Review: The Julian Chapter


Author: R.J. Palacio.
Genre: Young Adult, Novella.
Rating: ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ

Blurb:

Over 1 million people have read Wonder and have fallen in love with Auggie Pullman, an ordinary boy with an extraordinary face. Now readers will have a chance to hear from the book's most controversial character—Julian.

From the very first day Auggie and Julian met in the pages of the #1 New York Times bestseller Wonder, it was clear they were never going to be friends, with Julian treating Auggie like he had the plague. And while Wonder told Auggie's story through six different viewpoints, Julian's perspective was never shared. Readers could only guess what he was thinking.
Until now. The Julian Chapter will finally reveal the bully's side of the story. Why is Julian so unkind to Auggie? And does he have a chance for redemption?

Cover Review:

Similar to the Wonder cover, this one is just as cute and collectable! 

Book Review:

I had planned on not writing reviews for the Wonder novellas because I just wanted to read them and enjoy them.

But The Julian Chapter forced me to write a review about it. And that's how awesome it was. I can't not write about it. I just have to.

I love how Julian goes through the journey from being an absolutely stupid kid to a boy who understands and owns up to his mistakes. 

The transformation of Julian from a bully to a normal kid is, well, inspiring. It's short, but so full of meaning. 

I'm glad the author decided to write it and gave Julian a chance to redeem himself.


Buy The Julian Chapter now:



Review: The New Girl


Author: Ingrid Alexandra. 
Genre: Psychological Thriller.
Rating: ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ

Blurb:

You’ve only just met.
But she already knows you so well.
When Rachel moves into the spare room in Mary’s flat, everyone is quick to jump to the conclusion that there’s something strange about her. Everyone apart from Mary.

And when Rachel starts sleepwalking, everyone’s fears grow. But there’s something about the new girl that Mary can’t help but trust, and having recently escaped a toxic relationship, she needs the support.

Rachel becomes a friend and an ally, and Mary soon discovers that they have more in common than she ever could have imagined.
In fact, Rachel seems to know more about Mary than she knows about herself…

Cover Review:

To be honest, I do don't judge thrillers by their covers, because they're almost always pretty simple and bland. I'm a psychological thriller addict, so when I read this book's description, I had to have it, no questions asked. 

Book Review:

The New Girl was a chilling read, and I'd expected a lot from it. A lot. 

The start was pretty awesome, it built up just enough suspense to bring me to the edge of my seat, but then things started spiraling downwards. 

It was pretty clear just after a few chapters—to me, atleast—what was going on. The truth about who Sophie was, was pretty much told when Cat gets worried about Mary seeing the letter that arrived for Sophie. 

On the other hand, the suspense about what happened on The Night and what Mark was going to do, kept me reading. And the end might have been a tad anticlimactic. 

To be honest, the ending seemed a bit overused to me. I've seen this 'good person kills bad person and gets away with it' ending in a lot of psychological thrillers recently, and it's becoming a clichรฉ now. 

The New Girl was an exciting read, but not as original as I expected it to be. 


Buy The New Girl now:



Amazon UK. (0.99£ only!)





Interview: Philip Becnel, Author of Freedom City


Hey Bookworms!

Today I had the opportunity to have a chat with Philip Becnel, author of the anti-trump satire, Freedom City. 


Before continuing, let me introduce him to you! 



I was born in San Francisco and raised in Cotati, California, but I spent my formative years in New Orleans and then Northern Virginia. I now live in Washington, D.C., where I've been a private detective for almost twenty years.

FREEDOM CITY, an anti-Trump satire about resistance to American fascism, is my debut novel, but some years ago I published two nonfiction books about investigating: Introduction to Conducting Private Investigations and Principles of Investigative Documentation. I've also published articles in a variety of legal and popular journals, including Time Magazine.

Twitter | Facebook | Website | Amazon |

Now! Let's head on to the interview now, shall we? 

What inspired you to write Freedom City? What was the first spark?


