Showing posts with label Adult fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adult fantasy. Show all posts

Monday, February 16, 2015

BLOG TOUR w/ GIVEAWAY: The Healer by Gregg Luke


ABOUT THE BOOK

After successfully completing his first-year professorship, Welsh folklore expert Chris Pendragon has earned a vacation. At least that's what the young scholar tells himself—but deep down he feels an urgency to reassess his life, to find a sense of purpose. Hoping that perhaps a trip to Wales will provide the answers he seeks, Chris embarks on a journey of self-discovery. But he could never have anticipated the unimaginable adventure that awaits him ...

Shortly after his arrival in Wales, Chris is witness to a horrific accident with more far-reaching consequences than he could have dreamed. Following Chris's heroic rescue of one of the victims, an unexplainable phenomenon is revealed: bones that had been broken were made whole with Chris's touch. Still reeling form this discovery, Chris is approached by a wizened old man with an implausible answer: Chris has been chosen to be the bearer of the Dial, a healer of unparalleled power. But the calling is fraught with peril, and Chris soon discovers there are those who will stop at nothing to seize the power of the Dial. With the help of a beautiful, if skeptical, doctor, Chris must choose: go back to the life he was leading or embark on a thrilling new destiny.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

GREGG LUKE was born in Bakersfield, California, but spent the majority of his childhood and young adult life in Santa Barbara, California. He served an LDS mission to Wisconsin then pursued his education in biological sciences at SBCC, UCSBB, BYU, and subsequently graduated from the University of Utah College of Pharmacy. His biggest loves are family reading, writing, music, science, and nature.

REVIEW

This is the first book I've read by Gregg Luke and it won't be the last.  I was pulled into the story immediately, intrigued with the whole premise.  Many people have struggled with the whole what should I do with my life dilemma, but not quite in the same way that Christian Pendragon does.  On a vacation in Wales, Christian faces just such a dilemma.  After stopping to help a couple of accident victims, Christian discovers that he has a powerful gift.  But when he meets an old gentleman who attempts to help him come to terms with this unbelievable gift, he finds the whole situation almost too much to believe.  I loved the way the author integrated the real with the fantastical creating a fascinating story of faith, compassion, and courage.  

Christian made for a great character, one I found myself rooting for whole-heartedly.  His inner struggles with finding his path in life and then having to make difficult decisions that effected not only his own life but those around him was a journey that I enjoyed following him on.  I loved reading about Christian's trip to Wales a place that doesn't show up in literature a whole lot.  The descriptions of the people and places made me want to hop into the book and visit there as well, even if I didn't have a clue about how to pronounce the names.  A thoroughly enjoyable book that I can highly recommend.  I willl definitely be seeking out more of Luke's books.

GIVEAWAY

a Rafflecopter giveaway

TOUR SCHEDULE

Feb. 20th: 



Tuesday, January 20, 2015

GHOST MOON NIGHT by Jewel Allen

Source: ebooks for review (http://www.ebooksforreview.com/)
All opinions expressed are solely my own.

ABOUT THE BOOK

A Secret to Save Them All . . .

It was whispered years ago that when a pirate cursed a Philippine village with langbuan, or flying undead, a boy received a secret that would protect him from certain death. But even armed with a secret, can anyone survive the undead for long?

Seventeen-year-old Antonio Pulido has never known a time when the langbuan didn’t roam the streets every Ghost Moon Night, killing anyone in their path. He works hard to protect his family and the girl he loves from the deadly attacks, but he wants them stopped once and for all. Can Antonio uncover the decades-old secret and will it help him defeat the langbuan? Or will Ghost Moon Night come again and take someone he truly cares about? It falls on Antonio to save his village, but time is running out. The next Ghost Moon Night is nearly here and Antonio knows this is his last chance to destroy the undead and end their reign of terror -- or die trying.

REVIEW

Wow! I'm not sure what I was expecting when I picked this up, but this wasn't it.  I can safely say that this is different than anything I've ever read before.  I loved the setting, a small village in the Philippines.  I always find it interesting to read about places I've never been.  Antonio is an interesting character in that it is clear from the beginning that he is a complex character.  He makes some good decisions along the way, but he also makes some bad ones that have unpleasant consequences.  There were several different plot lines here that all blend together, like real life, as the choices of Antonio, his family and friends as well as enemies all come together to create a fascinating story with plenty of twists and turns.  I figured that Antonio would play a role in trying to break the curse, but it came about in a way that I really did not expect.

