Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts

Friday, May 25, 2018

"TALK NERDY TO ME!" - Celebrate Nerd Pride Day with Here Be Magic

Posted by: Dani Harper, Author
Since 2006, May 25 has been designated as Nerd Pride Day. In honor of this auspicious occasion, we asked everyone at Here Be Magic"Tell us something nerdy about you..." 

Read on as our authors reveal their innermost geek!



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"Being a nerd is about feeling an intense adoration of a topic that inspires you to gather knowledge or paraphernalia far beyond the extent of the average fan. To wit, I have a billion pieces of vintage clothing that don’t even fit, all because I love vintage clothing. If that’s not nerdy in its own way…what is? 

Note: I am not a hoarder otherwise, only with regards to my nerdly hobbies. 

Also note: cats don’t count in the “not a hoarder” category. I have six." 
~ Jody Wallace, www.jodywallace.com 

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"Do I have to do "just one", asked the giant nerd? I mean, c’mon, I’m a software tester in my day job, a general technophile, and a lifelong fan of multiple SF/F authors and media properties. I can yammer on for hours about Star Trek, Star Wars, Doctor Who, Battlestar Galactica, the MCU, Mac vs. PC, iOS vs. Android, and the minutae of worldbuilding in the Tolkien legendarium. 

Especially Tolkien.

Come to think of it, that may be my answer right there. ;D" 
~ Angela Korra'ti, www.angelahighland.com

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Nicole Luiken is an avid reader AKA a bookworm. Instead of bringing a towel with her wherever she goes à la Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, she brings a book to read, usually of the SF/Fantasy variety. The best way to lure her away from her books is with a Board Game Night.


~ Nicole Luiken, www.nicoleluiken.com

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"I took a minor voice-acting role in a not-for-profit fan-made Doctor Who audio play. (I won an audition against pros and everything!)"

~ Shawna Reppert
www.shawna-reppert.com






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"My personal nerdiness is on full display in my writing office. There's a figurine of Cerberus, the 3-headed dog that guards the gates of the Underworld, with various faeries and dragons to keep him company. My collection of Ray Bradbury sci-fi novels has a place of honor among rows of books on myths and legends and the paranormal. You'll see a signed photo from a Klingon cosplayer, a poster of demon-hunter detective Constantine, plus my vendor's booth banner and a couple of ID cards from the last comicon I attended. Not to mention the fully articulated wolf head that my hubs wore at said comicon...

Why yes, those ARE Marvel action figures standing around my keyboard. I use them to act out scenes in my stories – honest!
~ Dani Harper, www.daniharper.com


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"I love to dress up in Victorian/steampunk clothes and go to museums, festivals, and anywhere I can, with as many like-minded friends as possible."

~ Cindy Spencer Pape







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"I'm sure there I have multiple nerdy habits in addition to my lifelong bookworm obsession. I'm sharing my latest obsession—the Supernatural television show. Last year I binged the seasons with my daughters (their second time through) and we've been to the convention twice. 

I impatiently wait for my Thursday night fix with, "The Boys", plus I have several Supernatural t-shirts that I wear with pride as if I am a Hunter waiting for Sam and Dean." 
~ Maureen L Bonatch, www.maureenbonatch.com

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"I’m in my 60s, and a grandmother. But that doesn’t stop me from flaunting my SUPERNATURAL t-shirt, my DR. WHO wallet, or whatever else I want to show off. My office is my nerdy paradise, with everything from a Superman doll, Phantom of the Opera artwork, X-Files paraphernalia, and my beloved bobblehead Groot. 


"When people comment on my stuff, I proudly tell them, “You’re never too old to be a nerd!”
~ Linda Mooney, www.lindamooney.com


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Our very own Veronica Scott in the soundbooth
during the creation of a Star Trek audiobook. 
https://www.amazon.com/City-Edge-Forever/dp/B01H47NKNU/
"I grew up watching the original Star Trek every week with my younger brother. There are no words for how cool we thought the show was. So I think my proudest nerd/geek moment might be the fact that I am now an actual  “Star Trek” Red Shirt Security Officer – I got to play one in the 2016 official audiobook of the Harlan Ellison original script for ‘The City on the Edge of Forever.’ That was one of my very favorite episodes back in the day, although there are quite a few major differences between the show that was broadcast at the time and the original Ellison script. My character for one thing LOL.  

