The Tale That Twines Official Release!

THE DAY IS HERE! Book two in the Eternal Library Series, The Tale That Twines, is finally available to the public in both paperback and ebook! Yaaaaay!

Paperback version of The Tale That Twines, book two.

The matching cover version of The Thread That Binds, book one, is also now available! I also still have a lot of copies of the limited Tabby-cover book for less if you’re on a budget.

Paperback copy of The Thread That Binds, book one.

If you missed the Kickstarter or pre-order period, you can now get The Tale That Twines directly from Numinous Spirit Press or various other places. Book one, The Thread That Binds, and the Threadbound Oracle, which ties in to the same universe, are also available in the same places as always (links are all in the buttons below).

(P.S. if you DID back the Kickstarter and never got a tracking email or are having any issues with your rewards, PLEASE CHECK THE MOST RECENT UPDATE BLOGS HERE and then follow the instructions based on your situation!)

If you’re not super familiar with the Eternal Library, it’s a cozy adult fantasy series about an intergenerational found family of queer magic bookbinders! Both books released so far center around the main characters’ journeys through an apprenticeship in Illumination—an ancient art of hand-crafted magical books that never die with age. If you are an artist, craftsperson, or someone who enjoys the arts, you’ll probably love the detailed and loving focus on the process of hand bookbinding, drawing, lettering, printing, papermaking, natural pigments, thread spinning, paintmaking, and more.

The thing about Illumination is that it isn’t just a physical craft. It requires spiritual growth and healing from the Illuminator if they want to succeed. In The Thread That Binds, Tabby and Amane deal with past family trauma and perfectionism through dreamwalking and cartomancy, while in The Tale That Twines, June struggles to recover from past traumatic memory loss through etheric cord reading. Every apprentice, despite being adults themselves (in their mid 20s to early 30s), has an older, wiser mentor figure (usually age 60+) there to guide them through the process, an aspect which is always a strong focus of the book.

The Eternal Library Series takes place in a secondary fantasy world similar to ours, but with IRL witchcraft-like magic that’s been turned up a few notches. They have magic technology (cell phones! computers! multispectral imaging!!) that may feel comfortingly familiar while still offering an escape from real life. Book one takes place in the equivalent of 2018 while Book two, a prequel, goes back to the equivalent of 1978 and all that entails for tech. Culture and history in the books tend to break away from that of real life into its own thing (this is not an alt-Earth!!), but still takes a little bit of inspiration.

Caspora, the Pacific Northwest-like country the books take place in, is a queernorm society without a cultural concept of gender, though gender does exist elsewhere in the globe! Rather than be one strict version of “androgynous,” Casporans are simply free to dress, look, act, and express themselves as they see fit without an assigned gender role. So you’ll see plenty of things we’d consider “gendered,” like characters wearing dresses or make-up, characters who have facial hair or breasts or other “obvious” secondary sexual characteristics, without that indicating anything other than their personal aesthetic preference or natural body type. Most of the characters in the Eternal Library series use e/em/eir(s) pronouns and, though they wouldn’t use the word for themselves, are effectively what we’d call agender and nonbinary.

(Obviously this situation is not every person’s dream, not even every nonbinary person’s! It’s just my personal fantasy that I hope other people enjoy. There are still characters with binary and trans identities in the book!)

Caspora also recognizes asexual and aromantic spectrum identities, and indeed, many of the main characters fall under those labels! Book one has aroace narrator Rhiannon and gray-ace narrator Tabby, who are in a long term queerplatonic relationship at the start of the story, as well as several secondary characters (AKA the mentors who are the MCs in the prequel haha). Book two has single narrator June, who is demisexual and demiromantic, as well as gray-romantic love interest Aeronwy and aromantic best friend Siobhan. Both books feature polyamorous relationships, another thing that’s normal in Caspora.

Caspora, not having gender, doesn’t really have words for gender-based sexual orientations, but other places in the world do, hence characters like Amane identifying as pansexual. Basically, everyone is queer in some way or another.

The first book, The Thread That Binds, doesn’t outright state that any of the characters are neurodivergent, but they definitely are. I didn’t discover that I myself am autistic and ADHD (combined acroynm = auDHD) until after publishing book one, so those experiences and traits were sprinkled in among the characters without recognizing what I was doing! I made up for this in book two by outright confirming that June (the sole narrator) is auDHD, while love interest Aeronwy is autistic. Both of them are also mentor figures in book one, and I’m going to confirm on the page later in the series that Rhiannon is also on the autism spectrum. Just throwing that out there now, haha. Tabby also clearly has cPTSD even if it isn’t mentioned by name, which also falls under the broad neurodivergent umbrella by many people’s reckoning.

There are multiple characters with physical disabilities, chronic illness, d/Deaf characters, and generally an air of inclusiveness by society for those things! Why make it a queer fantasy utopia and leave in all the ableism???

Before you read all this thinking it’s nothing but warm fuzzies, I will go back to the fact that the main plots of both books center around trauma healing. There is a list of trigger warnings in the front of both books and on the pages of my website if you want to check them out (links are at the bottom of this blog).

That said, I have been told that even those difficult parts of the book can be like a warm hug, because it’s clear that it’s going to be all right in the end, because people feel seen, and because there’s a strong element of encouragement and acknowledgement and care. I do my best not to cover up the dark reality of these things, which are based on my own experiences, while also maintaining a ray of hope. I’ve had therapists say they recommend my books to clients and others say they were partly inspired to write/research about the power of stories and art in healing! The best compliments EVER!

Then, of course, there is the Threadbound Oracle. I devised the Threadbound Oracle’s structure/system for the Eternal Library Series, though back then it was going to be a huge graphic novel series instead of in written prose. I wanted one of the main characters to be a Tarot reader, but since it’s a secondary fantasy world, I didn’t just want to throw Tarot in there with no explanation. I based the Threadbound Oracle somewhat off of traditional Tarot and also off of the characters and story themselves (though some of that changed over time as I completed the deck ages before I completed the first novel, lol) so that it could both exist in-universe and in real life.

The Threadbound Oracle in real life.

In The Thread That Binds, the Threadbound Oracle is a magic bookbinding/Illumination-themed deck that Amane specializes in and uses throughout her journey as a main character in that book. In real life, the real Threadbound Oracle illustrations feature the characters and places of the books! Very meta, I know. You definitely don’t have to read the books to use the Oracle, but it will help deepen your understanding of it.

These books, characters, and cards all come from deep in my heart, and it’s such a privilege to be able to share them with you all! I’m so pleased by the reaction and reception that the deck and book one have gotten since they were released in fall 2020, and now here in fall 2023, I hope you enjoy the next installment in the story. Your words of encouragement keep me going when times are rough in the creative process, or when I’m deep in self doubt.

This month I’ll be starting work on book three, The Flame That Sings, the second prequel which will be narrated by young Aeronwy. Aeronwy is my favorite character (and many other people’s from what I gather, hehe), so I’m SUPER STOKED for this one! It’s going to be EVEN LONGER than the first two books! Oops!! It’ll be at least two years before publication, but I’m planning to share updates along the way with y’all one way or another.

My current favorite drawing of young Aeronwy (left) and June (right).

