Tag: acatherinenoon

  • A silhouetted hand reaching toward a bright sun in a clear sky, with rays of light radiating outward.
    Magic” by Bohman is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

    Joining is one of the most foundational, misunderstood, and quietly powerful magics in the Foundlings universe. It’s not bonding. It’s not imprinting. It’s not ownership. It’s the opposite.

    Joining is the magic of connection without collapse.

    It’s the moment when two people — or a person and a place, or a person and a community — choose to align their magic without losing themselves. Margret teaches it early, but she teaches it slowly, because Foundlings often come from places where connection meant danger, obligation, or erasure.

    Joining is the first magic that says: You can be with others without disappearing.

    Some Joinings are temporary:

    • a shared spell
    • a healing circle
    • a night around the hearth when everyone’s magic settles into the same rhythm

    Some Joinings are long‑term:

    • a coven
    • a shifter pack
    • a chosen family
    • a community that holds you through the winter

    And some Joinings are sacred:

    • the moment a Foundling realizes they are no longer alone
    • the moment they feel the world respond to their presence
    • the moment they choose to stay

    Joining doesn’t fuse people together. It lets them breathe together.

    It’s the magic of resonance — of finding the people whose presence steadies your hands, slows your heartbeat, and reminds your bones that belonging is possible.

    Joining is how Foundlings learn that connection can be safe. It’s how they learn that they don’t have to carry everything alone. It’s how they begin to build the lives they were always meant to have.

  • Image used under Creative Commons license.

    Invocation is one of the oldest forms of magic in the Foundlings universe, but it’s also one of the quietest. It isn’t about summoning storms or calling down lightning. It’s about calling yourself back.

    Every Foundling learns invocation long before they learn glamour or shifting or any of the flashier magics. Margret teaches it first, usually over tea, usually when someone is shaking too hard to hold the cup.

    Invocation is the magic of naming what you need.

    Sometimes it’s as simple as breathing in and saying, Warmth. Sometimes it’s a whisper: Safety. Sometimes it’s a roar: Mine.

    Invocation isn’t about asking the world for permission. It’s about aligning your magic with your intention — calling your scattered pieces home, gathering your strength, and anchoring yourself in the present moment.

    Some invocations are spoken. Some are sung. Some are silent, felt only in the bones.

    Shamans use invocation to steady the pathways between worlds. Witches use it to wake their craft. Shifters use it to ease the transition between forms. Foundlings use it to remember they are not alone.

    Invocation is the first magic that says: You belong here. You get to choose yourself.

    And once a Foundling learns to invoke their own name — truly invoke it — the world begins to shift around them, making space for who they are becoming.

  • A stone hearth with a glowing fire, a rocking chair, and snow visible outside the window.
    Image used under Creative Commons license (CC0).

    Every clan has a hearth, but not all hearths are made of stone.

    Some are literal — a firepit ringed with river rock, a woodstove that never quite stops humming, a kitchen table worn smooth by elbows and laughter. But most hearths in the Foundlings universe are made of something quieter: intention, safety, and the steady presence of people who refuse to let you go cold again.

    A hearth is the first thing Margret builds when she takes in a new Foundling. Not a physical structure, but a container — a place where someone can thaw. Where they can eat without flinching. Where they can sleep without listening for footsteps. Where they can remember what it feels like to be held in a world that once tried to unmake them.

    Hearth magic isn’t flashy. It doesn’t glow or spark or ripple the air. It’s the magic of warmth, of belonging, of you’re safe here, love whispered into the bones of a space until the walls believe it.

    Every hearth has its own flavor:

    • Gareth’s is all cedar smoke and quiet watchfulness
    • Caden’s is laughter, tea, and the soft rustle of feathers
    • Nora’s is a pot of something simmering, always enough for one more
    • Lynnie’s is blankets, mismatched mugs, and the kind of silence that heals

    A hearth is a promise: You don’t have to earn your place. You already have one.

    And once a Foundling has stood at a hearth — truly stood there, warmed through, fed, seen — something in them changes. They stop bracing for the door to slam. They stop shrinking themselves to fit. They start imagining a future that includes them.

    Hearths don’t just keep the cold out. They teach you how to stay.

  • A cat wearing a pink and white onesie sits on a perch by a window.
    G is for Glamour… or at least for trying.

