Sacha Black's Blog, page 21
June 1, 2022
140 Writing and Marketing Systems with Elana Johnson
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 140 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Elana Johnson all about writing and marketing systems.
In this episode we cover:
How to assess your timeMistakes to avoid when trying to structure writing systemsHow to streamline your businessTiered launchesHow to assess your series successThis week’s question is: What do you want to learn more about?
Recommendation of the week is: I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston
***this show uses affiliate links
Find out more about Elana:
Read her books for writers: Writing and Releasing Rapidly and Writing Killer Cover Copy
See all of Elana’s books (including some she wrote under her pen name of Liz Isaacson)
Rebel of the Week is: Allison Carroll
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com
No new patrons this week, but a big thank you to my existing patrons. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
This Show is Sponsored by ProWritingAid
Get 20% off using Sacha’s link.
The post 140 Writing and Marketing Systems with Elana Johnson appeared first on Sacha Black.
May 25, 2022
139 How to Write Funny with Heide Goody and Iain Grant
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 139 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Heide Goody and Iain Grant all about how to write funny books.
In this episode we cover:
How to collaborate effectivelyMistakes to avoid in collaborationsHow to approach writing humourThe format and structure of a jokeDifferent types of humourAgents of chaosThis week’s question is: How do you self-sabotage?
Recommendation of the week is: Tinseltown Toils by Jay Renee Lawrence (Patron)
***this show uses affiliate links
Find out more about Heide and Iain at:
Rebel of the Week is: Dharma Kelleher
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com
1 new patron this week, welcome and thank you to Karen Heenan. A big thank you to my existing patrons as well. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
THIS EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY KOBO WRITING LIFE
Visit Kobo Writing Life here, read the Kobo Writing Life blog here, and listen to their podcast here.
The post 139 How to Write Funny with Heide Goody and Iain Grant appeared first on Sacha Black.
May 18, 2022
138 How to Write Erotica and Dark Romance with Golden Angel
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 138 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Golden Angel all about how to write erotica and dark romance.
In this episode we cover:
Overview of the genre and subgenresWhat makes a good erotica novelTerminology and languageHow to write a good sex sceneCommon mistakes to avoidThis week’s question is: Tell me about something you’re proud of.
Recommendation of the week is: Dear Writer, Are You Intuitive? by Becca Syme
***this show uses affiliate links
Links I mentioned are:
Superbad Villains on The Writer’s Mindset
Find out more about Golden Angel at:
Rebel of the Week is: Bair
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com
2 new patrons this week, welcome and thank you to Karla Hailer and Vanessa Wells. A big thank you to my existing patrons as well. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
The post 138 How to Write Erotica and Dark Romance with Golden Angel appeared first on Sacha Black.
May 11, 2022
137 How to Write About Mental Health and Trauma with Iona Wayland
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 137 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Iona Wayland all about how to write about mental health and trauma experiences.
In this episode we cover:
How to approach and research trauma and mental healthTrigger words and content wordsHow to write about trauma realisticallySensitivity readingSo much science and psychologyThis week’s question is: how are you looking after yourself?
Recommendation of the week is: The Bestseller Code by Matthew Jockers and Jodie Archer
***this show uses affiliate links
Find out more about Iona at:
Author Website/Sensitivity Reading
Rebel of the Week is: Lena Johnson
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com.
2 new patrons this week, welcome and thank you to Valerie Ihsan and CJ Dainton. A big thank you to my existing patrons as well. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
The post 137 How to Write About Mental Health and Trauma with Iona Wayland appeared first on Sacha Black.
May 4, 2022
136 How to Write a Scrappy First Draft with Donna Barker
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 136 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Donna Barker all about how to push through your first draft.
In this episode we cover:
Top tips and tricks to get through your draftMistakes to avoidMindset barriers for first draftsWhat to do when you get stuckThis week’s question is: who would you like to see on the show or what topics would you like covered?
