Wrecked By Fiction
Wrecked By Fiction dives into the stories that captivate us—and the emotional wreckage they leave behind. Each episode explores the books that shape our hearts, minds, and the way we see the world.
Wrecked By Fiction
How Naivety, Secrets, And Found Family Collide In Triple Falls
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Secrets feel sweeter in Triple Falls—until they don’t. We dive into Kate Stewart’s Flock and pull apart the tension between romance and deception, following nineteen-year-old Cecilia as she collides with Sean’s charisma, Dom’s guarded silence, and a town that keeps its own counsel. Reading blind heightens the pull: a prologue spoken by an older, haunted voice promises heartbreak we can’t yet name, while the present hums with chemistry, withheld truths, and the first hints of the Ravenhood’s purpose.
We talk through the time jumps, the setup that reads like contemporary worldbuilding, and why miscommunication can be both a narrative engine and a reader’s breaking point. Sean’s “are you all in?” refrain raises hard questions about consent to secrecy and power imbalance; Dom’s wall of silence looks cruel until Delphine enters and the edges soften. That quiet subplot—illness, addiction, care—reveals a layered found family and gives Tyler dimension beyond sunny charm. We examine how a brief moment of faith and scripture reframes vulnerability for Cecilia, even if it lands out of place, and how those human beats keep the thriller mood grounded.
Yes, we go spoiler-deep on dynamics and the infamous dock scene, but we also focus on what Flock is doing thematically: teaching readers to live with uncertainty, to hear the echo between what’s said and what’s meant, and to feel the cost of loving people who live by codes. The cliffhanger lands like a match strike—dialogue cut short, the “Frenchman” finally unveiled—and we make the case for queuing Exodus before you hit the last page. If you crave transparency and tidy resolutions, this ride will bruise you. If you want a moody, high-stakes romance that trades in tension, hints, and found family, it’s dangerously easy to binge.
Hit play, then tell us: Team Sean, Team Dom, or Team “Cecilia Deserves Answers”? If the conversation wrecked you in the best way, follow, share with a friend who loves messy love stories, and leave a quick review—your words help other readers find us.
Check out our Bookshop.com book store where you can get your own copy of the books we are covering! https://bookshop.org/shop/wreckedbyfiction
Welcome To Wrecked By Fiction
EmmaWelcome to the Wrecked by Fiction podcast.
AmandaYes, it is.
EmmaDid I read it on my lunch break?
AmandaYeah. I made I made notes because I didn't know there was gonna be a quiz.
EmmaHey, everything's for a great while I was watching a movie with my six-year-old. Yeah. I didn't know I could be both right and so fucking wrong. Wrecked by fiction, where we read, cry, and question our emotional stability.
Introducing The Ravenhood Series
AmandaHi, friend. Hi. I've missed you. I missed you too.
EmmaSo today we're gonna talk about Kate Stewart and the Ravenhood series. So we're gonna start with book one. And Flock was my first introduction to Kate Stewart. I had never read anything prior to this book. But it was recommended by so many different people that I communicate with inside the book community. Right. And I didn't know anything. I prefer to go in completely blind.
AmandaI get that.
EmmaSo I didn't look it up. I didn't read the back. I didn't read anything. All I knew is that it was a little bit dirty and a whole lot fucked up.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaThat's pretty much it.
AmandaAgreed. So book one doesn't quite get into all of it, but the yeah, the whole series is Yeah.
unknownYeah.
EmmaAnd I know that we want to start a little bit by without the um like not heavy spoilers. Right. Um, so we're not gonna go super deep right away. But I want to kind of like we know main characters, we've got Cecilia and we've got Dom and Sean. And you get a little bit of Tyler sprinkled in there.
AmandaHe's such a cutie.
EmmaOh my god. When Tyler was introduced, I thought that the book was gonna be about him and Cecilia.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaWell maybe I hoped that the book was gonna be about.
AmandaI kind of thought he was gonna swoop in.
EmmaYeah.
Reading Blind And First Impressions
AmandaAnd be like, you don't want that one. Let's go this way.
EmmaYeah, well. Tyler's a whole different ball of wax. Right. So compared to the other men in this series so far. So for sure. Um what do you have down that is non-spoiling?
