Ten books that have touched me
Posted: December 8, 2013 Filed under: On Books, On me | Tags: reading 3 CommentsStacey tagged me in one of those Facebook status games where you have to list ten books that have touched you in one way or another. The rules say not to overthink it, but since in my case I’m pretty sure that’s a genetic impossibility, I thought I’d post the list here, with some of my thoughts.
1. “The Stone Cage” by Nicholas Stuart Gray
This is a Rapunzel retelling from the perspective of the witch’s cat. I read it when I was about 11, and then again at 17, and then again in my late 20s – and I loved it every time.
I think I’m due to re-read it again. š
2. “Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy” by Douglas Adams
All of the laughs. ALL OF THEM! (I could add Terry Pratchett to the list for the same reason, but I read Adams first.)
3. “All the Weyrs of Pern” by Anne McCaffrey
“The Dragonriders of Pern” was my first fantasy series, and will always remain my favourite. It’s hard to choose one book, but it has to be either this one (I had SUCH a crush on Masterharper Robinton) or “Dragonquest” (for the mating flight scene).
4. “Magic’s Pawn” by Mercedes Lackey
As with Dragonriders, I loved all the Valdemar books. But Vanyel was my first and my favourite. It’s also the first series I ever read with a gay main character.
5. “The Hobbit” by J.R.R. Tolkein
I had an illustrated edition as a child, and read it SO MANY TIMES. In fact, I still have that same copy. I’m looking forward to sharing it with my son.
6. “It” by Stephen King
CLOWNS! AAAAAH!
7. “The Many-Coloured Land” by Julian May
This (and the rest of “The Saga of the Exiles”) is one of the few scifi series that I love. The way the past and the future have been woven together is so clever – and I loved Aiken Drum. Not as much as Masterharper Robinton, but, you know, a lot.
8. “The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
I’m not much of a fan of the last book in the trilogy, but I loved the first two. I couldn’t put them down.
9. “Interview with the Vampire” by Anne Rice
The early books about Louis and Lestat were my formative vampire fiction. To me, the series jumped the shark a little later on, but these books were where my first love of vampires was born. (Buffy was my second love.)
10. “Stormdancer” by Jay Kristoff
My first Steampunk experience was only last year, and I LOVE IT!
Character interview: Mischa Richardson from ‘Sleeper’
Posted: December 7, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: aussie-owned, book launch, Interview, small presses, urban fantasy, young adult 9 CommentsToday Iām interviewing Mischa Richardson, the main character from SLEEPER by S.M. Johnston. Iāve never done a character interview, so this is a new and exciting experience!

“Sleeper” by S. M. Johnston
Mishca, why don’t you tell us a bit about yourself?
āMy parents adopted me from America as a baby, but raised me in Australia. For most of my life Iāve been on the sidelines due to health issues. Guys avoided me and I felt like a social freak. Then I had my heart transplant and things changed.ā
What are you most proud of?
āThat I graduated high school without dying.ā Mishca goes all shifty eyes. āIt was touch and go there for a bit, but the heart transplant did the trick.ā
Heart transplant. That sounds serious.
āYeah. It was pretty full on. But the operation was a success. No more sickly Mishca. Do you mind if we talk about something else?ā Mishca bites her lip and looks away.
Okay, sure thing. Because Iām a book nerd, Iām sure my readers would love to know this: whatās your favourite book.
āOh, thatās hard. I love Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre and anything by Jane Austen. More modern books would be Losing It, Girl Saves Boy and Sweet Evil.ā
If you could have one wish what would it be?
āTo be normal. Before my heart transplant I was weak and socially awkward, and now itās ⦠never mind.ā Mishca chews on her nail. āLetās make it for an endless supply of shoes.ā
Whatās your secret shame?
āIf I told you then it wouldnāt be a secret, so Iāll pass on that one.ā
Whatās the best and worst quality you think a person can have?
āWorst is definitely judgmental people. Seriously, the number of shop assistants who assume I canāt afford certain brand clothes, or that Iām going to be a shoplifter. I know things are changing and hopefully in years to come the colour of my skin wonāt cause people to judge me. The best thing people can do is to pay it forward. A little kindness can go a long way.ā
Blurb for SLEEPER:
A new heart should mean new life, not a living nightmare.