    Glamour gets a bad reputation in most fantasy worlds. It’s treated like a trick, a mask, a way to hide what you really are. In the Foundlings universe, glamour is the opposite — it’s how you tell the truth.

    Glamour is the magic of presentation, the spellwork of being seen the way you choose to be seen. It’s the shimmer that rises when a shifter lets their feathers show in their hair, or when a witch’s tattoos glow faintly under moonlight. It’s the way a shaman’s eyes catch the light when their magic stirs, even if they’re trying to pretend they’re just a normal person buying coffee.

    Glamour isn’t deception. It’s agency.

    For Foundlings, glamour is often the first magic they learn after being rescued — not because it’s flashy, but because it’s grounding. It helps them feel at home in their own skin again. It lets them decide how much of their magic to reveal, and to whom. It’s a boundary, a shield, and a celebration all at once.

    Some use glamour to soften their edges. Some use it to sharpen them. Some use it to make their hair look better on humid days (looking at you, Aaron).

    But all glamour has one thing in common: It’s a declaration. A quiet, powerful I am here, spoken in color, light, and intention.

    In a world that tried to erase them, Foundlings use glamour to write themselves back into the story — beautifully, boldly, and on their own terms.

  • Image of a raven in foreground, full profile, with misty image of trees behind it.
    Image used under Creative Commons license (CC0).

    Foundlings come from every corner of the magical world — gryphons, lions, witches, shamans, corvids, and beings whose origins blur the line between myth and memory. What they share isn’t bloodline. It’s survival.

    A fledgling is someone whose life has been shattered or stolen, someone who has run out of road, someone who needs a place to land. Gareth, the prince who escaped a firebombed coup. Dayton, who fled a family that couldn’t protect him. Nora Cohan and her pride‑family, hiding from danger in the only place they could breathe. Lynnie, whose bear‑magic is older than language. Caden and Morgan, each carrying their own scars and secrets.

    Different species. Different magics. Different histories. But the same truth: they needed someone to choose them.

    That someone is Margret Meadows — the quiet center of the storm, the woman who sees what others overlook. She doesn’t just rescue. She claims. She gives shelter, structure, safety, and the first fragile taste of belonging. Under her protection, a Foundling becomes a fledgling: not helpless, but new. Not weak, but unrooted. Not alone, but beginning again.

    A fledgling’s “first flight” isn’t always literal. Sometimes it’s the first night they sleep without fear. Sometimes it’s the first time they shift without pain. Sometimes it’s the moment they realize they’re no longer prey, no longer hunted, no longer invisible.

    Fledglings carry the promise of transformation. They remind the clans — and the world — that magic isn’t just power. It’s connection. It’s chosen kin. It’s the courage to start over.

    Every Foundling begins as a fledgling. Every fledgling becomes part of something larger than themselves. And every new beginning strengthens the family they’re building together.

  • ©A. Catherine Noon, 2026, All Rights Reserved.

    Magic never disappears cleanly in the Foundlings world. It lingers — a warmth in the air, a shimmer at the edge of vision, a soft hum beneath the floorboards. The clans call these remnants echoes: the residue of spells, the memory of power, the imprint of something that mattered.

    Some echoes belong to places. Some belong to people. And some, the oldest and strangest ones, belong to Margret.

    No one agrees on what she is. A witch. A vessel. A reborn avatar of the Morrigan. Something older than all of that. Something newer. Something that refuses to be named. But everyone agrees on this: when Margret passes through a room, the air remembers her. Foundlings she’s touched carry a faint resonance of her magic for years — a sense of being seen, claimed, protected.

    They say she hears echoes too. Not the kind left by spells, but the tremors of children in danger, the first flare of wild magic, the soft cry of a name waiting to be spoken. She follows those echoes across cities and forests and thresholds, finding the ones who need her most. Sometimes she stays for a day. Sometimes, as with Caden, she stays for a lifetime. But the echo of her arrival never fades.

    There are echoes around her identity as well — whispers of who she might be, who she has been, who she will become. The clans have theories. None of them match. Margret never confirms anything. She simply smiles, as if she can hear something the rest of us can’t.

    In the Foundlings world, echoes are how magic remembers. And Margret is the one who listens.

