Goodreads
YA Fantasy
Behind the Stars #1
My Rating: 4 stars
Right now you can download this for FREE on Amazon HERE
Synopsis
Prentiss Puckett is certain of three things:
-Graduation is two weeks away.
-Summer only gets hotter in south Mississippi.
-She’s getting a job with air-conditioning.
She did not expect to be kidnapped walking to work.
And she never expected to become a hero.
My 2 Cents
Captive is the first installment of a serial, Behind the Stars. I didn't know too much about it going in, which was probably a good thing, because that's really helped the suspense!
In this first part, Captive, Prentiss is a fairly ordinary hick type girl. She has a boyfriend, Jackson, knows all about farming (Jackson's supposed to inherit his Dad's farm eventually, so all their plans include that) and also works part time with the town vet. Its these skills that become very important later on.
On a normal routine day, Prentiss is kidnapped and wakes up to a "farming concentration camp" is the best way to describe it. Its full of kids from her town, including her brother and some other friends, but Jackson is not there. No one knows what's going on, but they are assigned work shifts in the dairy barn, potato fields, and corn fields. They also appear to have been drugged as most kids seem almost zombie like.
Prentiss is not one of these kids. She spends most of this installment trying to figure out how to bust out of the camp. But what she learns just creates more questions...
So far I'm liking this story. The mystery element really has me hooked, and I really like Prentiss as a character. We also get flashbacks of her and Jackson, whom I like as well. I have a few theories as to what's going to happen next, but nothing concrete. I can't wait to find out!
Monday, November 24, 2014
Sunday, November 23, 2014
4 year Blogoversary Celebration--All Our Yesterdays Spotlight and Giveaway!
Don't forget to enter the other giveaways going on!
Today I want to talk about one of my favorite books of 2013. All Our Yesterdays by Cristin Terrill. Why you may ask? Because I've recently joined Cristin's Street Team, and have nothing but love to share about this book! Seriously, if you want me to recommend you a original amazing YA book, this one is it!
Only Em can complete the final instruction. She’s tried everything to prevent the creation of a time machine that will tear the world apart. She holds the proof: a list she has never seen before, written in her own hand. Each failed attempt in the past has led her to the same terrible present—imprisoned and tortured by a sadistic man called the doctor while war rages outside.
Marina has loved her best friend, James, since they were children. A gorgeous, introverted science prodigy from one of America’s most famous families, James finally seems to be seeing Marina in a new way, too. But on one disastrous night, James’s life crumbles, and with it, Marina’s hopes for their future. Marina will protect James, no matter what. Even if it means opening her eyes to a truth so terrible that she may not survive it... at least, not as the girl she once was. Em and Marina are in a race against time that only one of them can win.
All Our Yesterdays is a wrenching, brilliantly plotted story of fierce love, unthinkable sacrifice, and the infinite implications of our every choice.
Sounds amazing, right? It really is!
One of the best reviews I've ever read was about this book, and no, it wasn't mine! My good friend, Jen @ Today In Jen's Library wrote the most amazing review, and I am going to share it now! By the way, make sure you click on her name to check out her BookTube Channel!
Jen's Review:
Time travel done right. Finally! Thank you, Cristin Terrill! The cover flap of this book says ""All Our Yesterdays is a wrenching, brilliantly plotted story of fierce love, unthinkable sacrifice, and the infinite implications of our every choice." Having just closed the cover, I couldn't agree more.
Time travel inevitably involves a complicated story that is difficult to follow. That is, unless an author sets simple rules and sticks to them. In this story, Terrill has done it expertly. One of her laws - the idea that time has a sentient quality - fixes many of the mistakes made by many storytellers. I also loved the idea that time is not linear as we understand it. What if it's really not? The way she explains paradoxes is brilliant. The bottom line is simply this: when we as readers know the rules the author has created and she doesn't break those rules, we can finally enjoy a great story that makes sense.
The tale is told from the viewpoints of Em and Marina. By alternating perspectives with each chapter, it is far more easy to keep track of what is present and what is past. Even when it starts to get really complicated - and it does near the end - it is not difficult to understand.
The plot is fairly straightforward. Isn't every time travel story about going back to fix things in the past? The thing that's unique about this particular story is that it's been done 14 times previously by the protagonist. Will she get it right this time? Well, that's the story.