Interestingly, the book did not read like a zombie story, in fact I didn't really think about the langbuan being zombies until the end while reading the author's note.  Except for the parts where Antonio fights with the langbuan, most of the story felt pretty realistic.  The author did a great job saving up details for the big reveal at the end.  I had suspicions about some of the events of the story, but I was still very surprised at the end.  I thought that I'd already passed the climax when boom, something is revealed that changed everything.  It was a great move on the part of the author.  It's always fun when an author still manages to surprise you after you think you've figured everything out.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, even though it's quite different than anything I've read before. A culturally interesting read with some intense fantasy elements that add a nice spark to the story. Recommended.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

BLOG TOUR: A Fantasy Christmas By Stephanie Fowers, Cindy C. Bennett, & Sherry Gammon



What do Witches, Elves, and Greek Gods (Oh My) have in common? They are part of the romantic Christmas anthology, A Fantasy Christmas, written by Cindy C Bennett, Stephanie Fowers, and Sherry Gammon








Banished from the South Pole, Kara tries to carve out a new life among the elves of the North. It’s not easy with a secret to protect—a secret she's cursed with by the unusual circumstances of her heritage: half-elf, half-fairy. In the North, she’s assigned to work with Seb on a special project. He's the most gorgeous elf she’s ever seen - and the orneriest. 

As if being banished wasn’t punishment enough. 

Seb introduces her to Trystin, a fairy from the nearby fairy forest. Trystin discerns her secret right away and promises to teach her how to use the powers given to her by the very thing she’s fighting to keep hidden.

Check out Cindy C Bennett's web page for more information on her.


Nothing is simple for Aphrodite’s daughter, especially love. 
Scorned by society in regency England, Affry longs for romance. Upon encountering a dashing nobleman at her aunty's Christmas' ball, Affry gets caught in a lovely intrigue with disastrous results. Worse, she wins the interest of the gods. 

Now the furies of the underworld and Hades himself are after her. When all is fair in war,  Affry must use love as her weapon—but only for the one who’s stolen her heart. 


Check out Stephanie Fowers' web page for more information on her.



Loving Marigold by Sherry Gammon

Author of Unlovable, Unbelievable, Not So Easy and more)


Young Marigold Yarrow has a secret. She’s also in love with Jack Mahoney. In the middle of her ninth grade year, Jack's family up and moves to Port Fare, New York, leaving the small town of Sugar Maple, West Virginia - and Marigold - far behind.

Nine years later Jack and Marigold meet again. They join forces to weed out the shady Abbott boys. The unscrupulous brothers are illegally selling moonshine near her home on Sugar Maple Ridge. And they'll do anything to get Marigold to leave the ridge. Anything. This time it may be magic that tears Jack and Marigold apart.


REVIEW

A delightful collection of clean, fantasy-related romance, A Fantasy Christmas provided a great deal of enjoyment for me.  Not only are the stories well-written, but the characters are unique and made me smile. With plenty of magic and mayhem, the authors sent me on a fun journey through love and adventure.  A series of stories that I can highly recommend.  I only wish they had been a little longer so I could have stayed with the characters just a bit more.

Purchase A Fantasy Christmas-Click on links:

Amazon
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Smashwords

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Friday, June 7, 2013

BLOG TOUR and GIVEAWAY: A Way Back to You by Emily Gray Clawson

a way back to you tour  

a way backA Way Back to You

What would you do if you were given a second chance? Annabelle, whom nearly everyone calls Anne, has been stuck in the past for two years. Numbed by grief over her husband's unexpected death and overwhelmed with the responsibility of raising their three young children alone, Anne agrees to let a friend take the kids for the weekend while she tries to get some much-needed rest at her parent's home. But when Anne wakes up the next morning, she is suddenly sixteen again. And it just happens to be the worst day she spent as a teenager. High school the second time around brings unforeseen changes and frustrations, but remembering that her future husband, Mitch, has just returned from a mission and is living on the other side of town gives Anne hope. Getting Mitch's attention (for the second time) is more complicated than she could have imagined, but Anne discovers she is stronger than she believed possible—and there just might be a future for her after all.

emilyAuthor Emily Gray Clawson

Emily Gray Clawson describes herself as an author, mother, and youth mentor. Born and raised in Utah, she is passionate about her faith and great books and will share her love of both with anyone who will listen. Emily began writing at the age of seven, creating homemade picture books that she peddled from door to door. She self-published her first novel, Things Hope For, and is collaborating with Jennifer Graves on a book entitled A Sister’s Witness: The Powell Family Tragedy. With her husband, Richard, Emily founded two youth leadership programs, Handmaidens of Virtue and Mastering Knighthood. Trained in vocal performance in college, she has enjoyed including aspects of her training in this book. Emily and Richard are the parents of four children and live in Taylorsville, Utah.


