades now, with the occasional tweak to account for âaging,â so to speak. For those of us who have taken on physical forms, weâve long since learned all the necessary tricks for staying incognito. Either move around a great deal, or alter your appearance enough to avoid getting noticed. Or, do what Matilde does and lie through your teeth about coming from extremely sturdy stock where all the women look shockingly youthful and similar. It takes confidence to pull off, and sheâs got that in spades.
I suppose I could do a full reconstruction in honor of my big return. But I find Iâve grown fond of this version of me. Anthea Corey is a woman who might be in her midforties and probably comes from somewhere vaguely Mediterranean. She has striking features, with just enough imperfections to avoid the uncanny valleyâthe nose is just ever so slightly crooked in a way that I feel extremely proud of.
But enough self-congratulatory preening. Itâs time for me to get ready and hit the scene. Thereâs a city full of people outside my window. Surely one of them will be a safe bet, a quick and easy job for a muse whoâs maybe a little out of practice.
Thanks so much for reading! And if you like what you've seen so far, please be sure to preorder!