Category Archives: Journal

“Be the creative spark that lights up the world”

I’m over at On Creative Writing talking about pantsing vs. plotting, the editing process and why everyone’s voice matters.

Bonus: There’s a preview of the cover for my new book out in October.

Lovable monsters: The July 2025 Bibliofiles

I recently moved homes in the suburbs of Vancouver, which left me wishing I could trade my body in for something better. This somehow got reflected in my reading choices this month, which were all lovable monsters and suburban nightmares. Or maybe it’s just the times….

Fiction

Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell

How to describe Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell? Weird horror meets romantasy meets queer love coming of age story meets… well, you get the idea.

There’s a lot going on in the tale of Shesheshen, a shapeshifting monster (think gelatinous cube with bodily agency) who’s being hunted by a family of monster hunters and their minions. There’s a romantasy plot where Shesheshen falls in love with one of the humans but doesn’t quite know how to get around the part where she’s a monster that just wants to lay her eggs in someone. There’s a queer love story, complicated by the whole eggs business and a dash of asexuality. There’s a neurodivergence angle where Shesheshen desperately tries to make sense of the quirks of human society (think Murderbot or even Frankenstein’s creature). There’s enough trauma and abuse from parents to fill an entire YA series. Mix them all up and you have a fun and genuinely unique tale that will have you yearning for a sequel.

Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/182506390-someone-you-can-build-a-nest-in


Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik promises to be a reimagining of the Rumplestilskin myth, but it is so much more than that. Set in a vaguely eastern European land at the edge of woods where the mythical and murderous Staryk race dwell, the tale mainly follows three women: Miryem, the daughter of an inept moneylender; Wanda, a peasant girl from a sundered and violent family; and Irina, a noblewoman’s daughter who may hold the key to uniting several realms. It’s a cold, bitter world where treachery and death wait behind every tree and in every home, but these women are determined to rewrite the narratives that have already been foretold for their lives.

Spinning Silver has all the classic elements of a fairy tale — a love story with a brooding king, shapeshifting monsters, a land that is harsh and without mercy — retold for modern audiences. It’s a tale not just of fantastic creatures but also of unyielding defiance in the face of mundane oppression. It’s also a masterclass in storytelling, with its multiple POVs, interweaving narrative threads and deep knowledge of fairy tales and myth.

A word of caution, though: Spinning Silver is a dense and very layered book, so read it when you have the time to give it the attention it deserves.

Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/36896898-spinning-silver


Lost You Again by Ian Rogers

A creepy ghost story with a twist, and then another twist, and another. A truly haunting tale from one of Canada’s finest horror writers.

Link: https://www.thedarkmagazine.com/lost-you-again/


Employee of the Month by Alex Irvine

Government employees in a Michigan industrial park try to reconcile their suburban lives with their professional careers as interrogators and torturers. But the lines between the two become increasingly blurred and soon bodies start showing up in the wrong places.

Link: https://www.bourbonpenn.com/issue/36/employee-of-the-month-by-alex-irvine


Foreign Tongues by John Wiswell

An alien believes ice cream is the highest form of life on Earth and is determined to free it from its human wardens. Butterscotch mayhem ensues.

Link: https://www.flashfictiononline.com/article/foreign-tongues/


Non-fiction

What if Tom Bombadil had written The Lord of the Rings? by Thomas Wharton

“This was Middle-earth with nobody in it! No Men, no Ringwraiths, no Elves or Dwarves or Orcs, no conflicts or battles or rousing speeches or hobbity wisecracking or escapes in the nick of time. This was just nature. Growth, decay, wind and rain. The Sun rising and going down. The moon coming out. An eagle soaring in the sky. The rivers flowing and the trees swaying in the night. An eerie, wild strain of Illuvatar’s great music of creation.”

Thomas Wharton revisits Lord of the Rings with an eye toward the nature rather than the quest.

Link: https://thomaswharton.substack.com/p/what-if-tom-bombadil-had-written


Why You Can’t Finish Writing That Novel by Thomas Wharton

Are you a writer who needs an outline to figure out the tale before you’ve started? Or do you write to actually figure out the tale? I’m a little of both myself.

