Author

Kat Goss

kat.goss@hylosis.pub

Kat Goss Website

"What are the circumstances that can change something we might previously have refused into something we can accept? That is the journey I try to create for a reader."

With a passion for exploring strange ideas and reimagining normal situations through an alternative lens, Kat Goss crafts stories that challenge perceptions and keep readers involved. Away from her screen, she enjoys unraveling the complexities of human nature and searching for the unusual in the usual.

Kat lives in Stanford, a heritage village in South Africa where she lives a quiet life with her wife and a small menagerie of animals. When she isn’t writing, she spends her time traveling and cooking. 

Previous work includes the gothic fiction Dysphoria: A Vampire’s Curse to Live.

Our Books by Kat Goss

The Client

Freelance editor Natalie Kemp's life flips upside down when her long-term client goes missing. This client provided the majority of her income, causing tensions to flare in her young marriage as they struggle to stay afloat.

Desperate for new work, Natalie opens her laptop and finds an email: "We'd like to speak with you about my missing husband." Eager to help, she innocently replies—only to find herself ensnared in a web that threatens to destroy her career, her marriage, and her entire life.

The Client is a gripping domestic psychological thriller that explores the dark side of love, the fragility of trust, and the devastating consequences of a life built on lies.

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Get to Know Kat Goss

Audio interview with The Anything Goes Podcast With Duzzy Clayton

Written interview with the-System *

"As humans, we like to believe in our own moral compass and that we know what is right and what we stand for, not realizing how easily it can be changed and manipulated. What was once the driving force to do the right thing can also be the driving force to do the wrong thing and that change can happen without notice."

“Every story, no matter how delightful or awful, is an important one. There is no purpose to writing if it does not leave the reader feeling some sort of way.”