Tuesday, January 24, 2017
Release Day: @JeffeKennedy's The Forests of Dru
Today, we're celebrating our Sunday captain Jeffe Kennedy's launch of the latest in her High Fantasy series The Sorcerous Moons! This week's topic is all about our pets, and while Chuffta would strenuously object to being referred to as a "pet," there is no doubt Princess Oria would be lost without her little dragon sidekick.
THE FORESTS OF DRU
An Enemy Land
Once Princess Oria spun wicked daydreams from the legends of sorceresses kidnapped by the barbarian Destrye. Now, though she’s come willingly, she finds herself in a mirror of the old tales: the king’s foreign trophy of war, starved of magic, surrounded by snowy forest and hostile strangers. But this place has secrets, too—and Oria must learn them quickly if she is to survive.
A Treacherous Court
Instead of the refuge he sought, King Lonen finds his homeland desperate and angry, simmering with distrust of his wife. With open challenge to his rule, he knows he and Oria—the warrior wounded and weak, the sorceress wrung dry of power—must somehow make a display of might. And despite the desire that threatens to undo them both, he still cannot so much as brush her skin.
A Fight for the Future
With war looming and nowhere left to run, Lonen and Oria must use every intrigue and instinct they can devise: to plumb Dru’s mysteries, to protect their people—and to hold fast to each other. Because they know better than any what terrifying trial awaits…
Labels:
Jeffe Kennedy,
Release Day,
The Forests of Dru
Fantasy Author.
The Immortal Spy Series & LARCOUT now available in eBook and Paperback.
Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I release a new book.
The Immortal Spy Series & LARCOUT now available in eBook and Paperback.
Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I release a new book.
Monday, January 23, 2017
I have no pets.
I know that I'm supposed to show pictures of my pets here, but I have none. Instead, I will simply cut and paste a story about the last pet that I had. I still miss the little guy.
Dinner For One: Part Twenty-Eight “Sanity and happiness are an impossible
combination.” –Mark Twain“Only love lets us see normal things in
an extraordinary way.” –Author UnknownAs I write this I’ve turned in the latest
rewrites on two rather long short stories, resubmitted a series proposal to my
agent and have also spent the better part of the last week working the day job
without a break. This is my first day off in a while. As you might have
guessed, I don’t really do days off very well. There’s not much to them for me.
I do the day job and I work: I stay at home and I work. There are exceptions,
of course, but not really that many.
That’s okay. I’ve always been a bit of a workaholic. Okay, maybe not
always, but since I met Bonnie at the very least. It’s not that I don’t like
having fun. I do. I happen to find the notion of having fun high on my list of
things I like, in fact, but I don’t always have the same definitions as a lot
of people around me. I genuinely enjoy both the day job and the writing. They
both help pay my bills, and as an added bonus, the retail gig at Starbucks lets
me get out of the house and meet people. Without that one I’d very likely be a
hermit.In the morning I will be burying another
pet. One of my very rare exceptions and a constant companion for several years.
This time around a very special little fellow whose formal name was “Donnie
Ducko.” He was named, rather tongue-in-cheek, by Bonnie after the movie we’d
watched about a week before, Donnie Darko. As you might have guessed by the
name, he was another duck. He was also raised by us from the time he was one
day old or less, and he was a bit unique. His nickname was Little Bit, because,
of course, he was just a little bit of fluff when we got him.
While we were at the park one day,
handling the feeding and care of Bonnie’s adopted masses and keeping them from
the road, a man came up with a small blue bucket and asked if we knew anything
about baby ducks. Said bucket contained heavily chlorinated pool water and one
very tiny duckling. Bonnie immediately said yes. Long story short, we adopted
another duck. In this case he’d been caught on the filter door of a swimming
pool that had just been bleached. He was caught on the door. His five siblings
were pulled into the filtration system and drowned.
Little Bit was not waterproof. The
chlorine from the pool had stripped most of his new-hatched glands and he would
never be properly waterproof. He was also agoraphobic, and so was an indoor
duck.For around nine years he’s been my
constant companion. For the last couple of years we mourned Bonnie together,
two bachelors in a house with too many rooms and too much junk.
And he is gone. I have no doubt
whatsoever that he is winging his way to Bonnie even as I write this. I will
miss him very much and I already miss him enough to leave me feeling a little
punch-drunk again.