Recommendation of the week is: Gallant by V.E. Schwab
***this show uses affiliate links
Find out more about Donna at:
Rebel of the Week is: Jackson Hollingsworth
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com or instagram me @sachablackauthor
3 new patrons this week, welcome and thank you to Darren Blake, Rebecca Adams and Kimberly Grymes. A big thank you to my existing patrons as well. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
This Show is Sponsored by ProWritingAid

Get 20% off using Sacha’s link.
Check out The Witch’s Revenge by ProWritingAid user S.W. Millar
The post 136 How to Write a Scrappy First Draft with Donna Barker appeared first on Sacha Black.
April 27, 2022
135 6 Lessons from Three Years of Full Time Writing
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 135 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to me! This is a special solo show reflecting on what I’ve learned having completed my third year of working for myself.
Lessons from Three Years of Writing Full TimeI can’t quite fathom the fact that we’re here again. But it has officially been three years since I quit my day job. THREE YEARS. What the hell? *rubs eyes* *checks calendar* *nope, it’s definitely been three years* I reflect on what I’ve learned about writing, publishing and business and share those lessons with you in the hope that you don’t make the same mistakes I do! This is 6 lessons from three years of writing full time.
You can catch year one lessons here and year two lessons here.
Lesson 1: The Income UpdateYear one was about survival, year two was about shrinking the freelance and building my own business. I did both of those. Year three was about continued growth and beating my old day job income. Thank the many and fucking varied gods I did that this year. Brutal truth time, when I left my day job, I halved my income—this bit, you know. But because I did that, I’ve struggled with self-worth and feeling confident in my decision.
I HALVED my income.
Who the fuck does that?
Me, apparently.
And sure, the high of saying fuck you to the corporate world was like a delirium induced ecstasy-gasm. But just like everything else, there was a killer come down, and that’s what the last two years have been. Doubt. What if I couldn’t grow my income again? What if I never earned a decent salary again? What if I couldn’t surpass the ceiling of my old day job income?
On and on I’d berate myself. I talked about how year one was spent in crippling fear and in year two, I learned that self-belief was important. But I still feel like I’ve been holding myself back, and that I had self-limiting beliefs because I wasn’t sure I could surpass my old day job income. I think I had to prove to myself that the decision was worth it and that I’d made the right choice. To use a Clifton strengths term (everyone drink), I had to “win” against my day job. “Just quitting” didn’t quite feel like enough of a win. Surpassing my old salary does. It’s made a significant difference to how I feel, my confidence and my belief that there isn’t a cap anymore. The sky truly is the limit.
But let’s look at the numbers.
Turnover was up 35% and net profit up a fraction under 31%. The main difference being investments in advertising and outsourcing. I expect the outsourcing expenditure to continue as will the advertising, for now at least.
The biggest differences in overall figures from year one to now, is the reduction in reliance on freelance income. In year one, freelance accounted for 75% of my income. Today, it accounts for 32%. My aim over the next year or two is to continue shrinking that to the point where it no longer makes sense to do any freelance, although leaving will be hard because I bloody love what I do. Second point to note is that in my first year the “everything else” bucket accounted for 8% it now accounts for 21.5% a big increase. I do, however, have more to note on this in a later lesson.
Book sales remain the largest portion of my income.
In my third year, my main income streams in order of size were:
Book salesFreelance workCourse salesThe podcast including patreon and sponsorshipsAffiliate incomeSpeaking and consulting MerchandiseYear one assets included: 4 nonfiction books, 2 nonfiction boxsets and 2 fiction books.
Year two assets included: 8 nonfiction books, 3 nonfiction boxsets, 2 fiction books and 1 course.
Year three assets include: 8 nonfiction books, 3 nonfiction boxsets, 4 fiction books, 1 audiobook, and 2 courses. And a deal secured for Korean rights translation on the existing nonfiction books.
Despite adding a new nonfiction set this year (side characters) the two collaboration books I did with J Thorn were pulled and are being remade into something new.
