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Tag Archives: children of vampires

Jingle Sharks—In Honor of #SharkWeek

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Posted by Melika Dannese Hick in Fun Stuff, Missives, News, Updates

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Hi Everyone,

Sunday marks the 30th anniversary of Discovery Channel’s Shark Week. I’ve been watching this annual epic of jawesomeness since the beginning, and, given that Christmas In July is also being celebrated here in the States at the moment, I thought it was past time to dust off a little something I composed ten years ago and share it with all of you.

Here it is…Jingle Sharks—so named because Shark Week is the most wonderful time of the year.

Best,

~Melika

Jingle Sharks

 (As performed by Irv, a Great White Shark from Sydney, Australia, and all around fantastic lad,

with select interjections by the Australian Shark Chorus)

Swimming through the sea, with bloodshed on my mind,

I spy a little seal, then bite off his behind!

But he is just a snack, I need a bigger munch,

So when I spot a surfer dude, I shout, “Yippee! There’s lunch!”

 

Ohhh! Jingle Sharks, Jingle Sharks, chumming’s not for us!

Sharkin’s been looked down on since Old Quint, he bit the dust!

(And we’ve got Bruce to thank for that!)

Ohhh! Jingle Sharks, Jingle Sharks, we like our bait live!

Why don’t all you people on the beach come take a dive?!

(We won’t bite, we promise! Sharks’ honor!)

*brief tom-tom interlude: Da da da da da DA, dum dum!*

The surf is choppy now, and swimmers cannot see,

That lurking right offshore, is little three ton me!

I play it nice and cool, I bide my time so good,

And when nobody’s looking, I latch on to someone’s foot!

 

Ohh-ohhh-ohhhhhh! Jingle Sharks, Jingle Sharks, Shark Week is sublime!

We’ve ruled cable TV for three decades in prime time! Ohhh-oh-ohhhhhh!

Jingle Sharks, Jingle Sharks, everybody’s hooked!

Thanks to conservation, now, our goose ain’t gonna be cooked!

*raucous shouts of “Sharkland, forever!” erupt from the Australian Shark Chorus*

 

End Song

Copyright © 2008, 2018 by Melika Dannese Lux

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SPFBO Author Interview for The Thousand Scar Blog

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Posted by Melika Dannese Hick in Author Spotlight, Deadmarsh Fey, Fun Stuff, Missives, News, Updates

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#AmWriting, 18, 1888, 1894, 19th century, 2002, 2014, 2018, 700, a book addict's bookshelves, a fragment of life, a wizard should know better, ache, Agatha Christie, all we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us, Amazon, amazon.co.uk, Amazon.com, anne rice, antestheria, aragorn, arthur, arthur machen, Augustin Boroi, author, Authors, autonomy, autumn, awestruck, bear, best friend, betrayal, birthday, black cats, black winged beast, blog, blogger, bloggers, blogs, blood, blood wood, book, book addict, book feature, books, Books In My Belfry, British, brothers, brothers and sisters, business, calling, carte blanche, Carver, cats, celts, characters, charpentier, children, children of light, children of vampires, chocolate, chocolate chip, christened, City of Lights, City of Lights by melika lux, city of lights: the trials and triumphs of ilyse charpentier, classic, Coffyn, Constantinos, coquette, corcitura, Corcitura feature, count, Count Rakmanovich, Count Sergei Rakmanovich, Cover, creative fiction, crime and punishment, curse, cut, cutwater, cutwater island, dance hall, dance of romance, dannese, dark, dark fantasy, dark wreaker, darkness, dashing, deadliest, Deadmarsh, Deadmarsh Fey, deal, death, demons, demons of the deep, desire to weave stories, devil, dialogue, die, diva of the paris stage, dogs, Dostoevsky, double blinds, Dracula, draculaesque, dragons, dream, dreams, driving force, druids, dwellers, dwellers of darkness, dwellers of darkness children of light, earth, Eastern Europe, Eiffel Tower, email, emotional, England, englishman, enraptured, epic, Eric Bradburry, Europe, Excerpt, Facebook, faeries, fall, fallen kingdom, family, fantasy, fantasy is escapist, fascinated, fate, Fated, fated to die, father, fathomless, female author, female vampires, female werewolves, female writers, fey, fiction, Film, Fin de siècle, finding home, first novel, Folies Bergère, France, free, free reign, freebie, freedom, French, french flag, French wine, friends, Friendship, frodo, frodo baggins, full circle, Fuseli, Gandalf, gandalf the grey, Germany, giveaway, glories, glory, good and evil, good vs evil, Goodreads, gothic, gothic novel, Grand Tour, great god pan, Greece, grey beard, grey wolves, guides, guillermo del toro, Guinness, h p lovecraft, hammer, havelock, hazard, henry fuseli, here there be dragons, hermit, hermitlife, high school, hinterland, historical fiction, historical romance, home, hope, hopes, hopes and dreams, horror, Humor, hybrid, hybrid vampires, Ian McCarthy, ian mckellen, iconic, ilyse, Ilyse Charpentier, in which a dashing Englishman woos mademoiselle Charpentier, in-depth, incendiu, Indie, inspiration, instill, Interview, iron reveals, isobel, isobel vickers, J. R. R. Tolkien, Jack the Ripper, jagged ones, jess watkins, john william waterhouse, joy, Jurassic Park, Kindle, kindle giveaway, Kip, Kipling, Knightley, La Perle de Paris, la petite coquette, languages, laptop, legend, legends, Leonora, Leonora Bianchetti, lies, life, light, Links, lips, Lockie, loggerheads, logistical, London, longing for home, longings, lord of the rings, LOTR, Louvre, Love, love of reading, Luc, lux, lynn's books, machen, maddie, Madelaine Bradburry, malevolence, Manon Larue, marine biologist, mark lawrence, marked, Maurice Charpentier, meanings, meant to be, melika, Melika Dannese Lux, Melika Lux, michael baker, modern times, mother, Music, my calling, my dream, myth, names, nebulous, new, new release, news, night, nightmare, norse, norway, Nosferatu, novel, novelist, novels, now face-to-fey, oblivion, of darkness, opera, orange, original, orlok, pale, palming the ace, panic, Paperback, Paranormal, parc monceau, parents, Paris, Parisian, pianist, pict, plausible deniability, play, plots, pointy hat, post, pre-raphaelites, professor fertig, promotion, prophecy, publication, publicity, publishing, puckie, pumpkin, pun, pure magic, questions, quick-fire, quites, quote, rapture, reading, revenge, Review, rex, roger, Roger Knightley, romance novels set in historic France, Romania, Romanian, rural, rural england, Russia, russian, sacrifice, Sangue di Vita, scary, scary vampires, schadenfreude, seasonal, seized, self-published fantasy blog off, Sergei, Sergei Rakmanovich, series, seven hundred years, sham, Shark Week, Sharks, siblings, silver-tongued devil, singer, singing, sir frank dicksee, snippet, soprano, Sorina Boroi, souls, spfbo, Spooky, steal of a deal, Stefan, Stefan Belododia, Stefan Ratliff, story arcs, storytelling, storyweaving, stratosphere, summer, supernatural, supernatural thriller, Suspense, swathing, T-Rex, talking animals, tall tales, terror, the darkness within, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Lord of the Rings, the white people and other weird stories, these vampires don't sparkle, thousand scar, Thriller, Tolkien, Tollers and Jack, Toulouse Lautrec, Tour Eiffel, tragedy, trahaearn, train, travel, tricksy, triumph, triumphant, true love, truth, TV, Twilight, Twitter, Tyrian purple, UK, undead, updates, USA, vampire fiction, Vampire Hunter, vampire mythology, vampire mythos, vampires, vampiresses, vampiric, vampiric equality, vampiric transformation, vampirism, vamps, varney, varney the vampyre, Vasily Markolovick, vickers, violinist, Vladec, Vladec Salei, vocation, Vrykolakas, Wales, warnings and visitations, website, welsh, Werewolf, werewolf transformation, Whitechapel, wine, winter, wizard, Wood, wreaker, writer, writer's block, Writers, writing, Young Adult, young author, young female author, young love, Young Protagonists, young writer, Zigmund, Zigmund Fertig

