Showing posts with label Dark Fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dark Fantasy. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

The Reaper’s Quota by Sarah McKnight – Spotlight & Blog Tour

The Reaper's Quota by Sarah McKnight blog cover


Today, I’m featuring a spotlight for a book I wanted to read but didn’t get the chance to. It’s called The Reaper’s Quota by Sarah McKnight.

The Reaper’s Quota was in the top 10 books in the Book Blogger Novel of the Year Award for 2022 (BBNYA 2022).

 

A bit about the book

Book title: The Reaper’s Quota

Author: Sarah McKnight

Publisher: Self-Published

Length: 190 Pages

Genre: Dark Humor, Satire, Young Adult

Publication Date: 10 November 2021

 

Book Synopsis:

Meet Grim Reaper #2497. Behind on his work, he must complete his quota of thirty Random Deaths or face termination in the worst way. Faced with an insurmountable task and very little time to complete it, Reaper #2497 struggles to hang on to the one thing he's not supposed to have - his humanity.

 

Add The Reaper’s Quota on Goodreads.

 

About the Author

Sarah McKnight has been writing stories since she could pick up a pencil, and it often got her in trouble during math class. After a brief stint teaching English to unruly middle schoolers in Japan, she decided she wasn’t going to put off her dream of becoming a writer any longer and set to work.

With several novels in the making, she hopes to tackle issues such as anxiety, depression, and letting go of the past - with a little humor sprinkled in, too. A St. Louis native, she currently lives in Pennsylvania with her wonderful husband and three cats.

You can find her on Twitter @mcknight_writes and her website www.sarahmcknightwrites.com.

Find The Reaper’s Quota by Sarah McKnight on Amazon Canada, Amazon UK, and Amazon US.

 

About BBNYA

BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 finalists and one overall winner. 

If you’re an author & would like to learn more about the BBNYA competition, you can visit the official website at http://www.bbnya.com or Twitter @bbnya_official.

BBNYA is brought to you in association with the @Foliosociety (if you love beautiful books, you NEED to check out their website!) and the book blogger support group @The_WriteReads.

Thursday, November 17, 2022

By the Hand of Dragons: Rook by Alexzander Christion – Spotlight post

I’m shining a spotlight on yet another novel featuring dragons and this time chimeras too!

This book is a semi-finalist in the Book Blogger Novel of the Year Award (BBNYA).

Now let me introduce you to… *drum roll*

 

By the Hand of Dragons: Rook by Alexzander Christion



 


Book info

Publisher: Self-Published

Length: 551 Pages

Genre: Epic Dark Fantasy, Adult 

Date of Publication: 20 February 2019

Find the book on Amazon Canada, Amazon US, or Amazon UK.

Add By the Hand of Dragons via Goodreads.



 

Blurb

Sheath has just learned that he is not a boy, but a Chimera, a weapon created by powerful dragon magic to be the perfect warrior and win a war almost one believes is coming.

One of an army of 300 child soldiers, he must master every art of war and become powerful enough to defeat a threat that frightens even the Council of Dragons.

Can a boy, no matter how powerful his magic, win against assassins, politicians, giants, the Blood Soldiers of Loria and all the strange creatures, beasts and monsters that call Fuumashon home? He would say yes.

 



About the author:

Alexzander Christion Author Photo
Crafted and trained in South Florida, Alexzander grew up in sunshine, nice weather and bad schools. Son of a professional kickboxer and a church choir director, Alexzander had a happy eclectic childhood.

A student and lover of music, art and all things martial, he is a military veteran and also an avid anime, comic book, movie, tv and video game nerd.

He received his degree in TV and Film production as well as Communications in Frederick Maryland where he lives with his wife and three kids. If you get the chance, you really should talk to him, awesome dude.

 

About BBNYA:

This year, the Book Bloggers' Novel of the Year Award (BBNYA) is celebrating the 50 books that made it into Round Two with a mini spotlight blitz tour for each title. BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 10 finalists and one overall winner.

If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website or take a peek over on Twitter. BBNYA is brought to you in association with the @Foliosociety (if you love beautiful books, you NEED to check out their website!) and the book blogger support group @The_WriteReads.

