Cover Art

As much as my logical brain wants to claim that cover art on a book isn’t important, it really is. Most of the books I have picked up cold were either by an author I already knew or the cover art grabbed me (and the back cover copy was interesting after that).

At the same time I’ve read about how, in traditional publishing, the author has very little to no say in what the cover looks like. Most publishers will work with an author if they really hates the cover, but they’re under no obligation to. On top of that, the cover art doesn’t always accurately represent the insides of the book. The publishers are trying to make a sale, not show a scene.

Which makes me nervous, in a genre where it’s popular to put women in revealing clothing/armor, I really really don’t want Tabitha to end up looking like a girl on the cover. I feel like that would defeat the point. Maybe I’ll get lucky and my cover art will be a close up of an eye or a picture of a sword or something, then I won’t have to worry about that. Then I’ll just be left to twitch when the second book of my series comes out and the font used for the title on the spine is not the same size as it was on the first book. (I’m looking at you Windwitch.)

Now obviously, I first have to get to the point where I have a publisher, but that’s a different story.

Where My Ideas Come From

A lot of times people ask writers: ‘Where do your ideas come from?’ to which the usual reply is, ‘Everywhere.’ While this is basically true. While it seems like an idea pops out fully formed, it is likely that you’re only hearing about it once a lot of ideas from all over the place will finally come together in that one lightning bolt moment.

I can get little ideas from tv shows or movies I watch, other books I read, from music I listen to, or even just things I see or hear during the course of my day. It’s taking all those little sparks and organizing them until you hit that one piece that brings it all together …sort of like the straw that broke the camel’s back, only it’s a good thing.

For the Storyteller, that moment was while I was reading through lesser known fairy tales on the Internet and I read one called The Little Wildrose. When I read that the main character was carried off and then raised by eagles, that’s when the lightning struck my brain. I had wanted to write a story with fairy tales where the characters are aware that the fairy tales are a thing every since I read Mercedes Lacky’s The Fairy Godmother. It wasn’t until this point that I finally had the idea of where to start.

And even with that idea, I had a false start where Wildrose was the main character and was going into the tales alone. This is where I got the idea for playing with genders though, as I made Wildrose male and had him interacting with a female Bluebeard. A few months later I wrote 90k words in October and November with Tabitha as the main character and the rest is now history.

Music and Writing

I know it is rather popular for writers to write to music, but I never listen to music when I am writing. Like I said yesterday, when I am writing new prose, I need to have it quiet with no outside stimuli. I tend to not listen to music when I revise either.

But that doesn’t mean music isn’t super important to my writing process. I have songs that I associate with my different stories and whenever I hear them, in the car or while I’m at work, that gets my brain going on that particular story. Sometimes that means I’ll have notes that I need to jot down real quick. Other times it means it just helps me to think through the story.

Songs that I associate with The Storyteller series:
Demons by Imagine Dragons
Payphone by Maroon Five
A Thousand Years by Christina Perri

Where I Write

Writing for me happens almost exclusively on electronic devices now. I used to have a little notebook in my back pocket, but transcribing was a beast, especially if I was writing out an entire scene. That was before I got my new phone and the Scrivener app which I simply love. It comes in such handy when I’m at work because I can quickly jot down ideas/scenes and then just transfer it over when I get home. But where I write depends on what I am doing at the time.

New prose is done either on my phone (when I’m out of the house) or my netbook, which I take into the basement. I tend to get distracted very easily when I’m writing new prose, so I have to remove myself from the Internet and my laptop where there are tons of great distractions. I also need it to be quiet with as little outside stimuli as possible. This is why I go to the basement, just to completely avoid my husband who works from home, and the cats, who like to demand attention.

Revising takes place on my laptop, which is hooked up to a large monitor so my screen is larger and I can see more words at once. I am a lot less likely to get distracted when revising. Plus, with my style of writing there is a ton of moving files and words around so a mouse is necessary. I have been known to revise pretty effectively even in busy, public places. I guess once the words are down, they stay in my head better.

Character Art

So I’m not to the point of having fan art, since not much of my stuff has been out there in the world. However, I have commissioned pictures of different characters over time. Some of those characters are from stories that have become trunk novels, but the pictures are still nice. These are the ones just from the stories I mentioned in my first post.


This is Silverfire and her otp Redstone. My naming conventions were not quite as developed back then, but Silverfire was the first original character I ever came up with. art by Ajinryu


Shani is from ‘The Colors Of’ which started out as a pokemon fan fic. She actually has silver hair that she dyes black to hide it. art by Sarah Ellerton.


The three main characters from Shifting Winds. Angelica is the princess. Dylan is the demon who captures her, and Rusty is Dylan’s servant/apprentice. (I never finished coloring Rusty.)
art by Ajinryu

Author Photoshoot

At a certain point, a few years ago, it occurred to me that I needed to have a nice picture of myself to put up on my social media platforms. I have always taken lots of pictures, but I have never had lots of pictures taken of me. So I planned a day with a friend where we staged a photoshoot at the barn where I work. It ended up being a rather cloudy and windy day, but we did the best with what we had. Here are some of the pictures from that shoot.

The horse is Nick, my Appaloosa gelding who was born on the farm. These pictures are from 2014 when he was 2, so he’s quite a bit bigger now. I haven’t changed all that much.


