Sunday, March 18, 2012

Tooth and Nail: Interview with author Jennifer Safrey





Gemma Fae Cross, a tough-girl amateur boxer whose fiance is running for congress, has just made a startling discovery about herself. She is half faerie - and not just any faerie, but a tooth faerie A hybrid of fae and human, Gemma is destined to defend the Olde Way and protect the fae - who are incapable of committing violence - from threats to their peaceful and idyllic way of life, which must be maintained by distilling innocence collected from children''s baby teeth. But when a threat to the fae mission emerges, Gemma is called upon to protect her heritage, and become a legendary fae warrior... even if it means sacrificing everything she knows about being human. 

Goodreads

There are some books that grab you the second you see the cover. Yes, I know. It is shallow, but cover art matters. So does the story hidden under it. Happily, the wonderful publisher sent me a copy of this amazing book to review. Tooth fairies, boxing, kick butt fae politics and the hidden terrors masked behind the shining facade of your neighborhood dentist. (shudder) This book was one rocking great time and I was even more thrilled when author Jennifer Safrey took some time out of her busy life to answer a few questions.

What I liked:

The use of tooth fairies as fae is unique. Except for that memorable movie with the Roc, I don't remember another tooth fairy book or film. Gemma is a tough character with depth that you can't help but start to care about. Every piece of dialog and action is well written and the plot is original with exceptional orchestration. This book is a sleeper that I want to tell everyone about. 

What I Didn't:

Why, oh why couldn't it have been another five or six hundred pages? (*sob*) I hope it becomes more than just one book. 

Overall:

The plot, characters and voice are amazing and I can't wait to read more from Ms. Safrey. Gemma is a character that will stick in my mind for a long time. I can honestly say that I will be looking a little more closely at the samples I get from the dentist. Excellent book. Make sure you post it on your Goodreads page as a book to read this year. 

5/5

Now for the interview!





1. When did you find yourself interested in the fae?

 I am a longtime fan of paranormal romance and urban fantasy (even back when romance writers were told it's a small niche market!), and after a long period of time travel and vampires and shapeshifters, I began to see fae pop up here and there. I like fae as a catch-all term for the supernatural, and I suppose that's how I use it in my book.

2. What are some of your favorite faerie movies and books?

I loved, my whole life, the fairy tales that were as likely to turn out gruesome as happy, like Grimm stories. The crazier the story, the more real it seemed to me. I mean, the princess was so pissed at the frog for taking advantage of her that she picked him up and threw him against the wall as hard as she could, and that was when he became a prince. The best part is that the frog had been holding the princess accountable for broken promises, and she was beyond angry that he was right. Impetuous Gemma would totally do that, even though it was not the right thing to do, but she is a human caught in a fairy tale. That's great stuff.

3. Did you write with music playing while you were working, or did any particular music inspire you?

 I really can't write to music. Lyrics are something I memorize and listen to so if I hear words being sung I can't concentrate on creating my new words. Sometimes I listen to wordless yoga music, which is nice, but I listen to that so much at my studio now that it doesn't really translate well anymore in the writing part of my life.

4. Gemma is a fierce heroine and a character I have come to care about in only a few pages. How did she come about?

 When I created Gemma I really wanted to set her apart from other urban fantasy heroines. The problem is, I love urban fantasy heroines, so differentiating her but still keeping the kind of moxie I love was not easy. I wanted her to be more real, somehow. I wanted the reader to come away with feeling that she is always human first, fae second. And humans make a lot of mistakes. In some scenes, her timing really sucks. She is quick to emotionally react to things. But deep down, she is intrinsically good. She doesn't want to kill anyone, even the bad guy...and that was crucially important to me in building her character. In a lot of urban fantasy there is a lot of killing, and often killing with zero remorse because in those worlds, that is the expectation. But if Gemma is a human first, she's no more likely to kill someone as any normal human. Warrior or not, she thinks murder is not what you do. I worked very hard to make that come across as heroic and not righteous.

5. Tooth fairies are an original topic when you think of faerie tales and even current fiction or movies (except for that really interesting movie with The Roc in a tutu).  What made you decide to take faeries down this road? 

