Posts Tagged ‘paranormal romance novels’

21st April

Welcome Linda Winstead Jones!

Linda Winstead Jones holds a special place in my heart for authoring the very first romance novels I ever read (The Sisters of the Sun Trilogy) and starting me on a long delirious love affair with the genre. This is a big year for her: two of her books are 2008 RITA finalists and the RWA is honoring her with a lifetime service award. She was kind enough to take time out of her busy schedule to answer my questions.

Raintree: Haunted is a finalist for the 2008 RITA and earned 4.5 Stars from the Romantic Times, which called it “nonstop action from start to finish.”

Prince of Magic is also a 2008 RITA finalist and earned 4 Stars from the Romantic Times. Publishers Weekly wrote that the story has “Punchy battle scenes and steamy lovemaking,” and praised Jones’s “gift for creating complex heroes and villains.”

Ciara: This year you are being honored with the RWA’s Emma Merritt Service Award. Can you tell us about the service you have done to earn this distinction? How has working with the RWA aided your development as a writer?

Linda: I was shocked when Sherry Lewis called to tell me that I was getting this award. It truly is such an honor. I served on the RWA Board of Directors as a Regional Director for four years. Honestly, I don’t feel my contributions were more worthy than those of so many other women who served on the board. Everyone who reads the Policy and Procedure manual from beginning to end deserves some sort of award! <g>

Serving on the board was such an interesting and rich experience, and I made many very good friends in those four years. Nothing is accomplished by one person alone. The best of our accomplishments were joint efforts, always. I truly am honored that the current board believes I made a significant contribution.

Ciara: Lets talk about the RITA, the Oscar of the Romance Industry. You won in 2004 for Shades of Midnight, and are a double finalist this year for Prince of Magic and Raintree:Haunted, all in the paranormal category. How did you feel when you got the call?

Linda: Long before I was a finalist, I heard the words “It’s an honor just to be nominated,” or other words to that effect. Until I got the first RITA call, I had no idea how true those words are. I was thrilled, of course. I’m not one to scream into the phone, but I did laugh (perhaps a bit hysterically) and once I was off the phone I did a little dance around the kitchen. (Because dancing is always an appropriate response to good news.) This year Donna Grant called me, and honestly, I thought the contest calls were going out the following day. I greeted her with a “what’s up?” and thought she was calling about some old board business. So, I was truly shocked, and then to be told I was a double finalist – more dancing was called for. Lots of phone calls and e-mails to friends and editors. Celebrations ensued. And then I had to make dinner and do laundry and get back to the work in progress, since a deadline is looming.

While I would of course love to win, it’s true that to be in such great company is an honor. When I won in 2004 I was sitting with my friend Lori Handeland, who had insisted that I write out something just in case. I had a short list of people I’d have to thank if I did win, and when my category came around and they started calling out the names of finalists, I realized I didn’t have a chance so I stuck that piece of paper somewhere in my program. Then they called my name and Lori screamed at me and I’m desperately looking through my program for that scrap of paper while she’s trying to push me out of my chair. <g>

Ciara: How did you get started writing paranormal and what has influenced you most in your work in this sub-genre?

Linda: While not technically paranormal, my first crack at stories which were very much out of the ordinary were with the fairy tale romances I wrote for Leisure/Lovespell. I loved writing those books! They were so different, and so much fun. From there it was a short hop to time travel, then to ghosts, and finally to fantasy set in an alternate world. It’s almost as if you give your brain permission to go beyond the bounds of reality, and it happily takes off.

Influences are everywhere, in fiction and in non-fiction, in television and in music. Often simply in letting your mind roam completely free. No constraints, no boundaries. You ask that question that always has to be asked – What if? – and then sit back and listen.

The characters from Sisters of the Sun, my first trilogy with Berkley, had been with me for a while before I actually got them onto paper. I could see the first chapter or two, but then it died from there. Nothing. Nada. Their stories just didn’t go anywhere. Then one day I was in the hammock in my back yard, watching the sky and thinking about the Fyne sisters, and it came to me out of nowhere. “They’re not from here.” From that moment The Sun Witch, and the other books in that series, flowed.

Ciara: You have written in many sub-genres under the names Linda Devlin, Linda Fallon, Linda Jones, Linda Winstead, and Linda Winstead Jones. What was your favorite book to write, and why?