Em is a gritty main character. She's been through torture, she's been on the run from authorities, she's been part of a rebel/terrorist organization and she's both escaped and been caught. She's been betrayed. She is determined and focused, and yet never seems to have lost her true heart or humanity. She is fiercely protective of Marina. She is somewhat of a study in contradiction, and that's what I liked about her. Every time I thought she was tough and heartless, she was overcome by her love and compassion.
Marina, on the other hand, is a spoiled rich girl who is shallow and a bit silly. These negative qualities can be attributed to her insecurity, though. She is at the same time loyal and loving, devoted to James. Mostly she is simply immature. But even at that, she is not unlikable. So much of today's society is full of teenagers just like her. On a list of the best of them, I'd at least put her at the top.
James is a brilliant character, both in his personality and in the way he is written. Finn is charming and funny, practical and humble. The lesser characters (Richter, Nate, the Shaw family, Marina's parents and Finn's mother) are really just highlights. They serve the plot and are each distinct without drawing attention from the main points we really care about.
The action doesn't stop for a minute. The suspense kept me riveted enough to read the book in one sitting. The climax of the story is terrifying, shocking and complicated at the same time. I found myself shaking my head at the end, wondering exactly what happened, having to think it all through again to make sense of the paradoxical aspect of the events.
This book is smart, and I like that. It's also not pretentious. It is heart-wrenching, scary and romantic. It may even be possible, and I think that is what may be, for me, its most attractive quality. I do love a story that just might happen. This isn't just a great story for time-travel lovers. Fans of dystopia and apocalypse will also enjoy those elements that it offers.
And the ultimate irony here is that virtually every novelist goes back and rewrites their book. Isn't that some version of time travel, rewriting the past? Well done, Cristin Terrill. Could you do it again please?
And NOW, let's give this puppy away!
One winner will win a ebook of All Our Yesterdays from Amazon. 5 runner up winners will win some awesome All Our Yesterdays swag! This giveaway is international. Good Luck!
Friday, November 21, 2014
4 year Blogoversary Celebration--Interview with Leigh Talbert Moore + Giveaway!
Don't forget to enter the other giveaways going on!
Today on the blog I have one of my favorite Indie writers, Leigh Talbert Moore! Leigh is the author of one of my favorite contemporary series, Dragonfly!
Welcome
to the blog Leigh! So happy you are here! To start off, why don't
you tell us about your latest project.
Hey,
girl! Thanks for having me here! My current project is BEHIND THE
STARS. It’s an action-adventure/paranormal romance set in the woods
of south Mississippi. I’m saying it’s like “Red Dawn” meets
“LOST” because of how it’s set up and what happens… or what
the characters think is happening. I finished it in 2011, and it went
to my literary agent at that time. After I became an indie author in
2012, I took it back, but I was in the middle of putting out the
Dragonfly series. So I held it until MOSAIC, the last book in that
series, was released in June. Now BEHIND THE STARS is ready to shine!
Release
date for the novel is Dec. 31. I serialized it, so readers can start
reading it now if they want. The complete novel and all episodes are
currently available for pre-order, and “Captive,” (episode #1) is
FREE! So you can get a little taste and see if you like it. Yay!
There's
been a lot of discussion in the book community the last few weeks
about negative reviews and how authors handle them. What are your
thoughts on this?
Negative
reviews are part of the process, even when authors think they’re
unfair or unfounded. When it happens to me, I vent to a trusted
friend and then go read the 1-star reviews on Harry Potter or one of
my most favorite books of all time. You can’t please everybody!
What's
a typical day look like for you?
Get
up, get kids to school, sit down, check email, check Facebook, try
not to waste too much time on either. Write. Get kids, finish day,
write some more, sleep. Repeat.
What
made you decide to become a writer?
Well,
I’ve been a published writer since I was in my 20s. I started out
as a journalist. Then in 2009, I decided to try my hand at books, and
I wrote the Dragonfly series. The rest is history!
What
books have you read in the past that were inspiring to you?
Especially when you were a kid?
I
read inspiring books all the time, honestly. Some of my favorite
books as a kid were the Judy Blume books. When I was in college, I
was a huge Barbara Kingsolver fan. When I started writing books, I
really fell in love with Sarah Dessen and Deb Caletti. Now that I’m
Indie, I get amazing books from FAB indie authors all the time. Too
many to name!
I
just love all your book covers, especially your latest! How involved
are you on the creation of your book covers?
