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Announcing Blood Deep’s Release Date

I still can’t quite believe how much excitement has been flooding in for this pending announcement. But then again, neither can I believe we’re on book 4 of my Blackthorn series already! It only feels like a short time ago since I launched with Blood Shadows.

But here it is…calendars at the ready…it’s Blood Deep‘s release date!

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NINE weeks and counting!!

There will be lots more between now and then though – not least the cover reveal, the first three chapters uploaded here for you to read for free, and a post from me giving you a few clues as to what to expect. It’s all on its way. 😀

If you’re not a regular here, you might not know that Blood Deep features the final integral Blackthorn couple you need to meet: Eden and Jessie. For those who are still assuming this is the finale, I cannot stress enough that it’s not!

And if you are fairly new here, and don’t yet know how Blackthorn began and developed into what it is today, I was asked to reveal all in a post for my week-long spotlight on the wonderful ‘The Author Visits’. You can read it here.

Have a fabulous weekend, everyone!

xxx

Blackthorn on ‘The Author Visits’

Courtesy of the wonderful Veena Kashyap, Blackthorn is currently featuring in a week-long spotlight on ‘The Author Visits’. Thank you SO much for hosting me, Veena. 🙂

It started on Monday with a showcase of all three Blackthorn books so far. An awesome 5 star review of Blood Shadows featured yesterday. Today, I’m being interviewed by Veena. If you’d like to know who or what inspires me to write, what scene I’d pick out as a favourite from one of my books, and what advice I’d give to fellow writers on their path to publication, you’ll find it here. There’s lots more insight too!

Later this week, there will be reviews for Blood Roses and Blood Torn as well as a guest post from me. There’s also a give-away of the first three Blackthorn books, just in case you want to tempt a friend into trying the series. I do hope you’ll be able to stop by.

And, in case you’ve missed it on Facebook, Twitter and the notice board here, THIS FRIDAY we’re revealing Blood Deep‘s release date! I’ve been totally overwhelmed by your response to this news so far – thank you for all the support and excitement that’s been flooding in. Calendars at the ready!! 😀

The Author Visits

We’re also celebrating Blood Shadows reaching number 1 again in the Gothic Romance charts on Amazon.com this week – so thank you again for all your support. xxx

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Blackthorn: A Dark and Twisted Fairy Tale?

Once upon a time, in a dark, dark wood…hold on…strike that….

Once upon a time, in a dark, dark district, deep in the rotten and impoverished core of a human-ruled locale…

I often get asked what inspired Blackthorn – how the idea first came to me, or which author in the genre made me want to dip into PNR. By now most of my readers who visit this site or have read any of my interviews will know it was one night of getting lost that inspired my first thoughts about the series. And I have confessed that I hadn’t actually read any PNR at that time, not least because it didn’t exist long, long ago, in the distant land of Wales, in the year of 1996.

But…

I had watched The Little Vampire TV series as a child. I did watch The Lost Boys in my late teens. I’ve always held that those two were the inspiration to my urban approach to vampire tales. Then, of course, I read Anne Rice. My fascination with all things mythological stems back years even before all of that though – probably as far back as having read The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. Amidst all that, I developed a fascination for the Gothic genre.

Yet I cannot deny, though I’ve never gone into any depth about it until now, that fairy tales have most definitely played a part in forging the fabric of what Blackthorn has become. For a long time, I didn’t even realise it. After all, what is the essence of Blood Roses if not Beauty and the Beast? Except this beast really bites – and Beauty has a sting all of her own, of course!

There’s been some fabulous and fun fiction, TV shows and films out these last few years during a wave of fairy tale revival. This time it’s been with new spins on old favourites or, more specifically, intended for an adult audience.

It appears that fairy tales are as enduring as the legends surrounding our most beloved supernatural characters – vampires, werewolves and witches, amongst others. Witches, in particular, are reoccurring “favourites” in both fairy tales and paranormal romance. Unlike so many representations of witches today though, I remember when they were damn scary. I think the film, The Blair Witch Project did an incredible job of bringing the legend right back to how it used to be. I remember it took me months to build up to watch it. I knew, even before it started, it was going to terrify me. I knew I was going to be transported right back to when I was a child, when the witches of fairy tales truly were the thing of nightmares. The serryn-kind of witches that terrify vampires in Blackthorn.

Whether we like it or not, we’re born with an inherent fascination with the macabre. It’s in our basic survival instincts to be aware of the threats out there – we want to learn, we want to understand and we want to be able to protect ourselves. As children, fairy tales feed that part of us. They’re exciting, dangerous, scary, anxiety-provoking and utterly compelling as a result.

