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Elizabeth McKenna

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Elizabeth McKenna

Tag Archives: Fantasy

Kingdomless by Michelle Garyfalakis – Book Tour and Giveaway

25 Wednesday May 2022

Posted by Elizabeth McKenna - Author in Book Tour

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Fantasy, Giveaway, Romance, Young Adult

Join Us for this Tour:  May 16 to June 3, 2022
 
Book Details:

Book Title:  Kingdomless (The Evamore Series Book 1) by Michelle Garyfalakis
Category:  YA Fiction (Ages 13-17), 422 pages
Genre:  YA Fantasy Romance
Publisher:  Self-Published
Release date:   January 2022
Content Rating:  PG-13 +M: There is a scene where our main character is held at knifepoint and her attacker grabs her breasts without consent. The word ‘nipple’ is used in this situation. This is the reason for the added “M” in the rating.

Book Description:

The remnants of the United Kingdom of Garth, once ruled by the legendary Dynasty of Evamores are in the throes of conflict. Ten years ago, King Wren of the West discovered Raelle washed up on the shores of the Balour Sea, with no memory of the first nine years of her life. She was brought back to the castle and dutifully cared for and cherished by the king and his three older sons. On her nineteenth birthday, the Western Kingdom’s adoptive princess is secretly sent away by her stepmother to marry King Veras as a token of peace between the kingdoms. But, the Northern King has other plans.

As Raelle’s amnesia melts away with the help of a northern storyteller, she discovers more about the Kingdom of Garth, magic, the lovetie connection of the Evamores, and her role in the grand scheme of things. She is confused, angry, and curiously comfortable in the North.

A dark shadow overcasts all of the kingdoms, and the threatening influence of the fallen god Kellar seems to spread among the people, inciting disorder and violence. While the fate of the kingdoms may rest on Raelle’s shoulders, she can’t help but feel kingdomless. Betrayal is everywhere, from her own adoptive family to her newfound friends. Fearless, observant, witty, and determined, she is torn between her attraction to King Veras’ good nature and the unexplained pull to the Tracker Calak. The challenge that she faces is not simple. As the old gods, laws, and magic awaken, so does her own sense of self. There is a choice to be made, step into the role expected of her, or dive into the unknown and make her own destiny.

This YA fantasy novel asks the readers important coming of age questions and captures their attention with witty dialogue, relatable characters, and a world that is reawakening its forgotten magic. The readers will be entranced and hungry for more (and perhaps a piece of chocolate cake).

BUY THE BOOK
Amazon ~ Audible
add to Goodreads
 
 

Meet the Author:

MICHELLE GARYFALAKIS was born and raised in Ontario, Canada. She currently lives just outside of Hamilton, Ontario with her husband, four kids, and Snowy (their friendly Samoyed-Border Collie). When she isn’t obsessively typing out new stories on her computer, you can find her drinking coffee with a friend, snacking on some guacamole, or binge-watching Outlander (again). Michelle loves finding creative ways to communicate with people, and her passion for storytelling is the newest addition to that list.

Connect with the author: Website  ~  Facebook  ~  Instagram ~ Twitter ~ Bookbub ~ TikTok ~ Goodreads

 
 
 
Tour Schedule:

May 16 –
Cover Lover Book Review – book spotlight / giveaway
May 16 – Rockin’ Book Reviews – audiobook review / guest post / giveaway
May 17 – Character Madness and Musings – book spotlight / guest post / giveaway
May 17 – Leels Loves Books – book review / giveaway
May 18 – Kam’s Place – book spotlight
May 18 – My Reading Getaway – book review / author interview / giveaway
May 19 – Locks, Hooks and Books – book review / giveaway
May 20 – Wottaread – book spotlight / author interview / giveaway
May 23 – Literary Flits – book spotlight / giveaway
May 24 – Freda’s Voice – book spotlight / guest post / giveaway
May 24 – Jazzy Book Reviews – book review / guest post / giveaway
May 25 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – book spotlight / giveaway
May 25 – Cheryl’s Book Nook – book review / giveaway
May 25 – Living in a Bookworld – book spotlight / guest post / giveaway
May 26 – Writer with Wanderlust – audiobook review / guest post / giveaway
May 26 – Westveil Publishing – book spotlight / guest post / giveaway
May 27 – From the TBR Pile – book review / giveaway
May 31 – Gina Rae Mitchell – book review / guest post / giveaway
May 31 – Book Corner News and Reviews – book review / giveaway
June 1 – The Page Ladies – book review
June 1 – Sadie’s Spotlight – book spotlight / author interview
June 2 – She Just Loves Books – audiobook review / giveaway
June 2 – Books for Books – book spotlight
June 3 – fundinmental – book spotlight / giveaway

Enter the Giveaway:

 

KINGDOMLESS by Michelle Garyfalakis Book Tour Giveaway

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James Dreadful and the Tomb of Forgotten Secrets – Book Tour and Giveaway

11 Tuesday Jan 2022

Posted by Elizabeth McKenna - Author in Book Tour

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Fantasy, Giveaway, Young Adult

Join us for this tour from Jan 10 to Jan 28, 2022!

