Travel

A reader’s stay in Indianapolis: Canal walks, Vonnegut, and a bookstore worth the drive

The best way to understand a city is to walk it—and on my first morning in Indianapolis, that’s exactly what I did. I’m currently on my very first house sit through TrustedHousesitters, caring for two incredibly sweet, easygoing dogs. While they’ve been wonderful company during my downtime, this trip has also doubled as something I want to be intentional about moving forward: a writing retreat. Building travel around writing time—quiet mornings, unstructured afternoons, space to think—feels less like a luxury and more like a necessary shift in how I want to move through the world.

Much of downtown Indianapolis can be seen from the canal walk.

That mindset carried into my first full day, which started with a solo walk along the downtown canal. The full three-mile loop offers one of the most immersive introductions to the city you could ask for. The path winds past water, public art, and a cluster of museums that practically guarantee I’ll be back. It’s the kind of place where you don’t feel rushed. You notice things. You let the city unfold at its own pace.

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Writers on Writing

The quiet power of foreshadowing: How great novels prepare readers for what’s coming

The best plot twists in fiction rarely come out of nowhere—they feel surprising and inevitable at the same time. That paradox is usually the result of careful foreshadowing. When done well, foreshadowing prepares readers for events long before they happen, creating the sense that the story’s outcome was always embedded within the narrative. I was thinking about this recently while reading Ruins by Lily Brooks-Dalton. The novel includes a central revelation that attentive readers may begin to suspect early on, yet the author never makes the answer obvious. Instead, she carefully plants clues that guide the reader toward the truth without spoiling the experience. That balance is the essence of effective foreshadowing.

Foreshadowing is the quiet trail of clues that leads readers toward the ending long before they realize it.

What is foreshadowing?

Foreshadowing is a narrative technique in which an author plants subtle hints about events that will occur later in the story. These hints might appear as dialogue, imagery, symbolism, or even small details that initially seem unimportant. The goal isn’t to give the plot away. Instead, foreshadowing creates narrative cohesion. When the key event finally arrives, readers recognize the groundwork that made it possible. The story feels intentional rather than arbitrary.

In Ruins, for example, the opening sections contain small details that feel slightly out of place. The world seems familiar but not entirely so. Certain descriptions, structures, and assumptions about society invite questions. None of these clues explicitly reveal where the story is going, but together they form a pattern that becomes meaningful later. The result is a reading experience that rewards attention without demanding it.

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Beautiful and Terrifying releases April 23, 2026: A new anthology from the edge of the uncanny

Beautiful and Terrifying: Tales and Visions from the Edge of the Uncanny, the newest anthology from Elderfly Press, will be released on April 23, 2026, bringing together haunting fiction, poetry, and black-and-white artwork that explore the strange space where beauty and fear collide.

The cover of Beautiful and Terrifying: Tales and Visions from the Edge of the Uncanny, Elderfly Press’s upcoming anthology of eerie fiction, dark poetry, and black-and-white art, releasing April 23, 2026.

I’m thrilled to finally share the release date for this collection, which has been such a meaningful project to bring into the world. From eerie woods and submerged cities to folklore retellings, grief-soaked landscapes, and intimate encounters with the supernatural, this anthology embraces the unsettling and the sublime in equal measure.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Missing Sister by Joshilyn Jackson: A twisty Southern thriller about sisterhood, guilt, and revenge

What if the person avenging your sister’s death isn’t you—but someone who knows more than you ever did? In Missing Sister, Joshilyn Jackson delivers a chilling, character-driven thriller that explores the razor-thin line between justice and obsession. The novel follows Penny Albright, a rookie cop still reeling from the tragic death of her twin, Nix, five years earlier. Born three minutes apart, the sisters were inseparable—until Nix’s sudden death and a cryptic voicemail left Penny drowning in guilt and unanswered questions.

Get your copy of Missing Sister from my independent online bookstore today!

Now working in law enforcement to honor Nix’s dream of making the world safer, Penny is called to her first murder scene and comes face-to-face with Danny Bowery, one of the three men she’s long blamed for her sister’s death. He’s sprawled in a pool of blood outside an upscale Atlanta shopping center, as if conjured by Penny’s long-harbored anger. And then there’s the blonde woman in blood-soaked clothes gripping a box cutter—a woman who hints that Bowery’s murder is only the beginning of a larger story about sisters before vanishing into thin air.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

I Did Not Kill My Husband by Linda Keir: A modern fugitive thriller fueled by hashtags, headlines, and wildfire

What happens when a social media influencer becomes America’s most hated wife and then vanishes into the mountains? I Did Not Kill My Husband, by writing duo Linda Keir, delivers a slick, high-concept thriller about reputation, perception, and what it takes to survive when the entire world thinks you’re guilty—and it hits shelves March 3, 2026.

Get your copy of I Did Not Kill My Husband from my independent online bookstore today!

