Showing posts with label Virtaulbookworm Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virtaulbookworm Publishing. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Guest Blogger: Welcome Cole, Author of The Pleasure of Memory


The Pleasure of Memory is the first volume of three in the Blood Caeyl Memories fantasy series. Told in a contemporary tongue, it is set in a period of mixed eras, where swords, crossbows, and cannons are the weapons of the times, though the setting has more in common with the lawless frontier locales of the American Old West than medieval times.

Beam is a thief, rogue, and murderer who takes his gold wherever the path of least resistance offers it. Orphaned in childhood, his extended family abandoned him as a young boy, hitching him to a horse post at the steps of a rundown priory in Parhron City. He is discovered at dawn by Brother Dael, an elderly monk who is Prelate for the Priory of Saynfyl, a priory dedicated to the care of the insane. Dael finds Beam tethered to the horse hitch out front, and takes him in without question, and raises him as his own.

Years later, when Beam reaches the age of sixteen, he inherits his deceased mother’s estate. Along with a generous quantity of gold coins, he receives some of her personal property, including an elaborate puzzle box of olden design. Confounded in his efforts to open the box, he eventually tucks it away.

Years later, long after his mother’s money has run its course, he searches through his belongings in search of something to hock. Among his things, he rediscovers the box. He instinctively makes another attempt to unravel the secrets to opening the complicated panels. This time, the box simply falls apart in his hands. Inside, he finds an ancient map. The map eventually leads him to a cemetery the size of a small city tucked away deep in the southern scrubs.

The cemetery resides on the reservation lands of the Vaemyn, a savage race who sport tiny horns beneath their ears that allow them to “hear” images emitted generated by the vibrations of living creatures. Due to their ability to track their prey by listening to the earth, they are extremely difficult to evade.

Beam spends the next two years prowling through the cemetery, evading the savages by day and picking his way through their dead by night. As he searches, he finds trinkets of gold and jewels sent with the dead to the afterlife. Eventually, he discovers a secret chamber leading to a maze hidden beneath one of the crypts. There, he finds a brilliant crystal the size of a small apple. The blood-red gem seems to have a fire at its center, and is carved in the image of a sensuous, lidded eye. Believing he has found the treasure his mother’s map sent him after, he flees north to through the lawless Nolands and back to civilization with the Vaemyn in pursuit. He believes this gem will bring him the riches that will afford him the life of leisure and lavish indulgence he so richly deserves.

What Beam doesn’t know is that this crystal is actually a Blood Caeyl. This was the most dominant of all the stones of power, with influence over the forces of life itself, and one believed to have long ago vanished from the world. In time, the caeyl begins to alter him, gradually awakening the memories of a thousand lifetimes and changing him into a new man, and even a new life form.

His metamorphosis arrives just at the beginning of the end of times. A Fire Caeyl mage has created a rift to the Wyr, and has summoned an army of Wyrlaerds, Divinic Demons with an instinctual desire to rule all mortal life, and the ability to possess the flesh of living souls. The changes Beam endures lead him to the edge of his mortality, to the portal between the corporeal world he was born to and a labyrinth of memories spanning thousands of years and endless lifetimes. There he learns that his birth was never by chance, but rather part of an elaborate plan to end the threat of the Wyr for all time.


The Evolution of the Blood Caeyl Memories
 by Welcome Cole

The Pleasure of Memory was born from a dare. Or perhaps challenge is the better description. Years back, I was discussing the art of writing with a dear friend, a fellow devotee and author of fantastic fiction. We were discussing the evolution of The Story. The conversation was something akin to a literary version of the creation versus evolution debate. Did the best stories evolve through careful structuring of the plot and characters prior to the actual writing, similar to God’s Seven Day Plan? Or did they grow organically from the kernel of a planted idea, flowing initially as a kind of free association that gradually evolves into a life form?

I clearly favored the latter.

To prove his point, my friend then initiated the challenge. He provided me with an opening sentence, and double dog dared me to grow it into a story. The opening line he graciously delivered to me was “It’s a good day to be you,” written as a quote. Looking at that seed, I was pretty certain it wasn’t an acorn that could grow a mighty oak. I figured I’d be fortunate if it grew a milkweed.

After several fruitless months of writing, wadding, trashing, writing, wadding, and trashing, I decided to take a more scholarly tack. I cheated. I took a concept I’d been playing in my head for about a year, but hadn’t yet started on, and I placed the dare sentence at the beginning of it. Now, in all fairness to myself, I have to say that I still wrote this story organically from a simple premise and without benefit of a storyboard, but while starting from a different seed. However, in using his second dare seed, the concept of my original premise was dramatically changed. You might say this story arose from genetically modified stock.