Linda: You might as well ask me who my favorite child is. <g> The Sun Witch was very special, as was Cash. Madigan’s Wife, one of my first Intimate Moments, because I adored Ray. Raintree: Haunted, for so many reasons, not the least of which was Gideon. Prince of Magic, because Sian really spoke to me. I’m seeing a pattern here. Love the hero, love the book. There have been several favorites over the years, but the true favorite has to be the one I’m working on at that moment – whatever that moment might be.

Ciara: You were first published in 1994. What got you interested/started in writing and how long was your path to publication?

Linda: Like so many writers, I’ve been a reader all my life. As a child, as a teenager. I even loved writing term papers in high school, which definitely marked me as different. When I was in my mid-twenties, I took a creative writing course. We wrote poems and vignettes, and that was enough to get me hooked. With three small children, there was little time to write, but I tried. Those early efforts were not particularly good, but I learned a lot. It was strictly a part time hobby, one I gave up when my husband and I opened our own picture frame shop. With three kids in school and a business that was opened six days a week, there was no time for any hobby, much less writing a book.

In a twisted way, running that business is what lead me into writing. After a few years my husband took a job that took him out of town for weeks at a time, leaving me with a business and three kids who were attending three different schools. They all had activities – band, baseball, soccer, roller hockey. I painted the living room pink, but what the heck? I did it all. Now and then someone would as me how I got it all done, which surprised me. I got it all done because I had no choice. Being in that position made me realize that I was capable of doing whatever I wanted to do. And though it had been a while since I’d written anything, I knew I wanted to write.

When the lease on our shop was up, I told my husband I wanted two years to see if I could sell a book. He agreed, but he saved all our framing equipment so if things didn’t work out we could go back into that business. We closed the shop in August 1992. I set up my typewriter (yes, my TYPEWRITER) at the dining room table, and I wrote Guardian Angel. I bought a copy of The Writer’s Market and found a publisher that accepted unagented books (and also published western romance) and in May 1993 I sent them the first three chapters of my book. (without making a copy. Yowza.) In June I got a request for the full and sent them the rest (since of course that was all I had. Again, no copies.) In June I also found a local RWA chapter, which was a real turning point for me. I remember walking into the room and realizing that these were my people. They still are. In October of that year, I went to my first writer’s conference, Moonlight and Magnolias in Atlanta. I didn’t get much sleep that weekend, so when I got that call Monday morning, I was asleep on the couch and dazed when I talked to Alicia Condon at Leisure. I wrote all the details of the offer on a MacDonald’s napkin that was sitting nearby. <g> My first book was released in August 1994, exactly two years after we closed the frame shop.

And so it goes.

Ciara: What advice would you give writers just starting out?

Linda: Join a writing group – RWA or something else that suits you. We write alone, but the support of a group is invaluable. Also, don’t allow yourself to be paralyzed by the constant bombardment of rules that are around these days. Tell the story – that’s the most important thing.

Ciara: In your opinion, what are the most important elements of good writing?

Linda: There’s good writing and there’s good story telling. I’m not a perfect technical writer, I realize that, and the books I love might not be technically perfect. Compelling characters and a gripping story are what will bring a reader to an author again and again. What one man loves another will not, but in the end I don’t know anyone who raves about sentence structure or the scathingly brilliant use of adverbs. <g> Not to say that anyone wants to read a grammatical mess, of course, but loving the characters and caring about them is what makes for a great book, IMO.

Ciara: What is your favorite book of all time, and why?

Linda: This changes, too. I grew up devouring Nancy Drew, and for a long time Little Women was my favorite book. Then Gone With the Wind. The Stand, by Stephen King, Son of the Morning, by Linda Howard. I couldn’t possibly pick one.

Ciara: What are you working on next?

Linda: I’m working on another Nocturne, currently titled The Last of the Ravens – though of course that title could change. The story is set in the mountains of Tennessee, near to the place my good friends and I sometimes go to unwind, shop, and plot.

Ciara: If you could leave your readers with one legacy, what would you want it to be?

Linda: Legacy is a strong word. <g> All I want to do is make my readers laugh and cry and escape from real life for a while.

Thank you so much Linda! I look forward to meeting you at the Book Signing Event at the National RWA Conference in July!

31st March

Demon Angel

Title: Demon Angel
Author: Meljean Brook
Series: The Guardians (book 2)
Publication Info: Berkley Sensation, January 2007
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Rating:
<3 <3 <3 <3 < 3

Ms. Brook has crafted one hell of a great narrative in her book Demon Angel. It is a powerful story of love and redemption, heaven and hell, and the complex forces that make up the human condition. I couldn’t put it down, on the edge of my seat until these fabulously unique characters triumphed over evil and found their happily-ever-after. Ms. Brook’s story has the complex world building and epic struggles of truly great sci-fi/fantasy, with all the true love I crave from the romance genre. I cannot say enough good things about her story or her writing.