So last year, I added two fiction books (one was an anthology), two nonfiction books, a course and an audiobook. Annoyingly I have a novella coming out but it’s just after the end of the full time year so I can’t count it. On the plus side, I’m up a publication in the first month of the new year!
By the end of next year:
I should have two new boxsets at least (one fiction, and the side characters one) seeing as those are easy fixes. My focus is really on asset creation. I want to build my backlists across the board. Specifically, I’d like to write more books than ever in the coming year. What that looks like, I’m not entirely sure I want to state publicly yet. But I have plans for two different nonfiction text books and several fiction books. How many I get to, remains to be seen. I’d also like to add more courses and audiobooks.
Takeaway 1: I maintain last year’s stance. This annual review is ridiculously helpful in helping me gain perspective and take note of what has actually, factually, been accomplished. More to the point, it helps me remember what the priorities are and continue pushing towards them.
Lesson 2: You Can’t Do EverythingIt physically pains me to write that you, or more specifically, I, can’t do everything. But apparently, I can’t. Of all the years, this year has felt like the biggest leap in terms of development, income wise, mindset, personal self development. It’s been a maturing of sorts, an empowering and settling into the business and knowing I can do this but also realising that if I want to, then I have GOT TO FUCKING FOCUS. Which leads me to my point…
I spent probably eight months of the last year cutting and hacking out and saying no to things. I WAY, WAY over committed myself. Despite having added a reasonable number of assets, I was finding that I was spending so much time doing jobs and tasks and little promises for other people, that for the first time since leaving my day job, my business felt like work. I felt like I’d left a project management career for another job. That is absolutely not what I want.
So I committed to spending last year getting rid of everything that wasn’t core to my business. Those eight GRUELLING months were well spent. I delivered on all the commitments I promised.
I’ve tried and am continuing to try to put boundaries in place—I find this very difficult, I don’t like letting people down; I don’t like saying no. I want to help everyone. But I physically, mentally, emotionally and literally cannot. In order to help the most people and in a way that keeps me sane, I have to focus on writing books, courses and producing audio.
In the last eighteen months, there’s definitely been a shift in the amount of help wanted versus how much I can physically do. This is made more difficult by the pandemic and the fact I do have a child who’s at an age where he still needs me. But it’s caused a shift and pushed me to a mental pain point. The achiever and competitiveness in me wants to do more, but I am at the physical limits of my capacity. Therefore, it’s pushed me to re-focus and question what is most important. It’s annoying I had to get to a pain point in order to do this reflection, though.
Worse, despite having learned this lesson, I’ve had to relearn it! I’ve just come through another little patch where I had over committed again. But I’m on the other side now focusing on getting words. And I am, surprising no one, significantly happier again.
Takeaway 2: It’s hard to get perspective when you’re in the depths of business, but I’ve been trying to give myself more headspace and thinking time. That enabled me to see the road I was going down and pivot. At the end of this year, what do you want to have achieved? Do you want to have produced 200 Instagram posts? Or do you want to have written another book? Maybe you need to set up a mailing list or perhaps you want to improve your marketing? You cannot do everything. So what do you actually want to achieve?
Lesson 3: Focus Where the Money IsThis is connected to lesson 1, the income update. I am kind of mad at myself, kind of resigned that I had to go through the last year in order to get to where I am. Nothing moves fast, until everything does, SIGH.
Last year, I noted that books were generating the biggest income for me and therefore that’s where I should be focusing my time. But did I do that?
No.
No, I fucking didn’t.
*internal screaming*
Look, I made some headway towards it because in order to make headway; I had to clear the decks and I managed to do that. So, for the love of fucking literary gods, I have GOT TO SPEND MY TIME ON THE RIGHT THINGS SACHA.
If you want to earn more money, then you focus your time on the highest earners, right? While the “everything else” bucket brings in 21 something percent of my income, it takes up about 60-70% of my time, which is not a good distribution. If I spent more time on the heavy earners, you’d expect I’d earn more overall.
