Paperbacks in the Sun

A paperback copy of Phantom and Rook held outside in front of a partially green lawn.

The book cover of Phantom and Rook by Aelina Isaacs.

On a busy market street in a modern town with tudor architecture a warm glow illuminates the crowds & stores that line the road. There is a seasonal festival, which is evident over this hustle because of the decorations of red & gold bunting and flags crisscrossed cross over head, and sunflowers have been pinned on the beams and roof tops. Between all the people, two men have seen each other. A tall brown man, with a mane of curly black hair, wearing a knitted rainbow duster, looks over his shoulder with the confusion of a clouded memory. He has arms full of shopping in paper bag, herbs, flowers and bottles, he has to be on his way and the crowd is moving, but still he lingers as he looks at the other man. The other man is small, thin, freckled and has a shock of red hair that is firey in the dawn light, he is taking the hood of his green jersey like he is going to pull it over his head, but before he does he looks back at the second man. The heaviness of his heart and thin hope are evident in his face.

I have some beautiful paperbacks of the Adventures in Levena books, and of The Rebel Foxes, available in my bookstore! They are signed, and come with art prints. You can find them here.

A paperback copy of Matsdotter and Adrastus held up in front of a partially green lawn.

The cover of Matsdotter and Adrastus by Aelina Isaacs.

Two men embrace each other  in a warmly lit area between bookshelves. They hold each other as if dancing, and stare adoringly into each other's eyes. The man on the left is short, white, and has trim brown hair. He wears glasses and a brilliant red jacket with black lacing. He smiles wide at his companion. The taller man has waist length black hair and translucent dragon fly like wings extending from his back, and brown skin. He dresses in all black, and has golden lines inscribed into his cheekbones. He stares down at fondly at his companion with a quiet smile.

Adventures in Levena is a cozy urban fantasy series that follows a group of friends as they learn how to love and live later on in life.

A paperback copy of The Rebel Foxes held up in front of a partially green lawn.

The cover of The Rebel Foxes by Noah Hawthorne.

A woman with brown skin and long curly blonde hair stands defiantly in the center. She wears a leather jacket, tight pants, and a gas mask full of plants. She sprays magical green spray paint to the left and right across a stone corridor. She has a determined look on her face.

The Rebel Foxes is a standalone dystopian fantasy with shape-shifting mutants, a trans polyamorous romance, and eating the rich.

Rule # 32

I’ve been sharing my book recommendation posts on my Patreon and social media, but with Tiktok and Instagram going downhill fast I figured I’d bring them here, along with other things I’d usually post on there like WIP Wednesday. If you’d like to check out all my previous book rec posts, you can check them out for free on Patreon.

If I had a nickel for every queer zombie book I read, I’d have three nickels which isn’t a lot but it’s weird I haven’t read more because I love them.

Library Love

Phantom and Rook

Did you know you can request Phantom and Rook at your local library, or through Hoopla and Libby? Requesting titles in person or online is a great way to support your favorite indie authors, and your library by showing them what patrons are interested in. (Hint, it’s queer books)

And if you want a copy for yourself, I have signed copies in my bookstore!

🌻📚🌈🎧

Arlo Rook has decided it’s time to move out of Garren Castle, home for orphans of all races, magical or not, at 100 years old.

It’s not the first time he’s left home, but a setback landed the Hedge Witch in the hospital a year ago, and subsequently back to square one. Now he’s ready to strike out on his own, despite his friend’s worries he’s not ready.

Thatch Phantom is an immortal, the last of his kind and perpetually bored. When he’s not closing interdimensional rifts and corralling trouble in the universe, he’s visiting his favorite city of all, Levena. No one remembers him, but he’s made an everlasting impact on the city nonetheless.

Long ago, he set up an anonymous scavenger hunt for the starving village, providing them with a year’s worth of supplies. He upped the ante each year, providing less practical things, as the village had become a city and was wealthy beyond belief. Festivals are thrown in his honor to this day, or a version of him, that is.

Thatch has decided to throw a wild card into this year’s Game. Whoever discovers his true identity will win one wish of their choice, no restrictions. Aside from the obvious, such as no falling in love, murder or resurrection.

Arlo crashes into the mess of copper curls and bright eyes, who throws apothecary goods and his life into a chaotic mess. It certainly wasn’t the first they met, but Arlo doesn’t remember him. Thatch, however, never forgot the Witch with a familiar soulmark on his face.

What follows is a hilarious and wholesome series of events that teases the immortal with the one thing he wants most.

Someone to call home.

Stack of Phantom and Rook books

Phantom and Rook

Phantom and Rook

Arlo Rook has decided it’s time to move out of Garren Castle, home for orphans of all races, magical or not, at 100 years old.

It’s not the first time he’s left home, but a setback landed the Hedge Witch in the hospital a year ago, and subsequently back to square one. Now he’s ready to strike out on his own, despite his friend’s worries he’s not ready.

Thatch Phantom is an immortal, the last of his kind and perpetually bored. When he’s not closing interdimensional rifts and corralling trouble in the universe, he’s visiting his favorite city of all, Levena. No one remembers him, but he’s made an everlasting impact on the city nonetheless.

