An Enigmatic Book From the Enigmatic KJ Fieler

In working with a publisher who puts out a lot of books (Shout out to Reagan and the team at Black Rose Writing) you cross trails with a lot of people. Some of them stick with you and you form a small society of cool people you like interacting with. Enter KJ Fieler. She’s interviewed me in the past and pretends to enjoy my work. Her newest book, Shadow Runner is out now. I’ll let her tell you about it.

So what’s your deal, lady?

By all accounts, I’m an adult, a suburbanite, and a writer. I agree with that last bit. As for the first two, I’ve never claimed to be either and can’t imagine how such a rumor started. Okay, maybe the fact that I do own a home is misleading. I submit to suburbia but view a house as just something to clean, and I need it to come with interchangeable backyards. Turns out, that’s entirely possible. Toward that end, Ric and I bought an Airstream, hired someone to mow the lawn, and spent six months one year, eight the next, wandering around state and national parks. I was never so gloriously happy as when there was a bison scratching his behind on our truck.

There’s a visual, to be sure. What’s the new book about and does it involve buffalo hindquarters?

In a nutshell: what happens to a person who’s forced to embrace the darkness to survive?

Shadow Runner is the tale of Ada, a young aristocrat who’s kidnapped and raised by a secret society. As she comes of age, she must target the very people she once called kin or attempt a daring escape. But if she leaves, she risks the lives of the ones most dear: her adopted sister and her enigmatic captor. Moreover, in a world of moral ambiguity, she must find her humanity. It’s a cross-genre blend of historical fantasy, steampunk, and young adult fiction.

What is it about the story that appealed to you? Where did it come from?

My favorite stories are all some version of the Heroine or Hero’s Journey. Ada’s life mirrors my own, except that her circumstances are placeholders for less glamorous—and slightly less traumatic—real-life events. I was never abducted by criminals… unless you count the time my rather seedy college roommates once told me we were going to the beach and failed to mention the part about having to scale a fence marked “no trespassing.” But I digress. Like most people, I’ve experienced my share of adversity. Among other things, I’m a breast cancer survivor, which years you’d think I would want to erase from my life. I don’t. I consider those trials a blessing. They forced me to find my mettle and stop sailing through life as if the days ahead are endless. They also caused me to stop being afraid… of anything other than air travel and palmetto bugs.

Ada is a better version of the me who feeds the cat and does the laundry. She’s brave, smart, precocious. She knows just what to say to bullies, she stands firm when monsters come her way, and she always knows her way home.

Who are the authors you read?

Oh, I’d have given vital organs to meet Douglas Adams. Hitchiker’s Guide was great, but he also wrote Last Chance to See: a magical book. He went all the places—some I’m not entirely sure he didn’t make up—and wrote about them in his wickedly comedic voice.

I’d donate a kidney to meet Neil Gaiman… in case anyone needs a kidney and is in good with him. I grew up on Asimov and Clark; spent my junior high school days learning to write in Elvish, thanks to Tolkien; found myself in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance which sparked my fascination with psychology and travel.

These days I’m a devotee of Barbara Kingsolver, Jess Kid, Wayne Turmel (EDITORS NOTE-SUCKING UP WON’T HELP), Cam Torrens, Del Blackwater, Deb Heim, Kim Conrey, Alex Hugi and… well, let’s just say I’m a big fan of digital books because they travel well.

And they’re cheap! Don’t forget that. Where can we learn more about you?

https://www.kjfieler.com

https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/29624050-kjfieler

https://www.bookbub.com/profile/k-j-fieler

https://www.facebook.com/kat.fieler

If you hate starting series that aren’t complete, consider starting the Johnny Lycan: Werewolf PI series. The grand finale, Johnny Lycan & the Last Witchfinder is available now on Amazon and from Black Rose Writing.