AmandaSo I made I made notes because I didn't know if there was gonna be a quiz after I read the book. Hey, everything is for a grade. So some of it is just like descriptors of the characters, right? So talking about how in the prologue Cecilia's 26, right? But then jumps back to when she's 19. And initially I had to go back and re-listen because I when they started where she was 19, I was like, I missed.
unknownHang on.
AmandaAnd so I had to I had to go relisten to that the first time. But um yeah, anyway. And then talking about how you know she's going why she is going back to Triple Falls or to Triple Falls, I guess not back, but going to Triple Falls to be with her dad and that whole thing. Um I did somewhat relate to her relationship with her dad.
EmmaYeah.
AmandaMostly because I didn't have that growing up either. So it was kind of like okay. Um their reasoning is obviously very different from mine, but yeah.
EmmaCecilia is something else. Yeah. I think too, Cecilia's relationship with her dad and leaving, you know, where she grew up with her mom and um that change for her was so interesting. I remember when you started reading and you were like, wait, this is the future. Yeah. And then it you texted me when you when it jumped back after the you know, the first 17 pages or whatever. Yeah. And it says, Oh, I'm 19 now. And you're like, wait, why do I know how it ends? Yeah when in reality that's just Kate Stewart fucking with your brain because you don't know how it ends.
AmandaYeah, she likes to do that.
Cecilia, Sean, Dom, And Tyler
EmmaYeah, she does like to do that. Um I do think though that Cecilia's relationship with her dad is the way that it is described in the beginning of the book is fundamental to understanding why Cecilia is the way she is. Right. Because she is incredibly naive. Yes. Um really throughout this entire this specific book.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaUm, throughout all of book one, she is incredibly naive. She has this. She describes herself as broken or cursed um because she is a hopeless romantic. Right. And believes in the fairy tale ending and that she will eventually get that for herself.
AmandaUm there were so many times I wanted to shake her and be like, what are you doing? Just stop. Stop getting in your own way.
EmmaWell, I think oh my god. The so my biggest issue with well, maybe not the biggest, one of my issues with this specific book is the miscommunication piece, which is so heavy with Sean and Cecilia, and really every man and Cecilia in her life in general. Yes. Her dad, Sean, Dom, every single man introduced. Yes. Um, and miscommunication is my least favorite book trope.
AmandaSame.
EmmaWhich we have discussed because I'm just like, just talk to each other. I cannot grasp. No. Especially because when we're reading, especially romance books, but you get that kind of internal dialogue where they're talking to themselves, or the men are talking to each other, and then Cecilia's just on the outside, and she's like, da-da-da-da-da. Everything is pretty and Triple Falls is beautiful, and I love my life, and these men are all over here like you don't know anything.
AmandaNo, yeah. Meanwhile, my brain has already calculated all of the 50,000 steps that she's missed, and I'm like, woman.
Time Jumps And Character Setup
EmmaAnd when we so, I mean, we're gonna I wanna dig into kind of the deeper stuff, and so that we can, we are gonna go a little bit spoilery. Right. Um so, and what I tell everyone in my life and what I have told you is like if I know you're never gonna read this book, so I'm gonna tell you every single plot line that is important because I need to shed whatever this story is out of out of my bloodstream. Um and so now, like now in the listening experience is the time to like maybe fast forward the next 15 minutes. Right. Um, if you don't want to hear exactly uh is going on with Cecilia and Sean and Dom. We're diving in. Yeah, we're going in. Uh spelunking. What the fuck was that? Um so okay. You said you wanted to shake Cecilia so many times. Uh yes. I it so this series for me was so interesting because I typically am able to do that, right? Where you pick up things, but so many because I went in completely blind so many times in this book, I was like, what the fuck is actually happening? And I was like, I just have to keep going. Yeah. That obviously is not what happened with you. No. You were piecing together. Was it because of the way Sean talked, or was it other things?
AmandaProbably the way that Sean talks, but also just my my personal background plays a part of that too.
EmmaBecause of the cops' daughter situation.
AmandaOkay.
EmmaYeah.
AmandaSo I just tend to pick up on things and things like that that most people don't.
EmmaI hadn't thought about that.
AmandaYeah.
