Interview: Romantic fantasy author Carol Beth Anderson

Hi folks! I hope you’re having a fantastic July so far, the weather has been a bit hit and miss here in the UK, but when isn’t it?

Today I want to introduce you to another fabulous fantasy author and help you build that vertiginous TBR just a little higher. Step inside and say hi to Carol Beth Anderson, author of The Magic Eaters trilogy, and more.

Hello! Thank you for chatting with me today, why don’t you tell us a little about yourself.

I was born and raised in the Arizona desert, where I played make-believe games with my twin sister and older brother, transforming blankets into princess capes and my mother’s dresses into fine gowns. Almost as soon as I learned to write words, I began turning them into stories.

As a young adult, I moved to Texas and have lived here ever since. In addition to writing, I enjoy baking sourdough bread, hanging out with my teenage kids, husband, and miniature schnauzer, and hosting high-school exchange students.

Amazing, I was an exchange student back in my teens! We exchanged with France and Spain, and it was so much fun. When did you start writing and who inspired you? 

I’ve always written, but I was inspired to start writing a novel when I happened to meet a local author doing a signing at a bookstore. I read her novella that day and thought, “I could do that!” I started brainstorming for my first novel that night and started writing it a few days later.

I love that, I would absolutely love to do a signing in my local bookstore! And the idea of inspiring someone else to follow their dream is wonderful. I hope you wrote to that local author and told her she inspired you! What’s your favourite genre to read?

I love fantasy with romance in it (whether as a primary plot or subplot). I love Brent Weeks, Michael J. Sullivan, and Leigh Bardugo.

Romantic fantasy is my number one genre to read and write too, and Leigh Bardugo is one of my favourite authors! Six of Crows was just brilliant. Can you tell us about your published books and where we can get our hands on them?

The Frost Eater is the first book in The Magic Eaters Trilogy, which is upper-YA fantasy with dragons and romance on the side. The trilogy is complete, and I’ll admit … I adore this story. I’ve been thrilled to find that readers do too!

Buy The Frost Eater here, available in ebook, paperback, hardback and audio.

Add it to your TBR shelf here.

I have to admit, I’ve seen those covers around and been coveting them for quite a while! I’m definitely going to have to get the audio book of The Frost Eater! I’m in the process of having an audio book made of my debut novel and it’s such an exciting process! Where do you find inspiration for your stories? 

A lot of it just comes from letting my mind wander over the course of time. I write down ideas, and some of them stick! However, I also find inspiration from covers. For The Magic Eaters Trilogy, I just had some rough ideas. I found the covers as premades—the designer had already made them and had them for sale. I bought them, had her change the titles to the ones that would fit my series, and used the covers to help guide the series. I bought a premade for my next book (Faerie Fallen) too. I didn’t have any ideas for my next series that were “sticking” until I got the cover and suddenly had tons of ideas, based on the image.

I’m addicted to premade covers, The Fair Queen was a premade too and as soon as I saw it I knew it was the one. But I love the idea of taking inspiration from the cover itself! It sounds like you’re very visual, I bet you love Pinterest! Do you consider yourself a plotter, pantser or plantser? 

Plantser! I plan out major plot points in advance, but some of them do change as I go. I only do a chapter-by-chapter outline for one-quarter of the book at a time. (When I finish the first quarter, I do the detailed outline for the second quarter, and so on. And it still ends up changing along the way.)

I think most of us are plantsers at heart, my writing process is pretty similar. So, what are you working on right now?

Faerie Fallen, a romantic fantasy novel. It’s the first book in my Feathered Fae series, and I’m loving this world and characters and the slow-burn, enemies-to-lovers romance!

Faerie Fallen is on pre-order and comes out in December.

You had me at enemies-to-lovers romance! Your new series sounds like a combination of all my favourite things. What one piece of advice would you give aspiring authors? 

Publishing is a marathon, not a sprint.

So true. Thank you so much for chatting with me today! It’s been lovely to get to know you and your writing methods better. Before you go, where can we find out more about you and your books? 

Carol Beth Anderson’s website: https://carolbethanderson.com 

Sign up to my newsletter: https://carolbethanderson.com/sign-up-for-insider-emails/

Find me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cbethanderson/

Join my Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/CBAStreetTeam

Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cbethanderson

and Tiktok! https://www.tiktok.com/@cbethanderson


Well, that’s me on an official book-buying ban after adding all those gorgeous covers to my TBR!

