The past few months have brought quite a lot of change for Ambergrove. The first of the republications releases this week! Here’s a little update on the goings-on around here.
Republications
Through June, I have reviewed and revised printed proofs of Ranger’s Odyssey, and I approved the final proofs last week. The official release date for the new editions is June 26–this Friday! When publishing the first edition of Ranger’s Odyssey, I was so close to October 10, and I love fun dates, so the publication date was 10/10/2020. We had a hiccup in the release, so it wasn’t actually available until a couple days later, but that is the official publication date. This third edition will likely not be available until a day or two after the publication date as well, but (in simplified American date format), it will be published 6/26/26, continuing the numbers thing from the first edition.
These republications are wholly mine. They are everything I wanted the books to be when I first wrote Ranger’s Odyssey. These editions have chapter illustrations and a larger map. When they were previously published, the publisher set the prices. I pushed for them to be lowered and was able to lower them some, but they were still higher than I wanted them to be. With these new editions, I am setting them at the lowest I can set them. Instead of $27 for the hardback, it’s $15. Instead of $14 for the paperback, it’s $10. Instead of $4 for the ebook, it’s $1. I want the books to be accessible. I want them to be read and enjoyed. This means my royalties for the republications will be just as low, if not lower, than they were for the first editions, but I don’t write for the money. I write because I love this world that I made, and I want to share this love with others.
Our illustrator is hard at work on the Realm of Chaos illustrations, and I have formatted and tweaked it on my end. We’re hoping to have the illustrations completed in the next couple weeks and the new edition of Realm of Chaos published in late July. With any luck, Wheel of Fate will follow the same pattern and be available near the end of August, with the special edition of the Dragonwolf trilogy coming in September. After that, Raine will have the colossal undertaking of the few thousand illustrations for the TTRPG books before we get to Ember in the Forge, likely in the spring.
The late pledging for the Kickstarter closes on July 1 (under two weeks from now). Those who backed just for Ranger’s Odyssey will receive their copy in July. Those who backed the full Dragonwolf trilogy will receive their copy after Wheel of Fate is published (expected by September).

Regressions
Over the past year and a half since I hit my head, I have shared a little information here and there about my injury. A significant update over the past couple months has prompted me to share more for the sake of transparency.
I slipped on ice and hit my head on a tree root in January 2025. Since then, I’ve had recovery periods and regression periods. When too much stress piles up at one time, my body can no longer handle it, and it permanently damages my brain. I recover some after a regression, but some damage is always permanent. My biggest issue, as it applies to Ambergrove, is memory loss. Every time I experience a regression, I lose more and more of my prior capacity–my vocabulary, stories, experiences, and people. After the first regression, I compiled a document that explains that all the Tales of Ambergrove saga is leading toward, with summaries of each series. I believe it is the author’s responsibility to complete a story they have put part of into the world, so I wanted to make sure that I had enough together to do that if I lost the capacity to write. As it stands, I have not written much since my injury besides the new chapter for Ranger’s Odyssey and the new race and subclasses for the TTRPG.
My brain is slowly deteriorating. A couple months ago, my condition worsened enough that I had to be put on disability from work. I have spent these months off work mostly attending doctor appointments and tests, trying new treatment plans, and trying to rest. It does not seem likely that I will be able to regain enough capacity to work again. I cannot make it through a day without napping, I cannot wake at a decent hour due to medications, I cannot focus or remember things if there is a need to remember them or a need to follow a timeline, I forget huge things as well as little things–something is always slipping through the cracks–and going out into the world for a couple hours tears my body up for days.
We’re trying different things to ease the severity of this and to provide scaffolding for me, but we are looking at the probability that resting will be my focus for a while. What does all this mean for Ambergrove? Well, there’s good and there’s bad. When I have eased my brain, rested, and have minimal stress, ideas are coming to me just like they used to. If I have a good day, there’s a few hours in the day that I can work on something for the books as long as I don’t have the pressure of a deadline. This means things have been slow going, but I haven’t lost my capacity entirely as I have with other elements of life. With my focus shifting to my health and away from working a day job, that means that there will be more opportunities to work in Ambergrove–whenever my brain is working with me. Unfortunately, it seems like regressions will continue. My treatment plans are mostly to slow down the frequency of regressions. The less daily stress I have, the greater chance that I will have a reasonable capacity for the longest time. However, there’s no telling how long that will be. I could do everything I can to slow the deterioration of my brain and still lose my capacity to write in the next year. Or I may still have 10, 20, 40 years. There’s no way to know.
So, I’ve mapped the main story out, to be released if I’m not able to complete it like I’d planned. I’m working on the republications when I have the capacity to do so. Once the republications are complete, I will work on the next books whenever I can and share them with you whenever I have finally finished them. I will no longer impose deadlines or even projected timelines, in the hope that not doing that will allow my brain to work with me for longer. We’ll just have to see how things end up.
For now, the one thing that’s really stuck with me through all this is that it’s really important to take the short rest. In D&D, a short rest is sort of like a nap and a long rest is like a full sleep overnight. When you take a short rest, there’s things you get back. Sometimes you can regain health points, sometimes spell slots or qi–but there’s always something you can gain just by stopping and giving yourself that rest. It took me a year and a half to realize that I needed to take the short rests, that naps weren’t a shortcoming but a necessity. That sometimes the best thing you can do to better yourself is nothing–and, harder still, that I needed to be okay with doing nothing. So, I’m slowing down. I’m taking my short rests whenever I need them. I’m hoping that keeps me prepared for any encounter there may be ahead. We’ll have to see what this next adventure brings.

Redirection
So, what’s next? Well, I probably won’t do any events that require me to stay overnight somewhere. I have too many aids at home that I can’t do without. At least for another year or two, I’ll probably only be doing events I’ve done before or with shops or groups I’ve worked with before. This means I will continue to have a booth and run games at Clayshire Castle’s Medieval Faire. I will participate in the seasonal markets and other fantasy-adjacent events organized by the illustrator, Raine Hutchens. I will continue to participate in author fairs and in events organized by Enchanted Novelties bookstore.
I will continue to donate Ranger’s Odyssey to any library that will put it on the shelves, and now, with the lowered cost, I will donate the casebound hardcovers instead of paperbacks–or perhaps the full trilogy in paperback format instead of just Ranger’s Odyssey.
I will continue to work on things to do with Ambergrove here and there whenever I can. The republications require very little work now on my end, so my capacity won’t hold them back. The next tale of Ambergrove may still take some time to be told, but I am determined to tell all the tales I can while I have the capacity.
This is a new adventure now, but I’m taking my short rests. Take the time to take yours, too, when you need them. Until next time, adventurers!





















