
New Hampshire authors Killarney Traynor and Ceara Comeau are taking their mutual creativity to a new level – and a new medium.
Their new production company, Book Sisters Productions, is dedicated to translating the work of local authors (including their own) to the “big screen,” and are hard at work with some projects to get the company rolling. I recently sat down with them to gain more insight into this blooming dynamic of working together.ย
Just from the interview alone, I felt these two had known each other for a lifetime, even though it’s only been a few years.ย And I also found their company name fitting, as they did appear to me to be just like sisters.ย Traynor, (aka “KJ” below) originally of Chester, just finished filming her first series called the โSadie McAllister Filesโ which is now in post-production with Claremont native Comeau (“CC” below) playing the lead, as Sadie.ย
This is their first project together and is due to be released in the fall for viewing on YouTube.ย
Author’s Note: I’m involved in this production as an actor playing the role of Carol Greene.
V: KJ, I have worked with you in the past.ย Some people might be familiar with you already as co-host of โThe Early Late Night Live Showโ with your brother Terry Traynor and Mitch Fortier out of Exeter or have worked with you when you were part of Narrow Street Films.ย How did you and Terry become so bonded in film over your other siblings?
KJ: Well, my whole family, since we were homeschooled would do plays and all the kids would play all the roles.ย When I was younger, we had a camcorder so me my brother Al, Augi, and Terry would create shows together and edit them.ย They were horrible, but at the time thought they were amazing. Terry got obsessed with Jackie Chan films and wanted to do his own films, but since I was older I felt too cool to do it then.ย At one point he just needed a girl, and I was like OK, Iโll be in your film and thatโs when I got hooked.ย The next thing you know, I am talking my way into his moviesโฆwe just ended up working together all the time.
V: How does it feel now to work without your family?
KJ:ย I feel like everybody contributes a little bit.ย Even this project, I ran it by my sister Cali and she gave me some insight as to why the character has been acting this way.ย My mom helped me write the last scene because I was kind of lostโฆI feel like we are all โhamsโ and we express it differently.ย
V: How did you and Ceara meet?
CC: We met at a book expo of some kind in Portsmouth.ย We were not table buddies, but table buddy adjacent; it was not the largest one Iโve been to (expo), but the largest one at that point and I felt very โlittle fish big pondโ syndrome.ย I sat next to KJ and Stephen Lomer, a mutual friend of ours, and within seconds, Iโm pretty sure Stephen melted all the ice; melted everything and just made us all start laughing.ย Even though we sold books that day, I feel like we just had this bond that just started right there.ย It was through her (KJ) and that day that I heard about what Terry did and I was like โOh this is so cool!โ I now know somebody who does TV!ย Thatโs awesome!ย Thatโs kind of how it started I guess, from there.ย The rest is historyโฆ
V:ย What year was that?
CC: 2018? 2019?
KJ: Stephen was being active and running around the room and we were more reserved sitting with our books and chatting.ย Teresa Boudreault (Stephenโs wife) was there and started having a conversation about which actors we thought were the hottest and could act in our books and I think thatโs how we bonded.โ

V:ย Did you ever read each otherโs books?
CC: I read two of hers, one of them Iโm trying to convince her to turn into a film because itโs absolutely wonderful, and it makes me very happy.
KJ: Oh, which one?ย They both have haunted houses in it.
CC: The Christmas one.ย The one you and Peggy wrote.ย I have never forgotten it.ย Oh my God that would be the most amazing film if we could do it.
V:ย What is the name of the book?
KJ: โThe Tale Half Told.โย I have a new cover that is coming out for it and itโs turning into an audiobook.ย I wrote it with my sister Margaret.ย We just watched a scary movie about a haunted house, and she turned to me and said, โWouldnโt it be scary if you were snowed into a haunted house so you couldnโt leave?โ and thatโs where that book came from.ย I wrote it as a book and I didnโt think of it as a movie, but of course, it does lend itself to being a movie.ย I think it would be a lot of fun to do since itโs set in 1971, so you would have the cool ’70s fashion.ย The ghosts are from the 1940s, so you would have the cool 1940s fashion.
