šŸ‚ Why Moons and Shadows Is the Perfect Fall Read

There’s something about fall that pulls us inward. The air grows crisp. Mornings come slower. Candles flicker a little longer in the evening. And somewhere between the scent of spiced coffee/tea/bit of old aged whiskey and the rustle of changing leaves, we begin to crave stories that linger in the soul.

That’s exactly where Moons and Shadows lives.

This isn’t just a fantasy novel. It’s a descent into soft magic and quiet power—a tale of shadow and light that was made to be read under blankets, beside glowing lamps, with a mug warm in hand. The kind of story that whispers to the parts of you that the world sometimes forgets to see.

šŸŒ™ It’s for the readers who…

  • …feel things deeply and quietly.

  • …find themselves stargazing when they should be sleeping.

  • …have ever felt a little too much, or not quite enough.

  • …carry questions they’ve never been able to ask out loud.

Set between forgotten coastlines and candlelit cottages, Moons and Shadows invites you into a world where truth is dangerous, memory is sacred, and love is not always what saves—but what sees. It’s a book for readers who want to fall into something—not just read a chapter, but dissolve into it.

šŸ•Æļø Pair it with:

  • Your favorite oversized sweater

  • A tobacco and vanilla or cinnamon or cedarwood candle (bonus points if it crackles or from TheDriftwoodHome on Etsy)

  • A playlist that blends melancholy piano with cinematic swells

  • That first cup of coffee, tea, or cocoa that feels like fall

šŸŽ And here’s a little secret…

The Special Edition is on its way—with new bridge chapters, expanded lore, and scenes that peel back the layers of this world even further. If you’ve already read the Foundational Edition, the Special will feel like revisiting an old memory that’s somehow still growing. If you haven’t read it yet…fall is the perfect time to begin.

So if you’re looking for a book that’s more than escapism—something immersive, lyrical, and threaded with shadows and stars—Moons and Shadows might just be your autumn read.

Ready to drop in?

Let the leaves drift. Let the shadows rise. And let this story find you when you need it most.

Next
Next

The Courage to Ask the Question