Amber Beetle Books

The latest book from Amber Beetle Books, the children’s imprint of Not From This Planet, is called War Bear, and has been written and illustrated by Matthew Wiggans. It tells the story of war refugees through the eyes of a teddy bear left behind. The illustrations are stunning, and the story is inspiring, and we at Not From This Planet are very proud to have published it, and to have partnered with the charity War Child. For every copy of the book sold, £1 will go to War Child. You can get your copy in paperback, hardback or on Kindle here!

Earlier this year, we also published another children’s picture book, written and illustrated by Christina Chard, called Verity Soap and the Silver Candle Snuffer. Christina has been writing and creating the illustrations for this gorgeous book for years, and I think it would make an excellent Christmas gift with the wintery theme and all the wonderful animals in the story. You can get your copy in paperback and hardback here.

The Magical Doorway Series is my own children’s novels, and there are three so far, with more on the way! (Soon, hopefully!) The Magical Faerie Door, The Magical Mermaid Portal and The Magical Dragon Mirror are stories of brave young children who venture into other worlds and dimensions to help magical beings. They are suitable for any age, but have a reading age of 8 to 12. You can get them on Kindle and in paperback and hardback here.

I look forward to expanding our children’s imprint in the next few years, so do keep an eye out for new releases in the future!

Let’s Start at the Very Beginning

What do you do when your motivation, your very reason to create, disappears? When your drive and excitement just dries up overnight, because there’s nothing pushing you onwards?

You stop.

In 2018, that’s exactly what happened for me. I lost my reason to write. But to explain what my reason was, I need to go back to the start.

I distinctly remember, in my early teens, when I had already read hundreds of books, and had been writing short stories and poetry of my own, the moment when I decided I wanted to be an author.

And why that was what I wanted to be.

I wanted to be an author and sell millions of books, so that I earned enough money so that my dad could pursue his passions, his dreams. As an artist, or a musician, or a photographer. Because back then, he worked in corporate jobs that meant we never saw him, and he didn’t appear to enjoy them very much. He was miserable, quite honestly, and I somehow thought that it was my responsibility to make him happy.

So that was my reason, to free him from the prison of exchanging his time for money. So he could be happy.

Of course, my writing was also one of the only things we connected over. And though he was fairly critical of my writing, he was encouraging enough that I didn’t give up. And I clearly remember, at 15, when I had given him my novella, Heaven dot com, that he was away in Italy, working, but he called me one evening. On my mobile phone (which would have been a stupidly expensive thing to do at that time). He called me to say that while reading my story in a restaurant in Italy, it had made him cry.

We weren’t close, and that kind of feedback was enough to carry me for many years, and even when my parents split up in my early 20s, by which time I’d no relationship with him at all for a few years, I still sent him the very first printed copy of that novella. Because I wanted to make him proud. Because although I had told him I didn’t need it, I still wanted his approval. I still wrote for him. To try and give him a better life than he had.

When he got the copy, he called me. It was the first time we had spoken in a long time, and it sparked a new chapter, whereby we got on enough to see each other once a year or so. He met someone, and I went to meet her, and stayed with them. She told me that he was proud of me, and this second-hand praise was enough to keep me going.

Then in 2010, I met someone who encouraged my writing, and encouraged me to publish. I had written my first novel just before we met, and I published it two years later, having decided to take the Indie route, right at the dawn of the Kindle, and print on demand publishing. The very first copy, however, I printed on my home printer, and hand bound it in leather, and gave it to my dad. I have no idea if he read the whole thing, but the only feedback he gave on that one was, ‘the doors disappear and reappear too much.’

Still, he read it.

And so, over the years, I accepted that he wasn’t likely to read them, but he was proud of my books. And now I had someone else to write for, my partner. Again, much like my dad, he didn’t read them all, but there was one that was his favourite, and that praise was enough to bolster me, to keep me motivated. I had dreams of selling millions of copies, so I could help him pay off the mortgage, or help him to realise his dreams.

Sounds familiar, huh?

Of course, that never happened, but I gave him all my love and attention and support, to try and make up for my lack of financial success. But we parted in 2017, just as things were starting to take off.

By this time, my dad and I still had a distant relationship, and I found that he was weirdly competing with me. He was making something of his music, which was great, but any time I managed some success with my writing, he would say he had to up his game, so he could win. Because it was all about who got famous first. I went along with it, all the while hating it, still hoping for just one, simple, straightforward – ‘well done’.

