Where creativity meets faith, warmth, and story.
The Solar Stories Library
Stories, tips, and inspiration to help authors bring their words—and their light—to life.
Where Story Meets Design: Inside the Solar Stories Studio
Hi, I’m Anna—the designer behind Solar Stories.
I’m so glad you’re here.
Solar Stories is my creative studio devoted to book cover design, interior formatting, and logo design for authors who care deeply about their stories. This space exists for writers who want their books to feel aligned, beautiful, and lasting—not rushed or trend-driven.
At its heart, Solar Stories is about thoughtful presentation. About honoring the work you’ve poured months (or years) into. About creating something that feels as intentional on the outside as it is on the inside.
Here’s what guides my work.
A Gentle Shift in My Work (and an Invitation)
Over the past season, I’ve been paying attention.
Not to trends.
Not to algorithms.
But to where my work feels most honest, most life-giving, and most sustainable.
And the answer has become quietly, clearly obvious.
I am shifting my primary focus back to design: book formatting, cover design, and logo design.
A Return to My Roots
For the past few months, my work has been centered around sustainable marketing—helping writers and small businesses step off the hamster wheel of trends and instead build rhythms that last. That work has mattered deeply to me, and it still does.
But as this new season has unfolded, I’ve felt a familiar tug—one that’s been with me from the very beginning.
When the Work Quietly Changes Shape
Every creative business has moments where the work begins to whisper something new.
Not loudly.
Not all at once.
Just enough that you notice.
Setting Marketing Goals That Match Your Writing Seasons
Marketing as an author can feel overwhelming, especially when you’re juggling writing, editing, publishing, and your daily life. One week you feel energized and posting consistently; the next, you’re burnt out and struggling to show up online.
The secret to sustainable, stress-free marketing isn’t working harder—it’s aligning your marketing goals with your natural writing seasons. When your goals reflect your creative cycles, your marketing becomes intentional, manageable, and even enjoyable.
How to Build a Loyal Reader Community on Social Media
If you’re an author, you know the feeling: you post, you wait, and . . . crickets. Social media can feel overwhelming, lonely, and even discouraging. But it doesn’t have to be this way. What if, instead of chasing likes or followers, you focused on building a loyal reader community—people who not only read your books but genuinely connect with you and your stories?
That’s the heart of sustainable marketing. And it starts with three simple pillars: Rooted, Rhythmic, and Relational Marketing.
Grow Your Author Presence Without Burnout
Marketing your books doesn’t have to feel exhausting. You don’t need to chase every trend, post constantly, or force yourself into loud, chaotic strategies. What you need is a simple, repeatable system that lets you clarify your brand, share your stories, and connect with readers—sustainably, thoughtfully, and joyfully.
That’s exactly what the Sustainable Author Marketing Starter Kit offers. Create once, repurpose wisely, and watch your content work harder while protecting your time and creativity.
Embrace Your Writing Season: How to Market Without Burning Out: 18-months of Content Creation Ideas
If you’re an author, you know the struggle: writing your book is just the beginning. Once your manuscript is done, the marketing begins . . . and suddenly, you’re juggling social media, email newsletters, and building a reader community. It can feel overwhelming.
That’s why I created the Writing Seasons: 18 Months of Sustainable Content Creation, a 76-week roadmap for authors designed to make content creation sustainable, intentional, and aligned with your creative seasons.
Rooted, Rhythmic, Relational: A Sustainable Approach to Author Marketing
Marketing as an author can feel overwhelming. Social media trends change daily, algorithms shift, and everywhere you look, someone is promising the “secret” to instant visibility or viral growth. But if chasing every trend has left you burned out or disconnected from your readers, it’s time for a different approach . . . one that’s sustainable, authentic, and actually enjoyable.
Enter Rooted, Rhythmic, and Relational Marketing. These three pillars help authors market their work without losing their creative spark or their sanity. Let’s break down what each means, and how you can apply them today.
End-of-Year Reflection: What Worked, What Didn’t, What to Keep: A gentle, honest check-in for authors building sustainable creative lives
Every year has a rhythm of its own. Some seasons feel wildly productive; others feel slow, stretchy, and reflective. But no matter what your year looked like, taking intentional time to pause and look back is one of the most empowering things you can do as an author—both for your creativity and your marketing.
End-of-year reflection isn’t about judgment. It’s about clarity. It’s about understanding the path you walked so you can step into the new year with confidence, vision, and peace.
How to Turn Followers into Readers—and Readers into Friends: Adopt the Rooted, Rhythmic, and Relational Approach to Marketing
If you’ve spent any amount of time on social media as an author, you’ve probably heard the advice: “Grow your following.” But follower count alone doesn’t sell books. What matters is connection–real, human-centered connection that turns passive scrollers into engaged readers . . . and eventually, into friends who champion your stories.
This is the heart of sustainable marketing. And when you build it on a foundation of Rooted, Rhythmic, and Relational marketing, everything becomes easier, lighter, and far more meaningful.
The Reader Journey Map: How to Build Familiarity, Not Just Followers
Every author I’ve met has said that they love it when readers send them messages about their books. It’s a way to feel connected to your readers and to relive your story through the reading experience.
It’s a way to become more familiar with your readers. But it’s not the only way.
Think about your most used social media platform. What does it look like? Does it reflect the emotions you wish to convey in your books? What about your website? Does it draw in your ideal reader?
Branding When You Write in Multiple Genres
“Social Media is a necessary evil.” Maybe you’ve heard this. Maybe you’ve said it yourself. Social Media doesn’t have the be the enemy. You can achieve a sustainable social media presence without burning out.

