Winners of the IWWV Holiday Giveaway have been contacted! Check your email if you entered and be sure to respond within 48 hours if you won.
Congratulations to winners and thank you to everyone who participated!
Winners of the IWWV Holiday Giveaway have been contacted! Check your email if you entered and be sure to respond within 48 hours if you won.
Congratulations to winners and thank you to everyone who participated!
Because we’ve been seeing so many wonderful holiday snaps of If We Were Villains on social media, we decided to do a seasonal giveaway! Between tomorrow and January 1st, you’ll have the opportunity to enter to win your choice of (1) a signed US hardcover, (2) a signed UK paperback, or (3) a US audiobook. All you need to enter is your email address, but you can improve your odds by following me on social media or sharing your favorite quotes and photos from Villains (no spoilers, please). Just be sure to use the tags #IWWV and #IWWVHolidayGiveaway so we can find your entries. More details are included on the RaffleCopter page, where you can officially enter, starting at 12:00 a.m., December 21st, US Central Time. (And yes! This giveaway is international.)
Good luck, and happy reading!
If you need something a little less dire to read than the ongoing tax debacle in the U. S. Senate, I did an interview with Superstition Review where I talked about If We Were Villains, writing, writing If We Were Villains, acting, authorship, and everything in between. You can find it here!
Normally I don’t use this platform for politics. But it’s a platform, and presumably you’re following me here because you (1) like to read and (2) want authors to keep writing books. If that’s the case, please scroll down! If not… as you were.
Here are a few photos from the #SaveGradEd rally at UMD today. If you haven’t been paying close attention to it–and a lot of people haven’t, what with the big distraction of Thanksgiving–the proposed Tax Cuts and Jobs Act going to vote in the Senate this week will mean financial disaster for grad students–and pretty much anybody who isn’t already disgustingly wealthy.
To make it simple: among other economic atrocities, this tax reform repeals section 117(d) of the existing tax code, which stipulates that graduate tuition remission is not taxable income. If this bill becomes law without some significant changes, graduate students–who teach undergraduates and usually don’t make more than about $20,000 annually for that work–will have their tuition remission, which might be anywhere up to $40,000+ a semester if they’re at a private school, taxed as income. This means a possible 300-400% increase in the taxes they currently pay.
Here’s the kicker: we never see a penny of that money. It’s not income, and taxing it as such will make it impossible for many graduate students to continue their education. (And personally, I know I won’t be writing much if I’m worrying about how I’m going to make up for a sudden tripling of my taxes.) Of course, writers and grad students aren’t the only ones who lose, here. Everybody loses with this bill, except big business and billionaires.
So here’s my humble bid: if you care about the poor, the middle class, education, small businesses, self-employed artists (like authors), or just not making the rich richer at everyone else’s expense, call your reps! The Senate starts voting on this bill tomorrow, and the louder we are, the better chance we have of being heard. If you want to learn a little more about why this bill is awful click here. If you’re in the D. C. area and you want to take part in protests this week, click here. I’ll be around so if you see me, come commiserate.
Thanks for your time.
If you’re ready for an autumn read, you can check out a list of campus novel recs I put together for The Attic on Eighth here.
Wishing you cool weather, hot coffee, and lovely autumn leaves.
The ladies over at The Attic on Eighth asked some great questions about art, writing, and If We Were Villains. Read here!

Need a little something to spice up your Saturday? Head back over to The Attic on Eighth for a custom cocktail recipe tailored to If We Were Villains and the oft-inebriated fourth years.
Happy drinking!
Rory and Eliza from The Attic on Eighth gave Villains its most inventive review to date. Read it here, and keep an eye on their page for the next few days for a few more features.
I am, as ever, awkward in front of a camera, but excited to be interviewed by the Dallas Morning News. Read here!
If you want to get a signed copy of Villains (or you just want to come say hi), I’ll be signing books at the Prestonwood Barnes & Noble in Dallas this Saturday, starting at two o’clock. Details here. Hope to see you there!