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Series Catch-Up: Magic, Love and Mischief

Do you love diving into an amazing series?

We have the ultimate Paranormal Romance series for you: Magic, Love and Mischief Series

There are 3 books so far in this series.

Check out book one Antique Magic here:

Magic and romance meet at Spirit Antiques!

Bridget “Brie” St. James wasn’t looking for excitement. She just needed a part-time job while she finished grad school. Hired to be the assistant at an antique shop, she soon realizes there is more to her new place of work than meets the eye. Way more. Spirit Antiques caters not only to humans, but an array of mythical and mystical creatures.

Brie quickly makes friends with the witches, fairies, incubuses, and other unique customers at the seemingly sentient store, but more than anyone, it’s the shop’s handsome and mysterious owner Ezra who has her attention. But as their bright romance blooms, a dark spot from Ezra’s past emerges. An ancient and dangerous warlock has returned to claim his former pupil. Now it’s up to Brie to bring the magical community together to free her new love interest from the confines of a centuries-old blood contract.

With her newfound family, the graduate student has all the magic she needs, but will it be enough? Antique Magic is the first book in the Magic, Love, and Mischief series.

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!

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My Writing Journey

As a child, I wasn’t particularly fond of reading. However, things changed during my first year of high school. My friends were excited about a new movie, Carrie, by Stephen King. One of them asked if I had read the book. I hadn’t, so they gave me a copy to read before the movie came to town.

I took the book home, read it in my spare time, and quickly fell in love with the author’s writing style. I was captivated by the vivid details and loved how I could imagine the story unfolding in my mind.

When I finished Carrie, I knew I wanted to tell stories. I began keeping journals and writing short stories, though it was a secret I kept to myself. The process was more challenging than expected, but I continued writing throughout high school.

Life, however, had different plans. I joined the U.S. Air Force and served four years, mainly overseas. I got married and started a family with no regrets about the path I chose. Once my youngest daughter went to college, I felt it was time to pursue my writing. What started as a hobby quickly turned into much more. It’s never too late to pursue your dreams—sometimes, it’s something you’re born with.

Fourteen years ago, during the Christmas holidays, I fell ill and had a vivid dream about a brother and sister facing their worst fear. Their family was moving cross-country at Christmas. I could see them clearly in my mind and hear their voices. It felt like a calling—I knew I had to write their story.

Initially, my wife thought I was a bit crazy, but I stuck with it. I committed to reading and writing daily, teaching myself along the way. That’s right—I’m a self-taught writer with no formal training. My education has come from a handful of books on writing, some online classes, and a large writing conference I attended in Dallas in 2019.

In my opinion, the value of storytelling doesn’t lie in the number of degrees you hold but in how you tell a story. Crafting a novel is a skill developed over time, and reading is vital because it allows you to see how others tell their tales.

I read Hollow World by Michael J. Sullivan about ten years ago, and his writing profoundly influenced my writing. I reached out to him, and he promptly replied to my email. We continued to chat, and his best advice was to enjoy the journey. He was right. The publishing world is full of firsts: the first time I held my book, the first time I sold a book to a total stranger, my first book signing, and so on. Sometimes, things don’t go as planned, but that’s all part of the journey.

I’ve struggled with imposter syndrome, feeling like I wasn’t an actual writer or didn’t fit in. At times, I doubted the quality of my writing. But my mind self-doubt shifted during my next book signing. It was an incredible high—people who had purchased some of my earlier works were now seeking my new book. Just like any job, writing has its ups and downs. But if you love what you do, don’t give up.

So far, the highlight of my career has been signing a contract with 4 Horsemen Publications. Let me tell you how it happened. I was offered a table at a show in Orlando, which I gladly accepted. I’m not one to pass up a free table and the chance to sell my books. On the event’s second day, one of the authors invited my wife and me to dinner with them and a few other authors. We were excited to attend, but the author had to cancel at the last minute. Nonetheless, I decided to go and enjoy the evening.

When my wife and I arrived, we were greeted by the Chief Operating Officer and the Senior Editor of 4 Horsemen Publications. I had the feeling that I had been set up. After a wonderful dinner and listening to their pitch, I knew I was right. I also knew it was time to take my writing to the next level. Of course, I had to submit my work and see if it met their standards. After a few long weeks of waiting, I was offered a contract. I’ve never been happier and still write under the 4HP label today.  

