Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Love Paranormal and Urban Fantasy? Here's something JUST FOR YOU!
For some reason, it seems to be the season of the boxed sets. This one, featuring the first books in seven paranormal and urban fantasy series is free wright now. Free. Who doesn't love free reads? Get it on Amazon here.
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
A Valentine Witch for Valentne's Day
I'm a big fan of the novelette-sized story--I've written a whole series of novelette-sized fairy tale retellings--and I've been enjoying the paranormal romance novelettes from writer Shay Roberts. This one is set in North Carolina, where I went to college, and he totally nailed the perculiar vernacular of the local barrier islands. (Ocracoke Island was always one of my favorite places, but the local accent is hard to decipher. It's said to be very close to what Elizabethan English sounded like.)
I reviewed Valentine Witch (see my review here), and hope that the writer will come back to the setting and the characters later.
I reviewed Valentine Witch (see my review here), and hope that the writer will come back to the setting and the characters later.
Labels:
paranormal romance,
Shay Roberts,
Valentine Witch
Sunday, February 7, 2016
Interview with Jolie Du Pré
Author/editor/blogger Jolie Du Pré is the creative force behind For Love of the Vampire, a boxed set of paranormal romances launching today with novellas from eight writers including herself. She stopped by Kattomic Energy to talk about vampires, books in general, and the challenges of the writing life
Welcome Jolie!
Who’s your favorite on-screen
vampire?
Damon Salvatore of the The
Vampire Diaries!
If you could be any paranormal
creature, what would you be?
I would be a vampire! They’re
strong, sexy, and they live forever!
Do you have a writing ritual? For
example: Do you have a set page/word goal of writing a day? Do you write on
your birthday? Do you ever work on two or more projects at once?
I write with a set number of words per day. Plus, I always give myself a deadline.
Do you have a favorite among the
books you’ve written?
My favorite of the Pierce
series is book 4. I love the sex scene I
created. LOL!
What are you working on now?
Actually, I’m working on books for a new pen name. They are not paranormal related.
What’s the last good book you
read? Or: What’s on your TBR pile?
Prosperity for Writers: A
Writer's Guide to Creating Abundance by Honoree Corder. She gives simple,
yet effective solutions for getting you back on the right track, mentally, for
achieving your goals as a writer.
Interview with paranormal author Olivia Leighton
FOR LOVE OF THE VAMPIRE, a boxed set of paranormal romance novellas will be published tomorrow and author Olivia Leighton, whose work is featured in the set, dropped by to talk about vampires, and books and writing. Welcome Olivia!
Who’s your favorite on-screen vampire?
Hands down Elijah from the Originals.
If you could be any paranormal
creature, what would you be?
I like a lot of characteristics of a wolf shifter, but nothing beats the
draw of being a vampire to me. They are
cat-like in a way - sexy, stalk the night, can move silently, etc.
Do you have a writing ritual? For
example: Do you have a set page/word goal of writing a day? Do you write on
your birthday? Do you ever work on two or more projects at once?
When I sit down, I try to write as much as I can in two to four hours,
then I’ll go back and edit/add to/take away from.
Since I have a full-time job and a boyfriend who works odd hours, I try
to fit my writing in around those two things.
If that means I write on my birthday, so be it. I enjoy writing anyway, so it would be a good
way to spend my birthday! And yes, I
have several projects, but it’s normally in the form of working on book
covers. (I’m also a
professional graphic designer.)
Do you have a favorite among the
books you’ve written?
Honestly, I think the Vampire and the Owl is my favorite. I like the thought of being a snowy owl
shifter, and I’m quite fond of the town of Gilmer, TX which the story is set in.
What are you working on now?
I’m working on a spin-off tale from Unbroken. This one will focus on Daniel Collins (the
vampire) and the woman seeking revenge on him from changing her back in the
70s.
What’s the last
good book you read? Or: What’s on your TBR
pile?