CC: We need to make that on our list somewhere down the road.ย We have to.
V:ย KJ which book of Cearaโs stood out to you?
KJ: โA Scientistโs Remorse.โย It was a great dream line of sorrowful regret that I really loved, and I know that sounds really weird.ย I really resonated with this book, and I can hear what the soundtrack would be and I know what the ships look like.ย I dig this, I get this.
CC: It was the after-book.ย In the back of my head and when I first wrote it, it was one of those ‘why did I write this? ‘ Iโve seen so many people compliment it and Iโm like ‘thatโs why I wrote it.’

V: How would you compare or contrast your writing styles?
CC: I feel that we complement each other, to be honest with you.ย I write primarily science fiction/fantasy; thatโs my niche, thatโs what I do.ย KJ seems to write a little bit of everything.ย I remember โSummer Shadows;โ that was a mystery.ย Kind of on the somber side and I never forgot that story.ย What is nice is that we are not actually competing against each other, we do complement each other, itโs hard to explain how that is.
KJ: I feel Ceara does more myths and I tend to lean more towards the supernatural.ย I watched too much Scooby Doo as a kid.
V:ย KJ, I actually thought you leaned toward history in your writings.
KJ: I actually do love it [history].ย The three supernatural books that Iโve written are all set in the 1980s, 1930s, 1970s, and a western.ย I love reading history and it gives me so many ideas.ย The supernatural and historical fiction is where I like to stay.
V: Ceara is filmmaking new to you?
CC: Itโs a yes and a no because I did a short film with my cousin who is a filmmaker years ago, who is off doing different things now.ย I stayed with her for about a week and it was an educational show addressing problems she saw in her school and she was doing it through film. I was playing the lead role and that is all that I was doing, but I still saw a lot of the behind-the-scenes, like the set-up, the lights, watched her edit and that was when I was about 15.ย I didnโt know at all what she was doing, I just knew it was a lot of work.ย About two years prior, I had written a short story that she turned into a screenplay.ย It was a paranormal story and honestly looking back, it absolutely made no sense, but she still loved it.ย It premiered at her local theater.ย That was my only experience; I was also part of the casting committee for that.ย That was my first taste of filmmaking and Iโm like, โI think I kind of like this.โย My cousin and I went on different paths, but I knew I still wanted to film.ย Obviously, I was going to keep writing because that will always be my passion, but I knew I wanted to get into film and inevitably where this path was going to lead me.
V: KJ what are your thoughts on directing?
KJ:ย Iโve done it before, but itโs the first time Iโve done an entire production without my brothers.ย This is my first time doing post-production work and not getting someone else to do it.ย Itโs been a lot different, but itโs a ton of work.
V: Did you feel any sense of overwhelm while directing the โSadie McAllister Files?โ
KJ: At this point, what I really thought was this is the next step.ย I have to be able to do this part of it otherwise I really wonโt be able to participate as much as I want to.ย Yes, I was overwhelmed, but I had to kind of get over the overwhelmed.ย If I donโt, then I canโt do what I want to do next and there is a lot I want to do next.
V: Whatโs next?
KJ: A bunch of projects I have in mind a western, a gangster movie, a project revolved around Joan of Arc.
V: Will this be a book-to-screenplay adaptation or just screenplay?
KJ: In the case of Joan of Arc, I would probably write a screenplay because the best book was already written on it.
V: Ceara, I know you wanted to convert some of your writings to film. You wrote the โAmber Oak Mysteriesโ when you were 12 and it’s considered your โbabyโ project.ย Can you tell me about your series?

