From Dream to Draft
From Dream to Draft

Every writer has a moment when a story grabs hold and refuses to let go. For me, that moment came in the middle of the night. I woke from a dream so vivid that it felt less like a dream and more like a memory from a place I hadn’t yet been. In it, there was a path of worn yellow stones, half-buried in the forest floor. Each one was carved with strange phrases—idioms, like “Bite the Bullet” and “Break the Ice.” I remember standing in that forest, wondering what would happen if those sayings were real—if words could shape the world. When I woke, I scribbled the idea down, and that spark eventually became my first novel, The Idiom Stones.
At first, I thought it would be an adult thriller—after all, that’s the kind of story I usually imagine myself writing. My literary influences are firmly planted in that space. I’ve always admired the psychological depth of Stephen King, the curiosity-driven storytelling of Malcolm Gladwell, and the relentless pacing of Dan Brown. They each approach the human condition in such different ways—King through fear and empathy, Gladwell through questions that challenge how we think, and Brown through intellect and adrenaline. I suppose I wanted to blend those instincts somehow.
But as The Idiom Stones took shape, it became clear the story wanted to be something else entirely. The characters who arrived on the page were kids—twelve and thirteen years old—on the edge of growing up, caught between friendship and fear, between childhood magic and the weight of what it means to be responsible. It wasn’t a conscious decision to write for a younger audience; it simply felt right. And somewhere along the way, I realized I was writing the kind of story I would have loved to discover as a kid. I’m glad I followed it where it wanted to go.
If there’s one story that has stayed with me over the years, it’s Stephen King’s The Long Walk. There’s something about its simplicity and cruelty, the endurance of its characters, and the quiet horror of what people will do to survive, that’s never left me. When I heard it was finally being adapted for film, I was thrilled. I can’t wait to see how they capture that haunting tone on screen. That story taught me that speculative fiction doesn’t have to be about monsters—it can be about us. About choice, fear, and the fragile threads that hold us together.
Writing The Idiom Stones has been the most challenging and rewarding creative experience of my life. It reminded me that inspiration can come from anywhere—a dream, a memory, a question you can’t stop asking. For me, it started with a single image: a forest path paved in idioms. Where it leads… well, I suppose that’s what the story is for.
Thank you for stopping by and reading my very first blog post. I’m excited to share more about my process, my inspirations, and the journey of turning ideas into stories.
Follow along here as I navigate life as a new, aspiring author—one dream (and one draft) at a time.
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