A publication day interview with Micah Thorp, author of Aegolius Creek @TypeEighteenBks

My guest today is Micah Thorp whose novel, Aegolius Creek is published today by Type Eighteen Books. Congratulations, Micah! Read on as I chat with Micah about Aegolius Creek and the inspiration behind it.


About the Book

Don Karlsson has lived on his family’s Oregon homestead for most of his life. The timber on his land is his greatest asset—planted and replenished by his hand, maintained with his labor and sweat, and harvested for income at his discretion.

After a new species of voles is discovered living in those trees, authorities step in to protect the creatures, and Karlsson fights back. No one can tell him what to do with his property. He enlists the help of his children: Billy, a local who understands his father’s connection to the land; Stacy, a fierce attorney from Boston determined to represent her father’s interests—even if they go against her own; and the beloved and sensitive youngest, Zeke, who organizes local environmentalists to make sure his father does not win.

The impending confrontation engulfs the community and competing interests—local businesses and political groups, infiltrators seeking profit—with the Karlsson family at the center, still trying to reconcile the loss of Don’s wife and their mother, Marlene. Tempers flare, desperate acts are taken, and the courtroom battle spills over into protests and riots, leading to a riveting and stunning conclusion.

Format: Paperback (198 pages) Publisher: Type Eighteen Books
Publication date: 16th September 2025 Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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Interview with Micah Thorp, author of Aegolius Creek

What was the inspiration for the story?

The most famous book about western Oregon, Sometimes a Great Notion, was written by Ken Kesey in the 1960s. He was well known for One Flew Over a Cuckoo’s Nest (and a rather eccentric bus ride he took with the Grateful Dead), but Sometimes a Great Notion is considered by many to be his best work. It’s a story about a rural Oregon family running a small timber company in the mid twentieth century.

I grew up not far from where Kesey lived and had relatives in the area described by his Oregon novel. There was a certain culture that existed in the mid twentieth century in rural western Oregon; rugged and very independent, that I understood well. During my youth that culture dramatically changed. Conflict over harvesting timber on public lands pitted the environmental community against local blue-collar workers. The subsequent changes led to the dismantling of much of the industry. I wanted to write about the effect those changes had on the people and communities that went through them.

Why did you particularly want to explore the conflict between individual rights and environmental concerns?

Aside from the conflict that surrounded my upbringing, I think the topic is prescient. We are in the midst of a period in which concerns about climate change are going to be confronted by groups that must give something up to slow global warming. Understanding and resolving these conflicts is necessary to bring about change.

A central problem in these confrontations is a level of certainty that pervades different groups which often undermines the very position they advocate. In Aegolius Creek I tried to carefully balance the differing points of view and let the reader empathize with all of them. This particular conflict (land rights vs environment protection) isn’t particularly unique in the sense that the problem is complicated, while the arguments about it are simplistic. Only when you dig into the details are you confronted by implications of completely adopting one point of view – which is generally destructive. Dialectical thinking isn’t easily adapted by most, but it makes great fodder for a writer.

How important to the story is the book’s setting?

Very. The book is about place, both as a concept and a reality. Aegolius Creek is a fictional place, but quite similar to a number of different rural areas up and down the Willamette Valley. In order to make Aegolius Creek feel real, I devoted a short soliloquy about the Aegolius Creek Valley at the beginning of each chapter, a number of which are based on the real characteristics of real communities.

How did you go about creating your main character, Don Karlsson?

I had family members that could be a pretty easily substitute for Don – hard working, intense and remarkably reflective. He doesn’t change much through the course of the book – he’s an anchor for the story and the other characters revolve around him.

One of the important things I knew I needed to do with Don was detail the complexities of his point of view. It would be hard to empathize with him without his backstory or appreciating his point of view in some detail. With a pretty quiet, austere personality it was important to get inside his head a bit.

Were there any scenes that were particularly challenging to write? If so why?

The climactic scene in the book (which I won’t spoil) was difficult because I wanted to write it from a number of different perspectives all at once without losing any of the emotional punch. It made the sequencing difficult.

One of the things I was aware of as I was writing was juxtaposing point of view and tense. The prologue and epilogue are in first person past tense, from the point of view of a character that isn’t in the rest of the book. In the body of the story I primarily use third person present tense, but there are places where Don’s point of view is italicized in first person present or past tense.

The book has been described as ‘a vision of a disappearing world’. Do you agree with this assessment?

Yes and no….

There were a number of changes that occurred between the 1970s and 2000’s that affected the timber industry and all the communities built around it. The inability to cut timber on public lands obviously had an effect as did the subsidizing of Canadian logging. Automation reduced the number of loggers and millworkers needed. The lost tax revenues timber communities needed to support their public services were initially offset by funding from the federal government, but eventually the lack of jobs led to their decline.

With all these difficulties, the timber industry is still alive, if only a shell of its former self. At its peak Oregon timber harvests were around 10 billion board feet a year. By 2010 they had declined to less than a quarter of that.

Timber communities haven’t gone away, but many are a shell of what they once were.

Thank you, Micah, for such fascinating answers to my questions.


About the Author

Micah Thorp is a physician, writer, and lifelong Oregonian. His research has been published in numerous medical journals, and his short fiction has appeared in various literary journals. His first novel, Uncle Joe’s Muse, won a 2022 Next Generation Indie Book Award and a Foreword Indies Book of the Year Award. His sequel, Uncle Joe’s Senpai, was a finalist for the Foreword Indies Book of the Year Award. Micah’s novel, Aegolius Creek, is the recipient of a 2025 IPPY Independent Publisher Book Award: West-Pacific Best Regional Fiction.