"I only had seven words of dialogue in the audiobook BUT I said them to Kirk, with Spock standing next to us (in the teleplay script – sadly audiobooks are not usually recorded with a full cast all at one time, so I did my seven words alone in a booth but still….). I got to sign the title page of the script next to all the famous real actors, which was a thrill and I will forever be an official member of the Enterprise crew. And the best part is that my Red Shirt character doesn’t die!"

~ Veronica Scott, www.veronicascott.wordpress.com

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Now it's YOUR turn! Tell us one of your nerdy secrets! And on June 2, three lucky commenters will be drawn at random by the Rafflecopter. Two will win an adorable mini Millennium Falcon BOOK LIGHT! And one will win this Doctor Who travel bag!



(Must be a legal resident of the US and over 18 to enter. Winners will be announced in the comments on this post, in the Rafflecopter box, and in the Here Be Magic  Here Be News feature of the blog. Email addresses will NOT be disclosed.)

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Monday, December 5, 2016

Here Be News

Posted by: Veronica Scott
New Releases:
For God and Mars by Shona Husk: For God And Mars is inspired by Takamo, a science fiction game created in the early 1980s, and Takamo Universe, the massive multiplayer online (MMO) version now under development. The Takamo Universe back story is based on the writings of Randall Ritnour, game play events that occurred in Takamo, and the creative contributions of a host of Takamo players and fans.












Other News:
The Library Journal announced their Best Books of 2016 last week and two Here Be Magic authors were among those featured:

Jeffe Kennedy (and Grace Draven) for their duology For Crown and Kingdom

















Veronica Scott (and eight other authors) for the Pets In Space anthology
iBooks    Amazon    ARe     Nook      GooglePlay     Kobo





















The "City on the Edge of Forever" Star Trek audiobook, in which Veronica Scott has seven words of dialog as an Enterprise Crew Member (yes, she got to be a genuine Red Shirt) was named as one of  2016's Best by AudioFile Magazine. Congratulations to Harlan Ellison, SkyBoat Media and the all star cast of actors. Veronica sez: I was thrilled to be a tiny part of this once in a lifetime experience!

At Skyboat Media earlier in 2016, recording my part

Available where audiobooks are sold online

Monday, July 11, 2016

Here Be News

Posted by: Unknown


Congratulations to MISSY GENI, our Summer of Magic Blog Hop winner! Thank you to all who entered, and we at Here Be Magic wish you a wonderful summer of reading!

STAR TREK AUDIOBOOK NEWS:


The Star Trek audiobook of Harlan Ellison's "The City On The Edge of Forever" has been released, with Veronica Scott playing Crew Woman, a red shirt with seven words of dialog. Read about her experience recording the part in this USA Today/HEA post. "Really a thrill to see my name in the credits!"

Cover Reveal:



In case you missed the interview with Jeffe Kennedy at the Huffington Post on Fantasy Romance, her career and her recent release, THE PAGES OF THE MIND - then here's the cover reveal for the next book, THE EDGE OF THE BLADE!

A HAWK’S PLEDGE
 
The Twelve Kingdoms rest uneasy under their new High Queen, reeling from civil war and unchecked magics. Few remember that other powers once tested their borders—until a troop of foreign warriors emerges with a challenge . . .
 


Jepp has been the heart of the queen’s elite guard, her Hawks, since long before war split her homeland. But the ease and grace that come to her naturally in fighting leathers disappears when battles turn to politics. When a scouting party arrives from far-away Dasnaria, bearing veiled threats and subtle bluffs, Jepp is happy to let her queen puzzle them out while she samples the pleasures of their prince’s bed.