If you read this far, thank you SO MUCH, and I hope that if you’re not already invested in the Eternal Library, that this has gotten you more interested! You can also read the back-of-the-book blurbs, the entirety of Chapter One from both books, and find links to where to get them here:

If you’ve already got the books and/or decks and want to support them more, TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT THEM! Tell your followers on social media! Post reviews! Word of mouth is still the absolute best advertising even in today’s algorithmic hellscape.

Much love and peace to you all!

<3 Cedar

Raw Inspiration Particles: What if I have too many writing ideas??

Hi friends, it’s been a while since I posted a blog! This one’s more than just a project update—it’s some organized thoughts about a topic that has been on my mind a lot lately: what do you do when you have more writing ideas than you have time to spend on them? I’ll share some tips and tricks that I’ve found helpful in the 20+ years I’ve been a writer and some examples from my own struggles and experience!

(also, just a reminder, that the Pride Month S-A-L-E ends at midnight tomorrow, Friday June 30th!! if you were planning on grabbing a deck or book.)

So, grab a cup of tea, coffee, bubbly water, or other fun drink of your choice, and join me to chat a little about what to do when you feel like you’ve been hit by a Texas-sized meteor of writing ideas, and there’s no Bruce Willis around to save you.

WHERE DO IDEAS COME FROM?

The question, “Where do you get your ideas?” is often derided in writer circles, and most books about writing I’ve read by popular authors do not have a good answer for it, at least not one that would satisfy the sort of person or interviewer who asks it.

The truth about ideas for writing and where they come from is different for everyone, but for me, they tend to come from asking “What if?” questions about something interesting I’ve seen in real life. That may seem weird for someone who writes exclusively fantasy books, but the fantasy part is where the “What if?” comes in. What if books, but magic? What regular college kid, but also a parallel world of faeries? What if you could make a pact with a god to breathe fire? Basically, What if things were different somehow?

From there it’s a matter of extrapolation. If this, then that. And as you may well have experienced, the branching path of possible story beats and directions can seem rather endless. A fractal tree of choose-your-own-adventure cause and effect that eventually leads to a completed novel.

There’s also this explanation from the late and much beloved Sir Terry Pratchett in his book, Wyrd Sisters. I read this book when I was a teen back in the 2000s, and felt immediately seen by this bit:

Particles of raw inspiration sleet through the universe all the time. Every once in a while one of them hits a receptive mind, which then invents DNA or the flute sonata form or a way of making light bulbs wear out in half the time. But most of them miss. Most people go through their lives without being hit by even one.

Some people are even more unfortunate. They get them all

At the time, I was like, “Oh, me, me, me, that’s me!!!!” and while that feeling has gone up and down over the years, it feels extremely relatable in this moment right now, halfway through the year of our lord 2023, I can’t believe it’s 2023, but whatever, time isn’t real the way we think it’s real, it’s fine.

HELP I HAVE TOO MANY IDEAS

But time is unfortunately real enough for us as mortal, linear beings that we consider it a finite resource. What I’m saying is, that I currently have far more ideas for novels, novellas, books, stories, comics, games, decks, whatever, than I can currently work on simultaneously, given the number of hours and amount of energy I have in the day.

I could just save some for later, right? Go through them one or two at a time until they’re all completed, yes? I wish. The thing is, that I will keep getting new ideas. The pile never shrinks, it only grows. Much like the unread section of my bookshelf and kindle, I accumulate stories far faster than I am able to finish them.

I finished writing my first novel at fifteen, and since then I’ve written ten novels which I consider “finished,” though very few have gone on to end up published, along with a small handful of unpublished novellas and probably a dozen short stories. I have…probably two to three times more drafts which I consider “unfinished.” This does not count all the ideas that I have, say, drawn character sketches for or that I have a mental premise of but have not started writing outlines or chapters for—or never did, in the case of past ideas, but you get the picture.

Above, an example of my current folder of “Unfinished Book Ideas,” lol.

It’s always been like this. I have journal entries from my teen years complaining about this exact problem, and I had more energy and leisure time then than I do now as a decrepit 32 year old. (I jest. Thirty-two is not actually decrepit, it’s quite young in the long term scheme, haha.)

HOWEVER! I can say that over the years, I have developed some strategies for dealing with this admittedly first world problem a little better. I shall now share them with you in the hopes that it may help you with turning your own ideas into reality! And with coming to terms with the fact that no, we will never have enough time for it all… and that’s okay.

As always, this is just what works for me. What works for you may be the complete opposite approach, and that’s what’s so awesome about creativity! There’s no one way to approach it. But in case it does help:

TIPS AND TRICKS FOR YOUR OVERGROWN IDEA GARDEN

  1. Don’t limit yourself (initially).

It may seem counterintuitive, but the way to deal with having too many ideas is not to build a dam to stop the river from flowing. It’s probably not going to stop. It’s just going to overflow or explode one day and take out whatever neat and tidy routine you’ve built up beneath it. If you’re me, you end up feeling super overwhelmed and unable to do ANY writing at all under the force of it.

I mean, sometimes the flow does stop. Sometimes you feel like you don’t have ANY good ideas and the source of the river has all dried up, but that’s a different video than this one.

Something I catch myself doing is judging my ideas way too early on in the process. Baby ideas can come in many different shapes and sizes, and when you have a lot of them, it can be tempting to put them in an arena together to see “which one is better,” aka, “which one I should actually spend my time on.”

But baby ideas are rarely if ever fully formed. You usually can’t immediately tell which one, with time and loving care, is going to turn out “the best” or “the most interesting.” Telling myself “well, that idea isn’t good enough, so I won’t even consider it, because my time and energy is limited” is probably more to my detriment than my benefit at this particular stage.

Let the ideas come as they are, in whatever quantity they come. Make lists. Keep them around, even if it’s just a few words of a premise or a title or the name of the main character. You don’t have to decide right away which ones you want to work on and which ones to set aside. You might get to use them later, perhaps even during one of those dry spells. Let the river flow naturally.

You see these? I was so so excited when I first came up with them. I have done. NOTHING. With them. Mostly nothing, anyway. But it was still fun to come up with them, and sometimes… they lead into ideas that are actually going somewhere by reusing bits and pieces. More on that later in the list.

2. Prioritize based on interest level, then stay disciplined.

Okay, so, you have your ideas, but you only have so much time, and you DO want to work on something. You DO want to finish something. How do you decide which idea to work on?

For me, that decision is based on a levels of interest and excitement. The idea that I’m most excited about is usually the idea I am most likely to spend my time writing, and more likely to follow through to the end. Excitement and interest levels can wane, but we’ll get into what to do about that in the next one.

What I will do once in a while when I’m feeling pulled in a lot of different writing directions is to make a list and rank my current choices from most interested/excited about to least. I can tell I’m interested in an idea when I feel naturally drawn to thinking about it and excited and impatient to write it. Once I hone in on which idea is currently making me feel that way the most, I know it’s going to be my priority.

Some people can work on multiple projects at a time. I usually have multiple writing projects in progress, but there is always one which is my top priority that I spend the most time and energy on, often leaving the other WIPs untouched for months at a time.

This is because at this point, during the actual writing process, I try to stay somewhat disciplined with my choice of project. Sometimes I will run off and work on other things, but for the most part, when presented with a choice, I will stick with the Top Priority project until it reaches the end of a particular stage—a full first draft, for instance, after which I will take a break.