Hey,
thanks so much! When I first started out, my super-talented
author-friend Jolene Perry did all my covers. She and I would chat
and look at stock art and put something together—usually she had
read the book as a beta reader, so that helped. Steven Novak did the
cover for BEHIND THE STARS, and honestly, the process was very
similar, except he hasn’t read the book. I described what the story
was about, and he came back with that amazing design. Steven’s
really great. (www.novakillustration.com).
Do
you have any unique talents or hobbies?
Hmmm….
I don’t think so! LOL!
What
book have your read do you think should get more hype and
recognition than it does?
So
many great books sort of cruise by until they find the right
audience. I’m currently beta-reading the second season of the Debt
Collector series by Susan Kaye Quinn. It’s an amazing Urban Fantasy
series that everyone should read. Susan has the greatest imagination,
and she’s a fantastic writer.
What
is your favorite “fan” moment?
I
met the Monkees once! It was very anti-climactic… >.<
What is one tip you could pass along to beginning writers?
Just
keep writing. I used to say “just keep swimming,” which is
basically the same thing. Writing is an extraordinarily difficult
career path, but if you’re in it because you love to tell stories
and can’t imagine doing anything else, keep that goal in the front
of your mind.
What is the most important thing you've learned so far on your own
journey?
Things
never happen in the time or in the way you think they should. Just
keep swimming. (LOL!)
Thanks so much for visiting us today Leigh! To wrap things up,
share one random fact about yourself.
Hey,
you’re welcome! Random fact… I can cross my little toes without
touching them. Tah daah!!!!
Leigh Talbert Moore wrote her first graphic novel at the age of nine--about a lady scientist burned by acid. Sadly, the text of "Fury Woman" was lost, and Leigh's novelist aspirations went on hiatus.
After working more than a decade in journalism, editing, marketing, and public relations, she began writing books again, and in 2009 completed Dragonfly. Today, Leigh is the author of several popular young adult and new adult novels, all with a strong romantic slant.
She lives with her husband and two young children in the middle of the country, where she conjures new worlds, characters, and situations while playing chauffeur, chaperone, group activity leader, and referee.
And she's still trying to remember the plot of "Fury Woman"...
After working more than a decade in journalism, editing, marketing, and public relations, she began writing books again, and in 2009 completed Dragonfly. Today, Leigh is the author of several popular young adult and new adult novels, all with a strong romantic slant.
She lives with her husband and two young children in the middle of the country, where she conjures new worlds, characters, and situations while playing chauffeur, chaperone, group activity leader, and referee.
And she's still trying to remember the plot of "Fury Woman"...
And NOW, for the Giveaway!!
One lucky winner will win a signed collector's copy of "Captive" the first serial in Behind the Stars! (US only)
Thursday, November 20, 2014
4 year Blogoversary Celebration--Interview with Jodi Meadows + Giveaway!
Don't forget to enter the other giveaways going on!
Today on the blog I have Jodi Meadows, author of one of my favorite fantasy/dystopian series, The NewSoul Series, and author of soon to be coming The Orphan Queen!
Welcome
to the blog Jodi! So happy you are here! To start off, why don't you
tell us about your latest project.
My
next book coming out -- and the latest book that's finished
finished, as opposed to the books that are finished and being revised
until I get new gray hairs -- is THE ORPHAN QUEEN. It's the first in
a duology. Think YA Batman meets Game of Thrones, about an orphaned
princess fighting to reclaim her kingdom, set in a world where magic
isn't just illegal, but destroying everything. And the fact that she
has magic means she has to work extra hard to avoid the masked
vigilante who looooves to capture people like her.
I
absolutely LOVED your New Soul Series, and fell in love with Ana and
Sam. Who is your favorite character that you've written?
Oh
gosh, I don't have a favorite at all! I love them all equally and I'm
proud of them all equally!
What's
a typical day look like for you?
I
don't really have typical days, I think. There's always a lot of
email (which sometimes I put off), maintenance of my social media
accounts (fun!), and of course writing. I used to write until I
crashed, but I've been trying to do better about stopping after a
reasonable amount of work has been completed.
What
made you decide to become a writer?
I've
always been a storyteller and loved making things up. It wasn't until
seventh grade, though, that I realized writing could be a legitimate
job. My teacher read WAIT TILL HELEN COMES by Mary Downing Hahn to
the class. I don't know what it was about that book that switched my
brain like that, but it sure did it.
What
books have you read in the past that were inspiring to you?
Especially when you were a kid?