REVIEW

Clawson presents readers with a tender story of second chances and learning to find hope even in the face of debilitating grief.  Anne has lost her beloved husband and is struggling to raise three children on her own.  After collapsing one day she finds herself reliving high school. But things seem harder than the first time around, can she win over her husband again? And what about Sam? Beautifully written and sympathetically told, A Way Back to You is both a sweet romance and a story of growth through adversity. I can highly recommend this one to readers who enjoy a bit of fantasy with their romance.

BLOG TOUR GIVEAWAY

$25 Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash
Ends 6/25/13


a Rafflecopter giveaway

Monday, June 3, 2013

BOOK REVIEW: Serpent's Treasure: The Ancestral Key by Elaine T. Cook


ABOUT THE BOOK

 A two-thousand-year-old prophecy lingers at the threshold of fulfillment. Sworn to slaughter anyone they suspect could fulfill it, the Leoni family has nearly succeeded in wiping out the family they consider their greatest threat. Meanwhile, Nicolai Cavallo, eccentric heir to the vast Cavallo fortune, has hunted his entire life for his family’s long-lost treasure and is positive his search is paying off when he stumbles across what he believes is the missing key to his encoded map. In Serpent’s Treasure: The Ancestral Key a race against time begins when the computer system designed to help solve Nick’s family riddles is hacked. Elaine T. Cook expertly weaves this thrilling narrative of betrayal and daring. Nick must relocate the system’s unwilling programmer, Juliana Matthews, and convince her to aid him once more. Even so, can she fix the system before the Leonis learn Nick is attempting to fulfill the prophecy or, more importantly, before they discover he has found the key to do so?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR written by author (from author's website)

 
“Kawaii ko ni wa tabi o saseyo" was a Japanese proverb I learned while living in Japan a few years ago. It means: If you have a cute child that you love, you will send them on a journey so they can learn by experience.
      In Japan, I learned the beauty of simplicity in words. Japanese is an elegant language. It takes so few words to create a sentence of immensely deep meaning. The people of Japan, the culture, and the language have become an integral part of who I am. They have positively influenced my storytelling, increasing my ability to see the world in a different perspective. Perhaps in learning the language, I discovered for the first time that a simple word choice can produce a statement of profound meaning. I grew to know and love people, who were like me, yet existing within a culture that live by a different set of rules. It broadened my mind to other cultures, people, places, and languages. 
      Influencing my writing, probably more than even I realize, is genealogy and family history research. I began hunting for elusive ancestors in my family tree when I was eight years old. What does that mean? It means I understand easy answers are rare. There is worth in getting the whole story, no matter how many twists and turns are discovered along the way. Studying ancestors in my family tree has taught me that the choices of one individual can affect generations, and because I am dealing with entire families, the information I have gathered has allowed me to see situations from multiple points of view. I have gained profound knowledge from ancestors I have never met as I have learned about them. 
      Still, the greatest benefit to my writing has come from having my own family. Entertaining and instructing my children has allowed me to find unique solutions and ideas. My five children have incredible imaginations, which has rekindled my own. Furthermore, with seven individuals and one puppy in the household, communication is a must. Because of my husband and children, I have profited from an increased ability to express myself.  Serpent’s Treasure – The Ancestral Key was written for them, as well as for you. My five children are cute, and I do love them. Therefore, I created an adventure. May  you  enjoy the journey.


REVIEW

Treasure, a powerful artifact, life on the run, romance, this book has it all. Like all the members of her family, Juliana has a gift. But it's a gift she doesn't want anything to do with.  Her family has been hunted for generations until she and her Uncle Andrew are the only ones left.  But she wants nothing to do with it. Unfortunately for her, fate has something else in mind for her. The question becomes one of survival and keeping the artifact out of evil hands.  

I enjoyed the 'treasure hunting' aspects of the novel. Like any good mystery, there are plenty of twists and turns. With plenty of magical elements, the author takes the reader on a fascinating journey

The characters provide a mix of possibilities.  Juliana, the reluctant heroine, must make life-altering choices that effect many beyond those who she loves. Leigh, who seems to be a friend, but may not be trustworthy. Nick Cavallo, the man who will do anything to get his hands on the artifact.

All in all, a fun read. The only problem I had with the book was the fanciness of the language.  The author uses a lot of 'fancy' or big words that for me, slowed the flow of the story.  I sometimes had to stop and think about what the author was really saying. Sometimes simple works best when telling a story. Other than that though the story was enjoyable.
 

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

FIRST WILD CARD TOUR: Tears of Min Brock by J.E. Lowder

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!



Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:

WordCrafts Press (September 22, 2012)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

J.E. Lowder has played bass for Shania Twain, been charged by a black rhino while on safari, and visited the Oval Office. He honed his love for both music and writing while in high school when he went backstage to interview such artists as Bob Seger, Rush and Kansas – “sorta like “Almost Famous” but without Kate Hudson!” he quips. Lowder draws from all these experiences and injects a healthy dose of pure imagination when crafting his debut fantasy series, The War of Whispers. He points to the a quote by G.K. Chesterton as the summation of his writing philosophy: “Nay, the really sane man knows that he has a touch of the madman.” He is married, the father of four wonderful children, and is a proud grandfather. He lives near Nashville, TN where he continues to write. An avid biker, Lowder says he is “always on the prowl for adventure and stories.”

Visit the author's website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:


Areall crept toward the parchment as if an evil spirit possessed it. “Its beauty is its deception,” she whispered. “Burn it, child. Destroy it or you will curse us. The Cauldron will know. The Cauldron will see. They will come.”

Elabea calmly lifted the parchment from the coals, where it had refused to burn. “How can something so beautiful be evil?”

The Dark War is over. Betrayal, defeat and death forever accompany any mention of the battlefield known as Min Brock. The shining kingdom of Claire is no more. Any hint of rebellion is supressed by the constant drone that echoes throughout the land. The Oracles of the Council of Ebon, the dark lords who feed the perpetual flames of the Cauldron, forbid even mentioning the name of the Only, the King of Claire, on pain of death.

Yet in the night... a whisper comes to Elabea, a girl of 14 summers, who hears and dares to believe there might be more to life than the drone. Accompanied by her lifelong friend, Galadin, Elabea embarks on a dangerous journey to become one of the most powerful creatures in the land - a storyteller. Along the way she must learn to discern the true whisper of Claire from the counterfeit whisper of Ebon. One might lead her to restore light and life to a world ruled by darkness. The other leads to certain death.

The War of Whispers has begun.

Product Details:
List Price: $15.99
Paperback: 388 pages
Publisher: WordCrafts Press (September 22, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0615699766
ISBN-13: 978-0615699769
Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.2 x 0.9 inches


AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


The Moon King



Thud.

Elabea was startled awake.

“Who’s there?” she gasped as she pulled her covers close.

Although only fourteen summers of age, Elabea had seen her share of Ebonite night raids. Even so, she would never get used to warriors barging in while her family slept. Herded gruffly out into the night, they would be led to the communal fire with the other villagers. While Ebonite commanders took roll call, the warriors harassed them: spittle and curses flew; blades threatened children and women; kicks and punches landed on the men. Elabea quickly learned that the census was merely an excuse for Ebon to flex its military muscle.

She scanned her attic bedroom’s shadows for any sign of a warrior.

Nothing.

If not a raid, she wondered with a sigh of relief, perhaps it was my father downstairs.

Quinn often drank wildeberry wine well into the night, and in his inebriated state, sometimes hurled objects across the room followed by a string of curses.

Thud.

This time, Elabea recognized the sound as coming from outside. Gathering her courage, she peeked through a crack in her shuttered window.

Lances of silver-blue moonbeams crisscrossed Hetherlinn while the trees strained against the windstorm and hindered her vision. Suddenly, the trees parted, as if sensing her need for an unencumbered view.

Floating above the communal fire was a warrior and his mount that glowed like the moon. He turned and looked at her cottage, Number 17. Elabea gasped and jerked back into the safety of the shadows.

Did he see me?

Fearing the worst, she pulled her quilt close and sat perfectly still, hoping the ghost-warrior would soon be on his way. She tried not to worry, but worry she did.

He’s definitely not an Ebonite. So where’s he from?

She fretted, straining to hear any more sounds, wondering most of all.

Why is he here?

She jumped to the only logical conclusion her mind could comprehend, and that conclusion made her eyes bulge with fear.

He must be a monster from the Cauldron.

Flashbacks from her countless trips to the oak with her friend, Galadin, began to fill her with panic. The Oracles, she worried as she bit her lip. He’s come to punish us for climbing the oak.

As quickly as that notion lit her anxiety on fire, another took its place, and cooled her like water. We’ve played in the oak since we were five summers of age. Surely we would have been caught before now.

She relaxed her grip on the quilt, but remained fearful of the creature looming beyond her cottage. She tried to push his image out of her thoughts, but her will was not up to the task. The harder she strained, the more engraved his face became.

And what a face. Like dancing fire in a wintry sky.

Her curiosity, a trait that got her into trouble more often than not, joined her inner fray, and soon, her fears were overruled by a desire to take another peek.

She pushed away her blankets and found herself once more at the crack, staring out into the moonlight. The hovering warrior had not moved, but instead of fear the sight of him sent peace coursing through her veins.

His steed rose and boxed the air with his front appendages. Then, in a silvery flash, they were gone; disappeared into the deeper shades of the night. It was as if they had never existed at all.

Elabea stared, mesmerized by their flight.

