From Wyverns to Whispers: How J. Cronshaw Moved from Fantasy to Thriller

Fantasy author Jon Cronshaw shares how writing The Nanny’s Secret—his first domestic thriller—reignited his creativity after completing The Ravenglass Chronicles. Discover how his new pen name, J. Cronshaw, opened a new chapter in his storytelling career.

If you’ve been following my work for a while, you probably know me for wyverns, assassins, and dark fantasy worlds.

I’ve been publishing fantasy and speculative fiction since 2016, and I’ve been a full-time author since 2018.

Most of my readers found me through The Ravenglass Chronicles—a long-running epic about magic, destiny, and rebellion that spanned half-a-million words. It was an intense creative journey, and by the time I finished it, I needed to catch my breath.

In 2022, I decided to write something completely different. No magic. No kingdoms. No wyverns. Just people. Ordinary lives under extraordinary pressure. It started as a palate cleanser, a little side project to clear my head before diving into my next fantasy series. That story became The Nanny’s Secret.

At the time, I didn’t think I’d ever publish it. It didn’t fit with my other books. I love reading psychological thrillers, but I saw them as something separate from what I wrote. I wasn’t keen on setting up a new pen name or building a whole second author brand. So I set the manuscript aside and got on with other things.

But the idea of writing thrillers stuck with me.

The stories kept coming—small-town secrets, lies, betrayals, and the dark undercurrents that run beneath everyday life. Before long, I’d written a second thriller, then a third. Now, I’ve written eight and I’m working on my ninth.

When I showed them to a friend who writes thrillers, he told me I was mad not to publish them. I told him I didn’t want to annoy my regular eaders, and I didn’t want the stress of juggling two identities. He gave me a simple solution: drop my first name.

So “Jon Cronshaw” became “J. Cronshaw.”

Same writer. Different shelf.

That small change made everything click.

I’ve since built a new website, newsletter, and social media presence for J. Cronshaw—the domestic thriller author.

I’ll admit, I was reluctant at first. Starting over from scratch after years of building my fantasy world felt strange. But once I began, I rediscovered something I hadn’t felt in a long time: the spark of building something brand new.

These domestic thrillers are grounded in real life. They draw on my years as a court reporter, on real places near where I live—Morecambe, Heysham, Lancaster.

The stories are intimate and claustrophobic, the kind of tension that doesn’t need magic to feel dangerous. And in a way, writing them has made me a better fantasy author too. They’ve sharpened my sense of pacing, dialogue, and emotional realism.

I’m still writing fantasy—always will.

The Ravenglass Legends series is continuing, and there are more stories from that world on the way. But writing thrillers under J. Cronshaw has reminded me how much I love storytelling in all its forms. It’s a different kind of worldbuilding—one built from truth, not myth.

So if you ever fancy reading something a little different from me—something without wyverns, but still full of secrets and twists—you can download your free copy of The Lodger HERE to give you a flavour of what I’ve been doing.

And if you’d like to hear more about what I’m working on—both fantasy and thriller—you can listen to my weekly Author Diary podcast. I’ve been recording every week since 2017 and haven’t missed an episode.

It’s been a strange journey from wyverns to whispers, but I’m glad I took it. Because sometimes, stepping outside your world is the best way to remember why you built it in the first place.

A Most Necessary Correction to Wyvernic Delusions

By Senior Historian Gellin Drouth, Unrepentant Rationalist, Former Lecturer at the Collegium of Reason, Reichsherz.
Filed with irritation and full awareness it will be ignored.

Let me begin, with no politeness and less patience, by stating what ought to be obvious: wyvern riders never existed.

There. I said it.

I would carve the words into every schoolhouse door in the Empire if I thought the dull-eyed masses would read them. But no—the myth persists, feathered in glory, set in stained glass, and dribbled from the mouths of court poets with all the grace of a drunk vomiting prophecy.

Let us dispense, once and for all, with the romantic fantasy of men galloping through the clouds on the backs of leathery sky-lizards.