Oh
tons of books! WAIT TILL HELEN COMES, as I mentioned, THE BLUE SWORD
and THE HERO AND THE CROWN by Robin McKinley. SABRIEL by Garth Nix.
WINTER OF FIRE by Sheryl Jordan. Others I will think of immediately
after sending this email.
What
is your favorite thing about being a writer? What is your least
favorite?
All
the things are my favorite. Except taxes. Taxes is my least favorite.
Do
you have any unique talents or hobbies?
They're
certainly not unique, but I think they're interesting: I knit and
crochet, and I can spin my own yarn on both a spinning wheel and drop
spindles. I've also recently learned how to do calligraphy (for THE
ORPHAN QUEEN), so that's been fun!
What
book have your read do you think should get more hype and
recognition than it does?
One
of my favorites is DEFIANCE by C.J. Redwine. And lots of others. But
off the top of my head, that's it.
If
you woke up to your house on fire, what is the one thing you would
grab and save if you had time? (And assuming all people and animals
were safe already)
My
computer. It has my books on it!
What is one tip you could pass along to beginning writers?
Keep
writing. You're going to get rejections, and that's okay. Keep
writing anyway.
What is the most important thing you've learned so far on your own
journey?
Eyes
on your own paper.
Thanks so much for visiting us today Jodi! To wrap things up, share
one random fact about yourself.
Once
I knit a stuffed hedgehog.
Oh, I'd love to see that!
Jodi Meadows lives and writes in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, with her husband, a Kippy*, and an alarming number of ferrets. She is a confessed book addict, and has wanted to be a writer ever since she decided against becoming an astronaut. She is the author of the INCARNATE Trilogy and the forthcoming ORPHAN QUEEN Duology (HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen). Visit her at www.jodimeadows.com
*A Kippy is a cat.
And now, on to the Giveaway!!
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
4 Year Blogoversary Celebration + Interview with Rysa Walker + Giveaway!
Don't forget to enter the other giveaways going on!
Today on the blog I have Rysa Walker, a very lovely lady that I had the pleasure of meeting at UtopYA in Nashville this last summer! Rysa is the author of the Chronos Files, with her latest release being Time's Edge (which I wholeheartedly recommend!)
Welcome to the blog Rysa! So happy you are here! To start off, why don't you tell us about your latest project.
I'm
currently working on the final book in the CHRONOS Files series,
still untitled. It's due out in September, so I need to be finishing
up the draft fairly soon. And I'm simultaneously hashing through the
plot for the second novella, which comes out in May, but because of
publishing schedules for the full-length books, that will actually be
written last. It will be from Prudence's perspective, and I have a
feeling it's going to be…shall we say interesting…to
write.
What
do you think is the hardest part about writing time travel?
Keeping
everything straight is probably the hardest part. A close second
would be trying to explain things to people who take it rather
literally—or perhaps I should say linearly. I need to just point
them toward the little clip of the 10th
Doctor Who (played by David Tenant) where he describes the nature of
time. I remember watching that episode when I revising the first
version of Timebound—back
when it was still Time's
Twisted Arrow—and
screaming, "Yes! Yes! That's it. What he said!!!" I
wanted to reach into the TV and hug him, although admittedly that
wasn't the first time. #10 is definitely my favorite Doctor.
What's
a typical day look like for you?
Get
up far too early and drive the kids off to school. Come back and
handle correspondence and social media until my brain is sufficiently
caffeinated to write. On a good day, I get in a few hours of writing
before the kids come in. Put on the headphones after they get home
and try to write a bit more before dinner or chauffeur duties to
soccer, piano, etc. Exercise. Maybe get another hour of writing in
before bedtime.
In
my ideal universe, kids would go to school at night. I'm much more
creative in the wee hours of the morning. My kids are also
night-owls, so this whole up-before-dawn thing was clearly invented
by someone from a different species. I consider it an act of war,
but haven't been able to pinpoint who's behind it, so I'm reduced to
just shaking my fist feebly. Or home-schooling, but every time I
even think about that, I decide that the fist-shaking is a much wiser
response.
What
made you decide to become a writer?
I
don't think you decide to become a writer, or at least I didn't.
It's something you do because it's part of who you are. It's kind of
like being a reader. I never decided that—once I had the tools, it
was just part of my personality.
I
did, however, make a decision to write professionally.
That was helped along tremendously by winning the Amazon
Breakthrough Novel Award. The grand prize was almost exactly what I
made in a year of teaching, so that was my cue to take a leave of
absence…which morphed into a leave of (hopefully) permanence.
