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Lurking Musings

~ Musings of a newly published writer

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Tag Archives: Werewolf

[Review] Blood Secrets by Elizabeth Morgan

02 Sunday Oct 2016

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Review

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Tags

Blood Secrets, Cranberry Blood, Elizabeth Morgan, GRR Martin, Loup, Vampire, Werewolf


Followers of this blog will be familiar with Elizabeth’s work already as she was interviewed for Vampire month and has been in attendance with me on a number of signing events, most recently the Manchester Author Signing in August. At that event she was launching her latest book – Blood Secrets, the long awaited sequel to Cranberry Blood and the next in the Blood series of Vampire novels.Blood secrets by Elizabeth Morgan

Blood Secrets takes up the story more or less straight after the end of Cranberry Blood. Heather Ryan, our vampire slayer infected with vampire blood, is on the outskirts of Venice in Italy, on the trail of the ancient vampire her family has been trying to kill for centuries. But first she has to deal with local supernatural politics as she attempts to convince the local werewolf pack to allow her and the members of the UK pack she has an alliance with to enter Venice in search of both the vampires who live there and the kidnapped pack members who were snatched at the end of Cranberry Blood.

There follows an intense thrill ride of a plot where Heather and her love interest Werewolf, Brendan, explore Venice looking for vampires and the captured members of the pack.

This is a far heftier tome than Cranberry Blood, verging on 100,000 words and covering a lot more scope. It also brings in two new Point of View characters in addition to Heather and Brendan.  One is Eve, the daughter of the UK Pack leader, who is a Loup – a woman born to a werewolf but who does not have the shapechanging abilities. The other is Galen, the immortalised teenager, who is the Bloodling (or childe) of the Vampire Heather is chasing. In less skilled hands, this approach may have come across as clumsy or amateurish (and it does seem to be a popular style following GRR Martin’s use of it in A Song of Ice and Fire) but Morgan manages to make each voice different and every scene is relevant as seen through the eyes of the PoV character. The Brendan/Heather scenes are pretty much as written in Cranberry Blood – entertainingly alternating their views on each other and their relationship while the action happens around them. The Eve scenes allow us to see her fate in the Vampire run research facility she ends up in and the Galen scenes offer a fascinating insight into the mind of the enemy and the complicated stratagems in play from their side.

The story also pulls no punches. As the title suggests, there are a lot of secrets revealed in this instalment and Heather has her worldview shattered on a number of occasions. Her faith in her family is sorely tested and her relationship with the werewolves changes massively through the events in this book.

If there is a flaw it is that the end goes on a little too long. Stuff happens which to me feels it may have been better suited to the opening chapters of the third and final instalment. Closing the curtain a few scenes earlier may have been more effective in inciting interest in book three. However, this is only a minor issue and the events of the final few scenes are still relevant and interesting. The big reveals in this book do lead me to wonder if there is anything left secret at all in this series. Are there more reveals in book three? If so, what on earth could be left to find out that hasn’t already been spilled here?

In all, a very solid and entertaining second book in a trilogy that expands on the world building, develops the characters and leads us nicely into what promises to be an epic finale in book three.

Dianna Hardy: Cry of the Wolf Blog tour

25 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

blog tour, Cry of the Wolf, Dianna Hardy, paranormal romance, Romance, The Witching Pen, Werewolf, writing


Today we are taking part in a blog tour for Dianna Hardy. You might remember Dianna from her appearance in Vampire Month and her talking about the Witching Pen series. Here she is giving us a review of her latest series, Eye of the Storm, with an extract from Cry of the Wolf. Tomorrow, look out for a giveaway for exclusive goodies!

Extract from Cry of the WolfCryOfTheWolfCoverFrontSMALL

Looking to pass the time, she made her way to her desk where Lawrence’s books were scattered from where she’d abandoned them almost twenty-four hours ago. Now, where had she left off?
Right. Mythology.

It didn’t take her long to find the passage she’d read earlier, and it was an absorbing read: a god and a goddess ruled by anger had split themselves apart, creating, for all intents and purposes, duality. But they quickly discovered they could not live without each other. Loneliness and loss consumed them, and it came to be that the only way they could rejoin since their separation was when the lightning (the god) penetrated the earth (the goddess).

Interesting…

In these moments, Yemet’s determination renewed, as did her anger, and she vowed to find a way to rejoin with Himet.