Every spring I receive a clutch of letters (mostly from amateur antiquarians or spoon-bent mystics) breathlessly informing me of a “newly uncovered tapestry” showing a hero astride a wyvern, sword aloft, wind in his periwig.

Well, I could commission a tapestry showing a warlord astride a pair of juggling narwhals. Would that convince future imbeciles that he ruled the oceans on tusk-back?

Tapestries are not evidence. They are propaganda in wool. They were made to flatter lords, to awe the unlettered, and to entertain bored duchesses. They are no more reliable than a bard’s breath or a fishwife’s dream.

Let us speak plainly about physics—a subject long neglected by wyvern fetishists.

Modern wyverns, even the so-called “mountain reavers,” lack the muscle mass and skeletal structure to lift a full-grown human, let alone fly with one aboard. Their wings, while impressive in surface area, are adapted for gliding, short bursts, or—at best—elevated ambush.

I would sooner ride an enraged goose into battle than trust my life to the spindly back of a wyvern.

And don’t prattle on about ancient breeds. Yes, we’ve found fossilised bones larger than current specimens. We’ve also found bones of fish with teeth the size of pikes—yet I don’t hear scholars insisting they hosted annual regattas.

Extinction and exaggeration are twin parasites on the spine of historical truth.

And, of course, there is the “wyverns can speak” fallacy.  

Ah yes. The old “Witz could talk” fable.

Let me be clear: I have met wyverns. I have observed their behaviour. I have listened to their so-called ‘language’. What passes for wyvern speech is nothing more than melodic mimicry—a glorified parrot with ambition.

“Oh,” cry the mystics, “but they sing in harmony and understand politics!”

Nonsense.

You can train a crow to answer questions. You can teach a hound to fetch your slippers when you mention the King. This is not sentience—it is conditioned response, and should not be confused with reason.

If your wyvern tells you the harvest will fail, it is not prophecy—it is indigestion.

The modern obsession with treating wyverns as equals is not only laughable, but dangerous. They are apex predators with mood disorders, capable of tearing a grown man in half and sulking about it.

Their so-called psychic powers? Overblown. Manipulating emotions? Half the court’s concubines can do that with a raised eyebrow. Projecting thoughts? If you hear a wyvern’s voice in your head, seek medical attention. Quickly.

These creatures are not wise, ancient beings. They are beasts—clever, yes, but no more deserving of reverence than a well-trained horse or an unusually punctual goat.

If you must honour the wyvern, do so properly: mounted, taxidermied, and mute. A fine specimen above the hearth of a hunting lodge? Excellent. A trained wyvern on the battlefield? Impressive, if cruel.

But do not dress them in royal brocade and pretend they whisper strategy into the ears of kings. Do not pen sagas in which they cry crystal tears over the fate of empires. And do not, under any circumstance, let your children believe that a man once soared through the heavens on the back of a beast with the mind of a philosopher and the wings of a curtain.

Wyvern riders are a myth.
Wyvern speech is mimicry.
Wyvern sentience is fiction.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have real work to do—cataloguing the mating calls of the south-coast swamp drakes, who at least have the decency not to pretend they understand tax reform.

Yours with dwindling hope,

Gellin Drouth

On the Anatomy and Natural History of Wyverns

Filed 3E.928 under Archive Classification: Draconidae — Sentient Species — Restricted Study.

By Master Aelric Venn, Senior Beast-Lecturer, High Collegium of Natural Enquiry, Reichsherz


INTRODUCTION

Wyverns remain among the most fascinating and misunderstood creatures of the known world. Their biological structure, social behaviours, and psychic abilities mark them as an evolutionary anomaly—perhaps even a deliberate construct of natural magic. From the mountain peaks of Wiete to the jungles of Boeki, wyverns appear in remarkable diversity, and their history stretches deep into the fossil record.

This paper attempts to summarise what is known, observed, and theorised regarding wyvern anatomy and lifecycle, with specific reference to fossil studies, field observation, and limited vivisection performed under Collegium sanction.