Hi Everyone!

It is with great excitement that I share with you today the interview I did for the Thousand Scar blog. Many thanks to author and fellow SPFBO entrant, Michael Baker, for giving me the opportunity to answer these great questions. And also to author Mark Lawrence, for creating this fantastic contest in the first place!

And now for the interview! I hope you enjoy it.

  1. First of all, tell me about yourself! What do you write?

I have been an author since the age of fourteen and write novels that incorporate a variety of different genres, including historical fiction, suspense, thrillers with a supernatural twist, and dark fantasy. With my most recent release (and SPFBO 4 entrant), Deadmarsh Fey, I have transitioned into storyweaving fantasy full-time, but before this book, I had written an historical romance/family saga, City of Lights: The Trials and Triumphs of Ilyse Charpentier, and an historical Gothic suspense/thriller, Corcitura. The vampires in that one are definitely in the Classical tradition and would feel right at home sharing a pint or two of Sangue de Vita with Dracula or Varney or Count Orlok. In other words, they’d sooner rip out your throat than be caught undead sparkling.

  1. How do you develop your plots and characters?

Plots have always seemed to come into being after I already have a character, or set of characters, in mind. Certain paintings and other forms of art have inspired character (and story) ideas in the past, as well, specifically the works of the Pre-Raphaelites—Sir Frank Dicksee and John William Waterhouse being my favorite artists in the Brotherhood. Additionally, I have always found the work of Henry Fuseli morbidly entrancing, so much so that one version of his Nightmare ended up playing a pivotal role in Corcitura during an early scene set in the Louvre. The painting, and its ominous presence in that scene, still chill my blood to this day.

The meanings and stories behind names have always fascinated me, too. One chief reason characters tend to appear first in my imagination before plots do is because I research names and their origins ahead of anything else. Then, if inspiration starts tugging and insisting and refusing to leave me in peace unless I do something with what I’ve gathered, I give in and start storyweaving from there. This is what happened with the name Deadmarsh. I’d heard it in passing in 2002, and immediately thought, “Wow! What a creepy and portentous name to build a legend around!” I never expected it would take twelve years to finally invent a story to go with this name, but waiting for the right tale to make itself known was worth it.

There are many characters in Deadmarsh Fey who have Welsh names, and that was by design. If you dig a little deeper into what these names mean, you will see that I instilled traits into the characters that hearken back to what they were christened. With some of them, you would have also probably been able to hazard a fair guess as to their true identities and motivations…if I hadn’t made use of double blinds and false clues to throw readers off the scent. Being tricksy like this in my writing is one of my favorite things to do, because to have names be the sole source of a character’s reason for being, what makes him or her tick, would be to destroy the character’s autonomy—and would also be very lazy writing. Not to mention an unrewarding experience for the reader, and also myself, as the author. I have to stay engaged and be kept on my toes when crafting a novel, which is why I don’t outline, but prefer to figure things out along with my characters. It keeps things fresh and exciting, as does palming the ace as often as I can.

  1. Tell us about your current project.

My current project is the sequel to Deadmarsh Fey—set seven years later—and the second novel in Dwellers of Darkness, Children of Light. Several times in Deadmarsh Fey, I mentioned the Vickers family, particularly Isobel, the youngest daughter, who is Roger’s contemporary and good friend. Near the end of the novel, Isobel’s and her family’s link to the Deadmarshes, and the beings hunting them, is hinted at, and, to a certain extent, revealed to Roger in a shocking way. What he discovers leads directly into book two, Isobel’s story, which takes place on a desolate rock called Cutwater Island. Here there be sharks, and demons of the deep. And a creature whose memory is as fathomless as its desire for revenge.

