Author Archive

31 Days of Halloween { guest author } Natalie J. Damschroder, author of Under the Moon

In my upcoming paranormal romance Under the Moon, Quinn Caldwell is a goddess who gets her power from the full moon. The moon itself, and the energy she accesses through it, are benign, and the explanation of her abilities fairly scientific.

But the moon is a catalyst for all kinds of legends and folklore, some romantic, some creepy.

We all know that labor and delivery wards are said to be packed with women giving birth during the full moon, and cops talk about the weirdos who come out, and the increase in domestic disturbances on those nights. But I’d never heard the old Jewish superstition that says that during Hoshanah Rabbah, a man who doesn’t see his shadow by the light of the moon won’t live more than a year. I’d be sure to stay inside!

Most polytheistic cultures had moon goddesses or gods, or stories about how the moon came to be up in the sky. Those often revolved around love, affairs of the heart between the sun and the moon, where the latter played coy and led the sun in a merry chase. Those myths, combined with the beauty of a brilliant moon in a dark sky, encourage us all to glorify that hunk of rock.

It was glorified to such an extent that the U.S. soared to it in 1969. I wasn’t yet born, but I imagine the aftermath was a bit of a let-down. All that effort for some dusty rocks? Of course, plenty of people have bought into the conspiracy theory that we never went to the moon at all. That kind of kills the romance of it, too.

The most famous legends connected to the full moon are those of werewolves. Such stories date back to a couple of centuries BC, and a wolf’s howl is the signature of Halloween. Shapeshifters aren’t my thing, so I’ll leave that discussion to the relevant experts, but I found some interesting speculations that connect the European origins of werewolf horror stories to modern “lunar lunacy” beliefs.

A 2009 article in Scientific American talked about the ideas of psychiatrist Charles L. Raison and his colleagues. They said that despite studies disproving the connection between the full moon and accidents, suicides, and excessive birth rates, the whole concept may be grounded in historical reality. Before outdoor electricity, people who slept outside, including mentally ill people, might have been kept awake by the bright moon, and sleep deprivation could have made them act erratically.

