It’s Publication Month!

There’s something magical about spring. One day, you’re having what you don’t know is the last snowstorm of the season. Then, suddenly, you look around and the grass is a vibrant green and multicoloured flowers have burst out of lawns. Perhaps I’m woefully unobservant, which is possible, but I could have sworn those flowers weren’t there yesterday. The seasonal depression you didn’t even realize you had begins to lift. And so, while spring is my least favourite season, I have to admit that there’s some magic there.

It seems like a lifetime ago that I chose May 31 as my publication date, although, in reality, it was about nine months ago. It feels like I blinked and May charged in. 

Into Shadow will be out in the world in just three weeks, and I’m feeling a million things at once. I’m excited for people to read it, of course. I fell in love with this story as I wrote it, and I hope other people will fall in love as well. However, I’m also feeling the bundle of nerves that I’m sure comes with publishing a debut novel (What if no one reads it? What if people do read it?). I also have to accept that I’ve made mistakes in this process, ones that will hopefully help me do better next time. At this point, I need to let go of perfectionism and accept that I poured my heart and soul into this book—and that’s enough.

I picked an end-of-May publication date for several reasons. The first is that my protagonist’s birthday is in May. The second is that I imagined the events of the book beginning in June and taking place over the heat of the summer, so May seemed like a perfect time to release the book. I recently learned that May is also mental health month, so the stars aligned perfectly there. 

I wrote this book because it was the book I needed. When I first started getting manic, I couldn’t find any high fantasy books with a protagonist who had bipolar disorder. I was so scared, and I needed reassurance in the form of a book. I needed to know that people with bipolar disorder could still have adventures, fall in love, and live a full life. I didn’t need a happy book. I didn’t even need a book entirely about bipolar disorder—I just wanted a book where a character lives with bipolar, because people with mental illness deserve to do cool things like ride dragons, too. 

And I’m so proud of this book, because I did that. Not only did I give a character with bipolar a chance to shine, I explored the nuances of living with an illness like bipolar and how it can impact your self-perception and self-worth, and I wrote a proper adventure story that I’ve enjoyed reading hundreds of times. At one point, I was reading this book several times a week, not to edit it, but because I loved it. This was the book I needed, and I am hopeful that it will be a book that other people need as well.

This is a book about bipolar disorder, stigma, dragons, romance, and heroism. I wrote it in the style of the fantasy I love. It’s complex. It’s gritty. It’s political. Two of the five point-of-view characters are men, but I’ve always considered this a story with women at its focus. 

I’ve been on quite a journey with this book. We made it to the highs of being a finalist in a publisher’s contest to the lows of the query trenches and everything in between. I’ve loved this book, and I’ve doubted myself more times than I can count. But the result of all of this is a book that I’m immensely proud to be sharing with the world.

So, in this magical month of May, I hope you’ll consider searching up Into Shadow. It will be available on Amazon (print and ebook) and on Kobo (ebook) on May 31. I will officially list it within the next week or two, so stay tuned! 

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