But the cultural norms allow that a Dasnarian woman may be wife or bed-slave, never her own leader—and Jepp’s light use of Prince Kral has sparked a diplomatic crisis. Banished from court, she soon becomes the only envoy to Kral’s strange and dangerous country, with little to rely on but her wits, her knives—and the smolder of anger and attraction that burns between her and him . . .

Monday, April 4, 2016

Here Be News

Posted by: Unknown
Winners: Since there were only two entries, Sherri and Preethi are each winners of a $10.00 Amazon gift card for supplying words for our flash fiction challenge. The contest is CLOSED. We need the two e mails to send the gift cards, please. The one given by Sherri in the comments didn't work for Amazon. Thanks!

Other News:
Here Be Magic Contributor Veronica Scott is now an official Star Trek Red Shirt on the Enterprise. Read about her experience recording one line as Crew Woman in the all star production of the Harlan Ellison audiobook "City On the Edge of Forever."


New Releases:

CURSES
By Cindy Spencer Pape
Sensuous Paranormal Romance
Word Count: 
99.5K
$3.99 e / $9.99 p or free with Kindle Direct

amzn.to/1W60C4O

Blurb: Some people really are cursed when it comes to love! For innkeeper and witch Melissa MacRae, a family curse means that falling in love is the ultimate bad idea. Author Jonas Pierce is a werewolf, who has seen too much evil to even consider passing on his curse to another generation. So why does a hot summer fling have them both thinking about happily ever after?   
Note: Previously released by Triskelion and Wild Rose Press. Curses received 4 Stars from Romantic Times and was a finalist for the EPIC award. It was also recommended by Joyfully Reviewed, Romance Junkies and Night Owl Reviews.

Friday, December 18, 2015

Sci-Fi Week: Battle of the Franchises? No thanks, I'll pass!

Posted by: Angela Korra'ti
Unless you’re living under a very, VERY big rock, you’re aware that we’ve now got the first Star Wars movie we’ve had in decades in the theaters. To all initial reports, it even appears to be good. My wife and I are pretty amused at the number of early reviews we’ve seen along the lines of “everybody relax, it doesn’t suck!”

This post, however, is not going to be about the new movie, although it IS still going to be about Star Wars!

Because I’ve also seen quite a few posts and videos and such going around the net this past week, all along the theme of “this is why Star Wars is the best franchise ever”. In particular, I’ve seen a post that put Star Wars up against Lord of the Rings, and I’ve seen a video that puts it up against Star Trek. Both faceoffs are certainly clashes of titans, and the kind of post fodder guaranteed to get geeks defending the honor of whichever franchise is their favorite.

“What’s your take, then?” I might hear you asking.

Easy. I embrace the power of and. I love Star Wars and Star Trek and Lord of the Rings.

Oh, sure, I have often different reasons for loving all of them. Those reasons may even be different on different days for the same franchise, because people are allowed to be complicated creatures and full of contradictions!

Allow me to elucidate with a small sampling of why I love all three of these franchises.

Why I love Star Wars:

  1. Two words: Harrison. Ford.
  2. John Williams’ soundtrack.
  3. To this day, I remember eight-year-old-ish me laying eyes on that gigantic Star Destroyer at the beginning of A New Hope. Formative movie influence on me, like so many other geeks my age.
  4. Han’s love for the Millennium Falcon led me right into instant affection for Mal’s love of Serenity in Firefly! Because I mean honestly, Mal really is Han 2.0, isn’t he?
  5. And did I mention Harrison Ford? Because he warrants mentioning twice. :D

Why I love Star Trek:

  1. Three words: James. Tiberius. Kirk.
  2. The way my heart lifts every time I hear “Space: the final frontier” and the horns kicking in under those iconic words.
  3. I adore the whole core concept of Trek, which for me is “space is AMAZING, let’s go look at it and discover new life forms and civilizations and make friends with them”. I love the inherent optimism of that, and I frequently feel that we could use more of that optimism in all of our lives.
  4. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy, at least in the original series (the reboot movies aren’t doing it for me, not yet), are the threefold heart and soul of the cast. I regularly go back and rewatch that series, and the best parts for me are the parts that emphasize how these three characters all love and respect one another.
  5. Uhura! Our lady of communications! Who is also a musician! How can I not love her?

