There is one main reason for this: Canadian shipping rates.
If you are in Canada you likely already know about this, but it costs more than any of the items in my shop just to ship something to someone even just down the street from me. It is absolutely ridiculous and I cannot afford to keep prices reasonable and expect anyone who wants something from me to be not shocked at discovering a $25 charge to ship. It’s not fair to you.
Given that I just design most products, I do have third parties that can ship items at a much better rate! Art of Where, most book retailers, even Redbubble can all offer much better shipping rates than I can hope to get access to.
That’s not to say everything is going to be done by a third party! Obviously, signed paperbacks will still be coming from me, and anything that is not created and made to order. The jewelry, the charms,the zines, all still coming directly from me.
Just know that these updates are very intentional and being done for the purpose of making sure you’re not paying double what you expect just so that it gets shipped to you.
Once more, I don’t look properly into the books I take out! I am getting pretty used to being very surprised by the books that I end up with. Means I’m reading a lot of things I probably wouldn’t have considered in the first place.
This book is actually a short story. A very long short story. We follow Stella who is back in town to help after a childhood friend’s brother died. She is reminded of something she’d long ago forgotten — a strange children’s show that she had forgotten she was part of. One where the creepy old man told stories that seemed to foretell the ends of the children he watched.
It is a delightful concept! It combines a bunch of ideas that I love to see, from something innocuous turning out to actually be sinister if you look at it longer than five seconds, to prophecies that are surprisingly direct even at the time actually but you weren’t paying attention.
I sort of wish it was a little bit longer to see more things wrapped up, but ultimately, I think it ended at just the right place. It’s creepier and leaves a better impression where it ends here.
Bonus content has become almost a requirement for authors these days. It’s one of the easiest and lowest cost ways to promote a book. It can also be very daunting if you get to the point where you are trying to promote your book and you didn’t think of this beforehand!
I am personally a big proponent for the idea that your bonus content should be something that is created alongside the process of creating the book, not before or after, and here are a few ideas that I’ve used before, and some that have worked for other authors.
Sketches
Does your creation process involve doodling or drawing sketches of anything involved with the story? Keep all of those! It’s a great insight into the behind the scenes process and, if your audience likes them, you can always clean then up or hire someone to create a nicer version of them to release as art.
Mood boards
If you need to put together a mood board or collect images for inspiration for your stories, that would be a fantastic thing to share with your audience. You can turn it into collages and give a little explanation on what about it inspires you. It doesn’t have to be long, it just needs to be something that reflects your process and give some insight into the story to draw the audience in.
Deleted scenes
The things that could have been! Deleted scenes are a fantastic way to thank your audience for checking out your work by giving them a look at the things that didn’t make it. This could be an alternate ending that you decided didn’t work, a scene that was just unnecessary, or something that you threw in because you just really wanted to throw a fridge at something. Audiences like to see the things that could have been and it’s good to keep anything you may want to get rid of. Just in case.
Stuff that didn’t make it in
If you do a lot of worldbuilding or if you have a lot of ideas that just never seemed to make it to the final story, tell your audience about it! Even if it’s just notes, it’s an interesting thing to put into a newsletter, a blog post, or something that is just for your audience that can give them a bit more insight into the wider world of the story beyond the fiction that they already enjoy.
What are some kinds of bonus content that you enjoy?
Write Your Story: Unlock Your Creative Potential
Are you ready to embark on a journey into the world of storytelling? Look no further! Introducing Write Your Story, a comprehensive resource designed to fuel your imagination, enhance your storytelling skills, and bring your characters to life. Whether you’re an aspiring writer, a seasoned author, or simply someone who loves crafting stories, this workbook is your ultimate companion.
Is this another book picked up because it’s been on my saved shelf at the library for ages and I’m currently waiting on a bunch of holds that look like they are about to come in? Yes. Did any of the holds come in before I finished? Absolutely not.
The book follows Jess, a young woman living in the 90s and having what seems like a very typical life until one day something strange happens. One of her best friends drops a strange device that she’s never seen before and she starts to realize that her little town is not what it appears. She learns that she is the star of a reality show and has been since the day she was born, a secret kept from her all her life. Nothing in her world is real and Jess finds herself desperate to get to a reality she has never known.
Is this like a modern Truman show? Absolutely yes. I don’t think this shies away from the comparison at all, and I really did enjoy the execution of this. Jess feels very normal in contrast to the people slowly revealing themselves to be actors around her and it was interesting to see that there was an end date in place for Jess to learn the truth and leave potentially as a factor in this.
There are parts that feel less grounded than others. For the sake of the plot, she accepts what’s happening around her a lot easier than I would expect and is fully capable of getting around what are apparently trained military at one point in the book.
Even with all of this, it is a pretty fun read. I enjoyed it and the pace is pretty quick, so none of the strangeness overstays its welcome. And, well, I’m a 90s kid. I liked the references. You might enjoy it too!
