1. Do
you write in different genres?
I do! My own reading
habits are all over the map, so it’s no surprise that I’m interested in writing
different genres. Besides paranormal romance/urban fantasy, I also write YA
dystopian/fantasy, and romance fantasy. I’m trying my hand at a contemporary
romance right now, which has surprised me by how much I like it. I wasn’t sure
I’d be inspired enough to write something without magic or supernatural going
on, but yeah. Stretching my writerly wings.
2. If
yes which is your favorite genre to write?
My all-time favorite
genre is fantasy, both reading and writing. Give me swords, castles, and magic
with a side of romance any day!
3. Do
you title the book first or wait until after it’s complete?
I loathe titles. Loathe
them! I never, ever have the title picked out first. It usually jumps out at me
while I’m writing a scene. Eventually.
4. Is
there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?
Redemption and
acceptance are never beyond reach. I believe everyone deserves to be accepted
and loved for who they are, scars, flaws and all.
5. What
books/authors have influenced your life?
Well, that’s a mean
question. There are way too many to list, but I grew up reading Tolkien, C.S.
Lewis, Lloyd Alexander, and Piers Anthony (thanks, dad), so they had a huge
influence on my writing life, even how I view the world at times. And later I
discovered The Magic Garden by Gene Stratton Porter in my grandmother’s dusty,
abandoned ranch house library. That book is one of my greatest treasures, and I
can’t read it without weeping. I think that was the first story that gave me a
heart for broken people who want to be loved and accepted.
6. What
books are in your to read pile?
Since I can’t list the
entire library that makes up my TBR list, I’ll keep it to the next in my
reading queue. First is Beast of All by J.C. McKenzie – her Carus series is
awesome. I also have the last two books in Maggie Stiefvater’s Raven Cycle
series I’m chomping at the bit to devour, so they’ll definitely be next. After
that, my mood will decide.
7. What
is your current “work in progress” or upcoming projects?
I’m close to finishing
up the rough draft of the contemporary romance I mentioned earlier. It’s about
a woman who lost her brother, along with her zest for life, and the musician
who invades her world and refuses to let her fizzle out. With my love for broken
characters, this story has hit me hard, harder than any of my other stories,
maybe because it’s so real. I adore it and can’t wait to share it with readers.
8. Who
is your favorite author and what is it that really strikes you about their
work?
I can’t possibly narrow
my favorite authors down to one…but Anne Bishop is one of the few authors on my
“must buy” list. I believe she shares my love for broken characters because a
lot of hers are so damaged. There’s nothing more satisfying to me than seeing a
character who believes they’re unworthy find their own worth and love. And when
they kick the villain’s ass. That’s up there too.
9. Who
designed the cover of your latest book?
Fiona Jayde designed
both covers for Wonderfully Wicked and Beautifully Burned. I love her covers!
Plus, she’s so easy to work with and can somehow decipher all my unintelligible
ideas and create exactly what I want. She’s a genius.
Just for fun....
If you could have one paranormal ability, what would
it be?
It’s not exactly an ability, but I’d love to have
Wonder Woman’s Lasso of Truth. There’d be a brand spankin’ new justice system
under my magical rope, no joke.
If you could keep a mythical/ paranormal creature as
a pet, what would you have?
Definitely a dragon. They could fly you around when
you feel like leaving everything behind for awhile and crisp anyone who annoys
you. Plus, I bet they purr in their own way, and you wouldn’t have to worry
about getting cold in winter. So many benefits to owning a dragon, although
feeding them might create some neighbor complications.
If you could spend a day with anyone from history,
dead or alive, who would it be, and what would you do? What would you ask them?
Oh yeah. Jesus. I have a lot of questions for him,
although he’d probably just answer me in parables, and I wouldn’t figure
anything out by the time he had to leave. So maybe we’d just go to Disneyworld
instead. I bet I could skip to the front of the line with him every time.
Beautifully Burned
The Dreamcaster Series
Book Two
C.J. Burright
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Publisher: Ravenrock Publishing, LLC
Date of Publication: 8/23/2016
ISBN: 9780996147
ASIN: B01IX4GYAY
Number of pages: 274
Word Count: 74,700
Cover Artist: Fiona Jayde
Book Description:
Grandma warned me to resist him.
I know what he is. Even if he doesn't sparkle in the sun, hiss at holy water, or go by the traditional name of vampire, I know.
He doesn't want or need my blood. He wants my dreams...more specifically, my nightmares. And I've got oodles of those, so many they leak.
He's emotionally scarred, growly, dangerous, and kindles all my senses. Love isn't on his agenda. Having him for a guardian isn't on my list of fun, either. My touch sends him into darkness.
I shouldn't want him.
I can't want him.
But I do.
If I surrender instead of escape, I'll lose everything--my sister, my will, my life. Gran forgot to tell me the most important detail of all: how am I supposed to resist him when he's everything I've ever dreamed of?
Beautifully Burned is told in a dual, third person POV, and may be read as a standalone.
EXCERPT 2
“Leaving so soon, bartender?”
asked a gravelly voice.
Ella whirled.
Daxen leaned against an iron
lamppost several feet behind her, a plate of pie in one hand, as if he’d been
watching her from that location the entire time. He leisurely licked the fork.
She ignored the responsive swirl
in her belly. “Don’t you have anything better to do than spy on innocent
people?”
“Not really.” He wiggled his
plate. “Brought you some blueberry pie.”
A flutter awakened in her heart.
He’d brought her pie, and not just any pie. Gran had baked blueberry pie every
year for her birthday. She hadn’t eaten a single blueberry since the incident,
which was enough of a reminder to resist.