 I did a writing exercise some years ago with a freewriting group and the prompt was to write something from the point of view of the tooth fairy. I think I was the only one really interested in what came out of that. I thought about it for a long time. I saw that paranormal stories were beginning to feature fae and I wondered what angle of fae wasn't being covered, and wondered what I could really bring to the table in terms of unusual and unexpected. I ended up with an amateur boxer fae warrior. Go figure. :)

6. Outlining is something I am learning a greater appreciation for. Do you outline or write by the seat of your pants?

 If I don't have a contract I have a tendency to just meander around with writing, but if I am under contract I can't mess around. I have tried having extensive outlines and I think I don't do it because once the outlines are done, I am drained of energy to creatively fill in the blanks. At this point, I outline three chapters ahead. I know the beginning, the end, the general middle, and the general direction the story is going in, and so I'm always plotting the chapter I'm writing, and two chapters ahead. It's like a flashlight in the woods. My flashlight won't go to the edge of the woods and the way out, but if I illuminate enough of the space in front of me, I'll find my way.

7. What is your best advice to prospective writers out there? (Every scene is down pat and your dialog and movements are solid.  Wonderful!)

 I guess my best advice is to get physical with the writing. I read every single scene, every single dialogue exchange out loud, many times, until it sounded like I wasn't reading, but just saying casually. Only then did I know it wasn't stilted. For the final showdown fight, I took stuffed animals and made each one a character and moved them around my office to make sure their actions made sense. I pantomimed every kick, every punch, to feel if it was genuine and gauge what the character's effectiveness could be. Of course, if you'd opened the door to my office and saw me pretending to 360-degree roundhouse kick my teddy bear, you'd think I was nuts, but it worked for me. I'm not a spatial thinker so I need to see everything in front of me. I loved this part of the writing...getting phsyical with it. If you do it, and you feel it, your readers will feel it too.

8. Your descriptions of being in the ring at the gym are very visceral and real. It is not your typical meat market gym either, but the not so posh side that makes it interesting. Have you ever participated in sports in that setting? Did you find your experience was like Gemma's?

 I did some boxing for a few months. It was at a trendy gym but they did have an actual boxing ring and I loved it. My instructor was a black belt in taekwondo and encouraged me to give that a try because I must have done something to make him think that could be my thing. I moved to taekwondo, trained for years, and earned my black belt.I competed a little bit, but then I opened my yoga studio, and the new business left no time for martial arts training. Recently, though, I began to study muay thai. It's nice to be training again. I tried a little jiu-jitsu and I might pursue that as well. Gemma has had a much more hardcore, inner-city experience than I ever did, but I liked the idea that not only is she accepted at a tough boxing gym, but she is considered a real leader there because of her tenure. Competitive fighting is really opening up for women, expecially in mixed martial arts. Also, for the first time in the Olympics this year, there will be a women's division in boxing. I think even women who don't fight for sport are inspired by and respect other women who do use their bodies and their brains to fight competitively. And I know from experience that men will respect a female fighter. I certainly am not the best muay thai fighter in my class of all men but I am always treated equally. I like that Gemma is showing female readers this side of sport, this surprisingly fair dynamic between genders in a gym setting.


Many thanks to Jennifer Safrey for this 
great interview! Thanks also to Night Shade Books for
providing a review copy of Tooth and Nail.

We will be looking forward to your new writing
projects and hoping for another glimpse of Gemma
and the morning fae!



Friday, March 16, 2012

The Inquisitor by Mark Allen Smith: The Giveaway



A spectacularly original thriller about a professional torturer who has a strict code, a mysterious past, and a dangerous conviction that he can save the life of an innocent childGeiger has a gift: he knows a lie the instant he hears it. And in his business—called "information retrieval" by its practitioners—that gift is invaluable, because truth is the hottest thing on the market.Geiger's clients count on him to extract the truth from even the most reluctant subjects. Unlike most of his competitors, Geiger rarely sheds blood, but he does use a variety of techniques—some physical, many psychological—to push his subjects to a point where pain takes a backseat to fear. Because only then will they finally stop lying.One of Geiger's rules is that he never works with children. So when his partner, former journalist Harry Boddicker, unwittingly brings in a client who demands that Geiger interrogate a twelve-year-old boy, Geiger responds instinctively. He rescues the boy from his captor, removes him to the safety of his New York City loft, and promises to protect him from further harm. But if Geiger and Harry cannot quickly discover why the client is so desperate to learn the boy's secret, they themselves will become the victims of an utterly ruthless adversary. Mesmerizing and heart-in-your-throat compelling, The Inquisitor is a completely unique thriller that introduces both an unforgettable protagonist and a major new talent in Mark Allen Smith.

