Here are some reviews for Briar Queen, coming out June 2. (Of course I'm only putting up the good ones!)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY: "Harbour makes love, suffering, and sacrifice the most poignant parts of her worlds, and readers with even the barest knowledge of fairy lore and legends will be pulled deep into this tale of sharp magic and its ruthless children."
Publishers Weekly
RT BOOK REVIEW: "Harbour's characters play for high stakes, and the author is not afraid to make her characters pay."
RT Book Review
KIRKUS: "...the emotional core of the story is strong, and the beautiful, crumbling, poisonous world of the Ghostlands presents more than enough weird and wonderful images to satisfy fans of the gothic and strange."
Kirkus Reviews
BOOKLIST: "The lilting, whimiscal new adult fantasy, balanced by impressively detailed and dark vignettes, is fueled by a gothemo-scenester aesthetic...the magic is mysterious, the drama is aching, and the people are beautiful."
Fresh Fiction
Goodreads Madreads
The Best Books Ever
And I've got bookplates!
If you'd like a signed bookplate and 2 bookmarks, let me know.
Monday, May 25, 2015
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Briar Queen News!
Look who's on the banner at the RT Booklovers Convention!
(That's Briar Queen, third book in)
(And, in case you're wondering, the sloth the Harper Voyager girl is holding is named Nova.)
(That's Briar Queen, third book in)
(And, in case you're wondering, the sloth the Harper Voyager girl is holding is named Nova.)
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Fantastic Faery Books
In honor of Briar Queen's June 2 release, here are my favorite books about faeries:
STORIES
MOONHEART-Charles de lint
THE WAR FOR THE OAKS-Emma Bull
INK AND STEEL/HELL AND EARTH-Elizabeth Baer
THE HALLOWMERE SERIES-Tiffany Trent
DAUGHTER OF HOUNDS/ALABASTER-Caitlin R. Kiernan
TITHE, VALIANT, IRONSIDE/THE DARKEST PART OF THE FOREST-Holly Black
THE WICKED LOVELY SERIES-Melissa Marr
LITTLE BIG-John Crowley
MOONWISE/CLOUD AND ASHES-Greer Gilman
LAMENT/BALLAD-Maggie Stiefvater
EXCEPT THE QUEEN-Jane Yolen and Midori Snyder
THE TREE OF SWORDS AND JEWELS/THE DREAMSTONE-C.J. Cherryh
FIRE AND HEMLOCK-Dianna Wynne Jones
THE MYSTERIES-Lisa Tuttle
THE STOLEN-Bishop O'Connell
PETER PAN-J.M. Barrie
THE PERILOUS GARD-Elizabeth Marie Pope
THE REPLACEMENT-Brenna Yovanoff
TAM LIN-Pamela Dean
THOMAS THE RHYMER-Ellen Kushner
THE HOUND AND THE FALCON-Judith Tarr
RESEARCH
FAERIES (Deluxe edition) Brian Froud
BAD FAERIES, GOOD FAERIES-Brian Froud and Terri Windling
THE FAERY COMPANION-Beatrice Phillpotts
THE GREAT ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FAERIES-Pierre Dubois
THE ULTIMATE FAERIES HANDBOOK-Susannah Marriott
AT THE BOTTOM OF THE GARDEN-Diane Purkiss
THE FAERY PAINTINGS OF MAXINE GADD-Maxine Gadd
THE BOOK OF FAERIES-Francis Melville
THE SECRET LIVES OF ELVES AND FAERIES-John Matthews
THE ELEMENT ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FAIRIES-Lucy Cooper
THE FAIRY FAITH IN CELTIC COUNTRIES-W.Y. Evans-Wentz
ABBEY LUBBERS, BANSHEES, AND BOGGARTS-Katharine Briggs
THE ART OF AMY BROWN I and II-Amy Brown
VISIONS AND BELIEFS IN THE WEST OF IRELAND-Lady Gregory