So, it’s been about a month since I started looking at my life as a research project. It’s a daunting thing, because my life is full of all kinds of different aspects, so where do you even start with figuring out how to make it into whatever its ideal state is? What is ideal, anyway?
Luckily, I am no stranger to exploratory research! This is how I started.
Research
Naturally, I started off with a list of questions I wanted to ask about myself as I am now and what I think would make me happy. I put a couple questions down, each on a separate sheet of paper, and left them by where I eat (When I don’t eat at my desk) so that I could answer them when I was taking some down time during the day. I left some fun pens so and did this over the course of two weeks so I could do this when I was having different kinds of day and in different moods with different perspectives.
The questions I started with were:
What does is an ideal life?
What is a perfect day?
What do I like?
There were others, but these were the ones I found were the most useful.
Finding trends
At the end of the two weeks, I wrote all of the things I wrote down onto post it notes1 and started to group the ideas together.
You may notice that there are a lot of things that fall between groups. That is pretty normal, but I didn’t force these ones into one group or another. Sometimes one thing is meaningful for many things!
From these groups, I could figure out a series of areas of life that I found important. For me this is:
Environment
Experiences
Physical health
Mental health
Day to day
Creative freedom
Money
Relationships
Pets
Next steps
I also came up with a few initial next steps we can cover in the coming months:
Refining the areas
Determining the current status of these areas
Finding metrics
Creating some hypotheses
In Miro, because I am in tech and for whatever reason tech companies always seem to use Miro these days [↩]
Am I horribly burnt out? Yes. Was that the only reason I picked up this book? Also yes.
It’s mostly a book about burnout, the causes, and a bit more of a clinical take with the voice of someone talking to you over coffee. In the way a lot of books with clinical studies in them tend to do, it does tend to restate the same point in several different ways and angles, but each chapter ends with that TLDR which is useful when you find yourself glazing over the materials.
I thought the addition of putting a feminist lens on it was interesting, but ultimately it lost me around the parts where it started bringing in the patriarchy as well. I stopped relating because a lot of what was talked about centers more on women with families and filling very traditionally female roles, and I am burnt out because we are understaffed, I worked for a good while at 150% capacity, and only got a reduction in workload when my life went to hell and excess 50% was taken up by the flood matters.
I think I was expecting it to provide a lot more concrete strategies and advice on how to approach things, not just explain why it was not your fault and that we live in a society and all of those matters.
Overall it’s fine? It falls in the category of self help books where I didn’t really align with it and I might not be the person who this was for. I’ve seen others find this book to be lifechanging, so maybe it will be for you.
Creating a new fantasy world can be both exciting and utterly terrifying! While the opportunity is there to do absolutely anything in creating a new world, it can soon become overwhelming as you try to figure out how to make all of these different ideas work together. And it can be a lot!
So take a deep breath, and just start with a few simple questions.
What’s the weather like?
It’s a nice, simple place to start that offers a lot of places to go. Is there a lot of sun? Is it warm? Is it snowy and cold most of the year? Is it just a bit grey most of the time?
You can use this as a starting point to figure out what kind of terrain might be there, what kind of plants might be there, and what kind of people would inhabit a land like this. Take inspiration from people and places with a similar climate and understand why that happens. And then you can use that to better inform and develop the fantasy world you are creating!
Who is in charge?
In most cases, fantasy worlds tend to rely on either a monarchy or a council of some sort, but it’s important to figure out who is calling the shots in the world and what their motivations are. If it is something that they get by birthright, that world is likely going to operate a bit differently from a world where the ruling people can be replaced or aspired to.
Who gets magic?
In a fantasy world, there is often magic that people have access to. But who ultimately gets that access? Take some time to think about how the magic might work, and determine if there’s a methodology or process to someone getting access to that magic, or if it is a random thing that happens to some people with no rhyme or reason. Or maybe everyone gets magic, which makes magic a very mundane part of the universe!
How long has this place been around for?
You may want to approach a new world differently than an old world. If the world (or the part of the world you’re writing) has been around for a long time, you’re more likely to have very old architecture and established traditions which people have forgotten the origins of. In newer worlds, there may be fewer of these or even a larger mix of them coming from various new people settling in the place who are trying to bring their traditions with them.
What needs to change?
What is the world-wide conflict that affects the majority of the residents? And does your story touch on that? It’s entirely possible that it doesn’t, but it may serve as an important background element to provide context to why the people around them are behaving in the way they are.
Write Your Story: Unlock Your Creative Potential
Are you ready to embark on a journey into the world of storytelling? Look no further! Introducing Write Your Story, a comprehensive resource designed to fuel your imagination, enhance your storytelling skills, and bring your characters to life. Whether you’re an aspiring writer, a seasoned author, or simply someone who loves crafting stories, this workbook is your ultimate companion.
I will admit, I was very hesitant to pick up this one. It was giving me the feeling that it was a mis-categorized paranormal romance, or just that the library system didn’t have a paranormal romance section to file it under. But also it features cupcakes and was set in Vancouver, so I figured I might as well give it a shot.
