Showing posts with label daniel arenson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daniel arenson. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

Excerpt: Moth by Daniel Arenson

Today we have a special excerpt from Moth by Daniel Arenson.  Daniel is also giving away copies of Moth on Goodreads.  Goodreads giveaway ends November 30th.






















Moth (The Moth Saga #1) by Daniel Arenson.

They say the world used to turn. They say that night would follow day in an endless dance. They say that dawn rose, dusk fell, and we worshiped both sun and stars.

That was a long time ago.

My people are the fortunate. We live in daylight, blessed in the warmth of the sun. Yet across the line, the others lurk in eternal night, afraid... and alone in the dark.

I was born in the light. I was sent into darkness. This is my story.



BOOK EXCERPT: MOTH

CHAPTER ONE
A DISCOVERY IN DUSK


They entered the shadows, seeking a missing child.
            Torin swallowed, clutched the hilt of his sword, and gazed around with darting eyes. The trees still grew densely here--mossy oaks with trunks like melting candles, pines heavy with needles and cones, and birches with peeling white bark. Yet this was not the forest Torin had always known. The light was wrong, a strange ocher that bronzed the trees and kindled floating pollen. The shadows were too long, and the sun hung low in the sky, hiding behind branches like a shy maiden peering between her window shutters. Torin had never seen the sun shine from anywhere but overhead, and this place sent cold sweat trickling down his back.
            "This is wrong," he said. "Why would she come this far?"
            Bailey walked at his side, holding her bow, her quiver of arrows slung across her back. Her two braids, normally a bright gold, seemed eerily metallic in this place. The dusk glimmered against her breastplate--not the shine they knew from home, but a glow like candles in a dungeon.
            "I don't know," she said. "Yana has been strange since her parents died in the plague. Maybe she thought it would be an adventure."
            Despite himself, Torin shivered. "An adventure? In the dusk? In this cursed place no sensible person should ever enter?"
            Bailey raised an eyebrow and smiled. "Why not? Aren't you feeling adventurous now?"
            "No." He shook his head vehemently. "Adventure means sneaking out to Old Garin's farm to steal beets, mixing rye with ale, or climbing the old maple tree in the village square." He looked around at the shadowy forest, and his hand felt clammy around his hilt. "Not this place. Not the dusk."
            They kept walking, heading farther east, deeper into the shadows. Torin knew what the elders said. Thousands of years ago, the world used to turn. The sun rose and fell, and night followed day in an endless dance. Men woke at dawn, worked until the sunset, and slept through the darkness.
            Torin shivered. He didn't know if he believed those stories. In any case, those days were long gone. The dance had ended. The world had fallen still. Torin was a child of eternal sunlight, of a day that never ended. Yet now . . . now they were wandering the borderlands, the dusky strip--a league wide--that was neither day nor night, claimed by neither his people nor the others . . . those who dwelled in the dark.
            A shadow darted ahead.
            Torin leaped and drew his sword.
            A rabbit raced across the forest and disappeared into a burrow.
            Bailey stared at his drawn sword, eyes wide, then burst into laughter.
            "Protect me, brave Sir Torin Greenmoat!" she said, doubling over. "Will you defend me from the evil Bunny of the Night?"
            Torin grumbled and sheathed his blade, cursing himself. He had come of age last autumn, turning eighteen, and he had joined the Village Guard, yet it seemed Bailey would forever mock him.
            "Hush," he said. "It could have been them."
            She rolled her eyes. "They don't walk this far dayside, if they even exist."
            "How do you know?"
            Bailey groaned. "Everybody knows that. It's still too bright here. The nightfolk only live in the deep darkness." She lowered her voice. "It's dark as the deepest cave there, Torin. It's darker than the soul of a killer, darker than toast burnt in dragonfire, darker than the empty spaces inside your skull. So dark you can't see your own feet. That's where they lurk . . . scuttling, whispering, sharpening their claws . . ." She inched closer to him and smiled wickedly, the orange light reflecting in her eyes. "When all light is gone, that is where they'll . . . leap at you."
            She lunged toward him, clawing the air. Torin muttered and pushed her back.
            "This is no time for your games," he said. "A child is missing. Until we find Yana, I'm keeping my hand on my sword. And you should nock an arrow."
            She blew out her breath noisily, fluttering her lips. "Yana is thirteen, rebellious, and wants attention. We'll find her long before we hit the true darkness. Let's keep walking, and do try not to wet yourself." She winked. "I promise you, no bunnies will hurt you, Babyface."
            He sighed. She knew he hated that name. Even at eighteen, Torin still stood a little shorter than Bailey, and people often said he looked young for his age, his eyes too large, his cheeks too soft, and his chest too smooth. Torin had hoped that joining the Village Guard would make Bailey see him as a man, not a callow boy, but so far his hopes had been dashed. Standing almost six feet tall, preferring leggings and boots to gowns and slippers, Bailey wasn't easy to impress. Jumping at rabbits wasn't helping either.
            They walked on. Torin didn't wet himself, but with every step, his heart raced faster and more sweat trickled. As they headed farther east, the sun sank lower behind them. The shadows deepened, stretching across the forest floor like slender men in black robes.
            The forest began to thin out. Back in Timandra, in the full light of day, the trees grew thick and lush and rich with birds. Here in the dusk, they faded like receding hair on an aging man's scalp. The verdant woods dwindled into a few scattered trees, stunted and bent, their leaves gray. The soil lost its rich brown hue, darkening into charcoal thick with black stones. Another mile and the sun actually touched the horizon behind them, casting red beams between the last trees. The air grew colder and Torin hugged himself.
            "We should go back," he said, hating that his voice sounded so choked. "We've come too far. We're almost at the night."
            A lump filled his throat like a boiled egg, too large to swallow. Torin had seen the night before. Like everyone in the Village Guard, he had climbed the Watchtower upon the hill. He had gazed across the dusk, this withered no man's land, and beheld the great shadow in the east. But that had been different. In the safety of the Watchtower, the daylight upon him and the forest rustling below, it was easy to be brave. Now he walked toward the very lair of the beasts.
            "Scared?" Bailey asked, smiling crookedly.
            Torin nodded. "Yes and you should be too. They live near here." He took a shuddering breath. "The people of the night. Elorians." The word tasted like ash.
