Showing posts with label Mayra Calvani. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mayra Calvani. Show all posts

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Guest Blogger: Mayra Calvani, Author of Dark Lullaby

I'm thrilled to welcome back Mayra Calvani today. She is talking about the inspiration behind her supernatural/psychological thriller, Dark Lullaby. I'm fairly certain this was the first book by Mayra that I read and I loved it. You can read my thoughts on it here.


At a tavern one Friday night, astrophysicist Gabriel Diaz meets a mysterious young woman. Captivated by her beauty as well as her views on good and evil, he spends the next several days with her. After a while, however, he begins to notice a strangeness in her…especially the way she seems to take pleasure in toying with his conscience.

The young woman, Kamilah, invites him to Rize, Turkey, where she claims her family owns a cottage in the woods. In spite of his heavy workload and the disturbing visions and nightmares about his sister’s baby that is due to be born soon, Gabriel agrees to go with her.

But nothing, not even the stunning beauty of the Black Sea, can disguise the horror of her nature…

In a place where death dwells and illusion and reality seem as one, Gabriel must now come to terms with his own demons in order to save his sister’s unborn child, and ultimately, his own soul.

Purchase at Amazon!

The Story Behind Dark Lullaby by Mayra Calvani

I lived in Turkey during my twenties. It was an incredible experience. Not only did I learn to speak Turkish, but I also made wonderful friends and learned a ton about their customs and folklore.

Many Turkish people believe in the cin (pronounced ‘jean’). Not the jinn as westerners know it; you know, the genie that comes out of magic lamps. The cin is a much darker creature that could be lightly compared to the fairy. In Turkish myth, it is a being that lives in the forests. It can be good or evil. It is of spirit form but can shapeshift into an animal or human. Like the western fairy, it is often volatile, mischievous and prone to pranks, some of which can be deadly.

Now, want me to get creepy? It has a bizarre taste for human liver and, when in human form, its feet are set backwards.

Oh, and those little lights that you often see in the woods on warm summer nights, otherwise known as fireflies? They aren’t fireflies. They’re cin.

I was darkly fascinated by the accounts I heard, fascinated enough to write a novel. Thus, Dark Lullaby was born.Of course, I mixed the real tradition with my own fictional lore, thus creating a new type of supernatural being.

But it wasn’t only Turkish folklore that inspired me. The cin sparked my creativity into starting the story, but there were other influences.

I’ve always been very interested in moral dilemmas and in the concepts of justice and a higher good. For instance, is it okay for a man to steal in order to save his little girl, who is dying? In the case of Dark Lullaby, I went a step further: is it okay for a man to kill for the higher good? This question is the central theme in the story.

My love for astronomy and cosmology was another major influence. I wanted my protagonist to be an astrophysicist, a man of science, someone whose thoughts and beliefs were ruled by logic and reason, this way there would be tension when I made him face the unexplained world of the supernatural. The result is that he falls into a state of psychosis, to the point where the reader must wonder if what is happening is real or imaginary.

So many things can spark our creativity, but it’s those things that deeply touch us and we feel passionate about that can really infuse our fiction with truth and authenticity.

Dream Realm Awards Finalist!

Reviews:

“Mayra Calvani is a masterful storyteller… Dark Lullaby is complex and compelling…” –Habitual Reader

“Dark Lullaby is an atmospheric paranormal horror that grips you from page one and refuses to let go until you’ve raced, breathless, to the end.” –ePinions

“Dark Lullaby is a page-turner. A horror story from the top shelf! You’ll love it.” –5 stars from Euro-Reviews

“This is a terrific horror…” –Harriet Klausner

“Dark Lullaby will capture you with its rich descriptions, its exotic location, and the need to uncover the dark secrets hidden within its pages.” –Cheryl Malandrinos, The Book Connection

Mayra Calvani writes fiction and nonfiction for children and adults and has authored over a dozen books, some of which have won awards. Her stories, reviews, interviews and articles have appeared on numerous publications such as The Writer, Writer’s Journal, Multicultural Review, and Bloomsbury Review, among many others. When she’s not writing, reading, editing or reviewing, she enjoys walking her dog, traveling, and spending time with her family.