- The last good book… It would have to be Champion by Mary Lou.
Funny thing… I read mainly YA dystopian tales even though I write PNR. I have a shelf full of books, one side
contains books I read and the other books I need to read. The read stack features books like Champion
and Angel Fall. The TBR stack includes
Young World and Hemlock.
The usual vampire in PNR seems to
be a pale white straight male (whether sparkly or not) and a lot of readers
seem to like it that way. Do you venture outside the paranormal norm with your
characters?
I don’t like to make
my paranorms stray too far from their cookie-cutters, but I do like to put my
own twist on things. For example, my
vampires can be killed with steaks, but they need to be steaks crafted from
petrified wood. UV rays can still burn
them, but if they have a special tattoo, it protects them and they can be out
during the day.
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
Interview with Christine Pope
Best-selling author Christine Pope has new book out in her paranormal romance series "The Sedona Files." I thought this would be a good time to ask her a few questions.
Falling Angels
is the next-to-last book (oh no!) in your “Sedona Files” series. When you wrote
the first, Bad Vibrations, did you know you were going to chronicle the
second generation of your characters?
Frankly, I didn’t even know it was going to be a series. Back
then, I really didn’t know what I was doing, and thought writing standalone
books was the way to go (hint: it isn’t, at least in the vast majority of
cases). But then I began to think how about how I could expand that one book
into a series, and started working out the bigger-picture arc of the alien
conspiracy/invasion that’s always going on in the background (and sometimes the
foreground) of the books. As for the second generation, after I was done
writing Angel Fire, I realized I really wanted to tell Grace’s story
once she was an adult, and it sort of fell into place that I’d create a second
trilogy that takes place approximately twenty-five years after the end of Angel
Fire. So that’s why I wrote books for the daughters of the heroines of the
first trilogy: Grace (Kara from Desert Hearts’ daughter), Callista
(Kirsten from Falling Angels’ daughter), and Taryn, the daughter of
Persephone from Bad Vibrations.
Check out the trailer for The Sedona Files:
Check out the trailer for The Sedona Files:
You’ve got several established series out
there—the Witches of Cleopatra Hill, the Latter Kingdom books, the Gaian
Consortium stories—but it seems like you’re always coming up with something new
for your readers. What’s next?
The Gaian series has been ended (although there’s a prequel
short story coming out in an anthology in February 2016), and I’ll be wrapping
up the Sedona Files and the Latter Kingdoms books this year as well. I do plan
to write more Witches of Cleopatra Hill books, and more books in my Djinn Wars
series. There are also plans in the works for a post-apocalyptic zombie trilogy
to launch in late 2016. That one will still be romance, just darker and
grittier than some of my other books (and no, the romance is NOT with the
zombies). After that…I’ll have to see. I have concepts for several new
paranormal romance series (and possibly another science fiction romance
series), but none of those would launch until 2017 sometime.
In your PNR, you’ve had witches, ghosts,
demons, and now zombies. Have you ever been tempted to write a vampire or
werewolf story?
Well…in a word, no. I know they’re popular, but I like writing
about paranormal characters that haven’t been used as much. That said, the
newest Latter Kingdoms book (which I’m writing at the moment) does
actually include a version of one of those paranormal characters, but I don’t
want to say much more about it than that.
Monday, January 25, 2016
A Vampire a Day: Of Saints and Shadows By Christopher Golden
I'm a fan of Christopher Golden's. I've mentioned that I'm an admirer of the illustrated novel Baltimore, which he wrote, and his Joe Golem: Occult Detective series is wildly entertaining and I love the world it's set in--a mostly drowned New York where the poor people live in the watery areas and the rich live uptown. I didn't know that there are actually multiple volumes of Baltimore, so hooray for that. (Here is a list of his books, if like me, you don'thow many books he has for you to discover and enjoy.)