PHYSIOLOGY

Modern wyverns are defined by their bipedal body plan: two powerful hind legs and a pair of leathery, bat-like wings extending from shoulder-mounted joints. They lack forelimbs, though many use wing claws for perching, climbing, or limited manipulation.

Wyvern sizes vary dramatically:

  • The lesser whisperling, no larger than a fly, is often mistaken for an insect.
  • The black mountain reaver, recorded in the Greyspine Wars, stands as large as a wolf.

Fossil evidence indicates that in the Second Age, many wyvern species reached titanic proportions—some rivalling mammoths in mass. These megafauna likely supported human riders, and possibly contributed to the origin of bonded wyvern-rider legends.

Wyverns develop scales after emerging from their cocoon stage. These interlocking plates vary in hardness and colouration depending on species and environment, but are generally impervious to common blades. Only Ravenglass-forged weapons or high-grade armour-piercing bolts reliably penetrate them.

Wyverns possess elongated canine and carnassial teeth, suitable for tearing meat and inflicting deep puncture wounds. Their claws—particularly on the talons—are curved, durable, and capable of disembowelling a human adversary with a single strike.


VARIATIONS AND ADAPTATIONS

Regional variants exhibit specialised traits:

  • Southern venom-tail breeds possess retractable poison barbs on the end of their tails, used both for hunting and defence.
  • Rarer highland breeds, such as the Fangmist Howler, house venom sacs in their throat, allowing them to spit corrosive liquid capable of blinding and burning exposed flesh.
  • Tundra wyverns have thicker scale layering and reduced wing surface, adapted for gliding and insulation in cold climates.

These adaptations suggest significant environmental plasticity, and possible ongoing evolution—or deliberate magical manipulation in ancient times.


REPRODUCTION AND LIFE CYCLE

Wyverns follow a unique reproductive cycle:

  • Dominant female wyverns form matriarchal nests, often high in mountainous or inaccessible terrain.
  • One female will maintain several subordinate males, with whom she mates cyclically.
  • Fertilised eggs are laid in secure ledges or cavern bowls.
  • The hatchlings emerge not as miniature wyverns but as proto-wyverns—long, pale, worm-like creatures bearing little resemblance to their mature form.
  • These larval young spin silken cocoons and enter a prolonged metamorphic state.
  • Upon emergence, they display their characteristic limbs, wings, and scalation—born ready, in most cases, to fly, fight, and hunt.

Mortality is highest at the proto-stage, with unhatched eggs often preyed upon by cliff crows, carrion wolves, or rival wyverns.


PSYCHIC ABILITIES

Perhaps the most debated element of wyvern biology is their psychic faculty.

Even lesser breeds demonstrate the capacity for emotional influence—calming prey, unnerving rivals, or bonding with sentient beings through prolonged proximity. Higher breeds, particularly those exposed to Ravenglass, develop complex telepathic communication, and in rare cases, the ability to project sensory illusions.

Most remarkable, some wyverns demonstrate spoken language, using melodic, structured phrasing understood by humans. Their vocal cadence has a harmonic quality often described as musical, echoed, or unnervingly perfect.

Ravenglass acts as a psychic amplifier—a bonded wyvern bearing proximity to the substance gains greater clarity, range, and precision in its mental projection. Some claim that ancient wyverns helped design the Ravenglass binding rituals still used today by the Empire and the Guardians.


CONCLUSION

Wyverns are not simple beasts, nor wholly magical creatures. They are a unique convergence of natural evolution, magical adaptation, and ancient history—creatures of claw and wing, mind and scale.

To study wyverns is not merely to dissect flesh or measure wingspan. It is to engage with a creature whose legacy is written not only in the bones of old empires, but in the psychic threads that still connect sky, thought, and fire.

Let us hope that when the next great brood awakens in the mountains, we are wise enough to learn rather than conquer.


Filed under restricted circulation. Authorisation required for reprint or citation.