What
books have you read in the past that were inspiring to you?
Especially when you
were a kid?
This
would be a very, very long list. When I was a kid, I literally read
whatever I got my hands on. My parents weren't really readers, so I
got a lot of books from one of my grandmothers—everything from
Louis L'Amour westerns to Barbara Cartland romances. I was always
drawn more toward speculative fiction, even as a kid, but I didn't
find most of the children's books in that genre until I was much
older due to an understocked library and the fact that my grandmother
wasn't into ghosts, demons, space aliens, and so forth. There were a
few exceptions—she did have a couple of romance books that included
time travel and those stick out in my memory. And the library had a
book called Bid Time
Return by Richard
Matheson (repackaged later as Somewhere in Time). No one else got a
crack at that book for a very long time, because I kept rechecking it
until I got my own copy.
I
encountered Tolkien's work as a teen, Watership
Down, by Richard
Adams, and also Stephen King, Robert Heinlein, Madeleine L'Engle,
Douglas Adams.
What
is your favorite moment in history?
It's
more of an era than a moment. I geek out over pretty much anything
dealing with the Progressive Era, and also the Gilded Age. Things
were changing very rapidly—technology, social customs, politics—and
women were beginning to step into the public sphere in larger
numbers.
Do
you have any unique talents or hobbies?
I
play a mean game of Galaga and also Scrabble. I enjoy cooking, as
long as it's creative—let's just say that my creations can be hit
or miss. ;) I also know just enough Photoshop to be dangerous.
Family members don't trust me with their photos because I've been
known to be…creative.
What
book have you read that you think should get more hype and
recognition than it does?
It's
definitely not
YA, so I often avoid mentioning it in interviews, but Frank
Bardessono's The
Kindness of Ravens
was excellent. On the YA front, I think Marie Lu's Legend
series is much better than many of the other dystopian series out
there, but it never quite reached the same height. And in terms of
indie authors, there are many, many that I'd love to see get a wider
audience. David Estes is one. I also just read the first book in an
excellent series by John Corwin, Sweet
Blood of Mine, and
have added more of them to my Kindle. And there are others, but I'm
blanking right now.
If
you were able to time travel yourself, where and when would you
visit?
It's
no coincidence that Kate travels to the 1893 World's Fair and, in
this last book, to New York in the 1870s. Those are the first places
I'd go if I had a CHRONOS key.
What
is one tip you could pass along to beginning writers?
Read
where you write. You can also flip that around: write where you
read. If you are going to write YA, you need to know the field.
I've spoken to two writers in the past year who read only literary
fiction. One is currently writing a paranormal romance and the other
is writing a YA sci-fi, because they feel that they'll stand a better
chance of "making it" than with literary fiction. That's
probably true—but if you don't enjoy the genre in which you're
writing, if you're just "slumming" in order to make a buck,
the readers can usually tell. If you only read literary fiction,
you probably need to stick to writing lit-fic. And if you don't read
YA by choice, you probably need to write for adults.
What
is the most important thing you've learned so far on your own
journey?
Trust
that little voice inside that pushes you forward. It's usually more
insightful than the dozens of voices pushing you back.
Thanks so much for visiting us today Rysa! To wrap things up, share
one random fact about yourself.
I
am addicted to Inner Peas.
People
look at me very strangely when I sweep my arm across the shelf and
pull *all the bags* into my cart. (In my defense, my two teen boys
will eat an entire bag in one sitting.)
I'm
also addicted to chocolate and coffee, but I have multiple suppliers
for those addictions that fortunately do not necessitate a special
trip across town to Trader Joe's.
RYSA WALKER grew up on a cattle ranch in the South. Her options for entertainment were talking to cows and reading books. On the rare occasion that she gained control of the television, she watched Star Trek and imagined living in the future, on distant planets, or at least in a town big enough to have a stop light.
Timebound, the first book in the CHRONOS Files series, was the Young Adult and Grand Prize winner in the 2013 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Awards. A CHRONOS Files novella, Time's Echo, is now available exclusively on Kindle, with an Audible version scheduled for release in early June. Time's Edge, the second book in the series, is scheduled for release in October of 2014.
For updates, check her website: www.rysa.com.
Timebound, the first book in the CHRONOS Files series, was the Young Adult and Grand Prize winner in the 2013 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Awards. A CHRONOS Files novella, Time's Echo, is now available exclusively on Kindle, with an Audible version scheduled for release in early June. Time's Edge, the second book in the series, is scheduled for release in October of 2014.