STORIES
MOONHEART-Charles de lint
THE WAR FOR THE OAKS-Emma Bull
INK AND STEEL/HELL AND EARTH-Elizabeth Baer
THE HALLOWMERE SERIES-Tiffany Trent
DAUGHTER OF HOUNDS/ALABASTER-Caitlin R. Kiernan
TITHE, VALIANT, IRONSIDE/THE DARKEST PART OF THE FOREST-Holly Black
THE WICKED LOVELY SERIES-Melissa Marr
LITTLE BIG-John Crowley
MOONWISE/CLOUD AND ASHES-Greer Gilman
LAMENT/BALLAD-Maggie Stiefvater
EXCEPT THE QUEEN-Jane Yolen and Midori Snyder
THE TREE OF SWORDS AND JEWELS/THE DREAMSTONE-C.J. Cherryh
FIRE AND HEMLOCK-Dianna Wynne Jones
THE MYSTERIES-Lisa Tuttle
THE STOLEN-Bishop O'Connell
PETER PAN-J.M. Barrie
THE PERILOUS GARD-Elizabeth Marie Pope
THE REPLACEMENT-Brenna Yovanoff
TAM LIN-Pamela Dean
THOMAS THE RHYMER-Ellen Kushner
THE HOUND AND THE FALCON-Judith Tarr
RESEARCH
FAERIES (Deluxe edition) Brian Froud
BAD FAERIES, GOOD FAERIES-Brian Froud and Terri Windling
THE FAERY COMPANION-Beatrice Phillpotts
THE GREAT ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FAERIES-Pierre Dubois
THE ULTIMATE FAERIES HANDBOOK-Susannah Marriott
AT THE BOTTOM OF THE GARDEN-Diane Purkiss
THE FAERY PAINTINGS OF MAXINE GADD-Maxine Gadd
THE BOOK OF FAERIES-Francis Melville
THE SECRET LIVES OF ELVES AND FAERIES-John Matthews
THE ELEMENT ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FAIRIES-Lucy Cooper
THE FAIRY FAITH IN CELTIC COUNTRIES-W.Y. Evans-Wentz
ABBEY LUBBERS, BANSHEES, AND BOGGARTS-Katharine Briggs
THE ART OF AMY BROWN I and II-Amy Brown
VISIONS AND BELIEFS IN THE WEST OF IRELAND-Lady Gregory
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Once Upon A Rhyme by Jack Heckel
Welcome, Jack Heckel, who is actually John Peck and Harry Heckel, http://www.jackheckel.com/ , authors of Once Upon A Rhyme to It's All About Story.
1) Describe your book Once Upon A Rhyme in one paragraph.
Once Upon A Rhyme is all about what happens when a fairy tale goes wrong. For his entire life, Prince Charming has known that he would slay the Great Wyrm of the south, rescue Princess Gwendolyn Mostfair, marry her and live happily ever after. However, when the dragon accidentally impales herself on Will Pickett's pitchfork, and Will convinces his sister, Liz, to let him go rescue the princess, everything goes wrong. It's a comedic fairy tale fantasy about what happens when life doesn't turn out the way we thought.
2) What inspired Once Upon A Rhyme?
John had the original idea. It started with a simple question. Who is Prince Charming? Who is this guy who shows up in a plethora of fairy tales, has great hair, a fine steed and gets to bestow true love's kiss on any number of princesses? We wanted to see what would happen if his fairy tale didn't go as planned. Originally, it was going to be a tragedy, but Harry interpreted it as a comedy. Once that happened, we decided to write it.
3) Is this your first work of fiction?
For John, yes. For Harry, no. Harry's written two novels with another author under the pen name Lee Lightner, Sons of Fenris and Wolf's Honour, set in the Warhammer 40k universe. He's also had three small press novels, In the Service of the King (A Crimson Hawks Adventure), Souls of the Everwood and Balefire and Brimstone in addition to numerous roleplaying game books.