Book Details:
Book Title:  James Dreadful and the Tomb of Forgotten Secrets (The Dreadful Series Book 2) by Alan Creed
Category:  YA Fiction (Ages 13-17),  332 pages
Genre: Fantasy
Publisher:  Creed Publishing
Release date:  October 19, 2021
Content Rating:  PG-13. Uses of the word “sh*t” occasionally, “pr*ck,” “*sshole”. Also some references to drinking.

Book Description:

James Dreadful’s Epic Adventure Continues in Book Two of the Dreadful Series

After narrowly escaping a contract with his father’s evil servant Rekenhowler, James reluctantly decides to return home to the Cades Isles to live out the rest of his youth training to become a sorcerer. The only problem: James and his companions are adrift on the boat Persephone in the Realm of Shadows without a crew.

When a stowaway aboard Persephone informs James that his father—the Dark Lord—might have been mind-slaved by the mysterious, evil Cowl, James is shocked. The only proof that he will accept is the soul of his father, which he learns is lodged deep in the Tomb of Forgotten Secrets. In confronting his father’s soul, James can learn the truth about the Dark Lord—and if he is destined to become one himself.

But before he can reach the Tomb, James must travel to Sarvelok, an island protected by raiders, to retrieve the key his uncle Oskar stole from him. Attacking the island would be suicide—but possible with the help of Rekenhowler. The price James will have to pay, however, is too high, but without it, will he ever learn the truth of his father—and his own fate?

Buy the Book:
Amazon

Meet the Author:

Alan Creed fell in love with storytelling after seeing Star Wars for the first time as a child. When he was ten years old, his tutor asked him to write sentences containing three words: Ocean, Desert and Jungle. Instead of sentences, Alan wrote a 103-page story entitled Journey through the Desert. That’s when he knew he wanted to be a writer. His 103-page story served as the source material for the Dreadful Series. Alan is currently working on the next installment in the James Dreadful series.

Connect with the author: website ~ goodreads

 
Tour Schedule:

Jan 10 – Working Mommy Journal – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 10 – Gina Rae Mitchell – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 11 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 12 – Celticlady’s Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 12 – redpillows – book spotlight
Jan 13 –
 Rockin’ Book Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 13 – Lamon Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 14 – Lynchburg Reads – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 17 – Jazzy Book Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 17 – Gold Dust Editing & Book Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 18 – Hall Ways Blog – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 19 – GivernyReads – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 20 – Books, Tea, Healthy Me – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 20 – StoreyBook Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 21 – Pick a Good Book – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 21 – Book Corner News and Reviews – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 24 – Literary Flits – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 25 – Westveil Publishing – book spotlight / giveaway
Jan 25 – Sefina Hawke’s Books – book spotlight
Jan 26 – Sadie’s Spotlight – book spotlight
Jan 26 – Books for Books – book spotlight
Jan 27 – Kam’s Place – book spotlight
Jan 28 – Locks, Hooks and Books – book spotlight / giveaway

 

Enter the Giveaway:

 JAMES DREADFUL AND THE TOMB OF FORGOTTEN SECRETS Book Tour Giveaway

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 The History of Romance Novels and Fairy Tales – Guest Post by Bruce Calhoun

05 Tuesday Oct 2021

Posted by Elizabeth McKenna - Author in Book Tour, Release Blitz

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Fantasy, Guest Post, Historical Romance

                      

I’d like to welcome author Bruce Calhoun – a fellow Wisconsinite! – to my blog. Today is release day for his new novel Ardennia, which is a unique retelling of the Cinderella tale. I love it when author’s reimagine the classics, so I was very happy to help Bruce promote his latest creation. Good luck, Bruce!

~Elizabeth McKenna

Romance novels have a long lineage.  They date back to the medieval age and were labeled romance novels not because they were about romance, but because they were written in the French vernacular and not Latin.  Thus, they were called romances because French is a romantic language.   The romances were wildly popular with the French nobility, and because no one else but the clergy could read or had access to rare and expensive books, the stories were always about kings, queens, knights, ladies and clerics.  The Arthurian tales based on legends written in Latin are a prime example.  Chrétien de Troyes’ was the first writer who used the French language to elaborate on these tales. 