Why I love Lord of the Rings:

  1. Tolkien’s masterful works, as I’ve posted before, are a huge influence on me as both a reader and a writer.
  2. I can rewatch the Lord of the Rings movies yearly and feel like I’m coming home.
  3. Howard Shore’s masterful score.
  4. Every single time I hear Annie Lennox sing “Into the West”, tears start streaming down my face.
  5. Four words: Aragorn, son of Arathorn.

At the end of the day, though, what all of these franchises have in common for me is that they’ve all delivered me excellent storytelling, compelling characters, music that lifts my spirit, and worlds I believe in every time I visit them. To ask me to say that one is better than the other is like asking me to choose a one true flavor of ice cream. Dude, it’s ice cream. It’s all delicious!

All that said? That eight-year-old kid in me who went all wide-eyed in awe at the first sight of a Star Destroyer is now totally shrieking OMG OMG NEW STAR WARS OMG OMG OMG CAN WE GO SEE IT YET?

Hang in there, eight-year-old me. We’ll be going to see that movie soon enough. And Trek and Lord of the Rings will keep being there for us too!

So talk to me, everybody, and tell me what your favorite movie franchise is and why you love it so! (And if you’ve already seen The Force Awakens, this is a SPOILER-FREE ZONE, so please, no spoilers in the comments! I won’t be seeing the movie until Christmas Day! You wouldn't want to make Han cranky, would you?)


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Angela is a hybrid author who writes as both Angela Korra'ti and Angela Highland, and she is also a gigantic geek. You can find her and everything you'd like to know about her books on angelahighland.com, or follow her on Facebook or Twitter.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Nerdgasms: A Smorgasbord of Science Fiction Delights

Posted by: Jane Kindred

It couldn’t be a better time to be a sci-fi nerd. Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the long-awaited seventh movie in the franchise, opens this week, Doctor Who is going strong and the annual Christmas special airs on Christmas Day, the X Files returns in January, and a third Star Trek reboot movie is in the offing. Not to mention the plethora of Marvel and DC TV shows and movies that just keep coming. (Though I’m sure some will argue that comics aren’t “true” science fiction. And those people can argue that until they’re blue in the face—like Pa’u Zotoh Zhaan or Dr. Manhattan.)

I just binge-watched Jessica Jones, which I highly recommend, and I was psyched to see that Luke Cage is getting his own Netflix show in April. And I’m pretty sure I actually yelled “OMG, WHAT IS HAPPENING ON MY TELEVISION?” when I saw the previews for Legends of Tomorrow during last week’s Flash/Arrow crossover and saw that Arthur Darvill (Rory Williams from Doctor Who) was playing Rip Hunter.

I’ve always been a science fiction fan. I grew up with Star Trek, almost literally—I’m exactly 17 days older than the original series—and was one of those kids who saw the first Star Wars movie repeatedly when it first aired in theaters. I watched every possible science fiction show and movie I could find on our little six-channel, no-cable black-and-white television, gobbled up every science fiction book in the library, and started writing science fiction stories for extra credit in sixth grade.

One might expect that lo, these many years later, I’d be busy scribbling away on my own science fiction novels. But I’ve never written one, and I have no plans to do so. For some reason, science fiction writing (outside of those short stories in sixth grade) has never come naturally to me. The stories that always find their way out of my head are fantasy, with a liberal dose of romance. I suspect that somewhere along the way, I absorbed the messages girls are bombarded with that science fiction isn’t our domain, no matter how much we love it. Little by little, though, Hollywood is beginning to realize that women love science fiction just as much as men, and stronger female characters, like Jessica Jones, are becoming more common.

Nonetheless, those stories I loved growing up made an indelible impression on me, and I couldn’t be more excited about the resurgence of some of my favorite shows and characters. To me, science fiction and fantasy are two sides of the same coin, anyway, so I don’t make a huge distinction between my love for the X Files and my fangirling over Tom Mison’s eyebrow in Sleepy Hollow. ;) As long as there’s a little romance in all of them, I’m happy.

