I wrote a literary novel set in a town that runs on unspoken rules. Would you read this?

The premise: a small town that looks exactly like ours, except goodness compounds and comes back to you, cruelty eventually runs out of room, and the world keeps its word to the people who keep theirs. Nobody in the book fully understands the rules. They just start to sense the shape of them.

It follows five people. A twenty-nine-year-old caregiver, loud and joyful, who gets a cancer diagnosis and faces it with the radio turned all the way up. Her quiet best friend, whose four-year-old was hurt by a boyfriend the legal system couldn’t touch. A seventy-three-year-old grandmother who has kept an unopened letter from her dying mother for thirty-nine years. And the four-year-old herself, whose chapters happen down at floor level, in yellow socks and orange crackers and a rolly bug that trusts her enough to unroll in her palm. It follows four people closely. A fifth appears and disappears.

It’s about generational silence breaking. About goodness being quietly rewarded in a world that never announces itself. The man who causes the harm is never dramatically punished. He just runs out of room.

No fantasy elements you can point at. God is present but never named. The rules are felt, not explained.

Here’s the opening:

The McClendon house smelled like liniment and burnt coffee and something floral that Torah had never been able to name but had long since stopped trying to. She had been coming here every Tuesday and Thursday morning for two years and the smell met her at the door before Mr. McClendon did, which was saying something because James McClendon had not missed greeting her at that door a single time in two years.
He was already there when she knocked.
“You’re late,” he said.
“I’m four minutes early Mr. James.”
“Clock in the kitchen says different.”
“Clock in the kitchen has been wrong since 2014 and you know it.”
He stepped back to let her in and she caught the small smile he didn’t want her to see. That was the thing about James McClendon. He had been alone in this house for six years since Mrs. McClendon passed and in that time he had arranged his entire personality around not needing a single soul. She had spent two years quietly dismantling that arrangement four minutes at a time.

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 4 days ago
▲ 1 r/u_MbkMarketing+1 crossposts

I wrote a literary novel set in a town that runs on unspoken rules. Would you read this?

The premise: a small Southern town that looks exactly like ours, except goodness compounds and comes back to you, cruelty eventually runs out of room, and the world keeps its word to the people who keep theirs. Nobody in the book fully understands the rules. They just start to sense the shape of them.

It follows five people. A twenty-nine-year-old caregiver, loud and joyful, who gets a cancer diagnosis and faces it with the radio turned all the way up. Her quiet best friend, whose four-year-old was hurt by a boyfriend the legal system couldn’t touch. A seventy-three-year-old grandmother who has kept an unopened letter from her dying mother for thirty-nine years. And the four-year-old herself, whose chapters happen down at floor level, in yellow socks and orange crackers and a rolly bug that trusts her enough to unroll in her palm. It follows four people closely. A fifth appears and disappears.

It’s about generational silence breaking. About goodness being quietly rewarded in a world that never announces itself. The man who causes the harm is never dramatically punished. He just runs out of room.

No fantasy elements you can point at. God is present but never named. The rules are felt, not explained.

Here’s the opening:

The McClendon house smelled like liniment and burnt coffee and something floral that Torah had never been able to name but had long since stopped trying to. She had been coming here every Tuesday and Thursday morning for two years and the smell met her at the door before Mr. McClendon did, which was saying something because James McClendon had not missed greeting her at that door a single time in two years.
He was already there when she knocked.
“You’re late,” he said.
“I’m four minutes early Mr. James.”
“Clock in the kitchen says different.”
“Clock in the kitchen has been wrong since 2014 and you know it.”
He stepped back to let her in and she caught the small smile he didn’t want her to see. That was the thing about James McClendon. He had been alone in this house for six years since Mrs. McClendon passed and in that time he had arranged his entire personality around not needing a single soul. She had spent two years quietly dismantling that arrangement four minutes at a time.

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 5 days ago
▲ 1 r/u_MbkMarketing+1 crossposts

The Blackwoods documented everything.