Goodreads

*                                                   *                                                   *

This is a thriller in the extreme. Although there are no witches to haunt its pages (darn) it is still a quite impressive story that will have you turning the pages. I am reading it now and am finding it very engaging. 



Geiger is The Inquisitor
A Master Interrogator
An Expert in Psychological Pain
He Always Gets the Answer
Geiger: Nothing stands between him and the truth
The Inquisitor

Mark Allen Smith

Mesmerizing and heart-in-your-throat compelling, The Inquisitor by Mark Allen Smith is a completely unique thriller that introduces an unforgettable protagonist and blurs the line between good and evil.

Geiger has a gift—he knows a lie the instant he hears it. And if he wants the truth from you, he will get it. Geiger works in the unsavory business of “information retrieval.” To put it bluntly, he tortures people for a living. But when a twelve-year-old boy is brought in for interrogation, Geiger instinctively rescues him and finds himself the target of a deadly manhunt and a ruthless adversary.

Praise for The Inquisitor
"This is one of the best and most engrossing debut novels I've read in years, and also one of the most original. Mark Allen Smith has created an unusual hero named Geiger whose occupation is torturing the truth out of people. Geiger is good at what he does, and so is Mr. Smith. The Inquisitor will keep you locked in a room for days."—Nelson DeMille

"Information retrieval takes on a sinister cast in Smith’s mesmerizing thriller debut… [Geiger is] a fascinating piece of work… This may be the most unusual and talked about thriller of the season."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"[Geiger is] one of the most utterly distinctive protagonists in a recent thriller, and one of the most unexpectedly sympathetic… Smith invests his first novel with psychological dimensions you might expect in a third or fourth book… A breezy, involving thriller that handily overcomes any resistance to its grisly premise and leaves you hoping for the return of its oddly winning hero."—Kirkus (starred review)

"An adrenaline-fueled cat-and-mouse game… [Geiger] is a fascinating protagonist with a revealing backstory. A compelling debut thriller that blurs the lines between the good and bad guys."—Library Journal (starred review)

Want to win a copy of your own? Enter the contest below...

Monday, March 5, 2012

Lavender Calm: Peter Phippen & Arja Kastinen



After a hectic day at work or writing, I love to kick back with a nice soothing bit of music. This amazing new album by Peter Phippen and Arja Kastinen is just what I was looking for around the holidays and I listen to it almost daily. The flute and kantele ( a harp like instrument) marry well into an experience that melts away stress and  
brings an inner stillness that I relish after being in traffic or while I'm pounding out a few chapters on whatever book I am currently working on. Take a listen and see if you don't feel the tension ease right out of you as Phippen's flute and Kastinen's kantele bring some zen into your space.

For my complete review, please stop by Muzikreviews.com.


Thursday, March 1, 2012

Coventry Magic: The Giveaway



Jacki Smith, owner of Coventry Candles, one of the largest suppliers of magic candles in the U.S., has been crafting magic candles for more than twenty years. In "Coventry Magic with Candles, Oils, and Herbs," she shares the history of candle magic along with the recipes, spells, and divinations anyone can use to increase love, prosperity, luck, and abundance.


"Coventry Candle Magic" is not your mama's candle magic; this is candle magic for our complicated 21st century lives. Coventry Magic explores not only what color candle to use for a specific need but how to dig down deep inside and find out what that need really is.


So many times what we think is the problem is only the symptom of the bigger problem. Jacki Smith uses the humor of her own life experiences to show readers how to sort through the traps and tricks they've laid for themselves. Her self-evaluation system helps ferret out the underlying issues and beliefs that can often sabotage magical spells. The book helps readers get to the meat of issues and solve them in a magical, life-changing way.


"Coventry Candle Magic" will be an invaluable reference for beginners as well as experienced magic practitioners--the ultimate candle magic reference book.


The book features hundreds of candles and how to use them in a myriad of ways.


Plus: 
* An herb and oil encyclopedia
* Seven Steps to Personal Magical Evolution
* Basic how-tos for candle carving and using Tarot, gemstones, and elementals in candle spells.