 

Check out more BBNYA spotlights on Nadaness In Motion

All the Whys of Delilah’s Demise by Neve Maslakovic

Becoming Animals by Olga Werby and Christopher Werby

Earthlings: The Beginning by Ray Star

Emma and the Minotaur by Jon Herrera

The Iron Crown by L.L. Macrae

Miss Percy's Pocket Guide to the Care and Feeding of British Dragons by Quenby Olson 

Ascension of the Phoenix by Jessica Piro 

Don’t Think a Single Thought by Diana Cambridge

The Chocolate Clouds by Marc Remus

Dragon's Reach by J.A. Andrews 

The Oracle Stone by Talli L. Morgan


Thursday, September 1, 2022

With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte – Book Review

 

With Fire in their Blood by Kat Delacorte Tour Banner


 

Today, I'm featuring a book review for a different kind of read. This post is part of a blog tour but that did not affect my review in any way!


“Trust is an illusion in this city. Our hatreds run too deep.”

 

With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte is a modern young adult fantasy set in a medieval Italian town. It’s got magic, very strange relationships, political intrigue, and tons of twists and turns.

The book opens with Lilly, who lives with her father after her mother killed herself a few years before. From the first page, we see Lilly refer to her parents by their first names, Jack and Carly, not mum and dad. It shows the clear distance that has built up between them over the years.

book cover of With Fire in their Blood by Kat Delacorte

Lilly tells the reader how her relationship with her mother was never a good one and how she felt like her mother didn’t want her. She also says her father was a different man before Carly’s death him hard.

With Fire in Their Blood is narrated in Lilly’s first-person perspective so we see everything through her eyes. There are no other narrators in the book. Despite that, the reader can clearly see Lilly’s misgivings and naivety even if she can’t.

“The more I thought about this city, the more unsettling it became.”

Now Jack is more of a zombie, who decides to take Lilly to a distant off-the-beaten track town in Italy called Castello, claiming a new start.

But Castello…Castello is literally a beast of a town. Medieval looking. It catches your breath the moment you lay eyes on it. But then… you discover that it’s not what it seems.

Castello is a town that has been ravaged by warring clans for centuries. Now a man – only referred to as The General – controls the city and has divided the clans, the Marconis and the Paradisos.

Lilly finds herself on the Marconi side, which is like the poor side of the city. Mingling with the Paradisos is forbidden except for one day of the year.

This distinguishing reminded of Utopia, a dark post-apocalyptic Arabic novel by renowned Egyptian author Ahmed Khalid Tawfik. While the books’ premises and settings are worlds apart, the idea of a country (or town) divided into poor and rich is the common factor.

In Castello, the Saints are evil. Bad people with magical abilities. But reportedly all dead.

When I picked up With Fire in Their Blood, I wasn’t sure what to expect. What I was definitely not prepared for was the political intrigue Kat Delacorte had penned in this book. If there’s anything I loved above all else in this book, it’s the political intrigue.

It’s relatable (no I won’t elaborate) and done really well. It reminded me of the tactics used by the pigs in George Orwell’s Animal Farm. While the stories are entirely different, the methodology is the same. (If you haven’t read Animal Farm, then go pick it up now!)

Like many army-led political regimes, we see how The General has ingrained certain beliefs in people’s heads. Slowly, Lilly learns who the Saints were and what they did. How the last war started and how The General came to power.

“The Saints were the children of hell. Born blighted and unnatural with fire in their blood. Stained dark by sorcery and loathsome in the eyes of the light.”

And like any army-backed regime, The General emerged with his Enforcers who ensure that there are no Saints and that no one breaks The General’s law.

Though With Fire in Their Blood wins in imagery, foreshadowing, and political intrigue, it isn’t successful with characterization. I honestly couldn’t like Lilly. I tried but I couldn’t.

While there are many characters in With Fire in Their Blood but there aren’t any likable ones. And that put me off a bit. I didn’t hate Lilly but I didn’t like her either.

“The girl staring back at me was pale and shadowed, her dark hair a tangling mess. Something feral about her, difficult to tame. I was glad of that, because it hid how brittle I felt on the inside. Like there was another girl, a scared, lost one, locked below my ribcage, threatening to claw her way to the surface if I didn’t watch out.”

What I did like is that Delacorte created a truly broken main character. As a reader, I don’t see that often in books.

But Lilly isn’t the only broken character. Like the town of Castello, everyone is broken – in a way. I think this brokenness – along with Castello’s regime – has made the characters too shallow.

Another thing I disliked about Lilly is how she literally falls for half of the characters in the book! It was annoying. While I realize she’s 16 and discovering herself and sexuality, I felt it was too much. If it breathes, she’ll fall in love with him/her/it. For me it was forced. Kind of like when Netflix wants to force down certain ideas in its productions.

Another thing that stood out for me – not in a good way – was that some scenes weren’t logical to me. The trial was one of them.