After months of fuming about all the bigotry and corruption of the Trump presidency, I re-read The Monkey Wrench Gang, a book by Edward Abbey that really kicked off the environmental revolution in the 1970’s. The book is about some oddballs who wage a guerilla war against companies that are destroying the environment. The topic is dire, but the book is written in a way that readers can actually laugh at the absurdity of the situation. When I re-read that book, I thought, ‘Someone needs to write something like that set in the Trump era’—and that’s what I did. 

How did you come up with the title of this book?

Without giving too much away, ‘Freedom City’ is the name given to a fascist encampment on the National Mall. Politicians and generals like to come up with names for things that are semantically the opposite of what the thing actually is. Think, the ‘Defense of Marriage Act.’ I was going for something similarly Orwellian—a name that fascists would likely use for their home base to make it seem benign. The title is a play on the so-called Statue of Freedom, which currently stands atop the U.S. Capitol building and which was actually completed by a slave named Philip Reid.

Do you prefer reading eBooks or paperbacks?

I read a good amount of both, but I generally prefer paperbacks. For the past year or so I’ve been re-reading my favorite books and also a lot of non-fiction philosophy, which I can get from the library or a nearby used bookstore.

What kind of endings do you like in books, happy or heartbreaking?

I am very desperate to feel something about anything. An ending can be happy or heartbreaking, but it’s got to move me somehow. I suppose my ideal endings are the profound ones—endings that challenge how I previously looked at the world—with a slight preference for happiness.

Have you ever turned a real life person into a fictional character with the intention of killing them off? 

[Laughing maniacally] Freedom City starts at the unveiling of Donald Trump’s posthumous memorial, so that’s exactly what I did. However, Trump never actually makes an appearance in my book, which is more about his followers and his legacy. 

Are you a plotter or a pantser?

I’m a pantser by nature, but I plotted Freedom City. I knew that I wanted the prologue to occur chronologically after the epilogue, and the only way to make this work was to plot the entire book out methodically. 

Which character from Freedom City did you have the most fun writing? Why?

I think Beach Sands was the most fun to write. He’s a middle-aged, alcoholic lawyer with some unconventional sexual proclivities. Beach gave me a vehicle for writing some outrageous things that I’d never say out loud, such as ‘My only problem with the P.C. revolution is there aren’t any fitting pejoratives anymore. I tell you, the only good thing millennials ever did was bring back beards.’ I mean, I don’t really believe that, but sweeping statements like that make me laugh. 

Do you have a specific writing nook? Or do you write wherever inspiration strikes?

I have a desk on which I keep a sword and also a bayonet from an Argentinian AK-47. My desk chair is a repurposed barber’s chair, which feels sort of like a throne. Above the desk is a shield with a photograph of Emmanuel Zapata.

What do you listen to while writing? Or do you prefer silence?

I actually can’t write with music playing or anything. I’m an only child. The weapons on my desk are there to enforce solitude. [Laughing]

Which book's release are you excitedly waiting for?

I devoured the Song of Ice and Fire series, and like millions of others I’ve been anxiously awaiting The Winds of Winter.  I want to read that book so badly that if Ruth Bader Ginsburg and George R.R. Martin were both drowning and I could only save one of them, I’d seriously be tempted to let the Supreme Court sink into the abyss.

What's the most embarrassing thing that happened to you as a writer?

A lot of stuff has certainly humbled me as a writer—like query rejections and occasional lukewarm feedback—but I can’t say I’ve ever been embarrassed about anything. I just had an event in Chicago where the turnout wasn’t as great as I hoped, but I don’t take that sort of thing personally. 

Do you like summers or winters better?

Winters, for sure. I grew up in part in New Orleans, where the summers are brutal. They’re milder where I live now in Washington, D.C., but they’re still uncomfortably humid.

If someone left a one star review for your book, what would be your reaction?

This actually happened! Some guy—I think his name was ‘Anthony’—left me a one-star review on Goodreads. It was pretty suspicious since the guy hadn’t reviewed any other books—only mine. I’m fully aware that Freedom City will be extremely offensive to anyone who supports Trump, so it’s really not too surprising that some people would try to sabotage me.