Forget Disney’s interpretations, fairy tales, real fairytales, aren’t nice. In fact, they’re downright disturbing – not least when you peel the layers away. It’s probably why they’ve held a captive audience for so many centuries and why they’re still bought today. Dark, violent, cruel, sexist, full of selfishness and greed, kidnappings, blackmail, loneliness, where only the beautiful survive or whereby unless you’ve got feet unnaturally small for your height to the point you wouldn’t be able to stand up, you don’t deserve to find your prince. (I’ve got small feet for my height, by the way, so that’s not a personally-motivated dig. ;-))

Fairy tales don’t shy away from things. There’s childhood abuse, predatory adults, a beast threatening to slaughter a young girl’s father unless she’s delivered to him against her will (of course, she still fell in love with him – the shock, the shame, the slight against woman-kind!!), attempted murder, a brave prince losing his eyes trying to cut through a Blackthorn hedge (allegedly) to save his one true love, children shoving an old woman in an oven to burn her alive after thieving from her house – but only after being willfully abandoned by their parents to starve to death. And, of course, let’s not forget what terrible press stepparents get in these stories. Yes, fairy tales are just magical and highly-appropriate reading material for young and delicate minds.

Only maybe they are. Maybe that’s why they’ve endured like they have. Fairy tales are not there to soft-pedal reality. They are there, in some cases, to push readers to the edge of their fears, to give a sense of right and wrong, to show both light and dark in parallel, to explore the consequences of behaviour but, most of all, fairy tales show that all can be okay in the end.

Very few fairy tales end without some kind of justice, of good overthrowing evil (however debatable and sometimes stereotypical that evil is), of characters changing and developing as happens in all great stories. Most of all, they’re brilliant because they don’t hold back on character flaws. They don’t hold back on the bad stuff. They say sometimes life is bad, that bad things happen, that it can be struggle and that, sometimes, things happen for no reason at all. Anger, fear, hatred, cruelty, prejudice, oppression, injustice – they’re part of the fabric of society. BUT people survive, friendships are formed, families are reunited, characters see the errors of their ways and those that don’t are punished whilst the good go on to live happy lives. Good can triumph over evil. Monsters can be defeated. Love, ultimately, finds a way.

Some of us are still big kids at heart, aren’t we? Isn’t that why we love the escapism that stories give us? To go places we’ll never experience or might be too scared to venture alone? Don’t some of us, as adults, want to revisit the witch’s kitchen, to walk through that dark wood, to feel the wolf snapping at our heels, to believe that heroes and heroines still exist and, most importantly, that there’s always hope? Don’t some of us, basically, still like a little bit of magic in our lives? And not least when things, when reality, gets dark?

Hence Blackthorn – not for the faint-hearted, but then it was never meant to be.

So here’s a very special thank you for all the wonderful messages and emails I’ve received that inspired this post. To the readers who have brought me smiles and to the edge of tears letting me know how valuable the escapism of Blackthorn has been to you. Knowing it’s a little sprinkle of fairy dust in your own lives is the biggest payback of this series ever. You make sharing Blackthorn with you so worthwhile. So, in turn, thank you for sharing your stories with me.

Enjoy the rest of your weekend.

xxx

P.S. If you’re intrigued by my reference to the “Blackthorn” hedge – there will be a post on that before too long!

Jask’s Secret is Revealed!

A little while ago, I was really flattered to be invited to be a part of Moonrise Book Blog’s anniversary event. This awesome blog is super-supportive of Blackthorn, not least giving all three books terrific reviews and 5 stars each. So when they asked me to be a part of their event, it was an easy yes.

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As part of a fantastic giveaway, they have several fabulous authors each picking one of their characters to interview with a set of questions provided by Moonrise. When I saw that one of the questions was: ‘Tell us a secret about you that no-one else knows’, Jask immediately sprung to mind. After all, he’s the least likely of all my heroes to be holding something back…isn’t he?

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Earlier in the week, I let my Facebook followers know this interview was coming and asked them to try and guess what Jask’s deep, dark secret is. Some readers even re-read Blood Torn this week to see if they could find clues! Now that’s dedication! 🙂 I’ve received suggestions ranging from Jask being related to Kane, that he’s half vampire, he’s secretly married, he knows Rone’s twin is actually still alive and even that he’s ensured, after the trauma of losing his family, that he can never have children again. As is typical of the lovely Team Blackthorn, there were also some funny suggestions thrown into the mix to keep me giggling along the way. But one person, Candice, got dangerously close with her guess. Nicely worked out, Candice!

So, if you’d like to see what Jask has been concealing from everyone, even his best buddy, Corbin, it’s live on Moonrise Book Blog now. I don’t think you’ll be surprised as to why he wanted to keep this little gem hidden from one person in particular…

Thanks so much again, Moonrise Book Blog, for inviting me to be a part of your special event – it’s been great fun!

