About Blood Creek Witch: A paranormal fantasy (Blood Creek Saga Book 1)
A monstrous evil rising from the mountains. A teen witch who doesn’t believe in magic. The fate of Blood Creek rests in her hands.
Jenny Morgan wants nothing more than to grow hometown roots and make a few friends. But when she comes home to find her house halfway packed for yet another mysterious move, her hopes are crushed. Cursed with a fitful sleep, Jenny’s strange dreams spill into reality when she awakens to the news of her parent’s unexpected death.
Grieving and lost, Jenny travels to West Virginia to live with an aunt she’s never met. There, she discovers an unbelievable family heritage of witchcraft and magic, and meets three friends with dark secrets all their own. As deadly horrors straight out of myth and folklore threaten her new life, Jenny becomes the only one who stands a chance of stopping the growing evil. But embracing her heritage will attract the attention of an even greater evil—the same un-killable creature her parents died to protect her from.
★★★★★ This is a gnarly urban (no really, rural) fantasy tale of a contemporary witch, with a strong Appalachian flavor. – D. J. Butler, author of Witchy Eye
★★★★★ A teenage girl and her new friends battle a mix of troubles as well as monsters from Appalachian folklore in a modern setting. Some of the monsters happen to be people. – John Olsen, author of Crystal King
Buy The Book Here
Visit The Authors Website & Follow Them On Social Media
Learn More About The Author
Jay is an author, game developer, and software engineer. A steady diet of Star Trek, Star Wars, and The Twilight Zone as a child, mixed with an addiction to the words and worlds of Robert E. Howard, Lovecraft, Heinlein, and of course Tolkien produced a mixed-up young man who went on to corrupt the youth making console and PC video games, and writing stories that grow out of bizarre questions that begin with the words, “What if…?”
While he tries to keep up on the newest speculative fiction by established and new authors, he’ll often be found with his nose in pages of 70-year-old pulp magazines. Usually digital versions, because those old pulp magazines are delicate!
Jay is the winner of the 2016 DragonComet award for science fiction and fantasy.