Hi, I’m Genevieve Jack. Thank you for having me
today, Roxanne. I’m happy to be here to answer your burning questions about the
Knight Games series and my latest release, Mother May I. If any readers have
follow up questions, I’ll be stopping by to answer any they leave in the
comments.
1.
Do you have a specific writing style?
If my writing style(WS) were corporeal, it would
tell you to sit down and put your feet up. How about a glass of wine? WS has
six pack abs, likes the beach, and knows how to cook. You work too hard. WS desperately
wants to entertain you.
2. Do you write in different genres?
I do, but under a different pseudonym. I’ve written
young adult, science fiction, dystopian, fantasy, and paranormal, as well as
paranormal romance.
3. If yes which is your favorite genre to write?
Paranormal romance is by far my favorite genre to
write. I find it relaxing to escape to a world of vampires, witches, shifters
and magic. Often, when I’m reading or watching a contemporary story I think it
would be better with magic or vampires.
4. How did you come up with the title for your
latest book?
All of the titles in the Knight Games series are twisted
versions of games you might have played at some time in your life. The Ghost
and The Graveyard is a play on Ghost in the Graveyard. Kick the Candle comes
from Kick the Can. Queen of the Hill, of course, is a feminized form of King of
the Hill.
Mother May I is the name of a game where you ask the
“Mother” player, who is blindfolded, what moves you can make to get closer to
her. The person who reaches the mother first wins the game. In Mother May I,
Grateful Knight must confront her goddess mother for permission to unite the
elements in order to gain enough power to restore her caretaker/lover to his
previous undamaged state. The game was a perfect metaphor for the plot, making
it the obvious choice for a title.
5. Is there a message in your novel that you want
readers to grasp?
I believe that creative writing is art, and as such,
interpretation is left to the reader. I write my novels to elicit different
types of emotions from various readers, and it’s okay if they experience a
message meant only for them. That said, I was thinking a lot about the finality
of true love as I wrote this book, how it binds you and becomes something
larger than its parts. Love is unconditional and sometimes temporarily
one-sided. It requires trust, risk, and sacrifice. I believe those things come
through vividly in this work.
6. Is the book, characters, or any scenes based on a
true life experience, someone you know, or events in your own life?
Not in this book. However, in The Ghost and the
Graveyard, the second scene in chapter three was based on an intense dream I
had while I was in nursing school. I dreamt that I was taking patient calls out
of my home and that an old woman phoned in who showed signs of dementia. The
woman claimed to be locked in someone’s attic. As I frantically tried to get
her help, the call disconnected. Afterward, I heard a noise coming from the
second floor. I walked to my stairway. The glowing torso of the old woman
hovered at the top, and her anger at being kept locked in the attic was clearly
directed at me.
A second ghost, male and attractive, arrived then
and I was able to escape. This was the type of dream where I wasn’t myself, the
house wasn’t my house and the body I
was in wasn’t my body. In my dream, I
wondered where the male ghost came from, why he was there, and why he’d come to
me rescue. When I woke, I just had to fill in the details. That dream was the
birthplace of the entire series.
7. What is your current “work in progress” or
upcoming projects?
Mother May I is the last book in the Knight Games
quartet but not the last book in the series. Next up is a standalone novel that
takes place in the same world (A Knight World Novel) called LOGAN.
The cover is
included at the end of Mother May I, and let me tell you, it’s hot! Here’s what
it’s about:
Logan Valentine hates witches. After being drugged and
tortured by one in the past, he’s sworn off magical types for good. Even when a
certain redheaded witch plays the starring role in his hottest dreams, he vows
to focus on running his restaurant and leading a normal human life.
Polina Innes thinks humans belong in the same category as dogs
or pigs. The centuries-old witch abhors cross species romance and hates herself
for fantasizing about the human she met helping a fellow witch last year. As
her thoughts border on obsession, she becomes desperate to cure herself of her
rogue desires.