Mishca Richardsonās life is at an all-time high after her heart transplant. With new boyfriend, Ryder, the two of them have the perfect summer romance. Even the nightmares that have been plaguing her sleep since her operation canāt dull the high sheās on.
Things start to unravel as Mishca develops superhuman abilities. She does her best to hide them so as not to end up a science experiment in a lab. But she canāt ignore the instant attraction she experiences when she meets her university professor, Colin Reed.
Torn between the blossoming love and the obsession, Mishca must decide if she wants Ryder or Colin. But the organization responsible for her changes and her connection to Colin, is moving to secure Mishca for himself so that she can be the weapon he always intended her to be. If Mishca canāt resist her programming sheāll have a lot more to worry about than romance.
Add Sleeper on Goodreads! Buy it from Amazon!
Enter the giveaway here! (You could win a $100 book voucher!)
About the author:

Sharon M. Johnston
Sharon is a writer from Mackay in Queensland, Australia who has short stories published in anthologies and was also runner-up in the Australian Literary Review’s Young Adult short story contest with KARMA. By day she is a public relations executive and by night she writes weird fiction and soulful contemporaries while her husband, two sons and cat are fast asleep.
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Interview: Kristen Strassel, new adult author
Posted: December 4, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: book launch, Interview, self-publishing Leave a commentLast week over at Aussie Owned and Read I interviewed Julie, half of the Undead Duo. Iām now thrilled to have her partner in crime, Kristen Strassel, to my blog for a visit. Kristen is a vampire smut peddler, hair band fan, makeup artist and lover of live music. Her debut release, Because the Night, came out last month, and the prequel, Seasons in the Sun, comes out on 4 December. That’s right: TODAY!

Available NOW on Amazon! And Smashwords!
Because the Night is set in Las Vegas. It seems like the perfect place for a bunch of debauched vampire rock stars; although itās sunny I hear those casinos are so huge you can quite happily never see the light of day! How did you choose the setting?
Hi Cassandra!Ā Thanks for having me on here!Ā Las Vegas really chose me. I had a dream about ten years ago about a girl trying to make her way in Vegas. Something about the dream stuck with me so much I actually moved to Vegas to write a book about it! Turns out my friend must have left the TV on, because when I saw the movie Showgirls it bore a striking resemblance to the dream. But the experience was invaluable research for Because the Night.
Sure, thereās plenty of sunshine in Las Vegas, but itās Sin City. Dark, sensual, anything goes. The more I started putting the story together, the more it couldnāt have been set anywhere else. What other city in the world could vampires capitalize on what they are without anyone really believing they had anything to worry about?
Tell us a bit about the leading lads, Tristan and Blade. Are they both vampires? Which is the sexy one on the cover? Because damn!
Tristan is on the cover, and I know, right? Heās a pretty reasonable facsimile of what Tristan looks like to me. Tristan is a vampire, and heās the rock star. Heās always been trouble, which led him to the afterlife. Callieās never been able to resist him, which brought her to Vegas. But Blade is the one who made her stay. Blade is everything Tristan isnāt. First and foremost, heās alive. He leads a normal life, and understands thereās a time for fun and a time for responsibility. Tristan has no idea what responsibility even means.
I know youāre a huge live music fan. Did any real-life rock bands inspire Immortal Dilemma?
I love going to concerts. Thereās nothing quite like the feeling of seeing your favourite band play their songs live in front of you. The emotion, the energyā¦itās sexy. Thereās no better word for it.
Immortal Dilemma was inspired by Motley Crue.Ā Theyāre perfect because even though thereās that undertone of debauchery, women love them. Nikki Sixx has died twice. So anyone whoās done that and lived to tell about it deserves to have a fictional character based on them. He was my inspiration for Tristan.
Everyoneās publishing journey is different. What is the number one thing youāve learned so far on yours?
