Creative Work

Published Books

Creative Overview

My personal motto is “Imagine Otherwise,” and this is the perspective that shapes and informs all my writing, especially my creative work.

How might the world look different if we didn’t start with the corrosive and simplistic binary of “savagism vs. civilization”? What would fantasy fiction look like with Indigenous people, people of colour, queer folks, women and nonbinary folx, and other frequently stereotyped or marginalized communities at the centre rather than the margins? Must our imagined worlds always look to Europe and its patriarchal, colonial legacies, or can we root them in the deep cultures, lineages, genders, and histories of these lands? These questions drive my work, and I hope this helps open space for others to imagine with greater diversity, complexity, and possibility.

Books

Daniel Heath Justice_The Way of Thorn and Thunder

The Way of Thorn and Thunder: The Kynship Chronicles

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO PRESS (2011)

Taking fantasy literature beyond the stereotypes, Daniel Heath Justice’s acclaimed Thorn and Thunder novels are set in a world resembling eighteenth-century North America. The original trilogy is available here for the first time as a fully revised one-volume novel. The story of the struggle for the green world of the Everland, home of the forest-dwelling Kyn, is an adventure tale that bends genre and gender.

Daniel Heath Justice_Dreyd

Dreyd: The Way of Thorn and Thunder

KEGEDONCE PRESS (2007)

The forces of Eromar ravage the Everland, and the skies are filled with the smoke and ashes of the burning woods. Those Folk who do not escape into the far mountains and hidden valleys are driven into the broken westlands of Humanity, where Dreydmaster Vald reveals the full vision of his mad crusade, one that will annihilate even the memory of the Kyn and their kind.

Daniel Heath Justice_Wyrwood

Wyrwood: The Way of Thorn and Thunder

KEGEDONCE PRESS (2006)

The Sevenfold Council stands firm against Dreydmaster Vald’s treaty terms – they will not surrender the Everland. Their will is strong, but there is a traitor in their midst, and Vald intends to win this struggle… by any means necessary. As the Everland is torn apart by invasion and the threat of civil war, the young warrior-Wielder, Tarsa’deshae, and the little Tetawa Leafspeaker, Tobhi Burrows, travel to Eromar City, the centre of Vald’s influence, in hopes of rescuing the diplomats who have long languished in the shadows of Gorthac Hall.

Daniel Heath Justice_Kynship

Kynship: The Way of Thorn and Thunder

KEGEDONCE PRESS (2005)

The Everland, home of the Eld-Folk since time immemorial, a deep green world of ancient mystery and sacred shadow. A thousand years have passed since the world of Men and the world of the Folk collided in catastrophe. The wyr-powers of the Kyn and the other Folk have preserved their verdant homeland from the ravenous greed of Humanity since the Melding, but those powers are now under siege.

Short Stories

The Boys Who Became the Hummingbirds

Very loosely based on the Cherokee story about the origins of tobacco, but focusing on a rather different sort of medicine, this short story is about the transformative power of courageous love and acceptance—not just for the individual, but for our communities as well. It was published in 2016 in the collection Love Beyond Body, Space & Time: An Indigenous LGBT Sci-Fi Anthology (Bedside Press, edited by Hope Nicholson); a graphic version of the story, illustrated by the amazing Weshoyot Alvitre (Tongva/Scots-Gaelic) and also edited by the indefatigable Hope Nicholson, was published in Moonshot, Volume 2: The Indigenous Comics Collection, from AH Comics in 2017. It received the 2018 Prism Award (Small to Midsize Press category) from Prism Comics and the Cartoon Arts Museum at ComicCon 2018. See the BOOKSTORE for purchasing details.

Tatterborn

A queer Indigenous reimagining of the origins of the Scarecrow of Oz—with a decidedly dark twist—this tale debuted in 2017 in Read, Listen, Tell: Indigenous Stories from Turtle Island (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, edited by Sophie McCall, Deanna Reder, David Gaertner, and Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill).

Keeper of the Bones

Lorem ispum.