Long ago, he set up an anonymous scavenger hunt for the starving village, providing them with a year’s worth of supplies. He upped the ante each year, providing less practical things, as the village had become a city and was wealthy beyond belief. Festivals are thrown in his honor to this day, or a version of him, that is.

Thatch has decided to throw a wild card into this year’s Game. Whoever discovers his true identity will win one wish of their choice, no restrictions. Aside from the obvious, such as no falling in love, murder or resurrection.

Arlo crashes into the mess of copper curls and bright eyes, who throws apothecary goods and his life into a chaotic mess. It certainly wasn’t the first they met, but Arlo doesn’t remember him. Thatch, however, never forgot the Witch with a familiar soulmark on his face.

What follows is a hilarious and wholesome series of events that teases the immortal with the one thing he wants most.

Someone to call home.

Phantom and Rook is available in ebook, audiobook, and print.

Cover Art by Crossroad Art

Author Bookstore

Books2Read Links

Amazon

Audible

Goodreads

Buy Direct

When you sign up for the Book Dragon tier on my Patreon, you get the Phantom and Rook ebook along with The Rebel Foxes.

For those listening in audiobook, you can find the supplemental materials such as character guide and glossary on the Adventures in Levena page, along with more content.

Week One of the Phantom and Rook Read-Along

‘There is a certain beauty in being the first and last of your kind, but no one can argue it’s fucking boring.’

We’re officially one week into the Phantom and Rook Read-Along, and I thought it’d be nice to have one place to organize all my thoughts. In case you didn’t know, I’m hosting a Read-Along that goes until the end of November. I’m doing this because I wanted to celebrate the one year anniversary of the book’s release, and to prepare for the sequel’s release in January. You can get free ebooks by joining the Fable Book Club, and there’s also a Storygraph challenge. I’ve been sharing my annotations on Goodreads, and my thoughts on social media.

Without further ado, here is the summary of week one’s thoughts.

October 31st. Original Announcement Post.

On November 2nd, 2022, I published the book closest to my heart. While it is a cozy fantasy, Phantom and Rook explores deep topics like mental health, learning how to live long after you’ve become an adult, and falling in love despite all the things that might go wrong.

Since then an audiobook narrated by Kirt Graves was produced, and numerous libraries and bookstores put Phantom and Rook on their shelves, not only the print but ebook and audio versions as well. There are over 125 reviews on Goodreads, and over 30 on Amazon and Storygraph.

My ultimate goal was to provide an accessible story about happy queers, and I feel like I’ve done that and more. To celebrate, I’m hosting a read-along which starts tomorrow to coincide with the treasure hunt inside Phantom and Rook. I’m also giving away free ebooks for anyone who wants one, you don’t have to participate in the read-along to claim one. The link expires on November 1st.

You can participate in the read-along in any fashion you like. I have a Fable Book Club which has a place for members to discuss and share their annotations. There is also a Storygraph challenge with When Witches Sing as a bonus. I’ll be sharing my thoughts and annotations in the club, on social media, and Goodreads. If you simply want to read without sharing, that’s fine too! The schedule is simply a suggestion, and is the way it’s set up in Fable.

You can find all the links you need in my linktree and more, including a playlist for Phantom and Rook.

Thank you so much for supporting me, I appreciate each and every one of you.

November 1st.

“Let’s go out sometime, I owe you that much for making a mess of your things.”

He balks and the slightest bit of green swims to life in his eyes. A mischievous smile takes hold, but then he shakes his head, and the smile away. “Can’t, but thanks. Enjoy the festival.”

I open my lips but the owl chirps, a bizarre noise, and cracks open a yellow eye to glower at me. The man rolls his eyes at the bird, then glances back at me with a renewed emerald glow ringed around his irises.

He makes to leave, but I wring my hands and blurt out ridiculousness first. “I’d enjoy it much more with a local to show me around. I’m not … looking for anything, just a friend.” I manage to squeak out. Oh dear stars, am I blushing?

All I earn for my awkwardness is a seconds-long sly grin, then the back of his head as he walks away from me. Again.

I become a stone in the river, allowing the crowd to part around me. I wonder when the last time was that I experienced embarrassment. Have I ever been truly embarrassed?

Well, I certainly have now.

🍁🎃📚🏳️‍🌈✨

Day one into the Read-Along and I’m two chapters in! We’ve been introduced to Arlo’s life and his desire to move out and become a ‘real person,’ as he’s been healing from something in his past and hasn’t felt ready until now. After enchanting a group of children in the orphanage with a legend about a mysterious treasure hunt, he takes off for the market before meeting up with friends.

We’ve also met Thatch, the mysterious and wealthy immortal who delights in the little things. After purchasing a bookstore due to pure sentiment, although he’ll have us believe it’s practically, he goes for a walk through the market. He compares the town as it is now, to how it was decades prior. He becomes distracted by the festival decorations to the Scarlet Illusionist, the creator of the treasure hunt, and crashes into Arlo.

The immortal reminiscences over the witch he used to know, cataloging all the ways he’s changed, and prays to the powers that be that Arlo will remember him.