  1. Who would you say is the main character of your novels? And tell me a little bit about them!

Each novel in Dwellers of Darkness, Children of Light has a different protagonist through whose eyes we see the story. In Deadmarsh Fey, this is Roger Knightley, ten years old and cousin to Havelock (Lockie), the Deadmarsh heir. Roger is a bit of a firecracker, and though he is just a child, he’s a well-read one, which has resulted in his having quite a vivid imagination. Sometimes, this exacerbates situations, yet it also means that Roger is unencumbered by the inability to accept wonder and the inexplicable at face value. Because of this, he’s able to understand and recognize the dangers the creatures rampaging out of the Otherworld and into our own pose to himself and his family sooner than the adults and certain other characters around him. He also has a wry bent to his personality, and a stubborn streak, that help and hinder him in various ways as the book progresses. And he’s obsessed with dragons. You’ll have to read the novel to find out if that’s a fatal character flaw or not.

Story wise, the events in Deadmarsh Fey, though cloaked in the garb of fantasy, are about fighting for the ones you love. That is the main driving force behind Roger’s actions and those of his friends and allies. It’s not just about survival, or stopping the Dark Wreaker—a nebulous entity that has bedeviled the Deadmarshes for seven hundred years—and his servants from  being unleashed upon this earth, but about saving the very souls of those who are most important to you, those you’d sacrifice everything for. And that is something that has always appealed to me, not only in storyweaving, but in life.

  1. What advice would you give new writers on how to delve into creative fiction?

Absolutely do NOT write what you know. That is the worst and most stultifying piece of advice I have ever been given. If I’d followed it, Deadmarsh Fey would not exist. Don’t write what you know. Write what you dream, and make sure to instill your entire being into what your heart and soul are calling you to breathe into life.

  1. What real-life inspirations did you draw from for the worldbuilding within your book?

The setting of Deadmarsh Fey is rural England in the late 19th century. Both of my previous novels have taken place in this time period, so I was already very familiar with the mores and history and other elements of this era. For the crafting of Everl’aria (the Otherworld that is seeking to join itself to our own throughout the novel), I wasn’t inspired so much by real-life examples as I was by the mythology of Norway and Wales, which I tapped into to create my own legendarium for Deadmarsh Fey and the successive novels in Dwellers of Darkness, Children of Light.

I was also incredibly inspired by the works of Arthur Machen, an author I’d first encountered in 2007 after reading his disturbing yet fascinating short novel The Great God Pan. Once read, it is impossible to forget, but I never delved into any more of Arthur’s stories till many years later, quite accidentally, but at exactly the time I needed to most. As I discovered, he seemed to view the fey (faeries) as dangerous and lethal beings you should never trust or turn your back upon if you wanted to live. That was how I’d always imagined they truly were, so I felt I’d found a kindred spirit in Arthur, and validation for my own theories about the fey, when I read The White People and Other Weird Stories in the spring of 2013. I see this moment as the catalyst for my ideas about Deadmarsh Fey starting to coalesce—and my excitement level for the book shooting up into the stratosphere. It would be less than a year after reading this collection that I began writing the novel.

Incidentally, as an homage to Arthur, I named Havelock (Lockie) after a minor character in A Fragment of Life.

  1. What inspires you to write?

The desire to weave stories and lose myself in other worlds. J. R. R. Tolkien, who has been a defining force and inspiration not only on my writing, but also in my life, once said that fantasy is escapist, and that is its glory. I never took this to mean that writing fantasy was a way of denying reality, or hiding yourself in invented worlds because you couldn’t face daily life in our fallen one. Quite the reverse. The concept of crafting myths and legends around very human characters who inhabited worlds that reflected the glories and evils of our own, that mirrored them in some unique yet hauntingly familiar way, fired my imagination like nothing else ever had. This is the reason I don’t write contemporary fiction. Not because I can’t, but because swathing a story in the trappings of fantasy makes the experience so much richer for me as a writer, and also, hopefully, for the reader, than it would a tale stripped of its glory set in modern times. And just because something is classified as “fantasy,” doesn’t mean it can’t be realistic. If anything, it should be more so. I have always endeavored to create characters that are human, with all our foibles and weaknesses, hopes and dreams—and longings for “home.” By home, I don’t mean a building, but a deep ache within the heart to find the place where we belong. And home, for me, at least when it comes to writing, has always been in these other worlds, where I can best use the time that has been given to me to shine a blinding light onto the darkness.

  1. What was the hardest part of writing this book?

From a logistical standpoint, the hardest part was realizing that Deadmarsh Fey had to come first in the series. Until that realization finally sank in during the spring of 2014, I’d spent the previous year working on what would become the fourth book in Dwellers of Darkness, Children of Light. Writing this book first meant that I was trying to tell the end of the saga without knowing its beginning, which made for an incredibly frustrating experience. And yet I do not regret it, because what I wrote in that novel laid the foundation for all the legends and myths and conflict in this one. So, looking back, I see that it was necessary to go through this, since without that fourth book, Deadmarsh Fey could never have been written.

On an emotional level, the ending of Deadmarsh Fey was extremely hard for me to write. Over a three year period, I’d spent every day with Roger and company, and had grown incredibly attached to all of them…but not so attached that I would force them to act out of character just to please me. In the back of my mind, I’d always known how Deadmarsh Fey had to end, but the way it unfolded was not at all what I had been expecting and made everything that came before it so much deeper and more meaningful. This change of direction was due to a character showing me that his way was the only way things could be. And he was right.

  1. What was your favorite chapter (or part) to write and why?

There are four chapters that stand out in my memory as favorites. Now Face-to-Fey, Warnings and Visitations, Iron Reveals, and one I cannot mention the name of because it will spoil a story arc for not only Deadmarsh Fey, but book three in the series as well.

