Alaric

sunnuntai 30. marraskuuta 2014

Swords & Love - Book 2 for the cantiniére tales.

AUTHOR’S NOTES

Jeanette’s story is a wild ride. So it is. It is meant as an old fashioned adventure story, one to celebrate practical heroes and vile villains, though it is not always clear which is which, for we all know sometimes life forces us down paths that are shady at best. There is violence in the story. It is not subtle story of historical romance, though there is romance, but a woman’s story of war and survival. Jeanette is a daughter of revolution and war, she grew up with rough boys, and while a fighter’s heart beats in her chest, she is a woman as well. Yet, she is a female soldier most of all, and no soldier puts a civilian before their company and mates. So, forgive her the looting and casual attitude for killing. She is no murderess born, only a killer out of necessity. Moreover, the fighter’s heart is a good heart and gods know she can love as well as hate.
In Reign of Fear, she learnt to conquer her fears and to fight. She found the army, she found a man. Life seemed simple for her.
In Swords and Love, she keeps on fighting, but also finds love is complicated. She has a lot of growing up to do and Egypt is the place where she finds new doorways to cross. She finds new love, a healthier one, perhaps, but there is a prize to pay if you pursue your dangerous goals and some things are not meant to be. She will also learn to close old doors. Sometimes with a sword.
As ever, a fictional writer of history is bound to make some allowances for the sake of the story. So did I. There are characters that I remade. They sound and act differently than the history books would hint at, but in this book, they serve the story, not historical facts. Nor is the timeline always accurate, though I did try to accommodate the main milestones of the campaign to the story. Acre is not portrayed entirely accurately. I found a surprisingly small amount of information on the Mamelukes and the ways of Islam at the time, but I dug around deeper and came up with goodly amount in the end. Yet, I am sure to have made mistakes in some of the habits and ways of the time, though hopefully not too many. The Mamelukes were Muslims, yes, but they were also very powerful men and perhaps not always good Muslims. Some were, of course, but in this book the rules of a religion and how the powerful act might not always walk hand in hand. Also, I could have drawled on and on about the army units, the fabulous happenings of this incredible war and the details of the battles, but chose to do that only for the Acre, a horrible business that was. This is Jeanette’s story, not the story of Napoleon.
Yet, he does have an important part to play.
As for Bonaparte, the tension between the Directory and him was very much present at the time. They were at odds, they were paranoid of each other, and one has to wonder why Napoleon left for Egypt. Was it to gather fame and glory, wealth and allies, even a kingdom of his own or was it an honorable exile, similar to what old Augustus did for his Agrippa? Did the Directory send the bothersome bloodhound as far as possible, on a supposedly important mission? Did they suspect the Turks would take offence at seizure of Egypt; indeed did they encourage the Ottomans to respond? Did they stop Talleyrand from going over to Constantinople to negotiate a peace while the general fought a war, thinking his backdoor was safely latched? None knows.
Many have opinions on the matter.
Yet, I assumed he was disliked by the Directory, even feared and so the reasons for going are not important, only that he was not supposed to come back. The murder plot is a part of the story and another condemning contract was born. This age and time loved it’s papers, documents and signed deals.
I am also partially sorry for the unfortunate part Joachim Murat plays in the book. He is certainly given a nefarious character, and even as I did not know the man personally, only by the books and stories of his incredible feats, I do feel sorry for him on hindsight. He was a merchant’s son who became a king. He was brave, he was opportunistic, utterly vain, and handsome. His wife laconically noted that all his goods are on sale at the window. He was pretty and brave, but perhaps not overly smart. All those qualities make the perfect villain, a dangerous sidekick. When he died, he told his executioners not to shoot him in the face. What a man. A man of endless stories, that one. Therefore, I beg pardon, dear Murat, for making you a brute.
Going forward, we will see Jeanette with new problems to solve. She has the whole Napoleonic era to get into trouble, after all.