If you could swap your world with a fictional one, would you? If yes, what world would you rather live in?

Good fiction requires conflict, and I’m not sure I’d want to live in a world with constant conflict. My life is already fraught with conflict. When I’m not writing, I’m a private detective—and the only things worth investigating are inherently contentious. I suppose I might want to live in a children’s book or something, maybe a book with friendly animals who can talk to each other, and lots of hugging.

What is the best thing about being a writer?

I could say ‘working independently’ or something like that, but for me it’s the feeling of accomplishment from writing a book that I really think will become a cult classic some day. I mean, I might step in front of a bus tomorrow, but there are enough copies of Freedom City out there now that the book is bound to stick around long after I’m gone. This sense of immortality has permeated my life, such that I’m now drinking more and caring less about the things that used to incense me.

It’s not a bad life.

Thank you for coming over to my blog! I wish you all the very best for your book!

Want to know more about Freedom City? Here you go!




Author: Philip Becnel
Genre: Contemporary fiction

Blurb:

FREEDOM CITY is an anti-Trump satire that pays homage to The Monkey Wrench Gang.
After Donald Trump unceremoniously dies from natural causes, four misfits from Washington, D.C. who call themselves the Fearless Vampire Killers sever the heads of Confederate statues and wage a comedic guerrilla war on post-Trump America. When President Pence enlists droves of fascist volunteers to crush the “alt-left” uprising, the rebels must risk their lives to run the fascists out of D.C. 
What follows is not only a battle for survival—but a desperate search for remnants of what once made America great. 


That's it for today! See you tomorrow! Happy reading! 






Review: Queens Of Geek


Author: Jen Wilde
Genre: YA, Romance, LGBTQ.
Rating: ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ♥️

Blurb:

Charlie likes to stand out. She’s a vlogger and actress promoting her first movie at SupaCon, and this is her chance to show fans she’s over her public breakup with co-star Reese Ryan. When internet-famous cool-girl actress Alyssa Huntington arrives as a surprise guest, it seems Charlie’s long-time crush on her isn’t as one-sided as she thought.

Taylor likes to blend in. Her brain is wired differently, making her fear change. And there’s one thing in her life she knows will never change: her friendship with her best guy friend Jamie—no matter how much she may secretly want it to. But when she hears about a fan contest for her favorite fandom, she starts to rethink her rules on playing it safe.

Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde, chosen by readers like you for Macmillan's young adult imprint Swoon Reads, is an empowering novel for anyone who has ever felt that fandom is family.

Cover Review:

Pink hair. Do I need anything else?! I absolutely, most definitely love it. 

Book Review

Queens Of Geek was a beautiful, heart-touching story about us. 

Yes, you read that right. It was a story about us, the geeks, the bookworms, the fandom queens and kings. All of us. 

Queens Of Geek follows the three best friends, Taylor, Charlie and Jamie on their visit to the SupaCon. 

The story is not just another Young Adult book. It deals with topics ranging from bisexuality to social anxiety, standing up for yourself and for those you care about. 

Queens Of Geek was raw, beautiful and honest. 

My Chatter:
(A brand new section where I can finally fangirl, no professionalism included!)

Oh my God, you definitely need to read this book guys and girls! It's the most beautiful, real and heartwarming book I've read in a long time! 

The characters in this one run through crazy mazes, jump on trampolines that are disguised into bookish places, fawn over bookish goodies, cosplay and basically do everything we do or dream of doing one day. 

Taylor deals with social anxiety on a daily basis, and finds her solace in writing. She hates talking because her sentences and thoughts always get muddled up when she tries to talk, but she loves writing. Exactly. Like. Me. I could relate to her on every page. 

Charlie is bisexual. And open about it. But when a relationship with her co-star breaks her heart, she loses some of her confidence. And her caution, her pride, her need to be more than the hot star's girlfriend? It was all real. 

And Jamie. Jamie was the sweetest, perfect nerd. He was probably the most laid-back of the three. The calm, collected person. And yet he loses his cool to defend his friend when someone mocks Taylor.