For example, I finished the final draft of the second book in the Eternal Library series, The Tale That Twines, this spring and then had a kickstarter for it. I didn’t really work on any other ideas while I was working on that. But now, this summer, I’m working on The Perennial Empire, a humorous fantasy novella series. I’ll draft a few of those, and then after the Kickstarter is fulfilled at the end of the season, I plan to do the first draft of book three in the Eternal Library and not come back to the Empire novellas until after that is done.

3. Allow yourself to play around sometimes.

Despite having priorities and despite staying overall disciplined in my choices there, I do let myself have some room to play around. As an autistic person, I often struggle with demand avoidance. If something starts feeling like too much of a demand or obligation, even if it’s something I WANT to do, I will be unable to do it. I will become resentful and angry and stressed all to hell.

So I have to let myself go run and play sometimes. Take a little bit of a break to fiddle around with some other project that’s just below the top one on my list, even if that just means brainstorming scenes while I go for a walk or drawing the characters, but sometimes I might even write a little bit of another idea.

Even if you don’t have demand avoidance issues, this can potentially help let off steam and stress when it comes to staying dedicated to your top priority writing project. Other people may find they are TOO distractable and running off to play on other playgrounds might derail them enough that they end up getting nothing done for any project. It’s a balance that’s unique to all of us.

For example, right now my priority project is a novella series called The Perennial Empire. I just finished the first novella, Party of Fools, and really should be onto the second… but I had just finished a draft and I felt intimidated by starting another one so soon. I got a new idea about a cozy curse shop and a gnome and a very fabulous witch and a ghost grandpa and—I let myself write a few thousand words. I also made a book cover, even though I don’t even know if or when I’ll have time to finish writing it.

Taking a bit of a break to fiddle with THAT idea gave me time to readjust and be ready to come back to start the second Empire novella, which is called The Well Seasoned Hero, because it’s about food. Well, it’s about classism and the bullshit hero’s journey and tyrants and magic but—it’s also about food. You’ll see it out next year, hopefully.

An unedited excerpt from Party of Fools:

This was also when the Stranger entered the building. As a seedy bar, Ale’s Well was used to strangers. They had what you might call a diverse clientèle, the sort who didn’t ask questions and never gave up easy answers when it came to who or what they were and which line of work they were in, exactly. It was fluid that way, a liminal space in which a person might become anyone or anything at all, no matter who they were on paper.

Unfortunately, liminality fit this Stranger like a lumpy corset two sizes too small. You could see the way their strongly defined character squeezed out in all the wrong places, from the set of their broad shoulders to the way their cloak swirled lyrically around their feet, which were clad in boots that were visibly too expensive for this district despite the fact that they’d had quite a bit of mud scraped from them before entering.

Reed and Gladys appeared not to notice the Stranger. There’s a trope in stories like these where the hero walks into the seedy tavern and everyone stops to look at them, silence falling like an anvil. That may happen sometimes, somewhere, but not today and not here. Reed repeated the throaty chorus of Gladys’s ballad, eyes squeezed shut, face tipped toward the sky, and Gladys’s eyes remained fixed on him, her foot tapping ever so slightly.

4. Combine or cannibalize unfinished works/ideas into others.

This is probably my TOP writing tip for when you have too many ideas: combine them. Cannibalize chunks of one unfinished idea or story into another that’s further along or that you have more energy and interest in. This way you get the good big dopamine rush of playing with ALL the ideas, but you’re still working on just one actual project that you’re more likely to finish!

I also find that this can take a single idea or story to the next level. If your various ideas are particularly different from one another, it can add originality and tension and depth, which for me also usually increases my interest and dedication to working on that project.

For example, a couple years ago, I read a scifi story with an alien/human romance that I really didn’t like. I thought, I could do better! And came up with an idea about bee aliens for such a story of my own out of complete spite, even though I’ve never been particularly drawn to writing scifi or aliens. Unsurprisingly, that put it fairly low on my priority list.

Then while I was writing The Tale That Twines, the second book in my Eternal Library series, I found I needed a scifi book and TV series for the main characters to be obsessed with. So guess what? I took my bee alien idea—the beeliens if you will—and I turned that into the story-within-the-story that I needed.

I’ll probably never write the beelien idea on its own, but it still exists and I still got to play around with it. It also brought a whole new dimension to The Tale That Twines, which wasn’t originally focused on old scifi fandom, an aspect which now heavily informs the plot and brought an unexpected richness to the worldbuilding.

5. Don’t be precious; there will always be more.

Sometimes it can be hard to prioritize our writing ideas and figure out what we want to work on first and what we want to work on later or even let go of because ALL of it sounds good! We may not want to risk losing interest in an idea that we don’t immediately have time for because it just seems SO GOOD with SO MUCH POTENTIAL. It may seem like if you DON’T work on this particular idea RIGHT NOW, that something will be wasted, or you’ll miss your chance, because THIS is the BEST IDEA you’ve ever had and nothing else will ever be like it again!

The truth is, though, that we will always have more ideas. We may have dry spells, especially if we have other super stressful things going on in life. It may take a while to build an idea or world or story up to the point where it feels alive and beautiful and satisfying, but there will always be more ideas eventually, and there’s always potential for them to be THE NEXT BEST THING.

One of my painting professors at college used to tell us not to be “too precious” with our art to the point that we like an idea or an element of a painting we did so much that we’re afraid to take more risks or make changes because it might “get ruined.” Risks and changes are necessary in any creative medium, and that definitely includes writing. It’s okay to let some ideas wait around or to let them go entirely. There will always eventually be more.

In my own writing life, I faced this when I switched from writing in one particular universe to another. As a teen and in my early 20s, I wrote five books, assorted short fiction, and wrote/drew a 350 page webcomic all in the same universe, series title “Life in Glory.” I even have a tattoo for it on my ding dang arm. It was my first one. It’s not good. But I don’t regret it.

Some art from 2010 of the main characters from Radiant, the first book in the Life in Glory series, which was about saving a parallel dimension where everything ever created by the arts IRL comes alive.

I’d spent over 10 years writing in this universe, but the only bit of it that had been published for people to read was the webcomic and two short stories. I kept writing and rewriting and rewriting and rewriting the books but was never really satisfied with them enough to publish, because the ideas had all been cooked up when I was like 17 and I was growing out of it.

Also there were a lot of problematic elements deep in the plot and characterization that I had become more aware of over the years as I learned better, and it was really hard to revise them—they were part of the foundation. There wasn’t really any revising them. It was a base structural problem and to change those things would be to basically restart the series from scratch with all new concepts.

Eventually I realized that I needed to move on, but after worldbuilding in this one place with a huge cast of characters I loved, I was really intimidated! None of my new ideas could stand up to something that had existed and been built on for 10+ years and hundreds of comic pages and well over 500,000 words, not counting separate drafts of things.

I had to trust that if I stepped away from this world and this idea, that eventually the next thing I worked on would feel just as amazing and exciting and deep. And guess what? It did! The thing I ended up moving onto was the Eternal Library series, and now I love THIS world and THESE characters just as much if not more than the Life in Glory ones. And I’ve actually published it and feel good about that.