She laid back down, but she knew that sleep was out of the question - not because she feared his return, but because her imagination simply could not leave him be. Throughout the night, she pondered every possibility as to his identity.

Being restricted to her village by the Oracles, she was limited to information from beyond its borders. He was not from any of the surrounding nations, she reasoned. She had already ruled out the possibility that he was Ebon, nor was he a creation of the Cauldron. She tested another theory, one that went against the teaching of the Oracles.

Could he be from Claire?

The idea stirred her fantasies to the wind. High within her imagination they swirled, like snow on a zephyr.

Exhaustion finally took its toll, but before she drifted off to sleep, she felt the need to bestow him with a title.

The Moon King, she murmured. He’s the Moon King.






Morning came too soon, and Elabea stumbled out of bed. She tiptoed quickly across the cold planks and threw on her brown tunic. Woven from a thick cloth, it resembled a floppy bag more than a dress. It was the required outfit of Hetherlinn, as ordered by the Oracles, creating uniformity and squelching individualism. She often wondered if the other nations had to dress the same.

She pulled her wavy cinnamon-colored hair out from beneath her tunic and it fell past her shoulders. Her eyes were morsels of dark chocolate reflecting a fiery heart, and her smile - when she thought to smile - was inviting. A few freckles, sprinkled like nutmeg, adorned her creamy cheeks. Elabea was an attractive girl on the cusp of womanhood, but she did not consider herself pretty. Aside from an occasional compliment dropped by her mother, all she heard were insults. The residents of her tiny community seemed to hold a personal grudge against her, and many in Hetherlinn, especially the ancient widow, Mithe, castigated her on a daily basis. With nothing else to counter the poison, she accepted their demeaning comments as the truth.

Elabea slipped on warm wool stockings and boots, then strapped a thick leather belt around her waist. The belt, snug about her, accentuated her developing figure, and gave her the sensation of wearing something slightly more attractive than a sack.

She stepped to the square opening in her floor. The warmth from the kitchen fire below embraced her while the aroma of breakfast porridge made her stomach rumble. She descended the rickety ladder, the rungs creaking beneath her weight.

“Mother,” she asked as she dragged herself to the table near the fire. “Did you see anything... odd... last night?”

“No,” Areall answered. Her tone was as dull and flavorless as the porridge she scooped from the large black pot that hung over the fire. Like everything else in their cottage, the fireplace was simple and primitive, by order of the Oracles. Rough in places, with some cracks here and there, it was anything but elegant. Black soot covered the stones, rising up to the thatched roof.

“Last night, I saw something…or someone…riding out of Hetherlinn.”

“Probably just an Ebonite warrior on a night patrol,” Areall sighed as she plopped the bowl of gruel down in front of Elabea.

“I know what they look like, and he was definitely not one of them.” Elabea snatched up a wooden spoon. “He was larger than any man I’ve ever seen, and he glowed blue like the moon.” She dug into the creamy broth.

“You must have been dreaming.” Areall’s voice was overly tired for so early in the morning.

“I’m not a child,” Elabea snapped back. “I’ve seen fourteen summers and in another four, I’ll be permitted to marry…” In a more sullen tone she continued, “If anyone will have me.”

“Perhaps the moon was playing tricks on you,” Areall yawned, not the least bit interested in the conversation. She knew Elabea’s curiosity could be relentless, like a wolf in winter, desperate for a meal, and she was in no mood for it.

“At first, I was frightened, but soon…” Elabea’s thoughts drifted to the events of the previous night. She let the conversation fade for a moment, then with the spontaneity of youth she exclaimed, “Whatever he was, he was magnificent.”

Elabea twirled her spoon as her imagination began to work. “Is there a Moon King,” she asked.

“Moon King?” Areall chortled. “There hasn’t been a king other than Brairtok anywhere since the Dark War and…” Her rosy cheeks faded to white as if death had touched her flesh. In a serious tone, she abruptly added, “Let’s talk of different matters.”

“Could he have been something of old, something from the Dark War?”

Elabea’s spoon stopped twirling as she pondered the next question, one she was certain would get her into trouble for asking.

“Mother, could he be from Claire?”

Areall’s eyes widened. “Never mention that nation again. You know the Cauldron’s Oracles ban discussions of things that might be... or might have been.”

“I know,” Elabea persisted, her spoon spinning in her fingers. “But do you really think the Cauldron can hear inside our cottage?”

“Yes.”

“Then why hasn’t it seen me at the oak, or heard

Galadin and me talking about Claire... ”

Areall clasped her hand over Elabea’s mouth. “Hush, child.”

Elabea looked into her mother’s buggy eyes. She had seen that look before; more times than she could count. It came with every question she asked about the Cauldron, Ebon, the Dark War and the forgotten land known as Claire. It was the look of fear.