CC: I started when I was 12, but the series is kind of wonky, because when youโre 12 years old, you donโt actually think ahead, at least I didnโt.ย I thought to myself letโs just start writing โAmber Oakโ because I was getting bullied and didnโt have any outlets so she (Amber) was my alter ego and I felt like I could escape through her.ย Then I started writing little short stories about Amber, but they eventually turned into a longer series that I wasnโt expecting to write, and then the series went off a cliff somewhere and fell to the bottom of the ocean.ย I scratched it and I rewrote it, and thatโs where โMemories of Chronosalisโ came from, and thatโs where all the science fiction/fantasy comes in.ย The book after “Memoriesโ is “The Scientistโs Remorseโ which kind of goes 2000 years before everything that happens in โMemories of Chronosalis.โย It is an important book if you want all the details of the characters from โMemories.โย I realized when I looked at all those books together, I looked at from the perspective of the film series, and I said let me combine all four of these books, because I knew I could.ย I said to myself, letโs do that and see what we can come up with.ย ย
V: When did you both decide to have your own production company?
KJ: It was during another book fair.ย We ended up going to another book fair and this time we were sharing a table.ย It was during the COVID pandemic, I had projects that I had been working on falling through or ended for one reason or another and I was discussing my frustration when Ceara brought up making โAmberโ a series and one of us mentioned maybe we should work together on it.ย When we were not selling books, we were talking about how we would do that, and it just ended up being fun to talk about it with someone else.ย It will make things really overwhelming by yourself, but when you have someone to bounce ideas off of, itโs much easier.
CC: I said letโs just do it.ย Donโt question it, letโs just start doing something.ย Everything kind of fell into place to be honest.
KJ: She pitched โAmberโ to me, and it has everything that I really like.ย Itโs got a little bit of Sci-Fi, itโs got the kind of Nancy Drew feel, and it’s got the main character who is kind of doing quirky things.ย It made perfect sense and instantly I could see it.
V: What part was intimidating, uncomfortable, or challenging while filming the โSadie McCallister Files?โ
CC: This whole entire process.ย The process itself for me, I wouldnโt call it uncomfortable for obvious reasons because this is great, but it has thrown me out of my comfort zone.ย The reason is because, with the exception of working with my cousin, Iโve never really worked with somebody on a project unless it was a school or group project.ย Nine times out of ten, those projects didnโt work out very well.ย Iโm a borderline control freak; I have horrible OCD even in my daily life, but itโs getting me out of my comfort zone gradually.
V: When it comes to the actors, would you allow them to improv, or would you require them to follow the script?
CC: It depends on the situation, at least for โAmber,โ especially if the line is really important.ย I would love people to get into their character because it tells me I wrote it right.
V: Ceara, when it comes to the Amber Oak series how much involvement do you want to have in directing it?
CC:ย I will leave the camera work to KJ just because Iโm afraid Iโll break something.ย I think I would like to try my hand at directing.
V: KJ, did you miss being in front of the camera while filming the โSadie Series?โ
KJ: I love acting, but I never write scripts for myself.ย Iโll always write a script and then think, oh I should have put in a character I could play, but I always forget to.ย Whenever Iโm helping out in other peopleโs films, I always want to get in front of the camera, but when I write it, I have the vision in my head.ย I want to be behind the camera.ย When it comes to film, Iโm not a control freak, but when it comes to my books, I am.ย When it comes to filmmaking, what I actually like is the collaboration of art.ย The reason I do filmmaking is that I love to write, but writing is very introspective.ย Itโs a very lone ranger type of deal which I love but Iโm also the type where I need people around me.ย Iโll deliberately write scripts just so I can have people come hang out with me.
V: Was there any stress when it came to casting or getting people to work behind-the-scenes for โSadie?โ
KJ: I thought no one was going to show up, like no one was going to want to do it, like oh this is stupid.ย Plus, I always think everyone is going to get sick the night before.ย Usually, the night before filming Iโm a basket case.

V: What is the future vision of Book Sisters Productions?
KJ: Right now, Iโm still new to it, Iโm like letโs do another season of โSadieโ and letโs get โAmberโ done and if we can get those two things, I win.