6. Let it become compost. Compost is good!

When we spend time developing or writing ideas that we don’t ultimately finish, that time is not wasted. Those ideas are not trash. They’re compost! And compost is good! Every word you put down helps you grow as a writer. The nature of life and death is that some things do have to die in order to sustain life. Energy is never lost, only transferred from one place to another.

So if you end up spending time on stories that “never go anywhere,” that’s okay. It’s just part of the process, and the sooner we accept that, the easier it will be to focus on finishing and sharing other stories with the world. Those dead stories, even if you don’t cannibalize or combine them, end up fertilizing the story fruit you do grow.

CONCLUSION

To reiterate everything we just went through, when dealing with “too many ideas/too much inspiration,” I find it helpful to: not limit myself from having ideas in the first place; prioritize based on interest level and then stay disciplined; allow myself to play around; combine or cannibalize unfinished works/ideas into others; not be too precious about ideas, as there will always be more; and let some things die and become compost that will ultimately enrich my writing life overall.

Do you have any tips or methods for dealing with an overload of ideas that I didn’t mention, or more to add to any one of those points? I’d love to hear your thoughts down in the comments, as well as any questions you might have about my writing process or writing in general! If I have a lot of thoughts in response, I might even include it in my next blog and/or video, when I start making those again :).

Thank you all so much for all your love and support!! <3




The Tale That Twines Chapter One Preview and Kickstarter Update

Hi everyone! Hope you are all doing well! I have been hard at work getting everything ready to release The Tale That Twines, book 2 in the Eternal Library series. The book itself is now in the final proofreading stages, and the Kickstarter to fund the paperback and hardcover print runs is nearly ready to launch. Yay!!

As a way to get everyone excited, I’m sharing Chapter One of the book. You can read the entire chapter here in text, or you can listen to it on the YouTube video, in which I narrate the chapter over top of the painting process for the back cover. I’ve employed some new editing techniques for this one, using different speeds and angles to make it more interesting than a straightforward timelapse.

Right now, the tentative launch date for the Kickstarter is April 20! Hopefully I will not have to change that. The campaign will have ebooks, paperbacks, and special edition hardcovers* available for Book 1 and Book 2, along with copies of the Threadbound Oracle. It will ship worldwide. Pricing will be available when the campaign launches, and yes, everything (except maybe the hardcovers) will be available for purchase after the campaign, as well.

*Yes, one day there will be audiobooks, but not for a long time! It will take a while to create, and I need to do Book 1 first.

You can watch/listen here or keep reading for Chapter One in text format:

More updates to come, so stay tuned!

There are no content warnings. Chapter One is approximately 4,000 words long, or a 15 minute read.

Note: The written version below is slightly different from the audio, as I did more editing after recording.


THE TALE THAT TWINES

PART ONE: LOST
Casporan Year 3978
(40 years before The Thread That Binds)


CHAPTER ONE

Cloud Moon 4, 3978

Dear Hazel,

Today I put on my best clothes, did my hair, checked all my lists five times, left twenty minutes early, caught the train, arrived at the Library for my Charter Oath and Binding ceremony—and discovered I was there on the wrong day.

Today isn’t the Vernal Equinox. Tomorrow is. You’d think the difference in the train would have tipped me off; if today was actually the Equinox, it would have been on the holiday schedule. The Library was also full of patrons, which should have been my second warning, since it’s closed to the public on holy days.

I didn’t notice until I showed up at the Head Librarian’s office and Opal stared at me in surprise. E had a good sense of humor about it, thankfully. I’ve been chastised before for my inability to manage time. I wonder what e would have said if I showed up a day late rather than the day early. The ceremony can only be done on one of the two equinoxes. Imagine having to wait another half a year to start my job!

The thing is, I even used the planner that Theo bought me before I left Fenia. Unfortunately, a day planner is only useful if you write your appointments on the right date. Maybe I should give up on planners. They never seem to work for me. You used to say that planning your life down to the hour and minute was an oppressive tool of capitalist governments, that doing so ignores our natural sense of flow. Now that I’m an adult who understands what that means, I agree.

Planner or no planner, I’m still getting used to the nine-hour time difference between Caspora City and Merle. I often want to sleep during the day and stay up all night. Hopefully tomorrow won’t be like that—tomorrow I’ll actually be at the Library for my Binding ceremony!

(journal entry to be continued)

The Eternal Library looks exactly the way I remember it. A trio of white limestone buildings rises to greet me as I emerge from the underground train station: one in the shape of a snail shell, one a whelk, and one an abalone. Before them stretches a grassy quad speckled with apple and cherry trees, the morning air bright with their scent. This time, I’m here precisely when I’m supposed to be.

I approach the central building, the one shaped like a whelk shell. They call it the Spire, and its enormous carved wooden doors are shut tight. I pull experimentally on the huge iron handles, but they don’t budge. I pull again, then try pushing for good measure. It’s no use; they’re locked.

I wrack my brain for what Opal must have said about where and how to meet em, but all I’ve got is that we agreed to see each other at Opal’s office, which is inside the Spire. Nothing about how to get inside when the Library is closed to the public. Was someone supposed to give me a key? Was I supposed to call first? If I bang on the doors, will someone hear?

Just as I raise my fist, I hear footsteps behind me. I startle and whirl around to see who it is, shoving my hands behind my back as if they’ve caught me attempting a break-in.

“Hello, June,” Catrina Rosefall says. “In need of some help?”

Catrina Rosefall—or Rose, as e prefers— is an Illuminator in eir forties, tiny in stature but with an enormous spirit presence. Even with my wards on, there’s a twinkling of sequins and a laugh like a chime that hangs around em in my psychic Hearing. An indigenous Casporan, e has warm brown skin, a huge pile of curly black hair, and laser-green eyes that cut right to your soul.

“If it’s not too much trouble,” I reply with a smile, “help would be great right about now, yeah.”

Rose laughs and pulls an old-fashioned key ring from beneath a voluminous caftan. The heavy plastic bangles on eir arms clatter as e unlocks one of the doors and heaves it open a crack. With a flash of brightly colored fabric, e flits through the opening like a hummingbird. I follow with decidedly less grace, my cardigan pocket catching on the handle as I squeeze through.

“We’ll get you your own key soon,” Rose says, voice echoing in the empty expanse of the Spire. “Security doesn’t like to give up the ones to the old buildings without your signature on a hundred liability waivers.”

“Well, there are hundreds of priceless treasures in here, so I can understand that,” I say.

Here in the Spire is where the Illuminated manuscripts rest. Books that are hand-made, hand-written, hand-drawn. Each one a priceless and irreplaceable work of art which, thanks to their magic, will never fade or crumble. The sacred craft was invented nearly a thousand years ago by the Founders of the Library itself. The secret to creating these living, magical tomes has been passed down from mentor to apprentice for centuries ever since.

Today is my initiation into the craft. Anxiety and excitement swirl inside my chest like stinging bees and soft-winged butterflies.

The lobby of the Spire really does look like the inside of a shell. In the center of the building rises a column, around which lie nine floors of open air. The floors rise in a gentle spiral around the central column, occasionally connected by an arched walkway. I crane my neck back, gazing all the way past the ninth floor to a ring of round skylights, the beams of which fade before they hit the ground. The air smells like paper and leather and magic.