One night, under the full moon, which reflected Himet’s love for her when the sun could not, Yemet led her most prized and loyal animal – the wolf – to the top of the highest mountain. She let her grief, her sorrow, her loneliness and her anger pour out of her until she manifested a storm. Himet responded, joining in her dance, and at the exact moment he sent down his lightning, she placed the wolf in its path and infused herself with it.

Himet cried out in terror, but he could not pull back the lightning. It hit Yemet while she was in the physical form of the wolf – whilst she was mortal.

“Why?!” he asked her, his sorrow consuming him.

“I could not see, but now I do,” she replied with her dying breath, “to have all of you, I must yield all of me. Take my life, Himet. I trust you with it. I give it freely.”

© Dianna Hardy, 2013. All rights reserved.

Bio:

Dianna Hardy Colour Portfolio SmallAuthor of The Witching Pen and the Eye Of The Storm series.

Dianna combines a titillating mix of paranormal romance and urban fantasy into her writing, to bring you stories that are action-packed, fast-paced and not short of heat, with the focus on both character development and the plot. She writes both full-length novels and short fiction. She has also written poetry and esoteric books and articles.

Although quite active online, Dianna is a self-confessed hermit, preferring the company of nature and animals to the hustle and bustle of people. She loves anything paranormal (she doesn’t really consider it “para”), organic food, walking barefoot, the smell of the woods after rain, and summer days.

However, she is also sustained by coffee, chocolate and the occasional vodka.

She lives in the UK with her partner and their daughter, where she devotes her time to parenting, publishing and writing.

Links

Website: www.diannahardy.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/authordiannahardy

Twitter: www.twitter.com/thewitchingpen

Amazon: www.amazon.com/Dianna-Hardy/e/B003AGRHFC

Google +: www.plus.google.com/u/0/110398750519005724804/posts

The Witching Pen website: www.thewitchingpen.co.uk

This post is part of a blog tour. Check out the other stops on the tour… Click the picture below to see the full list.

Werewolf Love Blog Hop

[Vampire Month] Review of Being Human SE5 Ep5

06 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Reviews, Vampire Month

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Tags

BBC3, Being Human, reviews, Vampires, Werewolf


Appropriately enough for Vampire Month, over on Cult Britannia you can now read my latest review of Sunday’s Being Human episoide.

http://www.cultbritannia.co.uk/tag/being-human-no-care-all-responsibility-review/

Pop over there and have a look and then come back here for Aaron Smith’s Guest post, due to go live in 30 minutes….

[Vampire Month] Skyla Dawn Cameron interview

03 Tuesday Apr 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Angelus, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Count Chocula, David Boreanz, guest blogging, guest posts, Louise Cooper, Persephone Takata, River, Skyla Dawn Cameron, Vampires, Werewolf, writing, Zara Lain


Our final entry into Vampire month is Skyla Dawn Cameron. Yes, I know it is April now and Vampire month was March but it’s OK. By the powers vested in me by the fact I am ultimate controller of this blog, I now declare today to be honourary March and therefore still Vampire month. Hurrah!

So, here is Skyla…

Award-winning author Skyla Dawn Cameron has been writing approximately forever. Her early storytelling days were spent acting out strange horror/fairy tales with the help of her many dolls, and little has changed except that she now keeps those stories on paper. She signed her first book contract at age twenty-one for River, a unique werewolf tale, which was released to critical and reader praise alike and won her the 2007 EPPIE Award for Best Fantasy. She now has multiple series on the go to keep her busy, which is great for her attention deficit disorder.

Skyla lives in Southern Ontario where she dabbles in art, is an avid gamer, and watches Buffy reruns. She’s naturally brunette, occasionally a redhead, and will probably go blonde again soon. If she ever becomes a grown-up, she wants to run her own pub, as well as become world dictator. You can visit her on the web at www.skyladawncameron.com for free fiction, book news, and tons of other totally awesome stuff. She tweets like a fiend at www.twitter.com/skyladawn. Info about the current series she’s working on—which begins with Bloodlines—can be found at www.ZaraLain.com

What is the earliest memory you have of writing? What did you write about?

I remember sitting in my bedroom, on the floor, with stacks of blank paper with the logo of the hydro company my mum worked for on the top (as she’d brought me some from work), writing. I mixed fairy tales with horror; my influences were Disney princess movies I’d just watched along with Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” playing on my little record player (I loved the Vincent Price part).

