romantic suspense

“Romantasy” Is Not a Dirty Word. But It Is the Wrong One.

Fantasy author Danielle L. Jensen recently pushed back against the “romantasy” label, arguing that it reduces complex fantasy novels to “there was kissing, therefore clearly dragons are optional.” She is not alone. Fantasy romance has always demanded that writers master two genres at once: not just the emotional arc of a romance, but also worldbuilding, magic, politics, danger and impossible choices. So why has a catchy nickname managed to make the genre sound smaller, sillier and less serious than it really is?

New Paranormal Romance Collection from Tracy Cooper-Posey

The timelines are no longer bending.
They’re breaking.

Across centuries, lovers are separated, history is rewritten, and a family of vampires and time travellers discover that the past is no longer safe — and neither is the future.

In Kiss Across Time Box Three, saving the people you love may mean risking the collapse of time itself.

Ningaloo: Deadly, Beautiful, and Still Real

In Ningaloo Nights, the stunning Australian outback isn’t just a backdrop—it’s a character all on its own: beautiful, remote, and deadly if you don’t know what you’re doing. When beta readers questioned whether I’d exaggerated the dangers, I had to assure them—every survival detail in the book is true. Growing up around Ningaloo taught me that nature doesn’t pull punches. But oh, the beauty is worth every ounce of caution.

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