I can Hear some of the books whispering to one another through the bars on their cases, but the others are quiet, possibly asleep. All books have souls, but Illuminated books are stronger, louder, more self-aware. This morning in preparation for being around so many of them, I applied extra magic wards to protect me from sensory overload. It’s difficult enough to deal with the noise of the physical world without the spirit world layered on top.

“Thousands,” says Rose.

“What?” I say, startled out of my thoughts. I forgot we were having a conversation.

“There are thousands of priceless treasures in the Spire, not hundreds,” Rose says, tossing me a knowing look, “but they give us the keys because we need to be able to come and go. Being an Illuminator requires odd work hours at times.”

“So I’ve heard!” I say. “That’s one of the reasons I thought I’d be a good match for the job. I don’t exactly run on standard time, myself.”

“Good,” Rose says. “You’ll fit right in.”

The doors to the Head Librarian’s office are towering edifices of carved wood, just like the ones outside. Inscribed on them is the Library’s seven-pointed star seal, along with impressively detailed images of bookbinding tools. The old redwood still smells good when I press my nose to it to catch more of the scent lingering in the air.

Rose glances sideways at me in amusement before knocking.

Opaline Sweetfrond, Master Illuminator and current Head Librarian of the Eternal Library, opens the door at the first knock. Opal is in eir mid-seventies and aging gracefully, body still strong and spine straight. Eir lined brown face is framed by a graying shag cut and large, equally gray beard, both of which are neatly combed and trimmed. E looks smart in a matching tweed vest and trousers.

“I’m ready, don’t worry,” e says to Rose, and upon seeing me, smiles brightly. “Good morning, June! Sorry if I kept you waiting. Let’s all move down to the main Ritual Hall, shall we?”

I’ve never been in the Grand Ritual Hall before. On our way there, we pass the ornate reading rooms the Library is famous for, their ceilings frescoed with Casporan mythology and their walls galleried with famous works of art. Everything is gilded and polished to a shine.

An antique mirror on one wall reflects my face back at me: youthful, square, freckled, and visibly enthusiastic. I’m glad I took the extra time this morning to curl my hair and iron my clothes. I don’t care too much about appearances, but when I look back on my memories of today, I want everything to be perfect. Everything brilliant, everything in harmony like the opening hook of your favorite song.

In contrast to the surrounding opulence, the Grand Ritual Hall is made entirely from smooth gray slate and devoid of decoration. The seamless stone floor is no human construction but a natural feature of the land. Around it has been built a high, semicircular room with rows of lecture-style seating ringed around a central stage. The stage is etched with magical geometry and sacred circles, their edges worn by centuries of use.

Psychically speaking, the room is silent. I don’t think I’ve ever been in a place without at least some spirit noise. It’s a bit creepy.

“The stone is soaking it all up,” I say, gazing around at the floor and walls.

“I assume you mean the ambient magical energy?” Opal replies. “Yes, this room is an energetic vacuum, which is perfect for controlling large magical workings. Particularly in a place like the Library, where the separation between planes is thin and things can get out of hand quickly. Our ancestors certainly knew what they were doing when they built this place. Or rather, when they tapped into the existing flow of energy nature provides.”

Not my ancestors, but certainly Opal’s and Rose’s. Both are indigenous Casporans; my parents immigrated here from Fenia, a small northeastern country half a world away. I am the first and only member of my family to be born on Casporan soil. The only connection I have to this place, to the Library, is a personal one.

Opal and Rose pull the ritual supplies from a storage closet. Opal carries a single tiny wooden box while Rose staggers under the weight of a large, overflowing crate. I hold my arms out in an offer of help, but e shakes eir head and trundles on to a small table in the middle of the stage. I guess I’ll just watch.

“The Library is built on top of a big intersection of leylines, isn’t it?” I ask, as the two of them set up for the ritual. From the crate comes a tablecloth, a goblet, small glass bottles of who-knows-what. A triplicate statue of the Founders, much like the ones in the lobby of the building next door.

“Yes. The thickest of those intersections lies just beneath our feet,” Opal says, “connecting the Library, in one way or another, to the entire world beyond. A mycelial network of naturally-occurring etheric cords whose fruiting bodies include the likes of standing stone circles, holy wells, sacred groves, crystalline caves, and many an important cultural institution.”

“If Lynn Fireforge ever dies, you could replace em as a host,” Rose says dryly, naming the verbose presenter of a popular Casporan nature program. “Remember what we said about impromptu lectures on the nature of time and space?”

“I remember agreeing to give them only where appropriate, and this feels appropriate to me,” Opal retorts.

“That kind of thing is always appropriate to me,” I say. “I love those conversations! To the point that my friends also get annoyed by how long I can ramble on about the meaning of existence or how magic works or etheric cords, those sorts of things.”

Opal beams, and Rose rolls eir eyes good-naturedly.

“Let’s get this over with, and afterward you two can talk as long as you want about mycelial networks and fruiting bodies and whatever,” Rose says, and rolls up eir sleeves.

Opal and I face each other in the center of the etched circle while Rose conducts the ritual. E cleanses the space and our bodies with a silver bell, its pure ringing tone sending shivers up my spine. My energetic wards break and fall away like shards of ice, the magic melting into the stone floor. Without them, I feel vulnerable and exposed, but it must be necessary for what we’re about to do.

First, Rose has me take the Charter Oath that every Librarian must swear in service to the Library. E produces an enormous Illuminated tome two feet across, the words inked on vellum pages in Old Casporan. I was given a pamphlet with a modern translation of the oath when I accepted my apprenticeship, but, embarrassingly, I have yet to finish reading it.

Oh well. I understand the gist of the oath: a promise to protect and value the books and patrons of the Library above all else. I have no problem swearing to that and whatever else the Founders wrote. I place my hand on the pages, responding to Rose’s ritual calls as the words rise from the page and swirl up my arm. They glow with a soft white light as they ink themselves into my skin and disappear. This is high magic, ancient and powerful and humbling to experience.

The Oath ties itself around my heart, words spun into sentences twined into etheric thread. If I were to step into the astral plane and look at my spirit body, I wonder if I’d see a new cord connecting me to … to what exactly? This book? The Library? Where exactly in the Library? A place this old and powerful must have its own heartscape, the spirit place each and every being calls home. What does that look like? Can a person go there?

“Do you need a moment before we continue?” Opal asks, breaking my curiosity-fueled thought spiral.

I shake my head. “Sorry about that. Let’s keep going.”

We resume facing one another. Rose rings the bell again to refresh the space, clears eir throat, and reads from a small, worn-looking book:

“Today we gather at the beginning. The beginning of a new relationship and a new path in the web of life. Not only between mentor and student, but between the student and the art of Illumination, which at its heart is a relationship between the student and their true self. What becomes known after this point cannot be undone. Do you wish to proceed?”

“Yes, I wish to proceed,” says Opal.

“Yes, I also wish to proceed,” I say, following eir lead.

Rose fills a crystal goblet with what looks like water, then adds a drop of something red from one of the tiny bottles. Ink? The red swirls and diffuses with a psychic sound like arpeggios on a harp. In the magical silence of the Ritual Hall, it echoes.

The goblet then goes to Opal, who takes a sip before offering it to me.