            Bailey snickered and kept walking, her braids swinging. "If you ask me, 'lorians are just a myth." She trudged up a hillside strewn with boulders. "People who live in eternal night, their eyes large as an owl's, their skin milk white, their souls pitch black?" She snorted. "It's just a myth to keep children away from the darkness."
            Torin followed reluctantly, though every beat of his heart screamed to turn around, to head back west, to return to the eternal daylight of his home. Bailey could snicker at the stories, but Torin wasn't so dismissive. If the world indeed used to turn, and day and night would cycle like summer and winter, would people not have lived here once? When the world had frozen, leaving Timandra in light and Eloria in darkness, would the people here not wither into twisted demons, hateful of the light, thirsty for the blood of honest folk?
            "Torin!" Bailey looked over her shoulder at him. The low sun painted her a bloody red. "Are you following, or will you run back to safety while I go looking?"
            He grumbled and trudged uphill after her. "If I turn back now, I'd never hear the end of it."
            She grinned and winked. "That's the spirit, Winky."
            He sighed. It was another name he hated. Years ago, while wrestling with Bailey, he had fallen upon a stone and scratched his left eye. Since then his pupil had remained fully dilated, hiding most of the iris. He could see only smudges from that eye now, a blurred world like a melted painting. Folks joked that his eyes were like the world's halves, one green and good, the other black and dead. To Bailey, he had simply become Winky.
            Since his parents had died in the plague ten years ago--a pestilence many claimed the Elorians had spread--Torin had been living with Bailey and her grandfather. The young woman, a year his senior, could always draw him into trouble. Whenever Bailey climbed the Old Maple, she would challenge him to climb too, then laugh as he dangled and fell. Whenever she ran across the fields, she'd challenge him to a race, then tease him relentlessly for losing. Torin had always been a little slower, a little clumsier, a little meeker, and even here and now--old enough to serve in the Village Guard, tracking a missing child through the shadows--she could goad him.
            He shook his head as he walked uphill. Sometimes he loved Bailey like a true sister. Sometimes he thought her beautiful, brave, and his best friend. And sometimes, like now, he thought her the most stubborn, reckless soul this side of darkness.
            Several feet ahead of him, she reached the hilltop, froze, and gasped.
            Torin's heart raced. He clutched his hilt and drew a foot of steel. For an instant, he was sure the Elorians were swarming toward her. He raced uphill, boots scattering pebbles, and came to stand beside her.
            His hand loosened around his hilt, letting his sword slide back into its scabbard.
            Bailey turned toward him, her eyes damp, and smiled tremulously. "It's beautiful, Torin. It's so beautiful."
            He looked ahead, saw the land of Eloria, and could barely breathe.
            Beautiful? he thought. It looked about as beautiful as the black heart of a viper.
            From the Watchtower back home, the night seemed a mere smudge of ink, a blackness that spread into the horizon. But standing here upon the edge of dusk, he beheld a new world. Lifeless black hills rolled into the distance. Beyond them, mountains rose against a deep indigo sky. Wind moaned, scattering dust and invading Torin's clothes with icy fingers. No plants grew here; he saw no grass, no trees, no life at all.
            Upon one hill, several miles away, rose the black obelisk men called the Nighttower, a twin to the Watchtower back home. Torin had seen it before from the safety of daylight, a needle in the distance. Seeing the edifice so close chilled him, a strange feeling like seeing one's profile between two mirrors, a vision familiar yet uncomfortably different. The Nighttower rose like a stalagmite from the hilltop, black and craggy. Some men claimed it was a natural structure, carved by wind and rain; others claimed the Elorians had built their own tower to observe Timandra. Even standing here, Torin could not decide, but he had no desire to get any closer.
            Above all else, even more than the barren stone and looming tower, it was the sky that spun Torin's head. Countless small, glowing dots covered the firmaments like holes punched through a black blanket. An orb floated among them, as large as the sun back home, glowing silver. It took Torin a moment to realize--it was the moon. He had seen the moon before from the dayside, a wisp like a mote of dust, but here it shone like a great lantern.
            "The stars and the moon," Bailey whispered. "I've heard of them. The lights of the night."
            He grabbed her arm. "Bailey, this is enough. We've crossed the dusk; this is Eloria itself ahead. This land is forbidden." He tried to tug her back downhill. "We go home. Now."
            She refused to budge. "Wait. Look, Winky. Down there."
            He followed her gaze, staring toward the distant land of darkness. A lump lay below upon the eastern hillside.
            "A boulder," he said.
            Bailey shook her head, braids swaying. "All the other boulders here are tall and jagged. This one's smooth."
            She pulled her arm free and walked downhill, heading deeper into the darkness. Torin cursed and looked behind him. Back in the west, the sun still shone and trees still grew; they were gray and twisted nearby, green and lush farther back. Far above them, he could see the top of the Watchtower and the blue sky of Timandra behind it.
            Home. Safety.
            He turned away, muttering curses, and began walking downhill after Bailey.
            "She always does this to me," he grumbled.
            Thanks to her taunts, he had fallen from trees, almost drowned swimming after her in the river, and nearly gagged during a pie eating contest. And now this--walking into the land of darkness itself.
            He drew his sword and held the blade before him. He had never swung it in battle; he wondered if that would change now. As he moved nightward, his boots scattering pebbles, he kept glancing around, seeking them. He had seen countless statues, paintings, and effigies of Elorians, and now those visions returned to him, mocking him with oversized eyes, sharp teeth, and claws. He sucked in his breath and held it.
            Bailey knelt ahead over the lump. She looked up at him, and the last beams of sunlight filled her eyes. They gleamed, two orange lanterns.
            "Torin," she whispered, voice choked.
            He crossed the last few steps toward her. He knelt at her side, looked at the shadow below, and lowered his head.
            We found her.
            Yana lay on her back, eyes glassy and staring. Her skin was pale gray, and her hands were still balled into fists. Three gashes gaped open across her chest, and blood soaked her tunic, deep crimson in the night. A steel star, its points serrated, pierced her neck.
            Bailey's hand shook as she closed the girl's eyes.
            "I think we should leave now," she whispered.
            Torin nodded and they lifted the girl. All the way here, they had taunted each other, laughing and groaning. They walked home in silence, leaving the darkness and returning to a day that seemed less bright.


