Even more updates!

Map of the Lower Continent featured in the Treehouse Castaways series (I think I drew this when I was 17)

In the coming months I’m attempting to overhaul this website: my own domain, an updated mailing list that actually works, a new author related email (and not the one I use for personal use); who knows, maybe even a professional looking photo so you all know I’m not a robot. Potentially I can get started with sending actual content to my subscribers at a set time each month. Adding other shorts from the wonderful world of the Treehouse Castaways (many have been shelved over the years). The possibilities are endless.

I’m also in the process (finally!) of publishing the first book in the series, as mentioned in my last post. Part of the reason this wasn’t done a lot sooner (as in, back in 2019 when I finished it) is because I was hoping to shoot for traditional publishing. I have since changed my mind and decided to go the route of the self-published because this series is far too important to have other people telling me what to change and how to handle it.

It’s also quite long and, being a first published novel, very unlikely to catch the attention of major agents and/or publishers. That’s okay. I’m slowly working on its visibility. In the meantime, I’m busy writing the second book (first draft is complete but there are some very heavy edits ahead), updating this here website as mentioned, and learning the ropes of self publishing.

I also put off publishing because I honestly am not much for self-promotion, marketing – basically the logistical side of being a writer. It took me many years to get over that hurdle and return now ready to jump into it. I also had many doubts that anyone really wanted to read it. I’ve reread it multiple times in order to keep track of subplots and content needed for the next few books, and I can say I love it so much every time. But I also wrote it for me, for anyone like me who’s never really fit in anywhere.

So even though many people around me (including those potential agents and publishers) don’t really understand the series or see its value, I know that’s because it’s not for them. It’s for others out there like me. Maybe that means there are a lot less people that will be interested in it. But it also means that for those whom it finds, the value will be infinite.

In that vein, my next steps with publishing include hiring a professional artist to give it a cover that brings the magic of the book to life. I’ve been halted here at this step since last year because this is a financial hurdle I’ve yet to overcome. I don’t often speak about my real-world struggles here (I prefer this space to be for the series and any themes that are relevant), however, this is the reality of our world, especially nowadays. Many factors – identity, systemic barriers, financial precarity, real-world inequities – can have a major impact on whose voice gets heard, and whose doesn’t.

This is a story for people like that, so I want to give it as much chance to fly as possible. I created a GoFundMe in an attempt to raise enough money to pay for a real (not AI) artist that can give this series some justice – give it a fighting chance on shelves with books from authors with more resources than me. If you have read this far and have any interest in supporting this series, I would be greatly appreciative and will add your name to the acknowledgements page of the first book in the series. You can find out more here at my GoFundMe Campaign on how to support. Even if you can’t support right now, I appreciate you sticking around to hear my story.

More to come in the coming weeks!

Quick Update & Updated Preview of the Treehouse Castaways

I’m back! With only slightly modified content… But I have some fun updates as well. I’m currently in the process of getting my first Treehouse Castaways book published. This would have happened a lot sooner – for anyone that’s been following this site for some time, you might know I finished the first book in the series back in 2019. The reason I haven’t published it since then is… complex, to say the least. But it’s finally happening! At least, once I have enough money for the cover art. Wah wah.

In the meantime, I decided to upload a revised version of chapter one of the first book for preview because I am a very finicky, artist-type writer and never feel like my work is done. The first chapter also carries a LOT of weight for this epic fantasy series, so it makes sense that I never felt satisfied with it. I am keeping the original chapter on this website, so for anyone that’s curious to see the changes (I swear they’re there!), they can have fun hunting for them between the two. Think of it as a game that no one asked for.

I think it’s important to preserve older edits because it shows the progress not only writers make as they’re learning the craft, but the journey a story takes on its way to completion. Like my main character, Elijah Hawthorne, it’s a coming-of-age arc that never gets old. Anyway, for those of you interested, here is the updated version of Chapter One: Into the Closet (no, this has nothing to do with suppressing queerness).

The Treehouse Castaways: what it’s about

The Treehouse Castaways. It’s been ten plus years since the idea first lodged itself in my brain: I was fourteen and hardly knew what I was taking on at the time. Indeed, the story has grown a lot since then (as well as changed in certain ways), as I have. But like my characters, who are only a little younger than I was then, I like to think that I grew and learned in ways that informed my writing of them and of the story, which is as close to my heart as anything can be. Without the incubation period and the long years of struggling through structural issues, learning how to show not tell, learning to put together something of this size and complexity, I would not have the story that I do now.

So what is this story all about, you must be asking. I’ve kept it under wraps long enough, I should say. Here’s what the Treehouse Castaways is all about:

A boy. A cursed lake. A city of monstrous trees where secrets and magic are housed within them.

But there is so very much more than that. This story came together, like I said, over a ten-year period where I veritably absorbed everything I could through a lens of “how can I make this even bigger and better.” I owe so many great works out there—be they novels, television series, animes, film, graphic novels, video games—a debt of gratitude for their fanning the inspiration inside me.

The first work that planted the initial seed is a little story called Peter Pan—I think you know the one. A boy who refuses to grow up. A magical land that stands outside of time. Pirates. Lost boys. Fairies and pixie dust and children that can fly. This story has everything. I like to think that the Treehouse Castaways takes away some of this magic and transforms it into something fresh, something with the heart of Peter Pan—with the heart of never growing up—but something that’s never been done before.

The Treehouse Castaways is fantasy, coming-of-age, YA goodness (think if Peter Pan became a magician in a very Harry Potter-esque manner, and Neverland a place of enormous treehouses where, instead of being filled with pirates, continued to fill with lost boys—and girls—who spoke to trees and took in every manner of creature out there). The Treehouse Castaways is about, at first, not belonging. These are true castaways—people who don’t fit anywhere, seemingly. Although it’s not without its hope. Because the Treehouse Castaways is also about friendship and family and finding connection. It’s about finding meaning in a world that seems devoid of it. It is at once informed by childhood and whimsy, but also by the very truths that dissolve it: war and loss and isolation.

The Treehouse Castaways is at once an adventure story of exploration and discovery: this is important. These were the sorts of stories that kept me going as a child, that filled me with hope and awe and gave me joy to be alive. It’s also important that the characters with which we experience this story are children. There is something to be said about the innocence and fresh perspective that a child brings to everything they encounter. There is more danger and higher stakes for a child going through a trial than there would be for an adult, yet it shows the tenacity of the human spirit, even at such tender ages, when  they still overcome them. And it shows other children (even the eighty-year-old ones) that anyone is capable of resourcefulness, courage, and many great things besides.

Of course, you can’t have a fantasy story without a little magic. Don’t worry, there is plenty of that. Magic breeds mystery, and mystery is at the core of this story. For Elijah Hawthorne, the protagonist, mystery is at the core of his being. For who can know oneself and where they belong without a little trouble along the way?

Early Preview of The Treehouse Castaways!

It’s coming! The first novel in an epic adventure fantasy series, The Treehouse Castaways. Check out the first chapter of City in the Trees, book one of the series!

I am super excited to introduce City in the Trees for an early preview right here. This novel has been baking for some time and I am thrilled to finally let it out into the light (at least partially). For more information, please check out the Coming Soon page where another link to the early preview chapter exists, or message or leave a comment and I will get back to you.