Link: https://thomaswharton.substack.com/p/why-you-cant-finish-writing-that


What good is making art at all when the world is on fire? by Paul Vermeersch

“Art makes nothing unthinkable.”

Link: https://theampersandreview.ca/new-page-82


It’s the Natural Thing to Do: A Conversation with Stuart Ross

A great interview with Canadian icon Stuart Ross (also one of my favourite writers!).

Link: https://theampersandreview.ca/new-page-26


Poetry

Turn of the Page by George Murray

If you want to feel old and wise (or maybe just old or wise), here’s a poem for you.

Link: https://www.badlilies.uk/george-murray

The Write Life: Support your community

Now more than ever it’s time to support your community. It’s become clear that without active support, many of the communities we love and see ourselves as belonging to may wither and fade away. This is especially important for writers and other creators, whose communities are tenuous at the best of times.

How best to support your writing community?

Read, read, read. Read widely and deeply — and make an effort to read those writers who aren’t constantly in the spotlight. There are many fine writers whose works get overlooked because they are with smaller publishers that can’t afford a lot of marketing or who simply aren’t interested in self-promotion or social media. Go to the websites of smaller publishers in your country or writing/reading niche and see who they are publishing. You’d be surprised at how many writers you find who have fallen off your radar but you actually want to read. This is especially true if you live outside of the U.S. because, let’s face it, American publishing tends to dominate the cultural conversation. Hey, some of my favourite writers are American but I like a bit of variety!

Tell writers you like or appreciate their work. I can’t tell you how many times this has mattered to me when I’ve felt like giving up on a project and lighting my computer on fire. A well-timed social media post or email can mean the difference between a writer finishing their next work or not. We tend to work in isolation, after all, and the feedback we get tends to be spaced at very long and irregular intervals. Much like royalty payments! I can’t speak for other writers, but a generous comment here and there has meant as much to me as a positive review somewhere. I’ve even made some lasting friendships out of people reaching out to me!

Speaking of reviews, share the love for your favourite books. As fewer books are being reviewed in the media, personal recommendations matter more than ever. A review doesn’t have to be a carefully crafted BookTok video. It can be a few lines on your review platform of choice, or a simple photo post on your preferred social media platform. Don’t forget to tag the author to make their day and help them share your post! (But for the love of all the gods, don’t tag authors in negative reviews. That is not helpful!)

If you can’t leave a review, please consider leaving a rating. For better or worse, we live in an algorithmic world and ratings matter to a writer’s career. Every rating you leave on Goodreads, Amazon, Indigo, wherever actually does make a small difference to getting an author shown to potential readers, and it takes very little time to click on a star.

For what it’s worth, I think star ratings for books and other cultural works is madness. They’re not blenders (although my books have been called genre blenders!). I just give everything I read and like five stars because it’s all a matter of personal taste anyway. It’s the best I can do until someone comes up with a better system. Like maybe the number of times parts of a book have been highlighted and bookmarked….

Subscribe to the magazines that publish writing you like. This is a really simple one. If people don’t subscribe, then those magazines will cease to publish and there won’t be writing you like. It’s the same as buying books. Without a supportive community, there is no culture.

Most magazines can be found on Patreon these days, which makes it pretty easy to subscribe to them, and digital subscriptions are usually quite affordable. As a bonus feature, many magazines offer specialized communities to their subscribers in the form of Discord groups. So you’re getting twice the community for the price of one subscription!

Get out in person to events if you can. Go to the writers’ festivals, the reading series, the book launches, the conventions, and so on. If there aren’t in your area, then consider starting some. Join a writing group and use it for more than writing. (My writing group mostly plays games these days.) The same goes for book clubs. We’re social and physical creatures, and nothing builds community like presence. Most of my best and enduring friendships have been because of real-world events like this. 

Once again, read, read, read!

Play This: Sushi Go!

I like sushi every now and then but I only eat it three or four times a year. So I was skeptical that I would like a card game about creating sushi meals. But Sushi Go! has quickly become one of my favourite games.

The object of the game is simple: Make the best combination of sushi dishes from the cards in your hand. What’s the best combination? That’s where things get interesting.