Now Face-to-Fey put my plotting to the test because it offered definitive proof that things were truly rotten at Deadmarsh. Up until this moment, deniability was still plausible for some characters (one in particular), but several plot points that had been simmering away for many chapters finally exploded in this one—and could no longer be discounted.

Warnings and Visitations sets up the conflict for book two, the story of Isobel Vickers and her family that I mentioned above. It was a complete joy to write this chapter, since I had been looking forward to doing so for over a year by the time I finally got to it.

Iron Reveals has a HUGE, well, reveal about the creatures bedeviling Roger and his family. In my imagination, this chapter had a different tone and feel entirely, but once I let the characters take over and do with it what they wanted, it turned out even more cohesive and startling than I could have hoped for. I also indulged in some serious schadenfreude  while writing this, since it was truly the first instance in the novel of the shoe being on the other foot, meaning that certain unsavory characters finally got a taste of what it felt like to be on the defensive.

And then there is the chapter that must remain nameless for now. This final favorite will always be special to me because everything in it came together in a seamless and unsettling way. And quickly, too, which is always a plus! That it takes place in a library, and is bookcentric, was yet another reason I enjoyed writing it as much as I did.

  1. Did you learn anything from writing this book and what was it?

Deadmarsh Fey truly taught me how to let go and give the characters free reign. This probably sounds a little odd, but I’ve found that if you get the ball rolling for them, they tend to take over and make your job a lot easier. Not a cakewalk, mind you, because I still had to juggle several story arcs that needed to be resolved to make everything not only in Deadmarsh Fey, but the other novels in the series, come full circle. Yet it was exciting to get to work each day because I knew the direction the book had taken was the one that was meant to be.

The book definitely made me grow as a writer, as well, and showed me that it was important not to get too attached to scenes or any other pieces of writing (dialogue especially) to the detriment of the story. What didn’t work was cut, and the novel ended up being much better because I had gotten out of my own way and hadn’t tried to force things.

  1. It’s sometimes difficult to get into understanding the characters we write. How do you go about it?

I try to place myself in my characters’ shoes as much as is conceivably possible, attempting to see the world of the story through their eyes, and understand why they’d react the way they would in any given situation. Of course, you can’t remove yourself entirely from the equation, but I strive not to influence their actions too much. Carver, Kip, and Incendiu, just to name a few, all went their own way, and while I do have a strong attachment to them, the greatest tie I felt when writing the book was to Roger. This was because of the range of emotions I experienced with him. As I said earlier, the entire book is told from his viewpoint (third person), and because of that, I felt like I became Roger in this story. I experienced things along with him, which meant that everything he endured, everything he felt—pain, fear, excitement, terror, disillusionment, panic, elation—I felt  deeply, too. It was simultaneously exhausting and rewarding. And made it very difficult to put him through the ordeals I had him undergo. Very difficult, yet not impossible, and I felt wretched afterward, but it was what the story called for.

  1. What are your future project(s)?

After I finish the sequel to Deadmarsh Fey, I will be working on the next two novels in Dwellers of Darkness, Children of Light. All the books already have titles, but these are rather sensitive, so I’m holding them in reserve till I announce the publication of each novel.

  1. If you couldn’t be an author, what ideal job would you like to do?

I used to want to be a marine biologist, and would have pursued this path, if a certain wizard with a long grey beard and big pointy hat had kept his words of wisdom to himself. I blame my decision to become a writer on Gandalf the Grey (as portrayed by Ian McKellen in The Fellowship of the Ring), who got to me as an impressionable sixteen year old in the winter of 2001 as I sat, awestruck and enraptured, in a darkened theater and heard him speak this iconic line to Frodo:

“All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.”

Right at that moment, I made my decision, and have never looked back.

  1. What is your preferred method to have readers get in touch with or follow you (i.e., website, personal blog, Facebook page, here on Goodreads, etc.) and link(s)?

Readers can contact me through my Web Site. And also Twitter and Goodreads

Additionally, Deadmarsh Fey is available across all Amazon sites in paperback and Kindle editions.

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Best wishes,

~Melika

 

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The Darkness Within–Excerpt

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Taken from Deadmarsh Fey, Chapter 2

 

“What happened?” Lockie whispered, as shakily as if he didn’t trust his own voice.

“You tell me,” said Roger. He kept his arms wrapped around himself, afraid he’d fall apart if he broke his hold.

“What did I say?”

It wasn’t so much what you said as what you did, Roger thought, but didn’t have the courage to speak this aloud to Lockie. “I haven’t the foggiest,” he said instead. Let’s get that ironed out first, and then we can talk about the other person inside of you. “It was gibberish. Something about hearts and bone and someone called Blood Wood. Where’d you get all that, Lockie? What have you been filling your head with?”

“Must have been a nightmare.”

“When you’re awake?”

“It’s happened before.”

That was troubling. And it made Roger’s mind up for him. This was life and death now. He knew what had to be done, and he didn’t give a fig if Coffyn had an aneurism when he found out. “That’s it. I don’t care what your parents say, or anyone else, for that matter. That place is poison, and I’m getting you out of it. You’re being ruined in more ways than one, and if those nightmares began back there…”

“This didn’t start at Nethermarrow.”

Roger’s arms uncrossed and fell to his sides. “Then where did it start? Not…here?”

“I knew you wouldn’t understand. You’re too in love with this place to see its flaws.”

“Flaws? Deadmarsh? Rubbish.”

“Not flaws,” Lockie said, his brows furrowing so dramatically that they almost formed a solid, pale line across his forehead. “That’s the wrong word.” He was silent for a moment, eyes narrowing to slits. “Malevolence.”

“Don’t tell me you’re going to trot out the old ‘this house was built on an ancient burial ground’ sham again, are you? Which evil is it this time? Celts? Druids? Take your Pict.” Roger’s lips ticked up slightly at the edges. He’d used that dreadful pun before, but it was folly to expect his cousin to laugh at it now.