I hope you’ve discovered a few new reads, I for one can’t wait for Faerie Fallen to release in December, it sounds right up my alley.

Happy reading friends,

Lyndsey

x

Interview: New adult fantasy author K. L. Kolarich

This week, I had the absolute privilege of chatting with K. L. Kolarich, author of the gorgeous, epic New Adult fantasy series The Haidren Legacy.

Come along and find out what she had to say on writing, favourite tropes, and what to expect from book two in her new series…

Hi K.L., thank you so much for joining me on the blog today! Can you tell us a little about yourself to begin with?

In short, I’m just an itty bitty nymph who lives in a quiet, small town about an hour south of Nashville. Originally from Metro Detroit, you can imagine my nerdy haven, nestled in a loudly cicada-filled woods, is a far cry from those Motor-City origins. I reside in the humidity and ever-present trill with my four Bengal cats and mysteriously patient husband, who endures said cats along with myself. When I’m not scrawling away on the next installment in the THL series, we are usually lounging on our porch, sipping heavy handed pours, or traipsing around our little downtown square, doing the same.    

Well, that sounds absolutely dreamy! I’m from the UK and have dogs, so imagine the exact opposite of your fabulous, sunshine-filled life and you’re probably not far off! When did you start writing and what inspires you?

I never actually intended to become an author—it just happened. Which sounds overtly vague and nonchalant, but it’s true. I’d gone from working on a sort of research project to, through the prodding of trusted confidante, drafting a fantastical realm of my own, as the subject matter more accurately mirrored my bookshelf.
 
In my own writing, I find inspiration from the magic of music and language. Most especially, how different cultures tell their own stories and histories. This is, in part, why the worldbuilding in The Haidren Legacy is so vast. To some, even a bit daunting. I wanted the reader to truly feel as if they were in a foreign land, in which they needed to enlist a handy-dandy codex to navigate, like one traveling to a foreign country today. It could be said that the reader has to “work for it”, but then again, so would an American, for instance, to fully experience France. The goal was for that multi-layered richness to permeate off the page and their mobile devices. In a sense, I wanted my inspiration, the force propelling my heart, to setup residency in their own.  

I love a book with really rich world building, so that sounds perfect to me. I studied European languages at university, so I wonder if that experience is what draws me to fantasy novels with new and different cultures. I especially admire writers who can create entire languages! It’s not something I feel confident I could do. What are some of your favourite genres and tropes?

I’m going to answer this question by sharing that the most coveted possession in my entire home is my father’s decades-worn collection of Louis L’Amour books. These old westerns I grew up reading are filled with action, snark, and of course, unrelenting heroes who always win. In truth, I’m a sucker for hard-earned triumph. My softer side likes seeing the “guy get the girl”, so to say. But that isn’t always the case, is it? It’s ironic how what we love to read isn’t always what we need to write. Thus, it will be interesting indeed, to see the fruits of those old loves spring up, when permitted, throughout the remainder of the THL saga.  

That’s so true, I think sometimes we’re writing the stories we didn’t have when we were younger, trying to fill the gap between what we loved reading and what we felt was missing. On that note, tell us about your first published book.

My debut publication, The House of Bastiion (The Haidren Legacy, book 1) released just recently in January, 2021. Described as an intricate epic fantasy, full of political intrigue, complicated characters and sharp objects, HOB is best suited for fans of Sanderson, Hobb, and Rhodes (ie. Anyone who fancies a thick spine and a fat glossary).  

Additionally, I am already halfway through drafting HOB’s sequel, which I’m extremely excited about. While Book 1 undoubtedly laid a thorough groundwork for the worldbuild, its characters, and subsequently, a plethora of questions about everything in between, Book 2 compounds upon those questions, gives them further weight, and compels the reader to dig for clues; all of which, likely to result in many more delightfully head-scratching theories.  

I can’t wait to read it, political intrigue, complicated characters and sharp objects are three of my favourite things! Where do you find inspiration for your characters and settings? 

THL boasts a diverse cast. This was primarily inspired by my upbringing, alongside a wide variety of cultures, which is partly why I miss my northern state so much, aside from its snow. I wanted the Orynthian map to highlight the prism of beauty; how loveliness refracts in so many variegated ways.