This book wins the Best Line At-First-Sight, when the hero first sees the heroine: “No beauty was she, but broad-beamed and flat-featured, like an ill-tempered cow,” (p 9).

Another line I like, just to illustrate Ms. Brook’s talent: “the familiar verdant landscape receded under the fog as it smudged groves of trees into vague shadows, erasing distance and detail with unrelenting gray,” (p 3).

As you can see, Ms. Brook’s writing is both humorous and eloquent. The book begins in 1217, and the language patterns reflect the time period. As the centuries progress the hero and heroine’s language does as well.

When the hero, Hugh, and the heroine, Lilith, first meet, Hugh is a virtuous young knight and Lilith is a conniving demon. Their relationship is torturous and complex; they are two halves of a whole, one whose gift is truth, the other whose gift is lies. When Hugh sacrifices himself for another and becomes a Guardian, whose purpose is to protect humans from the manipulations of hell and the danger of nosferatu, he and Lilith begin a centuries-long contest; one to save humankind, the other to damn it.

The centuries are hard on both, and Hugh finally must end it. He choses to Fall, living out the remainder of his life as human, haunted by his actions and his memories of Lilith. But the devil has other plans, and when he sends the nosferatu to kill Hugh’s students, Hugh is brought back into the struggles he left behind. Ultimately they must use their gifts and each other to find redemption.

The passion is hot. The hurdles are many. What would you sacrifice for Love?

24th March

Demon Moon

Title: Demon Moon
Author: Meljean Brook
Series: The Guardians
Publication Info: Berkley Sensation, June 2007
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Rating:
<3 <3 <3 <3

I have a new favorite author, and her name is Meljean Brook. And she lives in Cascadia, though that has nothing to do with why I love her so much (I swear). Ms. Brook’s characters are Unique, Complex, and thoroughly Delightful. Her mythology and world-building are fabulous – multilayered, intricate, and fascinating. I strongly recommend reading this series in order: Falling for Anthony in the anthology Hot Spell, Demon Angel, Paradise from the anthology Wild Thing, Demon Night, Thicker than Blood from the anthology First Blood (8/08), and Demon Bound (11/08). I especially recommend reading Demon Angel before Demon Moon, as significant events happen between the two main characters in the previous book. However, if you are like me and don’t – read these series faqs. Colin’s quotes crack me up.

Our hero, Colin Ames-Beaumont, is a ridiculously beautiful vampire from Regency London (yay!) who has been cursed for the last 200 years. Sadly, our ridiculously vain hero cannot see his reflection and humans have a tendency to forget him as a beautiful dream. Colin’s references to his early years cutting a swath through the ballrooms of London are terribly amusing. His vanity is terribly amusing. His olfaction is terribly erotic. Oooo lord, I will never again eat a mango without thinking of him. Our heroine, Savitri Murray, is a delightfully brilliant and modern human woman – a non-virgin tech geek with a photographic memory. Her Indian-American background and cultural traditions – the family expectations, arranged marriages, wedding customs, food – added depth to the character and were delightful to learn about.

Brief Overview of the Mythology: In the First Battle, Lucifer and his demons rebelled against heaven and were banished to Hell. The nospheratu (a creature like a super-vampire) waited to see who would win the battle before joining and were thus cursed, welcome in neither Heaven nor Hell. Some of the angels, who fought for Heaven, became Guardians to protect humans from the demons and nospheratu and other things that go bump in the night. Vampires are basically second-class citizens on Earth.

Plot: I can’t really tell you without explaining a bunch of stuff that happened in Demon Angel, thus spoiling it for you. What can I say? Colin is attracted to Savi, but he hurt her in the last book when they hooked up. Savi is attracted to Colin, but he’s not a very nice guy. A demon starts impersonating Colin, manipulating the vampire community in San Francisco to try an assassinate Savi. Wyrmwolves start escaping chaos and come after Savi. Lots of talk about the events of Demon Angel. Lots of fighting. Lots of erotic mango eating.

