A year ago this month, I began a blog called Vree Erickson. It was about a recurring main character from my years as an author of Fantasy/Sci-Fi stories. That blog preceded this one by three months. It was short-lived in favor of blogging about more than Vree and my writing endeavors.
In the first post at Vree Erickson.com, I discussed the joy of writing—and one of my favorite fictional characters. Here is that post.

I began writing short stories about fourteen-year-old Vree Erickson in the early 1970s when I was her age. In those days, I typed my tales on a portable Remington typewriter and shared them with my closest friends. All my stories were mixtures of fantasy, mystery, and a touch of horror.
Verawenda is Vree’s proper first name. “Vree” is a nickname of VRE, which are the initials of her full name: Verawenda Renee Erickson. She was named after her paternal great-great-grandmother, Verawenda (Kaufman) Russell. Verawenda is a combination of the names Vera and Wenda, which were common English names in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Vree became a female friend of a teen character named David Evans. I named him after the child character David Collins in the TV series Dark Shadows. Evans is a surname from the show, particularly the character Maggie Evans who began the series as a waitress at the Collinsport Inn coffee shop. She always played with her hair when she was nervous—a trait I gave to Vree.
Vree began as an only child and lived with her parents in the countryside of a small town, Ravenwood, in Pennsylvania. Her home was atop Myers Ridge where many supernatural events happened. Dave was her neighbor; his twin sister Amy was her best friend. Dave’s best friend was Lenny Stevens who lived in town and had to ride his speedy Schwinn bike to visit. Friendship was a common theme in those stories. So were dealing with ghosts and the supernatural—good and bad.
I stopped writing about Vree and her friends after high school and pursued careers in art, teaching art, and photography. Then, twenty years after graduating high school, I found my school notebooks and the stories inside them.
I reworked several stories and published them online as Steven Campbell. Some of them became e-books and paperbacks, and I had a small run of success with them during the 1990s. Later, I renamed Ravenwood to Ridgewood and republished my favorite stories via Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords as Steven L. Campbell from 2013 to 2016. It was during this time that I created Vree’s only novel, originally titled Night of the Hellhounds, the Novel. I soon changed it to Margga’s Curse and offered it exclusively to my Smashwords customers for free. It’s still there (for now) and still free to download.
I made big changes to Vree in that novel, creating a brand-new life and family for her, which confused many readers of my earlier books. In the story, Dave and Amy are her triplet siblings, and they live in a Pittsburgh suburb. During a thunderstorm, lightning strikes Vree, their father, and their home, killing him and burning down the house. The family moves in temporarily with the kids’ maternal grandparents who live upstate. There, Vree discovers she has developed psychic abilities triggered from the lightning strike and can see and talk to her dad’s spirit who followed his family during their move. She can also see and communicate with beings from another solar system who are marooned on our planet. Unfortunately, her psychic ability to see them compromises their life-support equipment and causes two of them to die. She becomes their public enemy number one, topping the spot held previously by the spirit of a local witch named Margga who subjugates them with witchcraft to do her bidding. What’s more, Margga has cursed a neighbor’s family for crimes committed against her when she was alive, and she manages to kill a member every so often. She also recognizes Vree’s psychic energy as a means to escape death, but to get it means killing Vree.
I had a lot of fun writing that e-novel, though some scenes were crowded when Vree was with her siblings, mother, and grandparents. If you would like to read Margga’s Curse before I remove it from publication someday in favor of a rewrite, click on its book cover photo below, which will take you to its Smashwords page. The book is free and comes in various reading formats. You may also get my e-book “Night of the Hell Hounds” at Amazon. It’s 99 cents, but members of Kindle Unlimited can get it for free.


If you end up reading “Night of the Hell Hounds,” forget about everything and everyone in Margga’s Curse. The short story is a return to single-child Vree. Her parents—Mike and Kerri Erickson—are professors at New Cambridge University in nearby New Cambridge, which is a city north of Ridgewood. Mike teaches earth science and archeology, and Kerri teaches geology. They, along with Vree, live in New Cambridge, but their professions have taken them to an important archeology dig for the university. Because school is in session and Vree is fifteen, she ends up living with Mike’s parents, Dave and Amy Erickson, on Myers Ridge in Ridgewood. In the book, lightning strikes Vree and—déjà vu—she develops psychic powers. (Sometimes the baby doesn’t get thrown out with the bathwater.)
Thank you for joining me for this introduction of my new website. I plan to add more info about Vree, her past, her future, and things that make her a “real” fictional character, as well as my plans for upcoming books and dates of publication, and so much more. So, I hope you’ll join me … or should I say us?
Until then, good reading and good life to you.
—Steve, 5/8/2022
Update:
If the links in the two book photos above do not open to their respective locations when you click on them, here are the links for both books:
Margga’s Curse: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/627639, and
“A Night of Hellhounds”: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AY2K1H6
—Steve, 5/9/2022
This post “Re-Introducing Vree” copyright © 2022/2023 Steven Leo Campbell at stevecampbellcreations.com – All rights reserved.
I love novels for teens! I can imagine you scribbling ideas in notebooks as a kid and think that’s wonderful. I will happily check out your writing endeavors.
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Thank you, Susan. I was one of many bookworms of the 1960s and 70s growing up, and always wrote and drew from my overactive imagination when I wasn’t outdoors exploring nature and the countryside. I’ll always be a kid at heart.
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I can identify with that completely. 😉
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