Thursday, August 20, 2015

Excerpt:: Nightwise by R.S. Belcher



R.S. Belcher, the acclaimed author of The Six-Gun Tarot and The Shotgun Arcana launches a gritty new urban fantasy series set in today's seedy occult underworld in Nightwise.
In the more shadowy corners of the world, frequented by angels and demons and everything in-between, Laytham Ballard is a legend. It's said he raised the dead at the age of ten, stole the Philosopher's Stone in Vegas back in 1999, and survived the bloodsucking kiss of the Mosquito Queen. Wise in the hidden ways of the night, he's also a cynical bastard who stopped thinking of himself as the good guy a long time ago.
Now a promise to a dying friend has Ballard on the trail of an escaped Serbian war criminal with friends in both high and low places--and a sinister history of blood sacrifices. Ballard is hell-bent on making Dusan Slorzack pay for his numerous atrocities, but Slorzack seems to have literally dropped off the face of the Earth, beyond the reach of his enemies, the Illuminati, and maybe even the Devil himself. To find Slorzack, Ballard must follow a winding, treacherous path that stretches from Wall Street and Washington, D.C. to backwoods hollows and truckstops, while risking what's left of his very soul . . . .

Chapter One

The banker was crucified on the wall of his Wall Street office, fountain pens rammed through both wrists, an Armani Jesus.
The pens are Montblancs, very nice. Each one is custom-made, decorated with emeralds, sapphires, and rubies, and then hundreds of tiny diamonds just for good measure. They run for a hair under a million dollars each. They’re sturdy too, obviously. I doubt that their current function would be of much use in a marketing campaign, but still, a fun fact to know.
I left the shitty meth-lab-trailer-on-cinder-blocks I called home when I was thirteen. I remember writing the good-bye letter to my snoring, drunken mother on the back of a disconnect notice from Allegheny Power. I wrote my good-byes with a gnawed-on pencil, whittled to an uneven point by a pocketknife. I left the letter on top of a pile of past-due bills, truancy notices, and empty Marlboro cartons. No Montblancs in our clan, no sir.

Another dead end. This pattern was getting old. Every connection, every lead I had made to tracking Slorzack had dried up. To date: three strangulations, one incinerated alive while taking a shower, one exsanguinated, a “car bomb” that left no trace of the explosive device, and now, Wall Street performance art.
I considered a working on the body—wake the old boy up for a bit of Q and A—but if the killers had experience in the Life they might have set traps for any would-be necromancer.

I pulled the high-backed leather chair out from behind the desk, rolled it to where I could have a decent view of the tableau, sat down, and admired the effect, the craftsmen’s work, for a moment. Every artist signs his portrait in some way.
I pulled out an American Spirit, only three left in the pack, second pack today. The Zippo snapped open with a hollow, metallic clank. A hint of sulfur stung my nose as the wheel ground against my thumb and the flame kissed the tip of my coffin nail. Pa called cigarettes that. He was a Lucky Strike man. Too bad he hadn’t lived long enough for them to kill him.

The crucifixion itself had no occult symbolism that I recognized from the position of the body—hands above the head, almost crossed at the wrists but not quite. It did cause me to flash for a second to an image of an old bondage playmate of mine, the languid way she would raise her arms above her head and await the cuffs. If there was a safe word for God’s snuff play, he kept it to himself.
The positioning of the body and hands didn’t indicate traditional Judeo-Christian iconography; there was none of the overtly brutal but metaphorically and mystically powerful symbolism of Teutonic or Norse rites. He wasn’t hanged upside down, for example, or missing an eye, and I saw nary a crow.

I took a long draw on the cigarette, ran a hand over my shaggy hair. I had pulled it back, tight, into a ponytail to keep it out of my way. I rubbed my eyes.
The murder didn’t betray any of the subtle trademarks of Dalí Absurdist Chaos Magic, the telltale covert rendering of metaphysical, four-dimensional, transcendent hypercubism that old Salvador had extrapolated in his Anti-Matter Manifesto. A good read, by the way. Even if you didn’t care for his art, you had to admit Dalí was a top-notch psychosocial alchemist.

