Thursday, November 21, 2013

Which New Paranormal TV Show is Right for You? A Flow Chart

Posted by: A. J. Larrieu
Am I the only one astonished by the number of new television shows out this season with a paranormal or science fiction twist? I count at least five new series, plus plenty of returning shows and more on the horizon. Some are definitely better than others, but it's safe to say that whatever flavor of speculative television you prefer, the fall lineup has you covered.

If you're like me, and your schedule (not to mention your DVR) can't handle the influx, I give you this handy flow chart to help narrow down the new (and a few not-so-new) options:

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Personally, I'm devouring past seasons of Doctor Who in a desperate attempt to catch up, anxiously awaiting Bitten, and catching occasional episodes of The Walking Dead and The Originals. What are you watching this season?

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Win-A-Book Wednesday with...

Posted by: Jax Garren

Jax Garren


Jax Garren is the author of the Tales of the Underlight. Though descended from Valkyries and Vikings (Jax is part Swedish), she was raised a small town girl in the Texas Hill Country. She graduated from The University of Texas with a degree in English and a minor in Latin and stayed in Austin to teach high school. During her eight years in public education she was in a riot, broke up fights, had cops storm her class with guns drawn…and met the most amazing young people who taught her more about life and hope than she taught them about any school subject.

Jax believes in happily ever afters. She married her real life hero, a handsome engineer who is saving the world through clean energy technology. Her heroine is Marion Ravenwood from Raiders of the Lost Ark, the perfect blend of tough and feminine. Jax blames Marion for her dream of traveling to Nepal to experience Himalayan palaces and monasteries and to drink yak butter tea.

Jax loves meeting new people, so if you see her out and about say hello! She’s always happy to raise a glass with her readers (or anyone else) in a toast to courage, adventure, and love.

A frozen heart… 
Two years ago, amid grief and defeat, the man who once made Carrie Martin believe in happily-ever-afters deserted her on New Year’s Day. Ever since, she’s seen no reason for holiday joy amid the materialism and chaos of the most stressful time of year. So when a tipsy guy in a mall elf costume falls into her lap at happy hour and starts spouting poetry, it’s just one more reason to be disgusted at the season’s excess.

A man who’s more than he appears… 
Brett Vertanen, part-time elf and a caterer in training, is smitten with Carrie’s strength and sass. Having faced down a painful past of his own, he’s determined to be the one to warm her frozen heart. But when Carrie’s job forces her to attend a gala hosted by her ex–and his new wife–it could take more magic than a costumed elf can conjure to make this ice princess once again believe in love.

Hi all! Jax here. I wrote this story during a rough phase in my life--when my husband and I decided it was time to quit trying to have a baby and adopt. Throughout the journey of creating a family, I've had my amazing husband by my side to cry with, laugh with and just to know there was someone steadfast when things got rough. Brett and Carrie are both my love song to my family and my wish everyone could have someone--a friend, a love, a family member--to help keep hope and joy alive in life's dark moments.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Give me those 'More Interesting Secondary Characters'!

Posted by: Unknown

 
“What? No! We all know he lives - he has to come back for the next movie! Go back to Syrena and Phillip! How did she save him? How’s he breathing under water? Did she eventually turn him into a merman? Damn it!”

I couldn’t help yelling at the TV as the credits for Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides rolled. Yes, I was happy Jack lived to plunder, and stagger about another day, but I really didn’t give a hoot about him right then. His survival was a given (million dollar franchise that has another film in the pipes, anyone?). All I wanted to know was what happened to the ‘different’ mermaid and her human love.

Did she actually heal him and imbue him with the ability to breathe under water with a single kiss? If so, why weren’t sailors regularly capturing mermaids to force them into giving them what would be incredibly beneficial powers? If not, how long did she have to drag Philip to a place where he could actually survive? Who would help her heal him? Would mermaids even allow a creature their species essentially viewed as a less-than-happy meal to be healed? What would Syrena have to do to convince her kind that Philip was worthy of being her companion? Would she have to leave her people to have a life with him? Where would they live? If he remained human, but with the ability to live under water, how would his physiology eventually be affected? What would his and Syrena’s children look like?