And good luck to everyone who enters the giveaway!

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An Exclusive Blackthorn Interview

A little while ago, I mentioned on Facebook that an awesome interview had landed on my desk. Charles Phipps – an all-round fantasy and sci-fi fan – discovered my series through his wife, Kat (awesome lady), and has since become a huge Blackthorn fan. Not only did he read my books, but he reviewed them too.

The minute I read his reviews for Blackthorn (all 5 stars, yay!), I was taken aback both by just how much he had picked up on as well as his unique reflections. I’ll be honest and say we don’t agree on everything (be warned – he’s not a Kane fan! *gasp of horror*), but isn’t that the great thing about books? Having now read a lot of his reviews, I totally respect how much time, effort and thought he puts into each one. Charles knows his stuff and, yes, I’m in awe of how much he knows.

An avid fan of worldbuilding (he is a fantasy writer himself, debuting with Permuted Press in 2015), Charles was keen to know more about Blackthorn’s creation. Knowing he’d come up with some nitty-gritty (and maybe tricky) questions, I simply couldn’t resist signing up to this one.

This has to be the most detailed interview I’ve ever given about creating Blackthorn and the process I went through – as well as a couple of hints of what to expect in Blood Deep (as always, no spoilers!). You can read the interview HERE.

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And if you’d like to read Charles’ fabulously insightful reviews of each Blackthorn book so far, you can click on the links below:

Blood Shadows

Blood Roses

Blood Torn

Thank you SO much for hosting me on your blog, Charles – and for your patience in waiting for me to get Blood Deep drafted first!

And talking of Blood Deep

My revisions came back last week and it’s all looking good (phew)!! I’ll be making it the best it can be now under my editor’s guidance before sending it back in preparation for line edits. The even-better news is we’re another step closer to me being able to disclose the release date to you. I can’t wait! 😀

Blood Deep News and a Giveaway

I’ve finished writing Blood Deep! Well, in first draft anyway. As of yesterday, it’s in the hands of my publisher and editor whilst I await their verdict in the next couple of weeks. In the meantime, I’m left with post-exam/post-interview nerves. Let’s hope they like it!

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That’s the exciting news. As a small aside, the sad news is that on Friday, days before my deadline, my beloved laptop finally gave up on me. It feels like the end of an era, not least because I’ve spent fourteen years writing Blackthorn on it. It’s now going to rest snugly in my attic with my old electric typewriter where Blackthorn begun its first outing all those years ago. Sigh.

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But back to Blood Deep

So what happens next?

Before you get too excited, for those not in the know, this is just the first stage of the process. Once the story gets the nod of approval, the structural edits soon follow. After the structural edits come the line edits. After the line edits come the copy edits. A whole team will be working away in the background week after week until Blood Deep is exactly how I want it. The good news, however, is that although there’s still a wait, it might not be too much longer before my publisher let’s me announce the release date. Stay close for that one!

HUGE thanks, Team Blackthorn!

Since the release of Blood Torn back at the end of February, Blackthorn’s readership has increased day by day. Luckily for the series, many of you are wonderfully vocal with it – and this is something that certainly hasn’t gone unnoticed by my publisher. I cannot thank you enough for all the amazing messages you’ve been sending my way, let alone the fantastic reviews you’ve been leaving on places such as Amazon and Goodreads. Every single review matters and makes a massive difference in helping towards more Blackthorn books being signed. So THANK YOU so much for taking time out to share your support for both me and Blackthorn.

It’s payback time with a giveaway!

So to say thank you to all my awesomely-lovely Blackthorn supporters and because it’s my 40th birthday next week, I can’t resist a giveaway. I’ve been promising this for a little while but wanted to hold on until Blood Deep was in.

The challenge is simple and hopefully fun! Could you cast ‘Blackthorn The Movie’? Did you have someone in mind when you read the books? Do you know who would make the perfect Kane? The best Leila? Have you already decided on the ideal man to play Jask Tao and head up Blackthorn’s most notorious pack?

All you have to do to enter this giveaway is write your suggestions below this post or on my Facebook page stating who YOU would cast in the title roles. Because casting is so subjective though, I’m not going to judge the winners. Instead I’m going to pick names randomly from a hat. You get an entry for every suggestion you make so the more characters you choose, the better chance you stand!

The prizes

There are TWO prizes up for grabs – again, the winner of each prize will be chosen randomly. The same person may even win both!

Are you looking at the picture of that manuscript above, wondering what’s written beyond that first chapter? I’m going to give one reader the chance to read the first three chapters of Blood Deep before anyone else (other than my publisher and editor!). It won’t be an e-copy though – I’ll send you a one-off print version signed by me.