The formula for these romances was pretty basic:  Everything is copasetic, some kind of problem or need comes up, the hero goes on a quest, the quest is successful, the hero finds love with his lady and the tale ends happily.  The earliest romances were based not only on local legends, but on the great epics like Virgil’s Aeneid.  However, as they evolved, the heroes of these tales had to exhibit gallantry to the ladies as well as martial prowess.  It was no longer sufficient to slay foes on the battlefield; a warrior had to win hearts in the boudoir.

From the courts of France, romances conquered the rest of Europe with the help of such patrons as Marie de Champagne and Eleanor of Aquitaine.  The names of most the authors of these works have been long forgotten.   One name, in particular, has not:  Geoffrey Chaucer.  His Canterbury Tales contain several romances, though he is best known for establishing the sub-genre of the satire.

During the late medieval age, the invention of the printing press and the emergence of the middle class resulted in the inclusion of common folk in romances.  Books like Sir Amadace portrayed a merchant as a hero, and women also came into their own.  In Amoryus and Cleopes, a lady defeats a dragon with her wiles much to the delight of its readers – who were mostly women.  Taking it one step further, authors began to write about peasants.  They often featured peasant children in “fairy tales” like Jack and the Beanstalk or Goldilocks and the Three Bears. 

In the sixteenth century, the intellectuals of the humanist period began disparaging romances.  One such intellectual, Michel de Montaigne, called romance novels “wit-besotting trash.”  Another, Juan Luis Vives, warned that romances engendered “beastly and filthy desire.”   The church got into the act by prohibiting some romances.   This only made romances more popular, and they remained in fashion up to the early modern era.  Sadly, most of these books are lost to posterity.  But they were the antecedents of fairy tales, the novel and today’s fantasy fiction.  We owe much to the old romances, and many of their plots and characters live on in the works of such writers as Shakespeare, Goethe, Sir Walter Scott and Jonathan Swift.

My tribute to the old romances and the fairy tales that sprang from them is a unique retelling of the Cinderella tale; described below.

Ardennia: The Unlikely Story of Cinderella’s Prince is a Cinderella story like no other that captures the magic, brutality and earthiness of the medieval ages.  This first book in a series chronicles the many adventures of Cinderella’s Prince as he undergoes his baptism of fire in the Battle of Paris, is charmed by Cinderella at a masquerade ball, and sets off on a quest to find her after she flees the ball at the midnight hour.  The quest takes him through strange lands supposedly inhabited by ogres, pixies, hobgoblins, man-eating plants and giants, and peopled by extraordinary characters that include an epileptic bard, a bean counter who wagers his gold tooth in a dice game, a merchant who can never be too prosperous, a little girl who has a running feud with three bears, pilgrims that argue over who is the most pious and a beggar who has been cursed with leprosy for committing all the cardinal sins.  Be on the look-out for a bit of Chaucer-like satire.

My Bio

I am a literature-major drop out who received a Bachelor’s degree in biology and science education from the University of Wisconsin.  I taught marine biology in Puerto Rico, worked as a diver for the Australian Institute of Marine Science, wrote an award winning play, and founded Save the Rainforest in 1988 www.savetherainforestnow.org.  In my spare time, I read, bicycle, cross country ski and write plays and novels. 

To get the book, follow me, or read reviews of Ardennia, go to:

https://www.literaryworksbrucecalhoun.com/novels.html

Excerpts from the book:

“This one’s the daughter from his first marriage.  Her father spoiled her awfully.  Those days are over I can tell you,” Lady Tremaine had said, referring to Cinderella.

The eldest daughter disappeared up the stairway leaving Lord Phillip alone with Cinderella who was on her knees scrubbing the floor.

It had been years since the brother of the King had made use of ‘the maiden’ and the hinges of the door had creaked as it was opened to reveal the spikes in the door and the rear casement.

King Charles, flanked by the Count, Henry and Guy, led the cavalcade out of the castle through the gatehouse and down the hill to the village. 

 “You are about to become a very wealthy buffoon if you play your cards right.”

But Guy had only pretended to fall asleep, and when the hobgoblin tiptoed into the camp to steal Adele (his goat) Guy caught it red-handed.

The Baron led on, and soon they entered the crypt where the salted remains of several former barons and baronesses were on display.

Guy’s first instinct was to draw his sword and smite down the ogre.

“My mother would be glad to hear you say that because she wanted nothing more than for me not to be an idiot,” said Henry.

When it came time to go abed Guy warned that this would be an especially bad night for pixies and that they should plug their ears with extra beeswax.

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