When Polina finds a love potion guaranteed to connect her
with her soul mate, she’s sure it’s the answer to wiping Logan from her mind
for good. Only, her plan backfires. One sip leads her to his door and unleashes
an unwanted attraction that becomes increasingly impossible to deny.
8. Do you have a song or playlist (book soundtrack) that
you think represents this book?
You can listen to it here!
The Heart Wants What it Wants by Selena Gomez
The Walker by Fitz and the Tantrums
Counting Stars by One Republic
Gods and Monsters by Lana Del Ray
Fever by Peggy Lee
I Put A Spell On You by Nina Simone
Take Me to Church by Hozier
Come With Me Now by KONGOS
Centuries by Fall Out Boy
Unconditionally by Katy Perry
Knight Games
Book 4
Genevieve Jack
Genre: New Adult Paranormal Romance, Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Carpe Luna Publishing
Date of Publication: March 16, 2015
ISBN: 978-1-940675-17-6
ASIN: B00SNAFPF4
Number of pages: 300
Word Count: 65,000
Cover Artist: Steven Novak
Book Description:
Love will launch the mother of all battles.
Grateful Knight is one stressed out witch. Not only has she failed to restore her caretaker, Rick, from an evil witch’s mind-control spell, but the loss he endured extends well beyond his memory. To make matters worse, compensating for his absence could cost her the job she loves and the strength she needs.
When a new supernatural threat leaves Grateful for dead, a vampire ally saves her life but at a price. Her assailant's calling card makes it clear she’s marked for death, possibly by her goddess mother. With the help of her half-sister Polina, can Grateful gain the power she needs to win Rick back and beat the goddess at her own game?
Power
is a pain in the ass. People think they want it, they’ll kill themselves to get
it, but in the end, it’s nothing but trouble. Take Tabetha’s power; I was
ringing with it. As I patrolled the street in Salem I’d seen in the mirror, the
geraniums in the window boxes overhead stretched their necks in my direction.
Don’t get me started on the roses in my living room. I’d become the freaking
Jolly Green Giant of witchdom. The summer night veritably buzzed around me as
the elements of wind and wood tuned in to my presence.
So much power and so much responsibility. I hadn’t asked for
it, and I sure as hell didn’t want it. But here I was.
“What exactly are we looking for?” Poe, my raven familiar,
asked from my shoulder.
“Not sure. I couldn’t tell from the mirror.”
“What do you mean you couldn’t tell? And, more importantly,
why on earth are we here if you don’t know what we are looking for?”
“There’s an evil presence here. We saw a woman die. She fell
twitching to the street. I couldn’t see the perpetrator for some reason. Maybe
she was poisoned, or it’s some sort of poltergeist or invisible demon. All I
know for sure is a supernatural being means to do a human harm, and it’s our
job to stop them.” Again I wondered if the deficiency of vision was due to
Rick’s presence. I shook my head, not wanting it to be true. For all I knew,
the enchanted mirror might be on the fritz.
“Mmm. It’s not the
mirror, and I doubt it’s Rick,” Poe said, doing that intuitive thing he did
that made me feel like he was in my head. “If you ask me, without Rick’s blood
and, er, affections, your magic is weakening.”
“Don’t be ridiculous. I’m more powerful than ever. I can
feel every blade of grass from here to Vermont.”
“Yes, you have more power, but a more sizable engine
requires a more sizable battery. You, Witcherella, are running on empty. The
mirror knows and is answering in kind.”
“Hmph.” I hadn’t considered this possibility, but Poe was
probably right. It wasn’t Rick’s presence making the mirror go wonky; it was
his absence. Three weeks had passed since I last enjoyed Rick’s blood and as
far as physical contact, that enjoyment ended at handholding. Every time I
tried to get close to him, it was the fishing pole all over again. A
distraction. An evasion. “I want Rick to come around on his terms. This is all
new to him. He doesn’t remember anything, especially not me. I was there, not
so long ago, when I first met Rick and I didn’t remember who I was. I need to be gentle with him.”
