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Alis Franklin

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Alis Franklin

Goodreads Author


Born
in Australia
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Member Since
September 2013


Alis Franklin is a thirtysomething Australian author of queer urban fantasy. She likes cooking, video games, Norse mythology, and feathered dinosaurs. She’s never seen a live drop bear, but stays away from tall trees, just in case.

Alis Franklin is currently not accepting new questions.

Popular Answered Questions

Alis Franklin Yes! STURM UND DRANG (which I suspect will get renamed prior to publication, but that's the title on the MS I submitted) is the sequel to Liesmith.

It'…more
Yes! STURM UND DRANG (which I suspect will get renamed prior to publication, but that's the title on the MS I submitted) is the sequel to Liesmith.

It's set a few months after, but otherwise picks up with Lain, Sigmund, Em, and Wayne (as well as Munin, Hel, Lain's car, and a whole bunch of new characters... including a dragon!) more-or-less where we left off.(less)
Alis Franklin The tl;dr answer is "not at this time, no."

The longer answer (with emphasis on "longer" because this is an issue I have Srs Feels about) is that, when…more
The tl;dr answer is "not at this time, no."

The longer answer (with emphasis on "longer" because this is an issue I have Srs Feels about) is that, when I was considering publishing offers for Liesmith, there were options for print which I didn't pursue, choosing instead to stick with digital-only.

The rationale is, firstly, that print urban fantasy in general can be a hard sell at the moment, particularly for debut authors, which is due to a complex quagmire of bookstore shelving issues, particularly along the "urban fantasy vs. paranormal romance" split. Liesmith isn't, I don't think, quite "romance-y" enough to fit on the PR shelf (read: potential disappointment for PR readers who think they're getting something with more kissing and less hitting) and yet it's probably too romance-y for the straight-up fantasy shelf (ditto, in reverse).

So there's that.

The second issue is the fact that, yes, the romance in the book is a queer one. This is one of those things that shouldn't be a consideration but, in reality, it sadly is, and one of the side effects is that things like in-store placement and treatment of books with GSRM characters and themes can sometimes be... not the best.

Printing a book is a risk for both publishers and authors, because of Reasons about how bookstores operate, and basically there are a bunch of commercial and discoverability trade-offs in here that meant that, in the end, I decided to go digital-only for Liesmith's debut. Because even if publishers were prepared to support the book in print (which they were), whether or not bookstores would was an unknown. Bad print sales are kind of Instant Death for a book series and, dammit, I have some sequels in me yet! Hence going digital only was a "safer" bet.

Which is a bunch of inside baseball, but I guess what it boils down to is that a paperback edition of Liesmith depends on in-physical-store market demand for not just this book, but other books like it.

In other words: go buy more books with queer protagonists! And buy them, wherever possible, from local physical stores (most of which also have websites that sell ebooks, I will note!). If they're not stocked, request them from the counter; even if they're from small-press publishers bookstores don't "usually" sell (in most cases the store will still be able to get you a copy).

There is, I think, growing demand for diversity in books in general, and GSRM books in particular. But... that message might take a little while to trickle down to the shelves of your local bookstore. Until that happens, Liesmith will stay digital.

But... we'll see.(less)
Average rating: 4.03 · 565 ratings · 162 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
Liesmith (The Wyrd, #1)

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Stormbringer (The Wyrd, #2)

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Invisible 2: Personal Essay...

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Unnatural Order

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Wyrdverse: Tales of the Wyrd

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The Dragon of Rosemont High

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Wyrdtouched #3

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Liesmith: Book 1 of the Wyrd

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Invisible, Volumes 1-3: Ess...

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More books by Alis Franklin…

Finished reading: Hol(l)o(w)metabolism

Devoured (har har) while manning the CSFG‘s booth at the Geek Markets yesterday. Some heavy themes, but good shit. Available as a zine, printed or electronic, directly from the author.
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Published on November 22, 2025 16:09
Liesmith Stormbringer
(2 books)
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3.91 avg rating — 460 ratings

Alis’s Recent Updates

Alis Franklin wrote a new blog post

Finished reading: Hol(l)o(w)metabolism

Devoured (har har) while manning the CSFG‘s booth at the Geek Markets yesterday. Some heavy themes, but good shit. Available as a zine, printed or ele Read more of this blog post »
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Quotes by Alis Franklin  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“One spear to start a war, one spear to prime them. One spear to bring them all and into bloodshed bind them.”
Alis Franklin, Stormbringer

“Everything is true, especially the lies. That’s the trick.”
Alis Franklin, Liesmith

“And then, when they got back to the car, a raven the size of a cat was sitting on the roof, waiting for them, and everything went to hell.”
Alis Franklin, Liesmith

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Topics Mentioning This Author

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Aussie Readers: January - The Brand New Challenge 238 301 Feb 01, 2017 01:33AM  
“Where's the elevator?" Mike asked, sheathing his weapon. Tallow felt a little better telling Mike there wasn't an elevator and watching his face. But then Mike picked up the dolly, boxes and all, with one hand, took the kit bag from Sophie with the other, and started jogging up the stairs with"Third floor, right?"

"There," said Scarly, "goes a man who has names for all his muscles."

"I was just thinking that," Tallow said. "Serious gym rat."

"No, I mean he's named all his muscles. That's a man who calls one of his muscles Steve.”
Warren Ellis, Gun Machine

“The two guys who ran the place, always in Williamsburg hipster uniforms of short-sleeved shirts and neatly trimmed beards that looked stuck on with spirit gum, paid, as ever, no attention to anything but the food and the money. Tallow imagined that every night they counted their money and prided themselves on having not made eye contact with anything human.”
warren ellis, Gun Machine

“You’re at the age where the rush of the job has passed and the grind of the job is taken in stride, and this is the time when you’re wondering if it wouldn’t be so bad if you just stopped giving much of a shit and rolled along doing as little as possible.”
Warren Ellis, Gun Machine

“The best way to get even with anyone is to put them in the rearview mirror on your way to something better.”
Joe Hill, Horns

“I guess Satan was the first superhero [...] In his first adventure, he took the form of a snake to free two prisoners being held naked in a Third World jungle prison by an all-powerful megalomaniac. At the same time, he broadened their diet and introduced them to their own sexuality.”
Joe Hill, Horns

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