On the Matter of Witz: The Wyvern Behind the Ravenglass Throne

An Inquiry into the Influence, Origins, and Disputed Legacy of the So-Called King-Whisperer

By Scholar-Magus Elwen Thorne, Archivist of the Second Rank, Sothalon Imperial College, Year 931


It is perhaps the greatest testament to the enigma of Witz that in this, the 931st year of the Unified Empire, no scholar—not even among the cloistered savants of Reichsherz nor the dream-minds of Sothalon—can definitively answer one simple question: Who is Witz?

He has not been seen in nearly a century. Not publicly. Not in court. Not in sky. Some claim he has died, others that he simply moved on. But as with all things Witz, absence only sharpens the mystery. For many, he remains a puzzle, a presence, and—perhaps—a problem.

The earliest credible reference to Witz appears in the Book of Empire, that foundational record of the Ostehild dynasty and its divine sanction. He is named—casually, without elaboration—among the signatories of the Accord of Fire and Sky during the founding of the Empire. No age is given. No lineage. Simply: Witz, Winged Witness.

This is not the mark of a newcomer.

References to a speaking wyvern—a “black-eyed shadow of wise temper”—appear as far back as the First Kingdom Era. In the Diaries of Queen Imeryn, he is noted as advising her father, then herself, and later, her grandson. The tone shifts. Sometimes grateful. Sometimes wary. Always respectful.

This same Witz (for there is no mention of another bearing the name) appears again and again—never at the centre, always adjacent. A counsel. A confidant. A whisper.

And so the title bestowed upon him by popular history: The King-Whisperer.

The standard narrative, taught still in the provincial temples and lesser schools, casts Witz as a benevolent observer, perhaps gifted with foresight, perhaps merely long-lived and wise. He offered advice to the Ostehilds in moments of peril—urging restraint when blades were drawn, boldness when the court wavered, and mercy when cruelty tempted emperors.

But this is not the only interpretation.

Some claim Witz is no guide but a glamour-caster, manipulating perception, weaving enchantments subtle enough to pass for diplomacy. These claim he used puppet rulers to enact his own designs—an immortal, unaging architect of empire hiding behind a rotating cast of human masks.

It is known that wyverns possess psychic faculties. That Witz’s presence has preceded pivotal shifts in court power cannot be denied. He is mentioned in the margins of royal assassinations, civil truces, the appointment of three High Priestesses, and the unification of Molotok under imperial treaty.

Coincidence? Perhaps. But for one who seems always present when power moves, the idea of his non-interference strains credulity.

It is here that the line between rumour and revision becomes difficult to tread.

Witz’s name appears in the burned records of the Guardian Schism, preserved only through copies made by exiled Keepers. He is listed not as an outsider but as one of the Seven Observers, a title otherwise unrecorded, but consistent with Guardian terminology.

Was Witz a Guardian? Is he still?

His affinity with Ravenglass is unquestioned. Witnesses in the time of Kathryn Ostehild described him as “humming with resonance” when near the black crystal, able to still its glow or stir it to brilliance with but a thought. This is not merely affinity. It is mastery.

And yet, Guardians fell. Witz remained.

Did he abandon them? Did he survive their fall because he orchestrated it? Or did he, as some less conspiratorially minded scholars suggest, simply outlive them all?

How long do wyverns live?

This is not an idle question. Most wild wyverns do not survive past two centuries, though those bonded to Ravenglass seem to endure far longer. Yet even then, the known limit is four—five centuries at most. If Witz walked the court in the time of the First Kingdom, and again during the reformation of the Guardian sects, then he is no less than a thousand years old.

No known wyvern has achieved this.

Unless he is not a wyvern at all.

Some fringe theorists—typically the sort who claim the moon speaks—believe Witz to be a Ravenglass construct, a sentient artefact assuming wyvern form. Others suggest he is an avatar of the Shadow Realm, a psychic echo left to ensure a particular timeline unfolds.

I find such ideas fanciful. But I cannot wholly dismiss them.

Let us presume, for argument’s sake, that Witz is what he appears to be: a sapient wyvern with a gift for language, manipulation, and politics. Why, then, remain so long in the orbit of the throne? Why not rule openly? Or depart? Or die?