For me, the big earners are books and courses. Now, I’m part way there in terms of focusing on clearing the deck for this year. I have plans for courses and I’ve actually started one too. But I need to continue on my mission of saying no to things and ensuring that I prioritise words and word time in my working day.
The other thing that I have to give myself permission to do is the work that isn’t writing physical words but is most definitely writing books. And I need permission to do that during the working day. For example, outlining, inputting, mood boarding, brainstorming. I’m not sure why I find it so excruciatingly hard to give myself this time. But FFS, I need to get a grip. It IS work; it is the foundational work I have to do in order to get more books done. So here’s me saying it out fucking out and being accountable for me.
Takeaway 3: First, focus the majority of your time on whichever aspect of your business earns the most. Second, the shit around wording is also work. You can do that in your allotted creative times. That is all.
Lesson 4: Be a Better PublisherIndie authors are also publishers. We’re writers, marketers, fucking everything-else-et-ers. All of the hats. But here’s the thing. Being a good publisher makes a difference. This year, I decided to try and be better. To work on the shit that doesn’t necessarily scream of fun, but over the long haul does bring you more income, make you look more professional and ultimately do your business the world of good.
I worked on studying how to write better blurbs, I experimented with new promo mechanisms like “free” and updated my front and back matter. I wrote a reader magnet, I updated files on the stores, created a brand kit. And now I’m in the process of ensuring all my books are in all the formats. This is a slow process and will take some time, but already I’m seeing a huge difference in the number of sales.
I need to finish off by ensuring I have boxsets of everything and that my autoresponders are up to date. Guess that’s a job for this year! Especially as in doing this roundup, I’ve realised I haven’t published the side characters boxset! So that’s a job for me next week!
Takeaway 4: you have to be a good publisher and sometimes that means doing the donkey work and updating all the metadata, back end shit and thinking about your books as products.
Lesson 5: Human Connection is Necessary and DifficultThis is perhaps the weirdest lesson for me. I have always been absolutely fine working at home. In fact, the first year, I was practically delirious. “Fuck people” “fuck being in a team.” But then, when I left the day job, I had a network around me. We still lived close to our friends we’d gone to uni with.
Pandemic, plus 85-mile away house move = the loss of basically my entire network. Now, don’t get me wrong, I have a handful of long-time friends, but now, they’re scattered all over the world and all over the UK. Which is okay, because we make the effort to travel. But we also don’t see them on the regular because pandemic and, well, life.
The consequence is that my social circle has reduced significantly. 99% of the time, I’m completely fine with that. I have a very busy schedule and most of the time, work brings me deep joy. I’ve also got a couple of friends who I spend a LOT of time voice memoing and these gals save me on a daily basis. Like I would be lost without them and they mean everything to me. So thank you, ladies.
But, of late, I’ve noticed that the desire to just have someone to go for a coffee with, or just have someone I could go for drinks with or whatever has crept in.
I don’t know whether it’s just me, or the consequences of the pandemic and getting comfortable at home, but I find summoning the energy to be social, difficult. I want to widen my social circle just as much as I don’t. Which leaves me in a bit of a quandary.
The one thing that I do know from writing and business, though, is that your network is one of your most valuable assets. So I do need to do something about this situation.
Takeaway 5: I need to suck my shit up and be more social.
Lesson 6: Your Uniqueness is EverythingMore and more, I see and understand why uniqueness is everything. Knowing who you are, what you stand for and what makes your books, stories and voice unique is one of the most important things you can do for your business.
The moment you understand you, you can lean in. Every time I’ve understood a little piece of me better and I’ve leaned in, I’ve seen positive results.
Some of this is about strengths. If you’ve listened to this show for any amount of time, you’ll know that I absolutely love Becca. I love Clifton Strengths. It’s been a wild ride, because I have a lot of what are called influencing strengths which are the most misunderstood. The foremost being Competition which as you know, is my number one strength.