So many unanswered questions! Argh!

Such is the fate of the ‘More Interesting Secondary Characters’ - forever doomed to live on in the ‘what ifs’ of viewers, until the franchise creators drop a breadcrumb or two in subsequent movies or book tie-ins.

Or they live on in fan fiction. Lots and lots of fan fiction.

I can’t be alone in my M.I.S.C. lamentations - which secondary characters (in movies, books or TV series) do you wish had a LOT more screen time?

Monday, November 18, 2013

Here Be News

Posted by: Unknown
New Releases


A frozen heart…

Two years ago, amid grief and defeat, the man who once made Carrie Martin believe in happily-ever-afters deserted her on New Year's Day. Ever since, she’s seen no reason for holiday joy amid the materialism and chaos of the most stressful time of year. So when a tipsy guy in a mall elf costume falls into her lap at happy hour and starts spouting poetry, it's just one more reason to be disgusted at the season’s excess.

A man who’s more than he appears…
Brett Vertanen, part-time elf and a caterer in training, is smitten with Carrie’s strength and sass. Having faced down a painful past of his own, he's determined to be the one to warm her frozen heart. But when Carrie's job forces her to attend a gala hosted by her ex--and his new wife--it could take more magic than a costumed elf can conjure to make this ice princess once again believe in love.


Link List

Beautiful article on the power of story: Sometimes The 'Tough Teen' Is Quietly Writing Stories

10 Key Terms That Will Help You Appreciate Fantasy Literature

A Female Author Talks About Sexism and Self-Promotion - Sarah Rees Brennan

Google Wins: Court Issues a Ringing Endorsement of Google Books

Win-a-Book Wednesday Winner

Congratulationss to Laura, the winner of Monster in my Closet from last week's Win-a-Book Wednesday! R.L. Naquin will be contacting you soon about your prize.

This Wednesday we'll have another mystery giveaway; stop by for more chances to win!

Group News

Angela Campbell is kicking off a blog tour for her newest release, Something Wicked. You can enter to win a $50 gift card and both books in her series. To find out where the entry forms are, visit this link.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Ravens, Evermore: Ravens in Fact, Fiction and Folklore

Posted by: Shawna Reppert


Humanity’s view on ravenkind has always been ambiguous at best.  You can see how ravens got a bad rap. Their voices are, even to this raven fancier, unlovely. With their jet-black feathers and their long, heavy beaks, their appearance could be considered sinister.  (Personally, I think they look rather cool.)  They are often associated with death because they feed on carrion, including battlefield carrion.
In their defense, they didn’t cause the death, unlike raptors, which are basically killing machines with wings.  We can hardly expect other species to be any more sentimental about our dead than we are about theirs.  (Looking forward to that Thanksgiving turkey?) 

And ravens are smart.  Not just smart-for-birds, but very smart.  Smart enough to use sticks as tools and to steal fish from a fisherman’s unattended line.  Like crows, they recognize people and remember who was nice to them, and who wasn’t.  (Public service announcement: Always be nice to crows and ravens.)
British folklore almost always paints ravens as villains.  The very word raven in Old English is practically synonymous with bloodshed and strife.  The traditional ballad Three Ravens has a hawk, a hound, and a lover defending a knight’s body against the depredations of three ravens.  (Contrasted with the better-known and more cynical Scots ballad Twa Corbies, in which the hawk and the hound couldn’t care less and the lady fair is strongly implied to have brought about his death through treachery.)

