Saturday, April 20, 2024
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
Highly Intelligent Llama Farm
Gretchen Hollander’s life is not going the way she planned. She’s a year out of college, has no friends, and can’t pass the test to get into veterinary school. It seems that everyone else is miles ahead of her, and she’s stuck being just Gretchen.
However, when her mysterious Great Aunt Elsie passes away, she suddenly finds herself the owner of a small llama farm. Hildegard Farm is everything one would expect of a farm… Except the llamas… They talk.
They warn Gretchen of an imminent alien invasion that will devastate the countryside. As secrets about her Great Aunt’s past begin to unravel, the invasion approaches. Gretchen must decide whether to retreat to the safety of her old life, or to step forward into the unknown.
Does she have what it takes to fight back against an enemy from beyond the stars?
Wednesday, August 23, 2023
Monday, December 12, 2022
And my next OC-T enrollee is...!
Larry Westley!!!
Larry wasn't really supposed to be a character— he was Cop #2 in my friend's and my story, Goatsville Gothic. But then he started developing a personality and taking on larger scenes as we kept writing. Hopefully I can illustrate the more interesting parts of his arc in the coming months.
Wednesday, November 30, 2022
Review of Hunt for the Dragon Egg Thief
Hello! For the past few months, I've been tossing around the idea of doing book reviews or author interviews on here occasionally, and TODAY IS THE DAY. I read a short story and now I'm going to review it!
First of all. Look at this cover:
Hunt for the Dragon Egg Thief is a newly released short story by fantasy writer, R. Joy. It is fast-paced (I would have read it in one sitting if I hadn't been interrupted) and has loveable characters and cool worldbuilding.
It is written from the point of view of Asa, a Soulreader dragon who lived through the terrible Shadow Wars and is now investigating the disappearance of several clutches of Frostcreeper dragon eggs. The dragon taxonomist in me is insanely happy. She is joined by a woman named Caelan, a.k.a. the Fair Wolf. Throughout the story, we get familiar with the dynamics of this duo and are able to see how they support each other and work together to accomplish their goal of taking down the dragon-nappers!
Though this is a very short, very character-oriented story, we do get glimpses of what promises to be a vast and colorful world. It takes place in a snowy land that makes me think of the Northern Water Tribes from Avatar the Last Airbender, and Joy does an amazing job of invoking icy imagery. It is also filled with dragons. Several species of dragons are mentioned, but their physiologies and behaviors are only touched on (furry dragons with four wings!!!!). I want to know more.
While I wish some scenes went into more depth, this is categorized as a short story, and it's very evident that there will be a follow-up novel. In fact, it looks like there will be a follow-up series! I am very much looking forward to reading book 1.
Thank you for letting me nerd out, and have a good week.
(Also, I'm twenty-nine, as of yesterday. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.)
Monday, November 21, 2022
Jade OC-Training Tasks
Hi, I'm back. I debated what to post for a few days and finally settled on this. A couple of years ago, I joined this group on deviantArt called OC-Training. For those of you who aren't in the loop, OC stands for original character. The group is dedicated to helping OC artists develop their characters, stories, and drawing skills by going through a set of ten character-focused art prompts. It's pretty effective. I've been through four rounds now-- I jumped in on Round 12-- and have created about a hundred illustrations pertaining to Ravenheart as a result. The community is super friendly and creative. I help admin the group now (though I got pretty sucky at it after starting a new job, then after witnessing a murder, but I'm hoping to be better for Round 16!).
Anyways, I've shared all my illustrations on deviantArt, and a few of them on Instagram, but I figured I could share a few here too.
The first character I entered was Bradley Link, the super lovable and very unlucky uncle of Seth and Annabelle who just wants to piece his family back together. He was promptly followed by Jade Tyran during the Unofficial Villain Round, where everyone dared each other to enter the worst of the worst.
This is Jade:
Wednesday, November 9, 2022
Renaissance Nonsense
Sunday, September 4, 2022
Dr. Link got a new job
Sunday, June 26, 2022
The Links Are Chaotic Dumb
**************
Meet the Link family. Or... part of it. Emory, his brother, Brad, and his son and his niece, Seth and Annabelle, are infiltrating a dragon slayer hideout for reasons. Emory got left in the car while the others caused havoc and accidentally set a very large dragon free.
Okay, so this is an older piece of writing that probably won't make it into the final cut. I wrote it three-ish years ago to get a feel for the dynamics of the main cast, but I think it's still fun. Emory was a very new character at that point in time, so I was really, really trying to explore his relationship with the plot and the rest of his family.
Here's a work in progress of a series cover image:
Sunday, June 12, 2022
20,000
Hello! I got a lot of writing done over the past couple of weeks, and last night, I finished the front cover for book 1.