Also up for grabs is a signed paperback copy of my last release, Blood Torn.

It doesn’t matter where you are, I’ll post both prizes anywhere – so don’t let location put you off.

The giveaway opens now and closes on Wednesday June 25th (midnight UK time). I’ll announce the winners on Friday 27th June here on my blog.

I’ll also be posting all your suggestions onto a Pinterest board dedicated to YOUR shared vision of the Blackthorn cast. I’ll share the completed board with you once the competition closes.

I’m going to be taking a short break between now and then but please do keep posting your entries! Good luck! 🙂

Meet Blood Deep’s Eden and Jessie – My Vision

A frequent question authors get asked is who inspired their characters, not least in terms of their appearance. I’ve always had to answer with the honest answer of “no-one”. Instead of seeing someone and then creating a character based on that inspiration, the creation of my characters and their appearances sparked simultaneously.

This, of course, was never an issue when they stayed in my head and no one else needed to see them. But, since being published, it’s not just interviewers who ask that question – of course my publisher now needs to see my vision too, not least for those all-important book covers.

I’ve made no secret of the fact I’ve had a real struggle trying to find the right images for each of my characters. Having lived with them for almost eighteen years now, they’re as clear to me as anyone I know. I’ve trawled through hundreds of images these past eighteen months trying to find the right people to match my vision. All I’ll say is thank goodness for Pinterest!

Well, it’s that time again. 😀 With the first draft of Blood Deep due with Bookouture next week, it won’t be too long before the editing process is underway and the covers start being discussed. So, after a couple of months of keeping it secret, I’ve now launched my Blood Deep board over on Pinterest. There will be lots more to come on it in due course but, for now, I have a few sample Eden and Jessie shots to share. The ones below, I think, are the most defining. I hope you like them!







And talking of finding appropriate people to play my characters…

A few weeks ago I asked if anyone would like to have a bit of fun sharing who you would cast to play my characters in the film version of Blackthorn – all as part of a giveaway. I have more news of that next week!

Creating Blackthorn’s Couples: Jask and Phia

*WARNING!! This post contains HUGE spoilers for Blood Torn.*

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One of the fun aspects of writing Blood Torn was creating a whole other side to Blackthorn. Up until then the series had been dominated by the vampire world versus the human authorities, with other species only fleetingly mentioned. Amongst those cameo roles was Jask Tao in Blood Shadows, when Kane made a brief visit to the lycan compound to collect an escaped Caitlin and, later, when Jask is waiting for her outside the courtroom. To keep the focus on Kane and Caitlin’s story, I revealed little about Jask and his pack at the time, let alone how he fitted into the overall Blackthorn picture.

Lycans and serryns

In the background though, I had already designed the lycan world in detail – who Jask was, how he operated, let alone why I created the pack the way I had (you can read all about that herehere and here). As with all the mythology I’ve developed for Blackthorn, I’d spent quite some time looking into adapting established ‘beliefs’ to suit the world I was creating. As a part of this, I developed the concept of lycanthropy as an allergy, the management of it having become increasingly challenging for the lycans under the regulations due to the systems put in place.

Jask’s character evolved out of developing that mythology. I had to work out what kind of personality would successfully manage a minority pack in Blackthorn under that new system. I knew I needed someone mature, self-controlled, strategic, intelligent and wise. I needed someone strong enough both physically and mentally to rule a pack, let alone with an edge of authority that not only demanded respect but equally with a fairness, dedication and selflessness to earn that respect. And, of course, my lycan leader had to be someone with insight into the dynamics of the world he’s in in order to best protect that pack – including executing sufficent humility to seemingly play ball with all the various groups, not least the human authorities.

But, like with Blackthorn’s other heroes, there also needed to be a dark side to Jask to warrant his survival in Blackthorn – an innate sense of the hunter and, in some respects, the feral. I needed someone who made the pack stronger by being its leader as well as being strengthened because of the pack’s faithful support, but I also needed someone who was equally capable of going it alone – and surviving against the odds. Jask became that type of hero and subsequently an integral player in Blackthorn’s future, especially because he has one of the most powerful potential armies under his effective rule.

My serryn mythology was already established by the time I wrote Blood Torn, having explored it in its fledgling form through Leila in Blood Roses. But in Blood Torn, I had the opportunity to start to show more of a serryn’s evolvement through Phia – not least because she had none of her big sister’s reluctance in embracing her new ability. Phia’s developing serenity is, without doubt, more destructive to her personality than it was to Leila’s, particularly because of Phia’ emotional vulnerabilities and not having her big sister’s self-control (despite Caleb’s fervent efforts to the contrary). It goes without saying that if Phia had turned up to save Alisha instead of Leila, Blood Roses may have been the shortest Blackthorn book ever!