This is a tough question! I would have to say Expect the Unexpected. And adapt. When youāre writing your novel, everything is in your control. Once you make the decision to publish it, from the minute you send out that first query, you are handing control over to someone else. I think that the concept of ādream agentsā and ādream publishersā as a debut author is exactly thatāa dream. In the beginning, you work with the people who say yes. Itās just the reality of the situation when youāre starting out. You have to earn your bargaining chips. I never expected Because the Night to have the journey it did, but Iām happy with where Iām at and where the book is at right now. At the end of the day, you have to do what is right for you. You donāt have to answer to or apologize to anyone for what you do.
Whatās it like having a childhood friend who lives near you as a crit partner? (Can you tell Iām jealous?)
Because the Night probably wouldnāt have existed without Julie. Remember I told you about moving to Vegas to write a book? Yeah, that book didnāt get written. Until Julie one night worked up the nerve to tell me she was working on a vampire novel, which is Running Home. I said, āYou know, Iāve had one that I havenāt been able to put together in the right way and finish.ā So we worked together, we finished the books, and we brought them to the world.
We get together about once a week these days. Pizza and adult beverages are usually involved. Our meetings have evolved as our journey has. Before it was just about the writing. Now business has crept in as well.Ā We donāt always agree on everything, but that’s what makes for a good partnership.
I asked Julie this and now Iām asking you: whatās the one question you wish an interviewer would ask you and they never do?
On my bio, I allude to the fact Iāve worked a lot of different jobs. It took me a long time to find my path in life. I think thatās why Iām so attracted to the New Adult category. Iāve started over a lot. College wasnāt for me, and I worked a lot of dead end jobs that I hated. When I was younger, I didnāt have the confidence to reinvent myself so easily, and at one point I actually had to come to terms with the fact that my dreams were never going to come true. The turning point for me was when I lost a lot of weightāalmost 100 lbs. (which has since come and gone several times). It made me realize that if you wanted something badly enough, you could make anything happen.
Coffee or tea?
Coffee. Please and thank you.
Plotter or pantser?
Both, really. I pants until I hit a wall and then I outline what Iāve got and write down ideas for what needs to happen next.
Morning or night?
A very reluctant morning person. I have to be up sometimes in the 3 AM hour for work, and itās always very unpredictable, so I donāt like to get too off schedule. But I do love the nightlife.
Sneaking into nightclubs to see bands since she was sixteen, Kristen has been researching Because the Night her whole life. Now she’s been to more concerts that she could possibly count. She gets an up close and personal look at the behind the scenes workings of the entertainment industry doing makeup and hair for TV, movies and commercials. She’s a graduate of the School of Hard Knocks and Blaine Beauty School. She enjoys watching football, decorating her house, and making wickedly decadent desserts she force feeds to all her guests. She does not have a Boston accent. You can find Kristen on Goodreads, at her blog or on Twitter.
Book launch, excerpt and giveaway: ‘Sleeper’ by S.M. Johnston
Posted: December 2, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: book launch, contests, small presses, young adult 1 Comment
“Sleeper” by S. M. Johnston
Title: Sleeper (Book I in the Toy Soldiers series)
Author: S. M. Johnston
Release Date: December 2, 2013 (TODAY!)
Publisher: Entranced Publishing, Rush Imprint
Genre: Upper YA/NA speculative fiction
Blurb:
A new heart should mean new life, not a living nightmare.
Mishca Richardsonās life is at an all-time high after her heart transplant. With new boyfriend, Ryder, the two of them have the perfect summer romance. Even the nightmares that have been plaguing her sleep since her operation canāt dull the high sheās on.
Things start to unravel as Mishca develops superhuman abilities. She does her best to hide them so as not to end up a science experiment in a lab. But she canāt ignore the instant attraction she experiences when she meets her university professor, Colin Reed.
Torn between the blossoming love and the obsession, Mishca must decide if she wants Ryder or Colin. But the organization responsible for her changes and her connection to Colin, is moving to secure Mishca for himself so that she can be the weapon he always intended her to be. If Mishca canāt resist her programming sheāll have a lot more to worry about than romance.
Add Sleeper on Goodreads! Buy it from Amazon!
Enter the giveaway here! (You could win a $100 book voucher!)