I swing and roundabout on this, every time someone misunderstands it, it hurts and I want to crawl into my shell again and not embrace my strength. But I’m trying hard to lean in, embrace my superpower and use it to push my business as far as I can.
But it goes deeper than just strengths. I’ve had a “come to Jesus” moment this year understanding the type of fiction I want to write. How I didn’t realise I wanted to write queer books, I do not know. Perhaps in not accepting some of my strengths, I was also not accepting other parts of myself? Life is nothing if not a journey, right?!
I feel like this is the right path for me, and while I can’t know what the future will hold and whether or not I’ll be successful, nothing has ever felt this right. And I think that can only spell good things for the future.
I also feel like in accepting those bits of me I’m also finally after however many books I’ve written, starting to accept my writing process. I’ve searched for the longest time for an explanation a written-in-stone process I can follow and it’s taken me what like 12-15 books to realise what that is. But in accepting it, I’m speeding up. Rather than fighting the methods I need to employ to get to the end of a draft, I’m just fucking doing it.
In writing/reading this, that sounds insane, like duh, of course you just work the way you need to work. But DO YOU? Cause I didn’t. Despite being in this industry for god knows how long, I was still subscribing to what I “thought” should be my process. Well, fuck that. My first draft is my chaos draft, and knowing that is helping. Weirdly, I write fiction and nonfiction in exactly the same way too. And I am so excited for the rest of this year to see what I’m capable of.
Takeaway 6: You’re beautiful. Embrace you. Fuck what “they” say. Fuck what anyone says. Find what works for you. Find your “thang” your angle, your hook, the thing that makes you uniquely you and then lean like a very fucking drunk sailor into that motherfucker and go for it!
One Last Thought:No matter what happens, this is better.
I say this every year, and I hope this is an on running mantra for the rest of my days, because if it is, then I’ve done my job, I created the life I wanted. I keep two photos. The first is a post-it that I signed and carried in my wallet forEVER. Every day, when I went to the coffee queue for the fourth time (just to get out of the office) I’d see it as I went to pay for my coffee. I thought I wouldn’t get to work for myself until 2020. But I managed to leave in 2019. The day I got to cross that post it out and put 2019 is still one of the best days of my life.
The other photo is full of pain. I hate looking at it. I took the shot during one of my lowest days in the day job. I don’t know what possessed me to be honest. I looked rough. But I’m so glad I did. It’s easy now, three years out, healed mentally, to forget what it was like and the mental anguish I suffered. How crippled I was. I think now, looking back, I was suffering from major depression. I should have gone to the doctor’s and sought help. But I didn’t. All I cared about was getting out. I haven’t really ever talked about it, but I definitely had dark thoughts while working there. What saved me was a laser focus on one thing and one thing only—getting out and living the writing dream.
It took being in the darkest place I’ve been to push the hardest I’ve ever pushed. It’s funny really, that dichotomy. I truly believe writing saved my life.
So I keep the photo, and I look at it every year when I write this post, and I ask myself if I want to be back there.
Fuck, no I don’t.
This life, this vagina-busting, exhaustion-inducing, utterly mesmerising, awe-inspiring, creatively fulfilled life’ is so. Much. Better. Yes, I work more hours than ever, yes I have to make constant sacrifices, but I will never, ever go back. I choose me. I choose this life. Because no matter what, this life is better.
If you’re in the trenches, just keep going. If you’re in a dark place, know that I believe in you. Your creativity believes in you. You can and you will succeed. Never give up. Never bow down. Never, ever, let them win.
You got this.
The post 135 6 Lessons from Three Years of Full Time Writing appeared first on Sacha Black.
April 20, 2022
134 How to Launch Your First Book with CM Newell, SW Millar and Scott Williamson
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 134 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to not one but three guests, CM Newell, SW Millar and Scott Williamson all about how they launched their first books.
