(Otherwise known as Sacred Chickens Feed and Seed.)
Click on the chicken below to purchase shirts, totes and mugs.
Don't worry! It knows the way to the store.
There are links to purchase Julie's books at the bottom of this page.
Click on the chicken below to purchase shirts, totes and mugs.
Don't worry! It knows the way to the store.
There are links to purchase Julie's books at the bottom of this page.
Here are the products we're offering right now. We hope to add more items before Christmas and, within the next few months, shipping to Europe. If you purchase something, please take a photo and send it to us at [email protected]! With your permission we will share!
Links to Julie's books and short stories for purchase:
Synopsis:
Librarian Liz Martin finds herself in Hell after being hit by a bus. She's sure she wasn't a terrible person, so how did she end up here? And is the bad place even so bad? After all, Brian-the manager of Hell-is pretty cute when he's not desperately putting out bureaucratic fires and begging minor demons to clean the overflowing toilets. Despite living in her miserable apartment with an annoying cat demon named Dennis, Liz is in the very best relationship of her existence with Brian. But Satan's poor business management and shady real estate deals have done untold damage. In fact, Hell is crumbling and will soon cease to be-along with everyone in it. Liz and Brian decide it's up to them and their crew to get all the denizens of Hell aboard the last train out.
Synopsis:
A hungry stranger shows up in a small Appalachian town and things will never be the same.
Synopsis:
My hometown had a ghost, as every small town should.
A murderous cat, a talking snake and a portal to hell that opens in the church basement. The town of
Whistlestop is not your average small town. Or is it?
If you can imagine William Faulkner penning an episode of The Twilight Zone, you'll have an inkling of what Julie Carpenter has created in Whistlestop - a town that reflects modern America in a funhouse mirror of disorienting familiarity. From subtly crafted ghost stories to allegorical magical realism, the folks of Whistlestop will welcome you in for tea and cookies and a hefty dose of small town weirdness that is society today