At the end of 2017, Where’s My F**king Unicorn? was published by a traditional publisher. I hadn’t gone out to seek the deal, it had pretty much landed in my lap, but it was still a big moment for me. It had taken a year to publish the book and to celebrate the release, I held a small party at a local art gallery. It started in the morning, and finished at 3, and at ten minutes to 3, my dad and his partner came in the door, exclaiming loudly –

“Where is everyone? Where are the posters and the balloons? Why aren’t you out in the street telling people to come in?”

Up until that point, I’d had an amazing time, so many friends and family had come to support me, some had driven a fair way to do so. And yet in that last part of the party, my dad and his partner ruined it. They talked about themselves, my dad bragging about how many musical instruments he had (over 400) and his partner about her marketing skills, and how I had done everything wrong.

My friend did ask them, “Well, if you’re so good at it, why didn’t you offer to help Michelle?”

To which they had no reply.

I walked my other friend back to her car, leaving them to gab about themselves (not once did they ask to look at the book, to buy a copy or to congratulate me on it) and she turned to me and said – “What the actual fuck was that?” (I might be paraphrasing here, but it was along those lines)

What the fuck, indeed. But still, they had come to my launch, and that was just enough to make me believe that they were proud.

Then in 2018, after being on national TV, releasing the tenth book in my series, and sales were doubling year on year, I was feeling like I was actually getting somewhere, when I finally received it.

I can’t remember what it was in relation to now, but on the phone to my dad, I got that elusive, straightforward, unprompted, “Well done.”

And I felt nothing. That was it? That was what I had been waiting for? Somewhere around that time, I had been working on starting Not From This Planet with my best friend, and when I told my dad and his partner about it, all they did was tell me what a bad idea it was, and that I was making a mistake. His partner was particularly good at backhanded compliments that confused me. She told me that my writing was so good, that I should get an agent, not start a business with my best friend.

So somewhere in 2018, I stopped wanting to make my dad proud. I stopped craving his approval. I stopped wanting to make him happy. And I definitely did not want to compete with him on who got famous first.

So I stopped writing.

Of course, if you read my books, you will know that I have written a few since. But up until then, I was writing and publishing two a year, and since then, in 6 years, I have only released five, and those were a struggle. Of course, in the last six years I have also discovered I have ADHD and have entered perimenopause, so those things have also impacted my ability to focus and get things done. (Along with the continuing saga of the on again/off again relationship, which I gave another 5.5 years to.)

But it’s not just the writing that stopped. I stopped everything related to my books. I stopped blogging. I stopped doing FB lives. I stopped posting. I had a fan club that I ran, where I made handmade things sent to readers who subscribed. That stopped and never restarted. I stopped trying to sell my books altogether, which of course, meant that sales have steadily declined, because they are no longer visible. You have to consistently post stuff, or you just disappear into the abyss. I stopped doing events and workshops and talks. I just, stopped.

So that brings us to where I am now. A writer who barely writes, in search of a new motivation to write. I love my readers, many have become cherished friends over the years, and I want to write for them. But they don’t really need me, they could easily find other reading material. I would like to write for myself, but I find that when it comes to things that are for myself, they will always be at the bottom of the to-do list. I’m much better at prioritising others over my own needs or wants. I have told my dog I will write for her, to keep her well-fed and always surrounded by toys and treats. She just farted, so I think that means she loves this idea.

But anyway, that’s where I am in this moment. I won’t promise that my next book is coming soon (though I really do hope I will finish it soon) and I won’t promise to blog all the time (although I hope to do so more often), to start going live again or post consistently, because those will all likely be promises I cannot keep, as just keeping afloat at the moment is taking up all of my bandwidth.

But I can promise that I am working on things. That I am trying to get back to what I love. That I am reprogramming a lifetime’s worth of bad thoughts and beliefs. That I am trying to become the best version of myself. That I am trying to figure out who I really am, when you strip back all the bullshit.

And I hope that’s enough. I hope you will stick around to see what happens. To see what I create next.

If it’s not enough, then thanks for sticking around til the end of this post. It feels both liberating and terrifying, to lay all this out there for everyone to read. But it is time.

Because the thing is, I have been trying so hard, for so long, and now I am done with that. The mask is fully off, I can no longer pretend to be okay when people treat me badly. Because I’m not. I deserve to be loved and supported by those closest to me, not criticised, ridiculed or shamed. (That job is surely for the reviewers?)

I wasn’t going to add any photos to this post, but I found this one of the cupcakes from my Unicorn party. Just to add a bit of joy to this otherwise quite serious and slightly depressing post.