“So,” Rose continues, “the cup is passed as knowledge shall be, from one generation to another, master to apprentice, handed down through the ages from the Founding of the Library and the Founder, Eirlys Starsower emself. For all Illuminators may trace their lineage back to em, our guiding light in the darkness.”

I drink from the cup, and the sweet water makes my mouth tingle like a trip to the dentist’s office. It’s a struggle not to reflexively spit it out, which I can only assume would ruin the whole ritual.

Rose takes the cup from me as I cover my mouth and chuckles. I don’t know who e studied under, but e must have gone through this same ritual once. Did e learn from Opal, too? Or from the person whose studio I’ve inherited, their departure the open door for my own apprenticeship?

Now Rose opens the small wooden box that Opal brought out from storage. Its lid is inlaid with iridescent moonstone, the inside lined with black velvet. In the center lies a spool of crimson thread and a tiny pair of golden scissors. They remind me of my embroidery scissors, which are shaped like a stork. Instead these have a handle in the shape of a moon and sun that fit together when the blades are closed.

Opal extends eir hand to me, and I take it. Rose ties the red thread around Opal’s wrist, loops it around our clasped hands, and ties it off on my wrist, snipping the end with the tiny scissors.

Thread magic. The thread tied around my wrist is rough, maybe handspun flax, its strength and light weight impressive. I wonder who made it. With my free hand, I pinch it between my thumb and forefinger, trying to divine its origins.

Rose says something my brain doesn’t catch, and then Opal responds, “I do pledge.” Psychic information zips through the thread. A dark sky, twinkling with stars; the scent of spruce tip tea; a flash of burnished copper on an etched printing plate; the sound of a muffled radio, the voice on the airwaves reading a dramatic news story, or perhaps an old adventure serial. I can’t quite make out the words.

Opal’s spirit. That’s what I’ve just felt thrumming between us. I look up to find Opal and Rose are watching me expectantly. I drop my hold on the thread and offer an apologetic smile.

“Juniper Starstitch,” Rose says, stifling a laugh, “do you pledge yourself to the sacred role of the apprentice, to listen, to learn, to open your mind, heart, and spirit to the knowledge given to you by your teacher, in ways that challenge you to grow?”

“I do pledge,” I say.

The words are heavy on my tongue, which still tingles from the ink water. The power in them funnels up from the depths of my soul and through my mouth, every one of my past lives answering along with me. The thread hums, no doubt sending Opal a psychic paragraph of information on my spirit.

What do I feel like to Opal? E looks pleased, which is all I could ever ask for. I’m aware what an unusual opportunity this apprenticeship is. Not only to learn a craft few ever master, but to do so at the Eternal Library itself under one of the most respected and knowledgeable artists alive. I have so many hopes and dreams for what we’ll be able to accomplish together that it makes my heart ache and my hands restless.

Rose picks up the golden scissors again and with them snips the thread between us, saying, “Then it is done. So it is, so it will be.”

Though the physical thread is cut, I feel the magical bond stretch between us like intimate conversation and a cup of tea shared beside a cozy fire. Perhaps with a favorite book at hand. Rose winds down the ritual, dismissing the energy to sink back into the bedrock beneath our feet before putting the magical supplies back in their crate.

“You’ll want to keep that string around your wrist until it falls off naturally,” Rose says. “Shouldn’t be too long. That spool of thread is older than Opal—we don’t use too much of it over the years.”

“Oh, so it’s kind of like a handfasting engagement,” I say. “Interesting.”

When people want to get married in Caspora, each partner ties a woven bracelet onto the other’s wrist (or others’ plural, since in Caspora polyamory is fairly common) during the proposal. When everyone’s bracelets have fallen off, it means they’re ready for the wedding. It was one of the first products my parents, both weavers by trade, made and sold when they immigrated to Caspora. They liked to tease that my baby clothes and crib and food were paid for by the power of love.

“I noticed you examining the ritual thread,” Opal says to me. “If you’d like to learn how it was made, I can dredge up what my own mentor taught me about it, decades ago.”

“Don’t you mean centuries?” interjects Rose with a laugh.

Opal ignores em. “Someone needs to carry on the tradition, and who better than our new resident thread witch? Particularly one trained in the Fenian tradition, a culture which places even more importance on fiber magic than our own.”

Normally an invitation to talk about thread magic would trigger a massive, excited information dump from me, but in the wake of the double ritual I could take a nap right here on the floor. And I never take naps. I can’t seem to fall asleep properly at night or during the day.

An enormous yawn escapes me, creating a chain reaction in both Opal and Rose.

“Ah, these things do take it out of a person,” Opal says. “Perhaps we’ll call it a day and chat about threadcraft tomorrow.”

“Whatever the two of you do, I’m headed home now. I need to make sure Naseem and the kids don’t burn down the kitchen making Equinox dinner while extended family crashes around the house,” Rose says.

We all turn to head out. On the other side of the Grand Ritual Hall doors, the psychic chatter of the Library returns with a pop, as if I’ve taken out a pair of wax earplugs. The books are definitely awake now. Not just the Illuminated ones, but the Library as a whole.

“Is Naseem your spouse?” I ask. Rose nods. “And you have kids?”

“Yep. Two of them, both teens. They’re a handful,” Rose says with obvious affection. “You’ll meet them eventually when they come visit the Bindery. They’re very nosy and will definitely burst into your studio without knocking first.”

“Just like their Ren,” says Opal, with a sidelong glance.

Rose is in no way offended. “Yes. Just like me.”

When we reach the Spire lobby, the murmur of psychic noise rises to a stadium-level roar. In my exhausted state, the etheric soundwave puts me instantly over the edge. I wince and clap my hands over my ears, even though that doesn’t help in the slightest.

All I can hear is the noise of the Spire. All the books, all the ghosts, the spirits, an entire spiritual ecosystem. Rose and Opal both try to speak to me; I can see their mouths moving, but their words are lost in the cacophony. I want desperately to bolt from the building, but I’d rather die than leave them with the impression that I’m rude or incapable of control.

My distress must show, because Opal gently takes my arm and leads me down a new maze of hallways. All I can do is focus on making my legs move. The noise level lowers as we distance ourselves from Spire lobby, but its echoes bounce around my body, making me shiver and sweat.

“Don’t worry, we’re not the only ones working today. Holidays are deep cleaning days for the core housekeeping staff. That means they’ve got at least one energy worker in the Infirmary in the case of magical accidents,” Opal says in a soft, soothing voice. “Whoever it is will get you right as rain in no time.”


Thank you so much for reading! I hope you’re excited as I am for this new release! I will send more update emails about the Kickstarter and other availability soon, and post about it on Instagram. See you then!

Eternal Library Book 2 Cover Reveal & Release Update: The Tale That Twines

Did you know that in addition to creating tarot and oracle decks, I write cozy adult fantasy fiction, too? A lot of you probably do know! The Thread That Binds, the first book in the Eternal Library Series, was originally published alongside the Threadbound Oracle in October 2020, as the two projects are intertwined. The deck appears in the novel and the characters appear on the real life version of the cards! I’ve made many different announcements in the two years since as to the future of the series, the details of which have been … ever-changing, one might say. Now I finally have some more concrete news!

