THE CONTEST announcement and cover reveal

Writing books can take a long ass time.

Every time I take a crack at this I tell myself “this time I’ll be more efficient”. Apparently I have no problem lying to myself. This book took a while to find its shape. But all that said, I’m immensely proud of it.

Lots of people go into the making of a book, despite the solitary nature of the writing. Beyond family and friends, who are critical, there’s my agent Lisa Rodgers. There’s Gemma Creffield at Datura and their whole crew of publishing talent. There’s more I’m neglecting to thank. I owe them a beverage of their choice.

But here we go. The Contest, coming February 2025 (pre-order now!), from Datura Books. I can’t wait.

In which I am sincere about NINE TENTHS

Nine Tenths publishes tomorrow.

This book is so many things. My first published novel. A creative endeavor spanning years. An idea that felt fresh and new before getting lost in a crush of superhero media, only to possess enough spark to be found again.

I loved this book so much I wrote a sequel before any contract existed (don’t do that.) When necessary I pushed this book from my mind so I could write new books about new characters. And when publishing became possible I found the book again, and rediscovered my joy for the world I’d created.

This book forced me to talk about my writing as real instead of a cute hobby—undermining your work doesn’t encourage people to come along for the ride. You have to stand in front of your creation. Be proud. Be your own advocate.

Many author friends encouraged me along the way, and I thank them. More recently I’ve received strong support from my non-writing friends. Some who didn’t know I wrote at all, others who were proud my journey resulted in a thing you can hold in your hand. (You hold your e-reader don’t get pedantic.)

I’m not much for blog posts, but your first book only comes around once. I hope people enjoy Nine Tenths. I hope people want more of my writing. But regardless, I enjoyed writing this book. I know it’s possible for the words I put down, the hours I spend holed up and isolated, to become a real story. A real book people can read.

Let’s see what happens next.