However, you may be interested to know that when I first started mapping out Blackthorn, I didn’t plan on Leila losing her serrynity to her nemesis – nor it jumping down the line, along with her fate, to her sister. I’m so pleased it did though because it shifted Phia (and Jask) from being a secondary character to becoming integral in Blackthorn’s tapestry.

But romance was never the plan

For the future of the story, I knew Jask and Phia had to meet. I knew it was Jask who would find Phia in the ruins. I knew Phia had to forge a link with the lycans. The last thing I expected was for these two to fall for each other.

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My initial intention when designing Blackthorn was that, although Jask was going to be a hero in the story, he was never going to be a romantic hero. When I first created his character, he had given up any prospect of finding love again. Having written a few scenes between him and Ellen whilst exploring his character, I couldn’t imagine him with anyone else. Instead, I’d resolved he’d focus on devoting all his time to his pack and, with me already knowing they would come under attack from the authorities, he was going to have enough to contend with without the entanglement of romance too. Besides, he might have needed Phia’s help but, for the outcome I wanted, he didn’t need to fall in love with her. Like with most of my characters though, Jask had his own ideas.

Sophia. Sophie. Phia. From the moment she burst onto the page in Blood Roses as an unruly child with a pretend UV torch on her head, a wooden stake in her hand and trying to feed garlic to her little sister, I knew I had my hands full. Furthermore, painted as an adult as the thoughtless missing sister causing Leila a headache and later revealed to be on prejudice-induced, anti-vampire vigilante mission in Blackthorn, Phia was most definitely never going to be one of Blackthorn’s romantic heroines. Aggressive, stroppy, stubborn, immature, argumentative, even arrogant at times, Sophia is frequently quick to act and slow to think. With a plethora of issues that would create a fortress-type barrier to any potential love interest, I knew it would take a saint to bother to peel through her layers. And well, to be honest, I didn’t think I had time for that in the strict internal timescale I had set for the story.

More so, I knew all her flaws were going to be exacerbated by having her up against Jask. Even-tempered, rational and reasonable, let alone with the weight of trying to save his pack on his shoulders, the last thing Jask should have been putting up with was Phia’s often deplorable (and irritating) attitude problem when, instead, he deserved so much better.

But whilst giving them more time on the page together than I’d originally planned, I switched from constantly face-palming with Phia to seeing a whole other side of her – and a whole other side to Jask too.

I started to see Phia as painfully lost in her own frustration and fears, erratically and misguidedly running around trying to make things better in all the wrong ways. Above all else, her deep sense of insecurity born out of her own self-hatred started to emerge. Behind the mask of arrogance was a vulnerable and fragile character who acted badly to evoke the same reaction in others because, basically, she didn’t believe she deserved any better. She certainly didn’t think she deserved Jask, someone who she had come to both respect and admire.

And, rather than Jask’s loss of Ellen being the barrier between him and Phia that I first envisaged, it became an opportunity to reveal an even more admirable side to him. With refined survival instincts making him wary of quick judgements, Jask’s tragic past also created in him a deep empathy that enables him to read beneath surface behaviours. Understanding everything there is to know about self-hatred, Jask revealed a compassionate generosity of spirit, let alone a patience and tolerance with Phia that I think makes the best of both him and of her. He sees her strength, her independence, her feistiness and her bravery. Most of all, he sees how fiercely loyal she is to those she loves. When she is calm and focused, Phia McKay makes one hell of an ally because, in a battle, she’d be the first to step in-between the one she loves and the enemy – and that’s a pack-like trait Jask inevitably deeply admires.

Their futures

Unlike with Blood Roses where, for so many reasons, I had to conclude it with a sense of uncertainty about whether Leila and Caleb’s emerging love is strong enough to see them through, Blood Torn, I hope, gives that real sense of a hero and heroine’s bond being strong enough to surpass anything. But things are never straight forward for my couples. As is indicative of Blackthorn, there is a flipside of renewed complications out of what should have remained a forbidden love.

I concluded Blood Torn amidst an imminent threat. Sirius Throme, head of the Global Council is once again using Jask’s pack as pawns in his mission to get his hands on Kane. In a strategic move you’ll learn more of in Blood Deep, he’s had Jask’s young delivered to the cons – something Jask is yet to uncover. If he does, his reaction could reveal a whole other side to Jask that Phia is yet to see.