Naivety And The Miscommunication Trope
EmmaInteresting. So we know now in Flock that Sean is essentially trying to work his way around not spilling the beans. Correct. Um, by leaving Cecilia little tiny hints about things. Right. Um, weaving them into the conversation so that he hopes she figures it out on her own. Right. Um, how many times do you think Cecilia thought she figured it out? Uh, and in reality she had not yet. Several. Do you think by the end of Flock she knew? For sure? You think she didn't? No. Not all the way anyway. No. Because we get into where she's all in with Sean and Dom is testing the waters. Right. Uh, which is quite now that I think I just said that. That's literally testing the waters because that is their first uh intimacy and altogether is in on the dock or floating in the water, on the floats or whatever. Yeah. But I think for me, Sean, you texted me so many times telling me how much you hated him. You're like, he is so dumb. Yes. Um I don't think that Sean is dumb. I do think that he is fucking lonely. I could see that. I think that he is carrying what he believes to be this massive thing. Yes. Um, and not to minimize it because it is huge what they're doing, um, as the Ravenhood. Um, but he has no, he doesn't feel like he can rely on anybody because Dom disappears, Dom has his own thing. Right. Um, Tyler carries his own piece, you know, everybody carries their own piece. Right. And Sean is like the face. That makes sense. And so him being able to see Cecilia and be like, oh, well, maybe she can carry some of this with me.
AmandaYeah, I could see how he's hoping for that. I just I think she's too young and doesn't it's way too much for her to fully understand.
EmmaAnd she can't grasp it because at this point in Justin Flock, she doesn't know anything about right why they started the Ravenhood, where it came from.
unknownRight.
EmmaUm, up until this point, she still calls Dom the Frenchman. Right. Um and I remember them meeting at the you know, opening scene with everyone when they're at the party, and she looks at him and is yelling at Dom about you know him being the Frenchman just because he has a slight accent.
unknownYeah.
EmmaUm and I remember, I'm pretty sure we probably find the page where she in she her internal monologue says, I thought he would have more of an accent.
AmandaRight. But she didn't she didn't key in on that and think that there could be someone else. Right.
EmmaShe hadn't pieced this. And again, her naivety is wild. Right. So to be young and dumb again. Oh my god, to be 19. Imagine to be 19 again. So Cecilia's piecing bits of it together. She thinks she's got it figured out, she doesn't. Sean can't tell her. Right. Dom hates everyone and everything. Um and Tyler is the peak golden retriever energy. I want to talk a little bit about Dom's aunt. Yes. Because that relationship in Flock is touched on just a couple of times, but you see a different side of Dom because of it. Yes. And because and Tyler too. Um that's really all you really get to know about Tyler in this book is his relationship with Dom's aunt. Yeah. Cecilia initially asks Tyler to take her to Delphine's house to clean because she's sick, super sick, right? And we know from the original meeting of uh Cecilia and Delphine that she Cecilia doesn't necessarily believe in God. Right. Um, but she believes in love.
unknownYeah.
EmmaDid you laugh? I did. I can see on your face that you laughed. Um, what did you so when she sits there and she reads, she tells Delphine a story from the Bible.
AmandaIt was almost out of place for me. Mostly because Cecilia talks about not being religious, right? Like it never comes up, and so then, but all of a sudden she's got this verse memorized.
EmmaYeah.
AmandaSo that was strange.
Spoiler Warning And Deep Dive
EmmaAnd all these feelings about God and how Delphine is so strong and Yeah. Yeah. But I mean, I also kind of get it because I spent years going to church and were you able to separate that piece from because if it feels out of place, were you able to just walk away from it?
AmandaYeah, for the most part. Yeah. I just kind of related it to okay, maybe she memorized that one in like some Bible study group or something, right? Right, right, right. Maybe there was something that that one was studied for some reason or whatever, because I've been there, done that. Um I couldn't tell you any Bible verses at this point.
EmmaMaybe only the ones that they scream at queer people. That's probably the only Bible verses I could quote to you, but they would all be wrong. Right. Anyway. I so for me that scene, well, Delphine showed not only a different side of Dom. Yes. Um, because you get a glimpse at his relationship with Delphine, which is huge going forward in the series. Um, you don't really get another glimpse of it in Flock. Right. Um, but Cecilia to me it feeled it feeled. That was cute. It showed a different type of vulnerability. Yes. Um, and again, this is wrecked by fiction. I read books that fuck me up because that's what they do, right? And so finding those pieces of vulnerability are why I read. Right. And so seeing Cecilia in that, which to me, yes, it was out of place. You could pull it from the book entirely and it wouldn't make a difference on the story, right? That's not a piece you need. And for me, that's why it was there.