Goodreads


The wonderful publisher of Coventry Magic has given us the  opportunity to do a giveaway! Two lucky winners will win a copy of this marvelous book. I received mine in the main recently and have enjoyed learning about candles and their uses. One thing is for sure, this is a more modern candle magic book and a great source for beginners and advanced practitioners. Check out a plethora of recipes, spells and divinations that will have you looking at that candle on your dining room table just a little differently.

Friday, February 24, 2012

An Interview and Giveaway With Author Elizabeth Marx



When I first came across the cover art for this book, I knew I had to read it. Complete with a winding plot, intricate characters and tons of mythology, this book has many elements that will appeal to readers at On the Broomstick. Author Elizabeth Marx agreed to do an interview and give two lucky folks the chance to win her book. So here we go...





How did you first become interested in witches?





I’ve always been fascinated by myths and legends, but when I was in fifth grade some new girls came to our school and not only did they look very different from the rest of us, they spoke and acted differently too. My Gram called them gypsies and said they were thieves and to stay away from them. Now, this was in the city of Chicago, where almost every ethnicity you can imagine was present in my school, but gypsies? They were new and fascinating to me, with their dark eyes that seemed to see into my soul and their bangle bracelets running from wrist to elbow. The girls were cousins, and Riva and Mara used to scare the other girls in our class when they’d pretend to read their hands, but I wasn’t afraid of them, just curious. I didn’t tease them and I think because I treated them like everyone else, they would sit at my lunch table, or maybe it was because I didn’t mind the smell of their very different food. Riva didn’t want to be a gypsy, but Mara didn’t seem to mind. When I told Riva that she didn’t have to be a gypsy when she grew up, she looked at me like I’d sprouted horns. Riva told me that her grandmother was a fortune teller and healer and that she would have to take her grandmother’s place when she turned 15. I told her that was ridiculous because it was a law that she had to attend school until she was at least 16 and you can’t just one day become a fortune teller. Riva looked deep into my eyes and she said that they had their own laws and then proceeded to tell me things about myself that there was no way she could have known. That should have scared me, but I wasn’t, I was sad for Riva and I tried to talk to her several times, but after she gave me her reading, she never spoke to me again. After Spring break that year she was gone from our school and I never saw her again. I can still remember the look on Riva’s face when she told me those things about myself, she wasn’t eleven-years-old at that moment, her eyes looked like they were hundreds of years old, as if her soul read mine countless times before. It’s funny, I usually wear bangles or a thick bracelet that has two silver coins on it that makes noise, I wonder if subconsciously it’s my soul singing to hers???

What inspired you to write Vanities?

I was interested in hereditary witchcraft and had several ideas about adult novels, but my daughter wanted me to write a young adult book and she liked the idea of witchcraft. I went from that general idea to fairy tales, which led me to morality tales, which led me to the 7 deadly sins. So I tied a fairy tale to the sin of vanity, but I wanted it to have a broader theme than just personal vanity, so I took it the ultimate vanity, all mankind’s knowledge and the possession of it.

Do you write to music? If so, what?

No, I write in complete silence. When I can get it! But I do use music to inspire ideas and scenes. Some of the music associated with All’s Fair in Vanities War.

Lady GaGa, Poker Face
Evanescence, Sweet Sacrifice
Paramore, Crushcrushcrush
Within Temptation, Stand My Ground
Nightwish, Amaranth
Epica, Cry For the Moon
Nightwish, Over the Hills and Far Away
Beethoven, Moonlight Sonata
Journey, Don’t Stop Believing
Within Temptation, The Howling
Nightwish, Bye Bye Beautiful

The story POV is from the Seer’s perspective. Why did you choose that throughout the book instead of switching chapters and POV for the other main characters?

The Seer came to me as the narrator of this story and since she died to tell it to me I thought I had to honor her in that. Also, the Seer is an outsider to the ExtraOrdinary world, it’s all new to her, just as it is to the reader. I wanted the reader to feel what it felt like looking at the story from the outside. I did use Keleigh’s POV in the beginning of the book to tell the story of what happened to her parents, and then toward the end of the book I used diary entries to tell the reader Keleigh and Locke’s deeper thoughts. I will probably use more of these diary entries as the books progress, but The Seer will always remain the narrator, unless Balor get’s his hands on her, and then there is that interesting Epilogue with Ilithyia and Darby tearing at The Seer’s wings??? And here is our captivating narrator.