Things I really like: The characters. Sir Pup is fast becoming my favorite. The way Colin’s speech is full of Regency words. How Ms. Brooks describes taste and smell. It’s brilliant. I almost cried at the end, when Colin and Savi decide to “see what comes next”, in a beautiful mirroring of a story told earlier in the book. (Totally reminded me of the old couple from Titanic.)

Things that could be improved: A few times in the book I stumbled over lines that were too subtle. I’d have to stop and think “wait, wait, what up?” Ms. Brooks just needs to be a bit more explicit in a few places. One of my favorite scenes, with the mango, ended abruptly on one of these confusing exchanges. I read it out loud to my hubby and he didn’t get it either. I mean, I can guess what she’s talking about, but I don’t know for sure. I might just have a dirty mind. ;)

I ran right out to Barnes & Noble to buy the other books in the series, and was seriously annoyed when B&N only had Demon Night in stock. I finished Demon Night today and liked it even better than Demon Moon. Drifter is my heartthrob. Read the first four chapters of Demon Night here.

Recommended for: anyone who likes dark paranormal, fans of J.R. Ward, Lara Adrian, and Marjorie M. Liu. I promise you will love Meljean Brook!

Meet the Author on May 16!: Ms. Brook will be part of a huge romance author signing party at Powells in Beaverton, OR. Powells doesn’t have its May calendar up, much to my disappointment, but when I find a list of participating authors I promise I’ll share.

23rd March

The Monster Book of Monsters

Ha! (Harry! Harry!) But doesn’t The Mammoth Book of Vampire Romance make you think of it? Biting its readers with two, very sexy, fangs? I digress.

Happy Easter! As you contemplate chocolate eggs, fluffy bunnies and people who rise from the dead, here is the brand spanking new cover for The Mammoth Book of Vampire Romance, filled with 30 (whoot!) stories from our favorite paranormal romance authors. I am oh-so-excited for its release. I dunno if the chick on the cover is a vampire though – where’s her black leather? And why is she wearing sunglasses at night? So she can watch you weave then breath your story lines? Just remember – Don’t switch the blade or masquerade with the guy in shades. She’ll bite you.

The book will be released in the US and UK August 11, 2008 by Running Press. The publisher is on a Mammoth Book trend, having published Mammoth Book anthologies of King Arthur to Tales of the Road to New Historical Whodunnits to Modern Fantasy. There isn’t much info up on Amazon, nor has google come through for me in my search for a complete list of authors. Here are the ones I found: Karen Chance, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Lilith Saintcrow, Keri Arthur, Vicki Pettersson, Alexis Morgan, Rachel Vincent, Jenna Black, Sherri Browning Erwin, and Nancy Holder.

Updated to add: more authors! Savannah Russe, Colleen Gleason, Jenna Maclaine, C.T. Adams & Cathy Clamp, Delilah Devlin, Shiloh Walker, Kimberley Raye, Rebecca York, and Susan Sizemore.

18th March

Shadow Touch

Title: Shadow Touch
Author: Marjorie M. Liu
Series: Dirk & Steele, Book 2
Publication Info: Dorchester, Jan 2006
Genre: Paranormal Romantic Thriller
Rating: <3 <3 <3 <3

Ms. Liu is a linguistic genius. Some of her sentences are so beautiful they bring tears to my writer’s soul. I tried to read this book slowly, to savor it, linger over the delicious phrases, but it was too good, too thrilling, not to turn the pages at a heart-stopping rate. I wish I had marked some of the best descriptions so I could share their lusciousness with you. To whet your appetite, a phrase from a scene on the Trans-Siberian Railroad: “In just one night they crossed vast swathes of taiga, steppe, and desert, mountains rising like knives to cut the sky, bleeding clouds across the high horizon,” (p277). Ah! Be still my heart! This is the second book of Ms. Liu’s that I have read. I love her settings. The first book, Tiger’s Eye, was set mostly in Beijing. This book was set partly in Russia. It made me want to visit. Mafia or no mafia.

Before you run out to pick up this book, let me warn you: Ms. Liu uses her significant talent to write a stomach-turning thriller. Yes, there is a romance in it, but don’t expect warm fuzzies. Serial killers, psychotics, murder, torture, mafioso, pain, death – this story is not for the faint of heart or faint of stomach. It kept me on the edge of my seat, a razor of anxiety knifing through my belly. Would they survive? There is a big difference reading about heroes like Ward’s Zsadist and Vishous and Kenyon’s Derek and Kyrian who were terribly tortured in the past – they are wounded loners in need of some serious psychological help, but at least the reader knows they are alive. They lived to tell the tale. Reading about torture in the present is almost more than my delicate sensibilities can handle. Some of these scenes creeped me the F*** out. Aaaaa!

