Our goal is to spread word about the *Night Creatures* series so that it’s published all over the world. So PLEASE help us out! To have a chance at winning the earrings, you have to post this message as many places as possible on the Internet:

***I’m addicted to the Night Creatures trilogy by Marianne de Pierres. Can’t wait for Shine Light, book 3, to come out in November 2012.***

Once you’ve done that come back here and share those links with us so we can check. We’ll be looking for the most links shared, AND, the links that reach the most people ie pages with lots of members.

GO FORTH AND WIN EARRINGS AND SPREAD NIGHT CREATURES LOVE!

2nd prize is a copy of either Burn Bright or Angel Arias.

Open internationally!

Competition deadline extended until Monday 28th May!



Here’re some piccies from Marianne’s weekend speaking at the Bundaberg WriteFest. As you can see she had a great time!



I am having SO much fun with the Monster high series of books by Lisi Harrison.

Book 1 Monster High was about Frankie and her struggle to fit in at Merston High.

Book 2 The Ghoul Next Door was about Cleo learning that not everything in life will go her way.

Book 3 Where there’s a Wolf, there’s a Way, was about Clawdeen finding her own path separate from her brothers.

Then we have the fourth and final book in the Monster High series, Back and Deader than Ever.

Draculaura (Lala ) feels like she never measures up to her Dad’s expectations, and when he proposes that the RAD’s (Regular Attribute Dodgers) start their own school separate for the ‘normies’ (regular humans), it is up to Lala to stop the reversion back to the days when RAD’s and ‘normies’ lived apart. She has to find a way to keep the RAD’s at Merston High and make her Dad proud.

There is still a high level of brand and product placement as with the other three books, and if that’s not your thing you may find hope in the underlying message of the series, which, in case you missed it is, be yourself and live an authentic life.

We so often see our characters portrayed as outcasts and misfits, and it’s their journey into popularity and more often than not, their eventual shunning of the popular crowd that signifies their success. This is not the case here.

In this instalment we are watching a popular girl bust her guts to keep her friends together. There isn’t any useless kowtowing or annoying teen angst (at least from our lead character). Lala does her best and though it’s not easy, manages to stay polite. This is something I think needs to be written about more often. You don’t have to be a bitch, kiss butt or give up your morals to get the job done.

For all the heavy ‘meaning’ I’ve been touting about, Back and Deader than Ever is still the same fun romp through the world of the RAD’s. If you loved the other three, you’d be foolish to not pick up the final book in the series.

http://www.lisiharrison.net/

Paperback, 272 pages

Published May 8th 2012 by ATOM

ISBN 0316099171 (ISBN13: 9780316099172)



“She will not stand alone.”

It’s been five years since the Darkswarm attacked the Keep of the Winds, leaving a trail of blood and destruction in their wake and irrevocably changing Malian, the Heir of Night’s, life forever.  Now thought to be dead in the wilds of Jaransor, Malian has been anything but idle in her exile. Not only has she developed her own powers into something the Swarm should respect (if not fear), she’s been hunting down every rumour of the presence of the Derai magic workers. Malian is more determined than ever that her people will not fall victim to the twisted dark tide of magic heading their way.

But not all accept tales of Malian’s death. Her enemies are on the hunt once more. Suspicion falls on the two heralds so instrumental in her survival, Tarathan and Jehane, who find themselves caught up in a web of intrigue and murder at the Ijiri Festival of Masks. Fleeing to save their own lives, they bring word of death on the wall and a call of duty and honour that Malian must answer.

Yet, despite five years of searching, the legendary weapons of the Derai’s greatest hero remain lost. Without them a return to the wall promises only defeat and death. Does Malian really stand a chance?

This Gathering of the Lost not only easily matches the brilliance of its predecessor but in many ways it surpasses it. Like all good epic fantasy sequels it’s bigger and better than ever and with another killer ending.

Lowe has taken the world to a whole new height that will leave you utterly addicted to the series. The action has been amped up another octane, the magic is more compelling than ever and the political intrigue perfectly woven throughout the plot.

I was staggered by the complex characterisation in the first book  – but this time I was left breathless.  Lowe has done a magnificent job of shaping and changing her characters, especially Malina and Kalan, by the events that have befallen them without losing that essential spark that had the reader so invested in their journey in the first place. The five year gap between adventures not only feels real when it comes to the characters, but for the reader as well.

Lowe has achieved a balance of light and dark throughout and the well-placed twists and turn will have the pages simply flying by. This is the series all lovers of fantasy young and old simply must have on their bookshelves. Lowe looks set to become a household name of the genre. I certainly can’t wait to see what new twists and turn she brings us next with “Daughter of Blood”.

The Gathering of the Lost-Helen Lowe

Orbit

555 Pages

ISBN: 978-0-356-50057-7

Released: April 2012



1. Hi Helen, thank you so much for dropping by and visiting Burn Bright.  The second book in the Wall of Night series, “The Gathering of the Lost” has recently been released. Can you tell us a bit about the series for those of us who haven’t yet experienced life with Malian?