I love that Golden writes in multiple genres, and for teens as well as adults. I love that he writes video games and comic books as well as novels. (Is he the ultimate geek or what? I'd love to run across him at #SDCC some time.) He's also very open to fans approaching him on his Facebook page and from his posts, he seems like a really decent guy.
I found Of Saints and Shadows in a used bookstore, captured by the cover, which uses familiar vampire tropes (crosses, daggers that look like fangs, red backdrops) in a way that seemed elegant and decadent and interesting.
I didn't know at the time that it was the first in a series--I'm not sure it WAS meant to be the first in the serie (it was published nearly 20 years ago), but it was urban fantasy of the first order. I LOVED his protagonist, Peter Octavian.
This novel has pretty much everything I crave. Golden has created a really rich world and mythos for his vampires (who lust after the "blood song") and the backdrop of the Venice carnival is particularly gorgeous. (Why should all the vampire stories be set in Paris?)
You will REALLY like this one and there are half a dozen sequels in the series to enjoy after this one.
I love that Golden writes in multiple genres, and for teens as well as adults. I love that he writes video games and comic books as well as novels. (Is he the ultimate geek or what? I'd love to run across him at #SDCC some time.) He's also very open to fans approaching him on his Facebook page and from his posts, he seems like a really decent guy.
I found Of Saints and Shadows in a used bookstore, captured by the cover, which uses familiar vampire tropes (crosses, daggers that look like fangs, red backdrops) in a way that seemed elegant and decadent and interesting.
I didn't know at the time that it was the first in a series--I'm not sure it WAS meant to be the first in the serie (it was published nearly 20 years ago), but it was urban fantasy of the first order. I LOVED his protagonist, Peter Octavian.
This novel has pretty much everything I crave. Golden has created a really rich world and mythos for his vampires (who lust after the "blood song") and the backdrop of the Venice carnival is particularly gorgeous. (Why should all the vampire stories be set in Paris?)
You will REALLY like this one and there are half a dozen sequels in the series to enjoy after this one.
Saturday, January 23, 2016
A Vampire a Day: Jim Carrey in OONCE BITTEN
this 1985 movie is a take on the Countess Bathory legend about a countess who bathed in the blood of virgins. In this iteration, Lauren Hutton's vampire Countess must drink the blood of a virgin to maintain her eternal beauty. But this is the 80s and virgins aren't that easy to find. Until...Mark Kendall (Jim Carrey) comes along.
the movie was made five years before Jim Carrey broke out in In Living Color and nine yearss before he starred in the trifecta of films that turned him into a superstar--Mask, Ace Ventura, and Dumb and Dumber. Once Bitten was released to 1095 theaters nationwide--it didn't even get a release in Carrey's native Canada--and grossed just a little bit more than $10 million. Even twenty years ago, that was a pretty poor performance.Janet Maslin, legendary critic for the New York Times gave it a thumbs up ("Call me crazy, but I liked it") but she was pretty much the only one. It's really a TERRIBLE movie, although i have friends who like to wallow in 80s kitsch and claim that it's actually a perfect time capsule of L.A. in mid-decade. Which may be true, but I don't have a lot of nostalgia for either the time period or the city.
the movie was made five years before Jim Carrey broke out in In Living Color and nine yearss before he starred in the trifecta of films that turned him into a superstar--Mask, Ace Ventura, and Dumb and Dumber. Once Bitten was released to 1095 theaters nationwide--it didn't even get a release in Carrey's native Canada--and grossed just a little bit more than $10 million. Even twenty years ago, that was a pretty poor performance.Janet Maslin, legendary critic for the New York Times gave it a thumbs up ("Call me crazy, but I liked it") but she was pretty much the only one. It's really a TERRIBLE movie, although i have friends who like to wallow in 80s kitsch and claim that it's actually a perfect time capsule of L.A. in mid-decade. Which may be true, but I don't have a lot of nostalgia for either the time period or the city.
Labels:
Janet Maslin,
Jim Carrey,
Lauren Hutton,
Once Bitten,
Vampire movie
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