                                             

You can like The Seer on Facebook at http://facebook.com/#!/TheSeers7DeadlyFairyTales
There are many supernatural characters in the book, and many references to Celtic mythology. What are some of your favorite resources for readers who want to know more?

                                                  








These are just a few of the books I used for research but I have an extensive library with over 400 reference books so it’s hard to narrow it down to just a few. It’s the main reason I decided to come up with my own Compendium which will be coming out, hopefully, by the end of the month: The Seer’s 7 Deadly Fairy Tales, A Compendium.  It is a Celtic encyclopedia for the series and has the first of 7 fairy tales, each will be told by a different character and will be added to the Compendium as the series progresses. Here’s the cover:



Can you explain the difference between Ordinary, ExtraOrdinary and OtherWorldly?

Ordinary: someone who lacks any special extra sensory skills, everyday mortals who live normal mortal lifetimes. Some mortals do have latent genes that surface sometime during life, but because they were raised in the Ordinary world these skills are not used or developed and therefore they lie dormant. Or there are some people who do use these skills, let’s say a psychic, but they use them for the sole purpose of profit, this person has some ExtraOrdinary skill but would not be considered ExtraOrdinary because he was not part of the Order. You must either be born into the Order or suffer great hardship and rigorous training to join it. 
    
ExtraOrdinary: someone born with extra sensory skills, be it divination, clairvoyance, telepathy, etc. These traits are inherited or encoded into their DNA, passed from generation to generation and from the moment of birth they are developed and encouraged. These persons inherit their membership into the Order by birthright.
Shining Ones: Celtic gods and goddesses, who along with the Danaan have been sequestered in the OtherWorld when Ordinary and ExtraOrdinary mankind banded together to sequester them when they interfered too often in human affairs. Some have the ability to cross between realms at certain times of the year when the veil thins. Some have the power to cross at will almost anytime, but they could not all cross at one time or the LeyLine (power source) would collapse.

What are some of your favorite witches in books and movies?
A pictures worth a thousand words . .  .



           





                          

What are your plans for the series?

At this point, all I can say is that Book II will be out this year, it doesn’t have a title or cover yet, but it will be about a deadly sin, follow the theme of a fairy tale, and take Locke, Keleigh, and The Seer on a journey for another another magical item and in pursuit of why exactly they’re tied together. It’s all mapped out on a piece of paper the size of a bulletin board, I could let you see it, but then I’d have to feed you some sort of potion to make you forget and you never know what else you might forget, like where you parked your broom last or who your familiar is.

As a writer, do you map out your story or fly by the seat of your broomstick?

I create a map or general idea of where I’m going, it’s kind of like the highway for me, but sometimes I want to get off and ride the sideroads. When I do this, I’m usually barely able to hang on to the broomstick because of the bumpiness, but occasionaly magical things happen when I do.

What is you advice for writer’s of YA fiction?

Write what you love and try to write it in a manner that’s unexpected.


Dana, my familiar, Lord Luxor and I, thank you for hosting us.





Many thanks to Elizabeth for flying in for 
an interview! Now for the giveaway!

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Reading Now (And Awesome): Born Wicked


"Blessed with a gift..."cursed" with a secret." 

Everybody knows Cate Cahill and her sisters are eccentric. Too pretty, too reclusive, and far too educated for their own good. But the truth is even worse: they're witches. And if their secret is discovered by the priests of the Brotherhood, it would mean an asylum, a prison ship - or an early grave. 

Before her mother died, Cate promised to protect her sisters. But with only six months left to choose between marriage and the Sisterhood, she might not be able to keep her word . . . especially after she finds her mother's diary, uncovering a secret that could spell her family's destruction. Desperate to find alternatives to their fate, Cate starts scouring banned books and questioning rebellious new friends, all while juggling tea parties, shocking marriage proposals, and a forbidden romance with the completely unsuitable Finn Belastra. 

If what her mother wrote is true, the Cahill girls aren't safe. Not from the Brotherhood, the Sisterhood - not even from each other.

Goodreads


This book caught my attention first thing this morning and I had to download it to my Nook app. Not that I'm not reading a dozen other things right now, but this grabbed me right away and so far, I like it.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Seamless Crochet Blog Tour and Giveaway


When I first came across this book in the Interweave Crochet Accessories special edition for 2011, I was hooked. The Radiance Sparkling Skinny Scarf caught my eye and I was intrigued by the idea of a seamless scarf done in a pattern. Picking up hook and yarn, I played with it but realized something rather quickly. One must learn to better follow diagrams to avoid the urge to stab ones self in the eye with ones hook.