In this episode we cover:
How they felt as first time authors in 2022How and why they chose their launch and marketing modelWhat went wellWhat mistakes they made and would do differently next timeThe hardest part about launching your first bookThis week’s question is: How is your year going? Is it as productive as you wanted?
Find out more about SW Millar at:
Find out more about CM Newell at:
**Anyone who buys an ebook through CM’s website store for rebel listeners, they can use the code Villains40 and receive a 40% discount through end of the year.
Find out more about Scott Williamson at:
Rebel of the Week is: Helen Rygh Pederson
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com
1 new patron this week, welcome and thank you to Dharma Kelleher. A big thank you to my existing patrons as well. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
THIS EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY KOBO WRITING LIFE
Visit Kobo Writing Life here, read the Kobo Writing Life blog here, and listen to their podcast here.
The post 134 How to Launch Your First Book with CM Newell, SW Millar and Scott Williamson appeared first on Sacha Black.
April 13, 2022
133 How to Write a Retelling with Alix E Harrow
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 133 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Alix E Harrow all about how to write retellings and improve your descriptive voice.
In this episode we cover:
How to write a retellingMistakes to avoid with retellingsHow closely you need to stick to the original taleHow to develop voiceDescription tipsThis week’s question is: How do you plan? By tax year, calendar year, by quarter or something else?
Recommendation of the week is: The Mechanic: A John Tyler Thriller by Tom Fowler (patron)
***this show uses affiliate links
Links and events I mentioned are:
Jericho Writers Self-Publishing Month
Find out more about Alix on:
Rebel of the Week is: Lena Johnson
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com or instagram me @sachablackauthor
No new patrons this week, but a big thank you to my existing patrons. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
The post 133 How to Write a Retelling with Alix E Harrow appeared first on Sacha Black.
April 6, 2022
132 How to Succeed in a Niche Book Genre with Nora Phoenix
Hello Rebels, welcome to episode 132 of The Rebel Author Podcast. Today, I’m talking to Nora Phoenix all about how to succeed in a niche book genre.
In this episode we cover:
What is a niche?How to assess a nicheHow to find and assess comp authorsThe difference between writing to market and to trendHow to build a platform in advanceThis week’s question is: What are your fave in-person events?
Recommendation of the week is: The Shadows Between Us by Tricia Levenseller
***this show uses affiliate links
Links I mentioned are:
The Rebel Diaries Anthology Edited by Sacha Black
Find out more about Nora at:
For readers: join FB group Nora’s Nook
For authors: join FB group #IWroteThis
Rebel of the Week is: Scott Williamson
If you’d like to be a Rebel of the week please do send in your story, it can be any kind of rebellion. You can email your rebel story to rebelauthorpodcast@gmail.com
1 new patron this week, welcome and thank you to Isabel Cañas. A big thank you to my existing patrons as well. If you’d like to support the show, and get early access to all the episodes as well as bonus content you can from as little as $2 a month by visiting: www.patreon.com/sachablack
This Show is Sponsored by ProWritingAid
Get 20% off using Sacha’s link.
The post 132 How to Succeed in a Niche Book Genre with Nora Phoenix appeared first on Sacha Black.
March 30, 2022
BONUS EPISODE Sneak Peek at The Rebel Diaries
Hello and welcome to a bonus episode of The Rebel Author podcast. Today I’m celebrating the launch of The Rebel Diaries Anthology with a sneak peek at all 13 stories.
Order your copy of The Rebel Diaries at:
Find out more about the authors at:
Scott Williamson
Kimberly Grymes
Sacha Black
Helen Glynn Jones
A.E. Kincaid
L.F. Wham
Val Neil
Jay Renee Lawrence
Mark Leslie
J. Ember Hintz
Matt Hollon
Meghan J. Dahl
J A Mortimore
The post BONUS EPISODE Sneak Peek at The Rebel Diaries appeared first on Sacha Black.