The story follows Jade, a witch from Vancouver who owns a cupcake shop thanks to some never delved into nepotism. One day a vampire visits her shop as part of an investigation because there are paranormal beings in town being killed and it looks very much like vampires might be doing it. He is looking to clear vampires, but Jade’s very minimal and not well developed magic remains on the site of the murders, making her the prime suspect despite her being not only oblivious to these events, but also very provably not the person responsible.
This book is the most Vancouver book I have ever read. There are references to landmarks, to lifestyle habits, to shoes that permeate throughout the book. I have read other books set here, but this was the most set here book that I have ever read1 and I was fascinated. But also, I really loved it and it was a ton of fun.
It was also not incorrectly categorized! While it is written very much like those light paranormal romance novels with the same voice and levity and lack of stakes, there is no romance at the center of this story and it ends up being more about a mystery being used as a way to introduce you to the world of a magical Vancouver. There’s some interesting concepts and it does leave on a cliffhanger that I’m sure is there to set up the next book, but the universe is a very soft fantasy.
Overall, I thought it was cute! It’s a quick read, low drama even though it does center around a bunch of murders and threat of death in a few spots, and I had a lot of fun with it. Check it out if you’re looking for something quick!
I collect hobbies. I write, garden, make jewelry and bottle charms, fold paper stars, design artwork, bake, all sorts of things. I’ve dabbled in resin making, used to dance, sometimes pick up making games, and am currently deep into determining how far I’m going to go into Notion.
If you also collect hobbies to the point where you are getting overwhelmed, here’s a quick checklist to go through before you app another one to the list!
New hobby checklist
Have you slept on it? A new hobby can seem really exciting in the moment, but give yourself a little time to think about it and see if the motivation continues.
Do you have the time for it? There is usually some kind of time commitment involved, whether that is taking classes or learning or even actually doing this hobby! Make sure it fits in with the rest of your life. As a tangent to this, if you are doing this with other people, do your schedules match up? Arranging things gets trickier the more people are involved, and you will want to make sure your schedules are compatible.
Do you have the capacity for it? Make sure adding this isn’t going to completely overwhelm you. Even if you have the time to take that extra class, make sure you have the mental space to do it as well!
Can you do a cheap trial run of it? New hobbies can be expensive. If you don’t know if you’ll like it, see if you can try it out without a huge cost investment first. Get a trial subscription, get a dollar store version of the art supplies, something to make sure this is something you want to do.
If you create things as a result of the hobby, do you know what you are going to do with those things? Trust me, if a hobby ends with something physical, you are going to wan a plan for what to do with everything you make. There are only so many drawers, shelves, and wall space for everything you are going to make if you like doing it.
Do you have storage for anything that you need for it? Does your hobby have a lot of materials or items attached to it? Skiing, snowboarding, fishing, these hobbies can have a lot of materials. Jewelry has a lot of small items that you don’t necessarily want to lose track of. Make sure that you have a place to put everything when you aren’t enjoying yourself.
If you’re good on all of these, go ahead and see how you like that new hobby! Give it a try, and I hope you have fun with the new skills you will learn or the time you’ll get to spend with others!
Write Your Story: Unlock Your Creative Potential
Are you ready to embark on a journey into the world of storytelling? Look no further! Introducing Write Your Story, a comprehensive resource designed to fuel your imagination, enhance your storytelling skills, and bring your characters to life. Whether you’re an aspiring writer, a seasoned author, or simply someone who loves crafting stories, this workbook is your ultimate companion.
I added this to my To Read list in my library a long time ago, but I’ve only just gotten around to it! I’ve been looking for a few quick reads to get me through the wait as several of my holds are so very close to coming in and, well, I am trying to make sure I have the time to actually read all those books I’m waiting for. And this one looked really quick!
The story follows a young boy in the south named Hoodoo, wo was born with a heart shaped birthmark under his eye. One day he starts to see a strange man both in and out of his dreams, but it’s not until a talking crow visits that what’s going on starts to become clear: He is here to collect a debt from his dead father, and Hoodoo has to pay up. Hoodoo knows he must kill this stranger, but he does not know how—Yet.
I had a lot of difficulty with this book, honestly. I’ve got trouble with books that are very voice-y, and Hoodoo has a very distinctive voice in this story in the way he speaks and tells the narrative. It lingers on explanations that I can tell the character would want to explain more, such as what Moonshine is, but not on elements that I found myself not fully comprehending. Granted, some of this is because I am an Asian from Vancouver who is not familiar with how the southern hoodoo magic intersects with the bible, and how the folklore associated with hoodoo works.
I should also mention that one of the pivotal moments of this book involves lynching, so content warning. It’s middle grade, so I really wasn’t expecting that.
Overall, I think this was just a book that wasn’t for me. I’m not the intended audience. The story moved along pretty quickly and seemed to be pretty solid for a young audience that is more familiar with the cultural elements that lost me.