When did you decide to become a professional writer? Why did you take this step?

In high school, I took everything—I was interested in so many different areas. So on top of creative writing and art classes, I took all the advanced sciences, law, philosophy, maths—all kinds of stuff. Of course, I didn’t always do my homework, but I sat and paid attention because that that point I was just interested in amassing knowledge and learning, still unsure about what I wanted to do for university.

I was about seventeen, sitting in an Advanced Biology class a grade level ahead of me, fairly confused because at that point of the semester, it was a lot of biochemistry, and required a working knowledge of a class I wouldn’t be taking until the following semester. We had a supply teacher who put on a video and I was drawing in my sketchbook. It was a terrible picture but I was practicing shading techniques.

I sat next to the two top students in the class—people a year older than me with like 98% in the course. And they were watching me draw. One whispered to the other, “If I could draw like that, I wouldn’t be in Biology.”

I don’t necessarily believe that and my drawing skills are nothing to write home about, but something clicked in my brain. Why was I spending all this time in classes that weren’t where my talents lay? The next day, I went straight to the guidance office and dropped everything but two art classes, English Literature, and Creative Writing. I filled the rest of my time with spares, which I used to write and draw. I finished writing my first completed novel that spring and pursued writing as a career straight out of high school.

What would you consider to be your greatest strength as a writer? What about your greatest weakness? How do you overcome this weakness?

Probably character and dialogue would be my strength. I love T.V. I’m picky in what I watch, but it’s one of my favourite storytelling mediums and for the longest time I wanted to be a screenwriter. Early on, I picked up a lot about dialogue writing from television, and I still think it—along with well-developed characters—is the strongest area of my writing.

Greatest weakness is description. I used to write first drafts that read like screenplays. Dialogue advanced everything, and description was more like set direction. I always knew this but it wasn’t until I really got analysing books that painted a vivid picture of the world that I truly understood I needed to step up my game—and wanted to. One of the writers was Lilith Saintcrow, probably my favourite living author. I was reading something of hers, marvelling at her word choice for sensory details and the sense of rhythm in her writing, and just thought, “Holy shit. I want to be a better writer.”

I am still nowhere near that level, but I take a lot of care now to slow down, immerse myself in the scene, and add flesh to the bare bones of my writing.

Tell us about the place where you live. Have you ever derived any inspiration from your home or from anywhere you have visited?

I went from living in a small town for twenty-seven years to an even smaller town for the past two; I live in rural, cottage country Ontario now.

Inspiration? Yes, it’s something that’s popped up in a lot of my WIPs. There is this wonderful isolation in a small town that is perfect for the horror elements in anything paranormal. Although this area is bustling in the summer with tourists travelling the canal, in winter it can be absolutely dead and lonely, and that’s wonderful to play with while writing. In fiction, I feel the setting needs to be its own character, and small towns have a lot of personality.

Which book, if any, would you consider to be your greatest influence and inspiration?

I don’t really know if I could pick a book. In terms of writers, hands down the top is Joss Whedon. Buffy the Vampire Slayer was pretty foundational for me: I learned about character arcs, plot arcs, dialogue, etc from watching and re-watching the series since I was fourteen.

Though perhaps not a direct influence in what I write, but definitely a contributing reason as to why I write, would be Louise Cooper’s The Time Master Trilogy. I had been writing all my life—including attempting YA horror novels when I was a preteen—and then I drifted into poetry and other stuff for a while. When I was sixteen, my mum got a box of fantasy novels at a church sale, which was a genre I’d never really read before. The first I picked up was Cooper’s The Initiate.

Blew. My. Mind.

It actually inspired me to try writing fantasy. While I quite firmly suck at writing straight fantasy, my fantasy novel was the first I ever finished (at 85 000 words) as a teen. I still have first printing copies of The Time Master Trilogy and was fortunate enough to work with Ms. Cooper for a short time before her sad passing years later when I started working in publishing.

What drove you to write about Vampires?

Well, first we have to go waaaaaaay back.

My fourth finished novel, River, was a contemp teenage werewolf tale, written in the fall of 2003. Prior to that, the books I’d finished were Gothic horror, epic fantasy, and suspense thrillers. I’d finished River, submitted it, and started poking around with what else to write.