Excerpt:
SOMEONE WILL DIE SO I can live. Iāve come to terms with that. It used to turn my stomach, how my donor might die, but now Iām used to it. Itāll most likely be a car accident or a drunken fall from a height, especially at this time of year, with all the end-of-school parties. But not from illness or any other ānaturalā causes. A violent, painful death will be my savior. Thatās how I will get my new heart.
I open my eyes and stare upwards, hoping the white, fluffy clouds that splotch against the blue sky will distract me from the images of people dying that flow through my head. I guess Iām not as used to the idea of getting someone elseās heart as I thought. The harsh Australian sun brings beads of sweat to my brow and a squint to my eyes. I swing my legs around and hoist myself upright on the stadium bleacher, looking out over the sports field. I readjust the singlet strap that had slipped off my shoulder and try to think happier thoughts. At least I wonāt be responsible for the person who dies so I can get a new heart.
Yeah, happier thoughts.
I let out a sigh. This is not how I expected to be spending my schoolies week, with my dad as he puts hopeful rugby league players through their paces. My friends are all doing the traditional, Aussie, end-of-high-school celebration with a weeklong party, but instead of Airlie or the Gold Coast, theyāre all in Bali, where I should be. Itās the big party to start our summer holidays before we find out which university weāve been accepted into. When Mum and Dad found out I was at the top of the transplant list, they vetoed my November plans in case someone croaks this week. So all my friends left, minus me. I know itās because Mum and Dad care. Theyāve proved time and time again that you donāt need blood ties to be great parents, or overprotective ones.
āAll right, boys. That wraps it up for today,ā Dad calls out to the pack of sweaty guys. āHit the showers, and Iāll see you all tomorrow.ā
I do my best not to stare as the group heads towards me. Half of them are shirtless, their muscles glistening after the training session. Okay, so Iām staring. A cute, red-haired guy catches me looking and winks. So, I reward him with a smile. A guy from school, who obviously chose a potential sporting career over a party week, nudges Cutie Ginger and then shakes his head. I hold back a huff. I thought with the end of an era, I could have a fresh start, but my reputation looks like it will haunt me beyond high school. Mishca the untouchable.
Dad lingers behind, deep in discussions with the managers and trainers, no doubt discussing the fates of the young men desperate to break into rugby league at a national level. They were all trying so hard to get Coach Tom Richardsonās attention. If only I had that many guys chasing after me. I wipe the sweat thatās formed at the edge of my almost afro, before it trickles down my brow. Yuck. Finally, Dad makes his way towards me, leaving his entourage behind.
āSo, any contenders in your latest batch of victims?ā I ask, picking up my discarded copy of West Side Story. Iād been rereading my university audition piece, torturing myself on how I could have performed it better. I wish I had tried out for plays at school, but I was a closet actor, only performing in drama class for fear that somehow my weak disposition would get in the way.
But next year will be different. A new heart and new hope.
āThere may be some. Tomorrow will be the clincher,ā Dad replies, humouring me. He knows Iām not that interested in his latest player acquisitions. He puts his hand on my shoulder. āIāve got to grab some paperwork from the office before we go.ā
āSure thing,ā I say to his back as he retreats up the tunnel under the stadium. I trudge behind him, my book clutched in my hand. With each step the tips of my curls brush lightly against my bare shoulders. It tickles and I regret agreeing with Mum to grow my hair out. I shove my hands into the pockets of my denim shorts and focus on the cool shade Iāll get once Iām inside.
My nose wrinkles the moment I step in the door. The whole place smells like dude, and not in a good way, but in the male equivalent of a stinky, wet dog way. I walk down the corridor and lean against the cool cement wall outside Dadās office.
My heart transplant operation is like a ticking time bomb waiting to go off, only thereās no countdown to watch. Evil thoughts invade my mind again, only now about my parents.
Would they still have wanted to adopt me if theyād known I had a congenial heart disease, or in simpler terms, a hole in my heart?
āSLEEPER is a fast-paced adventure filled with mystery, romance, action, and humor. Mishca and Ryder rank up there with my favorite heroines and heroes ever! S.M. Johnston is an author to watch out for.ā ~Wendy Higgins, author of Sweet Evil, Sweet Peril, and Sweet Reckoning.