Signs of Satanism? Please. So last millennium. Go listen to Gorgoroth and sacrifice a puppy, why don’t you.
No, no hocus-pocus. This was just someone killing a man in a very nasty way. More likely two or more killers, given the strength and flexibility needed to wrestle him up there, pin him, and hold him till the blood loss did its work. I was suddenly taken by the beginning of a very bad joke: How many faceless conspiratorial hit men does it take to crucify a banker?

This wasn’t a ritual or an execution. This was a message. For me. Stop searching. Back off.
Dark streams flowed from the dead man’s wrists, staining the pens’ jeweled lengths, ending in swollen, pregnant drops that fell down into his eight-hundred-dollar Orlando Pita haircut, saturating his hairline and trickling across his pale, downturned face. The blood split and fractured into a wet black web, finally meeting again to pool at his perfect chin and tumble down, splashing dark stains on the expensive wool carpet. The lines across his face reminded me of Alice Cooper’s makeup after a long, hot show.

I wrestled a small leather couch close enough to stand on it and reach the banker’s body. I braced one boot against the wall and pulled the Montblancs free with a lot of grunting and effort. They were sturdy and had been sunk deep through skin, bone, paneling, and plaster.
The body fell, bounced off the couch, and landed with a muted squish into the dark, wet stain on the carpet that had gathered below him like a lengthening shadow.

I wiped the blood off of the pens with a monogrammed silk handkerchief I found in his pocket and slipped them into my coat. He wouldn’t need them.
I hopped down, leaned over the body, and tried to imagine the killers, the struggle. It wasn’t as hard for me as it might have been for most and, unfortunately, most of my insights were through the eyes of the killers, not the victim. I kept thinking how I would have killed this man, how I would have left him as an example to be found. This was far from my first visit with violence and death.

Sane, healthy, normal people grew up in fucking Disneyland when it comes to evil and the beings capable of inflicting it. Monsters, human and otherwise, roam this world, I assure you. It would be nice to blame dark powers and inhuman fiends for most of the troubles in this life, but sadly, we can’t. There is more human evil out there than inhuman. Our world chokes on it, drowns in it, but some of us have learned to swim.
Hitler was the Henry Ford of the infernal. He developed a production line, a process, to make horrible, soulless acts more cost-effective and efficient while removing accountability and guilt for his “workforce.” He knew the importance of branding, sound-bite speeches, props, and jingles. He also knew, like any good marketer, the importance of images, symbolism, and meme, and he stole from only the best., Like Ford, he developed a process other sick, sad little psychopaths could duplicate and improve on across time and space. A process of atrocity that was as clean as the faces and reputations of the American industrialists who did business with Hitler up until the war and even after it had begun. No dirty fingernails for the boys in the home office, no hands-on work for them.

Somewhere in the process, someone has to get dirty hands, though. Someone has to strap on the IED, feed the starving women and children into the ovens, S drops the bomb or pulls the trigger; someone slaughters the schoolchildren. In my experience, the best of these “men of action” are weak-willed sheep. The worst … well, they worst enjoy their work. Some get off on it.
Evil is out there, right now, today, maybe watching your kids play too intently at the next table in that restaurant with the overpriced pizza and the giant rat for a mascot. Fun fact: Did you know that restaurant was founded and dedicated as a temple and feast hall to Karni Mata, the bride to the rat god, Mushika. It’s true. Those little gold tokens your A-B honor roll students are clamoring for are sacrificial blood coins feeding the god of plagues and vermin, and trust me, you don’t even want to know why they got rid of the ball pits.

It’s all out there—dirty nails, nails caked with graveyard dirt and the coagulated blood of infants.
I know these monsters, I have fought them, and if am to be honest with you and myself, more often than not I have been the monster.

The man I was hunting had nails that were very dirty indeed, and I had promised Boj I’d find Dusan Slorzack and make sure he paid his account in full. But now, a dead banker and another dead end.
Two weeks ago:

I found my friend, Branko Bojich in a decaying hospice in Brooklyn that smelled of shit and Vicks VapoRub.
“You look like hell,” I said, standing in the doorway of his tiny cell-like room.

“I’m dying from AIDS, asshole,” he said with a weak grin. “What’s your excuse?”
I tossed him a small gift-wrapped package. “I got your call. How are you, Boj?”

