sholio: a book and some gourds (Autumn-book & pumpkin)
It's that time again: I have a book out (on Sept. 26) so you get a free copy if you want one!

Download link will work until the book is live on Amazon. (Amazon page here.)

book cover depicting the lower half of a woman's face with hands crossed over a crystal ball showing a man's face; purple sparkles all around. Her hair is red-blond and lays on her shoulders. The title is below.

The past rarely stays buried.
No matter how deeply you bury it.


Download in your choice of formats on Bookfunnel.

Rest of blurb below )
sholio: a red cup by a stack of books (Books & coffee 2)
Keeley #6 is out on Friday - Amazon preorder here - and here are the usual free copies; get 'em while they're hot. (Link will stop working when it's live on Amazon in a week.) Click on the cover or the link at the bottom to download; let me know if anything seems to be borked. Also let me know privately if you need any of the earlier books for context, btw.

Blurb is still a work in progress ...

a book cover showing a blonde woman, a moon, and a small dragon in the background

From enemies to ... something else.

A few months ago, Aliette and her flock of bird shifters forged a truce with James Keeley and his magical detective agency. Now the shifters of Grand Bluffs need his help.

There's a new alpha in town, using a previously unknown form of alpha power so strong it's taking down the local shifters like dominos. But what does he really want? James, as a human, is immune to this alpha cult leader's shifter wiles, and James's magical spellgun can thwart the shifters' ability to sniff him out as a human.

Going undercover in a shifter cult, James can't take along his usual dragon backup. (And the dragon in question is deeply unhappy about it.) He's going to have to rely on Aliette—who not so long ago wanted to kill him—in a beautiful lakeside resort full of old enemies and new ones, where his survival relies on managing to convince a lot of shifter cultists that he's one of them.

Because failure means getting to star in his own personal production of The Most Dangerous Game.

And the only ally he has in the cult, Aliette, is one alpha-power brainwashing away from trying to kill him herself.

Not to mention that the spellgun, the one thing keeping every shifter in the cult from turning on him, seems to have developed an agenda of its own ...

Download from Bookfunnel in the format of your choice.
sholio: stacks of butter sticks (BUTTER)
This is my new mailing list signup incentive novella, ~cleverly designed~ to be clickable. (The way these work is that people have a bunch to choose from in any given promo and choose the ones they find most interesting or appealing. I specifically designed this one to be Extra Buttery. The previous Most Buttery one I had was Dragon & Detective, but I stopped being able to use that one for the mailing list signup when it became the first book in a series ...)

Anyway, this is the result of my brainstorming back in April/May about what would get people to sign up for my mailing list while also being appropriate to my current writing style and also fun for me to write, and, hopefully, fun for people to read. I mean, basically it's the venn diagram intersection of "people who read urban fantasy mystery like this" and "I like this" so ...

It's a sort of buddy-movie adventure with a unicorn "fixer" and an annoyed social worker who is saddled ha ha I slay me with him as they investigate a small town with extremely large problems.

Needless to say, if you click below you do not have to sign up for my mailing list, you just get 30K of me writing urban fantasy shenanigans with an injured unicorn and an annoyed lesbian costar who is 5000% immune to his charm.

a sexy man with silver hair holding a knife

Download or read it here.

He's the fae court's fixer.

Got a problem between the fae and human worlds? Chase is your man. Er . . . unicorn.

This time, he's got a string of suspicious murders to solve and a human partner who doesn't trust him, and he's having to do it while hurt, sleep-deprived, and under a geas. (So what else is new.) And with the Summer Queen breathing down his neck and holding his leash, failure isn't an option.

But death certainly is.
sholio: dragon with quill pen (Dragon)
I forgot I did this, but since I did apparently do this, Dragon & Detective is free this week on Amazon.

Ghost & Gambler (Keeley #5) is out now, and I'm enjoying the temporary warm glow of 100% 5-star reviews. It won't last, but it is nice! (Analytically speaking, this means the people who have been following the series are reading the new installment and liking it! I know it'll go down as a broader range of readers read it, that's perfectly normal, but this series has fans now. Wat. I got about 200 preorders, and that's even after having put up the preorder about 6 months after the previous book came out, and therefore missing the biggest initial wave of people who go straight on to order the next book after reading the first one.)