Some of the most important advice I can offer an inspiring author is to read and write daily, even if only a paragraph or two. Never give up. If you enjoy writing, then write. Most of all, enjoy the journey!

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Series Catch-Up: Tales for Well-Dressed Cynics & Optimistic Ragamuffins

Do you love diving into an amazing series?

We have the ultimate Literary Fiction (Social Commentary) books for you: Tales for Well-Dressed Cynics & Optimistic Ragamuffins

There are 3 books so far by Cathleen Davies

Check out book one Cheeky, Bloody Articles here:

Acid trips, terrorists, and one hundred birthday candles. Icy baths, burning bodies, and everything in between.

This thought provoking debut short story collection from Cathleen Davies pulls no punches. Expertly skewering readers’ expectations on failing relationships, cabin fever, police violence, feminism, loss, and loyalty; each unique character tells a tale of the dissatisfied, the angst-laden, and the justifiably outraged.

Elder members of the LGBTQ+ community lament simpler times.
Young women in foster care construct a death-pact because #promises.
A cult dismembers their followers to prove more than loyalty.

In a place where horror straddles humor, Cheeky, Bloody Articles dares to answer questions like: What if you lived to be 100 years old but absolutely hated your family? What were the lyrics to that awful Eminem song? And: Exactly how long does it take for a rat to decompose?

The poignant yet provocative collection is terrible, wonderful, but most of all insightful.

Every story of this anxiety-ridden tongue-in-cheek romp makes you question how many stitches you would have needed if your mother had actually taken you to the hospital. They will make you wonder what would have happened if you hadn’t been stood up on that first date. There’s a chance you may even find yourself wishing you could redact your ex’s name from the diary of your life.

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!

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Where I Get My Ideas!

A woman in a blue shirt witha blonde ponytail smiles at the camera.

Hi, I’m J.B. Moonstar!  

I have loved the natural world from an early age and enjoy going to zoos and aquariums and watching animal shows on TV.  One of my favorite animals is the meerkat!  My stories are eco-fantasy adventures for juvenile readers (7 years and up).  In my stories, the dragons and mermaids are the “good guys”, and with help from my young heroes, they rescue endangered animals.  I want my readers to learn that animals have lives just like humans do – families and homes – and just want to survive among the growing threats posed by today’s world.  My books also give children a glimpse of the world from the animal’s point of view.  I hope that I can encourage children to learn about, and love, nature as much as I do!

Where do I get my ideas?

The main plot in my books are many times based on nature/conservation magazines that discuss the plight of animals who are being pushed to the brink of extinction because of human greed or ignorance of what their actions do to wildlife. Since the purpose of Ituria’s Islands on the moon is to rescue endangered animals, I get ideas from these types of magazines for the plot or theme.   

You may wonder about Ituria’s Island and if living in the caverns of the moon is pure fantasy.  However, I did a lot of research for the first book in The Ituria Chronicles – several months of reading about the moon, and how I could create islands under its surface. I learned about the volcano flows, cavern structures, water/ice believed to exist on the moon, as well as the moon’s relationship with the earth.  All these facts were considered to create a world that could exist.  In my research, I learned people are now talking about making human habitats in the moon’s caverns. It would keep humans safe from the 500-degree shifts in temperatures and meteor impacts on the surface. However, should they attempt this, I do need to tell them that Ituria got there first!  

What do I write?  

My books are written for elementary school readers, basically seven years and older and are safe for young readers.  My stories are “fantasy” adventures because they have dragons and mermaids, unicorns, magic potions, and magical items.  However, my dragons are vegetarian and don’t need to be defeated by the end of the story.  My stories are “eco-fantasy” because the dragons and other fantasy creatures are working with my main characters to rescue endangered animals, and in the process showing the reader that the natural world from the eyes of the animals, and that they need our help and protection.  

So far, my young heroes in The Ituria Chronicles series have helped rescue Red Wolves, Chinese Crested Terns, sick deer, a stranded manatee, and even tiger cubs – these creatures were being threatened by humans and needed someone with the courage to help them. I have also started a new series, The Mermaids of Crystal Cay, where the mermaids are helping sea creatures survive the threats created by humans in their underwater homes.  In the first book, Kimmi and the Sea Dragon, they deal with a ghost net and its devastating effects as it sweeps through a kelp garden.  In the second book, Roselia and the Ancient Warriors, they must rescue horseshoe crabs illegally poached from a wildlife refuge.

