Showing posts with label guest post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest post. Show all posts

Saturday, March 31, 2012

The Withering World of Amelia Gray. Guest post by author Amanda Stevens.

Today I'm thrilled to be able to give this blog over in the capable hands of Amanda Stevens, author of the spine chilling paranormal romance series called the Graveyard Queen. If you haven't read the first books yet you're in for a real treat!


The Withering World of Amelia Gray

When I was little, cemetery exploration was a favorite pastime. My house was situated between two graveyards and I spent many a Sunday afternoon wandering through the maze of headstones and statuary. One of the cemeteries was abandoned and I wasn’t allowed to visit there alone. Naturally, it became a favorite escape. Nestled in a deep forest and shrouded by shade, the forgotten graveyard was a place of enchantment, a mysterious necropolis of sunken graves, crumbling headstones and fallen angels. The burials were old—pre-Civil war—and the symbols carved into the headstones intrigued me. I could daydream there for hours.

There’s a term for graveyard fascination—taphophilia.  From the Greek words taphos, meaning tomb and philia, meaning love or obsession.  A love of tombstones and cemeteries.

When I decided to write a paranormal series, I knew I wanted the protagonist to have an unusual skill or occupation. So I did an Internet search for strange jobs and up popped cemetery restorer—the perfect vocation for a character that would share my passion for graveyards. She would be Southern (also like me) and a loner because her ability to see ghosts had isolated her from human companionship. Her first name would be Amelia because it’s Southern and old-fashioned, and her surname would be Gray to symbolize the twilight world of ghosts.

Amelia became so real to me that I knew I had to create a worthy love interest, someone dark and mysterious and charismatic to lure her from the safety of her graveyard kingdom and tempt her into breaking one of her father’s cardinal rules: never associate with those who are haunted.

Papa’s rules are broken in The Restorer; the past is revealed in The Kingdom; and the future is foreshadowed in The Prophet. Set against the withering backdrop of abandoned and forgotten cemeteries, The Graveyard Queen series offers peeks into the lush dreamscape of restless souls, deranged killers and doomed lovers.

I’ve just been given the go-ahead for three more books in the series and I would like to invite you along on Amelia’s journey as her graveyard kingdom becomes ever darker and more mysterious.

…………..

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Book Trailer:



Check out the first three novels in Amanda's Graveyard Queen series!


The third novel, The Prophet, releases this April!










Friday, March 30, 2012

Blog Tour+Giveaway: Amy Plum's Top 10 Most Romantic Places in France



Today I'm super exited to welcome Amy Plum here on Escape In A Book! Unfortunately I believe I'm posting this a day late, for that I'm very, very sorry but hey better late then never, right? Amy is doing a blog tour hosted by the one and only:


Just click the banner to visit this wonderful site.


Without further ado Amy Plum's Top 10 Romantic Places in France:

1. The Medici Fountain in Luxembourg Gardens (Paris). It shows the jealous giant Polyphemus discovering the lovers Galatea and Acis.


Photo: Flickr/Phillip Capper, license CC BY 2.0.

2. La Pointe du Raz

Photo: Flickr/Richard Tanguy, license CC BY 2.0.


3. The Christmas market in Strasbourg


4. The village called Baux de Provence


5. Gordes

Photo: Flickr/momo, license CC BY-SA 2.0.

6. Honfleur



7. Menton - I've actually been to Menton myself and it's such a beautiful place! Sadly I do not have any good photos from the place myself.

Photo: FlickrAxel Naud, license CC BY-SA 2.0

8. The Mont Saint-Michel

Photo: Flickr/afloresm, license CC BY 2.0.

9.Saint-Malo 



10. Annency Lake

Photo: Flickr/s9-4pr, license CC BY 2.0.

If these picturesque scenes doesn't set you in the romantic mood for this weekend I don't know what will. Thank you so much for sharing this with us Amy! These places were just breathtakingly beautiful.

ENDED!Giveaway:

Would you like to win a copy of Die for Me and Until I Die(pre-order)? Just leave a comment telling me the most romantic place that you know of and a way for me to contact you. The giveaway ends 8/4-2012.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

A DIFFERENT KIND OF MAGIC - guest post by author Eden Unger Bowditch

Eden is the author behind the recently published novel The Atomic Weight of Secrets or The Arrival of the Men in Black(check out my review here). She is here today to tell us about how her book came to be and also a to tell us a bit about Egypt where Eden currently lives with her family.

I can say with all honesty, there were people who thought the Young Inventors Guild was just too weird to get published. There are no magic wands or flying broomsticks- not that I don’t love a well-placed wand and a good spell. But everyone warned that magic wands were in and everything else wasn’t. Well, The Young Inventors Guild forced my hand, so to speak. It was a story that grew and grew in my head and out came The Atomic Weight of Secrets… before I could stop it. I didn’t believe that a story could really grow to such proportions inside my brain. I remember hearing J K Rowling say that Harry Potter came out fully formed and the whole story was right there. It seemed unreal. Impossible. Until it happened to me, ladies and gentlemen.

It was like dropping colour into water- the idea, like the colour, soon permeated everything and the whole picture became clear. Each character bloomed into someone I have come to know and love (or fear, or both!) and the history behind it stretched far into the past… As I began to write, everything and everyone sort of took their places naturally. And once characters are formed, they will not allow themselves to be bullied into doing things that are not in their nature. Their voices come out and writing their story is almost like reporting on something observed. Filling in the details- no small task- is where the final picture takes form. I spent hours in the library and hours looking up everything to be clear on times and places of things. Historic work requires lots of research to be sure that the facts within the fiction are accurate. The Young Inventors Guild has so many parts that I have, with my editor’s help, laid out a timeline and (gulp) I put down the map of the whole story within the trilogy. This was hard to actually put to paper because then it was vulnerable and out there in the world. But it was really good to do and helped with connecting everything together.

And, to me, the story is full of magic. A different kind of magic. The magic we can do and feel and see all around us in this amazing world. It broke my heart that people thought kids wouldn’t be interested in invention. Really! So far, we are proving them wrong. Underestimating the power of creativity and the inspiration of inventiveness is just plain foolish. Kids are brilliant. And if we can all harness the spark of ingenuity that we all had as kids, we’d never be too tired to do something amazing.

I have always been fascinated with creating something from bits of other things. I love figuring out how things work and making them work differently. We are big on science projects and experiments in our house. It’s like finding pieces to a puzzle that you invent along the way.


Eden riding on a camel.
Living in Egypt has been such an incredible experience for all of us. Let’s be honest- we live in one of the most ancient places in the world, a place that is at the heart of invention and history. Did you know that toothpaste was invented here? And let’s not forget the pyramids. Egyptians still have that spark of invention or, more often, reinvention. In the US, something like 30% of what is recycled into bins is actually recycled. In Cairo, for example, 85-95% of everything that gets thrown away is recycled. We can separate glass and paper, but it all goes to Garbage City. There are people who live in Garbage City that have, for generations, recycled different things. There are families who recycle glass. Families who recycle plastic or paper. They often use these materials to make things they sell. But in everyday life you can see how ingenious people are as a culture. They say need is the mother of invention. Well, it is also the mother of recycling. The two go hand in hand here. People don’t buy a new broom handle, they will make one, hand cut threads in a stick, and make a new broom. Or they’ll invent some contraption or find some bits and pieces to use as a watering system or a bicycle or a wall. Things do not go to waste when there isn’t decadence to allow newly purchased replacement for anything used.

Thank you so much for this wonderful post, Eden! It was so nice of you to stop by here at Escape In A Book.