There are many different dishes that can wind up in your hand, and players get different scores for different combos. Want to play it safe and collect maki? The player with the most maki gets 6 points, while the player with the second most gets 3 points. Everybody else gets food poisoning. Or you could be adventurous and try the sashimi — if you collect three sashimi cards you get 10 points. Anything less and you’re picking up the bill. Then there are wild cards of a sort. Wasabi triples the value of your next nigiri. Chopsticks allow you to get extra cards and so on.

The real fun part of the game is you don’t stick with the same hand all game. Each turn you select one card from your hand that effectively becomes your order. Then you lay down your card so everyone can see it and you pass your hand to the player on your left while receiving the cards of the player on your right. It’s like one of those sushi boat setups. You never know what’s coming to you, so figuring out what to collect is always a bit of a gamble. On the other hand, you can see what everyone else is trying to collect so you can try to come up with ways to make sure they don’t enjoy their meal.

The game usually proceeds quickly, lasting about around 20 minutes or so, with the winner being the player with the most points after three rounds. Almost everyone I know is always hungry for more and wants to play again.

The game art is beautiful and it comes in a lovely box as well if you get the party pack version with all the cards and a game board. I highly recommend that, as most people end up ordering it after playing the basic game anyway.

It’s a good pick for family games as well, as the rules are easy to pick up and kids generally seem to enjoy it.

Just remember to leave room for dessert! (Seriously. I keep losing games because I don’t think of dessert points.)

Link: https://gamewright.com/product/Sushi-Go

The Write Life: You can’t do it alone

Writers are probably the most antisocial people around. After all, our ideal state is to be locked alone in a room all day, trying to convince imaginary people to do what we want them to do. Most days we’d rather read about other imaginary people than leave our homes to meet real people. If you’re a writer, you’re probably nodding in agreement at this point.

There is nothing more important to writers than community, though. In fact, I think building or joining a community is where the writing starts. I never would have become a published author if not for the university writing group I joined, which for the first time introduced me to editorial feedback, other perspectives on writing, revisions and writing to deadline. That writing group became some of my closest friends, and those friendships persist today even though we are scattered across the continent. (I swear they’re not all trying to avoid me.)

The value of finding like-minded people cannot be overstated. Did I say value? More like critical need. Without such a network, you are in a void when you start out, and you will be writing into the void. A community gives you an audience, gives you affirmation that what you are doing is worthwhile and necessary, gives you a path of development.

Of course, not everyone can find a local community. And there’s something to be said for joining online communities even if you do have a writing group that meets in person. Your writing community can never be too large. Or perhaps you need more than one community to fill all your needs. I contain multitudes and all that.

I have a local community in my area that has helped a great deal with improving my writing over the last few years. Hell, I likely wouldn’t have written anything without them. I was going through a hard time in my personal life, and writing would have been the last thing on my mind if not for my community. As it turned out, that writing group was what kept me sane and motivated during some crazy times. If not for the accountability of writing to hit the group’s deadlines, collaborating in some writing sprints, etc., I don’t know what would have happened.

We’ve mostly moved the group online to a dedicated Discord server but still meet in person once a month for games nights. And I’ve joined other groups to meet the needs they can’t fulfill — a different writing group for other projects, Codex and SFWA for writing and market chats, and a few private Patreon groups linked to magazines. All those communities help keep me immersed in a culture of inspiration and creation, which is half the battle right there when it comes to writing. And most of the battle when it comes to procrastination.

So what makes for a good community?

Make sure you find or create a community that actually helps you contribute to your development. That development can be different things at different stages of your life. It could simply be having readers and deadlines for accountability to keep you writing, or it could be beta readers to help polish your book for publication, or it could be agents who can connect you with markets. It could just be a group of writers talking different theories of writing. My writing group spent time studying Save the Cat, the hero’s journey and the heroine’s journey, and various Masterclasses.

Whatever it is that you need to become a better writer, you’ll find that a writing community will better help you achieve your goals. And hopefully keep you sane in the process! Well, as sane as a writer can be….

Behind the Screens: Author interview with Night Beats

I’m over at Night Beats talking about my Cross series of books (The Mona Lisa Sacrifice, The Dead Hamlets, The Apocalypse Ark).

