New release: Amoven: Prophesy by Nancy M. Griffis

If you are a werewolf fan, you’ll want to check out the latest release from Nancy Griffis, Amoven: Prophesy! What a gorgeous cover! I’m excited to be part of the blog hop in honor of her release.

Amoven Prophecy

Well hello there everyone! My name is Nancy M. Griffis and I’m the proud new author of Amoven: Prophecy. Cindy’s awesomely hosting my blog hop today!

Amoven: Prophecy is available now in ebook and print from all major online retailers. (Get your copy on Amazon)

I say “new” author of Amoven, but I’ve been working on the book for a longggg time. The gist of the novel didn’t change from the first draft to the last, but I had the hardest time letting go. It’s been through the hands of two different editors four times and even though they both loved it, I just couldn’t make myself pull the trigger.

I don’t normally feel so protective of my books, but this one seems to be the exception. Some books are like that. Usually, I write a book, edit it, send it to an editor, rewrite it a third time and boom! It’s good to go. Not so with Amoven. Despite the fact that the novel was essentially done a couple of years ago, it took a while for me to decide to publish it myself.

Amoven: Prophecy is about a family of wolf shapeshifters from San Digeo, CA. The McTavish Clan is small by Amoven standards with only four adult siblings–Jim, Daniel, Simon, and Sandy–and Simon and Jim are ‘mere’ humans, looked down on by many Amoven. The McTavish Clan fell out of favor generations ago and Daniel wants to restore the Clan to its rightful place at the head of the Council that rules their people.

To accomplish such an ambitious goal, Daniel is tackling the one thing that threatens all Amoven: the devastating decline in birth rates. While not as exciting as hunters on a killing spree, it’s just as deadly to their ultimate survival. Daniel’s arranged a Conclave with most of the North American clans to take place at the seat of Amoven power in the Colorado Rockies and this is where our story starts.

Having so many Alphas in one place is practically asking for a bloodbath, but Cole Bishop is just the Amoven to keep them in line. Grandson to Lauren Bishop–the woman who’s held power as head of the Amoven North American Council for almost one hundred years–Cole has a spine of steel under his manicured, indolent appearance. Publically, he can do nothing but support his grandmother and her backwards, anachronistic prejudices. Secretly, he does all he can to help Daniel McTavish in his goal to become head of the Council.

It’s not until the end of the Conclave that things get crazy. Someone tries to assassinate Daniel. Simon has visions of Amoven past despite being human. Sandy mates with a man from a powerful clan to spite her brothers. One of the Councilmembers abdicates his seat and bequeaths it to Daniel in the form of a prophecy that shows him as the key to Amoven survival or doom… and that’s all I can say without going into major spoiler territory.

I hope you love this book as much as I do! I am working on the sequel now, but don’t have a release date just yet.

Thanks so much to Cindy for having me!

You can find me online at www.nancygriffis.wordpress.com, @nmgrif, and www.facebook.com/nmgriffis. You can email me at nancymgriffis@gmail.com.

 

Sunshine Award

The Sunshine Award is awarded to bloggers whose positivity and creativity inspires others in the blogosphere. I’m so pleased to have been awarded one by Jennifer Wells, author of  Practically Dreaming and Magick Charm. Go check out her blog!

Here are the rules for accepting this award:

  • Link back to the person who gave me the award.
  • Answer the following questions.
  • Nominate ten bloggers for the award.
  • Link my nominees to the post and let them know about the award.

On to the questions!

What is your favorite Christmas/festive movie?
I love “A Christmas Carol,” the George C. Scott version especially. It’s a family tradition to watch this every year. There’s just something about Scrooge getting a second chance to make his miserable life worth living.

What is your favorite flower?
Daisies. Simple but elegant.

What is your favorite non-alcoholic beverage?
I’m a tea fanatic. I have loads of it, loose tea, bagged tea, you name it. I just can’t get enough of it and I love finding tea shops to fuel my habit.

What is your passion?
That would have to be writing. 🙂 I’m beyond thrilled to finally see my book in print. Now I just need to finish book 2 and get another one out there!