Likewise, the tension among some of my invented peoples was inspired by the prejudice sometimes thrown against groups dissimilar to others…. An unfortunate human experience repeated throughout history. Adding that honest, often uncomfortable component to each character’s POV and personal experience was a crucial facet in honoring their differences, as well as showcasing why those differences should be treasured in the first place. 

I love that, it’s so important for literature to hold a mirror up to the realities of our world. And where better to reflect the darkest side of humanity than in a fantasy novel? Do you consider yourself a plotter, pantser or plantser?  

Plotter, plotter, and you guessed it, plotter.  
 
I’ve framed my entire series, but the in-depth plotting takes place per book, by chapter, by scene. It’s a bit meticulous, but to be honest, I think the whole book would become a giant rabbit trail if I didn’t. We all have our strengths and our areas for improvement. My strengths are just usually rooted in tedious marathons of systematic scheming. So, to that end, I stay in my obsessively organized happy place. 

 I plan my books by the scene too, but where I fall down is the series planning. I need to take a leaf out of your book with my next series and make an outline from the start! Plotting books whilst pantsing the series arc is a little chaotic! Tell us, what are you working on right now? 

As mentioned above, Book 2 is currently underway. This installment pulls the Quadren (a group of ambassadorial advisors assigned to each seated regent) out of the crown city, Bastiion, as they begin to travel the Orynthian map. This is an endearing development because it brings certain Houses to the forefront of our story. In Book 2, we will discover more about our male MC, Zaethan, who represents the House of Darakai, and in doing so, must investigate his origins to better understand who he is and who he is becoming.

That sounds fascinating, I love when book one in a series introduces a new world by focusing on one small section of it, but then book two takes you farther afield to see what else is out there. I’m excited to see where your characters end up at the end of the book!  What one piece of advice would you give aspiring authors? 

I give the same advice to anyone who asks, usually because I still need to hear it myself: Write your favorite book, because no one else can.  
 
When at my best, I’m treating myself like THL’s biggest fan. No one will ever know my characters as well as I do, love them as dearly as I do, so how dare I belittle their value in unnecessary comparison or subject them to unproductive critique? Ratings and reviews will always vary because readers do. We should continue to grow and expand, no matter our success. But from day one, from the initial page, you are your first reader. Feed that soul what it craves, and the rest will follow.  

I think I needed to hear that today, thank you K.L. I completely agree, write for yourself first and foremost. Thank you so much for chatting with me today, it’s been a pure delight. Before you go, how can we find out more about you and your books?  

The best way to keep up to date on Luscia, Zaethan, and all future THL installments, giveaways, events, etc. is to subscribe to the #TeamHaidren Newsletter. While I am active on social media, I tend to give extra love to the team in the form of bonus content and exclusive raffles through our NL.  
 
Additionally, Team Haidren causes a good amount of ruckus in our reader group (hosted on FB). Being a rowdy menagerie of misfits, we welcome everyone to join!   

K.L.’s website:   https://www.thehaidrenlegacy.com/  

Signup to the Team Haidren newsletter:  https://www.thehaidrenlegacy.com/contact  

Follow the THL series on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehaidrenlegacy/  

Follow the author on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/k.l.kolarich/  

Join the Team Haidren Facebook group:   https://www.facebook.com/groups/teamhaidren  

Like the THL Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/thehaidrenlegacy  


That’s it, I’m off to read House of Bastiion, hold my calls.

It was so lovely getting to know K.L. better, I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did. I can vouch for how much fun the Team Haidren Facebook group is, I’ve been a member for a while and it’s a great place to find new fantasy book recs, so go check it out if you’re looking for a new fantasy-loving gang to join (motorbikes and leather jackets not required, but you do you boo).

Lyndsey

x

Interview: Diverse fairy tale retelling author Astrid V. J.

Happy June friends and foes! Can you believe the year is halfway through already? It’s absolutely flown for me – Enchanted Waters comes out in one month! It’s been almost a year since I joined this charity anthology and started plotting my story, Daughter of the Selkie King, and in a few short weeks I’ll be able to hold this collection in my hands and see the stunning illustrations, and share these gorgeous fantasy stories with you all!

