Maren van Essen
Maren van Essen
Maren van Essen writes romance for women who have already survived something. Her fiction sits in the genre she describes as eerie-cozy: grounded in the sensory textures of ordinary life, cedar and cold coffee and wool worn soft, with something strange moving just beneath the surface. Her love stories take their time. So do her characters.
The pen name carries family history. A great-grandfather crossed from Essen to Holland in the early twentieth century, and the name van Essen passed down through the generations. Maren is a variant of her grandmother's name. The combination is not invented; it's inherited. She writes under it because the work has roots, and roots deserve to be visible.
Her debut series, The Liminal Inn, opens with What Stays — the story of Mira, a semi-retired widow who takes a quiet job managing a bed-and-breakfast on the Washington coast and slowly understands that the guests are traveling from further away than any address suggests. The series runs to five books, each title drawn from the same question: what does a person keep, and what do they finally let go?
Maren van Essen lives in the Pacific Northwest. She writes in the early morning before the light changes. She believes the best romance novels are, at their core, about the courage required to remain open — to love, to strangeness, to the possibility that the world is larger and stranger than the part you have been given to see.
What Stays is available now on Amazon KDP.
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Maren van Essen writes romance for women who have already survived something. Her fiction sits in the genre she describes as eerie-cozy: grounded in the sensory textures of ordinary life, cedar and cold coffee and wool worn soft, with something strange moving just beneath the surface. Her love stories take their time. So do her characters.
The pen name carries family history. A great-grandfather crossed from Essen to Holland in the early...
The Liminal Inn: What Stays: Book One in The Liminal Series
The Liminal Inn: What Stays Maren van Essen
Some job postings find you. This one found Mira Calloway in September, written in language she couldn’t quite explain and couldn’t ignore.
Two years after her husband’s death, fifty-four-year-old Mira takes the innkeeper position at a remote bed-and-breakfast on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula. The inn...
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