My Stories

So I have been writing for …well my entire life. This is the list of stories I have “finished”, in that they contain a beginning, middle, and end. Not a huge list, but then most of my early years I spent bouncing from one project to another so very few of them ever were finished. Since I’m matured as a writer, I have a better track record of finishing.

Silverfire: Technically a set of stories (not just one boo) about a silver fox who rescues a kingdom. Other characters include Brightfire and Redfire. They were all, likely no more than a few thousand words and very rough, but they had endings. The idea came from Brian Jacques’ Redwall books, in which I was rather infatuated in my younger years. This story did evolve with me a bit and I have a much more current version of it started but the concept is so simple really just a trunk novel. However, Silverfire holds a special place in my heart and I’d love to use her in a novel some day. (Though probably with a name change.)

Gryphons, Gryfalcons, and Makkar: The story of a gryffin princess who finds allies in gryfalcons, and enemies in the makkar. A milestone in my career, this story was over 100 pages (in Microsoft Word). I was very proud. Again, trunk novel, but the main character Wirith’s name pops up when I need a name for a gryffin in other stories. This idea came from Mercedes Lackey’s The Black Gryphon trilogy.

Warehouse: A girl with powers ends up in a house where children with powers are raised and must unravel the mystery of why they exist. Totally ripped off from X-men. I tried fixing it once, but it’s a trunk novel.

Demonslayer: A woman with amnesia finds out she was trained by a group who are the last line of defense against demons, and that group has been wiped out. This story marks my first fully fleshed out world, and important first step into being a high fantasy writer. I have other novels and stories and characters planned in this world. However, the story is still rather immature and needs a complete rewrite, especially considering it’s only 23k. (Man, it felt really long when I wrote it.) This was influenced by a book google helped me to remember, Rhapsody: Child of Blood by Elizabeth Haydon.

Blessings of the Nerial: A little faith never hurt anyone, but it’s about to start. Wrote during NaNo one year, and I’m not positive if there were any strong influences for this one. I really like the concept but I don’t actually like the main character …so if I were going to rewrite it, it would need an overhaul.

Shifting Winds
: Angelica is a princess who lives life the way she wants, until she’s kidnapped by a demon. I love this story, but something is fundamentally broken in it, and I don’t have the skill to fix it. Inspiration for this story came from a mini series that played in a Harvest Moon video game. Bizarre right?

The Colors Of: Environment was ruined in a war and computers are designed to look like animals. This story was inspired by a Pokemon fan fic I wrote back in my fan fic days …so yeah. It took on a decent life of it’s own since then. I’d love to clean it up some day.

The Asir/Vanir War (12k): Loki leads a group a vanir to Asgard in order to stop the war raging on Midgard. Meant to be a prequel to a story I haven’t finished. This is a short story (fantasy short story), but it is clean and polished, and thus it gets to be on this list. I’ve loved Norse mythology for a long time. I wrote this before the whole Marvel/Loki/Tom Hiddleston thing.

The Storyteller: Once upon a time there was a prince. She was a girl. My first complete and polished novel. I’ve been working on the sequel.

Commission of Tabitha

This is a picture I had commissioned of Tabitha from my novel, The Storyteller. I love it tons. Not really much else to say about it. A picture is worth a thousand words after all.

Tabitha © Laura Highcove

If you want more information on Tabitha,
you can click here to get the first chapter of her story.

If you want more information on the artist, you can find it here.

Writing Struggles

I have found, in my writing, that I have times when my writing just flows, and it comes naturally, the dialog, the actions, the description. And there are other times when I struggle with a scene, I force myself through it NaNo style. Then I’ll come back later to try and iron it out, and it will flop all over the place like a fish trying to escape a butcher’s knife. I have come to discover that a lot of times when I have these troubles, the only way that I can fix them is go back and completely rewrite the scene, from scratch, and what I generally find is that the struggle I had was in me as a writer trying to force my characters into doing something and them desperately trying to tell me that they were having none of it.

I am getting a bit better with recognizing when this is happening. If something isn’t flowing, most of the time I can catch it and go back to the rewrite step before I put myself and my characters through a non-working scene.

However, this weekend I ran into what felt like this struggle, where my writing just wasn’t working, only it followed me from story to story. After two days of things not working I pulled out a short story that I’m pretty happy with and went to revising it. And it very shortly turned into a massive struggle, when all I was trying to do was streamline the story a bit. This one hit me much deeper because this was something I had already written, something that already worked, and somehow I was unable to revise it into something that still worked.

I cried. I admit it. I felt that somehow I had just … lost whatever it was that made me able to write. At lunch, my husband admitted that he could tell I was upset and so I explained to him what was happening as best I could.

And wonderful man that he is, made me realize that what was happening was that I had been rereading one of my favorite fantasy trilogies, and in that, I was trying to write in a style that was not my own, while I desperately tried to tell myself I was having none of it. So the reason I was struggling with all of my stories over the past few days was because I was forcing myself to do something that was against my nature. I can’t write like someone else any more than someone else can write like me.

Just chalk it up to another life lesson where I am coming to realize that when writing is a struggle, (and I mean a real struggle, not just ‘oh I’m too tired’) that it is simply a character not being able to be who they are, whether it be a denizen of my fictitious worlds or my own self.