Helen: Hi Cels, it’s lovely to be here with you today on Burn Bright. Now, for a bit about the series…

The Wall of Night is a quartet and what I call epic or high fantasy. It’s about a world of shadow and conflict where the alien Derai people are locked into aeons-old conflict with an ancient enemy, the Swarm of Dark (or Darkswarm)—but have been divided by civil war with its legacy of prejudice, suspicion and fear. I wanted to explore that ‘fatal flaw’—so although the Derai vs Darkswarm conflict is still important and has its own twists and turns to play out, the focus of the story is as much on the Derai’s internal conflicts and their relationships with other societies. It’s also very much a story of alarms and battles, adventure and mystery, friendship and love, as well as what Robin Hobb has called “strange magic, dark treachery, and conflicting loyalties.”

The first book, THE HEIR OF NIGHT, centres on Malian, the Heir to the warrior House of Night, who discovers both the full bitterness of that legacy and realizes that she has to resolve it. The second protagonist is Kalan, a young man thrust into a hateful life who is fighting to break free. The reader’s knowledge of both the wider world of Haarth and the main characters should deepen in THE GATHERING OF THE LOST although a central question is whether Malian and Kalan’s interests, after five years’ separation, remain as aligned as they were in THE HEIR OF NIGHT. Kalan, for example, hated the life forced on him by Derai society, so why would he want to return? While Malian, at the end of the first book, pledged her word that she would try and save their world – but she still lacks allies, as well as the hero’s weapons of power. Other fears revolve around whom, in a world of conflicting ambitions, she can truly trust – and even whether, given her great power, she can trust herself? As well as just how much she is prepared to sacrifice, including others and their aspirations, to fulfil her duty to the Derai Alliance and save Haarth.

Don’t get me wrong though, this is still a story of tournaments and flights by night, plots and magic, duty and honor—as well as romance. The characters are five years older you see…

2. I was instantly enraptured with “The Heir of Night” and for me it certainly hit all the high notes of an epic fantasy. You describe yourself on your website as “a lover of story” and it certainly shows in your own writing. Most avid readers have that one book that changed their life and started their love affair, which book was it for you?

Helen: Cels, I am so glad that you enjoyed HEIR—with it recently making the shortlist for the Gemmell Morningstar Award, which as you know is reader voted, I am discovering that quite a few other people have as well, which is always nice for an author to know!

But in terms of a book that changed my life—you know, I don’t think I can point to just one: there are so many books that I love and in many cases have loved for a long time. I am, I fear, a pluralist!

But one of those special books is Roger Lancelyn Green’s Tales of Troy and Greece, which I was given at around age 10. I was already an enthusiast for both Greek and Norse myths and legends, but there was something particularly real and compelling in Green’s retelling of several of the major stories. I have read many versions of those same stories, and many other classical works and reworkings since then. But I still feel that Tales of Troy and Greece was the route marker that set me firmly on the path to short stories such as The Brother King and Ithaca, and to poems like my Ithaca Conversations sequence, as well as establishing the strong mytho-heroic influences on my novels, Thornspell and The Wall of Night series.

Another special book is Marion Zimmer Bradley’s The Mists of Avalon, which was the very first retelling of the Arthurian legends I encountered—and I loved it! I was enthralled by its interweaving of Celtic myth and real history, and the combination of politics and battles and magic, romantic and sexual relationships—but most of all that the entire story was told from the perspective of the women in the Arthurian cycle. That was definitely a first for me in my Fantasy reading and one I liked, opening up the notion that women’s history and women’s voices in storytelling had something to say: something that mattered.

3. Not only are you a published author but you’re an accomplished poet as well. Is there any chance we may see a project from you blending the two crafts even further?

Helen: I suppose it’s possible, but I do think of my novels and my poetry writing as diverse forms that may arise from the same creative impulse but evolve in very different ways. I tend to write poems in response to a specific moment of seeing or feeling. Prose works may spark in the same way, and usually there is an initial image or idea, but taking that flashpoint to a novel length work requires long hours of committed discipline. So I think the main connection between the two is a love of story and language arising out of the same creative well. This may lead to a project drawing on both forms “one day;” I certainly don’t rule it out but I can’t see it happening in the immediate future.

4. Which of your fictional characters “burns brightest” in your mind and why?

Helen: Well, I really don’t have any one favourite character because I find that whichever character I am working on at a particular time is the one I am most interested in. Some characters are definitely easier to work with than others, but often you appreciate what you have achieved with the difficult characters more. The Earl, for example, was a difficult character to write, because I wanted to convey the shadings in a personality who is not necessarily that likeable at face value. So he was hard work—but at the same time I appreciate the character because of the hard yards required to get him right. Conversely, I have a fondness for Asantir because she stepped into the book more or less fully formed and told me that she was important to the story, so I had better pay attention. Needless to say, I have been paying attention ever since!

Cels and Marianne—thank you so much for having me to spend time with you here on Burn Bright.


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