ONLINE LINKS:
• Website www.MayraCalvani.com
• Blog www.thedarkphantom.wordpress.com
• Facebook https://www.facebook.com/mayra.calvani
• Twitter https://twitter.com/mcalvani
• Goodreads http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/272703.Mayra_Calvani


Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Summer Reading: Sunstruck by Mayra Calvani

Daniella is an architecture student living with her narcissistic artist boyfriend in San Juan. Abandoned by her father at an early age, Daniella always falls for the ‘wrong’ type of man. Her most enduring male relationship so far has been with her cat.
   
Several strange mysteries are threaded through Daniella’s everyday life: her ex-husband, Ismael, has just opened an outlandish hotel for animal lovers that has her distraught; Ismael’s wife, a rich woman Daniella fondly refers to as ‘Lady Dracula’, has some gruesome ways to keep her skin looking young; Daniella’s mother is founding a revolutionary, feminist society called The Praying Mantises; the island’s national forest is being depleted of hallucinogenic mushrooms; meanwhile, young girls are disappearing and there’s a nut loose dressed as Zorro slashing the rear ends of women who wear miniskirts.  

Oppressed by all these eccentric characters, Daniella feels herself falling into an abyss. Then something terrible happens, making Daniella wake from her stupor and take charge of her life.

What reviewers are saying…

“Dark and quirky humor coupled with quixotic characters adds to the surprising mix found in Sunstruck… I've never read a book remotely like it. Everything from the humorously weird to the acutely macabre can be found between these covers, and then some.” –Laurel Johnson, Midwest Book Review


"Sunstruck is like a nutty Whodunit with a little twist. Who really is in the Zorro costume? With all the crazy characters I caught myself pointing fingers again and again. A great read that will make you forget where you are, while you giggle yourself to complete oblivion from all the silliness." Autumn Blues Reviews


About the author…


Award-winning author Mayra Calvani has penned over ten books for children and adults in genres ranging from picture books to satire to paranormal fantasy novels. She’s had over 300 articles, short stories, interviews and reviews published in magazines such as The Writer, Writer’s Journal and Bloomsbury Review, among others. She has lived in America, Asia, the Middle East, and now lives in Brussels, Belgium.



Purchase info…



Title: Sunstruck
Author: Mayra Calvani
Author web site: http://www.mayracalvani.com/
Publisher: Twilight Times Books
url: http://twilighttimesbooks.com/
ISBN: 978-1-60619-024-2
Genre: Parody/Satire
Format: ebook in pdf, ePub, Kindle, Mobi, PRC, etc.
Distributors: Amazon Kindle; Apple iBookstore; BN.com Nook; eReader; Fictionwise; Kobo Books; OmniLit; Sony eBookstore, etc.
Release date: July 15, 2012
Price: $5.95
Pages: 160
Chapter excerpt: http://twilighttimesbooks.com/Sunstruck_ch1.html

Monday, October 10, 2011

Halloween Book Special from Mayra Calvani

This month brings the release of a new book by talented author, Mayra Calvani.

In a bazaar in Istanbul one evening, ten-year-old Alana Piovanetti sees a man standing in the shadows. He smiles, and over time she convinces herself that it was just her imagination that placed sharp fangs amongst those flashing teeth.

Twelve years later, Alana is surprised when she is chosen to manage a new restaurant opening in her home city of San Juan. She has neither training nor experience to justify her success. But La Cueva del Vampiro has the kind of ambiance she adores, for Alana has always had a penchant for horror and the dark side of life. Yet she is also plagued with dreams of dark sensuality, dreams that take on shattering reality when she meets the stunningly handsome, charismatic Sadash.

For Sadash is the man she saw in the shadows so many years before…and Sadash isn’t human….

You may read the prologue and first chapter here: http://twilighttimesbooks.com/EmbracedbyShadows_ch1.html


To celebrate the release of her paranormal suspense novel, Embraced by the Shadows, now available on Kindle for $2.99, she is giving away two of her other ebooks for free: Dark Lullaby and Cat Cellar and Other Stories and they’re available in various formats on Smashwords.

Dark Lullaby - https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/94529
The Cat Cellar and Other Stories -https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/95031

You can read my review of Dark Lullaby by clicking here.