Then, honest to god, this vampire chick strolled up and tapped me on the shoulder while I was out walking one night.

Granted, she was in my head. But I heard her. Her voice, her observations. I tried to ignore her, but then she gave me her name: Zara Lain. So I started her first book, Bloodlines, not really feeling like I had a choice in the matter because she might cut me. Now, that book was first published in 2008, and I let the series languish for awhile before revisiting it, totally rewriting it, and re-releasing Bloodlines in 2011—which reinvigorated my interest in the series.

So there you go. I write vampires because the vampires make me do it.

What do you think is the attraction for Vampire fiction? Why is it such a popular topic?

I…honestly don’t even know. As far as traditional mythological beasts go, I prefer a very wolf-like werewolf—and really, my preference is to write monsters from more obscure world myths.

I suppose it’s the beauty and immortality of the vampire—there’s a certain wish fulfilment they provide. And, despite the fact that it’s 2012, there is still a lot of sexual repression in many circles—so along comes a sinful, highly sexualized, seductive creature of the night, who promises eternal life, beauty, and freedom of everything our culture knows. Vampires today—just as they did in Bram Stoker’s time—provide an outlet for issues we’re struggling with as a society.

In a fight between all the greatest Vampires of fiction, who do you think would come out on top?

Count Chocula. C’mon, no one would ever see that coming.

What about in some other contest such as sexiness or dress sense? Who would win that one?

If I don’t say Zara is the best dressed vampire, she will probably stab me. Sexiest? It makes me a terrible person but I loooooove David Boreanaz in season two of Buffy as Angelus. He was horrible. That season was utterly heartbreaking and gutted me. But that pure evilness was sexy as hell.

How well do you think your character would fare against the winner(s) of the above?

My money is generally on Zara to survive anything. That’s what she does: she survives. Even if she’s not the strongest and she’s up against something big, she’s resourceful and a bit Machiavellian, and she’d manage to pull an ace out of her sleeve at the last moment.

Tell us the basic premise behind your latest novel.

It’s called Lineage and is the second sequel to Bloodlines and follows quarter-demon merc, Persephone Takata. Peri’s deeply damaged and suicidal after an attack meant for her kills her husband and children. The novel picks up five and a half years after that event, when the shadowy mercenary organization she works for at last gives her the name of someone who can help track down who killed her family. That someone is the vampire Zara Lain.

And, of course, wackiness ensues from there.

 

[Review] Being Human: Puppy Love

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts, Reviews

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Tags

Being Human, guest blogging, guest posts, horror, puppy love, solar storms, Vampires, Werewolf


A little late this week (I blame solar storms…) but here is my review of yesterday’s Being Human episode…

http://www.cultbritannia.co.uk/2012/03/12/being-human-puppy-love-review/

Feel free to pop on over there and comment. Or comment here… either way I’m happy.

Oh, and this does count as part of Vampire Month 🙂

Review – Being Human: Eve of the War (SE4 Ep 1)

06 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Reviews, TV

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Tags

BBC3, Being Human, horror, reviews, Vampire, Werewolf


As you are all well aware by now (well, at least I hope you are…) I’ve done regular reviews of self published books over at the epublish a book site. I also occasionally on this blog comment on films, TV and other SFF stuff that I hear about and have an opinion on. Well, now I have expanded that small empire of reviewage into something a little bigger. A sort of medium sized, semi detached empirette with a bigger garden and room for an extension…

In other words, I am now doing reviews for Cult Britannia, a website all about British cult TV, and my first review can be seen if you click the direct link below:

http://www.cultbritannia.co.uk/2012/02/06/being-human-eve-of-the-war-review/

As things currently stand, I will be doing reviews of the first two episodes of Being Human series 4 at least. I may be doing reviews of other episodes in the series and possibly reviews of other shows and general opinion articles as things progress. Feel free to pop on over there and see what I had to say about episode one and leave a comment if you disagree with me (or even if you agree with me…).

Review: Bad Blood

29 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by D.A Lascelles in Guest posts, Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bad Blood, Debra Doyle, guest blogging, guest posts, James D MacDonald, reviews, Werewolf


I’ve been doing more reviews! This one is of Bad Blood by James D MacDonald and Debra Doyle.

 http://www.epublishabook.com/2011/12/29/book-review-bad-blood-by-james-d-macdonald-and-debra-doyle/

It is a rather good Werewolf tale.

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