Sharon M. Johnston
About the author:
Sharon is a writer from Mackay in Queensland, Australia who has short stories published in anthologies and was also runner-up in the Australian Literary Review’s Young Adult short story contest with KARMA. By day she is a public relations executive and by night she writes weird fiction and soulful contemporaries while her husband, two sons and cat are fast asleep.
Facebook | Twitter | Website | Blog | Goodreads
Interview and giveaway: Julie Hutchings, author of ‘Running Home’
Posted: November 28, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: aussie-owned, contests, Interview, small presses Leave a commentToday over at Aussie Owned and Read I had the pleasure of interviewing the awesome Julie Hutchings. There’s also an ebook giveaway – you could win one of TWO copies of “Running Home”! š
Today Iām interviewing Julie Hutchings: black belt, beer drinker, harpy, and at least fifty percent of the Undead Duo. When sheās not doing those things, sheās a horror and urban fantasy writer, and one of my very favourite people on Twitter. Welcome to Aussie Owned and Read, Julie!
Your debut, Running Home, came out in August this year. When I read the blurb (which totally made me order the paperback from Amazon, by the way), I thought it sounded like vampires mixed with wasabi and tears. How would you describe it? And are you going to break my heart?
Thank you for having me on Aussie Owned and Read! And for buying my book. š Oooooh, I really do like that description! But itās better suited for the sequel which will take place in Japan. Running Home is more of a warm, fuzzy Christmas story but with bloodā¦
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Interview: Zara Hoffman, teen author
Posted: November 25, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: book launch, Interview, self-publishing Leave a commentToday Iām interviewing Zara Hoffman, the amazing sixteen-year-old author of The Belgrave Daughter, which is being releasedā¦today! How exciting! Hi, Zaraāwelcome to my blog.
Your story has a combination of sorcery, angels and demonsāthree of my favourite things in a book! Tell us a little about Fawn, your main character.
Fawn is a strong young lady who values family, friends, and trust above all else. She’ll do anything for those she loves. She’s very intelligent, but tends to lose focus when Caleb is around. Oh, and did I mention she’s the most powerful witch on the planet? Talk about a heavy destiny to bear. And she’s only twenty years oldābut at least she has her best friend Ivy and brother Alec to help her along the way.
Whatās Caleb like? Iām imagining a hot bad boy, with motorcycle leathers and a pair of sunglassesāam I close? š
Haha. I’m sure Caleb has taken up that appearance at least once or twice in his two hundred years as an angel, but he’s more of a laid back, jeans and a t-shirt guy when he’s with Fawn. He’s actually very similar to her in that he, too, loves his family more than anything and is willing to do many morally questionable things in his quest to reunite with them. But here’s a secret: he’s my favorite character of the story.
How do you want your readers to feel when they turn the last page of your book?
I want people to feelā¦hopeful? I’m sure when readers reach the ending they might want to throw things at my head, but I want people to feel disillusioned from the perfect romance that is in a lot of romance books, YA especially, and know that relationships are hard workābut not unattainable, and worth fighting for.
I know you researched traditional publishing extensively before choosing to self-publish. What was the thought process behind that decision?
My decision was in the making for a long time. While I loved the idea of being chosen by a literary agency or a publisher, the creative independence I’d be giving up didn’t seem worth it. For my first book, I wanted the story to be my vision, not some transformed version that wasn’t my intention. Also, I’m creative enough to know what I want on the cover and to format myself, and entrepreneurial enough to promote my own book, so I decided to go the self-publishing route. Maybe later in my writing career I’ll try for traditional, or maybe not. Only time will tell on that one.
What is the most important thing youāve learned on your self-publishing journey?
That rushing is the death to creativity and progress. Okay, maybe that’s a bit melodramatic, but rushing through something just for the sake of being able to say “I’m done” only creates stress and hassle. It’s not worth it. Take the extra time, turn out a better book, and be happier in the end.
What advice would you give to other teenagers who are writing their first novel?