These two ebooks are only available for free until Halloween night, so visit the Smashwords site now to pick up your copies. Don't forget your purchase of Embraced by the Shadows. I'm sure it's going to be another hit.

Visit Mayra's website at http://mayracalvani.com/2011/10/09/free-ebooks-during-october/ to find news of her upcoming virtual book tour.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

The Humane Award - Paying it Forward


Imagine my surprise when my fellow author, client and cherished friend, Beverly Stowe McClure sent me an email awarding me The Humane Award. I wish to thank Bev for this honor and encourage you to check out her blog, The Story of A Writer. Bev writes for young adults and one of her books, Rebel in Blue Jeans, was featured by The Book Connection.

According to this award's description, it is to honor certain bloggers who I feel are kindhearted individuals. They regularly take part in my blog and always leave the sweetest comments. If it wasn't for them, my site would just be an ordinary blog. Their blogs are also amazing and are tastefully done on a regular basis. I thank them and look forward to our growing friendships through the blog world. And I would like to do so now. There are many, many I could list. These are just a few that I'd like to give this award to:

* Malcolm Campbell, also known as, Sun Singer and his Sun Singer's Travels blog

* Barry Eva, also known as, Storyheart and his Across the Pond blog

* The blog of author J.W. Nicklaus

* Kim Chatel and her Chatel Village site, which includes several blogs on a variety of topics

* Mayra's Secret Bookcase by Mayra Calvani

* I'm Booking It by Laura De Leon

Once again, thanks to these and all my blogging friends. I certainly hope you'll visit their blogs and consider becoming followers.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Sunstruck by Mayra Calvani--Book Review


What do a naive and deeply sensitive college student, a modern-day Zorro who goes around slashing the rear ends of women in mini-skirts, a smug and selfish artist with a love of LSD, an ex-husband with his eye on revenge, a woman who collects torture devices, and a socialist--maybe communist--best friend who is in love with a priest, have in common?

They all live in steamy San Juan, Puerto Rico and they can all be found in Sunstruck, the latest release from talented author Mayra Calvani.

I've read several books by Calvani, but nothing could have prepared me for what I found in Sunstruck. Realizing how difficult satire can be to pull off, Calvani's witty prose captured me right away and kept me turning the pages.

Written in third person present--a challenge in and of itself--Sunstruck tells the story of Daniella, a college student studying architecture, who is trying to find her place in the world while surrounded by the most bizarre individuals.

From Tony, her live-in boyfriend whose obsession with LSD is only equal to his hatred for Daniella's cat, to Daniella's ex-husband who is married to a woman better known as Lady Dracula because of her gothic appearance and strange collection of torture devices, the further into this book you get, the stranger they all become. Just when you think you've got the situation figured out, you discover you're not quite there yet.

Calvani has taken human nature and put it under a microscope--a warped and slightly cracked microscope.

The chapters are short enough that you can read several in one sitting, but you won't be able to put the book down anyway. I was a bit cool on the cover art, but it captured the essence of the book well, and the cat on the back is absolutely gorgeous.

Proving once again that she is a master storyteller in multiple genres, Sunstruck by Mayra Calvani is both witty and brilliant.


Title: Sunstruck
Author: Mayra Calvani
Publisher: Zumaya Publications
ISBN: 978-1-934841-18-1
SRP: $14.99 (U.S.)

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Snip, Snip: What's the Impact of Online Reviewers now that Newspapers are Cutting Back? by Anne K. Edwards



Today's guest blogger is Anne K. Edwards, co-author of The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing, which we reviewed here. There is much debate about the validity and influence of the numerous online book review sites that have popped up over the past few years. I asked Anne to give me her thoughts on the impact that these sites have in light of cutbacks in newspaper book review sections. Here's what she had to say:

If you are among the readers who like to know what a book is about and whether it is worth reading, you probably look to reviews for that information. You may also have noticed that your favorite newspaper has cut back on reviews or deleted them altogether.