Sean’s Hints And Power Dynamics
AmandaI don't I would say that you don't necessarily need it for Cecilia, but it is nice to have it for Dom. Right. So having it to where it does show that other side of him. Right. Because I will say it was a part where I found myself actually liking him more because of it. It was a scene that helped change my perspective on Dom, where I was kind of on the fence with him. I what I wasn't a huge fan of Sean. I felt like Sean was manipulative in a way. And it kept making me wonder: is this a an a mentally abusive relationship? Like, is he gaslighting her? Okay kind of thing, versus Dom just being like flat out, I'm not telling you shit. Yeah. Right? Like, we're just not gonna go there. Um, but then seeing him being so caring for Delphine made me go, okay, him being so cruel and brash is a front. And he doesn't really necessarily want to be that way, but he's trying to protect whatever this secret is that they have.
EmmaWhat they've built. Right.
AmandaAnd so this is his boundary, his wall that he's put up, but he's softening because he is getting feelings for Cecilia.
EmmaThat's interesting. Because I think when I read it, I couldn't separate the way that Dom was with Delphine. I didn't see it as tender.
AmandaOkay.
EmmaUm I saw it as I think for me, it was written in a way that was meant to be perceived as like embarrassment when he didn't want anyone to go there.
AmandaI could see that.
EmmaUm, and then Sissy like comes in and comes in the house, and Dom's like, what is happening? Right. No one is supposed to be here. And then and then she goes on her own and she asks Tyler because she knows she knows something secret. Right. Um, which nobody else has really caught on to about Tyler, Tyler and Delphine. Right. So I think that the character development there for Dom. Um, I do agree with you that that's probably why that those scenes with Delphine were placed, especially as strategically as they were. Right. Um I think to so you go from Dom having this wall up to everyone, including Cecilia, and even the men that he's working alongside, right? Yeah. And then flash forward to Dom in bed in on the rainy days, and they're reading, and they kind of he's he still has this such this firm boundary set with Cecilia that he's like, you want adventure, you want excitement, you want outside, right? You go to Sean.
AmandaYeah, that's not not me.
EmmaYeah, he's like, um, we're not, we're not, we are not that. Right. Um, you want movies and books and not talking.
unknownRight.
EmmaI'm here.
unknownYeah.
EmmaUm, I do agree with you on the it feels a little gaslighty on Sean's part, especially through Flock. Yes. And I don't think that that gets cleared up at all. Um, even so you said that there is so in the ebook and the print, there is a um a bonus chapter. You are an audiobook reader. Correct. There was not that was not included. So in so for other people who do audiobook only, which is your primary form of consumption, yes. You read it before we started.
AmandaI got I got to glance it.
EmmaHow did you feel like it? So for me, because it's it's essentially the middle of the story, and it's just another piece of Sean being Sean and not giving Cecilia any answers.
unknownRight.
Dock Scene And Relationship Lines
EmmaI think that specific bonus chapter where essentially Sean is just asking her, like, are you ready? Are you all in? Because I can't tell you anything until you're all in. Right. And he's just constantly asking her, Are you here? Are you done? Are you ready? Are you over it?
AmandaI think it was just eating at him. And he needed he wanted it so bad, but couldn't just come out and tell her.
EmmaYeah. So um, those were the rules that he had to follow. And I think that that to me, in that scene, Cecilia didn't even know how to answer because as much as she wanted to give him what he wanted, as naive as she was, I don't think that she I I think she recognized that she wasn't ready.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaI think she could see enough of what was going on because we get to the end of Flock, and as the reader, you still don't know exactly what is happening with the Ravenhood and why they are in existence and what they're doing. Yeah. This book, not number one, is one of the, in my opinion, Opinion, it rates pretty high on that best slash worst slash worst cliffhanger. Yes. Because in the best way, which I think most cliffhanger books should end this way, which is just like a last line quote. Yes. Where it's dialogue and then they cut off. Yeah. Um, and flock into that way, which is the introduction of the actual French man. Mm-hmm. Which is, you know, for our next visit down the Ravenhood series lane. So I made you read it.
AmandaYou read it because of me. I did read it because of you. But I did like it. Was it worth it? It was absolutely worth it. It did not break my heart. Well. This one. This one did not break my heart. Okay. It did not. But I'm I mean, we've talked about it. I, for me, I need more of a realistic kind of scenario. Like the whole daughter of a multimillionaire kind of. You didn't relate. No.