Lockie turned on him a look that froze Roger’s blood. “I’ve seen its other side. I know what lives here, what’s been slumbering for so long.”

A hollow pit opened up where Roger’s heart was supposed to be. “How would you know that?”

“I woke it up.”

cover

 

 

(C) 2017, 2018 Melika Dannese Lux

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Deadmarsh Fey is Free This Weekend!

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Hi Everyone,

Yes, you read that right! The Kindle edition of my newly released dark fantasy novel, Deadmarsh Fey, is free from now until Sunday night at 11:59 PDT.  During this promotion, you can download the novel across all Amazon sites by clicking on the following links:

Amazon US

Amazon UK

cover

Flesh and bone and hearts unknown, lead to the rath and your fate will be shown…

Deadmarsh. The name struck terror into the hearts of all who heard it. But to Roger Knightley, neither Deadmarsh the house, nor Deadmarsh the family, had ever been anything to fear. Nearly each summer of his young life had been spent in that manor on the moors, having wild adventures with his cousin, Lockie, the Deadmarsh heir. This year should have been no different, but when Roger arrives, he finds everything, and everyone, changed. The grounds are unkempt, the servants long gone. Kip, the family cat, has inexplicably grown and glares at Roger as if he is trying to read the boy’s mind. Roger’s eldest cousin, Travers, always treated as a servant, now dresses like a duchess and wears round her neck a strange moonstone given to her by someone known as Master Coffyn, who has taken over the teaching of Lockie at a school in Wales called Nethermarrow.

And soon after he crosses the threshold of Deadmarsh, Roger discovers that Coffyn has overtaken Lockie. The boy is deceitful, riddled with fear, and has returned bearing tales of creatures called Jagged Ones that claim to be of the Fey and can somehow conceal themselves while standing in the full light of the moon. What they want with Lockie, Roger cannot fathom, until the horror within his cousin lashes out, and it becomes savagely clear that these Jagged Ones and the Dark Wreaker they serve are not only after Lockie and Travers, but Roger, too.

Joining forces with an ally whose true nature remains hidden, Roger seeks to unravel the tapestry of lies woven round his family’s connection to the death-haunted world of Everl’aria—and the Dark Wreaker who calls it home. The deeper Roger delves into the past, the more he begins to suspect that the tales of dark deeds done in the forest behind Deadmarsh, deeds in which village children made sacrifice to an otherworldly beast and were never seen or heard from again, are true. And if there is truth in these outlandish stories, what of the rumor that it was not an earthquake which rocked the moors surrounding Deadmarsh sixteen years ago, but a winged nightmare attempting to break free of its underground prison? Enlisting the aid of a monster equipped with enough inborn firepower to blast his enemies into oblivion might be as suicidal as Roger’s friends insist, yet the boy knows he needs all the help he can get if there is to be any hope of defeating not only the Dark Wreaker and his servants, but an unholy trinity known as the Bear, the Wolf, and the Curse That Walks The Earth.

And then there is the foe named Blood Wood, who might be the deadliest of them all.

Racing against time, Roger must find a way to end the battle being waged across worlds before the night of Lockie’s eleventh birthday—two days hence. If he fails, blood will drown the earth. And Roger and his entire family will fulfill the prophecy of fey’s older, more lethal meaning…

Fated to die.

Best wishes,

~Melika

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Get Corcitura for Free This Weekend!

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Hi Everyone!

Beginning tonight on Amazon.com at 12 AM PDT and running through Sunday night at 11:59 PDT, you can download the Kindle edition of Corcitura for free! Once the sale commences, just click here to get your copy. 🙂

Corcitura

Corcitura.  Some call it hybrid, others half-blood, mongrel, beast.  They are all names for the same thing:  vampire—the created progeny of the half-wolf, half-vampire, barb-tongued Grecian Vrykolakas, and the suave but equally vicious Russian Upyr.  Corcitura:  this is what happens when a man is attacked by two vampires of differing species.  He becomes an entirely new breed—ruthless, deadly, unstoppable…almost.

London, 1888:  Eric Bradburry and Stefan Ratliff, best friends since childhood, have finally succeeded in convincing their parents to send them on a Grand Tour of the Continent.  It will be the adventure of a lifetime for the two eighteen-year-old Englishmen, but almost from the moment they set foot on French soil, Eric senses a change in Stefan, a change that is intensified when they cross paths with the enigmatic Vladec Salei and his traveling companions:  Leonora Bianchetti, a woman who fascinates Eric for reasons he does not understand, and the bewitching Augustin and Sorina Boroi—siblings, opera impresarios, and wielders of an alarming power that nearly drives Eric mad.

Unable to resist the pull of their new friends, Eric and Stefan walk into a trap that has been waiting to be sprung for more than five hundred years—and Stefan is the catalyst.  Terrified by the transformation his friend is undergoing, Eric knows he must get Stefan away from Vladec Salei and Constantinos, the rabid, blood-crazed Vrykolakas, before Stefan is changed beyond recognition.  But after witnessing a horrific scene in a shadowed courtyard in Eastern Europe, Eric’s worst fears are confirmed.

Six years removed from the terror he experienced at the hands of Salei and Constantinos, Eric finally believes he has escaped his past.  But once marked, forever marked, as he painfully begins to understand.  He has kept company with vampires, and now they have returned to claim him for their own.

All the best,

~Melika

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Corcitura Featured on Author Suzy Turner’s Blog!

16 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by Melika Dannese Hick in Fun Stuff, News

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Hi Everyone,

Here’s more exciting news! I’m beyond thrilled to announce that Corcitura is the spotlight of the day on YA urban fantasy author Suzy Turner’s fantastic blog!