There are several reasons for this, but one of the foremost is economics. Books are not considered as important as music or dvds or movies for instance and the reader loses out to those other audiences. The exception is, of course, any ad taken out by a large publisher will garner a willing review by that newspaper. But remember that review is going to be favorable no matter whether the book is good or not because the paper won't want to alienate the purchaser of the ad--it's a simple matter of whether reviews are income producing or not. The attention given to music and visual artforms is often because their producers are paying for the ads.

So, the reader may turn to print review magazines for reviews, but these often have the same problem as newspapers. They must have money coming in to survive and paid reviews are one way of managing this. Any print media form is expensive and likely to become more so.

This leaves the Internet where reviews and reviewers are thriving and the lovely fact is most are free. It doesn't matter whether the reader goes to a review blog or a site that has a businesslike appearance for their information--they will find reviews posted aplenty.

The blog review has many forms, two are the informal review by someone who just wants to share a book they truly enjoyed while the other is the more realistically named review site that usually spells out good and bad points in a book and may or may not recommend it. This is a growing trend and anyone may set up such a blog on the free sites.

The more formally named review site offers the reader a balanced review also of the good and bad points of a book for consideration. They generally use certain guidelines and often have a staff of reviewers who read and evaluate the books or may take freelance reviews.

There are new sites and blogs being set up every day and the reader will soon discover some favorites where they can turn for the information they want about any book they're interested in. Some sites are exclusive to one genre while others are open to all genres. The proliferation of review sites and reviewers speaks to the popularity of reviews with readers. If readers weren't using these sites, they would soon cease to exist as numbers of visitors and readers are what shows a site's popularity. The longevity of these sites also is proof that reviews are here to stay.

It is quite likely that more readers are visiting review sites online than ever read reviews in the newspaper. Reasons for this may be the reviews are written in less formal language that does not condescend to the reader, they can be accessed any time as always available online, and the reviews are shorter which is something a time conscious reader will consider.

Among the premier review sites are Midwest Book Review, Armchair Interviews, In The Library Reviews, The Book Connection, and many others. One may find lists of review sites on the web and choose from them. Friends will recommend favorite review sites, booksellers like Barnes and Noble offer reviews now, online ezines specialize in reviews.

In the end the reader, author, publisher and reviewer may find the Internet is having a larger impact on reviewing and book selling than newpapers ever did simply by the larger number of books reviewed. This is the place where the small press that couldn't ever get attention in the print media may now find limitless reviews of its product. With a wider offering, the reader may feast his eyes and mind on an endless array of reviews.

--Anne K. Edwards
http://www.Mysteryfiction.net
http://www.Slipperybookreview.wordpress.com

Saturday, July 12, 2008

The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing by Mayra Calvani & Anne K. Edwwards--Book Review



Informational and insightful, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing is an excellent resource for aspiring, novice, and experienced book reviewers everywhere.

But it is so much more!

Broken down into three parts--The Art of Reviewing, The Influence of Book Reviews, and Resources--this book takes the reader through every aspect of book reviews. From how to write an objective review--positive or negative--to how to start your own book review site; from authors' opinions on how reviews impact sales to how reviews are utilized by libraries, bookstores, and book clubs; from where to get started posting reviews to lists of genre specific review sites, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing has it all.

Whether you are a reviewer, author or publicist, the information found within this book's 180 pages is destined to improve your knowledge of book reviews and book review sites, and improve your working relationship with other members of the publishing industry.

How? By giving you the tools and the insight into what book reviewing is all about and what reviews mean to the authors and publicists who seek them.

Topics include, but are not limited to:

The Five Keys to Being a Good Reviewer
Reading Critically
The Absolute Dont's (or Signs of an Amateur)
Is There Any Money in It?
How to Start Your Own Book Review Site
Dealing with Review Editors, Authors, Publishers and Publicists

Readers will discover the difference between a review, a book report, a critique, and a press release. They'll find out how facile praise or harsh negativity affects the reputation of a book reviewer and read all about the reviewers versus bloggers controversy.

Filled with sample reviews, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing can help readers draft stronger, more objective reviews for genre fiction, literary works, and non-fiction, and explores the interesting animal known as the article-review.

The last section of this book includes links and information for sites where aspiring reviewers can begin posting reviews; top print review publications, small print publications, print publications that pay for reviews, and general and genre specific online review sites and publications. The Appendix also includes a sample press release.