For updates, check her website: www.rysa.com.
And NOW, for the giveaway!
One lucky winner will win a signed copy of Timebound, Time's Edge, and an ecopy or audiobook of Time's Echo! (US only)
Enter below and GOOD LUCK!
Monday, November 17, 2014
What Are You Reading Monday 11/17
What I Read Last Week
The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer by Michelle Hodkin--4 stars
The Sea of Monters (The Graphic Novel) by Rick Riordan--4 stars
The Vicious Deep by Zoraida Cordova--4 stars
Sparks Rise by Alexandra Bracken--4 stars
Illusions of Fate by Kiersten White--4 stars
What I Am Reading Next Week
In the Afterlight
Born Wicked
Timestorm
Sapphire Blue
Behind the Stars
Currently Reading
Have a great week everyone!
4 Year Blogoversary Celebration--November Book Haul on BookTube + HUGE UtopYA 2014 Swag Pack Giveaway!
I have learned so much over the past 4 years, but one of the biggest and most challenging things is making and editing videos. I'm not really that tech saavy, although I do have a very techie hubby who helps me a lot! When I learned about BookTube, I had to get on board....
So I started my own BookTube channel, Juliababyjen! Its been a lot of fun, and is a constant learning process! I love just sitting in front of the camera and talking about books, and watching everyone else's videos too!
I've extended the channel over the last year to also include some of my artwork and art updates as well.
Here is my latest video, my November Book Haul! Enjoy! Don't forget to enter the giveaway below!
And NOW, for the GIVEAWAY!!
Today's prize: A HUGE swap pack from UTopYA 2014! This Giveaway is US only, but I do have a compensation prize of signed bookmarks if you win and you are International.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Don't miss the other giveaways going on now!
Day 1 of Blogoversary Celebration--$20 Amazon GC Giveaway
Day 2 of Blogoversary Celebration--David Estes Interview + Win A Signed Copy of Brew!
Sunday, November 16, 2014
4 year Blogoversary Celebration--Interview with David Estes + GIVEAWAY!
Today I have David Estes, amazing YA author, on the blog! I can't imagine a celebration on my blog without David, one of my very good friends, AND one of my favorite writers! His newest book, Brew, recently released and it is brilliant!
Welcome to the blog, David! Tell us more about Brew!
Thanks
so much for having me on your awesome blog, Jenny, and congrats on
your 4 year blogoversary, that’s a HUGE accomplishment!
In
three words, I’d describe Brew as a book about the
witch apocalypse!
Basically, the history from the Salem Witch Trials repeats itself on
a much broader scale, leading to accused “witches” being executed
in modern times. As it turns out, some real witches are killed in the
process and they don’t like that too much, leading to a major
response that comes to be known as Salem’s Revenge, as the
magic-born (witches, warlocks, and wizards) take over the world.
With
millions of humans killed off in less than 24 hours, the surviving
humans must attempt to survive in any way they can. One of them, a
teenaged book-blogging football player named Rhett Carter, becomes a
witch hunter under the masterful training of his neighbor, an ex-CIA
badass. Rhett’s ultimate goal is to become strong and tough enough
to kill the gang of witches he suspects murdered his best friend and
girlfriend.
Although
Brew is about survival, at the heart of the book is a message of
friendship and love, and the sacrifices we will make for those we
care the most about.
If
you were a warlock and could choose a witch gang in Brew to join,
which one would you choose and why?
Awesome
question! As you point out, Brew is a little different than other
witch books as there are still groups of magic-born, but they’re
called gangs rather than covens. They are generally grouped together
based on magical specialty. For example, the group of corpse-raising
magic-born are called the Necromancer, or Necros. There are many
other gangs, from Changelings to Pyros to Sirens. However, if I had
to choose just one gang, I’d want to be a Clairvoyant. Their powers
are extremely powerful and they have an almost elf-like quality to
them. Also, they have the gift of eternal life in the form of
reincarnating after death, something that would be incredible! My
biggest fear about dying is not being able to see what will come
AFTER
I’m gone. Reincarnating would allow me to see the world change over
the course of centuries!
The cover of Brew is STUNNING. I know you had some input into it. How
did this cover come to be?
Thank
you so much, I’m so pleased you like it! My wife, Adele, and I come
up with the concepts for all of my covers, and then we rely on the
expert skill of my various cover artists to bring them to life.