YA Indie Carnival Feature Corcitura 3-16-13

To visit the site and read the article, please click the following link:

http://suzyturner.blogspot.com/2013/03/if-you-love-vampires-then-you-must-read.html

Huge thanks to Suzy for helping to get the word out about Corcitura!!!! Don’t forget to check out her books, too! 😀

Best wishes,

Melika

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Why should I read Corcitura?

08 Saturday Dec 2012

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(For future reference, this article will be permanently housed under its corresponding tab.)

If you are a devourer of vampire fiction (from Dracula to Twilight and everything in between), you probably think all new territory has been explored. Let’s face it, there’s not much left that can be written about everyone’s favorite bloodsuckers. Corcitura, however, has been called “a startlingly original take on the vampire mythos.” Yet if you are still not convinced that this book is right for your discriminating vampire fiction palate, allow me to try and persuade you.

What starts out as a story of two best friends experiencing their first taste of freedom by setting out on a solo tour of Europe quickly explodes into a twisted untangling of centuries-old secrets as our protagonists are forced to flee from people who turn out to be much older—and somehow possess alarming otherworldly powers—than they originally appear. I am talking, of course, about vampires, and in this novel, the two that attack one of the main characters are the stuff of nightmare.

But vampires are only one facet to this multi-faceted tale. Not only are the vampires horrifying, and their trickery something I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy, but they have fascinating histories that are inextricably linked with one of the main protagonists and his family—especially his sisters, who have a crucial role to play in how this story works itself out. If you love seeing female vampire protagonists having a major role in the outcome of the story, then you will love the two in this book. Let’s hear it for the girls! They have enough history and chutzpah to fill volumes more—which is my intended plan. They also happen to be werewolves. And if that duality doesn’t intrigue you, I don’t know what will! 😉

If you read to lose yourself in different times, places, and worlds, this novel will certainly fit the bill. Not only is it set in the late 19th century, but you basically get to travel around the world for the price of admission. Of course, vampires are chasing you all over Europe, but what a ride! London, Paris (twice, the return trip being my personal favorite because of the scene in the Musée Grévin wax museum: talk about creepy! You’ll never look at clowns the same way again), Athens, Greece (where the first attack occurs), Brasov, Romania (where hidden relatives reveal themselves and the second and final attack takes place, solidifying one of the characters as the Corcitura), Venice, Italy (probably my favorite scene of the book—gondolas, Sangue di Vita, vampiric revelations, a den of the undead, shattered windows, and twenty foot drops into Venetian canals—you know, just another average day in La Serenissima), end of the century New York (watch out for the scene at the shop window), Prague (is there any city more fitting for mystically creepy shenanigans than this one?) Cluj and Sighişoara, Romania (where even more spooky doings and confrontations take place), Cologne, Germany (where the “Legacy” of the Corcitura is revealed in startling fashion), and finally an orphanage in London, where the last link in this tangled family chain is discovered.

Although vampires provide the conflict for the story, the main focus is on the characters and how they deal with the (oftentimes) awful and terrible things those vampires do to try and destroy their lives. If you tire of being shackled to the same narrator for an entire book, you will not have to endure that here, for Corcitura is told by using three different narrative voices. For more than half of the novel, our main narrator is Eric, who begins the story as a callow 18-year-old and ends as a 26-year-old with more knowledge of the world of “vampiric politics” than anyone could ever want to know. Then there is Madelaine, whose fascinating story beings midway through the second half of the novel in 1894 New York, and whose entrance into the saga could quite possibly prove to save one of the character’s lives in the end. Madelaine is fiercely loyal and as exciting and entrancing as the milieu in which she lives. The section in New York introduces a whole new world to Eric and makes him see that what he went through with the vampires in the past does not have to define his future. The characters Eric meets in this interlude grant him a much needed reprieve from the constant anxiety he has endured fighting for his life against creatures that by all rights shouldn’t even exist. But once marked, forever marked. After Eric has settled into what he hopes is a new and happy life with new friends and new loves, the vampires come to call and everything spirals out of control for him and those dearest to him from that point forward.

Out of all the narrators, Zigmund Fertig, the last character to tell his story and bring the book to a close, is my favorite, and I hope you will love him as much as I do. What a history this man has! His past weaves through the other sections in the novel before he even comes on scene, especially his connections with one of the main female vampires. The meeting of the two after so many years apart, and so many misunderstandings, is one of the most impactful and harrowing parts of the book, for Zigmund must make a decision as to whether to hold on to specters of the past or put aside his anger and join together to set his family and newfound friends free from the plague that has haunted them for centuries. Zigmund’s chapters crystallize all the narratives, history, and threads/character storylines into place and end the novel with a bang. Literally. There are not one, but three “endings beyond the ending” that keep you breathless and in suspense about how much influence these vampires truly have even until the last page is turned.

If you love terrifying vampires (And who doesn’t?), a thrilling, intricate story where something mentioned in chapter four has a huge bearing on the outcome of the story and not a word in this 700 page novel is wasted…but most importantly, if you want to read about characters you’d wish to know in real life (Except those vampires!) and root for them to have lives by the end of the book, then I invite you to lose yourself in this otherworld where vampires abide by no rules but their own.

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Genesis of Corcitura

03 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Melika Dannese Hick in Fun Stuff, News

≈ 1 Comment

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background, children of vampires, corcitura, female vampires, Greece, Romania, Russia, son of vampires, the inside story, Upyr, vampires, Vrykolakas, writing

(For future reference, this article will be permanently housed under its corresponding tab.)