As always, Calvani's attention to detail provides the reader with an easy understanding of the topic matter. While this is the first collaboration with Anne K. Edwards that I have read, I will certainly be seeking out more of Edwards' work as a result of the clarity and perfect structure of The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing. Calvani is a multi-genre author, reviewer, and editor and Edwards is a mystery author and editor of Voice in the Dark, a free monthly ezine featuring author interviews, columns, articles, short fiction, and resources for authors and readers.

I would highly recommend The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing to anyone with an interest in book reviews and their impact on the publishing industry.


Title: The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing
Authors: Marya Calvani and Anne K. Edwards
Publisher: Twilight Times Books
ISBN-13: 978-1-933353-22-7
ISBN-10: 1-933353-22-8
U.S. Price $16.95

Look for my reviews of fictional work by Mayra Calvani here and here. My October 2007 interview with Calvani appears here.

You'll find a group of interviews with book review professionals performed by Mayra Calvani at Blogcritics.org.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Interview at Blogcritics



To celebrate the release of her new book, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing, Mayra Calvani interviewed several book reviewers at Blogcritics.

I was honored that Mayra asked to interview me. You'll find our interview posted here.

You can find out more about Mayra Calvani and her books at www.mayracalvani.com/index.html And don't forget to check out her Slippery Book Review Blog.

Here is an interview I performed with Mayra for her horror novel, Dark Lullaby

I also reviewed Dark Lullaby and Mayra's children's book Crash!

Look for my review of The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing COMING SOON!!!

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Crash! by Mayra Calvani--Book Review



Children will love reading about Marcelo and his new puppy in Crash! by Mayra Calvani.

Marcelo's parents surprise him on his fifth birthday with a golden retriever puppy--the one thing he wanted more than anything in the world. Thrilled beyond all belief, Marcelo must now learn how to take care of his new puppy: feeding him, walking him, playing with him. But all that is easy compared to finding a name for him.

Crash! is a charming story about a boy and his dog and the special relationship that develops between a child and his pet. Author Mayra Calvani shows off her storytelling talents once again, as she did with The Magic Violin. Calvani has a way of getting right to the heart of children with her touching stories.

Kudos go out to young illustrator, Anna Pylypchuk, whose beautifully drawn illustrations bring Calvani's story to life. My children each had their favorites drawings from the story.

I can't wait to see what Mayra Calvani's next children's book is all about!


Title: Crash!
Author: Mayra Calvani
Publisher: Guardian Angel Publishing, Inc.
ISBN-13: 978-1-933090-54-2 (Print)
ISBN-13: 978-1-933090-71-9 (eBook)
U.S. Price: $10.95 (Print)

THE AUTHOR IS DONATING 50% OF HER ROYALTIES TO ALMOST HEAVEN GOLDEN RETRIEVER RESCUE AND SANCTUARY, A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION. ALMOST HEAVEN-GOLDEN-RETRIEVER-RESCUE.ORG

Monday, January 7, 2008

Dark Lullaby by Mayra Calvani--Book Review



Dark, exotic, and filled with chilling twists and turns, Dark Lullaby by Marya Calvani is horror story that grabs you right away and doesn't release its grip until the final word is read.

Astrophysicist Gabriel Diaz believes in the higher good and that everything can be explained by science and logic. One night in a tavern, a mysterious and intriguing woman captivates his body and soul. After spending the next several days with the mysterious Kamilah, Gabriel is convinced to join her in Turkey to visit her family's cottage, even though he can't push away the nightmares of his sister Elena's unborn child.

Plagued by a strange illness that leaves him weakened and sore, Gabriel begins to wonder who or what Kamilah really is. With the help of a village merchant and a one-eyed witch, Gabriel makes a startling discovery, calling into question all he believes in and forcing him to come to terms with his past so he can save Elena's baby.

Equally scary and beautiful, Mayra Calvani has drawn the beauty of Turkey into a chilling paranormal tale unlike any I've ever read. The descriptions throughout this book were stunning. I walked along the hike up a Turkish mountainside, lived inside Gabriel's head during his disturbing dreams, and stood beside him as he looked into the strangely carved trees in the forest leading up to Kamilah's cottage.