Three books later, the project has evolved into a complex story of good versus evil, of a man forced outside the comfort zone of his own greed and self-importance, of the allies he unwittingly finds among his enemies, of his metamorphosis into the human and, ultimately, god he was destined to be.

PURCHASE AT AMAZON OR VIRTUALBOOKWORM!


Welcome Cole is a writer of fantasy, contemporary novels, and urban fiction. He spends his time in the lakes and forests of Traverse City, Michigan and in the desert and mountains of Castle Rock, Colorado. He has degrees in Nursing and Business Administration, and writes at every opportunity. His book, The Pleasure of Memory, will be followed up shortly with his contemporary fiction novel, Henry’s Re-entry. The second volume of the Blood Caeyl Memories, The Shadows of Memory, will be released in early 2014.



Monday, February 25, 2013

First Chapter Review: Dirty Rice by Dorothy K. Morris


Happy Monday! Yeah, who am I kidding. It's Monday. Let's just try to get through it. 

Dirty Rice by Dorothy K. Morris is a historical novel set in the early 18th Century in the colony of South Carolina. The author is currently on tour to promote this novel, which is a prequel to her Mockingbird Hill Series.


BLURB: DIRTY RICE, a novel set in the early 18th Century in the Low-Country of the early South Carolina Colony, tells of love, passion, adventure and cruelty with totally believable characters. It is the first prequel to the four books of the Mockingbird Hill Series. The early 18th Century saw vast expansion into the New World from England, the European Continent and from Africa, and the establishment of rice plantations in the coastal regions of South Carolina and Georgia. Set against this background DIRTY RICE sweeps us away to a bygone era of adventure, romance and brutal reality. This is the story of African rice and African people, their knowledge, expertise and their forced labor that made the Carolina Colony the wealthiest colony in colonial America. It takes us from the plush parlors of aristocratic English absentee land owners, who set policy in the Colony to maximize profit, to the swampy shores of Carolina amid the mud and muck of rice fields, where people kidnapped from West Africa because of their knowledge and expertise in the growing of rice, were forced to work to fill the coffers of the landowners with wealth. It is a story of exploitation by some and compassion from others. In this, as in her four previous novels, Morris' emphasis is on the people who lived and were forced to cope with what life sent their way.

COVER: Definitely appropriate. It speaks to the setting and the rice crops that meant wealth for the land owners. The dark color seems to speak to the "dirty" rice. I would have preferred to see both pictures combined somehow instead of them being separate images marked off by the title.

FIRST CHAPTER:  The chapter opens with a brief history of the collision between the lands known as the West Coast of Africa and the East Coast of North America starting one billion years ago to form the Appalachian Mountains. Then five hundred years ago it is said that greed and ego led to the kidnapping and sale of Africans who were expert rice growers.

At the beginning of this second event in 1726, Reginald Upton oversees Greenville Plantation, Charles Town Colony, an enterprise of The Colonial Shipping, Land and Commerce Company, which is headquartered in London, England. Pressure to grow rice from a terrain of swamps, pocosins, saw grass, and earth thick with roots, leads Upton to write a letter explaining the situation, the competition, and the hardships to Sir Joseph Talleigh, the finance officer of the company.

On an island off the west coast of Africa, Fulani and Edraim work in the rice fields. The two young women wander into the marsh without lookouts to protect them. They soon wish they had heeded the warning of Edraim's mother never to do so.

KEEP READING: Yes. Though I typically prefer a novel that drops right into the thick of things, in this instance, I feel the brief background of what has transpired before Upton appears on the scene is helpful and needed. Morris was wise not to introduce too many characters at the beginning. Mainly its Upton in America and Fulani and Edraim in Africa. There are mentions of others, such as Sir Joseph Talleigh or Edraim's mother, but we don't meet them. Because I read the Foreword plus the opening history, if there were a plethora of characters, I would have felt lost right away. The author also provides some wonderful descriptions of the areas in which the novel is set, so the reader truly feels like she is right alongside the characters as the story unfolds.


Paperback: 500 pages
Publisher: Virtualbookworm.com Publishing (November 9, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1621371573
ISBN-13: 978-1621371571


I received a free PDF version of this book from the publisher. This review contains my honest opinions, for which I have not been compensated in any way.