On another note, something I hadn’t realized it before, but while writing this review, I noticed that Delacorte added lots of imagery and foreshadowing in the early chapters. Foreshadowing always gets extra points from me.

“After the dreams, I’d feel jittery and unsettled all day, my skin hot, my headache building behind my temples. It was as if there was a storm brewing inside me – like my body was rebelling against the town.”

I must say I found the book cover quite pretty and dark at the same time.

Overall, I found With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte an interesting and fairly fast-paced read with interesting political intrigue and imagery. The characters needed more work but it was a good read.

 

Overall rating for With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte: 3.5 stars

 

Note: I received a free copy of With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte as part of The Write Reads blog tour.


More images to come here and on Instagram

 


Wednesday, April 22, 2020

A Collection of Dreamscapes by Christina Sng – Book Review

Book: A Collection of Dreamscapes
Author: Christina Sng
Genre: Poetry Collection, Twisted Fairy Tales, Dark Poetry
Publisher: Raw Dog Screaming Press
Publication Date: 16 April 2020

Number of pages: 170


A Collection of Dreamscapes by Christina Sng is a poetry collection divided into 5 sections and featuring an array of beautifully dark poems.


I particularly enjoyed the rewritten "Fairy Tales" and "Myths and Dreamscapes" sections.

A Collection of Dreamscapes opens with "Allegra," a 5-star stunning and beautiful mythological story within a poem. I absolutely loved this one. I must note though, that the poems in this opening section should be read in order – as I realized – but you will enjoy them nonetheless.

As I said, I loved the "Fairy Tales," where Sng takes on common tales like Little Red Riding Hood, Snow White, Beauty and the Beast and twists them all. Sng also has several different stories/poems about a single fairy tale, like Rapunzel.

My favorites were: "Little Red," "Snow," "The Girl from the Tower," "Jack and the Giants," and "The Mermaid."

"Snow," the poem on the Snow White and Seven Dwarves tale, is different from anything I've read. Sng introduces ideas such as social media into the story. That said, I felt the poem was a bit long, less poetic in some places, and unbelievable in others. Still, it was definitely a far cry from the prince charming theme known for these types of tales but still Snow White wasn't the strong woman, unlike Sng's version of The Red Riding Hood.  

An interesting take is Sng bringing the modern world into the fairy tales. Interesting but a bit jarring still. You can find this in "Snow" and "Rapunzel."

"Beauty Sleeps for a Century" is a good rewrite of the Cinderella story, however, there was a significant repetition of "but" throughout that, for me, disturbed the flow of the poem.



I also liked how Sng mixed some of the tales together as you'll see in "Cinderella," "Always a Beast" and "Living Well Is the Best Revenge."

I absolutely loved "When There Are Monsters." It’s a dark and powerful piece and easily relatable to the real world, where monsters aren't just confined to books or TV screens.

The poem "The Monsters Within" is one of the more gruesome pieces in A Collection of Dreamscapes. It sent shivers down my spine. Similarly, "Violation" is a dark, gruesome and heartbreaking piece.

"In the Tall Grass" is a full on sci-fi poem. And I've never read a poem like it before. It's interesting, exciting, and definitely different.

I absolutely loved "The Lady of the Lake," with Sng's take on it; dark but brilliant. I wish I can quote it whole.



"The Joy of Sewing" is a creepy and gruesome piece that reminded me of the movie The House of Wax.

One recurring problem for me with A Collection of Dreamscapes is that many of the pieces read as more prose than poetry. An example of this is seen in "The War of the Fall," which has a great story but is not very poetic. I also found the sequence of the poem to be a bit confusing.

I have no problem with free verse, I write in it mostly myself but when writing in free verse there is a fine line between just dividing your sentence and having poetic flow to the piece. At the end of the day, you want people to read your free verse pieces as poems not as a newspaper article.

Other recommended pieces in A Collection of Dreamscapes: "Margritte of Mer," "Concepts," "Lobotomy," "Annalise Wanders the Forest," "Noonwraiths," and "The Tooth Collector."

Overall rating for Christina Sng's A Collection of Dreamscapes: 4 stars

Originally I rated this collection 3 stars, but upon an inspection while writing the review, I think the book deserves 3.75 to 4 stars.

Note: I received an advanced reader's copy (ARC) of A Collection of Dreamscapes by Christina Sng from Erin Sweet Al-Mehairi. This review is part of National Poetry Month.