A master storyteller, Calvani hooked me from the first moment in the tavern to the very last page. This is truly a unique story that I look forward to reading again.

Dark Lullaby will capture you with its rich descriptions, its exotic location, and the need to uncover the dark secrets hidden within its pages.


Title: Dark Lullaby
Author: Mayra Calvani
Publisher: Whiskey Creek Press
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-59374-908-8
Trade Paperback ISBN: 978-1-59374-907-1
U.S. Price: $5.99 (eBook)
U.S. Price: $13.95 (Trade Paperback)

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Horror Author Mayra Calvani Scares us with Dark Lullaby


Today’s guest is perfect to start off the month of October. Multi-genre author Mayra Calvani is here to chat about her latest horror novel, Dark Lullaby, published as an eBook and in Trade paperback by Whiskey Creek Press.

Welcome to The Book Connection, Mayra. I’m thrilled and a bit frightened to have you with us.


It’s a treat being here, Cheryl! Thanks for having me.

Before we talk about Dark Lullaby, why don’t you tell us a bit about yourself and your fascination with the dark side of things.

I was an avid reader when I was a child and from an early age began to love scary films—those old black & white movies about mommies, werewolves, and vampires. They must have made a deep impression on me, because since then I’ve always been attracted by the supernatural. I was a quiet child and reading was my escape into a world of mystery and adventure, a way to live ‘on the edge’ yet be safe at the same time.

You create stories that thrill and chill your readers, but write for children too. How do you change gears and write heart-warming tales like The Doll Violinist?

I guess I’m one of those writers who could never write in only one genre. Many things inspire me and I write what I love. It’s like switching to different modes. When I write children’s stories it’s as if a switch turns on and I’m in my children’s writer mode. When I write horror, the horror switch turns on, and so on with the other genres. I love the idea of being a multifaceted author and don’t really care about branding my name specifically with one genre.

What’s your writing process like? Do you write every day? Is there a time of day when you are more productive than others?

When I’m working on a novel, I try to write every day, otherwise I get disconnected from the story and it’s very hard for me to jump back into it. Mornings work best for me because my mind is fresh and because the house is quiet. Late afternoons are for my family and I’m always too tired to write at night. That’s mostly when I do my reading. I’m a reviewer as well, so there’s always a book in line to read or a review to write, so in this sense I do write something everyday.

I think I’m ready to chat about Dark Lullaby, though if I get too scared I’ll have to run upstairs and get my favorite blanket. Dare I ask where you came up with the idea for this chilling tale?

Three things, actually. I’ve always been very interested in moral dilemmas and in the concept of a higher good. For instance, is it okay for a man to steal in order to have money to save his little girl, who is dying? In the case of Dark Lullaby, I went a step further: is it okay for a man to kill for the higher good? As far as the location goes, I lived four years in Turkey, so this was a big influence. I was intrigued by the stories I heard there about the jihnn, and by the fact that so many people believed in them. My brother, who is an astrophysicist, was my inspiration for the main character. This is the first novel I write with a male protagonist, and I have to say it was very interesting getting inside the head of a man.

In Chapter One, we meet astrophysicist Gabriel Diaz, who is having a heated discussion with his ex-girlfriend, Liz at a popular bar. What can you tell us about Gabriel? Why will readers like him? Is there anything about him that readers might not care for?

Gabriel is a smart guy with a big heart and a grand sense of justice. He’s also a bit naïve, which together with his smarts, is somewhat unusual. But he is haunted by a dark childhood, one he would rather forget. When he meets the anti-heroine, Kamilah, she does everything in her power to bring his dark, buried feelings to the surface, leading to tragic consequences. I think readers will like his sense of goodness and justice, as well as his total loyalty to his sister Elena. At some point in the story this sense of justice somehow gets twisted inside his head… and he does a pretty terrible thing, something which readers may not agree with, but I’ve made Gabriel with plenty of faults and as real as possible, and this is really part of it all. He’s too temperamental and impulsive for his own good. Plus money simply slips from his fingers.

This heated discussion is about the discrepancies between law and justice. Why does Gabriel feel so strongly about this topic?