Want to immerse yourself in the world of Moth?  Check out The Music of Moth by Ekaterina here.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Character Guest Post: A Legacy of Light by Daniel Arenson

Today From the Shadows welcomes a character from A Legacy of Light, a new fantasy novel by Daniel Arenson.  Erry is a young woman from Requiem, a land where people can shapeshift into dragons.  She's here to tell us a little about the book.
*****
Hello, From the Shadows!

First of all, you should know that this isn't my story.

A Legacy of Light is about heroes.  It's about great princes, kings, and emperors who can turn into dragons.  They lead armies.  They fight in wars.  They battle for the throne of Requiem, an ancient kingdom of dragon magic.

I'm nobody.

I'm just Erry.  That's it.  Not Queen Erry the First, not even the Dreaded Outlaw Erry.  Hell, I don't even have a real last name.

So why am I the one writing this blog post?

Well, what did you expect?  Those kings, queens, and emperors to visit From the Shadows?  They're too busy fighting their wars.  But me... well, I've always been from the shadows myself.

I was born on the boardwalk of a small, seaside town.  My father was a sailor from a foreign land; I never met him.  My mother died years ago in the wars, back when I was only a child.  Since then, I've been alone here on the docks.

Well, alone aside from animals.  Stray cats are great company when you're an orphaned, homeless, bastard girl.

Life hasn't always been easy.  I eat fresh fish when I can catch them.  When I can't, I eat what dead fish are swept ashore, pick through trash, or steal.  I've stolen from many houses in this town, and I've only been caught twice.

Sometimes people try to help me.  Men, mostly.  They'll give me a meal or a roof for the night, but they always want something in return.  They always want me.  So I always run... back to the docks, back to my stray animals, back to scrounging for scraps.

But it's not all bad.  I have my freedom.  I'm wild.  I can run around and howl at the moon, roll in the sand, or just sit on the beach at night, watching the stars and waves.  I mostly roam around at night.  Night is when the docks are mine, and I can imagine that I'm queen of the sea.  Nobody wants to see a ragged, filthy urchin in the daylight anyway!

If you read A Legacy of Light, you won't read a lot about me.  As I said, this is not my story.  You'll learn about those kings, outlaws, and heroes.  You'll read about all the great things they do, things greater than anything I've done.

But I'll be there too, between the pages, popping up in a scene here or there.  And let me tell you, those are the best damn scenes in the book.  Honest to goodness, and may I choke on a fish bone if I'm lying.

I like this blog.  I've always liked the shadows.  But now dawn rises, so I'll run off to my hiding spots -- I'm not telling where they are! -- to sleep and dream of distant adventures.  I hope we meet in the shadows again... or between the pages of a book.























A Legacy of Light (The Dragon War #1) by Daniel Arenson.

"We live in a time of darkness. Requiem lies cloaked in shadows. Tonight we say: We will fight. We will keep our light blazing."

The people of Requiem, an ancient kingdom, can grow wings and scales, breathe fire, and take flight as dragons. For years, Requiem's holy stars have blessed the kingdom with light and magic. But now a darkness falls.


General Cadigus, traitor to the crown, has captured the throne. Bloodthirsty and cruel, he rules with an iron fist. He crushes his own people under his heel. He burns all foreign lands. The noble kingdom of Requiem fades; a dark empire rises.


In the wilderness, a small light kindles. Rebellion brews. The rebels are haggard, outnumbered, and desperate. They hide in forests and ruins. They fight for the memory of Old Requiem, for a legacy of light.


The Resistance is small, but its cry is loud: "The tyrant must fall."


Release Date: March 29, 2013

Thank you Erry for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website and don't miss his previous author and character interviews here at From the Shadows.

Friday, October 12, 2012

A Dawn of Dragonfire Giveaway Winner

Congratulations Matthew Napier winner the A Dawn of Dragonfire Giveaway at From the Shadows!  Matthew will receive an ebook copy of A Dawn of Dragonfire by Daniel Arenson.


Thank you to all who entered.

**All giveaway winners selected using Random.org**

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

A Dawn of Dragonfire Character Interview + Giveaway

Please welcome today's returning guest author Daniel Arenson.  Daniel is the author of Firefly Island, Flaming Dove, Eye of the Wizard, Blood of Requiem, Tears of Requiem, Light of Requiem, and A Dawn of Dragonfire.

Keep reading for a chance to win A Dawn of Dragonfire by Daniel Arenson.

Character interview: Lyana and Bayrin from A Dawn of Dragonfire

EJ:  Today we welcome Lyana and Bayrin, siblings from Requiem, a land of people who can become dragons.  Lyana, let's start with you.  Tell us about yourself.

Lyana:  First of all, you may call me Lady Lyana Eleison.  I am a knight of Requiem, a member of the ancient order of bellators.  I know many people these days no longer bother with titles – my oaf a brother, for example – but I still care about tradition.

Bayrin:  You care about your big head, more like.

Lyana:  Bayrin!  Be quiet!  You will have a turn to speak.  *sigh* Do you see what I must deal with?  Where was I?  Oh yes, as I said, I am Lady Lyana, a knight of Requiem, one of only fifty who guard the realm.  In human form, I have red hair and green eyes.  I turn into a blue dragon with golden horns.  In addition to being a knight, I am betrothed to Prince Orin Aeternum, and will soon be a princess, then a queen consort one day.

Bayrin:  Imagine the size of her head then!  No crown would fit her.

Lyana:  Bayrin!  I might have a big head, but yours is completely hollow!  Will you please be quiet?

Bayrin:  Me?  Be quiet?  How little you know me, dear sister.  In fact, I will now tell the readers a little about myself.  Well... I'm Bayrin.  And... hmmm...

Lyana:  Nothing much to speak of, is there?

Bayrin:  Lyana, quiet!  I didn't interrupt you, did I?

Lyana:  What?  You—

Bayrin:  AHEM!  As I was saying, dear readers, I am Bayrin Eleison.  I can turn into a green dragon (one much faster and stronger than Lyana).  I'm older than Lyana, and much better looking, and quite smarter too, and overall better liked and—

Lyana:  BAYRIN!  Don't lie to people.  I will tell them the truth.  Bayrin, my oaf of a brother, is the biggest blockhead in Requiem.   He is the son of great parents – our father is captain of the City Guard, and our mother is the High Priestess – but do you think he cares?  Do you think he ever tried to become a knight or priest?  No.  He spends his days singing in alehouses, or chasing girls, or sleeping past noon.  The only time he enters the armory is to draw rude drawings on shields.