It is a furious adventure. I hope you enjoyed it.

perjantai 28. marraskuuta 2014

Tears can be good.

You know you are not a lost cause and mauled beyond hope if you can still cry at a movie trailer or a good story.

If I Stay. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87uys6jp9dI

Thank you.

torstai 27. marraskuuta 2014

Thought for the morning.

Daring to dream. Daring to try. Daring to fail. Daring to try again. Daring to succeed. Daring to fail again and try once more.

Daring all. That is how.

But do not dare to cry or judge if you never did.

maanantai 24. marraskuuta 2014

Thought for the morning

There is no guarantee you get what you deserve.
No matter if you deserve joy, or punishment.
It's all planning and luck. Or lack of them.

Thought for the evening

At some point you must start delivering.
That will only happen if you keep playing.
No matter how damned hard it gets.

perjantai 21. marraskuuta 2014

Two books nearing the finish line

Two books, Wyrd and Swords and Love are coming along nicely. Final editing rounds for the second books in my historical novel series Hraban Chronicles and Cantiniére Tales are nearly finished and soon off to the publisher.

My fantasy book is coming along nicely as well, though I have to whip myself to get it done. Happy to have someone to watch over my shoulder, though.




perjantai 14. marraskuuta 2014

The power of a promo. Bestseller in a Amazon category. Heartwarming for a new author.

torstai 13. marraskuuta 2014

Starting a new book.

I typed out 20 k words today on a new novel, a historical fantasy.

Typing those words out, I began to fear. I thought about the first two books I wrote, both first in a series, huge historical novels of great ambition. There will be reviews that hate them, for they are not light reading but I already had many reviews that loved them. Yet, even one bad one can royally ruin ones day, no matter if such critique is great for developing even better stories.

One has to develop a fat hide to be able to cut it in this business but developing such a hide is going to take time. Being an author is great for self development. Everything I do is out there for anyone to see. Authors. We love it, we hate it, we must learn to live with it. I must, certainly.

That one dubious review I had already helped me with this new book and those two huge books I penned down last year and this spring and all the hot tears poured into them do give me some advantages. I bring a lot of experience into this new one and can save a ton of time from mistakes I made with the first ones. 

Now, all I have to do is to make it good. 

I will know I succeeded if I laugh and love some characters, hate others and shed some tears for the fallen.

Wish me luck!

The Oath Breaker promo period is nearly over.

Well, the Oath Breaker is nearly out of its promo period. We managed number 2 in amazon.com action/adventure/travel and 9 in the german historical fiction. In amazon.co.uk it is number 1 currently in the travel category. 
Thank you Creativia for a nicely run promo again.

tiistai 11. marraskuuta 2014

The Oath Breaker

My Oath Breaking raven nearly beat the Romans in our Amazon promo, and while being the number 3,7k in total Amazon sales rank, also hit rank #10 in German Historical Fiction and #3 in Action&Adventure/Travel.

Time for it to move down, but let us hope Hraban finds his way to the hearts of all historical fiction lovers.


Nibbling on new stories, munching on the old ones

Been really busy past two months. Yes, I know, that is the norm for anyone, but as for me, working on several projects and adding the family to the mix has been a bit like it was when I was still a product manager for Nokia.

Utter chaos!

As for the upcoming projects, I am busily editing the number two books for Hraban Chronicles and Cantiniére Tales, BUT

I am also finishing up on a fantasy novel, the first book in the Sisters of the Nine Worlds series. I'm pretty durned exited about this one.

So, should I survive these three books, it will be a miracle.

There is also some other projects that have been suffering, but I have not forgotten you, Project "Fixion" et. Co.

Reign of Fear

Happy to announce Reign of Fear, my Napoleonic story reached:

1# Best Seller positing on French Historical Fiction category.

Now, of course it has fallen, but in a sense the heroine of the story, Jeanette got to be a queen for a day.