June is Pride month, so over on Instagram I’m celebrating by sharing some of the queer characters from my stories all month. Head over there to meet Captain Conroy Rainer and Lieutenant Coulter Egan from The Fair Queen!

This week, I had the absolute privilege of chatting with USA Today bestselling and award-winning fantasy author, Astrid V.J. Keep reading to find out what we talked about…


Hi, Astrid, I’m so glad you could join me today! Why don’t you start by telling us a little about yourself?

I grew up in South Africa and have lived in Mexico, France and Sweden in the past fifteen years. My parents are both veterinarians, so my two sisters and I grew up in a menagerie. My mom’s a horse nut and so is my baby sister, who is fifteen years younger than me. Both of my parents are avid readers and from an early age they encouraged my love of books.

I met my husband during a GAP-year in France where I was au-pairing. We met one month before I was due to return home to study, and he joined me in South Africa a little over a year later. He’s Mexican-Swedish and the reason why I’ve had the privilege of living in these two different and equally beautiful countries. We have two children, a boy and a girl, and one day, we would very much like to expand our family and get a cat.

I have a Masters degree in social anthropology and am a certified transformational life coach. I consider myself a Jack-of-all-trades and love putting on different hats in different situations. 

In my spare time, when I’m not writing, I love to cross-stitch my favourite anime characters, play the violin or read anything I can get my hands on.

Growing up with vets for parents sounds amazing! I’d love to learn to ride horses, I’ve been on a couple of pony treks when I was younger and loved it. When did you first discover your love of writing and what inspired you?

I was twelve years old when I finally gave into the urge to read Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock. The cover called to me in a way other books never had. Granted, it was very advanced for my age and I only made it halfway before my mind couldn’t take in any more. I re-read that book when I was sixteen and finished it. One thing Hancock’s book did for me was spark an idea. Based on his premise that Atlantis is, in fact, Antarctica, I developed my first series.

The other element for that very first story idea was my dissatisfaction with my favourite genre. I loved fantasy books and adored all the amazing worlds authors took me to. My family is huge on LotR. Just to put this into perspective… waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay before the movies came out, we had cats called Frodo and Elessar, and dogs called Gimli, Merry and Pippin. I read The Silmarillion when I was fifteen because I wanted to experience Tolkien’s world again but didn’t want to re-read his other books again. However, even though I loved the fantasy genre, especially books by Tolkien, J.V. Jones, Michael Ende and Phillip Pullman, I still felt there was something important missing. I was growing up in multicultural South Africa in the transition from Apartheid to democracy, and I wanted to read fantasy books that acknowledged my lived experience of people and cultures being diverse.

As such, The Atlantis Series is urban fantasy and is also an African occult fantasy. I loved geography, and the mixture of landscapes in Uganda fascinated me, so that’s where I started my story, even though I have never been to Uganda. This trilogy follows the journey of Nyesha as she discovers her magic, attends school (and here I wanted to focus on African magic in response to Harry Potter), and finds out about Atlantis, and goes out to discover the lost island. 

After studying Anthropology, I realised I actually need to go to Uganda to do a little research for the very beginning of my book to make the contemporary part more realistic, so this project has been shelved until I can make that happen. However, it is a story that is fully formed in my mind and won’t take me long to write, once I get that missing component in.

Diversity is so important in stories, especially YA and MG, to show young readers that anyone can be the hero or heroine of their own story. It’s something fantasy should have been doing for centuries, what with different races and species being a really common aspect of the story, but I’m glad that diverse characters and settings are finally becoming more common in fiction. What are some of your favourite books?

I have read so much and love so many very different genres it can be difficult to choose. I think I’ll talk more about “most influential” authors who’ve inspired me over the years.

My dad is German and I grew up with a mix of classic English and German books. Two authors who’ve definitely influenced me from the very beginning are Michael Ende (most famous for The Neverending Story) and Ottfried Preussler. Their approach to fantasy and turning the most simple things into something magical always kept me interested.

Although I loved the Harry Potter series, I think I was too old by the time I discovered it, so it didn’t impact me as much as it did my younger sister’s generation (that’s my middle sister who’s five years younger than me). Phillip Pullman’s His Dark Materials definitely made an incredible impact, as did J.V. Jones’ The Baker’s Boy. In my late teens, I came across Game of Thrones and became a total George R.R. Martin fan.