I find myself equally compelled by the scientific and supernatural explorations of moon effects. How about you? Any moon-related stories?

~~~~~~~~~~

Natalie J. Damschroder’s latest and upcoming releases:

Behind the Scenes October 31, 2011
Carina Press | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Audible coming soon.

Under the Moon November 1, 2011
Entangled Publishing | Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Fight or Flight Out now!
Carina Press | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Audible

You can learn more about Natalie and her books at her website, eHarlequin, Goodreads, Twitter, and Facebook. She blogs with four other obsessed passionate Supernatural fans at Supernatural Sisters, with a number of fantastic romance authors at Everybody Needs a Little Romance, and just to hear herself talk at Indulge Yourself.

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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31 Days of Halloween { guest author + giveaway } Lisa Kessler, author of Night Walker

Today we are joined by Lisa Kessler, author of the paranormal romance, Night Walker, as she talks about the Mexican holiday of Dia de los Muertos. Give her a warm welcome!

Happy Halloween everyone! Thank you for inviting me to the 31 Days of Halloween blog party!

Halloween is my favorite time of year! I love the costumes and the spooky fun, but in San Diego we also celebrate Dia de los Muertos or Day of the Dead.

It’s a traditional Mexican holiday celebrating ancestors who have passed away. On November 1st and 2nd the veil between the living and the dead is thinned, and we celebrate with them.

In San Diego, when the calendar changes to October, you start to see skull sugar cookies… And skeletons posed in all fashions of life, playing in a band, dancing, etc.

But these aren’t scary Halloween-type ghouls. Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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Monster Mash & Bash Blog Hop 2011

As part of the 2011 Monster Mash and Bash Blog Hop, I’m giving away a copy of Shadows of the Night by Lydia Joyce (a Victorian historical romance with a Gothic sub-plot) and Devil Without a Cause (The Devil’s Bargin, #1) by Terri Garey (modern paranormal romance; slightly used from reading once for my review but in terrific condition) to one lucky follower living in the US! Just fill out THIS FORM and don’t forget to check out all the other amazing bloggers hosting giveaways!

monster bash and bash

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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31 Days of Halloween { excerpt + giveaway } The White People & Other Weird Stories by Arthur Machen, edited by S.T. Joshi

Thanks to Meghan at Penguin Books, I have three copies of The White People & Other Weird Stories by Arthur Machen, edited by S.T. Joshi for three lucky readers! So check out the following excerpt from Machen scholar, S.T. Joshi, and then enter to win a copy! Good luck and enjoy!

Introduction
Arthur Machen’s own life is perhaps his greatest creation; for it is exactly the life we might expect a poet and a visionary to have lived. Born in 1863 in the village of Caerleon-on-Usk in Wales (the site, two millennia earlier, of the Roman town of Isca Silurum and the base of the Second Augustan Legion), Machen was fascinated since youth by the Roman antiquities in his region as well as the rural Welsh countryside. He attended Hereford Cathedral School, but in 1880 he failed an examination for the Royal College of Surgeons; he felt he had no option but to go to London to look for work, where he hoped that his ardent enthusiasm for books might land him some literary work. But only poverty and loneliness were his portion. Dragging out a meager existence as a translator (his translation of the Heptameron of Marguerite de Navarre [1886] long remained standard, as did his later translation of Casanova’s memoirs), tutor, and cataloger, he knew at first hand the spiritual isolation that his alter ego, Lucian Taylor, would depict so poignantly in The Hill of Dreams (1907). In his first autobiography, Far Off Things (1922), he speaks of this period with a wistfulness that scarcely conceals his anguish. Consider the description of his attic garret on Clarendon Road: Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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31 Days of Halloween { guest blogger } Dana from On the Broomstick Talks Witches!

Today we are joined by Dana from On the Broomstick as she talks about Alice Hoffman’s Practical Magic and shares her favorite witchy books and movies with us. Enjoy!

What is a witch? Since I have started my blog, On the Broomstick, I have been asked that a lot. A witch is the woman in the mirror. She is the creak on the stairs and the shadow on the moon at night. She is the mysterious smile of the woman three steps ahead of you in the grocery store line. Or, she could be your next door neighbor.

Halloween is one of my favorite times of the year. It is the time of year for celebrating the “witch in every woman.” This autumn has been particularly fun with my discovery of The Practical Magic Blog Party 2011. Witches and witches at heart take great joy in bringing to life the magic in all of us as we remember the first time we watched the movie or read the book or had a midnight margarita…

The event was originated with Frosted Petunias and has grown into quite a large annual blog party. To celebrate, I read the book, Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman. The book was quite a bit different than the movie. For those of you unfamiliar with the story, sisters Sally and Gillian are left orphaned and are raised by “The Aunts” a spellbinding couple of older women who the girls discover are witches. The only problem with this is that it seems to run in the family. Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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31 Days of Halloween { giveaway } Sourcebooks Paranormal Austen Prize Pack

Thanks to Liz at Sourcebooks who has donated us these terrific books up for grabs today: Emma and the Vampires by Wayne Josephson; Mr. Darcy Vampyre by Amanda Grange; Mr. Darcy’s Bite by Mary Lydon Simonsen; and Pemberley Shades by Dorothea A. Bonavia-Hunt (all in trade paperback).

Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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31 Days of Halloween { guest post } All Hallows in Old Lancashire by Mary Sharratt, author of Daughters of the Witching Hill

Today we are joined by historical fiction author Mary Sharratt, author of the amazing Daughters of the Witching Hill (read my review) as she talks about All Hallows in Elizabethan Lancashire, England.

Come Halloween, the popular imagination turns to witches. Especially in Pendle Witch Country, the rugged Pennine landscape surrounding Pendle Hill, once home to twelve individuals arrested for witchcraft in 1612. The most notorious was Elizabeth Southerns, alias Old Demdike, cunning woman of long-standing repute and the heroine of my novel Daughters of the Witching Hill.

How did these historical cunning folk celebrate All Hallows Eve?

All Hallows has its roots in the ancient feast of Samhain, which marked the end of the pastoral year and was considered particularly numinous, a time when the faery folk and the spirits of the dead roved abroad. Many of these beliefs were preserved in the Christian feast of All Hallows, which had developed into a spectacular affair by the late Middle Ages, with church bells ringing all night to comfort the souls thought to be in purgatory. Did this custom have its origin in much older rites of ancestor veneration? This threshold feast opening the season of cold and darkness allowed people to confront their deepest fears—that of death and what lay beyond. And their deepest longings—reunion with their cherished departed.  Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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31 Days of Halloween { guest + giveaway } Hooray for Halloween by Roxanne Rhoads

Today we are joined by indie author, Roxanne Rhoads. Her latest book is Paranormal Pleasures: Ten Tales of Supernatural Seduction. Welcome!

Halloween…the one day when spirits can walk this world in the flesh when those who are no longer ‘real’ once again become corporeal.

The one day I enjoy more than any other day of the year.

Why?

There are many reasons but the main one is that the rest of the year I never feel like my ‘real’ self.

I can’t walk around vamped out in Goth attire looking dark and spooky even if that’s how I feel inside. I’m a married mommy of three. I don’t think the other mommies would appreciate a Morticia Addams among them; they probably wouldn’t let their kids come over and play with mine. That could pose a threat to the social lives of my little ones.

Perhaps I’m not being true to myself but I can’t do that to my husband or kids. So I hide the darkness inside only letting it out the rest of the year in my fiction.  Read more

Teresa

Teresa (nom de plume: Torrance Sené) is a self-proclaimed geek, a Janeite, a lover of werewolves and bad-ass angels, an aspiring novelist and an avid book reader who freelances as a web designer. You can follow her on Twitter at @eireannoir.

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