Bayrin:  Not true!  I’ve entered the armory for more than that.  I once also placed a frog in your helmet.

Lyana:  Place some sense in your head instead!  Bayrin, you are five years older than me.  When will you grow up?  When will you make something of your life?  Come to court now and then!  Pick up a sword and join the army!  Pick up a book and learn to read and write!

Bayrin:  I know how to read and write!

Lyana:  Scribbling rude limericks on alehouse walls doesn't count, Bayrin.  Won't you ever do something with yourself?  At least get a haircut and a shave, you look like a sheepdog.  I swear, Bayrin, if you weren't my brother, I would punch some sense into your hollow skull.

Bayrin:  Ladies and gentlemen, this is the real Lyana.  Forget knighthood or betrothals to princes – it's mostly lectures.

Lyana:  That does it.  It's time for punching!

Bayrin:  Ouch!  Lyana, stop that!

EJ:  I think this interview is over...  We hope you enjoyed meeting Bayrin and Lyana.  You can read more about them in A Dawn of Dragonfire, the first volume of Dragonlore, a new epic fantasy series.






















A Dawn of Dragonfire (Dragonlore #1) by Daniel Arenson.

The people of Requiem, an ancient kingdom, can grow wings and scales, breathe fire, and take flight as dragons. Their hearts are noble, their wisdom great, their kingdom a land of beauty and peace.

This peace will soon burn. From the south, a fire rises. Birds of flame take flight. The phoenixes soar, beasts of heat and wrath, large as dragons and cruel as wildfire. Their purpose is one: destroy the land of dragons.


Requiem's dragons have defeated countless enemies. Their claws are sharp and their flames bright. But how can they fight the phoenixes, creatures woven of sunfire itself?


In 2011, the Song of Dragons trilogy introduced readers to mythical Requiem. Today, after 100,000 copies sold, a new dawn rises. Dragonlore returns to Requiem with an epic story—for both new readers and old fans—of blood, steel, and dragonfire.


Thank you Daniel, Lyana, and Bayrin for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website.  Check our sidebar for links to past interviews with Daniel and his characters.

**A Dawn of Dragonfire Giveaway**

We are giving away an ebook copy of A Dawn of Dragonfire by Daniel Arenson to one lucky winner.

To enter, please leave a comment on this post (include your email address so we may contact you if you win).  This giveaway is INTERNATIONAL.  Giveaway ends October 11, 2012 midnight EST.


Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Cross-Novel Character Interview: Silas A Supernatural Thriller Meets Blood of Requiem












And now for something completely different...

Today we are trying something new.  We have two fabulous authors, Daniel Arenson and Robert J. Duperre, participating in a cross-novel character interview where worlds, and personalities, collide!

There has been a temporal rift in imagination’s space-time continuum.  This causes Ken Lowery and his dog, Silas, from Robert J. Duperre’s novel Silas: A Supernatural Thriller, to have a chance encounter with Gloriae, ill-tempered daughter of Dies Irae, the evil villain from Blood of Requiem, the first book of Daniel Arenson’s Song of Dragons series.  See what happens when three characters from two completely different universes meet…

Gloriae:  So... Ken.  That is what the commoners call you, yes?  Let me understand this.  You are not a warrior.  Not a king nor conqueror nor hero.  Your companion is no griffin, no dragon, not even a mighty steed.  It is but a lowly dog, a creature that begs under tables for scraps.  Why has anyone written a book about you and this flea-infested creature?  Who would want to read about two miserable, lowly beings?

Ken: Um...huh?  Someone wrote a book about me and Silas?  I thought this was an interview about me commissioning a screenplay for Dan Arenson's Blood of Requiem.  And why the hell are you talking to me like that?  Lowly, miserable?  I'm a freaking screenwriter, I'm not some "lowly being."  And why the hell are you wearing armor in the middle of summer?  Aren't you a little, er, hot?  Doesn't she look hot, Si?

Silas: Woof!

Gloriae:  Get that CREATURE off me.  Down, vermin, down!  Now. Ken Lowly, that was your name, correct?  Listen, Lowly.  I wear armor because I fight Requiem's weredragons, an ancient, shape-shifting evil.  A "screen play" for the blood of Requiem?  I do not "play" with weredragons.  Shedding the blood of Requiem is no game, Lowly.  It is a war.  A war that I and my father lead.  That is why I wear armor. This armor of steel, gold, and jewels costs more than anything you'll ever own, so tell this Silas of yours to stop drooling on it, lest I "pat" him with my sword.

Ken: Hey, enough with the attitude, huh?  Let's try to be civil here. And it's Lowery, Ken Lowery, not Lowly.  Oh, and please get that thing away from my dog.  I'm a little wary when he's around sharp objects, what with him only having one eye left and all.

So listen, if we're being civil now, what's up with this "weredragon" stuff?  Sounds pretty interesting if you ask me, even if it's a little out of this world - but believe you me, I GET out of this world. Also, I'm curious why someone as young as you would be so...mean-spirited.  Heck, you can't be more than sixteen years old! My daughter's that age, and all she can think about is texting the cute guy who sits next to her in class.  What the hell happened to you to make you so damn contemptuous?

Gloriae:  I'm eighteen.  And I envy your daughter.  I wish I could think about cute guys and be a normal girl.  But I was raised in war. The weredragons killed my mother, and many of my people, and I've been fighting them since.  They are creatures from a land called Requiem, shape shifters.  They can become dragons at will.  In the old days, they'd burn crops, and topple towers, and terrorize the empire of Osanna.  I was only a little girl in those days.  My father hunted them to near extinction, and I'm determined to find the last survivors, and to bring them to justice.  If I'm mean, and contemptuous, and cold, it is because the weredragons put hatred in my heart.  What happened to your dog's eye, Ken?  Did he lose it in battle?

Ken: Did he lose it in battle?  Well, sort of.  He was actually protecting me from a...ah, hell, it's a long story.  Let's just say that when you say "were"-something or other, I completely get what you mean.

In that vain, damn, those dragons sound like bastards.  Which is weird, because in most of the fiction I've read, dragons are honorable beings, and you calling them weredragons implies they're part human, too.  And your dad...well, let's just say that hunting ANYONE to near-extinction doesn't sound all that kosher, even if they've done some bad stuff.  You sure your daddy doesn't just have some sort of Napoleon complex?  Do you even know who Napoleon is?