“Dying, Laytham. Just dying, that’s all. No big thing,” he said, putting the gift aside. “How’s my favorite West Virginia cracker doing?”
“Fair to middlin’, as they say at the tractor pull. Just got back from Egypt last night. It’s good to see you, even like this, man.”

“Thanks, thanks for coming. I need to ask you to do something for me. It’s going to be messy, though. But I figure you…”
“Yeah, I owe you for messy,” I said. “What?”

“I want you to find the man who killed me, Laytham,” Boj said.
I’m looking right at him, Boj. You put that spike in your arm, no one else.”

He squinted into the afternoon sunlight that squeezed through filthy blinds. His eyes were still, and dark as opals, but his dusky skin was now washed-out and blotchy. He talked to the sunbeams, not to me.
“I told you I was married before I came to America, right?” he said.

“Yeah.”
“She died in čelebići, in Bosnia, back in ’92,” he said. “She was raped, every day for months, tortured. They nailed…” He swallowed hard and I saw him trying to beat down the vision. He let himself fail. “They nailed an SDA badge to her forehead and then kicked her to death.”

“SDA?” I asked.
“It’s the initials of one of the Muslim political parties over there. The stupid bastards didn’t even care how little Mita thought of politics. She believed everyone was good at heart … look what that got her.”

He looked back to me with dry eyes, dead eyes. Whatever lived behind those dark wells had preceded Boj out of this world; the rest of him was just waiting to catch up.
“I was here in the States handling my family’s business. I was planning to bring her over.”

Boj’s family’s business was called “import-export” in polite circles. The cops called them the biggest heroin production and distribution network in Eastern Europe. When I met him, he was handling everything for them from L.A. through flyover country—Middle America. I saw him at war with the Russians, the Triads. He was the Alexander of the street—bloody, raging, glorious, and terrible. Now he was a skeleton stretched over gray skin, one good bout of flu away from Hell.
“Stupid bastards,” he muttered. “I found out the name of the chief stupid bastard just a few years ago. It took the last of my resources. Most of my ‘friends’ have abandoned me, and even my enemies pity me and wait for me to die like a rabid dog. But I knew you would come, Laytham. I know you. I want you to find him. I want you to see he gets what he deserves.”

“Why the fuck me, Boj? I’m no cop, I’m not an enforcer, a leg breaker. I know some wise guys who’ll do him for…”
“Because he’s into the Life, Laytham, the Art, the Dance, bajanje—whatever the fuck you call it, just like you and Harel and all those other weirdoes we used to hang out with. I think he used it to escape from the law, even the street’s law.”

Down the hallway there were echoing shouts in Spanish. Someone named Tuni needed to mop up Mr. McGowan’s piss from all over the break room. I sighed.
“This chief stupid bastard have a name? We may have bumped into each other at one of the weirdo conventions.”

“Slorzack,” he said. “Dusan Slorzack. He was indicted for war crimes back in ’96, but he hasn’t surfaced anywhere since then. He seems to have found a back door to slip away from everyone.”
“That was awhile back, man. You sure he hasn’t just died somewhere?”

Boj said nothing. His face was sunken, a skull with tatters of skin and bone pulled over it, a constellation of sores marking his face.
“No,” he finally said. “Bastards like me don’t get that lucky. My karma is fucked. He’s out there laughing and drinking and fucking and Mita is only a memory in my skull, and when I’m gone, she’s gone too, like she never was, and that is the greatest crime I think I have ever known. I’d do it myself if I could, Laytham. I can’t.”

I scratched my head and sighed. Boj waited patiently with the ghost of his dead wife for me to mull it over. Slorzack. The name meant nothing to me. A long-cold trail. My enthusiasm must have been shining out of my face.
“You owe me blood, redneck,” he finally said when he felt me trying to pull away from it.

“Yeah,” I said, “I reckon I do. Okay, I’ll look into it.”
“Good,” he said, and I saw his whole body relax. He smiled. His teeth were rotting, and his gums were gray and recessed, but it made me feel good to see him smile, all the same.

“Thanks,” he said.
“I got to go. I’ll keep in touch,” I said.

“Yeah. What the fuck is this, Laytham?” he asked.