EmmaIs what you're saying. Yeah. Okay.
AmandaYeah. Any characters I can relate to.
EmmaI think too, so I cry at lots of things. Um, I get attached to characters very, very easily. That's that's not a difficult feat for me.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaUm I was so frustrated with this book because of that lack of communication. Yes. Um, I hated it. I I was like, I cannot listen to Sean one more time tell her that he can't tell her what's going on.
AmandaYeah. But and for her to not figure out what she needed to do to be able to get there.
Delphine’s Role And Dom’s Soft Side
EmmaYeah, and because he fed her, right, like line by line, what she had to do. Yeah. Um, and she couldn't figure it out. Right. That was very frustrating. Agreed. I think we discussed, um, have discussed before that you, you know, you need that relatability. Um, you need that real life piece. And so when I recommended this book for us to read and discuss together, I thought that this would be kind of like a slam fucking dunk in that. I'm not gonna lie. I thought that you were gonna get attached because it's contemporary romance.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaUm, personally, I classify it as more of like a thriller romance. I would agree with that for me, because of that air of mystery that you get, especially through the first two books. Right. Um, so I really did not think I I remember being slightly disappointed at the occasional check-in texts, being like, oh my god, she doesn't like it. Oh my god. And then, you know, and then as they you continued reading, there were some moments where I was like, Okay, we're gonna get some good uh feelings about this. And this book specifically hit me with Delphine. That was really the emotional piece for me. I could see that in Flock. Um her battle with addiction, her like level of hopelessness. Right. Um, that's where I got stuck. Yeah. Um and I was just so damn frustrated, I just didn't give a shit about the main characters. I my heart broke for a side character, right? Because the level of frustration with the main characters was so high.
AmandaYeah. So I can understand that. I will say, and I know that we'll get into it later, but Exodus did draw me in a bit more.
EmmaYes.
AmandaSo I did get slightly more attached in that book than I did in Flock.
EmmaWell, and we'll um we're gonna talk about Exodus next time. So I do think that if you had to tell someone whether or not to read this book, and you didn't know them or their life story, would you tell them to read this book?
unknownYeah.
EmmaYeah. You think there's enough there?
AmandaI do. Um I might put a caveat that book one is more of a setup, right? Like you're not gonna get a whole lot out of it. Okay, but give it the first, like do the first book get to the second one. The second one's gonna be the one that draws you.
EmmaIt's worth getting through the kind of um in the fantasy realm, we like to say world building. Yes. Yeah. You think the flock is essentially world building in this contemporary romance book. Yeah. I could see that. Um, you get some backstory on really just on Cecilia and then little bits and pieces of other characters. Right. And that's really it. There's not a lot of deep diving into characters specifically. That happens in round two. Mm-hmm. So okay. I would say that obviously if you hate a cliffhanger, don't read the book. Right. Um or at least have Exodus ready to roll. Right. It needs to be locked and loaded.
AmandaYou've got to have it ready to go ready.
EmmaIf you're reading on your Kindle, download both at the same time. Yep. Um if you're, you know, using a what is it, library app where you have to wait in line to rent books.
AmandaIf you don't have enough audible credits to get both at the same time, don't do it. Yeah.
Faith, Vulnerability, And Out‑Of‑Place Moments
EmmaBecause it does, it leaves on that one piece of dialogue. Yes. And then you're cut off. Yep. And well, I mean, in the print copy, you get the first chapter of Exodus. That is true. You don't. So it's not totally a cliffhanger, uh, which is interesting to me that they do that. But I gave so Flock alone. I'm not rating it as a series. I've gotta remember not to rate things as a series because it's very different once you have finished the whole universe, right? Yeah. Um Flock itself, I probably because I was so frustrated, if I my first time, my first read through, I probably would have given it a three and a half stars out of five. I could see that. Um solid. The foundation is there, right? But the mismute miscommunication trope is so low on my list of likes. I don't even like it in real life. I definitely don't want it in a book. I don't I don't need it in a book. Right. Give me real conversation. Yes. Give me open and honest. Yes. And Sean not being a big fat liar.
AmandaGive me hope that men actually know how to communicate.
EmmaOh my God. Oh my god. Well, and Don doesn't talk at all. No. That's like a big that's like one of his main character things, is that he literally just doesn't talk. Yeah. So the miscommunication is high in this book. So if that's not for you, then don't you don't you and the thing is for me, because eventually we will discuss the other two books and possibly further than that.
