Bookshelf

OREGON / INTERCONNECTED WORLD


STANDALONE DARK FICTION


ANTHOLOGIES


THE MINIATURE PROJECT


COOKBOOK


MONTHLY POCKET PUBLICATION


ROMANCE


SHORT FICTION


ESSAYS AND ARTICLES

LIFE, MUSINGS, & CREATIVITY

◗ Essays and mood boards on Just Another Elizabeth's newsletter—March 2025–current

◗ “Expectations and Author Readings” on Medium—October 2019

◗ “Cutting Back on Social Media for Writing’s Sake” in The Startup—October 2019

Disability

◗ What My Joints Tell Me on Rooted in Rights Blog: a program of Disability Rights Washington (about my MCAS journey)—August 2023

◗ “Crafts with Anastasia—Author Elle Mitchell Visualizes Her Stories By Creating Miniature Scenes” on Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers—March 2023

◗ “Why I Wrote a Disabled Serial Killer” on Women Writers, Women’s Books (About writing Another Elizabeth) — February 2023

◗ “Sorry, I Can’t” in Issue 10 of 99E—September 2020

WRITING & PUBLISHING

◗ Articles on A Million Ways to Be a Writer—January–September 2024

“Eight Effective Book Promotion Tips for Every Author” on Damyanti Writes—July 2023

◗ “How Writing Is Like Baking Bread” in The Writing Cooperative—January 2023

◗ “Writing Suspense: A Step-by-Step Guide for Aspiring Authors” on IngramSpark Blog—March 2020

◗ “Outlining With the Double-Corkboard Method” in An Idea (by Ingenious Piece)—March 2020

◗ “10 Things I’ve Learned In My First Year Of Self-Publishing (And 3 I Haven’t)” in The Startup—December 2019

◗ “10 Applications and Resources Self-Published Authors Should Consider Using”in An Idea (by Ingenious Piece)—November 2019

◗ “What One Self-Published Author Spent Publishing Two Books (And What I’ve Learned From It)” in An Idea (by Ingenious Piece)—November 2019

◗ “Book Mockup Sites I Love And Why” on Medium—August 2019

◗ “How I Write and Edit a Novel in 23 Steps: (Plus 4 More for Self-Publishing Authors)” in The Startup—August 2019

READING

◗ The best dark fiction serial killer books on Shepherd—March 2023

The best books about the secrets your neighbor keeps on Shepherd—December 2022


KEY

*Crip fiction: Fiction that features a chronically ill/disabled main character or point-of-view. The content of the story is not necessarily meant to focus solely on the illness, syndrome, disorder, or disability, though it can be a large part of the narrative. It's meant to show the character as a fully realized person, including the disabled experience.

The word “crip” is based on the philosophy of crip time.

**Disability fiction focuses on the illness/disability. It is the main point of the narrative.


TERMS

Embodied fiction showcases how emotions, trauma, pain, grief, and disability shows up in the body and the mind.