A Fan Art I made inspired by this book!


All three of them, and all of the minor characters, they were all so real. And so many issues were brought into light by the author in such a sweet, simple read.

How people still mock people with social anxiety.
How some people still frown upon bisexuality.
How overcoming your fears isn't easy, but so worth it.
How the society's expectations sometimes turn you into a completely different person.

Queens Of Geek was beautiful.
It was real.

*Chatter hereby ends


Buy Queens Of Geek now:




You need to buy it! 

Guest Post: Jenny M. Potts Talks About Her Journey As A Writer


Hey Bookworms! 

Today we have with us, Jenny M. Potts, who is not just a novelist, but also a screenwriter and playwright! 

Before I hand over the reins to her, let me introduce her to you in a proper, gentle(wo)manly fashion!


Jenny is a novelist, screenplay writer, and playwright. After a series of ‘proper jobs’, she realized she was living someone else’s life and escaped to Gascony to make gรฎtes. Knee deep in cement and pregnant, Jenny was happy. Then autism and a distracted spine surgeon wiped out the order. 

Returned to wonderful England, to write her socks off.

Jenny would like to see the Northern Lights but worries that’s the best bit and should be saved till last. Very happily, and gratefully, settled with the family. She tries not to take herself too seriously.


Now that you know more about her, let's hear from her, the story of her writing life so far!

~~~~~~

I’ve been writing since I was around nine years old. I wrote quite prolifically in those early years and it was all plays, which gave me the opportunity to star in all my dramas! I also produced and directed the plays, casting my friends in the parts. It was a very creative and happy time, when we laughed so much, it was a challenge just to stay upright. My most successful plays (ie, they were given a stage at school) were: Murder at Barrington Place (incidentally, my new neighbours are called the Barringtons… I haven’t told them about my murderous early script), A Day in the Life of a Psychiatrist and The Ghost Train

Apart from the obligatory suicidal poetry everyone creates during their teens, I did not write again seriously until I was in my late twenties. My partner and I had moved to France. We renovated properties and had a holiday business, so I had some time in the winters to, at last, turn my hand back to the pen.

I started to write poetry again and did quite well publishing my work. I remember on two occasions having vivid dreams which I wrote about immediately upon waking. Both those poems were snapped up by prominent presses of the day. One was called Realistic Woman Flavour and the other Infidelity. I have copies of everything I’ve published in Gascony where we have renovated a ruin (it took eleven years) and where I have happily sawn wood and screwed together vast lengths of bookshelving. My own publications don’t take up very much space but they’re in great company with all my favourite authors: Attwood, Zadie Smith, all the old Frenchies like Flaubert and de Maupassant, the great Russians like Kafka and Solzenitsyn, wonderful Americans like Smilie, Proulx and Auster and some dear Brits like Forster, Atkinson, Glaister.

I wrote simultaneously a great deal of short fiction and managed to publish most of that. I won some competitions and tried my hand at experimental fiction too.

Then in my early thirties, I wrote a novel called The Wine Merchant of Little Venice. I don’t think it was terribly good but I got a very encouraging letter from an editor at Virago, giving in depth analysis and advice. You would never receive a letter like that now, so I was lucky to get it. I then wrote more novels, gradually getting better and receiving encouraging letters from publishers and agents. Then I submitted Romy & Raphael to the Mslexia Novel Competition and of 1,800 novel manuscripts, I got a place in the top ten. There was an event for the winners at Waterstones on Piccadilly, with agents and publishers. Just prior to that, however, I got signed to MBA. My agent was Laura Longrigg. I remember being terrified before our first meeting, I’d waited so long for this moment.

Romy & Raphael attained the interest of Virago again, and one or two other publishers but I didn’t receive a contract. I went back to the drawing board and wrote a novel called Rooken versus Ryder which I hoped was more commercial and a genre – mystery/suspense – rather than the non genre literature I’d been doing (my own favourite to read and write). But Laura didn’t like it. I could’ve walked into the sea, I was so depressed. 

I picked myself up and wrote Piano from a 4th Storey Window. Laura loved it. Hurrah! The novel did the rounds again and though it attracted lots of praise, no-one bought it. 

Meanwhile, another publisher was interested in RvR, so I had to resign from Laura and met with the new publisher. They didn’t want to publish RvR though and suggested I go and write a real genre novel for them. I did that and it was Hiding. But the new publisher turned it down as it was too upmarket for their imprint. Aaaaaaagh.

I decided to go it alone. Got myself a great cover designer and shazam, here I am. Hiding has done well on Amazon and I’m about to publish my next thriller, Just. There will be two more thrillers this year.

I’m also working on a memoir for a famous ballet dancer. I have to meet him in Spain for our sessions. Aw, the hardship…

And I’m collaborating on a book with a friend, who also happens to be a ballet dancer. This is a triptych story with, as you’d expect, three parts, going from the early 1700s to the present day.