Who are my characters?  

My two series, The Ituria Chronicles and The Mermaids of Crystal Cay, are both composed of numerous stand-alone stories with a main theme of rescuing endangered animals.  In The Ituria Chronicles, my dragons Knocker and Megan have a potion that allows them to assume human shape for short periods of time so they can blend in with humans to accomplish their mission, and they enlist young heroes and heroines on Earth to assist in the rescues.

I love working with Knocker, he has such a confident air about him, and being a very large fire-breathing dragon allows him to control any situation, even when he is in human form. He has had many years of experience dealing with humans and doesn’t get upset when confronting them anymore, he knows he has the upper hand even though the humans may think they are in control.  Megan is a dragon who was trapped in a cave by humans for 350 years until freed by Jan, and she has an attitude, don’t try to hold her back!

My heroines, Jenna, Jan, and Michelle are ready and willing to stand up for themselves and not take orders from anyone; they are the ones in charge – even if they are only 11 to 12 years old. I guess it is how I wish I would have been at 12 – when I was 12, I was told that I could either be a nurse or a secretary – that was the only thing girls could do. 

My heroes, Russ and Taylor, also have their own backgrounds, and I have enjoyed seeing Taylor grow in confidence as he realizes that while he may have what some consider a handicap, he also has many strengths that outweigh this perceived weakness.  All my characters are compassionate and really care for their families and the animals that live around them. 

Ituria’s Alliance continues!

Come join Knocker, Megan, Michelle and the other members of Ituria’s Alliance as they rescue animals and protect nature from illegal poaching and other dangers posed by humans!   We are always looking for new recruits for Ituria’s Alliance! 

Website:   www.jbmoonstar.com
Instagram:   @j.b.moonstar 
Email:  jbmoonstar.author@gmail.com

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Series Catch-Up: The Mermaids of Crystal Cay

Do you love diving into an amazing series?

We have the ultimate Children’s Action Adventure series for you: The Mermaids of Crystal Cay

There are 2 books so far in this series.

Check out book one Kimmi and the Sea Dragon here:

“It looks like its tail is broken! Let’s make sure it gets home!”

Young mermaid Kimmi has been chosen to raise a baby sea dragon until it is large enough to live with its parents in the open ocean. Although warned not to go beyond the reef with her young charge, after Kimmi’s necklace breaks and the pearls scatter, they forget the warning and swim out to find the lost pearls.

When a ghost net threatens the mermaids’ kelp garden and the sea creatures who live there, Kimmi and Snappy must be brave in order to save the day. Will they make it back to the safety of the reef?

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!

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The Weirdo’s Guide to Finding Purpose

As part of my ongoing attempt to be a revolutionary, I often preach that writing is for everyone. I attend poetry nights and read poorly-written rhyming couples about something amusing enough to inspire a few chuckles, or relevant enough to provoke a few finger clicks. Inbetween these poems, I sermonise like a self-important Jim Jones character over the tiny crowd:

‘We all need creative outlets,’ I proclaim to the roomful of ambiguously-gendered poets with multi-coloured hair, ‘so everyone, everywhere should speak their truth, regardless of quality or marketability, because it’s bound to resonate with someone, somewhere. My hideous progenies, go forth and prosper! Prose belongs to the world!’ The poets usually scoff at being called hideous and the presumption that I progenated them, and go on to perform much better poetry.

And I do believe that writing is for everyone. I wouldn’t get so excited at the prospect of teaching fourteen-year-olds and baby undergrads creative writing modules if I didn’t believe this. I wouldn’t recommend Kathy Acker books in earnestness, or smile so much at the rhyming graffiti in toilet cubicles. Writing is for everyone. This, I truly believe. But there’s also a horribly narcissistic part of me that whispers: yes, absolutely, writing is for everyone… but it’s especially for me. 

I hold onto this platitude not from a place of pride, but from a place of self-protection. As a lonely, youngest child, growing up in the idyllic Yorkshire countryside, I was bored brainless for the entirety of my childhood. My siblings were too old to play with me; my parents were perpetually overwhelmed. I was this ugly, queer kid who acted weird (I pray I have some kind of neurodivergence, because otherwise I have no bloody excuse). I couldn’t get on with the farmer’s kids whose heads were screwed on right while mine was forever in the clouds. So, I did what any burgeoning delusionist would do and made up imaginary friends. Their backgrounds were convoluted and ridiculous and they all knew each other well. Most importantly, they protected me, and loved me above all others. 