I am remembering in particular a time
about five months before Bonnie passed away. As I have said on more than one
occasion I was often astounded by her strength: with everything she was going
through she kept her good spirits by and large and she fought hard to keep
herself alive. But on that
particular night, just as I was putting Little Bit to bed (in his cage in the
bathroom, where he could not get into any mischief) I came out and she had
tears in her eyes.
Naturally I asked what was wrong. Bonnie
looked at me and shook her head and said, “I just love him so much and it kills
me to think that he won’t be around as long as me. I don’t think I could take
it if he died.” What could I do or say? I held her and reminded her that he
would not have even been alive if not for her, and that whatever time he had in
the world was a blessing. She cried a bit more and said she knew she was being
silly. I told her she wasn't being silly at all. The heart wants what the heart
wants, and I have never run across a person who had a good heart that wished to
be without their loved ones in this world.
One more reason not to be angry with
Bonnie’s passing, I suppose. She did not have the heartbreak of losing her
little boy, the closest she truly ever had to a child to call her own.
When I put him in his bath tonight he was
quiet and barely swam around. I knew what was coming. As mentioned previously,
you get to understand the signs if you look for them. Within an hour he was
gone. Nine years, give or take. More than he’d have had in the outside world.
Seven years of bringing Bonnie joy every day, even on the rare occasions when
she dreaded life without him.
One last time then, I will cry over the
loss of a duck. Foolish man that I am, I opened my heart again. It’s almost a
guarantee of pain. A promise of suffering to come. I should know that I
suppose. Had I a lick of common sense, I would look at the words of Mark Twain
that are posted at the top of this particular essay and I would wish
desperately to be sane above and beyond all else. Sanity would be wiser, I
think. Sanity would mean not opening my heart, not risking my feelings any
longer. Not once again testing the human soul’s capacity for grief.
A duck. A waterfowl. A feathered bird
that always made Bonnie happier and yes, made the loss of my wife just a tiny
bit more tolerable. If sanity and happiness are an impossible combination, than
surely sanity and grief must also be impossible. So surely sanity would be the
wiser choice.
But there are still people out there who
have already won their way past my defenses. And even if I wanted to shut
myself off completely from the world, I don’t genuinely believe that would be
the wiser thing to do here.
As I write this, a friend of mine is just
leaving the hospital with heart troubles. As I write this, another friend is
hours or days away from giving birth. As I write this there are people laughing
and crying all over the world. As I write this, life is occurring all around
us, and death, too. They still go hand in hand, much as I might currently wish
for a different end result.
As I write this I find I am once again
crying, and trying to find the damned keys on my keyboard past the tears that
are blurring my vision. That’s fairly common when I write these particular
articles. They deal, unfortunately, with matters of the heart.
As I write this, the logical part of my
mind is telling me I’m an ass for crying over a duck and I am gleefully,
insanely, telling my mind exactly where it can go and how little I care what
logic has to say.Because as I write this, I can remember
the sound of Bonnie calling out “Little Bit!” In a loud, joyous voice after we
got back from dialysis and I settled her on the bed to rest, and I can also
hear the sound of our house duck lifting his head and calling back to her with excitement.
Bonnie was always happy to see her baby
boy. And Little Bit, the silly little duck we rescued from a very certain
death, the waterfowl who we took home and raised and kept and fed, who spent
part of each night on the bed between us and who liked eating lettuce shreds
almost as much as he liked throwing them across the room when he was eating
them, he was always happy to see his momma. It may not have been a biological
thing, but there was most decidedly love and joy between the two of them.
I’m a romantic. I asked him to tell his
momma I said hi and that I love her and miss her.
I suspect she already knows.
It is what it is.
I write fiction, a little of everything and a lot of horror. I've written novels, comic books, roleplaying game supplements, short stories, novellas and oodles of essays on whatever strikes my fancy. That might change depending on my mood and the publishing industry. Things are getting stranger and stranger in the wonderful world of publishing and that means I get to have fun sorting through the chaos (with all the other writer-types). I have a website. This isn't it. This is where you can likely expect me to talk about upcoming projects and occasionally expect a rant or two. Not too many rants. Those take a lot of energy. In addition to writing I work as a barista, because I still haven't decided to quit my day job. Opinions are always welcome.
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Meet the Pets!