I think this is also the highest I've ever gotten one of my non-romance books; Ghost & Gambler is currently:
Best Sellers Rank: #4,214 in Kindle Store
#11 in Werewolf & Shifter Mysteries


Weeeeee!

(Update: Husband fails to appreciate the awesomeness of being #4200 in the Kindle store. He is fired from my PR team.)

The wild thing is that, unlike all the many series I've never written but planned out in exquisite detail for 10-book arcs, this was never anything I intended to write at all. It was based on a bit of flashfic that I wrote about ten years ago on LJ for some random prompt. (It's roughly the first 1K of the first book, introducing James and Oz and the basic mystery setup with the missing car.) I posted it to my new realname author mailing list in May 2020, and I got about five or six people - unprecedented numbers for me at the time! - emailing me to ask where the rest of the story was. So ... I wrote the rest of the story. It's a weird, quirky series with weird, quirky covers; it doesn't match the stylings of most popular urban fantasy at all.

But people like it! And now book 6 is coming out in 2023.
sholio: shadowy man in trench coat (Noir detective)
After a couple weeks of frantic last-minute revisions, Keeley #5 is uploaded and ready for release on April 27! My betas were absolutely HEROIC this week, doing a lightning-fast turnaround on the *cough* 7400 words of climax revisions I wrote on Monday.



Featuring a magic luck-bending deck of cards, a high-stakes poker game, and a murder mystery in a (literally) underground casino run by a dragon.

Like all the books in the series, the plot is largely self-contained, so the book can be read without having read the others. There are some ongoing subplots, but there should be enough backstory in the book itself to follow them. As per my usual style, they keep getting longer with each book; this one is about 60K.

Download or read on BookFunnel!

Since this book is in Kindle Unlimited and therefore Amazon exclusive, the link will stop working when the book releases on Wednesday.
sholio: Woman sitting on a 1930s detective's desk (Noir woman on desk)
Writing mystery/action on a pro level, after years of writing romance and training myself to think analytically about it, has been really interesting. Over the last 7(!!) years that I've been doing Zoe, I've read a lot about romance structure and feel like I have a pretty solid handle on how romance beats work, but I don't have nearly as much of a grounding in the theory, so to speak, of mystery, so it's been interesting coming up with a lot of it on my own and feeling out intuitively how it all works.

One of the things I've realized recently that I generally do when I'm plotting mystery or action/thriller - what makes it feel "complete" to me, in the way that romance needs certain beats to be complete - is something I've started calling the "third act twist" in my head, although actually, it doesn't necessarily happen in the third act; my books are not that tightly plotted. It can be anywhere from halfway to most of the way to the end.

What it is, though, is the point when the characters realize there's a second layer to the situation than what they knew about. The mystery isn't just "who did the crime"; in order for it to feel satisfying to me from a plotting perspective (though I don't always manage to do this; I don't think I did it in Dragon and Detective) there's a second level to it, where the characters find out that some aspect of what they thought was going on is just flat wrong, and this reorients their goals, points them at something new, and sets up the transition into a climax that is very different from what they thought the climax was going to be.

Critically, it's not just "you didn't know this" but also "your assumptions were wrong"; it's the rug-pull of thinking that they, and the reader, know approximately what's being set up, if not the exact details, and then finding out there's a second layer to it that's going to come into play in the climax and ends up setting up a different climax than the one the characters thought they were headed to. It's not revealing who the killer is, but rather, revealing that the victim isn't really dead, the entire crime is a cover for some other crime, the person they thought they were on the run from is actually an ally and there's a bigger bad out there, the person they've been trusting all along is about to betray them, etc.

I didn't do it in Dragon and Detective except perhaps in a very tangential way, and did it without realizing I was doing it in the subsequent Keeley books; then when I was plotting out another book this week, my plot was falling flat until I suddenly realized that I needed to add a second, hidden layer to the mystery, and then all of a sudden the whole thing clicked and came alive. It involves a certain level of reality-shifting - in order to get that satisfying "click" feeling, you need to find out that some early plot-driving assumption, on the part of both the reader and the characters, was wrong, and that sets the plot spinning off in a different direction than it looked like it was headed.