“The vapors from the Cauldron of Ebon travel far and hear much,” Areall whispered. “You must respect the Oracles, my daughter.”

Areall did not remove her hand until she was convinced Elabea would humble her tongue. Finally, she dropped her hand and returned to her chores, as though nothing out of the ordinary had happened.

Elabea stared at her mother. “Aren’t you the least bit curious?”

“No,” she replied.

“Well, I am,” Elabea snipped, her curiosity piqued. “Nothing happens in Hetherlinn, or in all of Allsbruth for that matter.”

Areall spun around. Her eyes narrowed. “Nothing is good, Elabea. Nothing means no more war. Nothing is a blessing to life.”

Elabea thumped her spoon against the table with a petulant pout. “If this is life, then life stinks.”

Areall sighed and decided upon a different tactic. Pulling up a chair, she sat across from Elabea, hoping a calm discussion would end this battle of wills.

“Do you remember the stories of your youth,” Areall gently asked.

“Yes,” Elabea moaned, still beating out a rhythmic cadence with her spoon.

“Then you remember that the Dark War ended the tyranny of the King of Claire. Since that day, the Ebonites and the Cauldron have guarded and guided us. The Cauldron’s drone is a gracious reminder of all we’ve been blessed with.”

Elabea stopped the thump, thump, thump of her spoon and listened. She had become so accustomed to the drone’s perpetual presence that she no longer actually heard it, but she knew it was always there, just like the air that she breathed, as constant as day and night, winter and spring. Its tone conjured images in her mind of the wind howling through the hollow of a dead tree, low in pitch, monotonous. Ominous.

“That’s why,” Areall continued, “we must try our best to obey the Oracles of the Cauldron.”

“And what of their night raids?” Elabea huffed. “What have we done to deserve those?”

“It’s for our own protection. They simply need to tally us to make sure no one has... ”

“Listen to you,” Elabea interrupted. “Can’t you see that we’re prisoners in our own village?”

“Oh, Elabea,” her mother sighed. “I wish you could see life through my eyes.”

“And I wish you could see through mine.”

Silence.

“I suppose,” Areall conceded, “we’ve lost some liberties; but those are but inconveniences compared to the peace and prosperity we now have.”

“Peace and prosperity?” Elabea shot back. “The Oracles decree we can only travel five arrow shots from our village. The Oracles determine what we can and can’t talk about. The Oracles forbid you to teach us how to read. The Oracles demand... ”

“Enough,” Areall interrupted, her voice almost a whisper. “Such curiosity leads to a rebellious heart, and a rebellious heart leads too... ”

Elabea rolled her eyes and began banging her spoon against the bowl again. Areall gently laid her hand on top of her daughter’s to stop the incessant drumming, then, with a patronizing smile, returned to her chores.

The conversation was over.

After a moment of silence, Areall asked, “Would you like to continue learning how to knit?”

Elabea let out a dramatic sigh. “You know I hate to knit. And why aren’t you willing to discuss this? Why do you pretend all is well? Do you really enjoy the night raids... and wearing this?”

Elabea yanked at her tunic.

Areall smiled, but it hung broken and crooked on her attractive face, beaten down by war and the oppressiveness of the Oracles.

Quinn, Elabea’s father, picked that moment to stumble out of his bedroom. Bumping his forehead against the low threshold, he mumbled something that sounded like a curse, rubbed his sore head and staggered toward the fireplace. There, he fell into a wooden chair to begin another day, sitting and staring into the glowing embers that held no answers to his misery. Like all the days before, Quinn would slip further into despair, an occasional grunt about Min Brock the only thing that shattered his silence.

“Father,” Elabea announced, “I’m going to the meadow.”

Like the other children of Hetherlinn, Elabea was banned by her parents from visiting the meadow and climbing the ancient oak that grew in its midst. Despite their commands, threats and subsequent punishments, Elabea continued to visit what she called, her meadow. Overcome with their own personal pains, Quinn and Areall resigned themselves to defeat, and Quinn waved a rubbery arm while Areall huffed disapprovingly.

Elabea threw open the door and the cold breeze took her breath away. She pulled her shawl closer. A rustling sound near her ear made her turn to inspect. There, embedded in the doorpost’s rough planking was an arrow. And not just an arrow. The shaft was clear, glistening like dew, while the fletchings were unique colors: the cock feather was yellow while the hen feathers were orange.

Wrapped about the arrow’s shaft and secured with a leather strip was a parchment that twitched with the breeze.

The thud I heard last night must have come from this arrow.

This isn’t an Ebonite arrow, she noted. Their shafts are wooden and the feathers black and white. More proof that the Moon King isn’t from Ebon.

Before her thoughts could fade, his mystical face flashed in her imagination. I didn’t see him shoot this, but who else could have done so?