Which sci-fi premiere are you most looking forward to? Tell me in the comments and I'll choose one commenter at random to win a copy of my latest release. While it isn’t science fiction (unless you count the science of relocating nature spirits from the old world to the new), The Lost Coast is out today.

"This gothic-inspired modern romance is built on a supernatural base that drips with intrigue, mystery and some deliciously dark humor." ★★★★ — RT Book Reviews

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Busting Cosmic Dust Bunnies

Posted by: Unknown
In space, no one can hear you sneeze. Of course, I don’t recommend leaning out of the airlock while sweeping dust bunnies into the void. Parts of you might freeze or boil—are we actually clear on what happens when you lean into a vacuum? I just looked it up and…really gross things happen to bodies exposed to a vacuum. Apparently the lack of pressure lowers the boiling point of your blood, so it does that and then explodes out of all the surrounding tissue. Awesome.

That’s not what I wanted to write about.

Have you ever wondered how we’ll go about spring cleaning in space? The ship that your crew has been zipping about in is going to collect a lot of dust, even with all the hatches sealed and locked. Skin particles, hair, whatever the engineer picked out of his nose and flicked behind the power core when he thought no one was looking. The stuffing from that suspiciously Klingon-featured teddy bear that is just a keepsake. Powdered rations spilled and not properly cleaned up. The residue in the pipes leading to the water recycler.

Oh, God. I don’t even want to think about what else is in the water recycler. I bet that engineer pees in the shower, too. Then again, he might as well. All the water in his ship probably funnels to the same place, and the filters on that unit will need a regular cleaning.

I suppose you might land once in a while, throw open all the hatches and get the brooms out. Flush the tanks, take a risk on the local water. But what if your craft isn’t equipped for atmospheric reentry. It’s the bargain model—sleek enough to skip from star to star without too much hassle, not quite robust enough to actually land anywhere. Or…what if spring on Planet Bazooka is the season of the tank crab? Militant buggers the size of a Mini Cooper that like to scuttle through open cargo hatches and have crab babies on your just swept floor?

There’s got to be a better way to bust cosmic dust bunnies.


I thought about sonic cleaners, but they just loosen the dust and grime. It’s still there, just no longer attached to whatever you were cleaning. It might also be pulverized, but still part of the universe. Ultra violet light can be used to disinfect the dust, but the dust is still there. The fact is, that unless you have a handy, pocket sized black hole, whatever you bring onto your ship is going to stay on your ship until you take it off again. That’s, like, a law of physics or something. So, while we might be able to clean smudges off the shiny bits with newfangled solvents and tech, we still have your nail clippings and sloughed skin to do away with. Eventually, all that dust is going to make the place smell a bit, maybe tickle a sinus or two. And every time you sneeze, more stuff is going to enter your closed and fetid atmosphere—unless you’re leaning out of an airlock at the time.

I have come up with a solution. We could install vacuum ports. Program a sequence, hit a switch and a tidy (short and tidy, we want to be able to breathe afterward) current sucks anything loose toward a vent in the floor, through a duct and into a collection chamber. The chamber can then be vented outside (space dust!) or, for the environmentally conscious, emptied in a responsible manner. Um…incarnated at a station, then turned into space dust? Compacted and…burned? Mixed with the sludge from your water recycling unit and served in the staff cafeteria? Used to stuff upholstery? Ideally, we could find a way to turn it into fuel. Yeah, I like that.



Small animals (fur emitting, litter busting, flea bags!) should be kept away from vents during operation. Toes, fingers and other delicate naked bits shouldn’t get too close to the vents, ever. You don’t want to lose a testicle if someone accidentally starts the cleaning cycle. Likewise, any keepsakes should be kept strapped down. A blocked vent will not effectively clean a room.

It’s not a perfect system, but I’m open to suggestions. How would you go about spring cleaning in space?

=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=

On the Chaos, the crew play poker for pennies and chores. Loser cleans the bathrooms and Felix is the worst poker player in the galaxy. He's also not that dedicated to cleanliness. Probably a good thing they have a doctor on board!