Check out the awesome cover for the fourth Sorcerous Moons book!! It releases Tuesday, January 24, but you can preorder at a few retailers. The blurb:
An Enemy Land
Once Princess Oria
spun wicked daydreams from the legends of sorceresses kidnapped by the
barbarian Destrye. Now, though she’s come willingly, she finds herself in a
mirror of the old tales: the king’s foreign trophy of war, starved of magic,
surrounded by snowy forest and hostile strangers. But this place has secrets,
too—and Oria must learn them quickly if she is to survive.
A Treacherous Court
Instead of the refuge
he sought, King Lonen finds his homeland desperate and angry, simmering with
distrust of his wife. With open challenge to his rule, he knows he and Oria—the
warrior wounded and weak, the sorceress wrung dry of power—must somehow make a
display of might. And despite the desire that threatens to undo them both, he
still cannot so much as brush her skin.
A Fight for the Future
With war looming and nowhere
left to run, Lonen and Oria must use every intrigue and instinct they can
devise: to plumb Dru’s mysteries, to protect their people—and to hold fast to
each other. Because they know better than any what terrifying trial awaits…
****************
This week on the blog, we're featuring the pets of the SFF Seven.
(Or ferns, in some cases, maybe. Or the neighbor's pet - we shall see!)
Here at Chez Kennedy, we have two semi-famous pet residents. At any rate, pics of my Maine coon cats get more attention than posts about my books a lot of the time.
Not that I'm jealous.
Much.
Okay, I'm not bothered at all because Jackson and Isabel bring light and love into our lives. They're an integral part of my and David's day to day.
Isabel is the older kitty. In fact, tomorrow, January 23, is her eleventh birthday!! Happy birthday, Isabelly!! I'm not saying I sing to my cats, but if I did, my song for her might be to the tune of "Cinderelly" from the Disney version and goes "Isabelly, Isabelly, she's a beauty, Isabelly." She is, too. She's a blue smoke, and does look blue in some lights. She also has a lovely smile.
Jackson is our tuxedo boy. He turns five this year in March, and tends to get more press because he's always getting into trouble. Where Isabel is all about Zen grace, Jackson is irrepressible. Just yesterday I found him hanging out by the bouquet of lilies - with orange pollen all over the white of his muzzle. He just HAD to stick his face in the flowers. (Don't worry - he didn't eat any. Neither of them are plant-chewers.)
Labels:
Cats,
Isabel,
Jackson,
Jeffe Kennedy,
SFF Seven Pets
Jeffe Kennedy is a multi-award-winning and best-selling author of romantic fantasy. She is the current President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) and is a member of Novelists, Inc. (NINC). She is best known for her RITA® Award-winning novel, The Pages of the Mind, the recent trilogy, The Forgotten Empires, and the wildly popular, Dark Wizard. Jeffe lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She is represented by Sarah Younger of Nancy Yost Literary Agency.
Saturday, January 21, 2017
On the topic of Killing Characters
Ever since - SPOILER - the first time I read Little Women as a child, and was devastated by the death of Beth, I have an aversion to reading books where beloved characters die. Much less to writing them.
No, I'm not Pollyanna. I know - none better - that beloved heroic people die in real life and sad things happen. Every day in fact. I can even handle the occasional death of a character who's been a part of a series for several books and then meets their fate. Do I like it? No. If I enjoy the book or the series enough, I do keep reading and kinda blot that incident out in my head frankly.
Yeah, by now you've guessed I'm not a Game of Thrones fan. No disrespect intended to those who
are, or to the skills of the author - just not my thing. I'm amazed I hung in there with "The Walking Dead" and "The 100" TV shows...so I guess I do make occasional exceptions in my entertainment choices.(And I admired fellow SFF7 Jeffe's choice regarding Prince Hugh, as she discussed last Sunday in her post. It was a shocking scene, it had impact, it set up lots of key stuff for the later books...and I kinda never liked him all that much anyway. I love her Twelve Kingdom series by the way.)
When I was contemplating this week's topic, I drafted quite a long and detailed explanation in my head for you, explaining why I quite consciously do NOT write books very often where people I/we love end up dying. But you know what? I decided not to go there. Everyone has sad events in their lives. I'm not unique.
What I decided as an author a LONG time ago, was to write stories I wanted to read, full of action and adventure and romance and a very happy ending for the vast majority of my characters. I may not be able to control real life and fend off tragedies for people, but I can damn sure control the events in my own books.
