Ofelia Gränd

Read Around the Rainbow • Comfort Reads #RAtR

Hello, everyone! Once again, it’s Read Around the Rainbow time. I’ve been working to get back into the swing of doing more than just writing. I'm hoping to sneak onto social media more, post on my blog, and start emailing my reading group a little more often by including my rare Read Around the Rainbow posts. Speaking of, welcome to our new members! I have even gone so far as making a schedule! Ofelia Gränd would be so proud of me!

Since we last spoke, I have a few new things in the works, including organizing for the rerelease of a story that is reverting to me from the original publisher, with a second book in that series nearly complete. I’m also working on an upcoming box set for the 10th anniversary of another of my series. But I’ll let you know all about that in the coming weeks.

Now it’s Read Around the Rainbow time! (Typing that made me think of Reading Rainbow, which somehow led to me think of 3-2-1 Contact and then to The Bloodhouse Gang. I need more sleep!) Each month, the Read Around the Rainbow gang posts about the same subject on the last Friday of the month. This time around, we’re talking about Comfort Reads!

Oddly, I’ve never really thought about comfort reads until now. I might have even argued, I didn’t do them. But, after sitting down to really think about it, apparently I’m all about the comfort; I’d just never put that name to it.

In elementary school, I listened to the same Alice in Wonderland audiobook every night as I went to sleep. In middle school, high school, and college, I would watch the same cartoons every morning when I was getting ready for class. Whatever cartoon was showing in that time slot, I’d watch it every day, even repeats. I would actually feel edgy when they switched the schedule around, until I got used to whatever cartoon they’d put in its place.

When I was in my twenties, I started a business with two partners. I drew the short end of the straw and got stuck with closing the books every year to hand over to our accountant. And since then, for close to twenty years, I’ve watched the A&E Pride and Prejudice mini-series while doing it.

Why it’s only occurring to me now that it’s kind of the same thing, I’ll never know. Then, I just needed to apply that same logic to my reading habits. And sure enough, I do have comfort reads!


Over the years, I have lost count of the number of times I’ve read Fish and Ghosts by Rhys Ford. I know that story forward and backwards, and it is just a delight to read for me every time. When the week has become overwhelming or when I really need to unwind over a weekend, it is a go-to. It was one of my early MM reads, and it’s still one of my favorites. It’s just great fun!

I also return to Mummy Dearest by Josh Lanyon. Few things are better than classic monster-chasing fun, and I adore everything about it. It’s also a quick read, which can be nice when you’re spread too thin.

There are definitely others that don’t fall under the romance category, like Dracula, The Haunting of Hill House, and the High Society Lady Detective series, all of which I come back to again and again. There is something about rereading a book without the stress of wondering what’s going to happen. And it says something good about a book when knowing how it ends doesn’t diminish the enjoyment.

I don’t think most of the group had time to contribute this month, but check out the ones that did below—I’ll continue to update links if they come in after I hit publish—and make sure to share your comfort reads!


You can check out the other Read Around the Rainbow authors by clicking their names below!

Addison AlbrightHolly DayLillian FrancisFiona GlassOfelia GrändNell Iris

A.L. LesterK.L. NooneEllie Thomas


Be Kind • Read More • Find Joy


Read Around the Rainbow • Would You Rather... #RAtR

Hello again! It’s nearly the end of January, and so far this year I’ve managed to stick to the promise I made myself—Notice how I avoided the word resolution? That word has failure written all over it!—to take more time for writing and editing and keeping up with my monthly RAtR posts. Allowing myself time is something I’m particularly bad at. There is always something—or someone—else that needs my attention, and these moments, no matter how limited, can feel selfish. But after the last three years, I’m determined to make my mental health more of a priority and grab a little fun for myself.

This month Read Around the Rainbow is answering a few would you ever… questions. We are a group of authors spread across the map, so I’m interested to see how my answers line up with everyone elses.

I’ve never participated in a would you ever… post, and it sounds like fun. I haven’t really looked at the questions yet, but it seems like three questions wouldn’t make for a particularly long post, but being that I tend to go on and on—something that is exclusive to my writing and not me in person—we’ll find out together.

So, let’s get into it…

Would you rather publish one insanely great-selling book and never write again … or publish a string of 15 average-selling books over 20 years?

This is a hard one to answer, because who wouldn’t want a wildly successful selling book? But to never write again?!! That might just be too much to ask. Also, you’d have to assume that there are certain things a wildly successful book would bring with it—book tours, interviews, expectations, everyone knowing who you are—that are far less wonderful.

But if I could have a wildly successful selling book, and be able to write but not publish? That might be okay. I’ve sworn off writing before, only to have it call to me like a siren. I don’t think I could cut writing out of my life, but I might be able to cut out the publishing aspect of it and be content. And then, if I did it right, someday when I’m gone, my grown children would find my writing and think…wow, mom was quite the perv. #lifegoals

Would you rather be recognized wherever you go… or live a quiet (monetarily successful) life of anonymity?

I think I accidentally answered this one above. I am an introvert. I find the idea of being recognized everywhere absolutely horrifying! LOL

Would you rather write in a rooftop garden surrounded by city noises — or in a quiet studio with cows as your neighbors?

This is an easy one! The rooftop garden, surrounded by city noises! For me, nothing sparks creativity like the city, and everything that goes along with it.

Shortly after I was first married, my husband and I seriously considered purchasing an old Victorian in the middle of downtown. This was in the early 2000s when you could still afford a 100+ year old mansion of a house. One of my husband’s arts school buddy’s father had purchased it as a place for his son to live off campus, and after he graduated was selling the place. It was beautiful, and everything I always wanted. But we were young, and in the end were scared off by the cost of furnaces and windows and paying to heat a house with so many fireplaces. I still regret it.

But someday, when the children are out of school and we no longer have to worry about good school districts, we haven’t ruled out grabbing one of those lovely highrise condos with their view of the city lights to write by.

Well, that was longer than I thought but not as long as normal. Go me! Now, go check out how everyone else answered! That’s what I’m going to do!


You can check out the other Read Around the Rainbow authors by clicking their names below!


See you in February!