The month before it all ends (in a good way!…right?)

February 2025

Happy love month and welcome to February’s newsletter. If you showed up by accident but want to receive monthly content, please subscribe below:

In this month’s newsletter, scroll down to find:

  • Queendom Come: Early Release party and Pre-order fun
  • Love, love, love
  • Review Corner

Queendom Come: Early Release party and Pre-order fun!

The countdown is on and I cannot wait for you all to read Queendom Come! If you live in the area, we are having a pre-release party at the Banff Public Library and would love to have you. Plus, you’ll be able to buy your copy of Queendom Come a whole four days before the rest of the world so… that’s pretty awesome. Huge thanks to the Banff Public Library, and the Whyte Museum for putting this all together!

click here for more information


Colouring Contest

Leading up to the event, BPL (Banff Public Library) are hosting a colouring contest with lots of fab prizes! So grab your markers and crayons and get creating!

Here are the printable pages.


Pre-order Promotions

If you’ve pre-ordered your book, I would love to send you a signed book plaque for the inside cover as well as this exclusive art print. To claim these goodies, please jump over here and fill out the form.

Are you more of an in-person kind of book buyer? Select book stores will be hosting a similar pre-order event. Anyone who pre-orders their copy at:

Will get an exclusive art print and a signed copy of their book and can sign up for a giveaway!

Love love love

Happy Valentine’s Day ❤

Review Corner

Reviews are so helpful in getting word of Contest of QueensQueen’s Catacombs , and Queendom Come out there. If you have time, and if you’ve read the book, I would be eternally grateful if you could leave a star rating and/or a written review on Goodreads or Amazon.

Thank you to all the wonderful people who have left a star rating and review! Check out these lovely recents ❤

x live magically

Narrative Webs and Doublethink: author talk with Abigail Miles

June 2024

Welcome to June’s newsletter. If you showed up by accident but want to receive monthly content, please subscribe below:

In this month’s newsletter, scroll down to find:

  • Happy Birthday, Rose Petal Princess
  • Upcoming events: book signing and author talk at Four Points Books
  • Podcast: Author Nook with Abigail Miles
  • Captain’s Log: Turning Pages and Avoiding Capture in Portland
  • Review Corner

Happy Birthday, Rose Petal Princess!

It’s not every day your first born turns three!

Want more information about The Rose Petal Princess or would you like to order a signed copy? Click here: The Rose Petal Princess and other fairy tales

Upcoming Events

Mark your calendars for July 7th and come along for a fun time! I’ll be signing books at Four Points Books in Invermere as well as presenting a reading and chatting about my series. I’d love to see you there!

Author Nook: Narrative Webs and Double Think author nook with Abigail Miles

Welcome to my Author Nook, a monthly podcast I created where I chat with authors about their upcoming releases and we nerd out over their literary brain children. Find it on Spotify here, and Youtube here.

Today I am joined by Abigail Mile to chat about her debut novel The Building that Wasn’t which comes out July 16, 2024. This book will have you desperately turning the pages for puzzle pieces and scratching your head over what’s real and what’s an element of this timeline. So grab a cuppa, settle in, and join us!


The Building that Wasn’t

This story only ever has one ending.

When Everly Tertium encounters a strange man in the park claiming to be her grandfather, she is invited to visit a mysterious apartment building. There, she finds herself in a constant state of déjà vu, impossibly certain that she’s already lived through these moments, already been introduced to these people, and already visited all of these rooms and floors. So why does she have no idea what’s happening to her?

The longer she stays in the building, the more Everly becomes convinced there is more going on than meets the eye. Something is off, time seems to pass differently, and the people living there seem trapped. Slowly, Everly begins to wonder if she is trapped too. But would she even want to leave, if she could?

Captain’s Log

Turning Pages in Portland

Earlier this month I visited a dear friend in Portland and got the full Portland experience. I finally visited the famous Powell’s City Books and… I gotta say… it was not my kind of second hand book shop. I may ruffle some feathers with this opinion but it was full of people with a vibe like a warehouse. Neither of those things are my idea of a great second hand book shop. However! I found an absolute gem of a book: The Coming of the Fairies by Arthur Conan Doyle. This book I’ve only seen references too, and I even wrote a short story about called On the Belief of Fairies because it captured my imagination so completely. Basically, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was so eager to believe in fairies that when a couple of young girls took photos with fairy cut outs in their garden and said, “look what we found,” he dropped everything and came running with his “I KNEW IT” hat on. This book is a love letter to unwavering belief and I am so excited to own it!

While Powell’s books did not tickle my fancy, I did stumble across the most wonderful second hand bookstore while attempting to evade a sudden downpour: Mother Foucault’s Bookshop. It was a dream. Eclectic selection, rich wooden bookshelves groaning beneath gorgeous tomes and dog-earred paperback. It had an upper gallery! This shop was full of books that had been on adventures sitting in wait for their next companion. I cannot rave about this place enough and I spent way too much money here. Unfortunately I didn’t take any pictures because my fingers were busy flicking through the shelves, but here’s one I sourced from Google.


No Shanghai-ing Today!


Pretty pretty city

All in all, Portland was a heap of fun with a little bit of everything: relaxing beachfront, 12 bridges, stunning greenspaces, a dark underbelly and twisted history, great music scene (check out Narcissist Cookbook and Bug Hunter) and fantastic pizza.

Review Corner

Reviews are so helpful in getting word of Contest of Queens and Queen’s Catacombs out there. If you have time, and if you’ve read the book, I would be eternally grateful if you could leave a star rating and/or a written review on Goodreads or Amazon.

Thank you to all the wonderful people who have left a star rating or review!

x live magically

feature image: https://www.cnn.com/style/article/houses-impossible-architecture/index.html