After all, Jask, at the moment, is successfully managing his dark side, but it still simmers beneath the surface – and at no greater time than when his allergy peaks. He may be one of the rare lycans able to control his change, but he was never given the opportunity to perfect it with the regulations having interrupted his progress. But even without his instincts to contend with, self-controlled though he is, his interrogation scene with the vampire in Blood Torn shows that he has no qualms in doing whatever it takes for those he loves. When it comes to lethal, Jask is more than capable of holding his own against, or alongside, Kane and Caleb. He’s just not been put in that situation in Blackthorn yet.

As made clear at the end of Blood Roses, Caleb is already on the hunt for Phia: next in line to be his sacrifice if he is to claim his Tryan status and save the third species from oppression. He’s yet to find her, he’s yet to know she now has Jask and his entire pack behind her, but with Caleb’s impressive networks in Blackthorn, it’s only a matter of time. Jask will have even more to contend with if he’s seen as the barrier to the third species’ salvation – something that could test his loyalty to Phia if, subsequently, he’s not only at risk from vampiric retaliation but also from his own kind.

As for Phia, she may have made huge progress as far as her sense of direction and self-esteem are going, but she’s still a serryn and serryns are renowned for becoming overwhelmed by their own selfish desires. Already impulsive by nature, Phia’s greatest challenge is in controlling her serrynity sufficiently to use it as a weapon as opposed to self-indulgence. That need certainly won’t be helped if her natural nemesis evolves into a threat to anyone she loves.

Let’s just hope Kane’s visit to Caleb goes well!

That’s it for my couple insight posts for now. I will, of course, do the same for Jessie and Eden – but, no spoilers, I’ll do it after you’ve read Blood Deep.

I’ll be back next time though with a short post to show you my vision of what Eden and Jessie look like – and it’ll be kick-starting a give-away too!

Win Blackthorn e-Books via Jask on GraveTells

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Anyone who has been following Blackthorn for a while will know there are some awesome bloggers out there supporting the series. One site that has given Blackthorn LOADS of support is the fabulous GraveTells. Not only have they given the series glowing reviews in the past, last year they even ventured into Blackthorn for themselves to quiz Caleb and Jake (obviously they got back out again in one piece – phew!).

Now, in his first interview ever, it’s Jask’s turn in the hotseat – only, this time, I’m doing the quizzing. Inspired by conversations with my lovely Blackthorn fans, I put forward a series of questions to the infamous lycan leader to see what he had to say for himself.

So, if you’d like to know what provokes Blackthorn’s leading lycan into banishing members of his pack, why he fell for Phia, whether he believes he can protect his pack during the tough times ahead, and what he really thinks of Kane, you can read his interview here….

As a bonus, if you leave a comment, you can be in with a chance of winning a Blackthorn e-book of your choice (Blood Shadows, Blood Roses or Blood Torn). Or if you’ve got a burning question of your own, Jask is still open for interrogation – feel free to ask him anything! I know how creative Team Blackthorn can be. 🙂 

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Creating Blackthorn’s Couples: Caleb and Leila

*WARNING!! This post contains HUGE spoilers for Blood Roses.*

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Before I started writing Blood Roses, I was already gaining a gist of how I wanted the overall Blackthorn story to evolve. I knew it was going to be a story about overcoming oppression and injustice and about the measures that are put in place in society both intentionally and unintentionally that feed assumptions, discrimination and prejudices – where people are not seen as individuals but a collective and labelled as such. Blood Roses became the perfect opportunity to explore the terrifying extent of that, let alone allow me to test the cliché of whether true love really could conquer all. There was no better way to do this than through two characters destined to destroy each other for the sake of their kinds – who, by the very fabric of what they were, were the most fervent of enemies.

Caleb – the pending Tryan

When first introducing Caleb, I had to be careful not to give away any clues about him being the pending Tryan, but at the same time give him the necessary traits of being capable of leading a vampire uprising. I needed a character who was intelligent, hard-working, dedicated, focused, industrious, strong and assertive. One who also has a caring side, a compassionate one, and one that is fiercely protective of those he loves. I created a character who had managed to claw his way up through Blackthorn and stand on his own two feet despite the fact that his lineage dictates that he could join the Higher Order in Midtown any time he wanted to. Instead, Caleb opts to stay amongst his own, to be the iron fist ensuring that the interests of those in Blackthorn are maintained, not least against the threat of the cons. Caleb is loyal to those who are loyal to him and uncompromising to those who want to overthrow his power for their own ends. In Caleb’s district, the vulnerable are protected – and that is out of a reputation built on fear and zero tolerance.

But there is a flip side to Caleb. Caleb does what he has to do without apology because I needed him to be real to the environment in which he lives. There is an air of the authoritarian about Caleb, laced with brutality and arrogance because, like Kane, to survive Blackthorn, that means exhibiting traits that can been deemed villainous. That said, he is not perceived as a villain by his own. In fact, in any other context, in any other story, his serryn-hunting abilities alone it would be enough to herald him a hero – the Van Helsing of the vampire world.

