Wait! I forgot to put up my wreath. Is it too late?

A horseman dressed in black armor.

I was so busy editing, that I just didn’t get around to pulling the holiday wreath on my door! Oh, wow! I’ll go get it right now. (I literally just got up from writing this email, pulled the wreath out of my basement and switched out the summer butterfly on my front door.) Boom. Decorating done.

From Guardians of the Horsemen, Book 2 Chapter 1

Kalleck followed the tracks of their horses, easily visible along the trail leading higher into the mountains. Through the long summer evening, he rode on, gaining altitude steadily as he went, until the sun sank toward the west. Coming up over the crest of a ridge, he saw a column of smoke, harsh and black against the evening sky.

Checking his weapons, Kalleck rode nearer.

The burning remains of a small homestead came into view. What had once been a snug cottage was now an inferno, flames leaping high into the evening sky. From his position, no one was visible. Keeping under the cover of the trees, Kalleck made a circle around the place.

On the hill north of the burning house, tracks were plain in the soft earth. Dismounting, Kalleck knelt to examine the ground closely. The imprints of many heavy boots were visible, as well as the hoofprints of several horses. Whoever had started the fire had only recently left this place. It hadn’t been one person alone.

An exiled horseman makes a secret alliance with a traitor queen…

A young man on a horse, overlooking the ocean.

I have a new fantasy book coming up, and I’ve been working hard. I finished editing scenes, and changing out names in my new project. I can’t write and think of good names for characters at the same time, so I just name them something generic, but distinctive enough that the “find” feature will work, and keep writing. That leaves me with a group of people who need names at the end. It’s one of my final editing steps. I’m doing another read through to make sure all my edits worked. I hope to be off to the professional line edit soon! While that’s happening, I can finalize cover design, interior layout, and book descriptions. The description is, for sure, the hardest piece of writing in the whole book. Here’s some of what I have so far.

A dying prince undertakes a quest to save his father.

An outcast horseman seeks vengeance to destroy the people to whom he once swore his loyalty.

A murderous queen. A dying prince. A girl takes on the army who captured her father.

An exiled horseman makes a secret alliance with a traitor queen, bargaining with blood and betrayal to win a kingdom.

Marry the king. Murder him. The battle for vengeance is coming.

A dying prince uncovers a plot to murder his father and steal the throne. On a desperate voyage to reach the king before it can happen, he boards a ship. Spies hide among the crew. When their treachery is exposed, two of them attack him and throw him overboard to die in the ocean.

Washed up on an unfamiliar shore, he finds healing and new loyalties, but the plot is larger than he could ever have imagined. His own kingdom is not the only one in peril. The masked horsemen are already under attack. After a raid burns her village, a young woman takes on an army, determined to free her captured father.

On his way to warn his father, the prince must ally with her, even though she doesn’t want his help. Beautiful, angry and determined to stop at nothing until she succeeds, she would hate him if she knew who he really was.

A prince and two traitors…

I feel like it’s taking a crazy long time to get this writing project done. But, I confess, I’ve had a few health concerns that, while they didn’t STOP me from writing, have certainly limited my time, energy and brain power. The last few weeks have been much better and I’m stepping on the gas pedal now! It feels really good.

From Guardians of the Horsemen Book 2 Chapter 6

The deck remained silent until Tel heard hushed voices. Two men talking in whispers. Tel remained motionless, listening.

“They’ll send the message to the king soon,” a man said in hushed tones.

“Yes. They might have sent it already,” the other replied. “The king will go. He cares deeply about Lord Olthorin. Enough to name him his heir. Even though he had to do it. His spineless weakling of a son won’t be ruling anything.”

Hot fury rushed through Tel’s body as they referred to him that way. He wanted to confront them, to scream at them that they were wrong. But how could he? It was true. He was weak.

One of the men spoke again in a low voice. “The letter will tell the king to sail north to Talla and travel up the river to the fortress of Skarthal in Karanis and he will find Lord Olthorin there. Something will happen to the king along the way.”

Tel suddenly felt like he was choking. These people already had Olthorin, and they were planning to use him as bait to lure the king into a trap and kill him. And the queen was behind all of it. His father trusted her. He loved her. And she was only using him to gain power.

He had to tell his father the truth. Tel would find a way to make him listen. He had to.

“Who is that?” the man’s voice said.

Tel’s insides clenched. Had they spotted him? Swift footsteps approached. The tall man with the scar and one of his friends looked down at Tel in disbelief.

“Good evening,” Tel said, forcing his voice into a calm tone, and punctuating his words with a cough.

“You heard us,” the man said through gritted teeth.

“Heard what?” Tel kept his tone innocent, his expression confused.

“You heard what we said,” the tall man fixed him with a piercing stare.

“What do you mean—?” Tel began to protest.

The man crouched down to clamp a hand over Tel’s mouth, stifling any outcry, while his friend dragged Tel to his feet and shoved him against the rail. He drew a long knife and raised it. Adrenaline coursing through his body, Tel gathered all his meagre strength and twisted to one side, causing the blow aimed at his heart to fall behind his shoulder. Hot pain burned through his body as the blade struck him.

Crazy Creatures

One of my favorite parts of fantasy is the strange and magical creatures that live in fantasy worlds. In my novel River in the Sand, the desert is inhabited by venomous, carnivorous lizards. Watch out!

These dangerous lizards inhabit the desert in AJ Park's book, River in the Sand.
This fantasy novel by AJ Park is set in the desert.

Poisoned Splinter Finalist for Book Award

In the Fantasy Novel "Poisoned Splinter" by AJ Park a prince slips into violence as a dark sorcerer twists his mind.