Chaos Station (Chaos Station #1) is available now. 


To read the first chapter and learn about the rest of the crew, visit http://chaosstation.com




Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Why Faanshi is a healer

Posted by: Angela Korra'ti
It’s Healer Week on Here Be Magic—and ever so conveniently, it’s also the release week for Vengeance of the Hunter, my latest from Carina Press. And what ties these things together: the character Faanshi, the female lead of the Rebels of Adalonia trilogy, who happens to be the most powerful healer that the nation of Adalonia has ever seen. In this post, I’d like to talk a bit about why I made Faanshi a healer.

I’ve posted before on this site about the Elfquest comic book series, and that’s worth mentioning again here. Some of the most powerful magic users in Elfquest are healers, including the series’ long-running antagonist, Winnowill. (And how a primary villain can in fact be a healer is worth a post all by itself.)

It’s easy to think of healing as a feminine magic, and certainly Winnowill and Leetah are notable as Elfquest characters who are both a) powerful healers and b) female. The series adds gender balance, though, by also presenting Mender and Rain as healers—and while Rain is a briefly mentioned character in the backstory of the Wolfrider tribe, Mender is an ongoing significant character in the recently started, brand new storyline. As with many aspects of its characterization and worldbuilding, Elfquest thusly demonstrated a gender balance that was a fundamental influence on how I set out to write my own stories.

Just as important, though, was the physicality that it brought to healing magic. One of the earliest panels I remember from the very first Elfquest story I read was this one, where Leetah is healing Redlance, who’s been wounded by a human spear.


More than just laying-on of hands, this image spoke to me of the inherent power that could spring out of the connection of a healer’s hands to an injured or ailing person’s body.

It’s a theme I saw elsewhere, in early sources of SF/F in my life. The old Star Trek episode “The Empath”, while not without its problems, gave me another example of a character whose healing powers were very much oriented around physical contact with her subject. With that came another, equally important aspect—how the female who the Enterprise crew called Gem empathically felt the pain of those she healed, even as she healed them. Gem put herself in serious danger when she healed Kirk, and then threatened her own life when she healed McCoy. When I first saw this episode, Gem’s part of it played out for me very powerfully, and stuck with me even as I matured in my understanding of all things Trek.

Last but not least, the works of Gael Baudino contributed a final important building block to Faanshi’s creation. In her novel Strands of Starlight, Baudino tells the story of the character Miriam, later Mirya, who is possessed of incredible healing power that she cannot control. She must heal any injury or sickness she comes across, and it makes no difference whether she likes or even knows the person in question.

All of these came together in my head to eventually put me on the path of playing my own healer characters in roleplaying games—notably, I played Mender on the Elfquest-themed online game Two Moons MUSH. Later, on a Star-Wars-themed game, I played a character of my own creation, Rellawy Woodlake, who possessed great but uncontrollable healing talents, which at first got her mistaken for a nascent Jedi. Eventually, on AetherMUSH, I played the original version of Faanshi.

In Rellawy’s case as well as Faanshi’s, I loved the inherent conflict of a healer character forced to heal even when she didn’t want to, and the fight between antipathy towards one who might need healing and one’s own healer’s instincts. I also greatly enjoyed seeing where these characters’ ability to glean insight into the natures of those they healed would take them.

All of these rolled into the version of Faanshi who appears in the Rebels of Adalonia trilogy. This version of Faanshi is one who, even as she struggles to master her magic, draws great strength from what her magic has told her about Julian and Kestar, after she saves both their lives. It’s a source of reassurance that bolsters her almost as much as her faith in her goddess, Djashtet.

And it’s a big reason behind why Book 1 of this series is called Valor of the Healer.

If you’ve read Valor already, I invite you now to check out Vengeance of the Hunter, newly released by Carina Press! If you haven’t read Valor yet, now is a great time to start. Valor’s official page is here, and the page for Vengeance is here!


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Angela writes as both Angela Highland and Angela Korra’ti, and lives at angelahighland.com! Come say hi to her there, or follow her on Facebook or Twitter.
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