Gloriae: Oh, the weredragons claim to be noble.  They call themselves Vir Requis, a horrible name that makes me shudder.  They sometimes walk around in human forms, and sometimes grow wings and scales and fly as dragons.  How can such freaks be noble?  I mean, what would you do, if you learned your dog could also take human form?  The weredragons call me a villain.  They say I'm evil for killing them off.  But I know that I'm a warrior of light, fighting to rid the world of their darkness.

Ken: If Silas could be human?  When that hap...I mean, if that happened, I'd probably love him just as much.  He's my bud, no matter what he looks like.  I'm surprised you wouldn't get something like that.  Kinda narrow minded, if you ask me.  Oh wait, that's right...you're some crazy chick wearing armor in ninety degree weather who's evading questions about her father.  Like I should expect anything more.  Right, Si?

Silas: Woof woof!

Gloriae: My father?  My father is a great emperor.  A lord of light. He taught me everything I know -- how to hate dragons, how to fight, how to kill.  Everything that I am, he made me.  I-- Oh!  Silas!  Stop licking my face.  Down, boy!  Oh dear.  His fur is soft, isn't it? All right, I'll just pat you a little... there.  You like that, mutt? I think you do.

Ken: Oh, wow.  Look at your face!  I didn't know your features could soften so much.  You almost look...feminine.  You know, you look a little like my old neighbor, Jacqueline...only if she was tall and blonde and a little scary.  I guess Silas just has that effect on people.

You know what?  Forget about the questions.  I'm not even gonna reply to your stuff about your father.  Hell, we all got Daddy issues.  I know I sure as hell do.  But I like you.  You're interesting.  Frightening...but interesting.  You'd make a fantastic character study.  Maybe, if you met the right guy, you'd even open up to the softer side of Sears, you know?  Looks like Silas sure thinks so.  I mean, my wife's the only person he nuzzles into like that...

Gloriae:  Ken, would you mind if... I took Silas for a walk?  I think he'd like to go to the park.  Ready, boy?  Come on, let's go!

Ken:  I'm not sure if that's such a great...wait a minute, where you going!  Silas, come!  Glor, where the hell you going?  Why're you walking toward that swirling blue portal?  Oh no, not again.  Silas, listen to me!

Silas: Woof!


Thank you Daniel, Robert, Gloriae, Ken, and Silas for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website and don't miss our past interviews with Daniel and his amazing characters:
Author interview with Daniel Arenson.
Character interview with Eliven (The Gods of Dream).
Character interview with Neev and Romy (Eye of the Wizard).
Character interview with Kyrie (Blood of Requiem).
E.J.'s review of Flaming Dove.

To learn more about Robert J. Duperre and his books, please visit his website and don't miss his fabulous past author interview.
Author interview with Robert J. Duperre.
E.J.'s review of The Fall.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Character Interview: Kyrie (Blood of Requiem by Daniel Arenson)














Please welcome today's special guest Kyrie of Blood of Requiem by Daniel Arenson!  Daniel is author of Firefly Island, Flaming Dove, The Gods of Dream, Eye of the Wizard, and Blood of Requiem.

Daniel:  What is your favorite word?

Kyrie: 
"Requiem." It's the home of my forefathers. The place I'm from, where people can shape shift into dragons.  A mythical land now in ruin. Someday I'll kill the man who destroyed our home.  Someday I'll rededicate Requiem's temples and rebuild her courts.

Daniel:  What is your least favorite word?

Kyrie:
  "Irae."  It's the name of the man who burned Requiem, who killed my family, who drove me into exile.  I hate everything about him; his name, his beak nose, and his freakish metal arm.  I've fought him before.  Next time we meet, I won't let him get away.

Daniel:  What turns you on?

Kyrie: 
Don't tell her I said this, but... Agnus Dei.  She's another survivor from Requiem.  She's eighteen—two years older than me—and she thinks I'm just a little boy.  But I can't help loving her.  She's so strong, beautiful, fiery.  She annoys me a lot, and she's endless trouble, but there's something about her I can't resist.

Daniel:  What turns you off?

Kyrie: 
Her twin sister, Gloriae.  Now there's a girl I could do without.  If Agnus Dei is fire, Gloriae is ice.  If Agnus Dei is passion, Gloriae is hatred.   The girl is like a statue, so cold and hard and unyielding.  I hate everything about her.  I hate those green eyes of hers, which she thinks are so pretty. I hate her golden locks, which she's so vain of.  I hate those perfect lips of hers, which never seem to smile.  In short, Gloriae is horrible.

Daniel:  What sound or noise do you love?

Kyrie:
  The waves outside Fort  Sanctus by the sea.  I spent ten years there. After Requiem fell, and we were hunted across the world, I hid in Fort Sanctus.  It's only a mossy tower rising over the sea, old and crumbly, but it was a home to me.

Daniel:  What sound or noise do you hate?

Kyrie:
  Griffin shrieks.  The griffins toppled Requiem's courts, killed so many dragons, killed my family and friends.  They make horrible sounds, like eagles but louder, crueler.  I hope I never hear them again.

Daniel:  What is your favorite curse word?

Kyrie: 
So many to choose from....  If pressed to choose, I'd have to say: griffinballs.  Can I say that here?

Daniel:  What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?

Kyrie:
  I'm not sure I currently have a profession.  I run a lot, and fight, and get hurt.  I suppose that makes me a warrior.  But that's not something I want.  I never wanted to fight. I've never harmed Irae and his griffins.  I'd love to just live simply, maybe be a farmer.  Maybe that sounds dumb.  Farming isn't very glamorous.  But I'd be happy living simply on a farm with Agnus Dei, raising some animals, raising some crops....  At nights, we'd sit by the fireplace, or watch the stars, and just talk for hours.  We wouldn't have to hide from griffins, or be ashamed that we can turn into dragons.

Daniel:  What profession would you not like to do?

Kyrie:
  Anything indoors.  I wouldn't want to be a scribe, or priest, or cook, or clerk.  I like nature.  I like the sky.  I like shape shifting into a dragon and flying.  That's when I'm happiest; when I'm flapping my wings, tasting the clouds, and gliding high over the world.  Indoors too long, I wither.

Daniel:  If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?

