2024 COVERS

Lawless In Leather
Winterfall Destiny
Mated to the sapphic orc
Fae's Fate
Broken: A Romantic Science Fiction Eco Adventure
Wolf's Prize
Knightqueen
Wicked Ways
Unbreak My Heart
Curiosity Killed the Vampire
From Across the Sea
Angel In Armani
Edge of Night
The Witch's Tangle
Three Vampires And A Baby
Banshee, Death and Disarray: Holly Harrow: A Point Muse Cozy Paranormal Mystery
Damaris: A Scifi Alien Romance
The Shattered Court
Moon Blessed
Falling for Mr. Fake It

2024 covers

Welcome to the Dark Side!

We are writers mainly from Australia and New Zealand who write speculative fiction with romantic elements. Be it fantasy, paranormal, dark urban fantasy, futuristic and everything in between.

Friday, 14 April 2023

Magic Thursday: Why I Write for Young Adults with Melanie Pickering!



Ask any YA author why they write for a teenage audience, and more than likely their first answer is they are creating the kind of books they would have wanted to read when they were that age. You see, for the majority of us, there was a void in literature between middle-grade and adult fiction when we were younger, making it difficult to find age-appropriate books. 

Nowadays, the young adult shelves in bookstores and libraries are overflowing. Though not a genre within itself, young adult books have one of the largest followings on social media, and this is due to one thing. Emotion. 

We all joke about teenagers being drama queens, but it’s true. Young people are recording themselves reacting in over-the-top manners to the way the books they read have made them feel.

As a library assistant in a large secondary college, I’ve seen the influence that having access to different genres and authors can have on teenagers. Literature has always been an essential part of human culture, providing a means of education, entertainment, and inspiration. But for young adults, literature also plays a critical role in shaping their lives and values. 

Reading can help young adults to understand their own thoughts, feelings, and motivations. Not only can this help them navigate the challenges of adolescence and beyond, but it also provides a sense of comfort and understanding to young adults who are struggling with emotional challenges. By reading books with characters that are dealing with similar problems, they can gain a sense of perspective and realise that they are not alone in their struggles.

As I was writing my debut novel, Spill, I didn’t set out intending to tackle mental health issues. They just sort of happened organically as the story progressed. I had a blood-letting ghost and a protagonist who could see him whenever she drew blood. This first happens by accident, but then she starts bleeding herself on purpose. Add in a boyfriend who was a former cutter, and you’ve got some heavy issues. 

However, drawing on personal experience and having teenagers of my own, I could see a clear theme beyond the mental illness—something that affects nearly every young person at some point—not being understood, believed, or truly seen. My character, Amy, spends most of the book feeling invisible to everyone who isn’t a ghost. A very small number of my early readers challenged this idea, citing that she had a great friend group and people who loved her—how could she claim to not be seen? As adults, we might find this hard to understand, but for any young person going through this tumultuous phase of life, these seemingly irrational feelings are completely valid. It’s not up to us to tell anyone else how they should feel. But there are ways we can help.

As parents, mentors and educators, our role is to encourage young adults to seek literature that helps them explore the world from a safe place. This is also the time when they begin to develop their reading habits and interests, and the books they read can have a profound impact. If I can help just one young person feel validated, while providing entertainment and the promise of hope for the future beyond the last page, then I couldn’t ask for anything more. 

That’s why I write for young adults.





Spill

If you’d always felt invisible, how far would you go to be seen?

When seventeen-year-old Amy Shipley crosses the threshold of the abandoned house on Flinders Lane, she unwittingly unleashes the curse of a nineteenth-century bloodletter. Haunted by a charming ghost with a dark obsession, she is pushed down a path that leads to blood and pain.

But it’s a path where she is finally seen. Where she no longer feels alone.

Unable to ignore Amy’s descent into self-destruction, former boy-next-door Flynn Powell embarks on a mission to save the girl he’s fallen for. But walking that path opens old wounds, forcing him to question whether he’s the hero she really needs.

While Flynn battles his troubled past, Amy is thrust deeper into a seductive world of secrets and lies. In the fight to save their love, more than blood is going to be spilled, and it might just cost Amy her life.

If you like captivating mystery, characters with real issues and a tender romance that will melt your heart, you’ll love Amy and Flynn’s story.





Melanie Pickering

Melanie Pickering is an Australian author of genre-blending young adult novels that deal with love, loss, beauty and madness.

She has always had a vivid imagination and has been penning stories for as long as she can remember. Never satisfied when her favourite books were over, she continued the stories herself (often in cramped and messy handwriting) on the inside of the front and back covers.

Lewis Carroll’s timeless classic, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, fed her early hunger for twisted reality stories, and she has been obsessed ever since. 

She lives with her husband, two teenagers - plus their rescue pets - in beautiful sunny Brisbane, which is in stark contrast to the dark worlds that inhabit her stories. She loves dressing up, and thinks Halloween is terribly underrated.

You can find Melanie at her website.

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