Julie is a multi-genre author. Her articles and stories are featured in self-help, inspirational, trade, and fiction publications including Writer’s Digest, Coping With Cancer, Complete Woman, and Daily Meditation.
She is the 1999 Writer’s Digest Writing Competition Grand Prize Winner for her horror short story, “House Call.”
Her seventh novel, Falling Stars, is an eleven-time award winner, including the 2023 International Firebird Awards First Place in Urban Fantasy, the 2023 Pinnacle Book Awards Best Book in Fantasy, and the 2023 Outstanding Creator Awards First Place in Medical Fiction.
Other awards include Fade In magazine’s 2005 Screenplay Semi-Finalist for the thriller, Grave Jumper, and the 1998 Writer’s Digest Writing Competition First for her stage play comedy, Garage Sale.
Julie received a BFA in Dance Performance and Journalism from Southern Methodist University and completed two years’ post-graduate work at Stephen F. Austin State University. She wrote as a contributing editor for both school papers, area newspapers, and the regional magazine News of East Texas. She was a member of Golden Triangle Writers League while writing in East Texas, helping form her hometown’s first writer critique group with romance author Mary Lynn Baxter and true-crime author Suzy Spencer.
In Arkansas, Julie wrote for community theater, staging and filming several independent projects including her stage comedy, “Garage Sale.” After receiving the Writer’s Digest 1999 Grand Prize, her winning short story “House Call” was selected for publication by William J. Grabowski, former book reviewer and interviewer for The Horror Show magazine. She published her first of seven books in 2001.
Julie also worked as a teaching assistant for Rich Mountain Community College’s Radio/TV department while writing and collaborating on several screenplays under the management of the late Jeff Ross. Among them are Killing Grounds, a Writer’s Network 2000 Honorable Mention, and Grave Jumper, Fade-In magazine’s 2005 semi-finalist. Julie’s inspiration for Grave Jumper came from a composite of true crime reports by former Arkansas State Police Investigator Russell Welch, as well as Unraveled, Welch’s undercover exchange with runner Billy Bottoms regarding the investigation of Barry Seal.
After joining Round Rock Writers’ Guild near Austin, Texas, Julie began collaborating with indie authors as a ghostwriter, editor, and book formatter. She primarily consults and doctors fiction, blog, and screenplay material. She previously worked on contract with Upwork and James Innes Group, writing for clients across the globe on fiction and nonfiction projects, resume enhancement, and LinkedIn profile consultation. Genres Julie has written are YA, children’s, self-help, inspirational, spiritual, thriller, horror, fantasy, action-adventure, sci-fi, contemporary romance, self-help, technical, and academic.
Julie currently works as a remote freelance ghostwriter and editor in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, the setting of her seventh book, Falling Stars. She lives there with her husband, Jim, a primary care physician, their furry companions Madison and Kate. She has one son, Seth, an Air Force ROTC student at St. Edward's in Austin.
Julie's keynote/breakout, The New Time Paradigm, is an integrative time-management framework she teaches to overscheduled and overwhelmed creatives and visionaries. Julie is a member of IMDB, the Editorial Freelancers Association, and Eureka Springs Chamber of Commerce.
Falling Stars Budget: $10M - $30M | Fantasy A boy with cancer believes a legendary vampire in his hometown can cure him.
The Rabbit in Me Budget: $100K - $1M | Action Nashville musician and ex-con Bart Bryars is forced to tame his inner rabbit behind bars by creating a new style of fusion music.