Plot: The synopsis on the back of the book is one of the better ones I’ve read, but here’s mine anyway: Around the world magic is alive, living beside us but hidden. Humans born with psychic powers, shape-shifters, all secreted away, separated, many believing they are alone, freaks. Elena Baxter is one of these. She has hidden her entire life, using her healing gift on the sly but knowing always that someday her strange power would be discovered. The Dirk & Steele Agency was created to find these extraordinary individuals and give them a safe place where they may use their gifts to the betterment of the world, solving crimes, freeing hostages, finding murderers, whatever needs to be done that only they can do. Artur Loginov escaped his tortured past in Russia when he was found by the Agency, introducing him to the only true family he has ever known. Unfortunately not all gifted individuals have the pure motives of the Agency, and a new dark power, the Consortium, starts kidnapping the gifted. Elena is taken. Artur is taken. They find each other in captivity and a bond is formed when Elena uses her healing gift to save Artur’s life. With the help of other prisoners they escape, fleeing across Russia on the Trans-Siberian Railroad to Moscow, with a serial killer hot on their tail. They risk their lives to stop the Consortium from a desperate power play to unite the eight crime syndicates under it’s evil leadership. Phew!

It’s a fast paced adventure from start to finish. I couldn’t put it down. I can’t wait to gobble up the rest of Ms. Liu’s books!

16th March

Welcome Linda Wisdom!

We have a special treat today: Author Linda Wisdom is joining us to talk about what she loves about her new book, 50 Ways to Hex Your Lover. She will send one autographed copy to a lucky commenter, so comment away!

Title: 50 Ways to Hex Your Lover
Author: Linda Wisdom
Publication Info: Sourcebooks, Inc, March 2008
Genre:
Paranormal Romance

Jazz can’t decide whether to scorch him with a fireball or jump into bed with him…

Jasmine Tremaine, a witch who can’t stay out of trouble Nikolai Gregorivich, a drop-dead gorgeous vampire cop on the trail of a serial killer.

The sizzling love affair between Jazz and Nick has been off-again, on-again—for about 300 years. Mostly off, lately. But now Nick needs Jazz’s help, and while Jazz and Nick try to figure out their own hearts and resist their ever-increasing attraction, they must steer clear of a maniacal killer with super-supernatural powers. They are surrounded by a hilarious cast of oddball paranormal characters, including Norma, the chain-smoking ghost who haunts Jazz’s sports car, Dweezil, her ghoul of a boss, and Fluff and Puff, a pair of bunny slippers with sharp teeth and short tempers (watch your ankles)!

From Linda:

Why I love writing about Jazz

And why wouldn’t I when we’re so much alike.

She’s snarky. I’m snarky. She’s Irish. I’m Irish. She has red hair. I have red hair. She’s tall. I’m short. She’s gorgeous. I’m short. She can kick magickal ass. I’m short. She loves all the scented body wash and body creams. So do I. She shares her tub with rubber duckys who are more than they appear. I collect rubber duckys who so far are what they appear. She has bunny slippers that can eat pretty much anything, although the charge they ate that squirrel up at Moonstone Lake is unfounded. My bunny slippers just look cute and so far stay out of the cookie jar.

What I love about this book is that Jazz is someone I’d enjoy hanging out with. She may have magick in her blood but she’s still female enough to love shopping and her lattes. And who wouldn’t love having a BFF who could wiggle her fingers to make pushy people disappear, well, maybe just go away. She drives a snazzy classic T-Bird convertible with an irascible ghost in the passenger seat. She loves cotton candy, funnel cake, and roller coasters.

And did I mention she also has a super hot sexy vampire in her life? Oh yeah, Nick Gregory, a vampire PI who used to work with vamp law enforcement. And right now, he wants her to help him take down a serial killer of vampires. And if their plan doesn’t work out, they’d be dust. Literally. Okay, I’m a good friend, but I’m not sure I’d be willing to help her storm a big bad creature’s mansion to take him down. But I’d sure be out there on the road cheering her on.

Irma’s been in Jazz’s T-Bird since 1956 and not too happy about it, but she can’t seem to leave the car either.

Fluff and Puff, the bunny slippers, believe the house Jazz shares with web designer Krebs is their playground.

Dweezil, Jazz’s creature of a boss at All Creatures Car Service is…well, let’s just say you have to read him to believe him.