So if you're in the mood for a dark story where characters you've invested in and care about die, you won't be picking up one of my novels, and that's perfectly FINE. I have nothing but respect for authors who write in that style.
It's just not me and I'm happy writing what I write. (Waves from my happy optimistic corner.)
Best Selling Science Fiction & Paranormal Romance author and “SciFi Encounters” columnist for the USA Today Happily Ever After blog, Veronica Scott grew up in a house with a library as its heart. Dad loved science fiction, Mom loved ancient history and Veronica thought there needed to be more romance in everything.
Friday, January 20, 2017
Ding Dong the Dude Is Dead
Weeeeeell. Could last week's meme post have segued any more smoothly into this week's? I don't think it could.
I think I've provide graphic proof that I have no issue with killing of whoever needs killing. Bad guys. Innocents. Not so innocents. Folks who were in the wrong place at the wrong time - few are safe from me. And it's probably a character flaw of mine, but since those deaths happen solely to serve the story, I may be guilty of using death as plot device.
Remember fairytales? Not the ones Disney fed you - the dark and creepy tales the Brothers Grimm actually wrote - where Cinderella's step mother maimed her own daughters to get the glass slipper to fit? The penalty in those old, dark stories is almost always death. There's something ancient and bloodthirsty in the human psyche - something that whispers for the deaths of those who transgress, who keep the hero or heroine from what is rightfully theirs. No wonder genre fiction likes to off the bad guys. On some primitive level, it just feels right.
That's the bad guys sorted, but what about when it's a good guy or gal who bites it? I'll be straight with you here. It's emotional manipulation. Yep. Truth. You are being twisted into giving a crap about a character, you're being led to invest emotionally, and then you're being hauled nose first right into your own fear of death. Have I killed off good guys? Of course. SPOILER ALERT: There are likely to be more who take a dirt nap. Why? Not because I intend for you to work through your existential dread over what happens when you die - though, according the ancient Greeks, that's exactly what you're doing - that's the premise for all those tragedies they wrote. Catharsis - purging emotion. I'm not Greek. I kill off good guys because in every battle, in every crisis, in every situation with high stakes, some people learn the lessons that allow them to survive and some don't. Every action a hero or heroine takes has consequences. Sometimes, those consequences include the deaths of allies. Characters who could have been the heroes of their own stories. These are the deaths I try to be most careful with. I roll my eyes at every movie that murders some dude's family/girlfriend/partner in the first ten minutes (y'know, to motivate him) so I am very careful to not use character death as some kind of goad. That's just my particular peeve. If a character is to die, it needs to be the culmination of that character's arc - NOT a blip on someone else's arc, if you see the difference.
The one thing I can say is that I ended a book on a character's death. The series was later canceled by the publisher (not because of the death!) I'd intended to answer the question of whether that character had actually lived or died in the third book - only I didn't get to do a third book. This was not a happy thing for anyone. So. Killing characters is often necessary. Both from a story standpoint and from a character standpoint. But if there's any ambiguity about the demise, don't leave yourself and your readers hanging unless you're already contracted for the next book.
I think I've provide graphic proof that I have no issue with killing of whoever needs killing. Bad guys. Innocents. Not so innocents. Folks who were in the wrong place at the wrong time - few are safe from me. And it's probably a character flaw of mine, but since those deaths happen solely to serve the story, I may be guilty of using death as plot device.
Remember fairytales? Not the ones Disney fed you - the dark and creepy tales the Brothers Grimm actually wrote - where Cinderella's step mother maimed her own daughters to get the glass slipper to fit? The penalty in those old, dark stories is almost always death. There's something ancient and bloodthirsty in the human psyche - something that whispers for the deaths of those who transgress, who keep the hero or heroine from what is rightfully theirs. No wonder genre fiction likes to off the bad guys. On some primitive level, it just feels right.