I had the first motif on the scarf looking awesome. The second one was gorgeous. Then I ended up in the middle of the two with nary a place to go. Rip. Rip. Ribbit. Read directions again. 

There is a happy ending. I got super good at triple crochet clusters and I have a scarf that is morphing into something that is going to look great once I adapt it to the non pattern solution I just came up with.

Happily, my copy of Seamless Crochet arrived and I was able to look in the back of the book and see very detailed instructions on how to read the diagrams, both by color code (which matters) and in how the diagram works in general and for the projects in the book. There is even a DVD to explain further. You can bet on my day off tomorrow, that is where I am going to be. Hook in hand in front of the television, learning more about this awe inspiring book.



What I liked:

The diagrams in the book are clear once you understand the method behind them. So are the written directions. Combine the two and you have a marvelous system that is truly unique. One of the things I hate about motif style work is the amount of ends you have to weave in. Oh the horror. Not with this book though. Kristin Omdahl has done a great job of crafting projects that have little to no pieces to join and Yay (insert happy dance) hardly any tails to hide. 

The other thing I liked was the basic layout of the projects. You have a pattern block so if you want to adapt the theme to a project other than the one listed, you can do it. (Or like me who is learning how to read diagrams and made a detour or two that will have some creative offshoots from the original piece.) The projects themselves are lovely and I am itching to sit down and work through them. I love lace and the open style to these patterns is very appealing.

What I didn't:

Not a thing. My own inexperience was a stumbling block, but I am stubborn and am learning. The diagrams, once I received the book for review, are clear and I began to understand some of what I had missed in the magazine article. 

Overall:

This book uses geometric patterns to create a project base that will delight crocheters of all levels. There are 18 projects but infinite possibilities that will change the way you crochet and have you looking to change other patterns to reflect the methods taught here. The DVD included, in addition to the information at the back of the book is supremely helpful and will lead you to success.

5/5

About the author:


Kristin Omdahl designs knit and crochet garments and patterns under her label KRISTIN and website www.styledbykristin.com. She appears in every episode of Knitting Daily TV on public television as the show's Crochet Corner expert, conducts seminars around the country and teaches knitting and crochet in her DVD workshops, including Innovative Crochet: Motifs. She is also the author of Wrapped in Crochet, Crochet So Fine and A Knitting Wrapsody. Kristin's work has appeared in many magazines and books. She enjoys knitting and crocheting in her orchid garden in sunny southwest Florida.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Black Heart Loa: The Review




“An eye for an eye is never enough.”


Kallie Rivière, a Cajun hoodoo apprentice with a bent for trouble, learned the meaning of those ominous words when hoodoo bogeyman Doctor Heron targeted her family for revenge. Now, while searching for her still-missing bayou pirate cousin, Kallie finds out the hard way that someone is undoing powerful gris gris, which means that working magic has become as unpredictable as rolling a handful of dice. The wards woven to protect the Gulf coast are unraveling, leaving New Orleans and the surrounding bayous vulnerable just as an unnatural storm—the deadliest in a century—is born. As the hurricane powers toward the heart of all she loves, Kallie desperately searches for the cause of the disturbing randomness, only to learn a deeply unsettling truth: the culprit may be herself. To protect her family and friends, including the sexy nomad Layne Valin, Kallie steps into the jaws of danger . . . and finds a loup garou designed to steal her heart—literally.


Goodreads



I hope you have all seen the amazing giveaway and guest post from the wonderful Adrian Phoenix. In addition to the giveaway post, I wanted to do a review of Adrian's latest Hoodoo book, Black Heart Loa. Of the two books in the series, this one was my favorite. 

What I liked:

The world that Adrian has created is so believable you can almost feel the Cajun spirit invading your own. The dialect she uses is right on. So are the explanations of hoodoo terms that I had never heard before. Kallie and Layne are two main characters that you can't help but care about as they continue their adventure from the first book, Black Dust Mambo. The sexual tension is palpable and the sparks fly constantly.