I would say to write the story in your heart. If that happens to be one that caters to a popular trend, or completely goes against it, just write it. You’ll only be happy with a project that inspires your enthusiasm. How else would you be able to survive the long haul of writing a novel? And don’t expect it to be perfect. Revisions and edits are necessary. It’s a fact, but even though it’s long and involves lots of work, you can make it fun! And it’ll be worth it!
The Septemgeminus Prophecy states: āA powerful sorceress with blood laced in gold sevenfold shall determine the fate of the world.ā
Fawn Belgrave’s magical powers are the coveted prize in a bet between God and the Devil.
When she meets Caleb, the dark angel assigned to seduce her, Fawn’s life is turned upside down.
Zara Hoffman is a teen author. She spends most of her time doing homework and writing new stories. When she isnāt wrapped up in projects, Zara can be found relaxing with friends and family, listening to music, reading and writing, or playing with her dog, Riley. You can find her at her website, on Facebook or on Twitter.

Cover reveal: ‘The Other Me’ by Suzanne van Rooyen
Posted: November 25, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: book covers, contests, lgbt, small presses, young adult 1 CommentTitle: The Other Me
Author: Suzanne van Rooyen
Release Date: 19 December 2013
Publisher: Harmony Ink Press
Genre: YA, LGBT, contemporary
Fifteen-year-old Treasa Prescott thinks sheās an alien. She doesnāt fit in with the preppy South African private school crowd and feels claustrophobic in her own skin. Treasa is worried she might spend life as a social pariah when she meets Gabriel du Preez. Gabriel plays the piano better than Beethoven, has a black belt in karate, and would look good wearing a garbage bag. Treasa thinks heās perfect. It might even be love, as long as Gabriel doesnāt find out sheās a freak.
As Treasa spends time with Gabriel, she realizes she might not love him as much as she wants to be him, and that the reason she feels uncomfortable in her skin might have less to do with extra-terrestrial origins and more to do with being born in the wrong body.
But Gabriel is not the perfect boy Treasa imagines. He harbors dark secrets and self-destructive tendencies. Still, Treasa might be able to accept Gabrielās baggage if he can accept who she longs to be.
Add The Other Me on Goodreads now! And enter the giveaway to win aĀ $15 Amazon giftcard HERE!!

Suzanne is an author and peanut-butter addict from South Africa. She currently lives in Finland and finds the cold, dark forests nothing if not inspiring. Although she has a Masterās degree in music, Suzanne prefers conjuring strange worlds and creating quirky characters. When not writing you can find her teaching dance and music to middle-schoolers or playing in the snow with her shiba inu. She is rep’d by Jordy Albert of the Booker Albert Agency.

Cover reveal: ‘Forget Me Not’ by Stacey Nash
Posted: November 22, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: book covers, contests, small presses, young adult 3 CommentsI have read one of Stacey’s books — although not this one (yet!) — and can assure you she has serious game. Also, she is one of the contributors over at Aussie Owned and Read and one of the loveliest people you could ever hope to meet. So I’m very excited to be a part of this cover reveal.
Title: Forget Me Not (Book I in the Collective series)
Author: Stacey Nash
Release Date: 17 February 2014
Publisher: Entranced Publishing, Rush Imprint
Genre: YA speculative fiction
Since her mother vanished nine years ago, Anamae and her father have shared a quiet life. But when Anamae discovers a brooch identical to her mother’s favorite pendant, she unknowingly invites a slew of trouble into their world. When the brooch and the pendant are worn together they’re no longer pretty pieces of jewelry — they’re part of a highly developed technology capable of cloaking the human form. Triggering the jewelry’s power attracts the attention of a secret society determined to confiscate the device — and silence everyone who is aware of its existence. Anamae knows too much, and now she’s Enemy Number One.
She’s forced to leave her father behind when she’s taken in by a group determined to keep her safe. Here Anamae searches for answers about this hidden world. With her father kidnapped and her own life on the line, Anamae must decide if saving her dad is worth risking her new friendsā lives. No matter what she does, somebody is going to get hurt.