~~~~~~

Wow, you've sure been through a lot Jenny! And your future endeavours sound pretty interesting! Thanks for stopping at the blog and sharing your story with us!

Curious about Jenny's books? 

Here's a bit about her latest, Just:


How far would you go to save a life?

On golden Mediterranean sands, maverick doctor Scott Langbrook falls recklessly in love with his team leader, Fiyori Maziq. If only that was the extent of his falling, but Scott descends into the hellish clutches of someone much more sinister.

‘Just’ is a story of love and loss, of terror and triumph. Set in idyllic Cambridge and on the shores of the Med and Cornwall, our characters fight for their very lives on land and at sea. 

An unforgettable novel which goes to the heart of our catastrophic times, and seeks salvation.


Buy Just now:




Wait up! That's not all! We also have a giveaway! 

Win one of five eBooks of Just by Jenny M. Potts! (Open Internationally)

Terms and Conditions –Worldwide entries welcome.  Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below.  The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then I reserve the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time I will delete the data.  I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

That's all for today Bookworms! See you tomorrow!


Review: Shine


Author: Jodi Picoult
Genre: General Fiction, Novella. 
Rating: ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ

Blurb:

Today is Ruth’s first day of third grade at Dalton. The prestigious institution on New York’s Upper East Side couldn’t be more different from her old school in Harlem. Despite being the smartest girl in her grade, Ruth suspects that her classmates and teachers only see her dark skin. She also notices that Christina, the daughter of her mother’s employer, treats Ruth very differently when they’re hanging out with the popular girls rather than playing together. Ruth must navigate between two worlds, never losing sight of the dreams she has for herself—in hopes that someday, someone will see her for who she really is.

Cover Review

The cover is colorful, just like the novel. It has blues, pinks and yellows. I love it.

Book Review:

Jodi Picoult is my idol. My Sister's Keeper was the first book I read by her and since then I've read almost all of her books. 

I listened to Shine as an AudioBook and it was all Jodi Picoult. I loved how, even in such a short story, she managed to create such deep characters. 

Ruth was a sweet, caring character, even when she was a small girl, and I'm so looking forward to read more of her story in Small Great Things. 

I love Jodi Picoult for writing about topics that matter, issues that need to be focused on, and Shine was just what I always expect from her, a bunch of awesomeness. 

Okay, so this review may sound more like a fangirl's post than a critique's but I can NOT critique Jodi Picoult's work, all I can do is fangirl about it! 


Buy Shine now:







My Writing Corner: How Do You Do It Authors?

Hey Bookworms!


It's already been one week since the cover reveal of Scattered Constellations and I've managed to do so much!


With the help of my awesome editor—who’s also my sister, but doesn't let that fact get into the way of her work—I’ve managed to get the final manuscript ready! All that is left is formatting it according to kindle, which I'll be doing tomorrow.


The other big thing I will be doing tomorrow is sending out the ARCs of Scattered Constellations. *Shudders*


I don't know if I'm more excited or nervous about that, to be honest. I feel like I'm about to give an exam, and the ironic fact is that exams never scared me.


Even though I've got some really beautiful reviews from some really awesome authors—which you can read here by the way—I’m still super nervous about the reviews I'm going to receive.