As I grew older, the nature of the imaginary friends changed. Mostly, I stopped speaking about them aloud and instead kept them firmly in my own head so that I wasn’t rendered insane. Alongside this, my imaginary friends grew better-looking, more sexually provocative, less like protective parental figures, and instead a quirky group of misfits with various romantic sparks blossoming between them. These imaginings gave me moments of bliss in a life that was otherwise bleak and miserable. Pathetic fallacy is not so much a literary device but a fact of life for Northern-English adolescents in the late-2000s.

At sixteen, I put pen to paper officially for the first time. Or at least, that’s what I claim in podcasts. Before that, I uploaded fan-fiction about my favourite bands, and wrote poems about drinking black coffee and being depressed (when I actually hated coffee and wasn’t depressed enough by half, considering), and I’d been keeping diaries since I could write. Still, it works better as an origin story if I suggest that there was a moment of serendipity where the universe bent down to me and said ‘enough already, you’re destined to be a writer!’ My sixth-form college held a creative writing competition where the winner got £300, and I wrote a story about a teenage girl desperate to be a writer (go figure) and came second and won £50. This was a lucrative start to a frustratingly unlucrative career, and for that I am inordinately grateful.

The rest was surprisingly linear. A teacher suggested I apply for the creative writing course at UEA (a university in the UK famed for its Creative Writing programme), which I did. I got in, I moved to Norwich, I came out of the closet (though the door was always ajar for me), and I published stories in their undergrad anthologies. When I graduated, I spent a year working in China, which was an interesting year full of amazing experiences, but really it taught me that I would always be happier in universities surrounded by other creative, little weirdos, and I ran off to Birmingham to do a Masters. Much the of the same continued throughout my 20s. Year abroad, creative writing degree, year abroad, creative writing degree… Throughout all this, I got better at sending out stories to journals, emailing publishers, and pasting my scraps of paper into passable collections. At some point I stopped and looked around and thought: ‘Oh shit, I’m actually a writer, aren’t I? I can’t believe it, I’m actually doing it.’ 

 Now I’m completing my Creative Writing PhD, and things are fine. I’ve handed in a novel for an exam board of terrifying academics. I’ve published three books, and have another on the way. I’ve done podcasts where interviewers have referred to me as a writer, and I didn’t flinch. 

There are still moments where I remember who I was (that weird, queer little freak) and where I’ve come from (the backside of arse-end nowhere), and I freeze. But when my head’s in my hands and I’m swearing that I don’t deserve this self-important platitude, the pen sneaks itself back into my hand and before you know it I’m scribbling down bullshit again. During a bout of imposter syndrome, my academic supervisor listened to my self-flagellating woes with the patience of a saint before saying: 

‘You say you’re not sure you can do this, but it sounds like you’re compelled to. I think if you weren’t here at the uni, you would be writing this book anyway.’ 

And it’s true. I would have been. 

There are others who doubt me too. If I was a different, less-millennial creator I’d call them ‘haters’, but I think they’re more like ‘baffled-ers’ in reality. They see me stumbling over my words with my stupid green hair and my silly facial expressions, making self-deprecating comments and jokes that don’t land and they think her?! Really, her?! She’s not introverted or cool enough. Her accent is too northern and her voice is too loud. She’s not pretty, or interesting, or even really talented, and frankly, if she’s not neurodivergent then she’s just plain fucking weird. How in god’s name is she a published writer and I’m not? 

When this happens, I think of the old adage about modern art. The red-faced critic stares at the Rothko canvas screaming, ‘that’s nothing! I could do that!’. To which the artist responses: ‘Well sure you could, but you didn’t.’ 

They scowl at me across a pub table, sucking on their cigarettes. Too much of our socialising is unsaid, which I find painful because words are the tool I’m most familiar with. When I hear them silently ask that how in god’s name question I can’t say anything out loud for fear of getting it all wrong. But Christ, when I see their faces twisted saying how in God’s name did she do it? I wish to tell them: ‘I just did. Writing is for everyone. So, the question is, why don’t you?’ 