CC: For me, Iโm same boat, but also in my brain, I take it a step furtherโฆIโm thinking red carpet.ย Thatโs something I always had a thing with.ย Even though realistically I know we canโt go from 0 to 90 right now, but itโs something still in the back of my mind, of what if?ย Me, I would love to monetize โAmber.โย We have a lot of steps to do before that happens.ย Thatโs part of the reason why we are doing โSadie,โ so we can familiarize ourselves with what we can do better.ย Iโm looking at โAmberโ as something of a long haul.ย I honestly think we can be like โStranger Thingsโ with the Duffer Brothers; I think we could get there.
V: Hypothetically, if you were given a contract to sell the rights to your scripts for a price would you do it?
CC: No, I grew up with โAmberโ she is essentially part of my soul.ย Even though those stories are done and long gone and in the past as it were, she is literally a part of me.ย I know how Hollywood works and how big-ticket film people work because they often work a lot like traditional publishers.ย Once they get that in their hands, it goes completely different than what you were expecting.ย That concept terrifies me.ย What if they add something that has nothing relative to what โAmberโ represents?ย Even if nobody liked it, I want to be true to โAmber.โย I want to be true to my little self.ย I want to be able to theoretically look back in time and say to my twelve-year-old selfโฆwe did it and we did the right way.
KJ: โSadieโ is a different thing for me because the story came together so fast, and I have never written anything that quickly.ย There was of course a lot of changes after the first drafts, but the story came together like that! [snaps fingers]ย Even though it was essentially written as an experiment to see how we would work together and what we need to do, I wouldnโt want certain points to be corrected or changed.ย I donโt want lines of the script to be taken out of context of the true meaning.ย I would sit down with them first and talk about what they would do and maybe we can come to some sort of agreement, because itโs my name thatโs going to be attached to it.
V: Who is the target audience for your films?
CC: I know for โAmber,โ my kind of audience (thinking)โฆ Harry Potter, thatโs the kind of genre and age range Iโm going with.ย Youโre going to have kids who are super intelligent, they are ten years old and theyโre going to know every concept of Stephen King, but youโre also going to have people in their 70s who really like it.ย I want to target everybody, but the main focus for me, will be people who are young adults and Iโm looking to create the next Marvel meets Harry Potter.ย I want to be the next Marvel.
V: KJ, do you think you will be directing more than writing?
KJ: Iโm a writer first, so I donโt see me giving that up, but I really like directing.ย I love trying to figure out the best angle to tell the story.ย I was telling Ceara, that for every shot that I liked, that I really really loved in Sadie, there were three more shots I should have gotten.ย It came out great, but it was more like what if I had gotten this angle?ย I would have highlighted this motion rather than it being square.ย To me directing is kind of like rewriting.ย Youโve already written the story, now what is the best way to edit to tell the story and thatโs why I love directing.
V: Do you have projects lined up after โSadieโ and โAmber?โ
CC:ย Right now, that is the main focus.ย Iโm hoping we become more bonded through these experiences, and we do more things.ย I think it would be fun to collaborate with other writers out there and to do films with them, but for now all that KJ and I can absorb is just what we have which is โAmberโ and โSadie.โ
V: Do you both have any doubts right now?
KJ: Oh always.
CC: Sometimes.
V: Do you feel any pressure or added stress when there is public opinion involved or buzz about what youโre doing?
KJ: I really love it, so sometimes I have to turn off the outside voices.ย I canโt focus if Iโm worried about what other people are thinking.ย At some level I have to not care otherwise I wonโt be able to do it.
CC: That, to me, drives me.ย Iโm a marketing person, so if people are catching wind, Iโm thinking to myself, oh I did my job right.
KJ: For me, Iโm the worldโs worst marketer because I will write an entire book before I tell people that Iโm writing a book and apparently, thatโs the wrong thing to do.ย If I tell everybody, then I have to deal with their expectations, so I stop.
V:ย Any advice for future writers or filmmakers?
KJ: Do it for love. Everything else will come later but do it because you love it and enjoy it.ย Donโt forget to enjoy it.
CC: I concur.
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