How do you do it authors? How do you entrust me with your books like that? It's so difficult! It's amazing and inspiring how authors do that on a daily basis. Have complete strangers judge the art they spend months creating. Dealing with the negative ones, and trying to keep getting better at their art. I'm starting to realize just how tough being a writer is. And yet, I won't trade this with any other job I was offered. Hard it may be, but I still love it.


Anyway... I'm going to stop ranting now. I really hope everyone enjoys Scattered Constellations. ♥️


If you haven't been around here before and want to know what Scattered Constellations is all about, here's the blurb:


Words tumble out, with no pause;
From the pen, my anelace,
That I hold so graciously,
(In awe of its majesty, its power)
In my hand.


They form thoughts, hopes and musings;
Reflect my soul, my entire being,
And spread across the page,
Like scattered constellations
Across the sky.


(Scattered Constellations is a collection of 50 Free Verse YA Poems.)


You can add it to your Goodreads list if you'd like to read it later!

Scattered Constellations


You can also preorder the book through Amazon! Here's the universal link:

Preorder Scattered Constellations now.

I'll sign out now!


Keep reading, keep writing!
-Anky.

Review: Hers To Save


Author: Michelle Connor.
Genre: Fantasy.
Rating: ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ

Blurb:

A captivating new YA medieval fantasy, perfect for adults or teens.
When Aveline is betrothed to the Lord of her Village, it starts a journey that will take her far from home and everything she has ever known.

Embark on a coming of age saga with Aveline who befriends a creature she's only encountered in fairytales. He's twice her height and covered in silver scales.

Their journey will lead them into a battle they had no idea was being fought.
Can Aveline find her courage to play her part as a King's madness spreads across the land?

Cover Review:

The cover is dark and spooky. I like it! 

Book Review:

It's been a while since I've read a fantasy novel of this kind. Recently, all the fantasy books I've read focused on witches, faeries, Nephilim, you know what I mean, right?

This old-ish dragon fantasy was a good change, though I couldn't connect with the characters all that well. I felt bad for Aveline, but I didn't really feel her. 

My favorite character is without doubt the dragon, Aeolius. His dialogues were far and few, but he still had a definite personality and I loved that about him.

My favorite moment on the other hand is when Herveus gets injured and dreams about his sister. That was a heartbreaking moment and it gave me an insight into his complicated personality.

To sum it up, Hers To Save was an okay read. 


Buy Hers To Save now:








Review: Testimony Of The Blessed


Author: K.G. Reuss.
Genre: Paranormal Romance, Fantasy.
Rating: ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ๐Ÿซ♥️

Blurb:

blessed: (bles-id) adj. consecrated; sacred; holy; sanctified

I am not the girl they think I am.

They think I’m perfect. Good student. Nice, quiet girl. Helps the homeless. Follows the rules. I’ve spent my life being perfect, at least in the eyes of my friends. What they don’t know is, I have a secret. One that gnaws at me, tearing me apart bit by bit.

Just when I think I’m ready to crumble, he comes into my life. Brax Shepherd, the man of my dreams. The man who can take all my pain away with just a whisper in my ear.

But Brax has secrets too. Secrets that could end me if I let them.

Surrounded by sin, greed, and the faith I desperately cling to, I must decide which path I will take. One thing is for certain, I’m in love with the devil and would do anything to save him. Even die for him.

I’m not who they think I am. Sometimes I feel more cursed than blessed. He thinks he’s damned. But he’s my blessing in disguise. This is my Testimony of the Blessed.
Testimony of the Blessed is book 1.5 in the Emissary of the Devil series. It’s told from Maggie’s point of view. Delve deeper into the heart of the story by hearing Maggie’s recount of the beginning. Learn all the secrets she keeps hidden—even the secrets she doesn’t tell Brax.

Cover Review:

I know just how much trouble the author had to deal with in regards to this cover, and I love how beautiful it has turned out to be! 

Book Review:

Testimony of The Blessed is the second book in the Emissary of The Devil series. 