Celtic traditions are a little less clear about ravens and crows.  Both are associated with the Morrigan, the battle-goddess.  A truly fearsome figure, yes, but evil?  Depends on which side of the battle you’re on.
Norse people had a more positive view of ravens.  Two ravens act as messengers and intelligence officers for Odin All-Father.  (Though given the raven’s clever, trickster nature, I’m rather surprised they weren’t assigned to Loki.  Perhaps he didn’t like competition.)  I wonder if the Norse fondness for ravens didn’t damn them further in British eyes.  The British Isles had little reason to love the Vikings. 

But if you go back to classical times, the Greeks had a much more positive view of ravens.  Crows or ravens were servants and messengers of the sun-god Apollo, he who brought light and warmth to the people.

Native American traditions tend to be much less absolutist than European ones, and Raven is an important and contradictory figure in many of them.  Raven is part of many of their creation stories, either as creator of the world or creator/discoverer of human beings.  Sometimes he is the one who steals fire, either from the sun itself or from another creature that hoards it, so that the people might have light and heat. 
Yet Raven is also a trickster on par with Coyote, and like Coyote, he sometimes outwits himself to his own detriment.  

In literature and film, the contradictions continue.  In Disney’s Sleeping Beauty, the villainess has a pet raven.  In Edgar Allen Poe’s The Raven, the titular bird is a bad omen, a harbinger of doom and despair. Yet in Tolkien’s The Hobbit, ravens serve as messengers for the dwarven heroes.  And in George R R Martin’s Game of Thrones series, ravens serve as messenger birds.  Many  of Charles de Lint’s novels borrow heavily from Native American traditions.  His Raven created the world so long ago that he seems to have forgotten he had done so.  He moves through the story half-asleep— but with the threat of powerful things happening if and when he wakes.

In my urban fantasy Ravensblood, I deliberately play with the ambiguity of the raven as a symbol through the name of my protagonist.  The Ravenscroft family are notorious dark mages.  When Corwyn Ravenscroft, called Raven, tries to seek a path of redemption, he has many doubters, himself among them,   At one point, even his chief supporters question his motives and loyalties— and one of them gets a little advice at that point from Mother Crone:
“You were not the only one who believed in Raven when he was young.”
Ana started. She had not heard Mother Crone return.
“I granted him access to my coven’s sacred lands when he was in General Academy. I felt he needed some quiet place to be, away from others and how they judged him. He never abused the privilege. And I have never revoked it, though he has not returned since he went to William.”
Ana stared at her, found herself studied in return. Mother Crone was a seer, and one of the best. She could not know, not with a certainty, but if she had even an inkling. . .
Mother Crone patted Ana on the shoulder as though she were a child and not a woman a mere decade her junior.   “In some Craft traditions, the raven is associated with battle and death. But in others, the raven is the one who brings light to the people. Take this from my Craft—when you are in doubt, when your mind cannot make sense of the facts before you, let your innermost heart guide. It is wiser than you know.”

The raven will never be easy to pin down.   Which may be why it has captured the imagination of so many,

Friday, November 15, 2013

Darkness

Posted by: Steve Vera
There's a reason people are afraid of the dark. It's because when you're by yourself, surrounded by trees in the dead of the night and you can't see two feet in front of you, the scampering of a chipmunk sounds like the charge of an angry grizzly bear.

Or a hungry troll, take your pick.

Most of us in this day and age don't get a chance to be plunged into pure darkness; I mean, it's the twenty-first century after all, right? There's always some avenue or street nearby, the drone of a highway or some headlights coming your way, and even if you live waaaaay deep in the suburbs, there are still those pesky light posts to deal with. It takes effort to be immersed in complete darkness. 

Unless of course...you have a good friend whose father built a cabin in the middle of the woods in a itsy-bitsy town you've never heard of. When all you need to do to be surrounded by pitch black is to step outside onto the back porch once night comes and close the door behind you. Or sleep in a sarcophagus.   