Cara Campbell built her brand on curated luxury and unapologetic ambition. Married to plastic surgeon Karl Campbell, she seemed to be living the rags-to-riches dream—until she was convicted of his murder and sentenced to life in prison. The evidence is stacked against her: a failing medical practice, a million-dollar life insurance policy, and a social media persona that leans hard into the gold-digger stereotype. The internet convicts her long before the jury does.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward: A brutal, brilliant thriller about survival in the ashes

A lot of thrillers pretend to be gritty—Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward actually earns it, dragging readers into the Colorado Rockies and refusing to let them look away. Releasing February 24, 2026, Nowhere Burning is a harrowing, genre-blurring novel that folds the dark myth of Peter Pan and the feral desperation of Lord of the Flies into something uniquely Ward: unsettling, intimate, and psychologically razor-sharp.

Get your copy of Nowhere Burning from my independent online bookstore today!

Riley and her younger brother Oliver flee their troubled home in the middle of the night, chasing rumors of Nowhere—an abandoned ranch once owned by a reclusive movie star and now whispered about as a refuge for runaways. What they find is a scorched sanctuary with its own rules, its own hierarchy, and its own buried horrors. It promises freedom. It demands a price.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

The Ghost Women by Jennifer Murphy: Tarot, witchcraft, and the ghosts patriarchy tried to bury

On a sweltering August morning in 1972, a young art student is found hanging from a tree, posed like the Hanged Man from a tarot deck—and that image sets the tone for Jennifer Murphy’s The Ghost Women, a lush, angry, and often mesmerizing novel about power, vengeance, and the women history tried to erase. Releasing February 24, 2026, this is a book steeped in atmosphere: a remote art academy housed in a former monastery, whispers of witch trials, ancient tarot cards, and long-dead women who may not be finished speaking.

Get your copy of The Ghost Women from my independent online bookstore today!

When Detective Lola Germany arrives at St. Luke’s Institute of the Arts to investigate the death of Abel Montague, she quickly realizes this is no straightforward suicide. An ancient Hanged Man tarot card tucked into his pocket—and his body arranged to mirror it—points toward ritual. As more students are discovered staged like figures from the deck, Lola finds herself navigating a campus brimming with secrets, ambition, and a self-proclaimed coven of young women who may know more than they’re willing to say.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

How to Get Away with Murder by Rebecca Philipson: A police procedural that refuses to play by the rules

How to Get Away with Murder by Rebecca Philipson, out February 24, 2026, starts with a wink and a dare—“If you picked up this book because you truly want to get away with murder…”—and initially feels like it might settle into familiar police-procedural territory. It doesn’t. What begins as a fairly standard investigation quickly mutates into something sharper, stranger, and genuinely hard to put down.

Get your copy of How to Get Away With Murder from my independent online bookstore today!

Detective Inspector Samantha Hansen returns to Scotland Yard after a six-month medical leave, determined to prove she hasn’t lost her edge. Her reentry point is grim: the murder of fourteen-year-old Charlotte, whose backpack contains a copy of a self-help book titled How to Get Away with Murder. The book’s author, Denver Brady, claims to be a serial killer so successful no one knows his name—and as its contents go viral, it becomes disturbingly clear that someone is taking its lessons to heart.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Crown City by Naomi Hirahara: A cozy mystery steeped in California history and cultural collision

What if a cozy mystery also sent you down historical rabbit holes you didn’t even know existed? That’s the quiet magic of Crown City by Naomi Hirahara, a genre-bending historical mystery set in Pasadena at the turn of the twentieth century that releases February 24, 2026.

Get your copy of Crown City from my independent online bookstore today!

Set in 1903, Crown City follows eighteen-year-old Ryunosuke “Ryui” Wada, newly arrived from Japan and eager—if a little overwhelmed—to reinvent himself in America after the deaths of his parents. He finds work as an apprentice to an art dealer, moves in with a photographer roommate named Jack, and begins to piece together a life amid Pasadena’s booming prosperity. When a painting is stolen from the studio of celebrated Japanese artist Toshio Aoki, Ryui and Jack are hired to investigate, pulling them into a mystery that quickly turns more dangerous than either expects.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Dollface by Lindy Ryan: PTA politics, plastic masks, and a suburban slasher that’s wickedly fun

If you’ve ever suspected the PTA might be hiding a few skeletons in its meticulously organized closets, Dollface by Lindy Ryan leans all the way into that suspicion—and then hands the skeleton a knife. Releasing February 24, 2026, Ryan’s latest horror novel drops readers into a glossy, gossip-filled suburban nightmare where fitting in might be deadlier than standing out.

Get your copy of Dollface from my independent online bookstore today!

Jill is a horror author who has just relocated to suburban New Jersey, hoping to settle into a quieter life and, ideally, make a few mom friends without alienating them by waving around her Final Girl coffee mug. That goal becomes increasingly complicated when a serial killer wearing a plastic face mask begins targeting the town’s overly polished PTA moms. As the body count rises and the social hierarchy begins to crack, Jill finds herself pulled deeper into the chaos, inching closer to becoming the last woman standing.

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