Buy Forge HERE |
I’m the youngest of five (a brother
and three sisters); an aunt to three nieces and three nephews; and grand-aunt
(ye gods!) to two girls, two boys. I’d like to reiterate that I’m the youngest of five, so I get to be the
young, cool aunt. Being the baby of the family is finally a good thing.
Like writing, music is essential to my
sanity. I sing in a choir, with the family, in the shower, and while driving. I
play bluegrass/folk acoustic guitar, largely self-taught. Back in high
school/college, I taught myself five or six pieces on the piano, ranging from
“Won’t You Come Home, Bill Bailey?” to “Fur Elise”, and mostly remember them
still. Now, I’m starting to pick up a little mandolin.
I serve two cats. Pip the SweetieBaby,
is a 12-year-old Maine Coon. Orange-and-white Taz is a seven-year-old roadside
rescue. I named him after Tazhret, the hero’s alias in Forge because my godson delivered
him from the highway and into my care when I was first drafting the story. And,
like Keir, Taz was a lost and traumatized creature when he first came to live
with me. He’s a fat cat now, and picks on Pip when he’s bored. I can give them
both baths, without getting a scratch on me.
After many years of single life, I
married the man with the kindest heart I’ve ever met. Our wedding united two
tribes. Neither of us has to explain our family to the
other. We just get it.
I love to travel, whether by road trip
or air. So does my husband. We almost never unpack our bags. But the best thing
about traveling is coming home and sleeping in our own bed.
I love my in-laws.Which makes me an
exceedingly fortunate woman, given how many of them I have.
I also my love my numerous cousins. In
almost any conversation, I find myself saying, “I have a cousin who...[insert cool/odd/fun fact here].” This
also happens with siblings, but the cousins outnumber them.
My obscure contribution to pop
culture: When I was little, one of my favorite colors was magenta. Except I
thought it was pronounced “magneta.” I told my cousin Chrissy this story, and
she told her sister, who was in rehearsals for a community theater production
of Rocky Horror Picture Show in
Oklahoma City. In their playbill, the character Magenta was spelled—on purpose—“Magneta.”
(See how my conversation gets around to my cousins somehow or other?)
When I first drafted the scene in Forge
where the Khevox capture an important supporting character, I had both
bronchitis and pleurisy. I’d say my respiratory difficulties showed up in the
story. Let’s just say I shared my misery.
My father will turn 92 on March 13th.
He got a Kindle just so he could read Forge—the first science fiction he’s
read since grade school: Lost on the Moon, by Roy Rockwood. He remembers the space ship had “carbide
engines.” (Yes, my dad is an engineer. How did you know?) Happy early birthday,
Dad!
~~~Forge blurb~~~
Warned
by a Seeing…The
high king of the Scotian Realm expects the arrival of an enemy, a race of
psychic predators bent on galactic conquest. The Realm’s one hope is alliance
with the neighboring star domains in defense of a shared colony, Forge.Caught in Fate’s grim weaving…Mindblind, amnesic, Tazhret lives out his drug-induced visions of servitude on Forge. He wants to believe the beautiful woman with the nut-brown hair who whispers reassurances to his harrowed heart: “You have a name.”But is she even real? Or just one bright thread in his dark dreams?
An unexpected hope…Tazhret’s destiny leads him to freedom and the woman he yearns for
—and to a desperate struggle against the enemy. Tazhret can save Forge, and the clan of his beloved. But only at the cost of all he has hoped for: his name, his freedom, and his love
for the woman with the nut-brown hair…
~~~Excerpt~~~
Keir, on the threshold of recovering
his true name, meets the haunting woman of his dreams...
Floating
in a soothing sea, he didn’t open his eyes until the door clicked.
A
tall and slender woman strode into the room with the grace of a dancer, and
[he] forgot to breathe. A tunic in Scotian healer’s gold fell past her slim
hips, belted over black trousers with the four-stranded azure braid of a Water
adept. She came to his bedside, a smile turning up the corners of her wide,
wonderful lips, dimpling her cheeks, crinkling the corners of her eyes—her
large, luminous eyes, glimmering with brighter sparks of topaz and emerald in
the softer glow of dark amber. Her nut-brown hair fell to the clean line of her
jaw, framing her bonny face. Her perfect nose sat slim and straight between exquisite
cheekbones. Her dark, winging eyebrows arched above her beautiful eyes.
His
heart pounded, and he stared, slack-jawed. She’s real. I didn’t really
believe. But…oh, Trinity, she’s real.
“How
do you feel?” she asked in a soft contralto; the same voice he had followed
from his nightmare entombment.
[Keir]
snapped his jaw shut. How did he feel? He didn’t even know. Too much had
happened, too fast. And-and she was there. Right there. In front of him.
Expecting an answer.
Closing
his eyes, he considered the question, waiting for the familiar, desperate
jangle of jagged pain along his nerves, of slow recovery from old exhaustion
and long starvation. But they were silent, and in their place….
[Keir]
drew his first breath since she’d entered the room. “I feel…good, honored
healer,” he said, “Hungry. Tired. But otherwise, really…really good.”
Find me at:
Website: http://www.scotianrealm.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tk.anthony.90
Twitter: @TK_Anthony_
Email: tesskanthony@gmail.com
Goodreads:
http://www.goodreads.com/TK_Anthony
2 comments:
Wow! Your family sounds like my hubby's. His mom is the youngest of 15, so there are a lot of cousins. And, I think I've only met half.
You can bathe your cats without getting scratched? That is a feat. I've only ever bathed one cat like that. She would curl up in a ball and play dead, instead.
All the best, TK! :)
Dad was the second eldest of 13. I'm closer to my myriad cousins than many folks are to their siblings. We're like the Greek side of the family in "My Big, Fat, Greek Wedding"--only with beer and corn on the cob instead of ouzo and lamb.
You're more fortunate than most if your kitty merely played dead!
Thanks for stopping in, Jessica. Have a great day!
Post a Comment