The Willowburrow Gazette is a cozy children's series (reading age 4–9) narrated by Benji, a Sheltie who "notices everything" in the small village of Willowburrow. Each book introduces a new cast of animal neighbours and a string of minor village mysteries that always seem to get pinned on the wrong suspect.
Bite-sized stories (370–420 words each), gentle whodunit structure, and Benji quietly proving he's the real detective of the village throughout.
The Willowburrow Gazette: Books 1 & 2
Wildlife fiction for younger readers, set in the English countryside.
Benji Booboos and the Secrets of the Wild is a gentle, wonder‑filled countryside adventure series following Benji — a bright‑eyed Sheltie with a red collar and a boundless curiosity — as he wanders Britain’s hidden wild places. Across chalk ridges, ancient hedgerows, secret ponds and windswept islands, he meets creatures who each have something to teach him. Eighteen short, heartwarming stories spread across three books — Woodland Wonders, Skies, Hills & Shores, and Waterways & Wetlands — celebrating nature, friendship, and the quiet magic waiting just beyond the footpath.
Benji Booboos and the Secrets of the Wild series: Books 1 to 3
Observations Upon the Fauna of Southern Africa — Volume III (In Preparation)
A wry natural‑history adventure where Southern Africa’s wildlife meets the unwavering curiosity of Colonel Aubrey Fitch‑Harrington — and rarely shares his enthusiasm. Each story blends true animal behaviour with the Colonel’s wonderfully misguided interpretations, observed with quiet amusement by his Zulu guide, Cetshwayo. The facts are real; the conclusions are not. The delight lies in the gap between them.
"In My Considerable Experience” Books 1 to 4
Historical essays, flash fiction, and miscellaneous experiments.
The story of what happens when a quiet question finally outgrows the ideas meant to contain it.
The Wide Sky Series follows Elias Wren, who grows up in a town where the sky is literally painted — the elders insist it's the whole of creation — until one night a real star burns through a crack in the paint. Six books trace what happens once that impossible little light refuses to be unseen: not a rejection of faith, but a slow widening of it.