Something I enjoy doing is portraying a scene from the book on the
cover, so that when readers get to that particular part they have an
“Aha!” moment and appreciate the cover even more. In this case,
there’s a scene with dead sunflowers, but then Rhett’s magical
dog, Hex, begins to bring the sunflowers back to life, one at a time.
That’s what the cover portrays.
The
cool thing is that I was inspired to write this scene when my wife
and I were traveling in Italy. We were near Siena and driving past
beautiful fields of sunflowers. It was late in the season, so many of
the fields were dead. We stopped at one to take pictures, and found a
single living sunflower amidst thousands of dead ones. The dead ones
looked like old men with sore backs, bending over, while the living
one was vibrant and full of energy, craning toward the sun. That true
life scene inspired me to write my fictional scene in Brew, which
later inspired the cover for the book.
You
are given a magic wand that has 3 spells “built in” to it. What
3 things would you “fix” in our world to make it a better place?
Gah!
Why only three? It’s like the 3 wishes thing where you always want
to use your last wish for 3 more wishes. But I won’t cheat…much.
OK, first I’d want the wand to be able to create food from thin
air. That way I could use it to feed the hungry. It would still be a
major task to supply the food everywhere it’s needed, but I’d do
it. NO ONE should have to go hungry. A full belly would hopefully
inspire more people to turn their lives around and pull themselves
out of whatever rut they’re in. Oh, and this might be cheating, but
this would include pet food! There are way too many starving stray
animals around the world too, it’s heartbreaking!
Next
I would use my wand to remove all weapons from the world. Yeah,
angry, violent people would still try to hurt each other, but it
would make it a lot harder. Our world is way too violent. Although we
see it in the U.S., in other countries it’s far worse. People
shouldn’t be scared to go to sleep at night. People shouldn’t be
scared to walk down the road or go to vote.
Finally,
I’d use my last spell to cure all children’s diseases. This might
sound unfair to the adults, but children would be my priority. Every
child deserves the chance at a childhood. They should be out playing,
laughing, making up games, having fun, learning. Not stuck in a
hospital. Everyone should live to be at least eighteen. Although I’d
like to use my spell to cure all disease, I think that might be
pushing it a little!
What
is the best compliment you've received? Ever?
Whoa,
this one is really tough. I’ll start with a close second place,
which is when a major editor at one of the big publishing imprints
said one of my books was really high quality and my best writing yet.
That meant a lot coming from someone with a high standard. It’s
been my goal from when I started writing to truly become a good
writer, not just an average one.
However,
that compliment couldn’t top the compliment of my wife’s love.
She’s someone I respect more than anyone, and the fact that she
would love ME, is the best compliment in the world. She has high
standards and to think that I met them is unbelievable sometimes.
I
know you love your readers and fans, and are a rock star when it
comes to how you interact with them. What has been your favorite fan
moment?
Aww
thanks! I’m not sure about the rock star part, I can barely carry a
tune and have been known to make instruments sound like dying
animals! But thank you for saying that! Hmm, my favorite fan
moment…this is also really hard! I’ve had a couple of my readers
send me videos, and even one who created a soundtrack to one of my
books, which was really cool.
However,
I think my favorite moment of all was when one of my readers who was
unfortunately in the hospital with cancer, messaged me to tell me
that my books helped her get through her treatment. Gosh, I’m
tearing up just thinking about it. I can’t cure her cancer. I can’t
even be there to hold her hand and give her strength. But knowing
that my humble words and stories made even a small difference in her
ability to cope with an impossible situation? That’s success. That
makes all the hard work and self-doubt worthwhile.
Brew
is overall a very dark read, but has some great LOL moments! My
favorite line from Brew is one of them. What is your favorite quote
from Brew?
Ha!
I’m naturally the type of person who likes to laugh a lot. For me,
laughter is what makes life the best. So even though I do love drama
and horror and dark themes, I always have to infuse them with a bit
of humor. Although I’d say Rhett’s friend, Laney, has some of the
funniest lines, I’ll pull a scene from where Rhett and Laney come
across an old friend of Rhett’s a video-game playing, magical
weapons dealer named Tillman Huckle:
“Password?”
a voice says from the right, where there’s a largish couch, a
loveseat, and a giant, plush recliner. There’s a flat screen TV on
in the corner. A soldier that looks at least part cyborg is blasting
away at what appear to be aliens with long, rubbery tentacles as feet
and arms. Tufts of unkempt brown hair sprout like grass over the top
of the recliner, and the sound of controls being mashed fills my
ears.