“No thanks.” She made her tone
full-on frosty. “I don’t accept pastries from people who threaten me.”
He shrugged and took another
bite. “More for me.”
She huffed. Not even an apology.
Resistance grew easier every second. “Unlike you, I have a life to get back to,
a bar to manage. As you said, I’m not one of your precious dreamcasters, and I
can’t pop monsters out of my mouth, ears or butt, so I’m leaving. Got it?
Good.”
He worked his jaw, as if battling
a smile. “Shame. I’d trade half my library to see nightmares pop out of your
cute little rump.”
She drew herself up straight. How
dare he compliment any part of her? And bring up his sexy love for books?
“Well, I’d auction off my bottle of Kauffman
Luxury Vintage Vodka to see your glossy hair on fire, Dingleberry.”
His eyebrows rose. “Dingleberry?”
“Don’t make me taunt you a second
time.”
“What’s next? Dunghill? Vile
worm?” Daxen shooed at a black fly buzzing near his nose. “Or perhaps lump of
foul deformity?”
“All of those apply.” Ella
crossed her arms. Of course he’d love Shakespeare too. “Take your pie and
poetry and find someone else to pester.”
“I can’t figure you out.” He
scratched his chin and his eyes narrowed. “I went after you to save Kalila the
trouble and keep her away from Izzy. Now you’re here, the danger to her has
passed, you have no value to the V’alkara, and yet…”
The fly landed on his pie, and he
absently waved it away. The insect disappeared, swallowed by the black night.
He looked up into the
star-studded sky, his brow furrowed. His intense gaze returned to hers. “You
kissed me.”
Heat invaded her cheeks.
“Obviously, a moment of stress-induced insanity.”
“I think I liked it.”
Her mouth opened, closed. He
liked it? Or wasn’t sure, and if he had to think about liking it, not exactly a
compliment.
Quick as a heartbeat, he cut the
distance between them and leaned over her, so close the small mole below his
eye stood out. The sweet scent of blueberries infused the air. “Why would I
like it?”
Well, if that wasn’t a moment
killer. She stepped back, and her shoulders hit the solid gate. “Might want to
brush up on your flattery skills, sport. And for the record, I’ve never had any
complaints before.”
His eyebrows slashed down.
“You’ve kissed others?”
Sure. A sloppy peck on the cheek
from Clark Johannsen in kindergarten, an awkward ten-second exchange of gum
with Adam Parker beneath the bleachers during a middle school football game,
and a best-forgotten moment with Dan the Band Geek. He didn’t need to know the
extent of her inexperience. “That’s none of your business.”
“Who? I want names.” He crowded
her against the gate, eyes icicle sharp, the pie still balanced in one hand.
“Why? And no.” Panic boiled in
her breast, rising fast. The closer he got, the more she wanted to mold her
body to his. “Generally, my lips are well-behaved and keep to themselves. You
must have confused them with your V’alkara hocus-pocus. Back off.”
Instead, he eased nearer. His
warm, sweet breath fanned her mouth.
Frick. He was going to kiss her,
and that was the point of no return. She had to do something. Her pulse lurched
into a jackhammer rat-a-tat. The gate’s metal latch dug into her right
shoulder, a reminder of her goal. If she failed, Ginny would be alone. She had
to resist. Ella sucked air and whipped up some much-needed oxygen to her brain.
“If you think I’m going to pucker
up for you now, your brain’s malfunctioning. Besides, you don’t like to be
touched.” She poked him in the chest for emphasis. “Remember?”
His shoulders stiffened. His
throat worked, and he averted his gaze. The sweep of his long, midnight lashes
above his cheeks gave him the impression of a forgotten child, lost and broken.
The painful summary of his
adolescence surged to her memory, squeezing her stomach. Cages, torture,
chains. She might want to break his straight nose for threatening her, but she
hadn’t meant to rip the scar off a buried wound.
He stepped back before she could
apologize, not that she had any genius words of emotional healing to offer
anyway. As though suddenly remembering the pie, Daxen stabbed his fork into the
unfortunate pastry and ripped off a ragged chunk. “Run if you wish, bartender,
but you won’t get more than a mile away before a V’alkara on guard duty catches
you.” His eyes gleamed silver in the overhead lamplight. “And most of them
don’t have my tact and charm.”
“Let me guess, valedictorian of
the Howard Stern Charm School? I totally see it.”
His smile flashed, there and
gone.
The small gesture had the same
effect as if he’d dumped her off in the gardens of Versailles Palace or at the
top of Machu Picchu. Mind-blowing. Dizzying. Knee-shaking. She had to leave
now, before she jumped on him.
About the Author:
C.J. Burright was born and raised in Oregon and loved it so much she never left. While she has worked for years in a law office, she chooses to avoid writing legal thrillers and instead leans toward urban fantasy, paranormal romance, or—since all things medieval and magical fascinate her—fantasy romance. A member of Romance Writers of America and the Fantasy, Futuristic & Paranormal chapter, C.J. also has her 4th Dan Black Belt in Tae Kwon Do and believes stories should always include a fight scene, gratuitous or not. In what spare time she has, she enjoys working out, gardening, all things musical, Assassin’s Creed, and rooting on the Seattle Mariners (preferably with wine to curb her outrage when they lose). She shares a house with her husband, daughter, and a devoted cat herd.
Website: http://www.cjburright.com
Twitter: @CJBurright
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/cburright/
5 comments:
Thanks so much, Roxanne! :)
I Enjoyed the excerpt and the interview, Can't wait to read this book!
Thanks, Eva! <3
Sounds like a fun read; I loved the bantering between the Daxen and Ella.
Thanks, Christy! I do like my fair share of banter. :)
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