I Wish You Were Here

Chapter One

“I wish we could stay here like this, forever.”
His arms tightened around her and she could feel his warm breath in her hair.
“Me too,” he whispered. “Let’s not get up just yet.”
She snuggled deeper into his embrace, and breathed in his familiar scent, and felt his steady heart beat at her back. They fit together perfectly, and had always fit, from the moment they’d met.
She remembered every moment of their very first date. The way he told her stories of his adventures, trying to impress her. But she was just mesmerised by his smile, by the way he nervously tapped his foot under the table, and by the way he said her name.
“What are you thinking?” he asked softly.
She smiled, he always could read her mind. “I was thinking of our first date. Of how I loved you from that very first moment.”
“Oh,” he said. “That’s not how I remember it. I remember falling for you from the moment I saw you smile, but as I recall, you took a few hours?”
She giggled. “Okay, okay, maybe it wasn’t from the very first moment. But I knew that you were going to change my life from that first moment.”
He sighed. “I wish I had changed it for the better.”
She turned in his arms to face him, and lifted a hand to stroke his cheek. “You did,” she insisted softly. “My life was and is so much better for knowing you.”
He smiled and kissed her, and she closed her eyes to savour the feeling of his lips on hers. He pulled back slightly.
“I’ll be right back,” he whispered.
Before she could open her eyes, he was gone. She stared the empty side of the bed, and reached out to touch his cold pillow.
“Hurry back,” she whispered.

* * *

The insistent beeping of the alarm clock made Rebecca groan. Why hadn’t she remembered to switch it off? She didn’t need to be up so early today, in fact, she had planned on not leaving her bed at all.
She switched off the alarm, then turned over and reached out to touch the empty side of the bed. Despite hoping desperately, he had not returned for the rest of the night. She closed her eyes to remember the feeling of his arms wrapped around her, his scent enveloping her, but the memory was already fading away.
A tear escaped from her eye and soaked into his pillow. She would have given anything, she would have sold her soul, just to have him come in through the door in that very moment, with a tray of tea and toast, wishing her happy birthday with a bunch of fresh flowers from the garden, because he had forgotten to plan ahead and buy anything. She always forgave him for forgetting though.
Birthdays, anniversaries, Christmas, all had passed by without much fanfare, as he was never one to celebrate much. But it didn’t matter as long as he was there with a cheeky grin, a warm hug, and a long kiss. She could never stay mad at him.
Just as she couldn’t feel mad at him for not being there now.
The sunlight flickered around the edge of the blackout curtains, reminding her that the world still existed outside, and that perhaps she should go out and join it, or at least open the curtains and let it in, but she rarely did that anymore. The darkness suited her better, demanded less of her, allowed her to wallow in her sadness.
Limbs protesting, her head aching, her tired brain wishing that she had not drunk the entire bottle of wine the previous night, Rebecca got out of bed and stumbled to her wardrobe. Instead of opening her side, she gravitated towards his, and opened the door, wishing that she had been less on top of the laundry, that there were still items that carried his scent, that she could wear or wrap around herself like a protective cloak, keeping the rest of the world away forever.
Only a few pieces of clothing remained, hung neatly on hangers. She touched the sleeve of his favourite flannel shirt, and lifted it to her nose, inhaling deeply. Disappointment swirled in her stomach as she smelled the scent of their washing powder. Tears filled her eyes and she tried to remember his scent from her dream, or from her memories, but though she could remember how it made her feel, she couldn’t remember the exact scent itself.
Sighing, she closed his wardrobe and took the dressing gown from her own, wrapping it around her thin frame, before slipping her feet into her favourite slippers and going out to the small kitchen.
She ignored her phone on the counter, knowing that there would be dozens of messages from friends and family, wishing her a happy birthday. Though she appreciated them, it wasn’t them she wanted to hear from, that she needed to hear from.
She filled the coffee machine and switched it on, then put two slices of slightly stale bread into the toaster. It wasn’t quite the breakfast in bed she had wished for, but it would be something close. All that was missing was the flowers from the garden, and the cheeky smile.
Still ignoring her phone, Rebecca took her tea and toast and sat at the breakfast bar, and opened her laptop. Before she could convince herself that it was a bad idea, she found the icon on the desktop and double clicked.
A blue screen popped up, and she hit the green button. A few seconds later, his face filled the screen. Her heart nearly stopped as he looked directly at her and smiled.
“Good morning, my love.”

This is the first chapter in a brand new story that I am posting here on my blog as I write it. It is not finished, it is not edited, and I don’t know if it will be a book, but I wanted to try something new with my writing, so if you have enjoyed this chapter or are intrigued enough to want to read on, please do email me or comment!