Other than fantasy, I also read a lot of other books. Jane Austen and the Brontë sisters have a very special place in my heart, and at university I read Middlemarch as one of my setworks, which totally immersed me in the Regency period. I love those books! I’m also a big fan of Ian McEwan.

More recently, I’ve fallen in love with Guy Gavriel Kay’s works, along with Margaret Atwood and Neil Gaiman. Each in their own way, they’ve helped me mature my writing and contribute to my unique style.

I love how eclectic your reading taste is! I think it’s so important to read widely, both inside and outside your usual genre, you never know where you might find a spark of inspiration or learn some new aspect of craft that improves your writing style. Tell us about your first published book and what inspired you to write it.

My first published book is Aspiring, Part 1 of the Siblings’ Tale. This book was sparked into existence when I read Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson-Levine when I was fifteen. I LOVED that book but at the same time I was dissatisfied with it. Why were there so many retellings of Cinderella? Don’t get me wrong, I love Cinderella, but there are so many other fairy tales out there!

Having grown up with the German heritage as well, I was familiar with a ton of Grimm fairy tales that are not commonly known in English. As I ranted on about Ella Enchanted, I had an idea. What if I wrote a retelling of my favourite German fairy tale, keeping all the things I love about Carson-Levine’s book but also adding the things I felt were missing from the retellings genre.

I was in high school and didn’t have time to write the book right away, but the idea stuck with me. During my GAP-year, I had a few weeks free during the summer and I wrote the book by hand. I wrote the first part as a memoir by the main character keeping the feel I’d gotten from Ella Enchanted, and the second part as the retelling of the Grimm fairy tale. This also meant I had to invent a storyteller who could reconcile the two parts because of their disparate writing styles. Essentially, The Siblings’ Tale duology has become a lynch pin for everything else, connecting all my story ideas into a coherent universe.

Aspiring, Part 1 of the Siblings’ Tale also won two Literary Classics Awards in 2019. It received silver in the Young Adult Fantasy category and gold in the Fairytales category.

Wow, that’s an incredible achievement, congratulations on winning two awards with your first published novel! I love that your stories are all tied together and set within the same universe, I’m planning to do something similar and set more stories in the Fair Realm going forward. I think it gives readers a really comforting experience, returning to a world they’re familiar with, while also getting to read a brand new, exciting (hopefully) story. Where do you find inspiration for your characters or settings? 

EVERYWHERE! But let’s just look at The Apprentice Storyteller for this one. Viola Alerion, the storyteller and first main character is very much inspired by my German grandmother. She was a kind and loving woman who hid these characteristics under a hard shell of unapproachability. When I was a child, she often scared me and I know now that must have hurt her a lot.

As an adult, before she passed away, I had the opportunity to spend some time with her and I came to understand the immense impact growing up during the Second World War had on her. She was nine when the war ended, and everything that followed with East and West Germany made her into a very hard woman, not to mention that she got divorced when my dad was sixteen, and how that, in a small town where “such things weren’t done” affected her. Viola Alerion is my homage to my Oma, and is my exploration of how the harshness of life often makes us try to protect ourselves with thoughts and actions that, in the long run, do us and those around us harm.

The Apprentice Storyteller is also an expression of my homesickness after having lived outside of South Africa for the past decade. All the landscapes in that book are drawn from places in South Africa.

Your grandmother sounds like an incredible woman, and a huge inspiration. I set my novel in a fictionalised small town based on where I was living at the time, on the edge of Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire. I think it gives the setting a more credible feel when authors base it on somewhere they know and love. Would you consider yourself a plotter, pantser or plantser? 

A little of both, actually. I usually plot a general outline. For example, with my fairy tale retellings, I do an approximate division by chapter for the different parts of the tale. For my other books, I’ll mark out specific scenes that I know where they should be and roughly which chapter they should be to keep a good structure. With that outline, I’ll sit down and start writing, and then it’s a matter of seeing where the characters take me. So far, they’ve never lost their way entirely. We do sometimes take the scenic route, though.

The scenic route, I love that. My writing process is pretty similar, a good balance of plotting and seeing where the story takes me. So, what are you working on right now?

I have three projects I’m currently working on. The first is The Wordmage’s Tales series, a collection of stand-alone novellas that presents the tales the apprentice learns in The Apprentice Storyteller.