“You
know it’s me, Huckle,” I say.
“Password,”
he repeats, snorting out a laugh.
I
lower my voice, hoping Laney and her sister won’t hear, and say, “I
like big butts and I cannot lie.”
Tillman
doesn’t hold back, letting out a loud guffaw.
“Really?”
Laney says. “I’ll have to keep that in mind.”
This
is one example of how I try to add laugh-out-loud humor into a dark
story filled with death and horror.
What
has been your most extreme experience?
I’ve
been skydiving, which was definitely extreme. But that was nothing
compared to when my wife and I were attacked by monkeys in Thailand.
Let me tell you, it was freaking scary. A girl we didn’t know was
bitten on the arm, Adele had one of the monkeys smash her head into a
metal pole, another girl had her shoe break as we flew down steep
steps trying to escape. Somehow I escaped unscathed, but it was still
the most extreme experience I’ve ever had. Despite Adele’s
massive goose egg, she refused to let the monkeys stop us from trying
again, climbing the 1,000 steps to the top of the Tiger Temple. The
view was worth it!
You
are an amazing author that basically came from nowhere to become a
very successful full time writer. What is the secret to your
success?
*blushing*
You are too kind! I truly believe my journey is two parts hard work
and one part luck. There are no secrets to success as a writer.
Despite working a full time job and having very little free time, I
managed to write six books in 18 months, using my lunch break and
commute to churn out 2,000+ words per day. I wrote almost every day.
That’s how I got my start. The first five books haven’t really
sold many copies, but the sixth has sold ten thousand copies and the
subsequent sequels have done extremely well. Despite having spent
thousands of hours on the first five books only to watch them wallow
in the land of the unsold, I never gave up. I keep believing that
each new book I write will be my best book yet, and then I do my best
to make that belief true. I practice, practice, practice writing,
learning from my mistakes, taking on criticism without getting angry
(or at least as best as I can), and being inspired by the authors I
love. I respect each and every new reader (and old reader) that takes
a chance on one of my books, and I never take them for granted.
Without my readers, my dream of being a full time author could
disappear in an instant!
What
is one thing you want your readers to take away from your books?
Feels!
I want my readers to feel things as they read. Strong
feelings. Sadness when a favorite character doesn’t make it
through. Happiness when they do. Giddiness when characters reunite.
Spine-tingling suspense in the throes of the action. Laughter at the
humor. All of that. In essence, I want my readers to feel life
coming through the pages of my books.
You
are always working on some project or another. What's next?
Ha!
You know me too well. I don’t really take breaks, and when I finish
one project I immediately feel the itch to start the next one. Well,
firstly I have to finish writing/publishing the two new trilogies
that are in various stages of completeness. My witch apocalypse
series (Salem’s Revenge) has two books out (Brew and Boil) and I’ve
written the third and final book, Burn, which I’ll release in
January 2015. I’m also in the midst of my new YA SciFi dystopian
series, the Slip trilogy. The first two books, Slip and Grip, will be
released on December 1st
of this year. I still need to write the final book, Flip, which I
plan to release in the first quarter of 2015.
After
that…well, I might just have another awesome project planned, which
will be a SciFi retelling of a fairytale. Sorry, that’s all I can
say at this point!
It
has been awesome to have you on the blog again, David! To wrap this
up, share with us a random fact about you.
Thanks
so much! I’ve loved all your questions and I hope you and your
readers enjoyed my responses!
I’ll
leave you with this random fact: I’m so obsessed with Angry Birds
that every time one of them gets an update with new levels I have
trouble concentrating on anything else until I’ve managed to
achieve 3 stars on all the levels. *hangs head in shame* I think I
really need to go to the next ABAA (Angry Birds Addicts Anonymous)
meeting!
LOL
David Estes was born in El Paso, Texas but moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania when he was very young. David grew up in Pittsburgh and then went to Penn State for college. Eventually he moved to Sydney, Australia where he met his wife. They now live together in their dream location, Hawaii. A reader all his life, he began writing novels for the children's and YA markets in 2010, and started writing full time in June 2012. Now he travels the world writing with his wife, Adele. David's a writer with OCD, a love of dancing and singing (but only when no one is looking or listening), a mad-skilled ping-pong player, and prefers writing at the swimming pool to writing at a table.
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