He unwrapped his present. His eyes widened as he recognized the worn, battered leather case. He unzipped it and smiled again. Everything was like he had left it. The hypodermic, the needles, even the cooking spoon, caked and blackened. The rubber hose uncoiled like a tan viper, eager to wrap around his arm and sink its fangs into his vein. A small red balloon filled with poisonous rapture also fell out, tied tight to keep its contents from spilling.
“I figured what the hell, right?” I said.

“Yeah,” Boj said, arraying his works before him, looking at the balloon like a groom looks at a bride on their honeymoon. “What the hell.”
I knelt over the dead banker’s dumb face frozen in agony and terror. The dead always look fake, like bad wax mannequins or grotesque rubber sex dolls, but the death smells were there to remind you it wasn’t a special effect. Sweat, shit, piss, blood, all stuffed up my nostrils to assure me it was as real as it gets.

His eyes reminded me of Granny’s. All dead eyes did. I half expected him to blink, for those cold, empty windows to shift, focus past the gathering cataract clouds, and regard me from a sitting room in Hell.
They didn’t. I started to breathe again and felt the cool sheen of sweat wet the back of my shirt. I closed the dead man’s eyes, more out of a desire for reprieve from their regard than anything approximating respect or human kindness. My hands shook a little. I needed a drink.

A man like this would be missed—and soon. He had been here all night, and now, in the cold gray light of dawn, his office manager, or one of his racquetball buddies, or his steroid dealer would walk in and find him. I needed to be gone by then.
I tossed the room, looking for anything that might put me back on the frozen trail of Slorzack. My short-lived friend, the car bomb guy, had left a few legal pads in his desk drawer that hadn’t ended up blown to hell. They led me here. Slorzack had paid a lot of money for an introduction to this man—Berman, James Berman. Why?

I skipped searching the plundered desk and the computer with its blue screen of death. The people who killed the banker had done a professional job of tumbling the place. They had found whatever it was they were looking for, if indeed they were looking for anything at all. Tossing the room might have just been a ploy to divert attention from the murder. Unlike the crap you see in the movies, nobody methodically tears up a room and then misses the McGuffin in the false-bottom chest. It just ain’t so. The only hope I had was to pick through the scraps. Look for the unseen.
I closed my eyes, steadied my hands, and slowed my breathing and my heartbeat. I opened the lenses of energy that resided along the bone staircase of my spine. I exhaled and opened my eyes.

I started with the primary reason for the killer’s visit: Berman himself. If they just wanted to toss the place, they could have done that when he wasn’t here. No, they came to do this to him. Ransacking the office was either a secondary concern or a ruse. I examined his body. Berman was a very tan man. He had good hair and good teeth and was tall and had a body that was a testament to many hours worshiping at the temples of the racquet club and spa. He had a class ring—a big squat, ugly thing designed to announce to the world his pedigree. On his left hand was a simple gold band and a Masonic ring, gold with a ruby glaring up at me in the harsh office light. A Mason. He was a little more interesting now.
A sudden insight, a flare of intuition, made me open his shirt, ripping the buttons off the broadcloth and pushing his tie aside, so that it now clutched his bare neck more like a hangman’s noose than a banker’s badge of office. His chest was smooth, hairless. Around his neck, on a thin, expensive silver chain, were two slender cylindrical handcuff keys on a simple wire loop of steel.

I touched the keys and felt the swell of tantric power roar through my mind and down in my Swadhisthana chakra. The flicker of the candles, the spatter of hot wax, the feel of warm leather in my hand, the smell of blood and sex, the scream of pain and desire, echoing. This was the first real part of this man I had come across here. These keys were soaked in secret power, hidden desire, and I could track that.

But I felt a familiar pressure squeeze between my brows as my Ajna chakra opened its petals wider. Something else.
I took the chain and the keys, dropped them in my pocket. I reached for the mug of overpriced, and now cold, coffee on his desk and dipped a Montblanc pen into it. I stirred counterclockwise as I incantated. “Aperio latito conspici … iam.

I took the pen out of the mug and moved it across his still chest, left to right then right to left, finishing the charm by circling his chest widdershins and touching the tip of my makeshift wand to the spot where his cool, still heart was.
This was a risk. If the killers had planned on me using the Art to search, I could get a nasty surprise, but this was a very unobtrusive bit of magic. A trap would have to have a hair-trigger to activate against this.