I had originally planned to nest each of the stories in the actual novel, but I realised there was more to each of the short stories that couldn’t be taken up in the framework of a short story, which is why I decided to only mention the tales in The Apprentice Storyteller and give each one the attention it deserves through The Wordmage’s Tales series.

There are ten books in this series. The Sewing Princess is exclusive to my newsletter and street team members. The Artist and His Muse just published recently and The Last Warrior is on pre-order. I’m currently finishing up The Companion’s Tale which will publish in the summer sometime and is planned as my permafree book. I’ll be working on the remaining tales in the series during the autumn and will hopefully be able to publish them in 2022.

The second project is Enchanted Waters, which is a collection of short stories about magical water creatures. I’m working together with some incredible authors on this anthology which we would like to keep as a permanent charity anthology. We will be donating all proceeds of this fully illustrated book to Oceana, an ocean protection organization that fosters marine biodiversity and encourages sustainable fishing to protect smaller fishing communities.

The third is Ytherynia: The Gifted Blood Academy. This is quite a unique academy fantasy series that I’m working on together with a group of other authors. There will be four volumes, one for each year of high school and each author writes a short story or novella about a character of a different species. There is a coherent plot that ties all the stories together, but there’s also the difference of how the different species view the school and each other, not to mention the events taking place at the school. We’ve been working on this for over a year and I’ve learned so much from it! We’re taking steps to make this set of anthologies even more engaging and will probably re-publish the first book just before we release the second book, which is shaping up to be amazing!

There are a few other things in the pipeline, but these are the most tangible at this stage.

Your readers have got a lot to look forward to over the next couple of years! I’m so excited for Enchanted Waters, and all of your Wordmage Tales – collections of fairy tales set in a fantasy world are my favourite extra content by authors. Like The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Tales from the Hinterland and The Language of Thorns. What one piece of advice would you give aspiring authors? 

Write from the heart! I know I’ve said this before, and I’ll keep saying it. Readers want something authentic and as a writer, you can only achieve that if you write what’s important to you. I know there are those who believe you should write for the market, but I’ve read books like that and they feel flat. I’ve never enjoyed reading those books. Far more enjoyable are the books where authors bare their heart and soul!

I feel exactly the same, creativity comes from the heart and soul, readers can see straight through a story that the author didn’t truly believe.

It’s been incredible getting to speak to you today, Astrid! Thank you for sharing your writing process and upcoming releases with us, I can’t wait for more in your fairytale retelling universe! Before you go, how can we find out more about you and your books? 

On social media, I am most active on Instagram. That’s where I talk about what I’m writing, share more about myself and my life, and share my reading adventures. If you’re most interested in knowing what I’m reading, you can follow me on Goodreads. I’m meticulous about tracking my reading there.

I also have a Wattpad account and upload my works in progress on there. So if you’d like a taster of what I write, that’s a good place to start. I also have two parts of The Sewing Princess, one of the Wordmage’s Tales for free to anyone who signs up to my newsletter. You are not obliged to remain subscribed if my newsletters aren’t interesting to you, but my newsletter is a good way to stay connected and get the inside information on my book releases, sales and other opportunities.

I have a YouTube channel where you can find out more about The Siblings’ Tale duology and the social commentary I worked into it. Drawing Back the Veil: an analysis of the Siblings’ Tale gives more insight into me, what makes me tick and the social issues most important to me.

If you like fairy tales and want to know more about retellings, you’re welcome to join my Facebook group, Elisabeth and Edvard’s World. We have a book club and read a retelling by one of the authors in the group every few weeks and have a meeting to discuss the book and anything else bookish we feel like. I also feature other retellings authors and we have some bookish fun with parties every now and then.

The Artist and His Muse, one of the Wordmage’s Tales, just released. It’s available on Amazon and is FREE on Kindle Unlimited.


I hope you enjoyed finding out more about Astrid’s inspirations and creative process as I did. She’s such a huge inspiration to me, and I can’t wait to read more of her stories.

Astrid’s story, The Naiad’s Curse, will be featured in Enchanted Waters alongside my story, Daughter of the Selkie King. It’s available to preorder now and releases on 16 July, but you could get an early copy FREE when you join our street team!

Click here to get an ARC of Enchanted Waters in exchange for an honest review and supporting us on social media!

Lyndsey

x