I also publish under my maiden name. Take a look at these!

Surviving Sarah (Book One) YA
Warning: Strong language and triggering content
Sarah Carter was your average teenager. She went to school, did her homework, and was an honor student. However, she battled daily with depression, anxiety, and bullying until she couldn’t handle it any longer. Zeke suffers from memory loss and Sarah Carter plagues his nightmare ridden dreams, and he doesn’t understand why. He is in the hospital with severe amnesia due to a brain injury that no one will speak of. His doctor and parents decide letting him read Sarah’s journals will aid his amnesia recovery and speed it up. He doesn’t know what to expect as he cracks the spines of her journals and is taken on an emotional journey as he peels back the pages of the mind of the girl who haunts his every dream.
Splintered (Novella) Adult- Supernatural Thriller
It’s a quiet, November evening as Lorraine sits reading as the rain pelts down outside. Little did she know that this night would change her entire life as it comes across the radio about a lunatic escaping the local mental asylum for the criminally insane. As she hears someone break in, she whisks her kids away to safety… but did she really keep them safe? An endless nightmare can blur the line between reality and delusions in this supernatural thriller. Or is it supernatural at all?
The Diary of Jane: Memoirs of Insanity Adult Fiction
Trigger warning: mental health issues, abuse, suicide, bullying
People aren’t born broken. People are made broken by society, by family, by people they love and care about. People are made broken by the mirror they see in other people’s faces that morph into their own realities of what they see when they look in the actual mirror. It can happen at any moment in one’s life. It can happen as a baby, as a toddler, as a child, as a teenager, or even as an adult. It can be the cold shoulder of a mother who doesn’t hug their children or show affection. It can be the laughter of other children when they view you as different, funny-looking, or fat. It can be the face of a teenage boy who had never been taught to respect others and instead spends every waking moment taking a dig at others to seem cooler. It can be the grown adult shouting out the window “whale” as they drive by you standing at a gas station. But as I said, people aren’t born broken. They’re molded into it, and I was not the exception.
I was born and named Christine Jane Addison, but everyone calls me Jane.
Planned Books