The skin wavered like asphalt on a hot day and the tattoo appeared, spread across the dead man’s chest. Emerald ink, racing, arcing, forming symbols, finishing in the pattern of the pyramid with the All-Seeing Eye boring into me as it hovered at the apex amid a halo of brilliant radiating light rays.
Illuminating.

“Shit,” I said, with more than my usual amount of West Virginian twang. I said it out loud to no one but the dead man and me, a soon-to-be dead man.
“You’re with the fucking Illuminati.”

Copyright © 2015 by Rod Belcher



ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  • R. S. Belcher

  • R.S. BELCHER won the Grand Prize in the Strange New Worlds SF-writing contest. He runs Cosmic Castle, a comic book shop in Roanoke, Virginia, and is the author of The Six-Gun Tarot

BUY THE BOOK

Available Formats and Book Details

Nightwise


R. S. Belcher
    • Tor Books
    • August 2015
    • Hardcover

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Cover Reveal and Giveaway for Silenced in the Surf by Kate Dyer-Seeley

 
 
Welcome to the cover reveal for Silenced in the Surf by Kate Dyer-Seeley! This is book three in the Pacific Northwest Mystery series and releases March 29th, 2016.
 
About the Book:
Covering a windsurfing competition should have been a breeze for reporter Meg Reed, but with a killer in the curl, she's headed for rough waters…
 
Hood River in the Columbia River Gorge is the windsurfing capital of the world, and Meg is stoked to cover the King of the Hook event for Portland's Northwest Extreme magazine. Before the competition gets under way, Meg has a chance to try some windsurfing on her own. But when the current sweeps her downriver, she spots a body snagged on the rocks. The dead man is Justin Cruise, aka Cruise Control, a celebrity windsurfer and not exactly a nice guy. It's soon clear his death was no accident, and Cruise had no shortage of enemies. As Meg dives right in to discover who wiped out the windsurfer, she'll need to keep her balance--or she too may get blown away.
 
 
Praise For Scene Of The Climb
 
"A splendid overview of the greater Portland and Columbia River Gorge region, perfect for travel buffs. Her protagonist shows promise with her determined attitude and moxie." --Library Journal
 
"A fun, terrific adventure." --Suspense Magazine
 
Includes Adventure Guides!
Goodreads |  Amazon | B&N
 
----------------------------------------------------------------
Don't miss out on the first two books, Scene of the Climb and Slayed on the Slopes!
 
 
 
 
About the Author:
 
 
Kate Dyer-Seeley writes the Pacific Northwest Mystery Series for Kensington Publishing. The first
 
book in the series, Scene of the Climb, features the rugged landscapes of the Columbia River Gorge and a young journalist who bills herself as an intrepid adventurer in order to land a gig writing for Northwest Extreme.
 
Her work has appeared in a variety of regional and international publications including: The Columbian, The Vancouver Voice, Seattle Backpacker, Portland Family Magazine, and Climbing Magazine.
 
Kate lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and son, where you can find her hitting the trail, at an artisan coffee shop, or at her favorite pub. Better yet—at all three.
 
 
Giveaway:
 
Signed copies of Scene of the Climb and Slayed on the Slopes, Windsurfing Barbie kit,  Pink inflatable pool float, Clif bars, Burt’s Bees Pink Grapefruit lip balm, Ghiradelli Dark Chocolate bar with raspberry
US only
Ends August 27th
Prizing provided by the author, hosts are not responsible in any way.
 
This event was organized by CBB Book Promotions.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Review: To Love a Mate: Somewhere, TX (VonBrandt Family, #2) by Krystal Shannan


Can a small-town cowboy win the heart of a woman who doesn’t have one?

Surviving charity functions by day and automatic weapons and death threats by night, Emma Carrington learned to be as hard as the men her daddy hired to protect her. Hell, she even carried a military grade stun gun in her Prada bag and could shoot just as well as any of her ex-military bodyguards if the need arose.

