Wren Raphael: Celebrating New Beginnings

Offering original fantasy stories, fairy tale illustrations, and items of suspected enchantment, Wren Raphael aims to delight those seeking encouragement, inspiration, and a little magic in their daily life. We start our adventures with “A Circle of Wrens” and “The Spring Festival,” two short stories written and edited by storytellers Randy James Walker and Tove Innis.

Our stories will always be available digitally for free.

If you would like to read the first chapters of our adventures: subscribe to Wren Raphael for free today and we will send you your complimentary digital copies. These short stories are just the beginning of a longer journey. With your interest and support, we can continue to build Wren Raphael into a larger universe.

Wren Raphael art prints are currently available on RedBubble

As Wren Raphael grows we look forward to re-opening our own storefront. In the meantime if you would like to purchase an enchanting Wren Raphael illustration and support our artist’s work you can do so at our Wren Raphael Redbubble shop hosted by Neno Studios.

Wren Raphael is currently a very small passion project started by a geek and her friends, but with your help we can grow this tiny sapling into a mighty oak and collaborate with other creative minds as we continue our journey. Thank you for your interest and support!


Help us grow from a sapling to a mighty oak!

We want to continue creating original fantasy stories, but we need your help sharing them with the world. If you enjoyed our first short story “A Circle of Wrens,” we invite you to follow Wren Raphael on Facebook and Instagram and tell your friends how they can subscribe to our stories. We are a very small project that has only just begun, but with your help we hope to build a community and continue to share new adventures.


“She heard a rustling in the surrounding trees, and a ring of glinting eyes circled from the trunks. Esmyr saw that the eyes were those of a circle of wrens, each wearing what looked like a small, gleaming metal crown."

- excerpt from A Circle of Wrens