You can find out more about Cathleen, including where to find her online, here: https://linktr.ee/cathleendavieswriter

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A Writer’s Journey (Or The Art of Going Nowhere Fast!)

I guess it’s one of the standard questions every author gets asked sooner or later: “What was your journey as a writer like?”

I’ve written all my life, starting way back in my primary school days, when I used to write lurid stories about being stranded on desert islands, unicorns and monsters. My imagination was one tumultuous riot of ideas and images, and still is. The teachers set an assignment, a two or three page essay/story. I used to fill two or three exercise books. I often wish I had kept some of those stories just to reflect on early beginnings.

As I grew, I discovered I had other talents, drawing, painting, even back then my main art subjects were superheroes, which I still like to doodle with today. But writing was always at the forefront.

It wasn’t serious back then, just writing for my own delectation, ideas would come to me, [frequently] and I would just write about it, I often wonder how many millions of words I have written and forgotten.

I discovered camping, travelling, going out into the big wide world, a good source of subject matter, gathering experiences, though, again, at the time, I didn’t realise exactly what a treasure trove of knowledge I was building, or what for. I couldn’t settle, I can’t tell you how many different jobs I had in between travelling through Europe, the near east, the length and breadth of the U.K.

I dabbled a little in sending submissions to literary agents, with absolutely no results, but I wasn’t deterred. I kept writing and sending, happy with the never-ending merry-go-round of sending manuscripts and receiving rejection slips.

I don’t know exactly when it did become serious. Probably when an English literary agent finally accepted a young adult horror novel I had written. I was thrilled to bits. The literary agent, who shall remain nameless, [I’ll explain in a minute], encouraged me to also design and paint book covers for some of his other clients which I was all too happy to do. I even had one accepted and published which was a great boost to my self-esteem.

Unfortunately, it was all a scam. The literary agent was a fraud, he duped me, and several other aspiring authors into submitting the work only to plagiarize it and publish it under his own name. It’s not an uncommon story, and I was pleased when he was prosecuted and found guilty.

But that wasn’t the end of it. About a year later I saw a t.v. listing in the paper for a new adventure series. It caught my eye because the name of the series, and the title font design they were using was the same as the young adult novel I had submitted to the literary agent.

Long story short, the plotline of the t.v. series was exactly the same as my novel, and a lot of the characters matched. I sought the advice of a lawyer who having read my novel and seen the first four episodes of the t.v. series, was so confident in my case, he agreed to take the case pro bono. The case collapsed because we could never make a connection between the literary agent and the t.v. company who produced the series. Here’s the kicker, I was told by the t.v. company if I ever published the YA Novel in its present form I would be sued for plagiarism! Go figure.

To say that little episode took the wind out of my sails would be an understatement. It didn’t stop me writing, but I was reluctant to make any more submissions.

Fast forward fifteen years.

Originally from the U.K. I came to the U.S.A. in November 2017. In June 2023 I received my American Citizenship. I’m not sure what it was, but I felt inspired. I took a trip down to Cancun, Mexico. I was sitting on a bus, and I saw a store with a huge gorilla squatting on the canopy over the store front, the store’s name was JUNGLE. And that’s all it took.

I began writing the first novel in THE JUNGLE SERIES. It just felt right. The words just poured out of me. I finished it, edited it to the best of my ability and decided to take the bull by the horns and start submitting it. [Not with a little trepidation, I might add.] I was thrilled when it was accepted for publication by 4Horsemen Publications, I haven’t looked back since.

I think my story is typical of many aspiring [and successful] authors. If I have made light of it, it really wasn’t. But if you write seriously, it’s not because you want to write, it’s because you need to write. It’s in your blood. Don’t let anyone tell you writing is easy because they don’t know what they are talking about. I love writing, I have never considered it a “job”, but sometimes your characters haunt you, they never leave you alone, they drive you crazy.

Sometimes I feel as if I am going nowhere fast, just spinning my wheels, I have all these stories running around my head like headless chickens begging to be written and I wonder how many will see the light of day. Will I have the time, will anyone even be interested?

And writing goes beyond the actual creative process, that’s the fun part. Building new worlds, new characters, new adventures. Wait till you have to do all the rewrites, the editing…

It’s hard, it can be solitary… But do you know what?

I wouldn’t change it for the world.

Follow Alan at: 

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Series Catch Up: The Aestrangel Trilogy

Do you love diving into an amazing series?