When a failed kidnapping attempt forces her to hide out in Somewhere, Texas, Emma finds herself stranded, floundering through cow patties, and desperate for a car. Who better to “borrow” from than the sexy naked man she sees turn into a wolf and leave his perfectly good pickup truck available for use. It’s not like he can drive it in his current condition, right?

College senior Noah VonBrandt knows the pack law better than anyone —only a bonded mate can know his secret. He watched his brother find the mate of his dreams and he wants the same thing, but you can’t just make the “right” girl appear out of thin air. To his surprise, lightning does strike. When a beautiful blonde woman trespasses on the ranch and sees him transform, he knows he only has two choices —claim her or let the pack erase her memories. But even as Noah fights to save her, Emma’s past is hot on her heels and out for more than memories.


This was my first book by this author and even though it wasn't the first book in the series it could be read easily as a standalone. I really liked Emma and I liked that she was smart, snarky, and very loyal to the folks that she considered family. Even though it seemed that she was rather cold to her family there was reasons for it. And oh man I loved, loved, loved Lucy. I would definitely want to read her story.

Poor Noah seemed one dimensional in comparison. I didn't remember he was in college until I reread the blurb. The book didn't focus on him as much with the exception of him being worried about his mate coming soon. I would have liked to have had him fleshed out a little more.

I really liked that this book had a little more story to other than a good ole case of instalust which comes with most shifter stories. Though the instalust was there too. This was a good short quick read. My favorite part of the book was the part with the stun gun and the stolen truck. And I am definitely going to read more by this author. I give it 4 stars and was provided a copy of this book by the author in exchange of a fair and honest review.
 
 

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Forbidden Release and Guest Post By Cathy Clamp


Ten years have passed since the war that destroyed the Sazi Council and inflicted a horrible "cure" on thousands of Sazi, robbing them of their ability to shapeshift.
Luna Lake, isolated in Washington State, started as a refugee camp for Sazi orphans. Now it's a small town and those refugees are young adults, chafing at the limits set by their still-fearful guardians.
There's reason to fear: Sazi children are being kidnapped. Claire, a red wolf shifter, is sent to investigate. Held prisoner by the Snakes during childhood, Claire is distrusted by those who call Luna Lake home.
Before the war, Alek was part of a wolf pack in Chicago. In Luna Lake he was adopted by a parliament of Owls, defying Sazi tradition. The kidnappings are a painful reminder that his little sister disappeared a decade ago.
When Claire and Alek meet, sparks fly--but the desperate race to find the missing children forces them to set aside their mutual attraction and focus on the future of their people.




Guest post by Cathy Clamp
 

A lot of people ask me how I create such unusual characters, like those in FORBIDDEN. Claire and Alek and the rest come from very different places, but there’s a common thread of loss and pain in their backgrounds that make them support each other. While a lot of authors out there are fortunate that “people” drop into their heads, fully formed, I’m not as lucky. I have to actually work to create a well rounded character. Over the course of the last thirty books and short stories, I’ve perfected a “character chart” that I use to make each person. It’s a series of questions about the character that I answer as though I’m them, or at least, a close friend of their’s. Think about your best friend. If you’ve known them for any length of time, you could probably answer these same questions about them. Feel free to give it a try!

1. Character Name.

I usually use a Baby Name book to pick an interesting name for the character. Sometimes, ordinary is interesting.

2. Where did character grow up?

While this might not show up in the text, it’s important to me to know whether the character was raised in a city or in a rural area, or even in a different country.

3. Choose three clubs/sports the character was involved in in high school.

This is HUGE! Someone who was a jock, or a creative person or on the debate team really tells me how a person is going to respond when pressed by an antagonist.

4. What is a quirk (such as spinning hair around a finger when nervous, etc.?)

People remember quirks. Even tapping a pencil that gets on people’s nerves is remembered by readers.

5. When decorating an apartment, where would your character shop?

Big thing! This and the next few questions about shopping really hones a personality.

6. What role does money play in your character's life (is a 20" b/w television just as good as a 50" flat screen?)

Does a character chase money across jobs, or work for the sheer pleasure. That can really grab a reader’s attention.

7. Inspiration for Character (i.e., character from a movie, fairy tale, story, etc.)

Sometimes, I like to draw inspiration from a visual. A photo of an actor, model or fairy tale really helps me get my head into the character.