4) What song or music piece would you put on a soundtrack for Once Upon A Rhyme?
That's hard to say. We both listen to music when we write. For The Charming Tales, John listens to any 80's power ballad. After all, Charming's a rock star. Harry listens to the soundtrack to The Princess Bride while writing our fairy tales.
5) Which character was easy to write? Which was the most difficult?
The easiest character to write was probably Prince Charming because he has such an ego that he practically writes himself. We just have to imagine a man mentally composing an epic poem about himself while considering whether the color of his hose means he should have lace on his cuffs or not, and we are there. He's delightfully absurd.
The most difficult character to write was also our favorite by the end, Princes Gwendolyn. She's not who she appears at first and carries a dark secret. While she's ostensibly the villain of the piece, she's also a victim who was left by her love to rot in a dragon's clutches for decades. She contains both darkness and light, and she was a pleasure to explore.
6) What is your writing space like? Or can you write anywhere?
If either of us are within reach of our laptops, we can write. We both have day jobs that keep us busy and families who we adore. We have to take advantage of any time we can find, regardless of whether we are traveling across the country or finding some quiet time in our car during lunch.
7) Any odd writing habits?
Collaboration is odd. We create together and support each other. We argue and debate. We finish each other's sentences. When we write, one person finishes a chapter and then the other person rewrites it. It's a bit humbling and challenging to do that, and it takes a lot of trust. That's probably the strangest part.
8) Do you outline?
Definitely. We can't work on a book without an outline. Otherwise, since we collaborate, we'd be stepping all over each other. Having said that, our outlines usually only survive until about Chapter 4, as by that time, the characters have taken over. So, we redo the outline again and again. By the end, our outlines have been revised multiple times.
9) What is your favorite fairy tale?
John's favorite is The Seven Ravens. It isn't among the pantheon of Cinderella or Snow White or Beauty and the Beast, so it may be unfamiliar to most people. It is the story of a girl who takes up a quest to rescue her brothers, who have been cursed to live as ravens. It is an unusual story because the girl goes on her quest entirely alone and unaided. It is also unusual in that it lacks the presence in even a peripheral way of a romantic interest for our heroine.
Harry's a bit more indecisive, being torn between the more traditional Snow White and Sleeping Beauty, and claiming that Matt Smith's first season as Doctor Who may be his favorite fairy tale. However, we both hold a special place for The Bluebird which is the first fairy tale in which there is a reference to Prince Charming.
10) What is your favorite fictional world, one you'd want to visit?
No question or debate here. We both want to visit Middle-Earth. There are other worlds with incredible complexity and detail, but for both of us, we would want to step out of Bilbo's house and follow the road as it goes ever, ever on. We'd want to see Mount Doom and admire the wonders of the Elves. We'd like to stand next to the tree of Gondor and delve deep below the earth to the Mines of Moria. There's really no place that has captured our imagination like Middle-Earth.
11) What is the best writing advice you've ever received?
For Harry, it's this: don't leave the keyboard without knowing what you are going to write next. His mentor, Daniel Greenberg, told him that you come back to the keyboard in the same place you left. If you were frustrated and didn't know where to go, that's what you'd confront when you returned. Always leave before you are too tired and have run out of ideas. It's always hardest getting started.
For John, it was something Harry said. Don't try to write the perfect sentence. It's easy to get hung up trying to create the ultimate prose or striving for perfection. The worst completed work can be edited. The best first paragraph without the rest of a novel to go with it is only a first paragraph.
One last thing we'd like to include are the immortal words of Weird Al Yankovic - dare to be stupid.
12) In Once Upon A Rhyme, are there any hidden acknowledgements to friends, places you've lived, favorite writers etc;
Probably. We certainly have fairy tale references throughout, and we try to heap love on fairy tales. The one place that we both remember having hidden references are in several guards in the sequel Happily Never After, who are named after university friends.
