1) Tell us a little bit about yourself. How did you get into writing?
Writing feeds my soul. I started putting particular words to paper when I was a young teenager, thirteen or fourteen; in fact, I still have my original notebook. Itโs filled with angsty poems describing my torturous world. โItโs a maze, itโs a haze, itโs a crazy place. Itโs the world each day I have to face.โ My teenage years were challenging. For example, my father, who was a lay minister, set me up to be arrested for hosting a pot party when I was fourteen. Heโd heard some kids talking about it at church. I was trying to get to know the boy I likedโwho was the reason for the gatheringโwhen police suddenly appeared, blocking my bedroom window and doorway. We were all drive down to the station in separate vehicles. I had to attend court and was sentenced to two years probation. It was a little like Footloose in rural Canada without Kevin Bacon) and it didnโt end well. Parents, do not do this to your children.
Later, I wrote a piece called โBad Girl: Legacy of the Father-Daughter War.โ I was never able to rectify that relationship, which is a shame. I think thatโs why Iโm drawn to writing Young Adult fiction. I want my characters to overcome their challenges and get their happy ending.
2) What inspired you to write your book?

In 2013-2014, I took a year leave from teaching high school English to work for the Canadian Coast Guard as a relief lighthouse keeper. I learned much about the rigors of lighthouse keeping from the principal keepers at various locations around Vancouver Island. I also heard stories of hauntings and experienced some strange incidents myself.
At times in my life, I’ve seen and felt the presence of spirits in my bedroom. Often, I’d wake up and feel that someone was staring at me. I’d reach out and flick on the light to find no one there. One Christmas Eve, I awoke to see a shadowy presence standing at the foot of my bed. And at one lighthouse where I worked I felt the spiritual presence of a lightkeeper whoโd passed on. He wasnโt happy about me being in his house and wanted me gone as much as I wanted to be gone.
The Shadow Man combines family trauma with my lighthouse experiences and my interest in psychic phenomena and mediumship. Hereโs the back cover blurb:
Seventeen-year-old Gracelyn Lassiter has been hiding in her auntโs house for four yearsโsince her mother plunged from the cliffs at Feroz Lighthouse, leaving her without her home, her best friend, or answers.
Now her fatherโs burned to death in his sailboat and left a confession: โYour mother didnโt jump, I pushed her.โ
The trauma triggers Gracelynโs ability to see spirits so real she canโt tell whoโs human and whoโs a ghostโexcept for the gray-veiled Shadow Man who begs her to return to Feroz Island and find her motherโs journal.
When her cruel cousin posts the confession on the Internet, Feroz seems like a safe place to escape. And if Gracelyn can see ghosts, she can conjure her motherโs spirit and hear the truth from her own lips.
But her lighthouse haven is crawling withs spirits, secrets, and liesโand the closer Gracelyn gets to the truth, the more she realizes the dead arenโt the only ones who want to keep the past in the past.
3) What theme or message do you hope readers will take away from your book?
When Gracelyn returns to Feroz Island, the old lighthouse keeper says, โHome is a place you love, where you know you belong. A place you never want to leave, and if you do, your heartโs not quite right until you return.โ This theme resonates with me and many people, I think. We leave home for various reasons but it feels like thereโs always something missing. Maybe itโs the place. Maybe itโs the people. Maybe itโs just that feeling of knowing you truly belong.
4) What drew you into this particular genre?
I was an at-risk teen who ended up working with teens. A big part of me is still that rebellious kid searching for truth and belonging. I also love YA because itโs exciting and thereโs plenty of freedom to move between genres, settings, and time frames. The Shadow Manย is contemporary, but Iโve just completedย The Rum Runs Red, which is set in 1920s British Columbia during American Prohibition. I enjoy exploring how teens โlose their innocenceโ as they encounter people and situations that push them to the edge. YA is messy just like life is messy. Itโs a maze of voices and shadows coming from all directions, while there you are trying to listen to your heart and find your truth.ย
5) If you could sit down with any character in your book, what would you ask them and why?
Amos Moses is a secondary character but he plays a huge part because heโs Calebโs uncle and Caleb is the young man Gracelyn loves. We know some things about Amosโheโs Indigenous, heโs a master carpenter, heโs absolutely caringโbut Iโd like to know more. Iโd ask him about his spirituality and his relationship with โฆ Oops, I canโt give that away.
6) What social media site has been the most helpful in developing your readership?
I have a TikTok presence but I really love Instagram. I seem to be there the most, watching videos and posting photos. Itโs my happy place so I hope my readers find me there @harpers_books.
7) What advice would you give to aspiring or just starting authors out there?
Read. Read. Read. Then, unfetter yourself and write. Write about your passions. Write about your fears. Write the book youโd like to read. (Thatโs how I wrote โThe Man in Blackโ series. Write the best story you can, and then get other eyes on it. Not friends and family. Ask someone who will give you an honest opinion and donโt get defensive. I know itโs hard but when youโre learning itโs important to listen and learn your craft, and we only do that through experience.
8) What does the future hold in store for you? Any new books/projects on the horizon?
But of course. The Rum Runs Red will be my next YA release. I also write under another pen name, W. L. Hawkin. Next summer, Iโm working with an Indigenous editor on a sequel to my romantic suspense novel, LURE. Itโs called The Silent Girl. Iโm very excited about that.
With three books written and awaiting publication, I find myself staring at a blank page. Itโs a delicious feeling. Ideas are arising and Iโm listening to my muses to see what develops. I love this time.
Thank you Anthony. Blessings.
About the Author

Harper Carr finds magic everywhere, so naturally it lands in her books. Her Man in Black series, combines genresโmystery/thriller, urban fantasy, sci-fi (time-travel), and historical fiction. The stories support the LGBTQ community, are edgy, and suit older teens (16+ and adults.)
The Shadow Man, her new YA paranormal mystery was a finalist in the Northwest Pacific Writers unpublished writing contest in fall 2024. Watch for the launch in February 2026. Sheโs also working on The Rum Runs Red, a YA historical novel set in the 1920โs Prohibition era near Victoria, B.C.
Harper writes reviews for books that affect her profoundly, but focuses on Teen books. You can find her reviews here and on Goodreads.
She loves to read aloud and would be happy to visit your school or local library. She enjoys presenting workshops about writing. Find descriptions here.
Harper finds inspiration in Nature. Youโll often finds her walking in woods or by water with her released therapy dog.
https://www.instagram.com/harpers_books
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