Stephanie J Coleman

About the
Author

SJ Coleman is a veteran, a mother, and a compelling new voice in thriller fiction. She lives in the Pacific Northwest, where solitude, nature, and disciplined routine shape both her life and her work. Her stories are rooted in the lived experiences of responsibility, sustained pressure, and the weight of difficult choices. Deeply committed to justice, particularly for those who are forgotten, missing, or living in danger, Coleman brings that conviction to the page through the character of Sloane Briggs. Her writing blends action with heart, courage with compassion, and suspense with purpose, creating stories that do more than entertain; they stand guard. Coleman understands what it means to be a protector, and that mission is present in every page she writes.

A writer’s battle map

She lays down her weapons, but is the fight over?

Can a Warrior Leave the Battlefield Behind?
Sloane Briggs is a former Marine shaped by conflict, trauma, and the enduring weight of memory. After years spent confronting violence, she withdraws from the world she once navigated with precision and force, seeking refuge in the deliberate silence of a convent. Her retreat is not an act of escape, but a reckoning—a pursuit of healing, moral clarity, and a purpose no longer defined by combat, yet no less demanding.
Within the convent’s walls, Sloane is introduced to a different kind of discipline, one rooted in silence, restraint, and service. The steady rituals of daily life test her in unfamiliar ways, compelling her to confront memories long suppressed rather than weaponized or ignored. Through prayer, simplicity, and deliberate stillness, she begins the difficult work of healing, even as the past remains close, watchful, and unresolved.
The peace proves fragile. Violence breaches the convent’s sanctuary, placing innocent lives in immediate danger. Sloane comes to understand that evil does not vanish simply because one turns away from it. Faced with an impossible choice, she must decide whether to remain silent—or to protect others by drawing upon the very skills she once believed she had laid to rest.
Sloane chooses to fight again, but on different terms. Her strength no longer rises from anger or survival alone, but from compassion, faith, and deliberate purpose. In protecting the vulnerable, she redefines courage itself, discovering that true bravery is not measured solely in force, but in the resolve to stand for goodness and justice when silence would be easier.