Schedule Release Feb 17, 2026

Pre-Order a paper book or eBook

Some years feel like weather. Others feel like a dare.

The Fire Horse Year is a high-heat collection of eight stories about creatives who discover that talent isn’t the real obstacle—visibility is. A painter learns that what she reveals can become real, but only for one year. A songwriter breaks a city's algorithm with a rhythm that makes strangers stop and remember. A busker fights stolen work with a one-night set that proves authorship through community memory. A novelist finds a stable of unwritten books—living horses—and must finish a ride before the story goes feral.

Across quiet character pieces, speculative legal thrillers, and folklore-leaning realism, each story asks the same question: What happens when the work finally catches fire—and people start watching?

Purchase here 

If you’ve ever held back a project because you feared judgment, attention, or failure, these stories will push you to do the harder thing: ship the work, withstand the heat, and keep going anyway.

Book Review:

The Fire Horse Year: Eight Rides Through the Heat of Being Seen is a high-concept, emotionally sincere collection about the bargains artists are pushed to make—by institutions, platforms, markets, and sometimes by their own desperation. Across eight interconnected stories, creators are offered seductive tools: a contract that makes art manifest, a city “artist license” that promises fair visibility, a compliance law that strangles unregistered work, and a folklore deal that grants unstoppable creative output at the price of being publicly known.

Each tale stands alone with a clean, memorable engine, but together they form a cohesive argument: visibility is not a neutral reward; it is a force that can distort, endanger, and extract. The collection’s strongest pieces keep the supernatural grounded in everyday stakes—rent, proof of ownership, grief, burnout, and the pressure to “ship” work into permanent, monetizable form. The tone balances sharp social critique with real tenderness toward the people trying to make something honest in a system that prefers something usable.

 

Bourgeois writes with directness and momentum, building stories that read like modern parables—brisk, idea-driven, and designed to land an emotional reckoning without relying on shock. Readers who enjoy speculative fiction with contemporary cultural bite, especially stories about art, labor, and courage, will find this collection both timely and haunting. The only likely stumbling point is the book’s allegorical clarity: some readers may want deeper worldbuilding connective tissue, while others will appreciate the clean, fable-like impact. - True Voice Review