Our authors are what make us different: Fresh talent, dedicated to genre-challenging excellence.

Rebel hearts.

Currently published.

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Dee J Holmes

A Canadian author, born in Vancouver BC, Dee is interested in pushing the speculative envelope. The characters—and authors—she enjoys don’t sit in some narrow, boilerplate box and do what they’re told. They’re not content with the status quo. Whether battling supernatural forces, facing fantastical terrain or finding true love among monsters, her characters are defying expectations and changing their worlds.

Dee’s written work includes romantic urban fantasy novels in her Four Houses series.

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Saranna DeWylde

Saranna De Wylde has always been fascinated by things better left in the dark. She wrote her first story after watching The Exorcist at a slumber party. Since then, she’s published horror, romance and narrative nonfiction. Like all writers, Saranna has held a variety of jobs, from operations supervisor for an airline, to an assistant for a call girl, to a corrections officer. But like Hemingway said, “Once writing has become your major vice and greatest pleasure, only death can stop it.” So she traded in her cuffs for a full-time keyboard. She loves to hear from her readers.

The author of over forty full-length titles, her fiction has been published under pseudonyms in magazines, anthologies and novel length work.

Collaborative ground-breakers.

Forthcoming Authors.

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AJ Larson

AJ Larson is the author of “Joshua Complex” found in Phantaxis Science Fiction & Fantasy Magazine. Originally from the Canadian prairies, she was raised in a home dominated by the love of fantasy and science fiction. After relocating to the west coast, she carried on with this passion in the form of writing short stories.

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Jasmine Silvera

Jasmine Silvera spent her impressionable years sneaking “kissing books” between comics and fantasy movies. She’s been mixing them up in her writing ever since.

A semi-retired yoga teacher and amateur dancer, she lives in the Pacific Northwest with her partner-in-crime and their small, opinionated human charge.

“Any novel is hopeful in that it presupposes a reader. It is, actually, a hopeful act just to write anything, really, because you’re assuming that someone will be around to [read] it.”

– Margaret Atwood, from a 2011 interview with The Atlantic