“I had lied to myself from the very beginning, deceived myself into believing that I was being fanciful and overly imaginative. Surely such monstrosities only existed in nightmares? Yet I had lived through a nightmare these past months, and that was no dream at all. I was still fighting against the awful truth, not wanting to give in, searching my mind for a logical explanation—but there was none. And the most horrible realization of all was that I had known, somewhere deep inside, ever since the day I first set eyes on Vladec Salei. Plague carrier. Living death. Drainer of life. The phrasing did not matter. No euphemism could strike fear into the hearts of men the way that single word could. Vampire. And for me, the uninitiated, that single word meant death.” ~Eric Bradburry, Corcitura, Chapter 8 

December 9, 2003—that’s when the idea for the Corcitura crawled into my mind. At that time, however, I didn’t have a name for the book or the creature at all. It was just known as “That Gothic book with vampires in it.” For three months prior to that date, I had been mulling ideas for a novel with some sort of vampire that had never been explored before. In September of that year, I had scribbled my fragmentary ideas down in my oh-so-stylish rhinestone-studded Brooklyn Bridge notebook:

My rhinestone-studded Brooklyn Bridge notebook

Snazzy, no? I decided that the best way to tell the story would be to have “My Boys” (Eric and Stefan) go on a Grand Tour. Just think of it: dazzling locations, the clash of cultures, and the opportunity for all kinds of tricky vampiric subterfuge to be enacted on them in far-flung locales. From the outset, I chose to have the book “voiced” by three narrators: Eric and two other characters, Madelaine and Zigmund, who were only vaguely defined at that point. I knew he would play a very key role, but for a while, Zigmund remained the most nebulous of all—traipsing around somewhere in the fog. As for the rest of the story, everything else was up in the air. I knew I wanted to write about vampires, but while I had the rudiments of a novel, my vamp was content to stay in the background, kicking through my mind until he finally distinguished himself enough to get the story going. Until then, he’d be nicknamed “Our Combo.” 

A year before I even got the idea for the Corcitura, I had seen a painting that sent my mind reeling with all the possible implications behind it. The painting was “Oh, what’s that in the hollow?” by Edward Robert Hughes.

Oh, what's that in the hollow?

I took one look at that painting and screamed “VAMPIRE!” There’s something so morbidly entrancing and enigmatic about that painting. Is he dead? The sheen of his nearly translucent eyes certainly seems to suggest it. But what if he’s just resting until the moon rises? I only recently found out that he is dead! But back then, I was still in the dark, and so I did what all good novelists do: I totally ignored the inconvenient facts behind the painting and ran roughshod with my inspiration. Those translucent eyes were never far from my mind and inspired me so much that they found life in the book’s eponymous creature. 

I’ll bet you’re probably wondering what in the world said creature’s name even means, right? Well, I’ll tell you…in a second. Before the novel was called Corcitura, it went by a bevy of names: “OhmygoshthisissoawesomeIcan’twaittowriteit!” when I was still in the first blush of excitement and idealizing over how fun the writing of this novel would be; “That beast!” when I was in the thick of the conflict and was furiously writing my brains out and the book was taking on a life of its own; and finally “Corci,” which is what I have been affectionately calling it for the last couple of years. 

Originally, the novel was titled Nocturne because of an incident that occurs in a scene in the second half of the book.  Yet after lots of musing on the title, and how important a title is when catching a reader’s attention, I decided to name the book after the creature the two vampires create.  It seems obvious now, but at the time, it really never crossed my mind until I started thinking about how generic Nocturne sounded.  Now, when people hear the title, their reaction is “What does that mean?!” which usually results in my saying, “It’s funny you should ask.” This segues nicely into a pitch for the book. 😉  

Now back to the meaning. It was important for me to have something based in reality in a novel where the creatures were mythical, so I didn’t want to just make up a name for the new vampire species. I wanted it to be grounded in fact. Once I knew my creature was going to be a hybrid—created after being bitten by two vampires of differing species—I took the next step in finding out what that word in Romanian was (since Stefan’s family has a long and torturous history deep in the soil of that country). I have Romanian ancestors, so digging deeper into the country’s myths and legends was an added bonus. When I discovered that Corcitura meant hybrid, I thought about it, and since I didn’t like any of the names I’d made up, it eventually stuck. I know it seems strange now, but even though I had used the word throughout the novel, it never really occurred to me to change the title until the book was practically halfway written. Oddly enough, I made the decision at a wedding reception. My cousin had gotten married in the late summer of 2009, and as I sat talking to one of my cousins-in-law about the book, I paused in the conversation, stared off into space, and said, “You know what?  I’m almost 100% certain I’m changing the name to Corcitura.” And that was the end of that. 🙂 

So, why vampires, after all? Out of all the monsters of myth, vampires had always been my favorites.  I had always been fascinated by how they could be suave and alluring on the outside (or when the sun wasn’t up), but with the flick of a barbed tongue, turn into slavering, fang-toothed, bloodsucking beasts. The juxtaposition fascinated me, since in original folklore almost all vampires are essentially plagues. Some just know how to mask their true nature better than others. 

I knew if I was going to write about vampires, they’d better be different and intriguing, and since I’ve always been crazy for folklore from different parts of the world, this idea gave me an excuse to explore vampire mythology. It’s fascinating reading, freaky, but fascinating. Yet the real impetus behind the idea of having the victim be attacked by two vampires came down to one thing: sunlight.  Yes, that’s how the whole “combo” idea started—finding a way to make sure my vampire would be able to frolic around during daylight hours without being charred to ashes by the sun’s rays. For three months, I went back and forth on how a vampire could achieve this, during which time I whittled down my choices for favorite vampire candidates. Once I started seeing how different the strengths and weaknesses were, and understanding how much more indestructible the combined blood of two vampires would be (plus the human blood of the original victim), I knew I was on the right path.