That's the bad guys sorted, but what about when it's a good guy or gal who bites it? I'll be straight with you here. It's emotional manipulation. Yep. Truth. You are being twisted into giving a crap about a character, you're being led to invest emotionally, and then you're being hauled nose first right into your own fear of death. Have I killed off good guys? Of course. SPOILER ALERT: There are likely to be more who take a dirt nap. Why? Not because I intend for you to work through your existential dread over what happens when you die - though, according the ancient Greeks, that's exactly what you're doing - that's the premise for all those tragedies they wrote. Catharsis - purging emotion. I'm not Greek. I kill off good guys because in every battle, in every crisis, in every situation with high stakes, some people learn the lessons that allow them to survive and some don't. Every action a hero or heroine takes has consequences. Sometimes, those consequences include the deaths of allies. Characters who could have been the heroes of their own stories. These are the deaths I try to be most careful with. I roll my eyes at every movie that murders some dude's family/girlfriend/partner in the first ten minutes (y'know, to motivate him) so I am very careful to not use character death as some kind of goad. That's just my particular peeve. If a character is to die, it needs to be the culmination of that character's arc - NOT a blip on someone else's arc, if you see the difference.
The one thing I can say is that I ended a book on a character's death. The series was later canceled by the publisher (not because of the death!) I'd intended to answer the question of whether that character had actually lived or died in the third book - only I didn't get to do a third book. This was not a happy thing for anyone. So. Killing characters is often necessary. Both from a story standpoint and from a character standpoint. But if there's any ambiguity about the demise, don't leave yourself and your readers hanging unless you're already contracted for the next book.
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Perils of the Writer: When Characters Have To Die, When Characters Have to Kill
I'm fortunate so far, in that I've yet to get any significant pushback on killing any characters in my books. To which I saw: wait for Imposters of Aventil.
(Because I'm not entirely truthful about no blowback-- there's something there that one of my betas found devastating.)
I tend not to be the "let's be horrible to my characters" kind of writer. Not out of any specific gentleness-- deaths and serious injury are abound. But I think you need to make those moments matter, and therefore you can't cheapen it too much with frequency.
Or, rather, you need to set a tone. If the tone is set at "Horror", then you've got to kill characters left and right. That's what Horror is supposed to be: a setting where You Will Not Survive is the default that characters have to work out of.
I write Fantasy Adventure books where the tone is equivalent to, say, the superhero shows on the CW. Each one has it's own specific rules about killing and death, of course, and as the writer I have to respect that tone.
By which I mean, it's not just about if characters die, it's how my characters approach lethal force. To continue the CW parallels:
- Veranix in the Thorn books is closest to Arrow, in that using lethal force isn't necessarily an ideal, but it's also not off the table. Sometimes the situation will-- in Veranix's mind-- render it necessary. He's out there in life-or-death fights, so he can't hold back in the moment.
- Minox and Satrine in the Maradaine Constabulary are closest to The Flash. They serve as officers of the law, and so their mandate is a clean arrest and proper justice. They strive to do things the "right" way, bring someone in alive. That doesn't mean that lethal force never happens, and they don't struggle with it... but they take it very seriously. Also, most of the time the people who die in these stories start out dead to begin with.
- Asti, Verci and the rest of the Holver Alley Crew of the Streets of Maradaine are closest to Legends of Tomorrow, in that between their darker pasts and operating outside of the system, they don't hesitate at lethal force when the situation calls for it. They're anti-heroes who do what they have to.
- Finally, Dayne of the (hopefully) upcoming Maradaine Elite series is very much Supergirl. That's all I'll say about him for now.
Hopefully, when a beloved character does get killed (perhaps in Imposters of Aventil, now available for pre-order?), you'll understand the brave and bold choices I've made there.
A reminder that I'll be at ConFusion this weekend, and if you are there and want to get you're hands on an ARC for The Holver Alley Crew, there's a way detailed here.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
On Killing Characters
A List of Killed Characters off the Top of my Head:
Numerous characters from Game of Thrones
Numerous characters from the Walking Dead
Spock/Kirk when facing Khan
Mary on Sherlock
Jack from Titanic
**I could go on but I have a post to write. (;
I consider myself a level-headed, thoughtful person. I believe the Golden Rule is valuable and that the commandments were a pretty good list overall. And yet:
1.) I want Arya or Tyrion or Daenerys or Grayworm or SOMEONE to beat the shit out of Cersei Lannister and cut her vile throat.
2.) I want someone to take out Negan.
Let's compare the difference in the level of vehemence in my two statements above.
GOT: Cersei is a horrible, conniving person bent on keeping her family in power. She reads people well, anticipates their motives and acts to thwart any effort she sees as a threat. She's not afraid to unleash her vengeance-but there's a trigger beforehand. I feel she deserves to die more than most on the show who have been killed, but I have to admit last season they made me admire her inner strength. The deaths and the violence, in my opinion, feel in line with the time period and the social constructs. This 'realism,' I think, is part of what maintains my emotional investment.
