My friend Christine Pope writes romances in a number of different flavors--contemporary, fantasy, paranormal, and science fiction--and I like all of them. She writes strong heroines and her supporting characters are memorable as well. I'm very fond of her fairy tale series, Tales of the Latter Kingdoms (the most recent book is her retelling of Cinderella, Ashes of Roses), but I also have a soft spot for her "Sedona Trilogy," with its UFOs and men in black.
This week Christine unveils the first book in her new series. It's a paranormal romance called Darkangel, and it's about a young witch whose search for her soulmate is complicated by clan politics and her own desire to meet the man who has been haunting her dreams. But first, she has to survive a nightmarish series of encounters with an evil that seems to be targeting her. It's great stuff and there are two particularly engaging male characters that I wouldn't mind meeting.
I was never really a romance reader--mysteries is my genre, but with Christine's books, there's always something to enjoy. That's doubly true in Darkangel where the "game of thrones" playing out among the witch clans is just getting interesting as the book ends. (Never fear, the sequel is coming soon and a teaser chapter is included.)
Showing posts with label Tales of the Latter Kingdoms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tales of the Latter Kingdoms. Show all posts
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Friday, August 2, 2013
Christine Pope: The Kattomic Energy Interview
A native of Southern California,
Christine Pope has been writing stories ever since she commandeered her
family's Smith-Corona typewriter back in the sixth grade. Her short fiction has
appeared in Astonishing Adventures, Luna Station Quarterly, and the journal of
dark fiction, Dark Valentine. Two of her short stories have been nominated for
the Pushcart Prize.
Christine Pope writes as the mood
takes her, and her work encompasses paranormal romance, fantasy, science
fiction, and historical romance. She blames this on being easily distracted by
bright, shiny objects, which could also account for the size of her shoe
collection. After spending many years in the magazine publishing industry, she
now works as a freelance editor and graphic designer in addition to writing
fiction. She fell in love with Sedona, Arizona, while researching the Sedona
Trilogy and now makes her home there, surrounded by the red rocks. No alien
sightings, though...not yet, anyway!
KT:
Your new book, Angel Fire, rounds out the paranormal/sci-fi
romance series you dubbed “The Sedona Trilogy.” Is that the last we’ll see of
those characters?
CP: I hope not. I do have another trilogy partway sketched out
in my head, but I’m sort of waiting to see how the original trilogy does now
that it’s complete before I start into anything new.
KT: Did you know when you wrote the first book in the series (Bad Vibrations) that the story would evolve
into a trilogy?
CP: Actually, I didn’t. The original idea had been kicking
around in my head for a while, and then it was on a later read-through while I
was reformatting the book for print that I realized there was this overarching
story going on behind Persephone’s and Paul’s romance that needed to be told.
That’s when I decided to expand the book into a trilogy.
KT: Your love for Sedona really comes through in the books and I
love that you set so many scenes in real places. When did you first visit
Sedona? Did you fall in love with it the moment you set eyes on the red rocks?
CP: Our first visit was at the end of March in 2011. While I
was doing research for Bad Vibrations,
I came across a lot of references to Sedona in terms of UFO activity and alien
abductions, including the theory that there’s actually an alien base built
underground somewhere in Boynton Canyon. I’d already heard that the area was
beautiful and a New Age center, so we decided to take a road trip and do some
research in person.
In a way, my experience kind of
mirrors that of Persephone in Bad
Vibrations, since we wound our way down through the canyon on 89A and it
was dark when we came into town. So it was really the next morning that I got
my first glimpse of the red rocks – and yes, it was love at first sight. I
can’t even really explain it, because I’m not that much of a “desert” person,
but this doesn’t feel like a desert to me because there’s so much that stays
green here year-‘round. In fact, it’s very green right now because of the monsoon
rains we get in northern Arizona at this time of year.
KT: What’s next for you this year?
CP: Well, the next book out will be another novel in the Gaian
Consortium series, The Gaia Gambit.
It’s finished and with beta readers as we speak, so I’m hoping it will be out
in at least ebook format by the end of August. Toward the end of September I’ll
be re-releasing the second of my books that were published by a small press and
to which I’m gradually getting back the rights. That one, Playing With Fire, is a paranormal romance novella. In October I’m planning to put out an omnibus
version of the Sedona Trilogy, and then either in later November or early
December I’ll be releasing Ashes of Roses,
a new novel in my Tales of the Latter Kingdoms series, this one based on the
Cinderella fairytale.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Binding Spell by Christine Pope--a book review
Taken from her aunt's estate by kidnappers who were actually
after a royal princess, Lark Sedassa finds herself in the hands of a nobleman
who is in no hurry to correct his mistake when he discovers his beautiful
captive is herself the daughter of a wealthy and influential family. Not only
does he not intend to return Lark to her family, the golden-eyed Kadar Arkalis
intends to make her his bride.
Binding Spell is
the latest of Christine Pope's fantasy-romance series "Tales of the Latter
Kingdoms," and she's painting with a darker palette this time out. There's
malign magic at work in Kadar's castle, and secrets that could prove deadly for
himself and his people. Lark, who practices her own magic in secret, must face
the threat this evil poses and finally accept her own powers, which she has
always kept hidden.
As always, Pope's writing is lushly sensual, hauntingly
descriptive without shading into purple prose like those fantasy novels where
there are so many adjectives readers begin to wonder if the writer was being
paid by the word. The Latter Kingdoms may be fantastic realms, but the details
of the day-to-day lives of the characters that live there have a realistic
familiarity. Gowns get dirty; food
stores have to be replenished; inconvenient mistresses need to be sent away.
The characters share that reality and are dimensional and
believable. Lark is a serious-minded young woman whose growing love for her
husband eventually extends to everyone in his domain. Indeed, one of the best
scenes in the book occurs when Lark uses his ability to sense lies to dispense
justice in Kadar's "Hall of Grievances."
Kadar is a flawed man whose flaws bring him to the brink of
terrible actions, but those flaws also make him more than the usual "alpha
male" hero. The attraction between him and Lark goes beyond chemical into
the alchemical, and their bond is stronger than any magic. (Pope makes her
readers wait for her lovers to consummate their passion but she makes the wait
worth it.)
What fantasy would be complete without an evil magician?
There's one here, and he's a great character, the kind of manipulator you would
get if you crossed Iago with Grima Wormtongue.
You'll know he's trouble the moment you see him, just as Lark does.
Fans of the Latter Kingdom series will be amused by the
references Pope makes to plot-points from earlier books, and be intrigued by
the teasing hints she offers of characters that will appear in later books.
With each "tale," this series gets richer and more developed and
while the books stand alone, readers really should treat themselves to all of
them.
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