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The Glass Inkwell
Notes, musings, and dispatches from across the realms.
The latest notes, musings, and dispatches...


Jade Black
20 hours ago


Ink & Aether Studios
2 days ago


Jade Black
3 days ago

Welcome to Inkbound Realms
Hi, I'm J.P.—known as Indigo Winter here. I'm a librarian who fell into books and stayed, and a writer who believes stories are portals when reality needs more magic.
This blog gathers all the threads: mysteries I'm crafting, galaxies I'm charting, sentient libraries causing chaos, and the publishing journey I'm navigating with excitement and caffeine. If you're seeking diverse voices, genre-hopping adventures, and messy creative life, you've found your reading nook.


Miles Takes Over — "A Quiet Word About Characters Who Aren't Actually Characters”
Miles Stone agreed to write this under the condition that it not become a "content piece." He was told no promises. He wrote it anyway.

J.P. White
6 days ago


The Problem With "Write Like [Author]" Advice
On rereading a beloved series, craft study done right, and why you don't actually want to write like your favorite author

J.P. White
Apr 9


The Day Job Doesn't Care About Your Deadline
On balancing two full-time lives without completely dissolving into the couch Here is something nobody puts in the "how to be an indie author" guides, probably because it doesn't photograph well: At 8:47 AM on a Tuesday, you will be in a meeting about something that has nothing to do with your characters or your chapter or the plot hole you finally figured out at 11 PM the night before. The meeting will run long. There will be a follow-up email. You will have approximately

Ink & Aether Studios
Mar 31


The Kind of Dark I Can Live In
There's a thing I say when people look at my watchlist and squint. You'll write an entire fantasy novel with blood and betrayal and ancient monsters who eat grief for breakfast, but you won't watch Law & Order? And the answer is: correct. Absolutely not. Not even the reruns. I've thought about this more than I probably should have (it was a Tuesday, I had coffee, I was procrastinating on a chapter—you know how it goes). And what I landed on is this: it's not about the darknes

Jade Black
Mar 28


After Dark in Blackvale
On editing Vale & Stone Book 2 and what waits in the shadows of a town I thought I knew There's a version of Blackvale that most people never see. Not because it's hidden, exactly. More because it requires a certain willingness — to stay past closing time, to take the long way home, to linger in the kind of light that turns ordinary storefronts into something else entirely. Something older. Something that breathes. I've been deep in the editing trenches of Vale & Stone Book 2

J.P. White
Mar 17


When Characters Meet: The Alchemy of First Encounters That Make Your Heart Skip
There's a specific kind of magic that happens when two characters meet for the first time. Not just any meeting. Not the "oh, you work in accounting too?" kind. I'm talking about the kind of first encounter that makes you stop mid-bite of your sandwich, forget you have tea steeping, and accidentally stay up until 2 a.m. because you have to know what happens next. The kind that crackles. I've been thinking about this a lot lately—what makes a first encounter in romance truly

Jade Black
Mar 9


Why I Shelved Paradise Island (and Why I Brought It Back Now)
There are stories you write. And then there are stories you bury. Paradise Island was the second kind. If you've been following along, you probably noticed I recently renamed Paradise Island to Saltwater Between Us . That wasn't just a branding tweak. That was a reclamation. A quiet, salt-stung, sun-warmed reclaiming of something I almost convinced myself wasn't worth keeping. Let's rewind a little. I started my very first story in high school because a friend casually me

Jade Black
Feb 17


If These Characters Could See My Draft Folder…
There is a folder on my computer that should never, under any circumstances, gain sentience. It is labeled something harmless. Something professional. Something that suggests order and intention. Inside it lives half-finished chapters, alternate openings, emotionally unwell scenes written at 2:14 a.m., and at least three documents named some variation of final_final_ACTUALLY_final . If my characters could see this folder, I would never hear the end of it. So today, in the spi

Indigo Winter
Feb 11


Universal Studios and the Permission to Play
There is a particular kind of joy that only exists inside curated worlds. Not the fragile joy of productivity. Not the earned joy that comes after suffering. I mean the loud, unapologetic joy of walking into a place designed entirely for wonder and saying, Yes. I will have some of that. Universal Studios was my birthday gift to myself. A day of color and noise and spectacle after days steeped in stone, history, and ghosts. Ancient forts and quiet museums had given me weight.