Add Forget Me Not on Goodreads now! And enter the giveaway HERE!! You can win a pre-release Advance Reader Copy (ARC) of Forget Me Not, a $20 Amazon gift card, or (for the writers) a first chapter critique. I’ve had Stacey crit my stuff before. Believe me, you want this!
And here is the cover. 
Reviews:
āNash brings a secret world to life with these amazing characters.ā
āI’d definitely recommend this book to anyone who enjoys action, intrigue and romance.ā
āIt’s an incredible story with great action, a swoon-worthy romance, and twists you won’t see coming!ā

About the Author:
Stacey grew up in the Hunter Valley of New South Wales. It is an area nestled between mountains and vineyards. Full of history and culture, it provides wonderful writing inspiration. After dabbling with poetry during her teen years, Stacey stopped writing until after university when she was married with young children. Now she loves nothing more than spending her days with her children and writing when inspiration strikes.
Social Media Links:
Website | Facebook | Twitter | Pinterest | Goodreads
Interview: Amira K. Makansi, author
Posted: November 10, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: collaboration, Interview, small presses 1 CommentToday Iām interviewing Amira K. Makansi, who is one third of the team that wrote The Sowing, the first book in the Seeds trilogy, by āK. Makansiā. Welcome to the blog, Amira.
Thank you!
Did I read correctly that you and your two co-authors, Kristina and Elena, are all related ā that they are your mother and sister? How did the three of you come to write a book together?
It happened so naturally! About four years ago now, my mother Kristina had a dream that proved to be the genesis of The Sowing. She told my sister Elena about it, and they mapped out a basic story outline, and then forgot about it. Later, still haunted by the memory of that dream, Kristy revived the story and told me about it. Together we decided it had merit and that weād sit down and try to really write the thing. She wrote a chapter; I wrote a chapter. Then Elena wrote a chapter, then I wrote another. It just kept going that way until eight months later, we had a completed manuscript! We were bound and determined to tell the story of Remy and Vale, and we all believed in it.
Do you think writing with people so close to you has made it easier or harder to co-write a novel? How do you handle creative differences? Do you glare daggers over the breakfast table?
For me personally, I definitely think it made it easier to have co-writers. I donāt know if I could have written a book without their help. When I got stuck, one of my co-writers was always there to help me past writerās block, or a boring character, or a dumb plot idea. When we argued over different directions, we were always able to come to a consensus, even if it was a hard-fought battle. Some of the best ideas in the story were a result of the three of us just brainstorming casually: one person would say, āHey, what about this?ā and the other two would respond, āYeah, that sounds awesome! And what if we did this other thing, too?ā Thatās actually how we came up with the idea of the seed bank database that ended up being a key component of our story.
The Sowing is set in a post-apocalyptic world where genetically modified crops and environmental destruction are major themes. Are these issues you feel strongly about in the world outside your novel?
Yes. All of us feel very strongly about the need for environmental preservation and awareness, especially when it comes to food, water, and land maintenance. We are also passionate about learning more about genetic modification and its potential beneficial or harmful effects on the human body and on the environment. Itās such a developing field, and food companies are jumping into it too quickly for us to anticipate all the possible effects. It has incredible potential, both good and bad, and we are firmly of the opinion that Monsanto et al. are moving too quickly for us to avoid the bad side and fully realize the good side. The Seeds Trilogy is a story about the dark side of GMO ā a cautionary tale of the way that GMO crops, combined with mind-altering pharmaceuticals, could be used to control an entire population.
On your blog that you talk about plans for expanding the Seeds trilogy into other media forms, such as apps. Can you tell us a little about that?
We love the idea of serializing our storyāthat is, releasing it in pieces so that the reader can follow it much as you would a TV show. Weāve definitely toyed with the idea of working with a developer to create an app that would allow you to download the latest instalments of the books, while at the same time interacting with the world weāve created. Iād love to get to a point where you can click on, say, āThe Okarian Sectorā in the text, and that would link you to a few paragraphs of history and background on the state weāve created. Likewise, you could click on āElijah Tawfiqā, one of the characters in the book, and pull up an illustration, a short bio, and a description of his role in the book. Maps, illustrations, history, technology, and links to information about why this is relevant in todayās world would all feature in as a part of this app. Itās a dream, but I think itāll be realizable sometime in the future.