Kyrie:
  We in Requiem believe that when we die, we travel to the constellation Draco, and dine there in starlight halls with our ancestors.  The Draco stars are our gods.  The souls of our forefathers, who joined those stars, guide and comfort us. When I die, my soul will go there too; I'll turn into starlight, and forever dine and drink among Requiem's fallen.  If the stars could talk, I'd like them to tell me:  Requiem will not be forgotten.  Her light will forever shine here, and it will shine again someday over the world below.























Blood of Requiem (Requiem Fire, #1) by Daniel Arenson

A new epic fantasy series begins. Requiem Fire tells a story of blood, steel, and dragonfire.

BOOK ONE: BLOOD OF REQUIEM

Long ago stood the kingdom of Requiem, a land of men who could grow wings and scales, breathe fire, and take flight as dragons. Requiem ruled the sky.

But Dies Irae, a tyrant leading an army of griffins, hunted Requiem's people, burned their forests, and shattered their temples. Requiem fell. This ancient land now lies in ruin, its halls crumbled, its cries silenced, its skeletons littering the burned earth.

In the wilderness, a scattering of survivors lives in hiding. The griffins still hunt them, and every day promises death. Will Requiem's last children perish in exile... or once more become dragons and fly to war?



Thank you Daniel and Kyrie for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

Don't miss our past interviews with Daniel and his amazing characters:

Author interview with Daniel Arenson.
Character interview with Eliven (The Gods of Dream).
Character interview with Neev and Romy (Eye of the Wizard).
E.J.'s review of Flaming Dove.

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Character Interview: Neev and Romy (Eye of the Wizard)


















Please welcome today's returning guest author Daniel Arenson and special guests Neev and Romy!  Daniel is the author of Flaming Dove, Firefly Island, The Gods of Dream, and Eye of the Wizard.

Today we welcome Neev, a young wizard, and Romy, a demon girl.  Both
are characters from the fantasy novel Eye of the Wizard, by Daniel
Arenson.  Neev will be interviewing Romy.

Neev:  "Oh dear.  They have me interviewing Romy now?"

Romy:  "Hiya!"

Neev:  "I thought now that Eye of the Wizard is written and done, I'd
be rid of you."

Romy:  "You're never getting rid of me, Mommy."

Neev:  "Will you stop calling me that?"

Romy:  "Why?  You're a wizard.  You summoned me from Hell.  So now
you're my mommy."

Neev:  "Romy, how can I be your mommy?  I'm a boy.  Just because I
summoned you to Earth doesn't mean that--"

Romy:  "Can I have a lollipop?  Please please PLEASE?"

Neev:  "For Heaven's sake, you're a grown demon.  You've tortured
sinners for a living.  What kind of demon goes around begging for
lollipops?"

Romy:  "A HUNGRY demon.  Me want foooooood."

Neev:  "Romy, how old are you again?"

Romy:  "207.  I'm big!"

Neev:  "And you still act like a baby."

Romy:  "I'm not a baby.  Don't call me a baby.  Just because I like
lollipops, and just because I have a teddy bear named Floofie, and
just because I decorate my pitchfork with ribbons, and just because I
suck my thumb, and just because I sometimes wear a bonnet, and just
because--"

Neev:  "Romy, I get it.  Can we just get this interview over with?"

Romy:  "All right!  And after that, will you play marbles with me?"

Neev:  "No, Romy.  No more marbles."

Romy:  "Tea party?"

Neev:  "No."

Romy:  "Hide and seek?"

Neev:  "No more games, Romy!"

Romy:  "Chess?  I always beat you at chess."

Neev:  "No more chess."

Romy:  "Sour loser.  You cried when I beat you last time."

Neev:  "Romy, I told you already.  I had something in my eyes.  Look.
We have to do this interview already.  I want to go back to my
spellbooks.  First question:  What do you feel the main themes of Eye
of the Wizard are, and how does the author illuminate them?"

Romy:  "Howza what now?"

Neev:  "The literary themes.  The moral purpose of the narrative.  How
does your character's story arch illustrate them?"

Romy:  "Illu-whose-it?  Neev, are you all right?"

Neev:  "Tell us about your character development throughout the novel.
 How does Romy grow and change as the plot unfolds?"

Romy:  "Oh!  I get it.  There was this time in Chapter Twenty, when I
drank some growth potion, and I became a hundred feet tall!  Do you
remember, Neev?  You looked like a little ant to me.  I could have
crushed you!"

Neev:  "Not that kind of character growth, Romy.  I mean:  How did you
develop as a person?"

Romy:  "I'm not a person.  I'm a demon, remember?  You summoned me
from Hell.  You should know that, Mommy."

Neev:  "Stop calling me Mommy!  Are you going to answer these
questions intelligently, or not?"

Romy:  "I'm smart!"

Neev:  "Lovely.  So tell us, Romy.  Do you feel the climax of Eye of
the Wizard presents a moral dilemma, which can only be resolved by
making a personal sacrifice, and if so, how is this choice
foreshadowed, and how does it solve the conflict presented at the
plot's onset?"

Romy:
  "Uhm... yes?"

Neev:  "Yes what, Romy?"

Romy:  "I like turtles!"

Neev:  "That is irrelevent."

Romy:  "Can I have my lolli now?"

Neev:  "*sigh*  Here you go, Romy."

Romy:  "Mmm, yum yum, strawberry.  Thank you, Mommy Neev!"

Neev:  "I'd like to apologize to our readers for this travesty of an--
Romy, Romy, you're not supposed to eat the stick too!  Romy!  Stop
putting the candy in my hair!"























Eye of the Wizard by Daniel Arenson.

When you can't run or hide, you fight back.

On the longest night of the year, a dark wizard murders a knight and his wife.  The knight's children survive and swear revenge. Sam and Jamie vow to become knights like their father. Neev, the middle child, vows to become a wizard.  Five years later, things look grim. Sam is useless with the sword. Jamie is denied knighthood because she's a girl. Neev cannot cast a spell without growing donkey ears, a monkey tail, or an elephant trunk. The siblings feel like failures.  That's when the dark wizard strikes again.  Are the siblings powerful enough to defeat him? Or will they too die at his hands? 



Thank you Daniel (and Neev and Romy!) for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website. 

Don't miss Daniel's author interview here, Daniel's interview of Eliven from The Gods of Dream here, and E.J.'s review of Flaming Dove here.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Character Interview: Eliven of The Gods of Dream

Please welcome today's guest author Daniel Arenson and special guest Eliven from Daniel's new book The Gods of Dream!

