Home is Wherever She Is

Our Stories

We’re writers. We’re married. We both write romances. And yet it took us about nine years before we began writing together. Now we write Wifey Romances, short stories often inspired by the places we get to wander in our writing journeys.

We publish five or six a year, and if you sign up to our Wifey Romance newsletter, you get them for free!


Our different pen names (personalities)

We’ve got a little something for everyone. Crime. Sci-fi. Romance. Time travel. Mythology. Adventure. Dystopian. Have a wander through the links and find your next favorite read.

Brey Willows

What if?


About Helena

Helena crosses genres with several pen names. She writes heartfelt sapphic romance as Helena Harte to provide an outlet to her gooey marshmallow romantic side. She also writes thrillers, adventure romance, and sci-fi under the pseudonyms Robyn Nyx and RJ Nyx, exploring the darker side of human nature in order to find the light.

Helena Harte leaning up against her black pick-up truck

About Ally

UK-based, award-winning author Ally McGuire creates WLW romances with plenty of sarcasm and heart. Happily married to author Helena Harte, she also writes under the name Brey Willows, inviting readers to join her in worlds where connections thrive even in complicated situations, hopefully providing a much-needed antidote to the more bewildering aspects of modern life. 


What Readers Say

GW Reads ~ The Heart Remembers

“As always with an Ally McGuire book, you know it is going to be beautifully written.”

Toni Shore ~ Ship of Dreams

“Willows has created a wonderful story that pulls you in and doesn’t let go till the end. Its imaginative, filled with intrigue, romance. It was an absolute joy to read.”

Queer Literary Loft ~ Stunted Heart

“A spicy and thrilling ride to the finish set against the backdrop of an equally hot and action-packed Las Vegas strip.”

Stellar Space ~ Dead Pretty

“Robyn Nyx smoothly follows every thread as she weaves an engaging complex story with complicated intriguing characters.”