I’m super excited this week because I just found out that Poisoned Splinter is a finalist in the FAPA President’s Book Awards 2025. I have to wait until the first week of August to get the final details, but it’s an honor to be part of this!

In this books, an evil sorcerer uses the life energy of innocent people to fuel his magic. Prince Samanath of Ischar and his new bride, Dia fight against his dark powers.
He casts an enchantment to destroy Samanath’s sanity and banishes them to the jungle. Dia fights to survive as her husband quickly becomes more dangerous than anything else in the wild jungle.

Check out this book! You can buy it directly from the author at a discount, https://buy.stripe.com/8wMdS815i3XZ3Uk4gg or you can get it from Amazon!

nature #fantasybooks #magic #fantasyadventure #ajparkwriting #summerreads #theothersideofmakebelieve #hiking #reading #fantasyreaders #strongwomen

I love new stories!

You like to read too, so I’m guessing you understand how much I love being totally involved in a story. A feeling so good, you have withdrawal at the end of it. The only cure is… more story. I have been craving writing some new stories. I’d really like a couple of excellent shorter stories to lead into my longer works. Sounds fun and easy, right? Short stories have to carry a lot of weight. There are a few important criteria:

  1. They must be good on their own!! Who would be drawn into a longer work, if the short story isn’t good?
  2. They must relate to a longer book, without SPOILERS!
  3. They need to fit a whole plot into a small space.
  4. They can’t steal the thunder from a potential sequel.
  5. They need to be able to be read by someone who’s never read anything of mine before, so they have to include all the worldbuilding and set up.

Do you have any areas of story you wanted to know more about? I’d love your input!

The #2 Way to Die on the Freeway

A row of port-a-potties.

I couldn’t decide which title was best for this story…

Port-a-loo, coming right at you!

Watch out! Flying port-a-potty!

The Loo that Flew…

A port-a-potty accident!

Apparently, a couple of days ago one of our aunties was driving down I-15. She moved in behind a truck hauling a trailer full of port-a-potties. Suddenly, one of the straps broke, and the last potty in line flew! She braked and swerved but “It was HOT on me!” It went right into her car.

I’m happy to report that she wasn’t hurt, and I know you’re all dying to know if the potty was empty? (Yes, thank goodness!)

Though the trailer was fully loaded, only one potty made the plunge. We are so grateful she is OK! Who wants to go that way??  We’re all worried when we see a port-a-potty about someone having an accident. Well, she did. An automotive accident.

New Release 6-20-24

I am so excited to announce the release of River in the Sand, Seven Rivers Book Two.

A murdered king. A cursed princess…

Hiding in a remote corner of the desert, Kyjia guards a precious tablet of gold granting the right to rule the kingdom of Tyar. Her enemies will stop at nothing to possess it and claim the throne. When her father is murdered, she realizes they will come after her next.

On a quest to protect Kyjia, Allenthal travels deep into the desert. He comes to the aid of her father as he falls victim to a deadly ambush. Too late to save him, Allenthal accepts his dying request to help his family. But instead of gratitude, Kyjia believes Allenthal murdered her father, and he finds himself condemned to die for the very crime he tried to prevent.

Kyjia flees from her enemies, taking refuge in an enormous network of caverns. Day by day, their hunt grows closer. Finally, she is cornered and they cast a deadly curse on her, offering her the cure in exchange for revealing the location of the tablet. When Kyjia refuses, they leave her injured, blind and alone.

Re-release of War’s Ending

As an author, everyone always tells you that you must complete your work, send it out into the world, and move on. There are very good reasons for this! If you never do this one step, you can never go on and write more books. This advice is not wrong!

However, I broke the rule for a couple of reasons. My first book, War’s Ending came out in 2019. My first book! But the writing in it needed just a little touch up! I have always loved the story. I love the culture of horsemen who refuse to show their faces to outsiders, I love the tenacious heroine. Together the two of them attempt to stop a war.

I have had a sequel living in my files for at least four years, and I wanted the writing quality in the first book to match up to the new one. That makes sense, doesn’t it? Plus there were a couple of writing mistakes in the first book that were… (how can I say this nicely)? Embarrassing. So here is the brand new, Second Edition of War’s Ending! Learn more here…

Interconnected Stories…

I am just about to send Seven Rivers Book Two back to the editor. She made great suggestions to strengthen the story as well as position myself well for a third book. Cause hey, why shouldn’t we right another one? This could be a trilogy or even a series of seven. Doesn’t that make sense for the Seven Rivers? My goal is to write a collection of separate but interconnected stories, that way it can be a series, but still give readers satisfaction as they read each one. I don’t know about you, but unsatisfying endings make me angry!!!

I’m going to be wrapping up the launch sale on The Ring Keeper very soon, so if you need something to read this week, get it now. Here is a snippet from the beginning.

From The Ring Keeper -Chapter One

The Shekkar cut across the distance, heading straight for them them, gaining fast. Ana could hear the demons clearly now, and their horrible voices sounded triumphant. They were about to claim their prize. She stopped on the brink of the cliff, frozen, the yawning space open below her. Zarek had placed himself between Ana and the Shekkar, his sword in one hand and his dagger in the other. But there were too many enemies to fight, and they charged toward him, black claws outstretched. The foremost of the creatures struck at him. He blocked the blow with his sword, but poisonous claws seized the weapon, twisting it out of his grip. A flash of moonlight lit the sword blade as it spun away, landing behind the demon. Zarek sheathed his knife and darted straight toward Ana. As his shoulder slammed into her, his arm seized her waist, and his momentum propelled them out into the black abyss. Ana screamed as they fell.