PRO CONNECT
Annabel Youens writes for women who are done pretending everything’s fine.
Women who’ve ticked the boxes, built the life, held it all together—and now find themselves asking questions they can’t ignore anymore.
Her work speaks to that moment when the noise gets too loud, the expectations too heavy, and something inside you starts to shift.
She writes fiction and essays that explore what it means to let go of old stories: about success, identity, motherhood, marriage, ambition, aging.
Her debut novel, Thread Traveller, blends emotional realism with a speculative edge. It’s about falling out of your life—and finding something better than the plan.
Annabel’s Substack, Saved By The Spell, is where she writes about the messier side of midlife: creative burnout, waking up in your own skin, and the kind of magic that shows up when you finally stop rushing.
She’s not here to give advice. She’s here to tell the truth—hers, and maybe yours too.
Annabel originally studied creative writing at the University of Victoria in her 20s, when she fell into the world of tech. After being hired as employee number 11 at Abebooks.com, an online marketplace for rare, used and out-of-print books Annabel witnessed how the internet could connect people and help independent used bookstores thrive.
Annabel followed her desire to build community and collaboration with her husband. They founded two global technology startups and after living in New Zealand and Los Angeles they settled back on Vancouver Island to be close to their families.
In early 2022, at age 46, Annabel realised the speculative fiction novel she’d kept putting off couldn’t be silenced anymore. She resigned her Chief Marketing Officer position and began her journey as an author.
“A strong debut with compelling characters that passionately advocates for community, nature, and found family.”
– Kirkus Reviews
A woman transported back in time finds herself in the midst of a struggle between women connected to nature and a patriarchal religious group in Youens’ fantasy novel.
On a family holiday in Kent, England, the meticulously organized August and her husband, Andrew, visit Shepherd Neame, Britain’s oldest brewery, for a tasting tour. August is suddenly transported to an alternate timeline when the historic beer, called Five Bees, was first brewed. Waking up naked and confused, August stumbles to a doorstep, guided by a black cat named Hazel. Margaret, a local healer and wise woman, welcomes the strange traveler to the community. Mental to-do lists and a desire to get back to her daughter, Ripley, rage in August’s mind as she slowly learns Margaret’s way of living by the lunar cycle and the healing powers of natural ingredients. But all is not well in the village: The fields of “cosmos” mushrooms that provide sporelock—a turf mixed from “the pulp of the fungi with hay and manure” used for building—are being destroyed at “the hands of the Divine Sphere,” a patriarchal religious organization that threatens Margaret’s way of life and destroys the surrounding ecosystem. A vast mycelium network called the Mother, which women who are in tune with the natural world have connected to for generations, warns, “we must keep the balance.” Margaret and her small group must find a way to resist the Divine Sphere and continue their practice undetected while August searches for a way back home. Youens crafts compelling inner voices for August and Margaret, and the pages radiate with the warmth the author brings to their world. The extended metaphor of weaving effectively emphasizes the connection between the past and present timelines, which is maintained by individuals who work with the natural world to create the contemporary beer. Margaret’s emotional history is delivered with care. At times, the narrative dips into a “telling” rather than “showing” mode, but the magical elements of the story are consistently captivating.
A strong debut with compelling characters that passionately advocates for community, nature, and found family.
Pub Date: Oct. 3, 2025
ISBN: 9781069512208
Page count: 270pp
Publisher: Salt Line Press
Review Posted Online: Aug. 25, 2025
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