Births.
Marriages.
Names.
Until the records stopped matching. This family tree appears in Book One of The Blackwood Trilogy and becomes something very different once the truth starts surfacing.
For readers who love Southern Gothic, hidden histories, family secrets, and books where details matter.

https://a.co/d/0iXoYguT

https://a.co/d/0bYqMrSK

u/MbkMarketing — 10 days ago
▲ 2 r/GothicLiterature+1 crossposts

The Price of Truth – A Southern Gothic Historical Thriller (Free for Kindle Subscribers until Tuesday!)

If you love deep family secrets, buried records, dark atmospheres, and stories about the things people inherit besides money, I think you'll love the Blackwood series. Book One: The Things We Buried Book Two: The Price of Truth (Free to download for Kindle subscribers right now through Tuesday)

https://a.co/d/023yH4mi

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 13 days ago
▲ 4 r/u_MbkMarketing+3 crossposts

Two of my books are free on Amazon right now — one ends today

Hi everyone! I know this account is new, so I wanted to say that upfront. I made it because I wanted to post about my writing separately from my other account/pen name.

I have two books free on Amazon right now:

It Sounded Better in My Head is free for about the next 12 hours. It’s a contemporary workplace novel with humor, office chaos, friendship, slow-burn tension, and a main character who copes with feelings by making jokes at the worst possible times.

The Price of the Truth is free until Tuesday. Book one The Things We Buried is also available at a discounted rate right now.

No pressure at all, but if you’re looking for something new to read, I’d love for you to grab a copy while they’re free.

It Sounded Better in My Head: https://a.co/d/0d9oEZjd

The Price of the Truth: https://a.co/d/00n3oDVb

The Things We Buried: https://a.co/d/0gv2wHsz

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 13 days ago
▲ 6 r/southerngothic+3 crossposts

I published a Southern Gothic family mystery and people are actually reading it

I published my second novel this week under my pen name, Eleanor Vale, and I’m still kind of processing that strangers are reading it.

It’s called The Price of Truth (Book Two in The Blackwood Trilogy), and it starts after the family secret has already been exposed. The records were corrected. Lost names were restored. Everyone thought justice had finally happened.

Then someone finds another missing woman. What starts as one corrected family tree turns into a story about erased women, inherited silence, old church records, buried land transfers, and what people protect when the truth becomes inconvenient.

Genre-wise it sits somewhere between Southern Gothic, historical mystery, family saga, and psychological suspense.

It also somehow made it into the Top 10,000 in Historical Thrillers this week which feels unreal for a tiny indie release.
If this sounds like your thing, it’s currently free for Kindle subscribers until Tuesday:

https://a.co/d/0fDbsJ0z

If you prefer starting at the beginning, Book One (The Things We Buried) is already out too.

Would genuinely love to know what people here are reading lately in Southern Gothic / family mystery.

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 12 days ago
▲ 1 r/u_MbkMarketing+1 crossposts

I wrote a book for everyone whose personality is 40% ideas and 60% regretting the ideas.

You know when something feels brilliant at 2:14 a.m.
Then morning happens.

It Sounded Better in My Head is for people who think too much, say the wrong thing at the wrong time, make elaborate plans, and accidentally become a person in the process.

Messy friendships.
Big feelings.
Small disasters.

Less “perfect main character.”
More “human being attempting.”

If you like:
• character-driven fiction
• awkward humor
• emotional growth
• people who mean well but absolutely miss sometimes

welcome.

Question: what’s the last idea you had that sounded amazing… until daylight?

📚 Link in profile

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 13 days ago
▲ 2 r/u_MbkMarketing+1 crossposts

Turns out finding the truth is easier than surviving it.

Book two exists because I kept asking:
Okay… but what happens after the reveal?
People always talk about exposing the truth like it’s the ending.

It isn’t.
People get angry.
People rewrite history.
People pick sides.
People protect themselves.

The Price of Truth is about what happens after secrets stop being theoretical and become names, consequences, and choices.

If you like:
• emotional fallout
• morally complicated characters
• family conflict
• “everyone thinks they’re right” stories
• books that ask uncomfortable questions

this one might be your thing.
What fictional character deserved a better apology?

📚 Link in profile

reddit.com
u/MbkMarketing — 13 days ago