What is your favorite time of year?
I’m from New England, so fall is definitely my favorite time of year, although I love winter also. I love the way the light changes in the fall, the brilliant colors on the trees, apple picking, warm jackets, hot cider.

What is your favorite time of day?
I’ve always been a night person. These days late at night is the only time I have to myself, once everyone has gone to bed. If only I didn’t have to get up in the morning!

What is your favorite physical activity?
Ha, ha. I avoid it if I can. I do like hiking, though I haven’t done that in a while.

What is your favorite vacation?
My favorite trip so far was to Scotland many years ago. I’d love to go back someday.

Here are some of my favorite bloggers and my nominees for the Sunshine Award:

Nancy M. Griffis
M L Doyle
Kristen Koster
Avery Olive
alkaplan
James Crawford (the award for our lone male nominee is served with a side of zombie brains)
Louann Carroll
Jenn Nixon
Kayla Curry
Sasha Summers

Fluctuations by Nancy M. Griffis

Nancy M. Griffis, who has been interviewed previously on my blog, has a new science fiction novel out! Fluctutations is currently free on Smashwords! Hope you’ll check it out! I love the cover and am looking forward to reading it.

The blurb:

A state-of-the-art cruise ship with wealthy vacationers out for a thrill travels into The Fluctuation, a dangerous region of the galaxy where anything can happen. When an heiress, a telepathic feline alien, a sarcastic robot, and a young runaway get left behind after a catastrophic event, the Fluctuation is a chance to find out exactly what they’re made of… if they live through the experience.

Get your copy of Fluctuationshttp://www.smashwords.com/books/view/175059

Nancy M. Griffis writes novels and screenplays of the scifi/action/adventure/urban fantasy genres, adores tv and movies, and is a fangirl at heart. Check out her blog at http://nancygriffis.wordpress.com/.

Author interview – Nancy M. Griffis

I’m happy to share another author interview. Nancy M. Griffis has published two novels, Eternal Investigations, published in 2010, and Mind Games, published in 2006. Nancy and I go way back, and she was the first friend I met who also wrote (um, I think that was fifth, maybe sixth grade). So it’s so exciting that we are now both published authors. Nancy is also a screenwriter and working on that aspect of her career. And she is a prolific writer. If you like paranormal, you’ll want to check out Eternal Investigations. I’m about halfway through it now and it’s a fun and creepy read!

The blurb:

Helen has the ability to speak to spirits, and she heads to Atlanta on an emergency haunting job. Helen’s dead-ghost twin sister, Brenda, tags along.

When a small-time demon takes over Helen’s mind, Jacqueline gets a ghostly visit from Brenda asking for her help. Together they try to overcome the evil spirits and find themselves falling in love. When a new assignment sends them to Nevada, Helen and Jacqueline team up, in more ways than one.

They help investigate a haunted ranch in Wild Creek, Nevada, a town filled with mysterious happenings, including the infamous Ranch. The ranch is steeped in evil, the grounds for many, many gory deaths over the last hundred years. Helen and Jacqueline are caught in the house’s alternate reality, alone, frightened, and trying desperately to harness their powers against evil.

Now on to our interview.

Q: Where were you born? How many places have you lived? Are you the kind of person who likes to move around a lot, or do you prefer to live in one place?

A: I was born in Massachusetts. At last count, I’ve lived 42 places from birth til now. And yes, that’s more times moved than years I’ve been alive. I’ve never lived in one place for long, as you can see, but I wouldn’t mind giving it a shot. You know. For at least five years. That’d be interesting.

Q: Since you’ve been in LA a number of years now, how would you describe the differences between the East Coast and West Coast? (By the way, the DC area has now surpassed you and become #1 for gridlock!)

A: I actually looked that up to make sure you weren’t pulling a fast one! It sure feels like we’re still number one, but apparently we’re not even number two! Aside from the obvious one of weather (of which LA rocks), I would say the main difference is attitude and focus. Each coast definitely has their own attitude and what they’re going after, even when the end result is the same.

Q: What sparked your interest in writing? How long have you been writing?