8. Possible physical features

This isn’t always important, because people don’t really think about their own appearance all that much unless something changes. If a person’s clothes still fit and they like their hairstyle, looking in the mirror seldom happens unless brushing teeth or putting on makeup. You might think about the color of eye shadow for the day, but unless your skin is breaking out, you’re not going to think about your skin tone or nose width. It just is. But changes are always interesting, because changes come with emotional baggage.

9. How do you see the character (i.e., sterotype, caricature)

Is the character prejudiced against something or someone? It’s not always bad to have a preference about liking blonde girls, or thinking a smooth chest on a man is hot. Thinking about what the character likes gives him or her depth.

10. Possible conflicts in personality (i.e., likes to watch sports, but hates to PLAY them.)

Conflicts are GOLD in writing. Most people are in denial about something or have conflicts. For example, a woman who claims she doesn’t care what she wears, but owns a hundred pair of shoes has a conflict.

11. Possible need for change.

Maybe if that same woman is constantly broke and asking for handouts, buying less shoes might be a future change of personality.

12. Values and beliefs (church-going, would the character steal if starving, etc.)

A person’s moral character has a big impact on how they will react to the plot, so it’s very important to me.

13. How beliefs and values clash (would the character steal if sufficient reason? What is that reason?)

This is self-explanatory. What will make the character break? How much pain can I heap on them? Heh... [insert evil laugh]

14. What do they need in a mate?

Even if I’m not writing a romance, this is important. What do they find attractive in a person?

15. Who is the worst person for them to fall in love with?

Haven’t we all picked the wrong person to fall for? Why? Great character growth in this question!

16. What makes the character emotionally dangerous (seeing someone strike a child, etc.?)

This and the next question are very plot related. What cause will the person fight for?

17. What is it about the character that makes it impossible for him/her to simply "walk away" from the crisis of the plot?

Blackmail? Fear? Nobility? These are very different character traits.

18. What does the character most admire about their best friend?

Why hang out with a person? What makes a “best” friend?

19. What drives the character insane about their best friend?

Think about The Big Bang Theory. If you’ve seen it, why does Leonard consider Sheldon his best friend, even though he drives him crazy sometimes? Character conflict gold!

All of the rest of the questions are about character growth throughout the book (or series.) I won’t go into each one of them, but you can see how the answers will create an interesting character.

20. How does the plot help the character learn a lesson or grow?

21. What is the error in thinking during the plot (i.e., thought they could trust someone untrustable, so didn't spot the danger, etc.?)

22. Why do they hold this belief?

23. As a result of this belief, what do they need to learn?

24. What is keeping them from learning it?

25. What are the ways the character tries to "cheat" to keep from having to grow?

26. What event in the external plot forces the character to either grow or change?

27. Pinpoint your character's greatest fear.

28. What is your character's greatest secret?

29. What is your character's best childhood memory?

30. What is your character's WORST childhood memory?

I’ve learned to shorthand a lot of these questions by starting with the memories first. The memories of their best and worst days will reveal a ton about their upbringing and why they believe the things they do.

Character development is one of the most fun parts of the writing process. Even more than the plot! But the plot does shape who the people are. Sometimes, I have to change the character’s personality to have it fit neatly into the plot. Not every person can handle every plot, after all!

I hope you’ll enjoy FORBIDDEN and the characters who live there. You can look at them and see how I fit in the answers to a bunch of these questions. :)

I want to thank Cathy for coming to my blog and leaving an awesome guest post. I love the world of the Sazi and am so happy that she is rebooting this series.




Monday, August 10, 2015

Review: Furever After by Michelle Fox

Staying safe means killing her wolf…

Piper Oakes is done with being a shifter and doing whatever she can to jettison her wolf. If she doesn’t, her alpha will force her to be his mate, even though they have no bond. In an effort to force her obedience, he’s taken everything from her—family, friends and any sense of safety she ever had. There’s no reason for her to be a wolf anymore and every reason to walk away.

Saving her wolf is his only chance at love…

Doctor Jaxon Comyn has never met a wolf who could be his mate. To fill the void of living alone, he throws himself into the study of human medical science. When Piper comes into his life, it’s his one shot at having it all, but claiming her as his mate means taking on both her alpha…and his.