Even though this book is the retelling of Damned from Maggie's perspective, the content is totally different. And that's why I loved it so much. 

In Blessed, we get to know more about Maggie. We get to experience firsthand all the awful things she does through. And with her, I fell in love with Brax all over again. (Oh, by the way! The author did an exclusive on Anky's Book Bubble about the story behind the creation of Brax! You should definitely check it out here.)

Another character that played an important role in Blessed was Corbin Black. In the first book, all we saw was the dark side of him, but in this one, we get to see a better side of him too. I like to think that this was his chance at redemption. 

You'll probably have to read the books to know what I'm talking about, and you most definitely should. There's so much more to this story than fluff and romance. 

Even though the ending of this book is pretty much the same as Damned, I cried at both of them—and I'm most definitely not ashamed to say it. 

Testimony of The Blessed is the kind of book that warms your heart, makes you fall in love, and then shatters your heart into a million pieces. 

I can't wait to read Gospel of The Divine, the next book in the series. I. Can't. Wait. 


Buy Testimony of The Damned now:






Interview: Rose Titus, Author of Night Home

Hello everyone!

Today I had the opportunity to interview Rose Titus, author of Night Home. But before delving into the interview, let me introduce you to Rose Titus.



Rose Titus works two jobs to support her writing habit.  She exists somewhere in cold, dreary New England, with two manipulative cats and a very out of date Macintosh with which she creates horror and fantasy fiction.  She also has a restored classic car to ride around while in search of adventure.
For travel she has stayed for the night in an allegedly haunted castle, has taken a boat ride on Loch Ness, and has visited the fabled Bermuda Triangle, without getting lost.
Her work has previously appeared in Lost Worlds, Lynx Eye, Bog Gob, Mausoleum, Midnight Times, Blood Moon Rising Magazine, The Bugle, Weird Terrain, Descend, Wicked Wheels, Carnival of Aces, The Dead River Review, Fortean Times, and other literary magazines.
When she’s not writing or working or messing around with her old Buick, she waits by her mailbox for the next issue of Fortean Times to arrive.
Facebook | Amazon

Now that you know a bit more about Rose, let's head on to the interview.



The Vampire Next Door series is so very different from the usual Vampire books. What inspired you to write it? Was it just the wish to write a different Vampire story or are there more reasons?
Many years ago, I watched a TV news program in which a scientist shared his theory that legends of vampires may have been based on people who were born with a condition that caused them to need to consume blood to survive.  This was just one theory, but it set me to wondering...  what if vampires were just people with an inherited condition?  What if they were just people who lived in fear of ignorance and prejudice?  Just people who needed to stay out of the sun and needed to protect their secret or suffer being hunted for what they were?  What if vampires were just people who were hunted down all through the centuries because of people's superstition?  It was the start of the Vampire Next Door trilogy.


From your bio, I gleaned that you're an adventurous soul! Would you like to share one of your adventures with us?
In Bermuda, you can go horseback riding on the beach.  You get a bus to the riding stables, and get off the bus in this location that looks to be in the middle of nowhere - nowhere in the middle of Bermuda, and go down this dirt pathway and come to the riding stable.  You get on this trail ride that goes through a forest, then comes out to a meadow, and then ride down to the beach.  Sometimes the horses go into the ocean.  You can literally ride a horse in the turquoise blue ocean that surrounds Bermuda.  You get your feet wet, but the horses love to play in the water.  It's worth getting your feet wet.


Did you ever encounter any weird situations during one of your adventures? Like stumbling upon a vampire or a ghost?
Once when I was in Scotland, I stayed the night in a castle which the tour guide claimed was haunted.  Supposedly it was haunted by the ghost of a young lady who threw herself out of a window from the top floor after her beloved took off with a servant girl...  that night, all night long, I could not sleep because someone on the floor above was loudly pacing, walking back and forth, all night long, until dawn, a restless soul...  I wondered if it could be the ghost.  But I had to get up early so I could get back on the bus to get to Loch Ness and go on a boat ride...
Another time I sat in on a paranormal investigation that was conducted in a very old house that was also supposedly haunted.  They set up all sorts of high tech equipment to record activity.  I was there with them late into the night.  And yes, stuff went on.  Things moved around on their own.  I cannot describe the events in one paragraph.  You had to be there.  It actually quite fascinating.


