What Do We Do?

We’ll skip the boring introductions on how we began and go right to the important stuff: We help aspiring authors do what they love, without compromising what they love.

FeatherWritings is not a publishing company. We are a publishing consulting firm, comprised of real self-published authors who have real experience self-publishing their work without spending money on or compromising their vision for publishing companies. Our consultants can and will walk you through every aspect of the publishing process if need be, or if you’re just looking for a point in the right direction, we can do that as well.

Our goal is to not only help you save money, but save the integrity of the work you have produced. The final product of your writing will be 100% what you envisioned and not a limited, contract bound version that you may have get working with a publishing firm.

Reach out to our team and schedule your first consultation today. All pre-consulting inquiries are free, so don’t be afraid to contact us and ask some questions!

Contact us:

(760) 975-9152 | K.R.FeatherWritings@gmail.com

How We Began

In 2015, author K.R. Feather took a trip to the United Kingdom so that her mother and the rest of the family could study the Magna Carta on the 800th anniversary of it’s signing. During this time, they also went to Scotland in order to visit distant relatives and get an in-person lesson on their family history. Feather often says that she left her soul in Scotland after that trip, her mind and heart forever lost in the woods of the Highlands.

Feather, not new to writing, found herself spinning a series of stories in her head that would consume her thoughts for more than a decade. “Blesséd Creatures” became the first book in a trilogy she would write inspired by her experiences in Scotland and Ireland.

The process of publishing “Blesséd Creatures” while also working and going to school full time, inspired Feather to try and find ways to make the process easier and cheaper so she could continue to pay for her student loans. She found that publishing companies were too expensive and even more so controlling of the work she had produced, and that trying to find websites and classes that could walk her through the process never aligned with her schedule. She had to figure it all out on her own. From her long experiences, she gained helpful information that she started to teach to her friends and family who were also writers, but not published. Eventually, as she saw those around her succeed and experience easier publishing processes with the help of her advice, Feather realized she could not only be a writer herself, but also help other authors.

The final front cover of the novel that started it all.

The final cover of the book that started it all.