We have the ultimate Horror series for you: 

There are 3 books so far in this complete series.

Check out book one Aestrangel the Fallen here:

Hell hath no fury like an angel scorned!

Aestra, favorite teenaged angel of The Lord, has been sent to Earth to ensure that high school senior, Jake Parker, pursues the correct path. He is teetering between two options that may seem innocuous, but only one will lead him to positively impact the lives of millions of humans.

But what happens when the heart chooses love over responsibility? For Aestra, one fateful night will set into motion a chain of events unforeseen by even her infallible Creator.

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!

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Haunter’s Tale It’s Alive!

As the clock ticks down, dear fiends and phantoms, the veil between the living and the dead grows thinner. Soon it will be October 31, 2024, the day when Accomplishing Innovation Press unleashes the first volume of Haunter’s Tale upon the world. This spine-chilling anthology promises to be a ghastly delight, overflowing with ghoulishly original stories, eerie true ghost accounts, haunting artwork, and much more. For those who revel in horror, this is one book you won’t dare to miss!

At the helm of Haunter’s Tale is none other than James-Michael Roddy, a name that evokes images of some of the biggest Halloween events around the globe. With his diabolical genius and extensive experience in the horror genre, Roddy ensures that this anthology will be a masterpiece of terror. He has brought together the most talented horror/haunt designers and fans to create an unforgettable reading experience. The anticipation for its release date is palpable, with horror enthusiasts everywhere eagerly awaiting their chance to delve into the darkness.

Haunter’s Tale Volume One is no ordinary collection; it is a plunge into the depths of horror and hauntings. Each volume will feature:

Ghoulishly Original Stories: From twisted minds come new and terrifying tales that will leave you unable to sleep at night.

True Ghost Accounts: Chilling real-life encounters that will make your blood run cold.

Haunting Artwork: Visually stunning pieces that capture the essence of each story’s eerie atmosphere.

Backstories and More: Gain insight into the inspiration and creation of each spine-tingling tale.

In-Depth Interviews: Take a peek into the dark worlds of these masterminds as they discuss their creations.

Keep Repeating, It’s Only a Book

Volume One, titled Haunters and Hauntings, will kick off the series with a bang. Featuring an introduction from the legendary Tom Savini, a revered figure in the horror community, this volume sets the stage for what’s to come. Savini’s unique insights and experiences add an extra layer of depth and terror to the collection, ensuring that readers are in for a truly immersive experience.

Haunter’s Tale goes beyond simply showcasing stories and artwork; it celebrates the talented and dedicated creators behind them. The ultimate goal of this series is to provide a platform where horror enthusiasts can come together, share their work, and inspire one another. Every creator has a unique perspective on the genre, and Haunter’s Tale aims to give them the opportunity to share it with the world.

To complement this terrifying new book series, an hour-long podcast will also be launched. This podcast will serve as an extension of the Haunter’s Tale platform, offering in-depth interviews with horror creators. Take a deep dive into the minds behind the madness as they engage in thought-provoking conversations about all things horror, and read spine-chilling renditions of the stories featured in the anthology.

So brace yourselves, dear readers. The world of Haunter’s Tale is dark, twisted, and waiting to be explored. Enter if you dare, but remember to keep repeating: it’s only a book… or is it?

www.haunterstale.com

www.michaelroddystoryteller.com

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Series Catch Up: The Ituria Chronicles

Do you love diving into an amazing series? Then we have the ultimate Middle Grade Adventure booksfor you: 

The Ituria Chronicles

There are 11 books so far in this series.

Check out book one Russ and the Hidden Voice here:

There is a place filled with magic and safe for those seeking sanctuary…

When Russ is rescued from an untimely death, he is transported to a new world within the caverns of the moon. It is here that his savior asks Russ to help with a serious problem threatening to destroy Ituria’s Island. Will they be successful, and will Russ ever get back home?

Inspired by Ituria’s noble actions, Russ is determined to save the island, with the assistance of a dragon and other island residents. He even finds that he’s getting assistance from the mysterious nightmares! It all depends on finding the source of the haunting voice that only Russ can hear.

This book is great for early readers who love the environment, making friends, and learning how they can help real life animals and their habitats.

You can order this book  in all formats directly from our 4HP Website and receive 10% OFF using coupon code 4HP10!