The romantasy series “Small Town, Big Magic” concluded in September with its final book, “Dragon Fires Everywhere.” But while the four-book journey is over, the authors behind what’s known as the “Witchlore” series have hopes the story will find a second life in an on-screen adaptation — and say they aren’t necessarily forever done with the witchy characters in the fictional St. Cyprian, Missouri.
“Now that it’s done, it’s even a better pitch because you have the whole story,” Megan Crane, who wrote “Small Town, Big Magic” and its sequels in the “Witchlore” series alongside Nicole Helm under the pen name Hazel Beck, told Variety. “We’d love to have feelers out to have more conversations, absolutely.”
But now that the story is fully released, would the duo prefer a TV series or film for a proper on-screen look at Emerson, Rebekah, Ellowyn, Georgie and their battle against the evil Joywood coven?
“I think there are phenomenal filmmakers out there who can do pretty much anything and make magic out of any property,” Crane said. “As one of the writers of the book, there’s so many details that, to me, seems to translate more to a TV show.”
Up next, Crane and Helm are releasing a cozy-horror-romance two-book series, beginning with the first book, “Some Kind of Haunted,” coming next fall.
“We have a duology that’s coming next. That’s going to start in fall of 2026,” Helm said. “The first book is called ‘Some Kind of Haunted.’ It’s a cozy-horror romance in a Midwestern town. It’s still very Hazel. It’s going to have found family and sense of community and small town coziness and all of that stuff that I think people really responded to with ‘Witchlore.’ In fact, even in ‘Witchlore,’ there are some horror-esque elements. So it’s not so much a departure as just like leaning a little bit more into that part of this series.”
Though no further books are planned in the “Witchlore” series, the Hazel Beck duo aren’t shutting down the idea of revisiting St. Cyprian one day.
“I don’t know that we will say goodbye, actually,” Crane said. “Not because we have other books planned — but because it’s just part of us now. I just don’t see how we would.”