Welcome to Eliza Gayle's Southern Shifters series, where alphas move heaven and earth for their ‘happily furever afters

I liked Piper. She may be little but she's mighty and determined not to be claimed by her alpha who has delusions that he's her mate and not above killing anyone who gets in his way. He proved that
by killing her parents. But she got away and ran. She was determined that she wasn't going to be claimed by him even if she had to kill off her wolf to do it. She ran into Jaxon and fell ill I'm
not sure why but I'm assuming that it was because she was trying to kill off her wolf.  That bothered me a bit the not knowing. They didn't know they were mates. It took Jaxon's mentor to point it out. I am fine with the whole true mate thing. That is part of being a wolf and he was a nice guy. Instalust is not impossible and they didn't go with the whole I'm so in love with you thing. Seems like the author is going to let them grow into that.

 
This story is part of series but it can be read on its own. I know because I did and I wasn't confused. I do want to go and see if I can find Jaxon's alphas book. Rafe and Kitty's story sounds interesting. I give this book 4 stars.

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Review: Shards of Hope by Nalini Singh



Awakening wounded in a darkened cell, their psychic abilities blocked, Aden and Zaira know they must escape. But when the lethal soldiers break free from their mysterious prison, they find themselves in a harsh, inhospitable landscape far from civilization. Their only hope for survival is to make it to the hidden home of a predatory changeling pack that doesn’t welcome outsiders.

And they must survive. A shadowy enemy has put a target on the back of the Arrow squad, an enemy that cannot be permitted to succeed in its deadly campaign. Aden will cross any line to keep his people safe for this new future, where even an assassin might have hope of a life beyond blood and death and pain. Zaira has no such hope. She knows she’s too damaged to return from the abyss. Her driving goal is to protect Aden, protect the only person who has ever come back for her no matter what.

This time, even Aden’s passionate determination may not be enough—because the emotionless chill of Silence existed for a reason. For the violent, and the insane, and the irreparably broken…like Zaira.

Man I love this series so this one was bought by me. Another great story. Now I need the next one because there were several major plot points that were unresolved in this one. And I must say that Zaira's history almost made me cry. I am so glad she did what she did to her parents. It was not being a psychopath but survival. And she will protect Aden with everything in her and he her. Love that everyone underestimated him. I knew that there had to more to him for him to do what he did and to rise to his position.
I give this book 5 stars.




Revew: Spider's Trap by Jennifer Estep

Spider's Trap (Elemental Assassin, #13)Spider's Trap by Jennifer Estep

Keep your friends close but your enemies within stabbing distance.

One important lesson I’ve learned in the assassination business is that to be the best you have to roll with the punches. Now that I’m queen of Ashland’s underworld—by default, not by choice—a lot more punches are being thrown my way. But I suppose that’s the price of victory for taking down some of the underworld’s top dogs. Good thing I have my Ice and Stone magic to help me survive my volatile new position. Just when I think things are finally settling down, someone tries to murder me during a hush-hush underworld meeting. But the real surprise is how strangely familiar my shadowy assailant seems to be.

My job is to maintain order among killers, crooks, and thieves, and soon I’m embroiled in a bloody game where the ability to keep secrets could be the greatest superpower of all. My enemies have all sharpened their knives and laid their traps, waiting for me to fall. But this Spider weaves her own webs of death…

Review:
I just love this series. Gin is one of my all time favorite heroines and in this book we see more of her and her backstory with Fletcher.  Of course this book contains all the usual suspects and this is what keeps me reading this series. I love that even though Gin is an assassin she has friends and family that she would die to protect. And part of doing that in the last book was her taking over the underworld. But in this book someone attacks her at a meeting or at least we think she is the one being attacked. As the story progresses so does the mystery of who is the attacker is and why. And in the end all is revealed along with more secrets which sets up the storyline in the next book which I cannot wait to read. One of my favorite parts of this book is there is one character who may or may not become a friend to Gin. I am hoping that happens anyway. At this point they are frenemies.
The end of this book was a WTF moment which will continue in the next book. Not a cliff hanger per se but a definitely a tease. 
I give this book 5 stars and I was given this book via Netgalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.