Link: https://nightbeatseu.ca

The Write Life: Make your desk a happy space

Some time ago I was struggling to get any writing done and didn’t know how to get past it. My publishing career wasn’t going well, I had a number of personal issues that were disrupting my focus and writing felt like work rather than the thing that brought me joy. I was basically avoiding my desk because it wasn’t a happy space. The situation was unsustainable and I knew I had to rethink what I was doing. In short, I felt like almost every other writer.

I took a break to just read for a while, as one does in such moments, as reading may be the only acceptable form of procrastination. I happened to reread Atomic Habits by James Clear, and his thoughts on the importance of well-running systems suddenly resonated with me. Clear says goals are great for creating direction but ultimately unachievable if you don’t also have a good system for making progress. Every writer I know will see the wisdom in this.

“When you fall in love with the process rather than the product, you don’t have to wait to give yourself permission to be happy,” Clear says. “You can be satisfied anytime your system is running. And a system can be successful in many different forms, not just the one you first envision.”

I realized what I was lacking was a happiness system for my writing, which meant I wasn’t really able to achieve any of my goals because I couldn’t stick to the process properly. So I set about to change that, starting with my desk. The desk in my office was where I had been doing everything — my work for my day job, paying my bills, doomscrolling, checking my email and my writing. So it was a place of constantly conflicted feelings, with endless distractions to my focus. I decided to make it purely a creative space dedicated to my writing. Archaic perhaps, like buying a record player to listen to music, but sometimes there’s value in returning to the old ways. (Although I draw the line at chicken pox parties.)

First, I moved everything not related to my writing out of my office. I now do the work for my day job in a separate room, I keep up with the news on my phone rather than my writing computer, I don’t bother paying bills anymore, and so on.

Once I had cleared my desk of work, I redecorated it with things that made me happy to look at. I’ve long been a Dungeons & Dragons enthusiast (I’m a writer, remember?), so I framed some D&D postcards and put them on my desk. Just looking at them puts me in a good mood. I added a model of a Tintin rocket because Explorers on the Moon sparked my imagination as a child and I’ve never really grown up. My coffee mug coaster is a map from Lord of the Rings. My ReLit Award ring is always handy as a pick-me-up when I’m feeling down. I’m adding little things here and there that spark joy.

Now when I sit at my desk, I’m automatically put into a happy mood by the items on it. That makes me more willing to spend time at my desk, and the more time I spend there the more writing I get done. Sure, everyone else complains I’ve become a hermit — but I’m a happy, productive hermit!

So one of my most important pieces of advice to other writers is to create a happiness system — and start with a happy desk.

The Butcher of Tariffs – The April 2025 Bibliofiles

We just had a rather significant election in Canada, so I’ve been reading a bit more about tariffs and publishing woes. But I did also manage to find time to read Robert Jackson Bennett’s second book in the Din and Ana series, which takes things to a new level of creepy yet beautiful horror — which also applies to Premee Mohamed’s Butcher of the Forest. I also read KJ Aiello’s The Monster in the Mirror, which looks at the construction of mental illness in fantasy and science fiction — timely given our Instagram Live together!

I hope you check out some of these reads and enjoy them as much as I did.

Fiction

The Butcher of the Forest by Premee Mohamed

Veris is a survivor. She’s managed to keep herself alive under the rule of the merciless Tyrant, who has taken over her land and killed many of its residents. She’s also the only one to have entered the mysterious forest known as the Elmever and come back out alive. But when the Tyrant’s children go missing in the Elmever, he turns to Veris to rescue them. It’s certain death to go into those woods a second time. But it’s also certain death to fail the Tyrant. So Veris has no choice but to venture into the Elmever once more in search of the children.

The Butcher of the Forest is an eerie story that captures the spirit of fairy tales but leaves behind all the trappings meant for children. It’s as if the Brothers Grimm met up with Alice in Wonderland in a cosmic horror story. Haunting, weird and beautiful.

Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/127281143-the-butcher-of-the-forest


A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett

The charming detective pair of Din and Ana are back to solve a new mystery in A Drop of Corruption, the second in one of the best fantasy series I’ve read in ages. Din is an engraver, a sort of enhanced human who has the ability to memorize pretty much anything. He’s the field agent for Ana, a Holmes-like detective who is as brilliant as she is eccentric. Together they are sent to Yarrowdale, a kingdom on the edge of the empire where fallen Titans are dismantled for the magical blood that helps to power the empire. An officer of the empire has disappeared into thin air and only Ana and Din can solve the mystery. But things quickly grow complicated when they realize the disappearance is related to a string of murders, and the killer is a mad genius who moves between the kingdom and the wild lands at its borders, spreading a strange sort of contagion that threatens everything.

A Drop of Corruption is a riveting followup to the first book in the series, A Tainted Cup. It’s the sleuthing mysteries of Sherlock Holmes meeting the biohorror and weirdness of Jeff Vandermeer’s Annihilation, with the political intrigue that Bennett is known for. I can’t wait to read the next book!

Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/213618143-a-drop-of-corruption


Idle, Inc. by Benjamin Parzybok

A customer support representative at a tech startup that sells free time to people discovers exactly where that time comes from and at what cost. Another delightfully bizarre story from Bourbon Penn.

Link: https://www.bourbonpenn.com/issue/35/idle-inc-by-benjamin-parzybok


Labbatu Takes Command of the Flagship Heaven Dwells Within by Arkday Martine

Sci-fi space pirate smut!

Link: https://www.sundaymorningtransport.com/p/labbatu-takes-command-of-the-flagship


Non-fiction

Values by Mark Carney

Wherever you stand on Canadian politics, it’s probably worth reading Value(s) by Canadian prime minister Mark Carney, who was also a former governor of the Bank of England and the Bank of Canada. It’s an informative history of how we have determined value and shaped financial systems over the ages, with a disquieting move from market economies to market societies. Carney suggests we need to realign our values so they’re not just about financial worth and profitability. It’s hard to argue against that in the age of Trump and tariffs.

Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/54503528-value-s


The Monster and the Mirror by KJ Aiello

Part memoir, part analysis of mental illness in the fantasy genre, The Monster and the Mirror is a unique and powerful book that defies categorization. It’s also a necessary call for us to reimagine how we approach mental illness, from the health care system to the media in all its forms. A timely and important read.

Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/211765623-the-monster-and-the-mirror


Bookish and World Woes by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Silvia Moreno-Garcia reflects on the Canada-U.S. tensions and how things will likely be dire this coming year and beyond for writers, publishers and bookstores. This really is a time for everyone to support their communities.

Link: https://www.patreon.com/posts/bookish-and-woes-124982811


The Science of Romance: Young, in Love, and Enthralled by Biochem by Kristi Charish

Kristi Charish writes about living beside wetlands, which means every spring she witnesses a practical orgy among wildlife and teenagers. It’s sexy material for another column about the science of writing and how to use real-world science to flesh out your tales.

Link: https://www.kristicharish.com/news/2025/3/17/the-science-of-romance-young-in-love-enthralled-by-biochem


Could Tariffs Collapse Canadian Publishing? by Wolsak and Wynn

Most of the books sold in Canada come from the U.S. The multinationals that dominate Canadian publishing spend fortunes on marketing campaigns that independent Canadian publishers cannot compete with, which tilts demand toward U.S. books. So what’s to be done? Support those indie presses that are genuinely Canadian.

Link: https://www.wolsakandwynn.ca/blog/2025/03/27/could-tariffs-collapse-canadian-publishing


The America I Loved Is Gone by Stephen Marche

“Canada is a country that disillusions you. America is one illusion after another, some magnificent, others treacherous or vicious.”

Link: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2025/apr/20/american-dream-trump-canada

The angel gunslinger will Azrael will ride again!

I’m absolutely delighted to announce I’ve written a new tale of Azrael the angel gunslinger — and Beneath Ceaseless Skies will be publishing it! More details to come. In the meantime, here are the previously published Azrael stories:

Instagram Live with KJ Aiello

Update: You can view the Instagram Live I did with KJ Aiello here: https://www.instagram.com/p/DIzv5M7AotB/

I’m looking forward to doing an Instagram Live with KJ Aiello April 23 (7:30 ET / 4:30 PT). Aiello is the author of The Monster and the Mirror and a lively Instagram influencer, so this should be fun! Follow along on her Instagram channel.