I don't think that you always need this to make the genre work, I'm sure there are plenty of perfectly excellent examples that don't have it, but by this point it's unconsciously become part of my Keeley plot formula.

Examples from my other Keeley books, with specific plot spoilers:

Spoilers for the books published to date )

In general I think the main Third Act Twist variations I've been working with so far are: some aspect of the crime isn't what you thought it was, someone who was supposed to be a trustworthy ally isn't, or an antagonist who up to this point appeared to be the Big Bad switching sides and helping them against the real Big Bad.

For all I know there's an actual plotting-beat term for this, but Third Act Twist works fine for me; it describes what it does, and I know what I'm talking about.

Having figured this out is going to be immensely helpful for plotting this kind of book going forward, because I think when I get stuck on the big-picture plotting level, the solution is often just figuring out the second layer to the mystery and weaving it into the first.

It's also kind of interesting because this sort of sudden reversal of expectations/realization that Everything Was A Lie is exactly what you don't want in romance.
sholio: Red ball with snow (Christmas ornament)
This week's free story features Dolly, the office ghost from Keeley & Associates.



What does a ghost do when she wants to give presents to her friends? Dolly gets into the Christmas spirit by being a literal Christmas spirit ... so to speak.

Download from BookFunnel here:
https://dl.bookfunnel.com/4bskyftrmq

I'm taking a break from the free mailing list stories for the first few months of 2021, so enjoy 'em while they last.

In case you missed it, you can get most of the 2020 stories (through October) in a collection that you can download here:
https://dl.bookfunnel.com/j9k034u6ri

And the Kay vs. Santa (Gatekeeper-verse) story from a couple of weeks ago is here:
https://dl.bookfunnel.com/hkn405vhdx

Just in case a cathartic tale of Santa being hacked apart with a magic sword is more to your holiday tastes than something more heartwarming, lol. (It is heartwarming, I swear! Just ... differently so.)
sholio: shadowy man in trench coat (Noir detective)
Right, so book 3 in Keeley & Associates, that just-for-fun urban fantasy series I'm writing, is out next week, so it's time to throw some free copies at you! The link will stop working when the book is released.



Only a fool makes a deal with the fae.
But sometimes you don't have a choice.


Bookfunnel link!
(Or click on the cover. Which is tiny because I've been struggling with it for daayyyys and still don't like it.)

It's also for preorder on Amazon. Actually, here are the Amazon links to the whole series:
1. Dragon & Detective
2. Ghost & Gumshoe
3. Fae & Flatfoot (preorder, out next week)
4. Dick & Demon (preorder)*

*And technically not finished yet. It'll be out in June 2021.

ALSO FOR SALE NOW, also something I forgot to mention:
3-book Gatekeeper collection (the entire trilogy for $5.99). It was released Tuesday.

If you want any of these and don't feel comfortable dealing with Amazon, email me!

MORE FREE BOOK STUFF (links go to Bookfunnel; these won't expire):
Gatekeeper holiday story which is basically Kay vs. Evil Santa (will be on my website at some point, but not yet; download only for now)
Perfect Apples & Other Stories, a collection of short fiction from the mailing list (technically came out back in October, never actually linked to it because of reasons)

Sorry for dumping a bajillion links in one post like this! I have been more or less constantly busy for the last couple of months; then this week, suddenly I hit the point where I ... wasn't, and it has been amazing. But this also means that I'm poking my head up and reminding myself that I haven't actually linked to most of this stuff!

I'll have a year-end roundup post in a week or two of everything I've published this year that will also have links to a variety of perma-free stuff from the last year.
sholio: Woman sitting on a 1930s detective's desk (Noir woman on desk)
Thank you for all the cover input earlier! This is the current version - I'm going to go ahead and upload the files to Amazon a little later tonight for the pre-order, but cover tweaking is still entirely possible if you want to weigh in with further input or suggestions.



Downloads will be up through Monday and the book goes live on Tuesday. This is a novella-length urban fantasy murder mystery, sequel to Dragon & Detective but stands alone.

Download from Bookfunnel here!

Blurb under the cut )
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Doing edits for the second novella in the Dragon & Detective series, and tweaking covers. Do you have a preference?



(Click for bigger.)

Other suggested edits are also welcome if you have any.

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