The rustling paper stirred her curiosity.

If I take it, I risk violating the Oracles, but this wouldn’t be the first time. Elabea glanced furtively back at her parents. Besides, I’ve been going to the oak for most of my life. Nothing has ever happened, even when Galadin and I dared to ask to hear a whisper.

Stepping outside, Elabea closed the door behind her, then stretched her fingers toward the shimmering shaft. Flesh touched parchment and tingles raced up her arm. Startled, she jerked her hand away.

The Cauldron’s never known about us at the oak. How will it know now? What harm could come?

She stretched out her hand again, and this time yanked the arrow free.

Nothing happened.

She untied the leather and unrolled the parchment. Even as a simple girl from Allsbruth, she knew that the paper’s thickness and weight were proof it was an expensive quality. Exquisite black etchings were on one side, except for six characters that were gold.

I wish I could read. she bemoaned.

Drawn to the golden letters, she ran her finger across the marks. Suddenly, a whisper pierced the winds.

“Elabea.”

She shuddered and withdrew her finger.

“Galadin?” she demanded, looking this way and that for her best friend, who was noted for playing practical jokes. Only the wind answered.

Armed with the proof she previously lacked, Elabea went back inside.

“I told you I saw something last night,” Elabea crowed, holding both the parchment and arrow high.

Areall’s eyes widened as if seeing a poisonous snake about to strike. She sprang toward her daughter and snatched the offending items from Elabea’s hands.

“What have you done?” Areall scolded as she raced to the door. “What have you done.”

She heaved the arrow outside and slammed the door shut. “Your curiosity will bring death to us.” She darted to the fireplace.

Startled by her mother’s erratic behavior, Elabea stammered, “What are you doing?”

“This is a curse,” Areall shouted, crumpling the parchment into a ball. “It violates the teachings of the Oracles.” She tossed it into the flames. “I must destroy it before…”

She let her sentence fade, as if satisfied that the fire would quell any uprising their daughter had instigated, then returned to her chores as if nothing had happened.

Quinn lifted his throbbing head and glared at the women. “Why must you two be so loud?” he thundered.

Elabea remembered a time many summers ago when his eyes sparkled with life, but that was before he went off to fight in the Dark War. Now they were opaque and lifeless. Quinn’s eyes drifted to the parchment in the fire. Even in his hungover state he recognized it.

His eyes became icy. “Where did you get that?”

Backing away, Elabea answered truthfully, “It was attached to an arrow that was stuck in our door. Why? What is it?”

“It is from the land of lies,” he slurred.

“Claire,” Elabea whispered. She realized that despite the flames, the parchment was not burning.

“Don’t say the word,” Areall yelled, her placid expression replaced by churning rapids. Turning her fury on Quinn, she shouted, “Your night of drink is making you talk too much.”

“I’ll talk when and how I like,” he yelled back.

While they argued, Elabea saw her chance. Darting to the fireplace, she grabbed a small stick on the hearth and plunged it into the coals.

“Stop,” Quinn roared as he struggled to rise from his chair. “Leave it.” Becoming dizzy, he slumped back down.

“Amazing,” Elabea muttered as she dragged the parchment onto the cool hearth. “It’s not burnt and is even free of soot. It’s so…beautiful.”

“Beautiful?” Areall snorted. She crept toward the parchment as if an evil spirit possessed it. “Its beauty is its deception,” she whispered. “Burn it, child. Destroy it or you will curse us. The Cauldron will know and see. They will come.”

Elabea calmly lifted the parchment from the hearth. “They’ve never come before. Besides, how can something so beautiful be evil?”

Without another word, Elabea raced out the door.

Monday, January 28, 2013

BLOG TOUR GUEST POST: A Cast of Stones by Patrick Carr

On Tour with Prism Book Tours
SEE MY REVIEW OF THIS AWESOME BOOK HERE.

A Cast of Stones (The Staff and the Sword, #1)A Cast of Stones
by Patrick Carr
Paperback, 400 pages
Expected Publication: February 1st 2013 by Bethany House Publishers

Premise:

In the backwater village of Callowford, Errol Stone's search for a drink is interrupted by a church messenger who arrives with urgent missives for the hermit priest in the hills. Desperate for coin, Errol volunteers to deliver them but soon finds himself hunted by deadly assassins. Forced to flee with the priest and a small band of travelers, Errol soon learns he's joined a quest that could change the fate of his kingdom. 

Protected for millennia by the heirs of the first king, the kingdom's dynasty is near an end and a new king must be selected. As tension and danger mount, Errol must leave behind his drunkenness and grief, learn to fight, and come to know his God in order to survive a journey to discover his destiny.