Nick, see above.

And Jazz is in a cauldron all her own. She is so much I’m not and that’s probably a good thing. She can get herself out of trouble using magick. I’m not that skilled.

So how about you? Would you want a snarky witch for a BFF? I’m sure the sexy vampire would be a given. And how about bunny slippers that would make sure chocolate in your house never lasted more than a few seconds?

What would you want?

Linda

Thank you for coming! Don’t forget to blog for a chance to win an autographed copy of 50 Ways to Hex Your Lover.

15th March

Jacob

Title: Jacob
Author: Jacquelyn Frank
Series: The Nightwalkers
Publication Info: Zebra, November 2006
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Rating: <3 <3 <3

Winner Best Contemporary Paranormal Romance of 2006 in the Romantic Times Awards and all over the Romancelandia news, I knew I had to see what all the buzz was about. Debut author Jacquelyn Frank delivers an invigorating original work of urban fantasy, a breath of fresh air in the vampire-heavy world of paranormal romance. In short – a novel novel. (I had to say that!) I really enjoyed the unique mythology and culture of the Demons, a separate race of beings native to Earth that lives invisibly beside us.

The advent of Christianity heralded a new era of peace for Demonkind, as beliefs in dark magic fell into disuse. In honor of this Demons choose names for their kids from the Bible, hence the book titles Jacob, Gideon, Elijah, Damien, and Noah (in series order). Other than Damien, the demon names were refreshing as well. Why do so many authors feel that all vampires and demons have to be named Lucien, Victor, Devlin, and Bane? On a side note, if I were a vampire, according to the Vampire Name Generator, I would be named Sultana of Moldovia, known in some parts of the world as Haunt of the Crows, which is fitting because I HATE crows. Sadly I have yet to encounter a vampire romance novel with a heroine named Sultana. Boooring. I always thought my real name would make a good vampire or demon, as it means dark or black.

Mythology: The “Nightwalkers” refers to the non-human races that are indigenous to the night, namely Vampires, Demons, and Lycanthrope. Frank doesn’t introduce any vampires or werewolves in this novel, but tells us the three species have been involved in long bloody wars throughout the centuries. Ms. Frank does not introduce a deity being or creation myth either. Demons are, in general, a peaceful, serious people, very concerned with honor. They are elemental, each born with a control over one of six elements: earth, fire, water, air, body, and mind. (“By YOUR powers combined, I am Captain Planet!”) They are forbidden from harming or sleeping with humans, and it falls to the Enforcer, Jacob, to hunt down Demons who are about to seduce humans. Necromancers are humans who through dark powers summon and torture Demons until the victims Transform into soulless monsters, ruled only by the urge to escape and mate. Some other aspects of the mythology are uncovered during the novel, and I’ll just let you find them out for yourself. ;)

Plot: Jacob the Enforcer is tracking a Demon who was summoned in the attempt to either free him or put him out of his misery, when Isabella (aka Bella), a human, falls out of a window into his arms. Isabella is able to track the victim and kills it, an unprecedented skill for a human. Jacob takes her back to Noah the Demon King to puzzle her out. Jacob has lived a long lonely existence, reviled by his people for doing his job. He has never felt drawn to a human, until now. Isabella has always felt like an outsider and eagerly embraces the existence of a new species. She and Jacob find themselves unable to stay apart. When necromancers threaten the species, the lovers must overcome ancient taboos and mistaken history to bring the truth to light and realize their Destiny.

Things I liked: Original mythology and story. I reeeeaaaalllly liked Jacob and Bella’s growing mental link. It was just like Elf Quest! (My childhood obsession and, now that I think on it, introduction to Paranormal Romance.) Some of the flirty teasing dialog between the two was very funny.

Things I didn’t like: Linda Howard called the prose “lush.” I’d call it “overly loquacious.” The writing could be improved by K.I.S.S. and additional white space. The paragraphs are so thick I found myself skipping over parts of them. ‘course, I also read this while sick in bed. Being sick makes me grumpy. Still, for a debut author it’s pretty good. Some of the dialog I loved, while other lines were not so original. When Bella has three broken ribs and intense lacerations all over her body she shouldn’t have been so chipper. Adrenaline can only make up for just so much!

Who should read this book: Anyone who likes paranormal romance, including series by Lara Adrian, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Alexis Morgan, J.R. Ward, Marjorie M. Liu, and Nora Robert‘s Circle Trilogy.