**I'm no expert on the historical eras GRRM draws on for inspiration, so I have to note that WILLING SUSPENSION of DISBELIEF is a factor here.
TWD: Negan is a horrible and manipulative person, but I find him crossing the line into evil because he enjoys setting people up to fear him and to fail in order to have the excuse to hurt, maim or kill them. Watching the Walking Dead with him in it is something that must be akin to watching a snuff film. And while my writer brain understands that he is the embodiment of a level of evil that will force Rick & Co. to accept the risks of loss to up their game, I find I can no longer suspend my disbelief. I was emotionally invested until the season opener. Since then, there seems to be a personal distance. I still root for Rick & Co., but the fire has dissipated.
WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH WRITING?
KILLING CHARACTERS SHOULD HAVE UNDENIABLE IMPACT.
I can prove it with one word:
HODOR
In my series, I killed a character in FATAL CIRCLE (#3) who I liked so much I've thought of going back and writing her story, set a few decades earlier. I did not intend at the outset to kill her. I had a different plan. But when that moment came, I knew it was right. How did I know? See #3 below.
In books, characters die (much as they do in life) in a few ways:
1.) Random/unforseeable accident/health issue or complication
{Guy killed by raptor in Jurassic Park}
VALID BECAUSE:
it happens in real life ok, maybe not killed by raptor, but you know what I mean
the aftermath for the survivors will show their character and possibly growth
2.) Murdered {Abraham, Glenn; Qui-Gon Jinn}
VALID BECAUSE:
it happens in real life
it shows how far your villain is willing to go
the aftermath for the survivors will show their character and possibly growth
murder and/or revenge continue to be suscessful stories
3.) Self sacrifice {Kirk/Spock facing Khan; Hodor; Mary from Sherlock; Obi-Wan}
VALID BECAUSE:
it happens in real life
it shows how far your hero/ine is willing to go
it shows how far the cult leader & group are willing to go
in the aftermath if the hero/ine is/isn't changed by this tells us something
4.) Suicide
VALID BECAUSE:
it happens in real life
in the aftermath if the hero/ine is/isn't changed by this tells us something
If you're killing a character in your story,
the real question to me...the real root of it is:
How does the story change without them?
Unless you're writing an out of sequence time tale, or plan to write prequels, once you kill a character, they are gone. Their impact should not be. Whether their death hurt the hero/ine or whether it was a two-paragraph entry that defines the villain, if it is there it should have meaning beyond that death scene. If it was a beloved character, the impact for your readers will resonate. Make it count!
I'm the author of the PERSEPHONE ALCMEDI SERIES: #1 - VICIOUS CIRCLE, #2 -HALLOWED CIRCLE, #3 -
FATAL CIRCLE, #4 - ARCANE CIRCLE, #5 - WICKED CIRCLE, AND #6 -SHATTERED CIRCLE, several short stories, and the IMMANENCE SERIES: #1 - JOVIENNE.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Die, Damn You, Random & Beloved Characters, Die!
Those third act deaths are either the Great Glorious Come Uppance or the Ghastly Gutting of the Soul.
Yes, I usually know who is going to kick it in the third act from the beginning of the crap draft. That character owns the burden of pushing the protagonist the hardest. Their death symbolizes the Goal Achieved. Sometimes it's a merciful death or the final sacrifice. Other times it's hubris.
The trick is balancing the deaths.
Too many and the reader doesn't care; they're inured. Too few and the story rings hollow; after all, the value of life is driven by the inevitability of death. Not every death has to be gruesome. Not every set up for the dying should be intricate. Not everyone has to die by the antagonist's or the protagonist's hand. Oh, and don't overlook a good maiming; it can deliver equal--or better--emotional resonance.
All that said, if you're reading one my books, someone will die, folks. Usually a lot of someones.
However, I guarantee you, it'll never be the dog.
Labels:
beloved characters,
KAK,
killing off characters
Fantasy Author.
The Immortal Spy Series & LARCOUT now available in eBook and Paperback.
Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I release a new book.
The Immortal Spy Series & LARCOUT now available in eBook and Paperback.
Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I release a new book.
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