Some suggest his motive is stewardship—that he sees the Ostehild line as a necessary stabilising force in a world otherwise prone to collapse. Others argue he is enacting a long game, nudging events towards an unknown end that only he perceives. A few suggest he is bound by oath or artefact, unable to leave, unable to die, until some task is complete.

The truth is, we do not know.

And perhaps that is the point.

In this, the 931st year of empire, Witz has not been seen in court for nearly a century. Some say he departed into the mountains. Some say he sleeps beneath Reichsherz. A few believe he perished in the last Guardian cull, and that the Empire merely keeps his myth alive to mask a power vacuum.

But I believe he lives.

Because empires continue to shift—slowly, subtly, always just ahead of collapse. Because no power has yet grown so bloated that it has not found itself subtly corrected. Because the flame of Ravenglass still flickers in the archives, in the whispers of exiles, and in the dreams of those who remember him.

Who is Witz? A wyvern. A guide. A manipulator. A construct. A lie. A truth.

Perhaps all of these.

Or perhaps—just perhaps—he is still watching.


Filed for restricted review under Imperial Concordance 4.931.b.
For discussion under Temple and Collegium joint review only.

Get Exclusive Early Access to The Knight and the Rebel – Read New Chapters Every Weekday on Patreon!

Two siblings. Two paths. One destiny that could shake an empire to its core.

In The Knight and the Rebel, the third book in the Ravenglass Legends series, Ragnar and Maja’s worlds collide in an epic tale of power, loyalty, and rebellion.

As Ragnar rises within the very empire that destroyed their homeland, Maja fights to bring it down. But as secrets unravel and danger mounts, nothing is as straightforward as it seems.

With wyverns soaring through the skies and ravenglass whispering dark truths, Ragnar and Maja must each grapple with their choices.

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Ravenglass Universe Explored: The Unique World of Wyverns

Explore the fascinating wyverns of the Ravenglass Universe, from their psychic abilities to their integral role in society, and their unique bond with humans.

In the unique realm of the Ravenglass Universe, wyverns are not just mythical creatures; they are complex, sentient beings that blur the lines between fantasy and reality.

Here, wyverns come in all sizes, from the diminutive, almost whimsical dragonfly-sized ones to the mammoth-like behemoths that dominate the landscape.

But it’s not just their size that makes them extraordinary; it’s their abilities and their integral role in the society and lore of this universe.

The Mind’s Eye

In the Ravenglass Universe, wyverns possess a remarkable ability to sense minds.

This psychic talent goes beyond mere empathy; some wyverns can manipulate emotions, sowing seeds of joy, fear, or despair with the same ease that a bard might pluck a lute.

This ability makes them formidable allies and, in the wrong claws, dangerous adversaries.

Ravenglass: Amplifying Power and Control

The material known as Ravenglass is the key to amplifying the wyverns’ already impressive powers.

With it, they can ensnare human minds, weaving a hive mind that binds the wills of many to their own.

This power, while awe-inspiring, also treads a fine line between symbiosis and domination, raising questions about freedom and control.

“As the moon governs the tides, so too do these creatures sway the seas of our thoughts. Beware, for to dance with a wyvern is to waltz on the very precipice of one’s sanity, a perilous pirouette twixt dominion and subservience.”

Reflections on Wyverns and other Beasts, Meister Gregar Schultz

Longevity and Realm Slipping

Wyverns in the Ravenglass Universe are not bound by the same constraints as mere mortals.

Their longevity allows them to amass knowledge and wisdom far beyond human understanding.

Furthermore, their ability to slip between parallel realms unveils a world that remains hidden to most human eyes, adding a layer of mystique and mystery to their already enigmatic nature.

The Feral and the Telepathic

While some wyverns are integrated into human society, others remain feral, untamed and untameable.

These wild wyverns communicate telepathically, creating a network of minds that spans forests and mountains.

Their conversations, unseen but ever-present, add a whispering undercurrent to the world of Ravenglass.

Wyverns in Society

In human society, wyverns have found roles as partners, strategists, messengers, and spies.