But he doesn’t, and the witch turns down Thatch’s offer for a night on the town. So begins the push and pull slow burn that is Phantom and Rook.

“I want to see the world. Took me so fuckin’ long to even think about it. ‘What would mama say?’ you know? She always said this place was enough, and it is, but … I want more. I want to go on adventures, Mr. Phantom, that’s why I want to sell. Silly, isn’t it? Leave this behind for some fantasy, at my age.”

I stare directly into his eyes. “Doing what you love isn’t silly. I admire you, Gleason, and I think you should do it.

November 2nd.

I am having the absolute best time, it’s a good mixture of pointing out clues and roasting the characters. I visited the local coffeehouse today, so I had to take obligatory book pictures to pay homage to Thitwhistle’s.

I find a lot of inspiration in people and places, especially cafes and libraries, and bookstores.

You see, for a brief moment in time, you get to exist with these people at the same place, the same time, despite having different lives and schedules and what have you.

You are allowed a momentary glimpse into other people, the way they take their coffee, or what books they tilt their head at a funny angle to look at. You can learn so much about someone in an act as simple as whether they left or a tip or held the door for you.

And this is all without speaking. Find the courage to actually speak with people, and you can expand your perspective even further.

Easy to say, not so easy to do.

Air whooshes out of me and time stops as I stare deep into them, right down to his soul, one that clearly does not remember me but calls to my heart all the same. It stings more than I thought it would.

November 3rd.

A comfortable silence rests between us as the world turns, oblivious to the qualms of queers hopelessly in love with their best friends.

🏳️‍🌈📚✨🍁

I love this line so much, I thought I was so clever when I wrote it. Is it okay to love your own writing so much?

I’m reading The Fire In Fiction by Donald Masses at the moment, and it talks about storytellers versus status seekers. Why authors write, and the feeling of reading something you can tell was passionately written. It is the highest achievement.

So yes, I think you can, and should, love your own writing. Because if you don’t, who will?

The thing is, I truly contemplated his offer, which in the past is something I’d never do. Sex with strangers is off the table for me, and love … love nearly killed me twice, and I’m not about to break myself open again. I give myself props for even thinking about it, then chastise myself for being such a coward. Lindsey’s probably right, he most likely wanted someone to show him around. If that ended in a quick fuck, would that have been a bad thing? Yes. I don’t think like this about people. And I know enough about myself to know that even a one night stand would crack its way into my heart and feelings would spill out onto the floor like they did before. 

November 5th.

“I don’t know, I’m just … tired of everyone worrying, waiting for me to fail. What’s the point in trying to … live if no one thinks you can do it? You can’t keep smothering me, Caspian, and you have to stop taking blame for what I did. I’m serious, I’m my own person.”

🏳️‍🌈✨🍁💊

We’re officially three chapters into the readalong, and in the tail end of Qualms of Queers, Arlo talks about his depression and previous attempt to take his life. One of the things that was important to me while writing this story was to portray mental health in an honest way, because I think we all need more stories with characters who are ‘invisibly’ struggling.

I pass by pictures of when Tobias and Caspian first started dating, two months after he and I stopped. I smile at the sight of Kitt and I photobombing them. The kids snore in my arms when I stop, looking deeper into my grinning face beside Kitt’s, both of us holding up bunny ears behind the couple’s heads. On closer inspection I note the date, frowning. Six years ago. There was nothing different about my face, except my cheeks were slimmer than they are now. I look away, avoiding the next span of years where I progressively look shittier, if I’m there at all. The two years before I ….

When Witches Sing is out!

“Could you show me some magick?”

Oh,” I whisper, then nod quickly. “Yeah, okay.”

I clear my throat and stand, then sit back down, because I don’t want to stand over him. He’s already so much shorter than me, I feel like a giant just sitting next to him. He tentatively presses a hand to my arm, lips parting, and I startle. He pulls back, not taking his eyes off me. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to make you nervous.”


“Oh, I’m not. Nervous, that is.”


Felix chuckles. “Okay. Well, you don’t have to make yourself smaller, for me.”


“Oh,” I say, then stand and straighten to my full height before him. The leaves and petals in my hair and along my skin stand to attention, and I blush at the image of preening like a fucking peacock.


“Wow,” Felix says, staring up at me with wide eyes. “You’re really tall.”


I almost lean down, but he takes my hand. This time, he doesn’t let go. “No, don’t.” Felix stands beside me, my hand in his. I stare down at our entangled fingers, then back to his face. His neck is craned and it looks painful, but the determination in his eyes is almost frightening.


I squeeze his hand, then let go. I put my hands up, smiling wide. “Okay, have it your way, tchotchke.”


Oh, how he smiles at that. He pretends to be affronted, but that smile. It’s perpetual, blinding. “I am not a small thing.”


I shrug, turning away from him. I bring my hands to chest level and smile upon coming up with an idea. I close my eyes and murmur, “Abracadabra.”


Have fun with swamp witches, chaos witches, root witches and musical witches. Just, all of the witchery and tomfoolery there ever could be. Happy Yuletide friends.

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