13) Can you tell us what we have to look forward to in the sequel to Once Upon A Rhyme?
The good news is that the sequel, Happily Never After, is already available. It brings our story arc to a conclusion with the climactic wedding of Princess Gwendolyn, as well as the introduction of the Seven Players, a group of dwarfs (or is it dwarves?) and of course, Charming himself. It was originally meant to be the second half of Once Upon A Rhyme, and Harper will be publishing them together in a Fairy-tale Ending, later this summer.
If that wasn't enough, we've recently finished the third book in The Charming Tales, Pitchfork of Destiny. Without giving away too many spoilers, the Great Dragon of the North, Volthraxus, the Killing Wind, finally musters up enough courage to go tell Magdela, the Great Wyrm of the South, his true feelings for her. When he learns from Beo (a wolf) that she was killed, he turns his wrath toward the man responsible--Will Pickett. That means that Will has to face a living fire-breathing dragon, and he believes only Charming can help him. While those two quest for the dragon, Liz comes face to face with the man everyone else believes will save the kingdom, a mysterious figure known as the Dracomancer. By the end, fairy tales are fractured, and hopefully, there will be a lot of amusement for our readers.
Thank you!
Once Upon A Rhyme and Happily Never After are both available on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Jack-Heckel/e/B00L0E1CO8/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1
1) Describe your book Once Upon A Rhyme in one paragraph.
Once Upon A Rhyme is all about what happens when a fairy tale goes wrong. For his entire life, Prince Charming has known that he would slay the Great Wyrm of the south, rescue Princess Gwendolyn Mostfair, marry her and live happily ever after. However, when the dragon accidentally impales herself on Will Pickett's pitchfork, and Will convinces his sister, Liz, to let him go rescue the princess, everything goes wrong. It's a comedic fairy tale fantasy about what happens when life doesn't turn out the way we thought.
2) What inspired Once Upon A Rhyme?
John had the original idea. It started with a simple question. Who is Prince Charming? Who is this guy who shows up in a plethora of fairy tales, has great hair, a fine steed and gets to bestow true love's kiss on any number of princesses? We wanted to see what would happen if his fairy tale didn't go as planned. Originally, it was going to be a tragedy, but Harry interpreted it as a comedy. Once that happened, we decided to write it.
3) Is this your first work of fiction?
For John, yes. For Harry, no. Harry's written two novels with another author under the pen name Lee Lightner, Sons of Fenris and Wolf's Honour, set in the Warhammer 40k universe. He's also had three small press novels, In the Service of the King (A Crimson Hawks Adventure), Souls of the Everwood and Balefire and Brimstone in addition to numerous roleplaying game books.
4) What song or music piece would you put on a soundtrack for Once Upon A Rhyme?
That's hard to say. We both listen to music when we write. For The Charming Tales, John listens to any 80's power ballad. After all, Charming's a rock star. Harry listens to the soundtrack to The Princess Bride while writing our fairy tales.
5) Which character was easy to write? Which was the most difficult?
The easiest character to write was probably Prince Charming because he has such an ego that he practically writes himself. We just have to imagine a man mentally composing an epic poem about himself while considering whether the color of his hose means he should have lace on his cuffs or not, and we are there. He's delightfully absurd.
The most difficult character to write was also our favorite by the end, Princes Gwendolyn. She's not who she appears at first and carries a dark secret. While she's ostensibly the villain of the piece, she's also a victim who was left by her love to rot in a dragon's clutches for decades. She contains both darkness and light, and she was a pleasure to explore.
6) What is your writing space like? Or can you write anywhere?
If either of us are within reach of our laptops, we can write. We both have day jobs that keep us busy and families who we adore. We have to take advantage of any time we can find, regardless of whether we are traveling across the country or finding some quiet time in our car during lunch.
7) Any odd writing habits?