Creating this kind of dichotomous character became essential for the sake of the rest of the series and what is to unfold. Of all the characters needing to maintain an air of uncertainty in readers’ minds, it’s Caleb. What this lead to was the closest epitome of an anti-hero I could get. He’s the scarred warrior still struggling every day, with a barely suppressed dark side when up against opposition. And there none that bring out his dark side more than a serryn – the catalyst of all that went wrong in his life. He has every reason to want to destroy Leila and is totally justified every step of the way if you truly understand his mindset and can empathise with what his kind are up against. Unfortunately for him, his nemesis is not the cruel, manipulative and vicious witch she should be.

Leila – the serryn anomaly

Leila’s character was developed when I knew Caleb was going to have to come across a powerful force to be reckoned with. When it came to vampires versus humans, it seemed the former were always top of the food chain. They didn’t appear to have any natural predators (of course, that’s evolved massively now). The idea of creating a serryn came out of me wanting to pitch an equal against my pending vampire leader – something that would make him feel vulnerable in her presence.

The serryn is born out of old witch lore – more Blair Witch Project and less Bewitched. Serryns are the dark witches of fairytales. But instead of preying on humans, they prey on vampires. Within that boundary, they are indiscriminate killers whether the victims be males, females or children and they do so without conscience. Using their looks, charm and then emitting a lethal chemical not dissimilar to a pheromone, this rare strain of witch draw vampires to feed on their toxic blood. There’s no purpose to it other than pleasure, their sadistic streak only developing and intensifying the more kills they make. Of course, I created an exception to the rule in Leila. To test Caleb’s resolve and give a ring of truth to any potential of him falling for her, I had to present him the polar-opposite of what his experiences and beliefs dictate.

I needed someone with a clear sense of self and a deep-rooted need not to evolve into a fully-fledged serryn in the face of abject temptation. I needed to create a back-story of reasons why she would not confront her destiny. I needed someone who, instead of being self-seeking in the story, would, for the majority of it, be thinking with clarity, focus and an absolute need to succeed. Instead of a character who would take Caleb on physically (and inevitably lose), I needed one who could sustain a psychological battle and unhinge him from the inside. The fact Leila is still alive by the end of Blood Roses proves she was exactly as effective as she needed to be.

Enemies to lovers

Aside from being destined to kill each other and have every instinct dictate that from the moment they met, this was only reinforced by Caleb and Leila being from opposite ends of the geographic, social and political aspects of the Blackthorn world. I wanted to create a sense that the compacted hatred between Leila and Caleb was almost a carefully constructed plot by fate to ensure that when they finally met, the implosion would be guaranteed. I wanted to give the impression of them as puppets helpless to what they would become.

As part of this, I needed to develop tight internal conflict to forge the hatred between my hero and heroine. It wasn’t enough to just present them destined this way or as age-old enemies. They needed their own deep-rooted reasons to sustain the prejudices against each other and this came out of both having witnessed the worse of each other’s kind.

At a young age, Leila witnessed her mother being slaughtered by a vampire. It was her first introduction to them. She grew up in the world of Summerton, where children are taught how segregation in their security is justified by the daily threat vampires pose. Her grandfather, who was also her mentor, loathed vampires and brought her up with a fear of the vampire prophecies. In many ways, those prejudices reinforced her need to fight the dormant serryn inside and suppress any desire to step foot near Blackthorn. Of course, she has been advantaged by the regulations allowing her to stay in the safety of Summerton as far away from her potential trigger as possible, until she was summoned by Caleb – the earthquake to her well-ordered world.

As a youth, Caleb was tempted by a serryn who quickly turned on him, inflicting the most horrific physical, psychological and emotional abuse on him. He was forced to watch a serryn inflict the most atrocious acts on males, females and children of his kind as he helplessly watched on. Surviving, his needs for vengeance was only managed by the support and positive influence of his older brother, Seth – only to then have him murdered by a serryn some years later. Internally, he is justified in doubting Leila for who she claims to be. He’s been on the receiving end of their deceit with tragic consequences. It’s no wonder that when Leila presents herself as being the key to either the salvation or downfall of his kind, he has every reason to see her proclaimed innocence as nothing more than an elaborate scheme to trick him.

The stage was set. It should have run according to plan. He’s destined to be the saviour of his species, she’s anything but destined to be the saviour of him. But as the story progresses, that’s exactly what she starts to become.

