Author Interview

Author interview with science fiction writer John Pirillo

Step into a world where Sherlock Holmes rubs elbows with Houdini, Nikola Tesla powers fantastical inventions, and characters from classic literature walk side by side in a richly imagined alternate universe. Author John Pirillo, creator of The Baker Street Universe, has spent a lifetime steeped in the stories of Verne, Wells, and Conan Doyle—tales that not only sparked his love for reading but also ignited a boundless creative drive. In this interview, Pirillo shares how childhood afternoons buried in books turned into a lifelong passion for storytelling, why human decency is the heartbeat of his fiction, and how a cluttered writing space and a cold Zevia Cola help him bring entire worlds to life.

John Pirillo’s Baker Street Universe series is a genre-blending tribute to the golden age of imagination, where anything is possible and no hero stands alone. Set in an alternate Victorian-era London, the stories blend mystery, adventure, and speculative science as Holmes, Watson, and a rotating cast—including Houdini, Tesla, and Verne—team up to face threats that span dimensions and defy logic. It’s a genre-blending tribute to the golden age of imagination, where anything is possible and no hero stands alone.

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Q: What/who were your early literary influences, and how do you think their writing has shaped you as a storyteller today?
A: My earliest literary influences were the class comics of the fifties…My parents would read to me War of the Worlds, Journey to the Center of the Earth, and then later Atom Age Combat, GI Joe, Superman, Spiderman, Challengers of the Unknown, then when I could read for myself from libraires…Edgar Rice Burroughs…everything. Robert Heinlein. Isaac Asimov, L. Sprague de Camp, A.E. Van Vogt, Sherlock Holmes, Agatha Christie, Jules Verne, H.G. Wells…and pretty much any book I could get my hands on to read…from autobiographies to biographies, science, art and so on.

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Author Interview

Author interview with fantasy writer Tyler Edwards

Fantasy author Tyler Edwards struggled to connect with kids his age when he was growing up. Feeling rejected and alone, he became depressed and suicidal. Edwards says, “I remember reading The Hobbit, and the strangest thing happened. I was lost in this otherworldly adventure that took my mind off the struggles I couldn’t overcome. Stories became an escape. A safe place I could retreat to when life was too much. I loved writing them, reading them, and listening to them, I couldn’t get enough. Since I was eight years old, I’ve been writing stories in notebooks, dreaming of worlds and characters in hopes to one day create stories that someone else might find an escape in during their time of need.”

In the first book of Tyler Edwards’ Outlands Saga, Jett Lasting struggles to find his place in a world where drawing attention to yourself can get you killed. To survive, he must avoid guards, beggar gangs, and an ever-growing tension that could drag the whole city into chaos. Imagine Jett’s chagrin when he unwittingly becomes entwined in a plot to overthrow the government in which his choices could lead to the freedom or the death of everyone he’s ever known or cared about.

Q: What’s a memory of a story or book that made you realize you wanted to be a writer?
A: I remember as a kid my mother would read stories with me every night. The Call of the Wild, The Hobbit, The Book of Three, James and the Giant Peach and getting lost in these adventures. As I got older, I wanted to create those stories, those worlds for people to get lost in.

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