“I’ve been a fan of this series since the beginning, and while I’m slightly devastated that this is the end of it, I LOVED The Last Witchfinder.” S G Tasz

This final installment in Johnny’s saga is perhaps the weirdest, most baffling of all… Author Jill Hand

Today is the Launch of The Second Edition of the Long-Distance Leader and Maybe a Laugh?

Today we launch the updated version of a book that has changed lives around the world for 6 years. The Long-Distance Leader, Revised Rules for Remarkable Remote and Hybrid Leadership is now out in the world.

In this new edition we have updated the technology (Zoom exists! Skype for Business doesn’t!) and paid way more attention to hybrid work since the Return to Office (kind of.)

You can get the book at Amazon, or buy it from us and get free resources and bonus material! www.LongDistanceWorklife.com/LDL

Of course, when you write in multiple genres, they say you confuse your audience. People read business books don’t necessarily read fiction, and vice versal. Then people who read fiction, don’t always read historical fiction like Count of the Sahara or the Lucca Le Pou Stories. And people who read histfic don’t always read stuff like The Werewolf PI series.

I present the Venn Diagram of my audience. Thank you all.

Werewolves as Demon Metaphor??? Blackie Williamson

One of the things I always enjoy with the current werewolf renaissance in writing is when people come up with explanations for how and why the change occurs, or what’s really behind it. With the Johnny Lycan stories, it’s mostly a genetic defect (although as Nik Koslov can tell you, it can be transmitted by bite so don’t get cocky.) Horror writer Blackie Williamson has a different theory in his book, Evil Eye in the Sky.

Alright, Blackie. Who are you and what’s up?

Unlike many horror authors, I’m not trying to be original, but trendy, to sell books, because I’ve had bedbugs more than once and want out of this ghetto. I do write brutally, and with plenty of gore and series’ of shocks, to satisfy the true horror fans out there. I also write fantasy and science fiction. 

Okay, we’re going the brutally honest route. I like it. What’s Evil Eye in the Sky about?

A balance between beast and lover. Cormac, infected by another werewolf, has to fight with every fiber of his being to not rend asunder and eat blond Aubrey, his high-school love interest. To make matters worse, Cormac’s father, Goddard–who demands to be called God–is after Cormac and Aubrey to join his wolf pack and worship him, to devour innocents. The conflict is that they must find a way to defeat him.

You’ve made some interesting choices about what lycanism is and how it manifests. What is the thinking here?

: It was important to me to have the werewolf virus be a Legion, Cormac possessed by 2,000 demons. In cryptid research, I found that the Beast of Bray Road in Wisconsin became possessed after devil worship, as I am a Christian. I had fun with Cormac by making him a tough guy, but also a sweetie. Roots? I dunno. I was influenced by the werewolf-movie greats: An American Werewolf in London, The Howling, and the Ginger Snaps trilogy, as well as great werewolf novels like Cycle of the Werewolf by Stephen King. 

You’ve certainly done your werewolf homework. Who are your favorites?

Adam Nevill (werewolf novel The Reddening), Glen Duncan (The Last Werewolf), John Skipp and Craig Spector (Animals), Ray Garton (Ravenous and Bestial), and Graeme Reynolds (High Moor), the greats as far as werewolf novels, before they were overdone, plus Johnny Lycan: Werewolf PI Series by Wayne Turmel.

That’s a hell of a list, and I’m ashamed at how pleased I am to be on it. Not resistant to flattery. Where can people learn more about you?

My Amazon page is here.

@BlackieWFangs on X, and blackienosferatu on Instagram, plus blackynosferatu.livejournal.com.

If you hate starting series that aren’t complete, consider starting the Johnny Lycan: Werewolf PI series. The grand finale, Johnny Lycan & the Last Witchfinder is available now on Amazon and from Black Rose Writing. And it’s available in Kindle, Paperback and Audible.

“I’ve been a fan of this series since the beginning, and while I’m slightly devastated that this is the end of it, I LOVED The Last Witchfinder.” S G Tasz

This final installment in Johnny’s saga is perhaps the weirdest, most baffling of all… Author Jill Hand