Saturday, April 18, 2020

Ship of Death by Nada Adel Sobhi - Poem



Through high wind
And a bloody red sky
The Ship of Death sails
A beast of the seven seas

Traversing perilous waters
Carrying nightmares
From centuries past

Come high water
Come rain, lightning, and thunder
Come bellowing beasts
From the dark depths

Nothing shall stand
Before the Ghost Ship of Death

Written Friday, 10 April 2020 at 02:02 am
Inspired by a painting by J Edward Neill on Twitter

Artwork by J Edward Neill

Follow J Edward Neill on Twitter and Instagram for some amazing dark artwork and books.

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Adventures of Death, Reincarnation and Annihilation by Francis H. Powell - Guest Post


Today, I'm featuring a spotlight and guest post for a book I couldn't pick up but I'm excited about.

Meet Adventures of Death, Reincarnation and Annihilation by Francis H. Powell.

It's a collection of short stories from the Horror, Fantasy, and Scifi genres.



Synopsis:
What if the human race was considered irrelevant and then each being was just uploaded then locked away on hard drives called "brain pods" ?

What if a sub species was to come into fruition, then the human race turned on it, hunted it down before trying to annihilate it? Imagine you found out you were an ancient soul, who is reunited with another being from your former life?

Set in different times in a variety of settings and time periods, the past, the present and the future, the book explores the inevitable unknown that lies before us all "death". Death can arrive in a multitude of forms. Each part of the book explores different themes. There are characters who following their demises have to face up to their lurid pasts. There are some who face annihilation and others who are in a crazy pursuit of world destruction. We are living in an age in which it appears that the doomsday clock is ticking ever faster, as we teeter over the edge of world destruction. The book aims to contain some ironic twists. Even as young children we build up nightmare visions of what death involves. The reader is often left to distinguish between what is real and what is not, as stories reside within stories and the storytellers can never be fully trusted. Not all the book is doom and gloom, there are Elsa Grun's bizarre encounters with men and Shellys' hapless husband Arnie.

From secluded beach houses, to obscure motels, to visions of heaven, which takes the form of the Hotel Paradiso, to the world of the future death is always a wild adventure.

Guest post by author Francis H. Powell
BOOKS ON THE GO

How should an author work?
As a painter I would often work on perhaps, five or more paintings at the same time.  Maybe this is due to my style as a painter.  This links the works together, gives them a cohesion.  The paintings become a series, perhaps similar thoughts are in my mind, as I slap paint on each, in a feverish state.



What about stories?
Should a writer rigidly stick to one?  Go from start to finish? No distractions as to other works?
I was working on a project last year,  it is pretty much finished, it has to be rounded off. I have dedicated a lot to this book.  It has taken a lot of research, because it is set in Italy in the past.
However I haven’t worked on it in a long time.  It is gathering dust in my hardrive.
I feel sure to go back to it and hopefully with vigour.
Like with paintings, you can leave them for a long time, then go back to them and see new unexpected evolutions.
I went to my home country for Christmas and returned to where I live in France angry.
My anger was to do with politics and Brexit, a story that keeps  rumbling on, devouring hours of media time.
I felt impelled to write a book about the subject of Brexit, however a political  spoof.
It was remarks by family members that set me off.
Face to face I might be shouted down, but in a book I can express myself.
The book bares  some of the hallmarks of some of my previous work, but in other ways it doesn’t resemble my usual style.  I am usually writing short horror stories, but recently have a book published with elements of Fantasy and Science Fiction.
This book has become a bit of an obsession.
Last year my mind was a bit languid, perhaps a bit of “writer’s block” the beginning of this year has begun with a flourish  of ideas.

I don’t know how other authors work, perhaps in a more orderly way to me. or are they chameleon-like, with several books on the go?
Your thoughts please.

(Leave your thoughts in the comments section below this blog post)

Add Adventures of Death, Reincarnation and Annihilation by Francis H. Powell on Goodreads.
Purchase the book via Amazon and Barnes & Noble.



GIVEAWAY
This post is part of a blog tour organized by Silver Dagger Tours, so check out the rest of the tour HERE along with a giveaway!


About the Author
Born in 1961, in Reading, England Francis H Powell attended Art Schools, receiving a degree in painting and an MA in printmaking. In 1995, Powell moved to Austria, teaching English as a foreign language while pursuing his varied artistic interests adding music and writing. He currently lives in Brittany, France writing both prose and poetry. Powell has published short stories in the magazine, “Rat Mort” and other works on the internet site "Multi-dimensions." His two published books are Flight of Destiny and Adventures of Death, Reincarnation and Annihilation.
Connect with Francis H. Powell on social media via his Website * Facebook * Twitter * Amazon * Goodreads