  • Photo: StockCake (CC0‑equivalent)

    Foundlings A–Z: Cozy Queer Magic, Characters, and Worldbuilding

    Divination in the Foundlings world isn’t about certainty — it’s about listening.

    Magic speaks in signs, in patterns, in the quiet tug of intuition. It shows up in feathers on the doorstep, in the way shadows shift, in the sudden knowing that settles behind the ribs. Corvid sight is part instinct, part inheritance, part mystery. Some characters read omens like second nature. Others stumble into meaning by accident, guided by something older and softer than logic.

    Divination here is relational. It’s a conversation between the world and the one paying attention.

    Sometimes it’s dramatic — a vision, a warning, a flash of magic that changes everything. More often, it’s subtle: a whisper, a nudge, a feeling that won’t let go.

    And like all things in the Foundlings universe, divination is queer. It resists binaries. It refuses certainty. It honors the liminal, the intuitive, the in‑between.

    Magic doesn’t demand belief. It invites curiosity.

    And the characters who listen — really listen — often find exactly what they didn’t know they were seeking.

  • Misty image of many corvids with silhouettes of trees around the edges and dawn breaking in the background.
    Photo: StockCake (CC0‑equivalent)

    Foundlings A–Z: Cozy Queer Magic, Characters, and Worldbuilding

    In the Foundlings world, corvid clans are more than bloodlines — they’re living constellations of history, magic, and chosen kin. Each clan carries its own stories, its own rituals, its own way of seeing the world. Some are tight‑knit and fiercely protective. Some are scattered, fractured, or quietly rebuilding. Some hold power in the open. Others move like shadows, shaping the world from the edges.

    Clans aren’t destiny, though. Not here. A Foundling can be born into a clan, claimed by one, or walk between them. Kinship is fluid, queer, and deeply personal — a matter of resonance as much as lineage.

    And like all corvid things, clans are full of contradictions:

    • ancient and evolving
    • loyal and unpredictable
    • rooted and restless
    • bound by magic and broken open by choice

    Every character carries their clan with them — in their magic, in their memories, in the ways they love and protect. But they also carry the possibility of becoming something more than what they inherited.

    Clans shape the world. Foundlings reshape the clans.

  • Image of crowded bookstore with two straight-backed chairs, every surface and shelf filled with books, and an intricate rug on part of the wooden floor.
    CC0 / Public Domain (no attribution required); Photo via StockCake (CC0 / Public Domain)

    Bookshops raised us.

    The real ones with crooked shelves and mismatched chairs. The imaginary ones where magic hums in the floorboards. And the ones we build ourselves — little pockets of belonging where stories gather and people exhale.

    April is basically a love letter to bookshops: National Library Week later this month (April 19-25), Independent Bookstore Day on the 25th, and Seattle’s own Bookstore Day Passport Challenge (aka the Book Train for the truly dedicated), April 25-May 4. It’s a whole season of wandering, discovering, and remembering why we fell in love with stories in the first place.

    And here at Noon & Wilder, our digital bookshop is part of that lineage — a cozy, queer, slightly magical corner of the internet where readers can curl up, breathe, and feel at home. A place built for belonging, curiosity, and the quiet joy of finding the right book at the right moment.

    Here’s to the bookshops that raised us — and to the communities that keep them alive.

  • Image credit: Pixabay (CC0 — free for commercial use, no attribution required) Source: https://pixabay.com

    If you ask Caden, Aaron is “just his childhood friend.”

    If you ask Lyster, Aaron is “a fucking lion shifter who needs to back off.”

    If you ask Aaron… well. He has opinions.

    Aaron has been in love with Caden since before either of them knew what to do with feelings that big. He’s loyal, he’s stubborn, he’s protective, and he absolutely did not come to town just to “take a few classes.” He came because he’s done pretending he doesn’t want a life with Caden — even if that life now includes a crow shifter boyfriend who keeps glaring at him over breakfast.

    The tension is delicious. The history is deep. The future? Complicated in the best way.

    And “A” belongs to Aaron because he’s the one who turns this story from a romance into a polycule with teeth.

    Want to see Aaron’s visual inspiration?

    Rachel curates our character boards here:

    https://www.pinterest.com/noonandwilder/caden-book-1-as-the-crow-flies/

    Curious about Aaron’s story?

    Check out As the Crow Flies, available now.