The first book follows Seth, a young shapeshifter who is taken in by his aunt and uncle after the arrest of his father. Seth becomes trapped in his raven form and gets roped into helping a flock of ravens investigate some disappearances within their community. While his aunt and uncle desperately try to hold their family together, he begins to uncover dark secrets from his father's past.
Here's some old art of Seth, his uncle, and their raven friend, Roc:
Saturday, May 28, 2022
Introductions Are the Worst
Hello. Today I am here to write about starting things. Beginning a new project is always exciting-- ideas popping up like daisies, the thrill of unpredictable twists and turns of the narrative, characters dumping their entire life's story on you at the most inopportune moments...
A couple years ago, I found out that a two others in my graduate cohort write, so I pestered them and we decided to form a writer's group. We agreed to trade chapters and give feedback each week, offer support and encouragement, and get excited about the worlds each of us was building. I showed up to our first meeting at a little coffee shop across from school with a few comic pages and a notebook of half-baked ideas for a project called Kingdom Animalia. It was a mess of too many different genres mashed together and characters ripped from unfinished high school stories with loose or nonexistent motivations. Anyways, long story short, I loved it, but I wanted it to be more coherent and knew I could do better. Over the course of the next eight weeks, I drafted half a novel and managed to keep up with my graduate work. I still don't know how that happened, but I am super jealous of past Megan's motivation (I couldn't keep it up past that when everything got topsy turvy, but for a while there, it was great).
And... The story wasn't bad. I went back and reread it this morning and it's a heck of a lot of fun. I can't believe I wrote some of the off the wall things I did while managing to keep it coherent and interesting. The only problem was, I knew it wasn't the beginning of the story.
Beginnings are tough. It seems like everything hinges on them. If you don't hook a reader in the first few chapters, you'll likely lose them.
I wanted to start from the start instead of incorporating a bunch of flashback nonsense, so, I took the story back to its roots from 2009. Suddenly IT ALL MADE SENSE.
I brought back Cobalt the Wicked, a horrible dragon who reveled in bloodshed, and I tied in the fact that one of the main characters, Seth, could shapeshift into a raven and had a raven friend named Roc. I brought back a lot of the medieval fantasy elements that I'd loved so much before. And then all the new stuff that stemmed from it became even more exciting. I added a character who completely hijacked the story and became the beating heart for the entire thing. I wrote a heck of a lot of the beginning of Ravenheart.
And it sucked.
Okay, it didn't suck. The writing wasn't BAD, but it was a total shift in tone from what I'd been happy with in Kingdom Animalia. What started out a comedy with witty dialogue became a tragedy with sadness. And the plot became more involved than I'd bargained for. I'd never written a super involved, well thought-out plot before, so I had no idea how to go about setting it up and pacing it in a way that wouldn't lose a reader and leave them in the dark. I let random internet people read it, and I probably shouldn't have because I wasn't at a good point to share it and I just ended up getting frustrated with my inability to communicate everything I was trying to communicate. Which was a lot.
Creating the beginning of a story when you know exactly where it's going is a difficult task. You want to word vomit everything in page one. You want all your clever, carefully woven threads to be shown off immediately. But you also know this is a bad idea. You KNOW what it's supposed to be, yet it falls flat in the first few drafts. It confuses alpha readers. It grossly falls short of your own expectations. BUT it gives you something to work with.
Because I've written out all of these scenes, I can rearrange them. I can cut them up. I can add new information and space out important points. I've been working on recapturing the more lighthearted tone of Kingdom Animalia, despite the heavier subject matter. I've expanded from two POV's to four-- two adult, one kid, and one raven. This seems to have balanced it out and doesn't limit the scope of the story like the previous version, which was told mostly through the eyes of the twelve-year-old boy. And I can carry that format into book two, which opens up with my favorite scene I've ever written ever, which happens to be from the POV of the twelve-year-old's half-crazy father.
Slowly, slowly, I'm carving this story out.
Writing is a process, and I've heard it gets quicker with every book you finish. I'm hoping that eventually I can start turning out a book a year as opposed to one every three years. Beginning a series is the worst. But it's exciting.
Sunday, May 22, 2022
Updates
Hi. It's been a couple of years. What's been going on? Well, besides the entire world going entirely topsy-turvy and some other not-so-great stuff that's happened, I successfully defended my masters thesis in biology, got a teaching job, and... I finally started seriously tackling a project which I've been playing around with for a decade.
The project is called Ravenheart and the Dragon Tamer, and it follows a family dealing with the aftermath of a dragon attack. It's a lot of work and I want to throw it against the wall most days, but it's come a long way in a short amount of time and I am very happy at how much it has grown. I look forward to being able to share it someday in the near future.






