Connect with Micah
Website | Instagram | Goodreads

Interview with Eva Nevarez St. John, author of When Tough Cookies Crumble

My guest today is Eva Nevarez St. John whose memoir, When Tough Cookies Crumble: A True Story of Friendship, Murder and Healing was published on 30th July 2024. Read on as I chat with Eva about her book and the story behind it.


About the Book

When Tough Cookies Crumble

Two tough cookies. Breaking barriers in careers and love. Until one is murdered…

Janice Starr and Eva Booker became best friends when they met as soldiers in the Women’s Army Corp in Korea in 1978. In a time of rapid social change, they tested the limits of women’s liberation and the sexual revolution.

After they moved to Washington D.C. together, Janice and Eva supported each other as they faced the challenges of continuing their military careers in the Army Reserves, navigating jobs, going to school, and dating. Their friendship went through ups and downs, but their bond was never broken.

In the summer of 1981, Janice moved to southern Virginia on her own. Three months later she disappeared without a trace. Eva knew who was responsible for Janice’s disappearance, but the only one who believed her was Detective Kay Lewis. Another tough cookie, Detective Lewis overcame the obstacles put in her way by her colleagues and superiors to pursue Janice’s killer and find Janice.

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Interview with Eva Nevarez St. John, author of When Tough Cookies Crumble

When Tough Cookies Crumble is based on your own personal experiences. What inspired you to turn them into a book?

The book is about the murder of one of my best friends in 1981. The lead detective in the case contacted me in 2019 about writing a book. Initially, we worked on it together, but later she decided to have a man write it. I didn’t want the book to just be about Janice’s murder and I didn’t trust a man to write her story. That’s why I had to write my own book about our friendship, our experiences as female soldiers, what led to her murder, and the process of healing from the trauma through the writing of the book.

Tell us a bit about your friend Janice. How did you first meet? What drew you to each other? What did you admire about her?

Janice and I were roommates in Seoul, Korea, where we were among a small minority of female soldiers in the military. We bonded over our common experiences and interests. Janice was 19 and I was 21 when we met. She looked up to me like a big sister. We felt comfortable sharing everything with each other, which we continued to do in letters after my tour ended in Korea, until we reunited a year later. We moved to the Washington D.C. area together, where we supported each other in facing the challenges of school, work, continuing our military careers, and dating.

What challenges did you face when writing about something so personal?

This was an extremely hard book to write. It was challenging to relive the experiences I wrote about from this time in my life. Also, I learned disturbing details while researching the book that I didn’t know at the time. Writing about the roles that others played in the story was difficult, as well. I had a lot of fear about exposing the personal details in the book. The personal and professional support and feedback I received helped me get through it. In the end, I believe everything I wrote about in the book was necessary to tell the story.

You describe the period in which the book is set as ‘a time of rapid social change’ in America. How did this manifest itself for you personally?

Janice and I joined the Army in 1976. The Vietnam War had just ended. Women were beginning to explore careers in non-traditional fields, such as the military. The sexual revolution was redefining the roles women could play beyond marriage and motherhood. Civil rights and race relations were challenging the status quo. Janice and I had to deal with sexism and racism, both of which impacted the investigation into her disappearance.

The book is subtitled ‘A True Story of Friendship, Murder, and Healing’. Can you say more about the healing aspect?

I don’t think I truly began the healing process until I started writing the book. I had buried Janice and that time in my life deep in my subconscious. I numbed my feelings with drugs, alcohol and sex for most of my life. I tried to get clean several times, but I couldn’t be successful in the long-term because I wasn’t dealing with the underlying trauma. When the detective contacted me about writing the book, I had a reason to face my demons.

First, I went to counseling through the VA (Veterans Administration), so I could begin processing the traumatic experiences that I had to write about. Then I went to Narcotics Anonymous meetings with a willingness to commit to the program 100%. The next step was to learn about the craft of writing, in general, and memoir, in particular. I found inspiration and courage by reading many memoirs. I pursued spiritual practices, such as meditation and following spiritual teachers. I started taking better care of myself by exercising and eating better. Healing is an ongoing process for me.

What message would you like readers to take away from the book?

The biggest takeaway I would like readers to get from the book is to be careful about trusting someone too quickly. Take your time to get to know them. Look out for red flags, like they want to get serious too fast, they isolate you from your friends and family, and they make you question your own instincts. Talk to people you trust about the relationship and take their feedback seriously. Follow your gut and your intuition. There are bad people out there looking for someone to take advantage of. They can be very convincing and manipulative.

Another message is don’t be afraid to face trauma from your past. It is probably having a negative impact on your life in ways you don’t even realize. Find support to help you work through it. Writing about it can be very therapeutic, even if you don’t plan to share it with anyone.

Is this the end of your writing journey – or just the beginning?

I hope it is the beginning. I have always wanted to be a writer. I did have a couple of articles published in genealogy journals. I want to write more of those. I’m also considering writing another book about my family history.

Thank you, Eva, for sharing your writing journey with us.


About the Author

Author Eva Nevarez St. John

Eva Nevarez St. John was an Army brat, soldier, lawyer, and nonprofit manager. She continues to be a nonprofit consultant, social activist, writer, and genealogist. Eva currently lives in southern New Mexico.

Eva fell in love with books at a young age. She particularly loves to read about the wide range of life experiences and perspectives in memoir. The process of writing When Tough Cookies Crumble: A True Story of Friendship, Murder, and Healing helped her heal from the traumas she wrote about and to grow as a person. Visit Eva’s website for recommendations of other memoirs and resources for writing memoir.

Connect with Eva
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