Their inability to lie does not hinder their cunning; they are masters of obfuscation, using truth like a sculptor uses clay.

In Molotok, the famed academy of wyvern riders is a testament to the deep bond that can form between humans and wyverns, a bond that transcends species and speaks to the heart of cooperation and mutual respect.

The Rare Flight Partners

The larger wyverns, though rare, can form a unique partnership with humans, taking to the skies in a display of unity and strength.

These wyvern riders, soaring above the clouds, symbolise the potential for harmony between different beings, a harmony that is both powerful and delicate.

“They are bound to an eternal voyage, their crew lost to a fate most unnatural, their minds ensnared in the maelstrom of these winged serpents. ‘Tis a fate, I fear, worse than death, for their souls are shackled to an unending toil, with nary a hope of reprieve.”

from the log of Captain Alistair Blackthorne

Wyverns in the Ravenglass Universe blend myth and magic, power and subtlety.

They challenge our notions of what it means to be sentient, to coexist, and to wield power.

In their shadows and on their wings, they carry the stories of a world rich in complexity and wonder, a world where the line between human and wyvern is not a divide but a bridge to unimaginable adventures.

Wyverns remind us that sometimes, two legs are just as good as four, especially when it comes to inspiring awe, fear, and the occasional heroic epic.

 So the next time you delve into a fantasy novel or admire a medieval coat of arms, spare a thought for the wyvern – the unsung hero of the mythical creature world, doing it all on just two legs.

Unlock Exclusive Content and Early Access with Jon Cronshaw’s Ream Community

Embark on a thrilling journey through Jon Cronshaw’s immersive speculative fiction universe. Discover character-driven tales, exclusive content, and a passionate community of readers.

Hey there, fellow adventurers!

I’m Jon Cronshaw, a storyteller who crafts tales that blend the grit and darkness of reality with the wonder and excitement of speculative fiction.

From epic fantasy adventures to post-apocalyptic struggles, I create character-driven stories that explore the depths of the human experience.

Immerse yourself in stories that don’t shy away from the harsh realities of life, while also celebrating the power of hope, friendship, and perseverance.

By joining my Ream channel, you’ll embark on a journey through rich, immersive worlds filled with flawed heroes, complex relationships, and heart-pounding action.

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Wyverns in Legend and Lore: 10 Fascinating Facts about These Mythical Creatures

Discover the fascinating world of wyverns with these 10 intriguing facts. Explore their symbolism, characteristics, and role in folklore and fantasy literature.

Wyverns have been present in folklore and fantasy literature for centuries.

These winged beasts have the body of a dragon and the head of a reptile, and are often depicted as fierce and powerful creatures.

Here are ten fascinating facts about wyverns:

1. The word “wyvern” comes from the Old English word “wivern,” which means “serpent” or “dragon.”

2. In medieval heraldry, a wyvern was often used as a symbol of strength and ferocity. It was also associated with military power and often used as a crest for soldiers and warriors.

3. In many fantasy stories, wyverns are portrayed as fierce predators that can breathe fire and are immune to most weapons. They are often used as a formidable enemy for the hero to defeat.

4. In some legends, wyverns are said to have a venomous bite that can kill their victims almost instantly.

5. Wyverns are often depicted as having two legs, but some legends describe them as having four.

6. Wyverns are often portrayed as being smaller than dragons.

7. In some legends, wyverns are intelligent creatures and able to speak with humans.

8. In medieval bestiaries, wyverns were often described as having the body of a dragon, the head of a reptile, and wings.

9. In fantasy literature and role-playing games, wyverns are often used as mounts for characters, allowing them to fly and access hard to reach places.

10. Wyverns have been featured in a number of popular fantasy series, including those set in my Ravenglass Universe.

Click HERE to claim your free Ravenglass Universe starter library.

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Kat is destined to rule a brutal empire, but her heart yearns for a different path. Torn between royal duties and her magical destiny, she must navigate a world of wyverns, messenger boys, and mysterious Guardians to uncover the truth behind her powers and her family’s hidden past.

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