Psychological warfare

The result was intense psychological warfare exacerbated by a confined situation with the added conflict that both were a catalyst for the suppressed darkness in the other. The constant, relentless breaking down that Caleb does of Leila, while Leila fights the dormant serryn inside, was admittedly exhausting to write. They spin in circles like lovers caught in an intense argument, both needing to come out on top.

Into the mix, is the taboo simmering attraction between them. Not since his first encounter with a serryn has Caleb ever been attracted to one. He is renowned for being able to abstain from any physical interaction with them, but with Leila the draw is something even he can’t control. To suppress his own self-hatred at his growing feelings – the very prospect a betrayal to his dead brother, not least dismissing the torturous experience that changed who he was – he has to forge a distance that makes him appear cold and heartless. And Caleb is everything Leila should despise, not least because he’s blackmailing her, making it abjectly clear what he intends to do with her, let alone responsible for unearthing the serryn that she has fought so hard to contain.

But fortunately for both, Leila is empathetic enough to see behind the mask that Caleb has worn for too long. She begins to see the Caleb who once was. She sees him at the crucial point where he could flip from a tyrant to a hero – and she is determined to intervene. Not only does she want that part of Caleb to win over for his sake and for them as a couple, but she knows that, ultimately, saving him is the only way she’s going to save everyone else with it. Leila knows that if she succeeds in overcoming the darkness in him, there’s going to be a bright, shining light at the end of it that could save both their kinds.

And Caleb sees hope in Leila. She has a resoluteness he admires, a determination and an uncontrived strength of self, let alone a loyalty to those she cares about. And amongst that is her undeniable attraction to him. But Caleb has a vulnerability born out of knowing that once he falls in love, he falls deep. Caleb’s greatest struggle is his developing feelings for Leila whilst not being selfish enough to turn his back on his own. What Caleb really wants is the best of both worlds – to save his kind and have Leila. And despite the odds being stacked against them, Leila still believes in him when she has every reason not to. By falling for him at his worst, he starts to see Leila’s potential to be his salvation – at least enough to let her go, to let her try. For now.

To end or not to end?

One of the most challenging aspects of writing Blood Roses was maintaining the characters and the strength of their beliefs as genuine – no matter how dark that became at times. More than that, was the need not to override the magnitude of the decisions they are making. To overcome and resolve, in less than a handful of days, what are epic decisions would have undone the whole gravity of the developing love between these two. Caleb and Leila are in an impossible situation – damned if they do and damned if they don’t, and they both know it. What they both have is the weight of responsibility for their kinds on their shoulders with catastrophic consequences if they get it wrong.

But despite every reason for them to see their destinies through, when it comes to it, they cannot kill each other. For Leila, cornered and at her weakest point, when again and again Caleb is not given her the assurance she seeks, the point where she had finally given up hope, seconds away from her own death, she still placed her hand on Caleb’s chest to stop him because she couldn’t let him die. And Caleb, feeling her reach out to him one final time, finally starts to accept that whatever connection they have forged is something worth fighting for.

Their futures

Leila’s made Caleb a promise that she can find a way out of their predicament. Whether she succeeds, if she was telling the truth at all, is another matter. But for Caleb to put that amount of trust in Leila was an immense thing for him to do – the first step towards being able to trust her and let her undo all the damage that her kind have done before. Of course, if she fails, there’s every probability it will intensify his darkness more.

Because, whatever the outcome of their seven-day agreement, Leila is no longer a serryn but Caleb is still the pending Tryan. He’s got his finger on the button and so does his invisible enemy (more of that in Blood Deep!), with the question of who will press first. Caleb has everything he cares about, everything he has worked for, everything he believes in, resting on him making the right decision as to when that button should be pressed – before his enemy does the same. Caleb is left standing on the edge of the precipice, whilst what Leila does next being pivotal to whether he leaps.

What remains to be seen is whether absence makes the heart grow stronger when it comes to Leila and Caleb, or whether both will start to see things differently when they’re away from the intensity of each other. It depends if Caleb does get his hands on Phia, whether his love for Leila will override his instincts when faced with a serryn he hasn’t fallen for this time (and, let’s be honest, if anyone is going to try Caleb’s patience, it’s going to be Phia!!). Or even whether Leila’s loyalty to her own will win out, whether she will still see the potential of redemption in him, or whether she will accept that his demise is necessary for the sake of her own.

Unfortunately for them, the ante is about to be upped. Deep down, they both know there are consequences to them not fulfilling their side of the prophecy – consequences that you’ll learn more of in Blood Deep. Caleb and Leila’s fight to be together has barely even begun.

 

Jask and Phia will be in the spotlight in a short while – but an interview with the lycan leader is coming even sooner! I’ll have more news of that tomorrow. 🙂