Available 2/1/13:


About the Author:


Patrick Carr was born on an Air Force base in West Germany at the height of the cold war. He has been told this was not his fault. As an Air Force brat, he experienced a change in locale every three years until his father retired to Tennessee. Patrick saw more of the world on his own through a varied and somewhat eclectic education and work history. He graduated from Georgia Tech in 1984 and has worked as a draftsman at a nuclear plant, did design work for the Air Force, worked for a printing company, and consulted as an engineer. Patrick’s day gig for the last five years has been teaching high school math in Nashville, TN. He currently makes his home in Nashville with his wonderfully patient wife, Mary, and four sons he thinks are amazing: Patrick, Connor, Daniel, and Ethan. Sometime in the future he would like to be a jazz pianist. Patrick thinks writing about himself in the third person is kind of weird.

Awards: ACFW Genesis Competition 2010 Finalist for “A Cast of Stones” in Speculative Fiction.

Find & Follow:


GUEST POST



The clergy.

Creation:

When I first started the research for “A Cast of Stones” I’d planned on making the story an alternate-history of 14thcentury Europe. I purposely chose a time period that was prior to the Reformation because I couldn’t include that scope of chaos and conflict within the parameters of a reasonable word count. My writer’s group had coached me, rightly, that as a new author few publishers would be willing to let me run wild for anything over 150k words.

I later rejected the idea of an alternate history, but I kept quite a bit of the parameters of the time period. One of those was to use a powerful, somewhat monolithic church. I put a fair amount of research into the organization of the Roman Catholic church at that point. There was a built in mythos there that I knew quite a few of my readers would connect with; the intrigue, the power struggles, and the efforts of individuals to change some of the doctrine.

For simplicity sake, I kept my church hierarchy to three levels (the Roman Catholic church is far more complicated). The archbenefice is the head, but operates more on the basis of a first-among-equals rather than as an absolute ruler. Beneath him are the rest of the benefices, men who are attached to a specific geographic region and oversee a number of parish priests. I decided to name the collection of benefices the judica. In Latin, judica means judge. So the catch phrase of the benefices became “Judica me Deas” which would be the equivalent of “Judge me, O Lord.”


Tour-Wide Giveaway:

Grand Prize (USA & Canada):  Print copy of entire series of three books (#2 & #3 as they are published) + A Cast of Stones Mug + Lend your name to a character in book #3!!

2nd Prize (USA & Canada): Print copy of A Cast of Stones

International Entries: eCopy of A Cast of Stones




Open only to those who can legally enter. Winning Entry will be verified prior to prize being awarded. No purchase necessary. You must be 18 or older to enter or have your parent enter for you. The winner will be chosen by Rafflecopter and announced here as well as emailed and the winner will have 48 hours to respond or a new winner will be chosen. This giveaway is in no way associated with Facebook, Twitter, Rafflecopter or any other entity unless otherwise specified. The number of eligible entries received determines the odds of winning. Giveaway was organized by Burgandy Ice @ Colorimetry and sponsored by Bethany House & the author. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW.


a Rafflecopter giveaway



Only on this Tour... the author shares the Creation, his Goals, some Visuals and Excerpts on each of these mini-themes:

The Herbwomen of secret lore
The World of The Staff & the Sword
The Readers of the cast lots
The Watchmen, elite warriors
The Clergy of power



Catch the entire Tour!!

LAUNCH-DAY BLAST! 
1/23 - Backing Books - Herbwomen
1/24 – Christian NovelsReviewWorld
1/25 – I Am a Reader, Not a WriterReaders

1/27 – Reads to ReelsWatchmen
1/28 – LDS & Lovin’ It - Clergy
1/29 – Proud Book Nerd - World
1/30 – Open the Page - Herbwomen
1/31 – Wonderings of One PersonReview - Readers
2/1 – RELEASE-DAY BLAST! 

2/3 – Simple Wyrdings - Watchmen
2/4 – Bookworm Lisa – Review – Clergy
2/5 – Passion & LifeReaders
2/6 – Kari’s Crowded Bookshelf – Review Herbwomen
2/7 – Coffee, Books & Me - Readers
2/8 – Backing Books – Review – World

2/10 – Letters to the Cosmos - Watchmen
2/11 – Jill WilliamsonReview – Clergy
2/12 – ADD Librarian Herbwomen
2/13 – Worthy 2 ReadReviewWatchmen
2/14 – Hey, Tara!World
2/15 – Pieces of WhimsyReview - Readers

2/17 – CTF DevourerReviewClergy
2/18 – Pause Time - Readers
2/19 – A Backwards StoryReviewWorld
2/19 - Christy’s Cozy CornerHerbwomen
2/20 – Min Reads & ReviewsReview Watchmen
2/21 – FINALE BLAST, Winner announced