Okay, favorite ice-cream flavor?  

Pistachio.
I read that you live with your cats. Being a cat mama, I know what that entails. Do they cuddle you out of a writer's block or do they give you a 'go ahead and just get it over with' stare?  


My cats don't influence my writing, but I like to sit and read my Fortean Times with my cat and a glass of Dubonnet.  (Fortean Times is a British magazine that reports on unusual phenomena, such as bigfoot, or UFO's, ghosts, and sometimes vampires.  It's both entertaining and good for research.)


Are you a plotter or a pantser?
I just turn on my very old Macintosh and start typing; the stories seem to sort of write themselves.  It just comes, I don't know how, but that's how it is.  Sometimes when I'm writing, I feel as if the story already exists, somewhere, out there, in the ether and I'm sort of channeling it...


Other than writing, you also work at two other jobs, am I right? So what are they?
In my full time job, I'm a paralegal.  In my part time job, I am also a church secretary.  Being a paralegal, I often see into other people's lives.  I never knew so much about human nature until I became a paralegal.  Sometimes, real life is not pretty.


Favorite writing-time music? Or do you prefer silence?
I like classic rock, Springsteen, Rush, the Moody Blues, Blue Oyster Cult, that is what I consider real music.  There is actually a scene in my third book in the Vampire Next Door trilogy, All the Way to the Moon, where a vampire character discusses classic rock and declares it to be real music.


Would you rather be a Vampire or a Wizard, if you had the chance to choose?
Well, vampires don't age, but wizards do...  so... !


Your top five favorite authors are?
That's a tough one!  Let's see...  I love Michael Harner, who is recently deceased unfortunately, I like Linda Godfrey, Nick Redfern, Al Vermette for his secret agent books, and Kelly Novak, a great new author.


Are you a Night Owl or an Early Bird? 
I tend to be a little bit of a night owl.  I do some of my best writing late at night when the rest of the world is asleep.


Your favorite movie(s)?
I admit to being a Star Wars junkie, but I love the older Star Wars movies better than the newer ones.  When I was a kid, I wanted to be a Jedi!


Do you prefer classic literature or modern?
I like all types of literature, both old and new.  I also like a lot of non-fiction as well, which is why I love books by Michael Harner, Nick Redfern, and Linda Godfrey.


The one place you'd like to visit and write a book about?
Perhaps one day I would like to visit Tasmania.  They say it might be one of the last beautiful places on Earth.  Maybe if I wandered far off enough into the wilderness, I would see the rare Tasmanian tiger.


Lastly, a quote from one of your books that you really love?
In After Dark, the second book in the Vampire Next Door trilogy, one of the vampires feels sorry for some homeless street kids and takes them in... 
"Our parents threw us out, for various reasons, got no money, so people use us, then they throw us away when they're done.  Sometimes people beat us up and stuff.  We eat when people pay us, we live in a truck, under a bridge.  The only guy who cares is a bloodsucker."

And the vampire replies, "I would appreciate it if you boys would not use such bigoted and crude language to describe my people; we prefer to be considered ultra violet radiation challenged."

Interested in the book? Here's some information about it:


Genre: Fantasy, Vampire.
Blurb:

When Muriel Aubrey inherits an old house in a small town, she imagines that moving into the rural community will be deathly dull.  But the old house once belonged to her eccentric granduncle, a professor who was said to be researching something very mysterious and unusual before his untimely death.  While exploring the slightly rundown Victorian age home, she finds the research notes that had been hidden away, and discovers that the professor was researching vampires.
It isn’t long before Muriel meets residents of the small town who knew the professor almost a century ago, and that everything he wrote in the notes he kept is true…   And she suddenly finds herself stalked by a vampire hunter.


That's it for today! Hope you had fun!




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