It's funny, I thought I properly understood the complete magnitude that darkness can have on a person, but it wasn't until this past October while spending two weeks at said cabin (yeah, I was there all by myself for Halloween) that I fully experienced darkness in its full splendor. I actually dared myself to take a stroll at midnight through straight up, back-of-the-closet dark woodlands. Then I found out why it's so easy to become superstitious. Why it's so easy to believe in the supernatural, which of course ties in quite nicely to the theme of this blog site, Here Be Magic. And lemme tell you something. Out in the dark forests...there are monsters out there. Sitting up in trees just watching. And lurking. Talk about nerve racking, I figured I'd do that stroll a couple of times while I was out there but nope. Just that once. 

The good news is that it provided me with a new arsenal of inspiration to draw on and really helped me texture my writing further for Book III of my Last of the Shardyn trilogy. Speaking of which, I should probably mention that Book II--Through the Black Veil comes out Nov. 25th which is...whoa. Just ten days away. That's pretty awesome. Allow me to post a pic of the cover...
And yes, there's magic in those there pages. A police chief, a reforming sociopath, and a band of magic wielding knights cross from Earth to Earth's magical twin Theia, to battle the Lord of the Underworld. Dun dun dun dunnnnnn. 

Keep your nightlight on...

Thanks for the glance.

Steve out. 

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Happy Birthday!

Posted by: Ruth A Casie

Birthday celebrations are wonderful. They mark an achievement, look to the promises for the future, and are a reason to get together with family and friends.

So, here is a toast to celebrate and mark the achievement of Knight of Runes, my first published book. Like a proud parent, I can't believe two years ago today it debuted and that the story is still delighting readers. Every fan message makes my heart sing with pride.

The future looks bright for Lord Arik and his Rebeka. A follow up story, Knight of Rapture, is almost completed. I'm not certain if it will be the last we hear about the dynamic pair but I have had a lot of fun writing their stories. So much so, that the short story in the new anthology I participated in with my friends and critique partners, Timeless Keepsakes - A Collection of Christmas Stories, is a prequel to Knight of Runes

The anthology is the debut for Lita Harris, Emma Kaye, and Nicole S. Patrick. New parents are wonderful to watch. Their excitement is contagious! This time next year they will be celebrating their single title debuts. Lita's Love at Christmas and Emma's Time for Love both released this month.

Julie Rowe, a well established Carina Press author, shares today's birthday celebration with me. Her debut Carina Press book, Ice Bound, also released two years ago today. She is the fifth author in our anthology. With her expertise in teaching creative writing at a local college in Alberta, Canada, she taught us the art of short story writing and also has a story in our anthology.

The experience has been so awesome we are already planning a May release for Timeless Escapes - A Collection of Summer Stories.

Our families and friends have been supportive. More celebrations are planned for this weekend. In case you were so inclined, we've opted for no presence please (just buy our books *smiles*). 


Timeless Keepsakes - A Collection of Christmas Stories

The magic of Christmas is in the memories we hold dear and those precious treasures that remind us of the past. Join us as our Timeless Keepsakes take us on five remarkable journeys that heal old wounds, remind us of days gone by, play matchmaker, sweep us back in time and prove that love can conquer all.
~~~~~~~
Introduction ~ Sharon Sala

Mistletoe and Magick ~ Ruth A. Casie She would give her last breath for him. He would give up everything to guard her well and love her more.

Christmas Spirits ~ Lita Harris A widow's everlasting love is renewed by the memories of the holiday season.

Granting Her Wish ~ Emma Kaye She doesn't belong in his time and he doesn't belong back home. Could they belong to each other?

Letter from St. Nick ~ Nicole S. Patrick She’s trying to save her home and he’s never had one until now. Can an unexpected gift lead their hearts to the same place?

Secret Santa ~ Julie Rowe A nurse grieving the death of her twin brother receives an unusual gift at the staff Secret Santa party: the bullet that killed him along with a message of hope and love.

Timeless Keepsakes is available on Amazon and B&N
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