Why I Write

(And Why I Ghostwrite)

A woman with red hair and glasses reading a book.

I didn’t always love books the way I do now.
My relationship with literature was complicated—one of love and frustration, distance and curiosity.

Everything changed when I discovered romance novels.

For the first time, I fell in love with characters. I cried for their heartbreaks, rooted for them through impossible obstacles, and felt completely pulled out of my own reality and into something larger than myself.

That feeling stayed with me.

When I wrote my first love story, something clicked. Putting the words in my head and heart onto paper felt magical. Suddenly, I understood why people write books—why they choose to share emotion, experience, and truth through fiction.

That understanding is what led me to ghostwriting.

Today, I help bring other people’s stories to life with the same care, attention, and emotional depth I bring to my own. Whether it’s shaping an idea, developing characters, or completing a full-length manuscript, my goal is always the same: to tell the story as authentically and powerfully as possible.

Ghostwriting allows me to give back—to create stories that go beyond my own voice and help others share theirs.