As well as writing, youāre also an acquisitions editor at Blank Slate Press. What really grabs you in a pitch? What puts you off?
Good writing is the first thing I look for. Iām a pretty avid reader of science fiction, fantasy, and historical fiction, but Iāll read absolutely anything if the writing is good enough, and at Blank Slate Press, weāre passionate about finding and nurturing talented writers, no matter what the genre.
What puts me off? Arrogance. Donāt tell me youāve written the next bestseller or that youāre the best writer to come along since Hemingway. (Iāve seen some pitches like that!) I love seeing that a writer really believes in his or her work, but I donāt need to hear about why you think your book is going to be the next Hunger Games.
Thanks, Amira, for dropping by!
About The Sowing:
Remy Alexander was born into the elite meritocracy of the Okarian Sector. From an early age, she and her friends were programmed for intellectual and physical superiority through specialized dietary regimes administered by the Okarian Agricultural Consortium. But when her older sister Tai was murdered in a brutal classroom massacre, her parents began to suspect foul play. They fled the Sector, taking their surviving daughter underground to join the nascent Resistance movement. But now, three years later, Remyās former schoolgirl crush, Valerian OrleĆ”n, is put in charge of hunting and destroying the Resistance. As Remy and her friends race to unravel the mystery behind her sisterās murder, Vale is haunted by the memory of his friendship with Remy and is determined to find out why she disappeared. As the Resistance begins to fight back against the Sector, and Vale and Remy search for the answers to their own questions, the two are set on a collision course that could bring everyone togetherāor tear everything apart.
You can buy The Sowing on Amazon or Barnes & Noble, or learn more about it at the website.
Amira is a twenty-four year old writer and editor with a passion for food justice and sustainability. When not writing, working with Blank Slate Press, or promoting and marketing The Sowing, she also works in the wine industry, selling, drinking, or making wine. You can find her mushroom hunting in Oregon, writing in cafes while severely over-caffeinated, or eating buffalo wings just about anywhere.Ā

Cover reveal: ‘Branded’ by Katie Hamstead
Posted: November 7, 2013 Filed under: On Books | Tags: book covers, small presses 1 CommentYou guys have probably figured out that I’m a bit of a Katie Hamstead fangirl, with all of my posts about her Kiya trilogy. So I don’t need to tell you how excited I am to be part of the cover reveal for her newest (non-Egyptian) release, Branded, which is being released by Soul Mate Publishing in the Australian summer (and American winter, but whatever š ).
Terrorists have invaded Sydney, and Allison King barely escapes her brotherās wedding reception alive. She and her siblings flee, but their parents are killed by firing squad.
Now Aliās on the run and terrified. While searching for other survivors, she is captured by the General who leads the invasion. Heās smitten by Ali, and when she refuses to submit to his whims, he brands her for death. In a wild act of defiance, she snatches the branding rod and sears the mark onto his face. Marking not only him but also sealing her fate. Ali manages to escape and flees into the bush once more where she finds a group in hiding. Even with the scars left by the General, Ali learns to love and falls in love with the young man who found herāDamien Rogers.
But the General is hunting her. When he discovers their location, and finds her with another manāDamienāhis wrath is kindled and his obsession is inflamed. Ali must put herself on the line or the General could kill her family, those who help her, and most significantly, the man she loves.
And here is the cover. I LUFF IT! ā¤

Born and raised in Australia, Katieās early years of day dreaming in the ābushā, and having her father tell her wild bedtime stories, inspired her passion for writing. After graduating High School, she became a foreign exchange student where she met a young man who several years later she married. Now she lives in Arizona with her husband, daughter and their dog.She has a diploma in travel and tourism which helps inspire her writing. She is currently at school studying English and Creative Writing.
Katie loves to out sing her friends and family, play sports and be a good wife and mother. She now works as a Clerk with a lien company in Arizona to help support her family and her schooling. She loves to write, and takes the few spare moments in her day to work on her novels.
You can find Katie on her blog, Goodreads, Facebook or Twitter.