Gabriel has always loved philosophy and arguing about it. Being a scientist, he has an analytical mind and enjoys a heated debate. The conversation about law and justice they have in the beginning sets the ground for what happens later in the story. Will his ideals stay true, or will they collapse?

Having broken up with Gabriel just four months ago, Liz still carries a torch for him. And even more than that, she seems to enjoy bating Gabriel into these heated discussions. Is she drawn to him because of how strongly he feels about things or does she just enjoy the debates?

Liz still loves him, not because of the debates they have, but because of who he is as a person. More than anything, she loves the sweet, sensitive part of him. She can never forget how supportive he was during her mother’s illness. But Liz is too jealous and independent to be compatible with Gabriel, who unconsciously needs a vulnerable woman by his side, a woman who will need him to be protective. This, of course, stems directly from his childhood and relationship with his sister.

We met Kamilah in Chapter 2, when she joins Gabriel and Liz’s conversation. You painted a very detailed picture of Kamilah—her looks, her mannerisms, how her voice sounds. Why so much effort for this one character? How did you know what details to put in and which to leave out?

Kamilah is the center of the story, apart from Gabriel; she’s the anti-heroine, the catalyst that drives Gabriel to the extreme. I wanted Kamilah to completely overshadow Liz. Liz is merely a secondary character. I also wanted Kamilah to evoke both innocence and sensuality. I felt her mannerisms, voice, looks, were all very important in creating her powerful, alluring, supernatural nature.

Gabriel’s twin sister, Elena, is due to have a baby soon and he is debating about whether to go visit her. Why the hesitation? And what’s up with these disturbing daydreams he has of Elena and her unborn child?

He hesitates simply because he’s too busy! Astrophysicists don’t just take off to Europe whenever they feel like it! LOL. Did I mention how money slips through his fingers? He’s up to his neck in credit card bills, and cross-Atlantic airplane tickets are expensive. About the dreams… Yes, his sister is about to give birth to a child, but Gabriel keeps picturing this empty pram in a wooded park. This ominous daydream serves to foreshadow what happens later in the story. He has a bad feeling about the whole thing, a feeling that intensifies when he notices Kamilah’s fixation upon his sister, even though she is thousands of miles away. His sister Elena had lost her child a few hours after delivery 3 years ago, so this also adds to his apprehension.

Alright, I’ll be forced to stop myself there before I start shivering. I think we’ve given readers enough to whet their appetites. Where can readers purchase a copy of Dark Lullaby?

Dark Lullaby is available in both ebook and print form.

The book is available on Amazon:

http://www.amazon.com/Dark-Lullaby-Mayra-Calvani/dp/1593749074/ref=sr_1_4/103-8834202-9064634?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1189507282&sr=1-4

Also from the publisher:

http://www.whiskeycreekpress.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=571&zenid=c790ed40a08746e18c58f83270ea4091

You’ll be touring the blogosphere the entire month of October. Where do you journey to next?

Tomorrow I’ll be on Caridad Pineiro’s blog, http://www.caridad.com/blog/.
You may view the complete tour schedule on my website, http://www.MayraCalvani.com.

What’s up next in your writing world? Any exciting or spooky projects you would like to share with us?

I’m working on a paranormal thriller about wolves set in the French countryside. Wolves are my favorite animals and I’m enormously enjoying the writing and researching. The book will be out in the fall of 2007.

Is there anything else you would like to add?

For a blurb and excerpt of Dark Lullaby, readers may go to my website, http://www.MayraCalvani.com.

For the book trailer, go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZgbg5wk5Ug

I also have a book review blog and a newsletter:

The Dark phantom Review, http://www.thedarkphantom.wordpress.com .
The Fountain Pen, http://www.thefountainpennewsletter.blogspot.com.

For my children’s books, the links are:
http://www.mayrassecretbookcase.com
http://www.mayrassecretbookcase.blogspot.com

Thank you for scaring…er…I mean joining us today, Mayra. It’s been fun to be exposed to the dark side for a while. I wish you much success.

Thank you, Cheryl! I enjoyed your questions!


Look for my review of Dark Lullaby coming soon!

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