A: My nana! She had stacks upon stacks upon bookshelves just filled to brimming with Harlequin romances. I was probably reading the naughty bits a lot younger than I should’ve been, but I think I’m pretty well adjusted withal. I’ve been reading ‘real’ books for as long as I can remember. My fave book when I was 12 was Taming of the Shrew and The Wizard Children of Finn by Mary Tannen. You can’t love to write without a love of reading. I wrote my (no doubt very bad) first novel when I was 14 years old, but did shorts for English class before that, too.

Q: How long did it take you to finish the book? How many drafts did you write before you were satisfied?

A: The first draft only took a month. Of course, the first draft turned into 3 drafts before I was satisfied. Unfortunately, it was written for an anthology that fell through and I had 3 novellas tied together through the characters, but not a “real” novel. It took six months of solid, banging-my-head-against-the-desk of editing to get to the current version that I submitted to be published. (Here I have to thank a couple of friends, Juli and Louise, who poked me with sharp sticks to get it done) And then the editors got to it and, three versions later, Eternal Investigations was published. Thank God, because I was ready to shoot myself at that point.

Q: Do you have a favorite genre to write? To read?

A: The answer to that is the same: action/scifi/horror with the occasional spot of romance. And there has to be some decent angst going on somewhere, too.

Q: Do you have any advice for aspiring writers?

A: Find a couple of “cheerleaders” who will love everything and a couple of “Really? You sure you want to do that?” friends who poke you with sharp sticks and keep you grounded. You need both. Even more important: Keep at it. I have so many rejections from agents it’s not even funny. Still trying to get one, really. Most important? Love it. Embrace your passion because often that’s your only satisfaction.

Q: You’re also interested in scriptwriting. How does the scriptwriting process differ from writing fiction?

A: Screenwriting is deceptively difficult. I say deceptively because for a limited page format, features no more than 120 pages (140 if you absolutely have to in some kind of period piece) and tv no more than 65 pages, it’s often more difficult than novel writing which has no limit. Every word has to count where in novels, you can take 10 pages to get to a point. Well, as long as you keep the reader’s interest. I will say first drafts come out a lot faster though. The short page count comes in handy for that first vomit draft, which is really nice. ;o)

Q: Name a few authors who have inspired you and why.

A: Marion Zimmer Bradley totally opened my eyes to the world of scifi when I was 13ish. I adored her, even when I hated her writing because it tore my guts out. Shakespeare for the sheer wordsmithing. Wow. How many writers are still relevant/translatable hundreds of years later?

Q: Tell us about your current writing project.

A: LOL! Which one? Okay, for novels I’ve got Fluctuations which is a scifi adventure in final draft mode. Got a good start on the sequel’s first draft, too. As for active, in-progress novels, I’ve got a “real life” novel about life in the public transportation system (of which I’ve been a very reluctant participant the last 6 years) and a fantasy novel involving dragons and a heroine who doesn’t want to be one. My in-progress scripts include a scifi/horror, a time-travel, and a present-day noir. I bet you can tell I don’t have much of a life, right?

Q: Coffee, tea, or hard liquor? (or all three?)

A: I’m actually allergic to coffee, so that’s a no-no, but sure! I’ll take some liquor in my tea. I’m not that much of a purist. ;o)

Q: What books are you currently reading or on your to-be-read list?

A: Currently reading:

Good in a Room by Stephanie Palmer (being the partially social-phobic writer that I am)

To Reads:

The Tempering of Men by Sarah Monette & Elizabeth Bear

All the Nero Wolfe books by Rex Stout

Q: And now for the bonus fluff question: If you could be a character in one of your favorite novels, which character would you be and why?

A: I think Horatio Hornblower. Talk about living the live of high adventure!

Nancy M. Griffis writes novels and screenplays of the scifi/action/adventure/urban fantasy genres, adores tv and movies, and is a fangirl at heart.

You can get your own copy of Eternal Investigations from Amazon (http://www.amazon.com/Eternal-Investigations-Nancy-M-Griffis/dp/1610400992/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_2) or from Torquere Press (http://www.torquerebooks.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=97&products_id=2936).