The adventure is never ending and totally unpredictable, so you won't ever be bored with the story. As magical systems go in fiction, Hoodoo is relatively untapped, so the series has a unique flavor that I have definitely acquired a taste for. The addition of the werewolf characters in this book made it even more interesting.

What I didn't:

At the beginning of the first book I did find myself lost before I understood that it wasn't just one POV. The story switches between characters. By mid-way through the first book I was used to it and by the second, I hardly noticed it at all. 

Overall:

5/5 

I love the originality of this series and can't wait for the next installment. Adrian Phoenix has crafted a world rich with characters and personality that is saturated with culture and depth.



The Hoodoo Series: Adrian Phoenix Guest Post and Giveaway




I first came across this series a month or so ago when I downloaded it into my iPad. e-Books are my new addiction, to be sure. Reading through the first one, I couldn't put it down and the second one was even better! 5/5 stars for this series. Writing to the wonderful and amazing Adrian Phoenix, I told her how much I enjoyed the books and invited her on the blog for a guest post. She responded with the promise of a future interview and a guest post with some of my favorite characters from the books! And a giveaway!




So get yourself a moment or two and meet some of the feisty characters waiting for you in this series of hoodoo, magic and some butt-kicking adventure.


Gators Prefer Tourists in Marshmallow Suits
Or
Don’t Feed the Gators Marshmallows.


Kallie: Seriously. Don’t. And I can’t believe I even need to say that. You’d think it’d be obvious. But every day, the Cajun tour guides take goggle-eyed tourists slathered in sunscreen and bug spray out on their swamp boats and let them snap pictures with camera and cell phones  while they toss marshmallows to swimming carnivores.

Hooo-EEEE. Here, pretty Bab-BEH!

Swimming carnivores who eye the boat hopefully, wishing one of those soft, pale picture-snapping tourists would tumble right over that rail and into their bellies. Tourist nummie-nums.

Jackson: That’s ain’t true now. Them gators are beaucoup smart. They’re the ones getting free snacks, not the ones paying for the privilege to watch as those snacks are gobbled up, them.

Kallie: (smiling apologetically to the female newcomer she’s chatting with) Oh, this is my cousin, Jackson Bonaparte. And I’m Kallie Rivière, by the way. Sorry, forgot to mention that. Welcome to Bayou Cyprés Noir—and one of our many summer BBQs. My aunt told me that you bought the Bellefontaine place down on Magnolia Road and . . .

(Notices that the new resident is sliding an appreciative gaze over her cousin and rolls her eyes.)

Kallie: Think you could’ve worn a tighter T-shirt, Jacks? That one doesn’t look quite airbrushed on enough.

Jackson: (innocently) I could always take it off.

Kallie: Spare me . . . I mean, us. Spare us. Looks like our newest resident is ready for another beer. Why don’t you attempt to be a gentleman and fetch her another?

Jackson: (snorts) Yeah, that’s subtle, short stuff. (Smiles at new resident) Another Abita, chère? All right, Rosalinda, it is. With the color blossoming in those cheeks, a perfect name. I’ll be right back.

Kallie: (rolls her eyes again). Sounds like he’s been taking lessons from Dallas. Oh, that’d be Dallas Brûler. He’s a root doctor—one of my aunt’s best students, when he was leaving the Wild Turkey and women alone—but he’s been practicing on his own for some time now down in Chalmette. Anyhoo, as I was saying before my cousin and his T-shirt defined muscles interrupted us, my aunt told me that you bought the Bellefontaine place and asked me to point out the more supernatural aspects—

Belladonna: Like the loa—you don’t want to piss them off. Most of them are good natured, but like any spirit, they do not like to be taken for granted or annoyed or ignored. They tend to have nasty tempers when provoked.

Kallie: They rule these woods and bayous. So being respectful is always a good call. Some are nature spirits, elementals, but others are spirits of the dead. And if they possess you, take you for their cheval, then just go with it and have a good time.

Belladonna: (whaps Kallie’s shoulder) Stop that, Shug. Don’t listen to her, she’s full of shit at the moment. The loa don’t possess just anybody—usually.

Kallie: This is Belladonna Brown, by the way, my best friend. She’s a voodooienne, learning to be a mambo. No, I’m a hoodoo, like Dallas—a rootworker. There’s a difference between hoodoo and Voodoo, for true.