Collaboration is odd. We create together and support each other. We argue and debate. We finish each other's sentences. When we write, one person finishes a chapter and then the other person rewrites it. It's a bit humbling and challenging to do that, and it takes a lot of trust. That's probably the strangest part.
8) Do you outline?
Definitely. We can't work on a book without an outline. Otherwise, since we collaborate, we'd be stepping all over each other. Having said that, our outlines usually only survive until about Chapter 4, as by that time, the characters have taken over. So, we redo the outline again and again. By the end, our outlines have been revised multiple times.
9) What is your favorite fairy tale?
John's favorite is The Seven Ravens. It isn't among the pantheon of Cinderella or Snow White or Beauty and the Beast, so it may be unfamiliar to most people. It is the story of a girl who takes up a quest to rescue her brothers, who have been cursed to live as ravens. It is an unusual story because the girl goes on her quest entirely alone and unaided. It is also unusual in that it lacks the presence in even a peripheral way of a romantic interest for our heroine.
Harry's a bit more indecisive, being torn between the more traditional Snow White and Sleeping Beauty, and claiming that Matt Smith's first season as Doctor Who may be his favorite fairy tale. However, we both hold a special place for The Bluebird which is the first fairy tale in which there is a reference to Prince Charming.
10) What is your favorite fictional world, one you'd want to visit?
No question or debate here. We both want to visit Middle-Earth. There are other worlds with incredible complexity and detail, but for both of us, we would want to step out of Bilbo's house and follow the road as it goes ever, ever on. We'd want to see Mount Doom and admire the wonders of the Elves. We'd like to stand next to the tree of Gondor and delve deep below the earth to the Mines of Moria. There's really no place that has captured our imagination like Middle-Earth.
11) What is the best writing advice you've ever received?
For Harry, it's this: don't leave the keyboard without knowing what you are going to write next. His mentor, Daniel Greenberg, told him that you come back to the keyboard in the same place you left. If you were frustrated and didn't know where to go, that's what you'd confront when you returned. Always leave before you are too tired and have run out of ideas. It's always hardest getting started.
For John, it was something Harry said. Don't try to write the perfect sentence. It's easy to get hung up trying to create the ultimate prose or striving for perfection. The worst completed work can be edited. The best first paragraph without the rest of a novel to go with it is only a first paragraph.
One last thing we'd like to include are the immortal words of Weird Al Yankovic - dare to be stupid.
12) In Once Upon A Rhyme, are there any hidden acknowledgements to friends, places you've lived, favorite writers etc;
Probably. We certainly have fairy tale references throughout, and we try to heap love on fairy tales. The one place that we both remember having hidden references are in several guards in the sequel Happily Never After, who are named after university friends.
13) Can you tell us what we have to look forward to in the sequel to Once Upon A Rhyme?
The good news is that the sequel, Happily Never After, is already available. It brings our story arc to a conclusion with the climactic wedding of Princess Gwendolyn, as well as the introduction of the Seven Players, a group of dwarfs (or is it dwarves?) and of course, Charming himself. It was originally meant to be the second half of Once Upon A Rhyme, and Harper will be publishing them together in a Fairy-tale Ending, later this summer.
If that wasn't enough, we've recently finished the third book in The Charming Tales, Pitchfork of Destiny. Without giving away too many spoilers, the Great Dragon of the North, Volthraxus, the Killing Wind, finally musters up enough courage to go tell Magdela, the Great Wyrm of the South, his true feelings for her. When he learns from Beo (a wolf) that she was killed, he turns his wrath toward the man responsible--Will Pickett. That means that Will has to face a living fire-breathing dragon, and he believes only Charming can help him. While those two quest for the dragon, Liz comes face to face with the man everyone else believes will save the kingdom, a mysterious figure known as the Dracomancer. By the end, fairy tales are fractured, and hopefully, there will be a lot of amusement for our readers.
Thank you!
Once Upon A Rhyme and Happily Never After are both available on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Jack-Heckel/e/B00L0E1CO8/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1
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