Indigo Winter
Feb 9


Ghost Tours, Modern Medicine, and the Comfort of Being Haunted Together
Ghost tours are a funny thing. Everyone pretends they’re there ironically. For the history. For the vibes. For the camp. We insist we’re not scared even as we cluster closer together, listening a little too carefully, glancing over our shoulders when the guide’s voice drops. I went on mine at night, when St. Augustine feels like it’s holding its breath. Cobblestones slick with age and humidity. Streetlamps casting that specific kind of light that turns every shadow into a pos

J.P. White
Feb 4


The Shipwreck Museum: When History Becomes Entertainment
I went into the Shipwreck Museum with expectations. That was my first mistake. I imagined salt-stained stories. Quiet reverence. The slow, heavy gravity of loss. Shipwrecks, after all, are about disaster. About the sea taking more than it gives back. What I found instead was spectacle. Dim lighting. Theatrical narration. History packaged neatly with a gift-shop cadence. The tragedy was still there, technically, but it had been softened. Streamlined. Made palatable. Disaster,

Indigo Winter
Feb 2


The Lightner Museum and the Cost of Keeping Everything
The Lightner Museum is beautiful in the way only wealth can afford to be. From the moment you step inside, it overwhelms politely. Ceilings stretch upward, ornate and confident. Staircases curve with the assurance of money that has never been told no. Even the air feels curated, as if it knows it’s supposed to smell faintly of polish and history and importance. I found myself looking up a lot. At the ceilings. At the chandeliers. At the sheer audacity of it all. Then I looked

J.P. White
Jan 14


Castillo de San Marcos: When Protection Becomes a Cage
The walls of Castillo de San Marcos do not shimmer. They loom. Up close, the stone tells on itself. Coquina, made of compressed shells, thousands upon thousands of tiny lives pressed together into something meant to last. If you lean in, really lean in, you can see them. Fragments. Spirals. Ghosts of what used to be ocean, now stacked into a fortress. There’s old graffiti scratched into the walls too. Names. Marks. Proof that people needed to say I was here even when the pla

J.P. White
Jan 13


Bliss By The Sea: A Hotel Between Selves
Some places don’t ask who you are. They ask who you’re becoming. I arrived at Bliss By The Sea the way I arrive at most new places. A little tired. A little guarded. Carrying more versions of myself than would comfortably fit in a carry-on. From the street, the hotel looks composed. Confident. All clean lines and colonial symmetry, like it knows exactly what it’s doing and doesn’t need your opinion about it. The front facade is polite. Well-mannered. It says welcome in the

Indigo Winter
Jan 12


Why I’m Slowing Down on Blogging (And What I’m Saying Yes to Instead)
The new year has that particular kind of hush to it. The glitter from December is still clinging to the corners, but the calendar has turned its face toward seriousness. Fresh pages. Sharper pencils. A quiet, persistent tap on the shoulder that says, Okay. Back to business. And here’s the honest truth: I’m listening. Publishing Murder at the Midsummer Feast was only the beginning. Not the finish line. Not the victory lap. More like the moment the train finally hissed, shudde

Indigo Winter
Jan 11


The Ritual That Keeps Me Writing (Even When My Brain Is Playing Pinball)
I’ve long accepted that my creative process looks less like a calm, candlelit genius-at-work montage and more like a crow collecting shiny objects during a caffeine high. My brainstorming notes—whether in Notion or scattered through my ever-growing family of notebooks—read like a crime scene of half-thoughts, crossed-out side quests, multiple timelines arguing in the margins, and at least one doodle of a dragon wearing sunglasses. And yet… somehow, out of this chaos, a story

Indigo Winter
Jan 7


5 Secret Things I Loved Writing in Murder at the Midsummer Feast (All Spoiler-Free)
"Discover the cozy mystery 'Murder at the Midsummer Feast' by J.P. White, now available on Amazon. Dive into a world of gothic vibes, small-town secrets, and a feast turned nightmare, available in both ebook and print." There is a very specific kind of joy that sneaks up on you while writing a book. Not the fireworks kind. More like the quiet hum you feel when the scene clicks, the characters stop arguing with you, and suddenly you are smiling at your screen like it just told

J.P. White
Jan 5


What the Cards Said About My 2026 Writing Journey (And Why I'm Both Terrified and Thrilled)
It was 2 a.m. last night and I was sitting at my kitchen table surrounded by candlelight, two decks of cards, and a cup of tea that had gone cold twice already. The house was quiet except for the occasional creak of old wood settling and my own breathing, which had that particular rhythm of someone who was about to ask the universe a question they weren't entirely sure they wanted answered. Fun fact about being a writer who also reads tarot: sometimes you need to see the stor

Indigo Winter
Dec 31, 2025


The Year I Wrote Nine First Drafts (Please Don’t Ask How I’m Alive)
A TED Talk Presented Live From Inside a Pillow Fort Growing up, I thought writers lived in cabins with typewriters. You know the ones. Woodsmoke. Snow falling gently outside. A single mug of coffee that somehow stayed hot for hours. Turns out writers mostly live in Google Docs and Notion, with bad posture, three half-finished drinks, and a browser tab open just in case we need to google something unhinged like “how long can a person survive on an alien moon without oxygen.”

Indigo Winter
Dec 24, 2025


3 Cozy Sleuths I’d Absolutely Befriend
(And who would, without question, drag me into trouble with a smile.) There are fictional characters you admire , fictional characters you root for , and then there are fictional characters you just know—instinctively, cosmically—would absolutely enable your nonsense while also reminding you to hydrate. Those are my people. So today, let me introduce you to three cozy sleuths I would one hundred percent befriend in real life. I’m talking warm drink, rainy afternoon, wool-sock

J.P. White
Dec 17, 2025
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