You can read about it here in this blog or listen to me talk about it while watching me paint the cover art in this video:

If you’re unfamiliar with the Eternal Library Series, it’s a cozy generational saga set in a fantasy world with modern technology and media much like our own—but also different in many ways. The story takes place in the halls of the Eternal Library, specifically the department which practices the art of Illumination: an ancient craft that combines hand bookbinding with magic and spirit work to create immortal tomes that will never crumble with age.

The series begins with The Thread That Binds, in which our three millennial-aged protagonists Tabby, Rhiannon, and Amane are all working at the Library, either as Illumination apprentices or in the twisting halls of the basement Archives. Each of them has a soul-searching journey to go on alongside their much older mentors, Aeronwy, June, and Mairead, who have a history of their own … for better or worse. It’s a lot of self-exploration and healing from trauma and dealing with friendship and relationship issues set in an extremely magical and artistic setting!

Book one cover, featuring Rhiannon, Tabby, and Amane from left to right. (yes, this is the original one and not the “new” one with just Tabby and the sunflowers. I’m retiring that one and returning to the original!)

If you want to know more about The Thread That Binds, including where to get a copy, you can click here. There’s even a clearance sale on the paperbacks!

If you’re already good on that, keep reading and we’ll move on to book two. *eyeballs emoji* I don’t think there are any spoilers for book one up ahead, but read at your own risk if you haven’t picked it up yet and are sensitive to that sort of thing. (I love spoilers so I admit that I am not terribly careful at considering what counts as one, haha.)

The Tale That Twines

All we have is now.

Forty years before THE THREAD THAT BINDS, Juniper Starstitch returns to Caspora City young and hopeful. Chosen to be Head Librarian Opaline Sweetfrond’s last apprentice, June arrives at the Eternal Library looking to discover the magical manuscript art of Illumination—and to recover the memories lost to the trauma of the massive earthquake that killed one of eir parents a decade earlier.

June quickly discovers that these memories can be recovered through the ancient art of reading etheric Threads, the spiritual ties that link the world together. But remembering can be painful, and living in the past means missing out on the present. Even to the point that June’s beloved apprenticeship is threatened by eir inability to let go.

It will take the help of friends both old and new for June to untangle the knotted threads of time, including the mysterious and stern Aeronwy Greengrove, who June may or may not be falling in love with, one song at a time.
— Back of book blurb

The Tale That Twines is the official, for sure, definite title of book two! In the past I have called it The Flame That Burns (ugh), The Flame That Sings (this will be book three, actually), and The Ink that Blooms (a lovely title but the story never actually ended up with an ink motif so … it had to go). All of these titles have been printed in the back of paperbacks and burned into ebook copies, so my apologies if it’s confusing!

I have also waffled a lot on how many books will be in the series. Two? Three? Five?? Okay, no, it’s four. I swear this time, it’s definitely four and I won’t have to walk that one back later on, ah ha ha.

The Tale That Twines is the first of two prequels, because I love writing and reading things out of chronological order. I am only being slightly sarcastic here; this is just how things have developed for this project over time, but also, I DO love a wonky timeline. One day I’ll go into the overall series development and chronology, but not in this post. Perhaps I’ll save it for the art book/world bible I want to put together one day.

Anyway, here is the publishing order and chronology as it stands, with the risk of things changing and having to contradict myself again later:

  1. The Thread That Binds - modern day

  2. The Tale That Twines - prequel set 40 years prior to The Thread That Binds

  3. The Flame That Sings - direct sequel to book two, The Tale That Twines (thus also a prequel to The Thread That Binds)

  4. The Book That Dreams - back to modern day, chronological sequel to The Thread That Binds

Publication order: 1, 2, 3, 4
Chronological order: 2, 3, 1, 4

If you’ve read The Thread That Binds, then you probably know or have correctly guessed that the two prequels are about Aeronwy, June, Mairead, and the other older characters from the first book—but 30 to 40 years younger, facing their own shadows as Illumination apprentices or other magical professions. As The Thread That Binds is set in the fantasy approximation of 2018-2019, this means that book two is set in the fantasy approximation of 1978-1981. And oh, have I had fun with that!

I hope this pleases you! It pleases me immensely! As much as I adore the original trio, Aeronwy and June are my favorite characters in the entire series. I accidentally fell in love with them while fleshing out their backstory during early development of The Thread That Binds and now I cannot get enough of them, so I made them main characters, lol.

Some young June doodles from this year for you:

Book two, The Tale That Twines, is narrated entirely by June over the course of eir own apprenticeship with previous Head Librarian Opaline Sweetfrond. Opal is a sort of Carl Sagan figure, grand and charming and the author of a foundational science fiction series about bee aliens from the ‘30s and ‘40s which was later turned into a television show—one June grew up absolutely obsessed with in the late 60s, much the way many scifi fans grew up with original series Star Trek in our universe.

There’s a lot to do with fandom in this book, from fanfic and fanart, to zines and toy collections, to conventions and cosplaying. And of course: the friends we make, the things we learn about ourselves, and how we’re inspired creatively through the media and stories we love. I was inspired by my fiancé’s interest in 60s-80s scifi media (particularly Star Trek and Japanese tokusatsu and sentai shows) as well as my own experiences lurking around the edges of various fandoms from the 2000s up through now. There are huge themes around memory and grief as well as continued themes of family—both found and bio—from the first book, all wrapped up and around the fandom stuff.

I’ve also leaned harder into the neurodivergent traits of the characters now that in addition to both of us having c-PTSD, I now know I’m autistic and my fiancé has been diagnosed with ADHD. (I also might have ADHD and he also might be autistic, the two are highly comorbid and we are Exploring These Things as people who have been masking/compensating/camouflaging their entire lives.) Looking back at The Thread That Binds, I can see those things sprinkled throughout the cast: Rhiannon’s touch aversion, Aeronwy’s muted facial expressions, June’s forgetfulness and noise cancelling headphones, several characters experiencing forms of psychic overload, my stylistic focus on detailed sensory information, and a billion other bits and pieces. It’s all there if you know what to look for!

So for book two, it’s confirmed and further explored in the text that Aeronwy and June are both autistic and that June has ADHD, though I’m still working out exactly how those things are named and referred to in the story. I’ve created this world and series to be comforting and safe for queer and trans and physically disabled people, why not ND people as well? Not to say that they don’t experience difficulties as a result of their neurotypes, but their world is much more made for them and inclusive to their differences than ours is. Which is all to say that I don’t think they’d call ADHD a disorder in Caspora (though they might in another country in their world).

I’ve wondered whether they would have the word “autism” as well, but I feel really, REALLY strongly at the moment about naming it blatantly for the audience due to my own recent experience with being late diagnosed. It’s all very complicated, so I’m trying to handle it as thoughtfully as possible. Ultimately it is just my one single perspective/take and doesn’t represent all ND people and their feelings on the topic. That’s all I can really do!

Of course, we also get to see how Aeronwy and June met and then fell in love. This is not spoilers, we know them from book one as the adorable old married couple that they are, so there’s no tension on will they. All the excitement and intrigue instead comes from how do they, which personally I have always preferred in stories. It makes me a lot less anxious to know things are Going To Turn Out All Right and have a general idea what will happen in the end, but I still feel a sense of wonder and intrigue over exactly how the story gets to All Right. You feel me? It’s the journey there that matters!