Belladonna: Mmm-hmm. Voodoo is a religion with priests and priestesses and ceremonies. Hoodoo is folk magic, practiced by people like Kallie and her aunt and Dallas. But we both know how to make poppets and lay tricks and uncross hexes. Though my favorite has got to be the shrivel package trick you laid on that idiot who was stalking you, Shug.

Kallie: (nods) Worked beautifully. He ain’t been around since. (cups a hand around her mouth and whispers): The shrivel part was only temporary.

Belladonna: There wasn’t much to shrivel anyway. Unlike that fine nomad of yours. Never saw a man who wore wet boxers better.

Kallie: For true! But Layne isn’t mine . . . not exactly . . . not yet. And it’d take one powerful shrivel-package trick to do much to him. Not that I’d want to!  Do anything bad, I mean.

Belladonna: What about the naughty kind of bad?

Kallie: Tais-toi, you. Or I’ll be fixing you with a cat’s-got-her-tongue trick.

Belladonna: (laughs) Oh, girl. You wish.

Kallie: (looks at the wide-eyed newcomer) All right, some of the other things you need to watch out for are the loups-garous—the werewolves. They normally keep to themselves down in Le Nique and try not to eat people, but lapses have been known to happen.

Belladonna: (nods, her head of blue and black curls bobbing): You should watch out for Devlin Daniels, the demon wolf of the bayou. He doesn’t abide by anyone’s rules—hoodoo, loup-garou, or loa. Rumor says he was conceived at the crossroads.

Kallie: How about a little quote from my Aunt Divinity? “If a person be evil or wicked of just plain bad and leave misery and grief in deir wake, den one night de demon wolf will come for dem and he’ll rip deir black hearts from outta deir chests, He be de voice of dark retribution, him. Now, be good and eat yo’ peas, girl.”

Belladonna: Since when does not eating peas equal dark retribution?
Kallie: That’s exactly what I asked!

Belladonna: Oh, I can’t wait to hear the answer.

Kallie: She said, and I quote: “Mebbe de peas don’t, but yo’ sass certainly qualifies. Now, tais-toi, you, and eat.”

Belladonna:  Did you? Eat those peas?

Kallie:  (sighs) Yup.

Jackson: (hands bottle of Abita to a wide-eyed Rosalinda) What’d I miss?

Kallie: Not much, just sharing a few pointers with our newest resident. So, to recap, be careful of pissing of the loa, avoid loups-garous . . .

Belladonna: And beware of hex-laying, vengeful ghosts.

Kallie: I forgot that one! Beware of unsolicited potions and don’t do anything to a poppet if you find one—it’s most likely linked to some poor soul—eat your peas, don’t wear a marshmallow suit, and keep a broom close to hand in case you need to shoo a gator off your porch. Did I forget anything?

Belladonna: Revenge-hungry hoodoo bogeymen, maybe.

Jackson: Where’s she running off to?

Belladonna: (frowns) Maybe to fetch a broom?

Kallie: Or a for sale sign. Now, how about we organize the men into a wet boxers contest at the next BBQ? We just need to round up my luscious nomad, Layne. And no, you can’t enter, Jacks. Ew. You’re my cousin.
Here’s a link for the first chapter of Black Dust Mambo. And you can visit my website for a peek at Black Heart Loa. The third book, Black Moon Mojo, will be coming soon.



I’m also the author of The Maker’s Song series: A Rush of Wings, In the Blood, Beneath the Skin, and Etched in Bone. The fifth book, On Midnight Wings, will be out later this year.



You can read the first chapter to A Rush of Wings here.






Thanks so much for having me! It’s been a blast. You can also find me at:
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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Switched: The Giveaway



SWITCHED… at birth:
When Wendy Everly was six years old, her mother was convinced she was a monster and tried to kill her. Eleven years later, Wendy discovers her mother might have been right.  She’s not the person she’s always believed herself to be, and her whole life begins to unravel—all because of Finn Holmes.
Finn is a mysterious guy who always seems to be watching her.  Every encounter leaves her deeply shaken…though it has more to do with her fierce attraction to him than she’d ever admit.  But it isn’t long before he reveals the truth:  Wendy is a changeling who was switched at birth—and he’s come to take her home.   
Now Wendy’s about to journey to a magical world she never knew existed, one that’s both beautiful and frightening.  And where she must leave her old life behind to discover who she’s meant to become…





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