Out of all the vampires I researched, the two that won in the end were the Upyr (from Russia) and the Vrykolakas, which hailed from Greece. The Vrykolakas (referred to as the Vryk from this point forward) was a jackpot find for me, mainly because he’s a virtual unknown in literature, but mostly because it is unclear if the Vryk is a vampire or a werewolf. You see where this is going, right? Just before I hit the halfway point of the novel, I realized I would have to be crazy not to exploit that gray area to the hilt. It only made sense to embrace this ambiguity, which led to a whole new story arc being created for my two female Vryk protagonists later on in the novel. I am so happy I did this because it launched the second and third halves of the novel onto a completely different plane, with the book beginning to essentially write itself from that point on. To quote Colonel Hannibal Smith, “I love it when a plan comes together!” 😉 

The Upyr and the Vryk are two sides of the same coin. Where the Vryk was plague-ravaged, nasty, and didn’t do anything to hide his true nature, the Upyr moved heaven and earth not to show his hand. My Vryk was rabid and couldn’t do much to control it. But the Upyr…he was a bird of an entirely different breed. Debonair on the outside, but blacker than the foulest dungeon, he was ten times more deadly than the Vryk and no one would ever be able to tell. He was my linch pin and turned out to come on scene much quicker than expected, which goes to show you that when the character wants out, you’d better listen, because from the moment he waltzed into the story, everything was transformed.

After doing all that research and character planning, I came up against my next problem: how to outline a novel with three narrators (different voices and perspectives were a must with a story this long and with this many converging arcs) and several different plotlines and locations? Simple, really. You write an outline, then throw it out the window once the characters hijack the story and take it where they will. My original outline had the book being even longer than it turned out to be. I am so thankful that outline changed—and dramatically.  Since the boys were going on a Grand Tour, there was originally going to be chapter upon chapter of what I realized quickly would be nothing but a travelogue, and a dull travelogue at that. In a novel billed as a thriller, one can only tolerate so much local flora and fauna before the hair starts being ripped out of the scalp.  So, if I was getting bored, something needed to give.  That all got scrapped when Vladec Salei decided to make a pit stop in Paris and bring along his particular brand of trouble much earlier than expected. 

Finally, things were in place. In May 2008, after five years of planning, outlining, scalping said outline, and gathering my research and ideas, I was ready to begin, and this was the line that sparked the flame: “But the hour grows late, and Eric needs me.” Short and sweet and loaded with hidden meaning, Madelaine’s line from a letter sent to Zigmund in the epilogue was what set the whole process in motion. And yes, I wrote the end before anything else. I had written Chapter 8, A Tavern in Venice, back in 2005, and also the first chapter of the novel that same year, but those were drastically overhauled when I sat down and actually started writing the book seriously on May 22nd, 2008. That line that started the ball rolling is indeed still in the epilogue, but the epilogue itself was turned on its head and bears little to no resemblance to what I had originally thought it would. Aren’t plans wonderful? 

I began this process thinking I would just write a vampire novel with a new twist, but what started as a story about hybrid vampires quickly morphed into something beyond what I had been planning to write.  Probably more than anything else, Corcitura became the story of the corruption of a soul and how this has a domino effect on all those who encounter him—life is overturned for everyone; everything they have ever known is distorted past recognition; nothing can ever go back to the way it used to be, for now they live in danger, fear, and some that loved him most meet their ends at his hands. 

As I entered the second phase of the novel, Corcitura had become not just a name for a dual natured creature, but a metaphor for the duality of our own natures, of the constant battle between base motives and our “better angels.”  By this point, having three narrators really helped me define this theme. Letting Madelaine and Zigmund pick up the threads of the narrative in the second and third halves of the novel forced me to look back on Eric’s narration and see if he really was as reliable or as clear-headed as he meant to be, especially in regards to Madelaine. As other characters began to make their way onto the page, the premise of upending centuries of accepted vampiric behavior and tradition began to become more and more important. Several times in the novel, characters are given a choice. Will they uphold the status quo and prove everyone who ever judged them or their “kind” right? Or will they go against the call of the blood and turn their back on their very nature by deciding that they will be the ones to put an end to the cycle of destruction? This was the most rewarding, and fun, part of the novel for me to write, since some characters made the choices I wanted them to, while others categorically refused to cooperate and hence went their own way—often to their own annihilation. 

After everything was said and done, and the book marinated and went through countless edits, I realized that Corcitura is, in fact, a horror novel, but not in the normal sense. It’s horror on many levels. The first part deals with the visceral, blatant horror of the vampires and the terror of having no way of stopping these creatures from corrupting you, body and soul; the second with the horror of deception, lying, treachery, betrayal, with thinking you know someone but discovering they have lied to you about practically everything; the third with the horror of abandonment; and lastly with the horror of the unknown—the uncertainty of things to come. But Corcitura is also a historical novel, a thriller, a book with that unnerving Gothic feeling that permeated the stories I grew up with—novels you could lose yourself in for days at a time, tales filled with characters you’d miss when the final page was turned. That’s what I set out to write, even more than a straight up vampire novel, because it’s really not about vampires in the end. It’s about the people whose lives they destroy, the people who choose to fight against them, who team up with vampires who have decided that it doesn’t matter what the legends have taught them, they will do everything in their power to stop the undead from claiming even more souls. 

The novel is not only about Eric and Stefan, but the coalition of unlikely allies whose lives intersect with vampires past and present. Each of them, in his or her own way, must overcome anger and hatreds that have been festering for centuries if there is to be any hope of survival. Some of this band, however, are not so different from the creatures hunting them—two half-vampire, half-wolf women who had the “gift” thrust upon them when they would have rather died; the last of the Corcitura’s untainted siblings, a woman whose choice might finally lift the five-hundred-year-old curse laid on her family; a scarred, hunted man who for thirty years thought the most important person in his life was dead; a young bride who was forced to become fearless in a heartbeat to save the man she has just married—the man she is beginning to understand she doesn’t really know—from becoming the vampire’s next sacrifice; and, finally, the son of two vampires, the child who cries blood—the boy who just might be the salvation of them all. 

Nine years, twenty-three edits, thousands of revisions, and 700 pages later, Corcitura is finally here. Welcome to a world where an ancient Upyr plots your destruction and a half-wolf, half-vampire haunts your doorstep, its barbed tongue poised to rip into your throat the second you answer its call. 

Button up your collar. 

Keep the flame burning. 

And come along for the ride.

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