(also, yes, I have put older them on the Blueberry card for the Magic Pantry Oracle because I DO WHAT I WANT!!)

In The Thread That Binds, June mentions that e’s demisexual/demiromantic and that Aeronwy is gray-aro, so you can look forward to that influencing the way their relationship develops. If you like friends-to-lovers and glacially paced slow burn, WELCOME! There’s also more aromantic representation with Siobhan, who we see a lot more of in this book than we did in the first one, as eir friendship with June is central to the plot. Whoo!

Publication Timeline

One of the reasons it’s taken me a long time to write this book is that I have been dealing with a lot of intense autistic burnout for the past two years where I couldn’t write at all. The other is that I initially wrote a 160k word draft of “book two” in the first half of 2021 which I promptly realized needed to be split into two books, each one of them expanded further. The Tale That Twines is a rewrite of the first half of that draft, and book three, The Flame That Sings, will be a rewrite of the second half. The prequel material is just too much story for one book. It needed to become two!

A similar thing happened to my fellow writer and friend Claudie Arseneault with her Isandor/City of Spires series, where the book three draft became book three AND four, so at least I’m in good company! (also: please go read the Isandor series PLEASE!! If you like my work you will love this!! Book four, the final book, is coming out next year and it’s amazing!)

me excited about City of Exile because it’s so good alsdkfjklasdj

Currently, The Tale That Twines is like 95% finished. With the arrival of the new year and the publication of this post, I will begin line editing the current draft to clean up the language, style, and fix any small inconsistencies. This past summer and fall I rewrote SO MUCH of the first draft—already a full redraft of that first combo draft—that at this point I have to stop myself from being a perfectionist and just be happy with the story and plot where it’s at. Unless something huge pops up that I missed, but you know, fingers crossed.

Once I’ve finished the line edit, I’ll be sending it off to my editor for copyedits and then applying those on return. In the meantime I’ll finish the back cover art for the book and put together all the promotional material and such things, format the various editions, all the administrative things that need to be done before publication. I’m hoping this will take no more than 3-4 months, but like, life is what it is. What actually happens may be very different from how I’m hoping things will go.

does it surprise you that Data is my favorite Star Trek character across all the series?? Sisko is a close second, though.

Regardless, the next step is: Kickstarter time.

I know!! I know, “Cedar I thought you were having the Magic Pantry Oracle Kickstarter in spring 2023!” Well, I was, but things have been Very Slow on the oracle illustration front. I am just not feeling it the way I am FEELING getting this book done. I also don’t want the book to get further delayed because I’ve had the deck Kickstarter and gotten burnt out again. So, here we are. I am choosing to follow the true depths of my heart and focus on the book, even though it barely makes any money, especially compared to my deck work.

I am going through a lot of personal change right now. It’s bound to show up in my business, and I’m going to be open about it rather than hide it behind a façade of “competence.”

With my decks, I’ve achieved the main goal I had for pretty much all of my 20s: to make my living via art. It’s amazing and wonderful, but recently I’ve felt a little lost without a dream for the long-term future. For many, many years of my younger life, my biggest dream was being a published author making at least a partial living off of writing—until other people convinced me that dream was pretty much impossible.

Well. I’m going to prove them wrong, just like I did with making a living off of art. I’m not stopping my deck making anytime soon; I have lots of plans in that realm and still plan to publish the Magic Pantry Oracle in 2023! But I do want to take a risk once again. I want to give myself more time to write and put that writing out there in the world.

The Kickstarter for The Tale That Twines will be as simple as possible. It will be for a few thousand dollars, much less than my deck campaigns, which I will use to do a small reprint of book one (with the original cover, to match) and a first printing of book two in both paperback and hardcover. There will be ebooks available as well as a few small goodies like bookmarks, stickers, and signed bookplates. Oh! And of course you’ll be able to purchase the Threadbound Oracle along with your books if you don’t already own one.

One awkward issue involves my decision to revert the series back to the original cover design. A year ago or so, I became self-conscious of the original cover for The Thread That Binds and reprinted it with a new one that I felt was more “elegant,” “serious,” and “refined.” But deep down I still love the original cover more with its rainbow books and bookbinding tools, its illuminated manuscript like frame and all that. Also it … does a much better job telling you what the book is about. It’s just better advertising! It looks great! It is not cringey or “too young looking” and anyone who thinks it is isn’t my target audience anyway!

(No one actually said those things about it, I told it to myself because we all have our insecurities. I am trying to overcome mine.)

Because of this, I still have like 160 copies of the “new” cover, the one with the portrait of Tabby and the sunflowers. I would feel weird offering them as Kickstarter rewards with book two because they don’t match! Therefore, I am having a clearance sale on the “new” cover paperbacks in the shop from now until they run out of stock. You can also get it bundled with a copy of the Threadbound Oracle on that product page with the same discounted price applied.

If you are more concerned with budget than with the covers of the books matching, now’s the time to grab one for literally half the price I originally sold them for when I first published them. Ten dollars is a steal!!! I paid like $8.80 per book for printing with shipping and everything so I’m just trying to make my money back on what I now consider a mistaken purchase, as pretty as those covers are. Consider it a limited edition!

Note: the paperbacks on Amazon and Barnes & Noble are not on sale because I have put the original cover back up, so if you buy it there it will match book two. Whoo! You could also wait for the Kickstarter to get both books at once, but a) maybe you want time to catch up on the story before then, and b) it’s almost certainly WAY cheaper on shipping to get it from Amazon if you live outside the US.

Of course there’s also the ebook on both of those platforms, Kobo, and here in the NSP shop, which is the cheapest option. This link has links to all of them.

In any case, once the Kickstarter is fulfilled, The Tale That Twines will also be available on all major platforms! Hopefully sometime this spring! As always, I will keep you updated about actual dates and availability. I’m also planning to post a sample of the first chapter (or a few chapters) as a teaser in February, including an audio version probably read over footage of painting the back cover.

(Some folks have asked about audiobooks for The Thread That Binds, and the answer is: I’m working towards it! I have absolutely no idea when it will be available, but I’m determined that it will be one day! For the whole series, I hope!)

Thank you so, so much to everyone who has read The Thread That Binds in the last two years. Every time I get sales on any platform, for any format, it makes me smile and lights a flame of joy in my heart. The idea that people are out there not only reading but enjoying my story is the most incredible feeling in the world, and I hope that you’ll continue to enjoy the series as it continues. I have so much to share! <3

Also: thank you all so much for your responses to the last blog post! I love hearing from all of you; it’s very heartwarming and encouraging :)

Quick Links:
The Tale That Twines Cover Painting Video (w/ audio blog)
The Thread That Binds: more info & buy links
The Thread That Binds: Chapter 1 sample read
City of Spires Series by Claudie Arseneault (political fantasy w/ tons of aro & ace rep)




Introducing: The Magic Pantry Oracle (so far)

I love food. I love cooking. I love eating. If you follow me on Instagram, you may be aware that my next deck project—or current, I suppose—is a food-themed oracle called the Magic Pantry Oracle. I’ve been posting timelapse videos of the painting process, with little additional information; this post will remedy that lack, diving into what I’ve done so far and what I have planned coming up to its 2023 release!

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