Daniel:  Today I'm interviewing Eliven, one of the deadliest creatures
from fantasy novel The Gods of Dream.  She's a demon.  She's evil.
She's sexy.  She's married to Phobetor, the God of Nightmare, and
plans to help him destroy the land of Dream.  Welcome, Eliven!

Eliven:  Where are the kittens?  I was told there would be kittens to eat.

Daniel:  Sorry, no kittens.  We only told you that so you'd agree to
the interview.

Eliven:  How delightfully evil and conniving.  I'd kill you on the
spot, were I not so impressed with the ruse.  I might still kill you
later.

Daniel:  Tell us about yourself, Eliven.

Eliven:  What do you mean?  I'm Eliven!  I'm the Queen of Nightmare.
I'm a legendary terror.  Everybody knows me.

Daniel:  Everybody in the lands of Dream and Nightmare, yes.  But
we're doing this interview for humans on Earth.  They're still
unfamiliar with you.

Eliven:  Oh, the earthlings will know me soon enough.  After my
husband and I destroy Dream, we'll go after Earth.  Soon all the
mortals will dream of me every night… and wake up drenched in cold
sweat, screaming in terror.  Dream will fall in no time, don't you
doubt it.  And Earth is next.  But for now--fine.  I will tell you
about myself.  I'm thousands of years old, but I don't look a day over
twenty.

Daniel:  You've aged well.

Eliven:  A diet of kittens does wonders.  For those who haven't yet
seen me in their nightmares, I'll describe myself.  I have deep red
skin.  I have sharp claws and fangs.  My wings are wide and leathery,
and when I flap them, they cause storms. My hair is woven of
dragonfire, and my tail can knock over a mountain with one flick.

Daniel:  You're very powerful.  But you're still only
second-in-command of Nightmare.  Have you ever wanted to rule
Nightmare yourself?

Eliven:  Oh, I love my husband.  You know him as Phobetor, the God of
Nightmare.  To me he's Phobey, my beloved.  I worship him, as will all
of you soon.  Soon you will all know his strength, as I do.

Daniel:  You're a devoted wife.  Is Phobetor a devoted husband?

Eliven:  Well… I love my Phobey.  But I admit that when he talks about
Moonmist, that girl from Dream that he loves, I get jealous.  So
jealous I could kill him and her!  Why can't Phobetor love only me?
Why must he also love another woman?  Why?!  Moonmist is even on the
cover of The Gods of Dream.  I would have made better cover art.  I'm
much more beautiful, aren't I?  Excuse me.  I need to go… smash a few
boulders now, and kill a few defenseless animals.

Daniel:  You seem upset.  So Phobetor is not loyal to you.

Eliven:  Look.  Why are you talking so much about my husband?  This
interview is about me.  Let's talk about how beautiful I am.  Or how
deadly I am.  Or… let's talk about how soon, I'll be the Queen of
Dream as well as Nightmare.

Daniel:  Why do you want to rule Dream, too?  Isn't Nightmare enough?

Eliven:  Dream has always belonged to us.  Did you know that Phobetor
is from Dream?  He was banished.  They tossed him out.  But Dream is
his birthright.  I, as his queen, will rule it beside him.  Dream will
be ours.  Once we take over, we'll get rid of their trees, and
waterfalls, and sandy beaches.  We'll kill all the fairies and
animals.  Dream will become a province of Nightmare, our empire – a
land of fire, ash, and terror.  A land that will worship me.  And then
earthlings will have no more good dreams.  They'll dream about nothing
but me – beautiful and terrible.

Daniel:  I certainly hope that doesn't happen.  Is there no way to stop you?

Eliven:  Well… the gods of Dream think those kids Cade and Tasha can
stop us.  But really.  Cade and Tasha?  They're only humans.  They're
weak.  They're scared.  There's no way they can defeat me and
Phobetor.  So let them try.  Let them go on their little quest against
us.  It'll be fun to kill them.

Daniel:  Readers will have to pick up The Gods of Dream to see if Cade
and Tasha succeed.

Eliven:  No point.  There's no way Cade and Tasha can stop Nightmare.
But sure.  If any readers want to find out what I already know, let
them read The Gods of Dream.  They'll only read how I'll kill Cade and
Tasha, probably right on the first page.

Daniel:  Would you also like to read the book?

Eliven:  Read books?  I eat books.  And kittens.  They're delicious.
Now I'm hungry.  I'm going to look for food.  Goodbye, weak mortal.
See you in your nightmares.

Daniel:  Goodbye, Eliven, and thank you for this strange but
enlightening interview.























The Gods of Dream by Daniel Arenson.

Discover the world of dreams and nightmares....

What are dreams? Some think they are figments of our mind. But what if they were wisps of a distant, magical world… a world you could visit?  Twins Cade and Tasha discover Dream, the land dreams come from. It is a realm of misty forests, of verdant mountains, of mysterious gods who send dreams into our sleep. Cade and Tasha seek solace there; they are refugees, scarred and haunted with memories of war. In Dream, they can forget their past, escape the world, and find joy.  Phobetor, the god of Nightmare, was outcast from Dream. Now he seeks to destroy it. He sends his monsters into Dream, and Cade and Tasha find their sanctuary threatened, dying. To save it, the twins must overcome their past, journey into the heart of Nightmare, and face Phobetor himself.  Discover a world of light and darkness, of hope and fear, of dreams and nightmares. Discover The Gods of Dream. 


Thank you Daniel and Eliven for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website and don't miss his recent author interview here.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Guest Author Interview: Daniel Arenson












Please welcome today's guest author Daniel Arenson!  Daniel is the author of Firefly Island, Flaming Dove, and newly released this week The Gods of Dream.

EJ:  When did you begin writing?

Daniel: 
I wrote my first story when I was fifteen years old.  It was a fantasy about reptilian creatures who destroy a castle, and a squire who escapes the carnage and goes on a quest to defeat the creatures’ master.  It wasn’t great literature, and thankfully the manuscript has been lost to the ages.  I’ve been writing (and hopefully improving) since then.

In 1998, when I was eighteen, I sold my first story.  The ezine that bought it paid me $28.  I continued writing and selling short stories for the next few years.  In 2007, Five Star Publishing (an imprint of Gale) released my first novel, Firefly Island, in hardcover.  I’ve been focusing on my career as a novelist since.