AmandaYeah.
EmmaIf miscommunication, if that trope is not for you, if it's too much, if that's a hard pass on your book reads list, don't read this series. No. It's you can't, you shouldn't. No. Um because it doesn't end up book one. No, it doesn't get better. It doesn't get better. It continues on. Yeah forever. Forever. It's like one of the main tropes throughout the entire series. So yeah, just not for you. And you know, considering I hate it so much, I read every book. You did. Quickly. You're just a glut for punishment, aren't you? Why I read these books because they break me over and over and over again. So okay. So you would recommend it. I gave it three and a half stars. Do you have a chaos rating or something of the like that you would recommend?
AmandaI mean, there is a lot of chaos in this book.
EmmaSo the chaos rating is high, is what you're saying.
AmandaIt's probably off the charts. Okay. With the chaos rating.
EmmaYeah.
AmandaYeah. I would agree with that. There's a lot of it. Man.
EmmaFlock. I don't really know. If there was like one line, I probably would just go back to like you could start on page one, and the whole description of the book is Cecilia talking about how cursed she is. Right. That to me is very much like we're gonna go in. Ready? Do it. Cecilia says the first four letter words are I grew up sick. Yeah. And she goes on about how she believed in love and all of that stuff. She thinks that it broke her. She thinks that essentially love killed her.
unknownRight.
Gaslighting Concerns And Boundaries
EmmaAnd that she's a ghost now. And she's floating through her life. And I think that that perfectly describes the way that this book kind of rounded rounds itself out. Right. Because Cecilia is a fucking ghost. And she continues. However, Cecilia does grow up. She does. And we get a little more badass. She does. And we get a little more intense. And we get a little more uh I don't take shit from no man. Right. Um I was very proud of her in the third book. She did good. She did good. I do think that we get more of Cecilia. I I know that we kind of struggled with her naivety and her childishness um in this book, but it is so important to remember that she is 19. And you get the prologue again is this it's the future, right? Right. So she's saying all of this after everything flock has happened. Yeah. After her heart was broken. Yeah. Um, after she has no idea what happened. Right. Um, and she's a ghost. She is ceasing to exist at that point by the end of the first book. Right. Um because a bunch of grown men decided to keep a very, very, very serious secret. That's it. And she was too little to understand. Did you write a Goodreads? You don't use Goodreads.
AmandaI have a Goodreads, but I don't get on there often enough. Okay. I need to be better about that.
EmmaWell, we're gonna link our Goodreads count. Yes. Wrecked by Fiction, we'll have a Goodreads count. So as we talk about things, the dates that we talked about them, that's when they're gonna be uploaded onto our account. Um we're gonna be on TikTok, we're gonna be Instagram, we're gonna be Facebook, all the all the places. Every place. If you wanna see our face, you can probably see it somewhere on the internet. Yep.
AmandaUm if you want to. Please don't be cruel. We're just we're just two moms. Be kind. We read a lot of dirty books.
EmmaUm we didn't even talk about the sex in this book yet. Right.
AmandaSo um, and if you know us in real life, no, you don't.
EmmaNo, if you know Amanda in real life, no, you don't. So I don't give a shit. Um, but find us on the internet. We're gonna have uh another episode about Exodus coming sooner than later. And we're gonna round it out with finish line. And if I can convince Amanda to read the legacy series, maybe her heart will actually break. So in the comment section, tell Amanda that you don't care that she doesn't love Dom, but you need her to read One Last Rainy Day, and that Delphine might be an alcoholic, but you need to read Severed Heart.
unknownOkay.
AmandaSo I will work on it. You had me switch gears to go into Yeah, we're going fantasy. Yeah.
EmmaI know that other series.
AmandaWe're gonna go fantasy on the struggle bus.
EmmaWe're gonna read a lot of things. Well, let me preface. I have read a lot of things. You're going to read a lot of things so that we can talk about it.
AmandaYeah. I have a lot of catching up to do.
EmmaYeah.
unknownOkay. Nice.
AmandaProud of you. Proud of you.
EmmaYay! We did it. We did it. Wrecked by Fiction is recorded and produced by Westhouse Productions. They handle all the audio, video, and post production so we get a clean sound, smooth edits, and zero tech headaches. Westhouse Productions aligns with podcasts, live music, and creative projects that want to sound professional without losing their edge.