“Sex can be gentle. Have I mentioned you’re weakening?”
I groaned at his lack of subtlety. “It’s not just about
blood and sex,” I murmured. “He either can’t or won’t shift or do magic of any
kind. The answer is to jog his memory. I bought him a laptop today and showed
him some cat videos.”
“Cat videos?” Poe forced a gag.
I spread my hands. “I want him to learn about the modern
world. LOL cats are the gateway drug. Oh, and that panda that sneezes. I love
that one.”
“Is he still hunting?”
“And fishing. Sometimes he stares blankly out the window,” I
said honestly. “Have you ever seen squirrel stew, Poe? It ain’t pretty.”
“Sounds delicious.” Poe smacked his beak.
“I try to be charming, but it feels forced.” I pressed a
finger into my chin. “It is forced. We are two strangers, and I’m trying to
force him to fall in love with me like a creeper. He probably wishes the entire
thing was a bad dream. Plus, I think he might be depressed.”
“Ya think? He falls asleep in 1698 and wakes up in 2015,
having witnessed his fiancé burned at the stake and his entire community,
including his parents, struck down by the cursed spellbook used to bind her. Of
all the things Rick could be, depressed is the most logical.”
“I don’t know how to help him remember. I need him, Poe. If
you’re right about the mirror and my magic is waning, things are going to go
downhill fast.”
“Perhaps if you dressed a bit more comely?”
I looked down at my black T-shirt, jeans, and boots. My
outfit was enchanted to remain comfortable in any weather and to bend and
stretch to the demands of my job. I loved it. “What’s wrong with this?”
“You have a skull and crossbones on your chest.”
“It’s fun. It says dangerous,
yet fashionably casual.”
“It says weird goth
girl with emotional problems.”
“You’d have emotional problems too if your fiancé left you
at the altar and then forgot who you were. This is who I am.” I stretched my
arms to the sides. “Grateful Knight. Love me or leave me.”
Poe cleared his throat. “Only problem is, if Rick doesn’t
love you and leaves you, it could mean your death. This is serious. If you
can’t bring back Rick’s memories, at least try to make him want you.
Tell him
you need blood and sex, pronto. Love can happen at its own pace.”
Love. I hoped it could happen at all. Sometimes Rick treated
me like his captor, like he didn’t quite trust me. I still loved him, even
after he left me at the altar and ended up drugged in Tabetha’s bed. Those are
hard things to forgive, but I’d let them go. I loved Rick from a deep, forever
place in my soul. A place that couldn’t be reached by all the nastiness Tabetha
had doled out before I tore her apart.
I rolled my eyes. Poe’s concern for my well-being had as
much to do with his existence being tied to mine as for my safety. I got it. I
did. I couldn’t go on much longer without Rick. But I also couldn’t lose him.
If I pushed him too hard, I might drive him away.
“What was that?” I said, perking my ears.
“What?”
“You didn’t hear that? It was a twanging sound. Very faint.
Like a guitar string being strung.”
“Crap, Grateful. Move!”
About the Author:
Genevieve Jack is a former registered nurse turned author of weird, witty, and wicked-hot paranormal romance. She grew up in a suburb of Chicago and attended a high school rumored to be haunted. There she developed a love for old cemeteries and ghost tours. Today, she specializes in original, cross-genre stories with surprising twists. She lives in Illinois with her husband, two children, and a Brittany spaniel named Riptide, who holds down her feet while she writes.
7 comments:
Thank you for hosting me today!
I LOVE this series. I got Mother May I at midnight last night and I am already almost 40% of the way through. =)
Aww! Thanks Stacy. I hope you love how it ends!
This a an AWESOME series!
Such a fantastic series! So excited to delve further into Grateful's life (which I'm jealous of - I mean, who wouldn't want to be a witch?) in this fourth novel!
LOVE, love, love this series so much!! It's quite addicting. I almost wish it wasn't so I wouldn't burn through them so fast. When something is this good, you want it to last! Keep writing because I'll definitely keep reading!
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