EJ:  What brought you to the paranormal genre?

Daniel: 
I was inspired to write Flaming Dove, a story of angels and demons battling for the Holy Land, after a trip to Israel.  I visited a Crusader’s fort on the beach, and thought about how men fought over this land for thousands of years, how even Heaven and Hell are prophesised to one day war here.  I decided to write a novel about Armageddon, but not the story we’re used to.  In my book, Heaven will not win the battle of Armageddon.  The hosts of demons and angels will beat each other into a bloody standstill that rolls into a long, endless war of attrition.  This premise not only fascinates me, it also parallels aspects of the current situation in the Middle East.

I decided to make my main character half angel, half demon, torn between both worlds.  I thought this, too, could make a powerful statement and create powerful drama.

Finally, I love the visual aspect of this setting – the bat wings, the fire, the visions of countless angels and demons battling in the skies, war amid crumbling desert ruins, a mix of ancient swords and modern guns….  It’s fun and visceral.

EJ:  If you could be any paranormal or have any one supernatural talent, what would it be? Why?

Daniel:
  I’d choose to be able to read minds.  I think that would be more powerful than any other talent.  Information is true power, after all.  And I'd win all my poker games.

EJ:  Tell us why readers will enjoy your new release.

Daniel:
  I’d like to quote author David Dalglish, speaking about my novel Flaming Dove:  "It's really very simple: if you want to read about angels tossing around godlight and demons lashing whips and shooting fire while super-powerful archangels and archdemons blow up half the world trying to crush each other....well, here you go."

EJ:  If your book(s) were being made into a movie, who would you cast for the leading roles? Why?

Daniel:
  Laila, the main character, is half angel, half demon.  She is dark, torn, haunted, an outcast.  She is also very strong, and is deadly with her Uzi and grenades.  I would cast Mila Kunis to play her – I think she can portray Laila as being outwardly tough but inwardly vulnerable.

Beelzebub, a fallen angel, is the main antagonist to Laila.  He is also her former lover.  He’s a hopeless womanizer, the charismatic leader of Hell, and more of an anti-hero than a true villain.  I’m not sure who should play him; it would have to be somebody Laila would both love and hate.  My female friends suggest Johnny Depp or Clive Owen, and I trust them.

The archangel Michael, the leader of Heaven’s hosts, mentors and trains Laila to fight Beelzebub.  He’s a flawed hero, a character who fights on the side of good, but who struggled with internal doubt and fear.  He tries to be honourable in this war, but finds himself jaded, and doesn’t hesitate to lie when necessary.  He is gruff, taciturn, and world weary.  Possibly Russell Crowe could play him well, showing a tired old warrior who’s still got some fight in him, but who carries a weight of much horror and bloodshed.























Flaming Dove by Daniel Arenson

Outcast from Hell. Banished from Heaven. Lost on Earth.The battle of Armageddon was finally fought... and ended with no clear victor. Upon the mountain, the armies of Hell and Heaven beat each other into a bloody, uneasy standstill, leaving the Earth in ruins. Armageddon should have ended with Heaven winning, ushering in an era of peace. That's what the prophecies said. Instead, the two armies--one of angels, one of demons--hunker down in the scorched planet, lick their wounds, and gear up for a prolonged war with no end in sight.In this chaos of warring armies and ruined landscapes, Laila doesn't want to take sides. Her mother was an angel, her father a demon; she is outcast from both camps. And yet both armies need her, for with her mixed blood, Laila can become the ultimate spy... or ultimate soldier. As the armies of Heaven and Hell pursue her, Laila's only war is within her heart--a struggle between her demonic and heavenly blood.

Thank you Daniel for joining us here today at From the Shadows!

To learn more about Daniel Arenson and his books, please visit his website.

Check out E.J.'s review of Flaming Dove by Daniel Arenson here.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Book Review: Flaming Dove






















Flaming Dove by Daniel Arenson.

Outcast from Hell. Banished from Heaven. Lost on Earth.The battle of Armageddon was finally fought... and ended with no clear victor. Upon the mountain, the armies of Hell and Heaven beat each other into a bloody, uneasy standstill, leaving the Earth in ruins. Armageddon should have ended with Heaven winning, ushering in an era of peace. That's what the prophecies said. Instead, the two armies--one of angels, one of demons--hunker down in the scorched planet, lick their wounds, and gear up for a prolonged war with no end in sight.In this chaos of warring armies and ruined landscapes, Laila doesn't want to take sides. Her mother was an angel, her father a demon; she is outcast from both camps. And yet both armies need her, for with her mixed blood, Laila can become the ultimate spy... or ultimate soldier. As the armies of Heaven and Hell pursue her, Laila's only war is within her heart--a struggle between her demonic and heavenly blood.

Laila is born of angel and demon, her mixed blood a curse that bars her from both Heaven and Hell, so she must fight for the one place she calls home...earth.  Flaming Dove is an action packed urban fantasy that dares to challenge the reader to question the traditional roles of good and evil.  The apocalypse has come and gone, but the war between Heaven and Hell continues.  Earth is a wasteland where angels and demons slaughter each other with no regard for human life.  Heaven and Hell are deadlocked, but there is one woman who could tip the balance...for either side.  Laila is half demon and half angel, a deadly combination that gives her strength to rival the strongest archangels and archdemons, but she doesn't belong to either side.  Laila swears allegiance to no man, angel, or demon, but when the one place in all of existence that she can call home is threatened she must make a choice.  Will she side with Heaven, for which her half sister fights, or will Laila fight alongside her former lover Beelzebub the current ruler of Hell?  Flaming Dove presents an interesting look at the gray areas of good and evil.  These aren't just your usual pure of heart angels and slithering evil demons...though there are also those in abundance.  Arenson presents a dark and gritty look at armageddon and a kick butt heroine who comes armed with fangs, claws, and an uzi.  A thought provoking dark fantasy novel filled with non-stop action and intriguing characters.

I recommend Flaming Dove to readers of urban fantasy, paranormal suspense, and especially to fans of dark fantasy.

Don't miss author Daniel Arenson's visit to From the Shadows tomorrow December 27th!

Source: This book was provided by the author or publisher for honest review.


Flaming Dove on Amazon.
Flaming Dove on Goodreads.

**Update: Flaming Dove giveaway at Goodreads February 6-March 6, 2011**