Posts Tagged With: fantasy

The Flight of Fantasy Award

ffaI’m happy to announce that I am the recipient of The Flight of Fantasy Award which has been newly created by the brilliant and immeasurably talented Sophie Tallis. Her blog is celebrating its one-year anniversary. Please do stop by and visit.

Here are the official rules for The Flight of Fantasy Award:

  1. Display the award logo on your blog.
  2. Link back to the person who nominated you.
  3. State 11 things about yourself (it’s a Spinal Tap thing!), including why you love fantasy and your first or favourite fantasy book.
  4. Nominate 7 bloggers for this award and link to them. (If you want to link back to me as well, that would be lovely but isn’t required!)
  5. Notify those bloggers of the nomination and the award’s requirements.

Eleven random facts about ME:

  1. I love fantasy because it’s the ultimate escape.
  2. As a child, I hardly ever read fantasy. My favorites were Benji and Little House on the Prairie.
  3. My favorite fantasy series for grownups is Lord of the Rings.
  4. My favorite fantasy series for younger folks is Harry Potter.
  5. I haven’t seen the final Twilight movie yet.
  6. I haven’t read Fifty Shades of Grey.
  7. My favorite new fantasy book is White Mountain by Sophie Tallis
  8. My favorite comedic fantasy author is Will Macmillan Jones.
  9. My favorite new YA fantasy author is Lisa Wiedmeier.
  10. My favorite new Paranormal Romance author is Michel Prince.
  11. I had purple hair when I was in high school.

My seven nominees for The Flight of Fantasy Award:

  1. Maegan Provan
  2. Tori Barrow
  3. Gregory A Hart
  4. Jade M Phillips
  5. Ted Cross
  6. Misty Harvey
  7. Teigr Princess, Kira Morgana

Please stop by Sophie’s Blog and check out her list of nominees. I’m proud to count many of these amazing authors among my friends and urge you to visit their blogs.

Categories: award, bloggers, fantasy, fiction writing, sophie tallis, tricia drammeh | Tags: , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Paranormal Property Hunters

If you’re anything like me, your imagination goes into overdrive the moment you see a creepy old house or a crumbling castle. Picture this: You’re driving down an old two-lane country road. There are fields as far as the eye can see. Tall stalks of corn tower overhead, blowing gently in the breeze. The setting sun casts an eerie orange glow over an abandoned house set a few yards away from the road. The weather-beaten wood siding is gray with age; shutters hang loosely, the slats broken or missing; the windows boarded; the front porch steps are cracked and splintered, buckled in the middle; a broken screen door opens and closes, slapping the door jamb rhythmically. It’s easy to imagine a ghost moving slowly through the dusty inside, drifting over cobwebs, through walls, waiting out its eternity in a place doomed to be destroyed when the property is zoned for commercial development. It seems like it would be easy to to structure a horror screenplay or paranormal novel around such a desolate structure, doesn’t it?

Think about the venues for your favorite paranormal novels. Not every paranormal or dark fantasy novel is set against the backdrop of a haunted house, gothic castle or crumbling urban decay. Vampires have left their Transylvania castles in favor of penthouses, country estates, or small Washington high schools. Werewolves have fled the deep, dark woods and walk (and hunt) among the New York City elite. Witches have abandoned their cauldrons to pursue university degrees. Demons have set up shop in beachfront cottages. Ghosts still hang out in ancient monasteries and eighteenth century inns, but you can find them in brand new suburban homes too.

Paranormal settings aren’t limited to graveyards and haunted mansions. Paranormal characters can (and are) branching out and going mainstream. And, while I sometimes hear lovers of classic vampire lore complain about modern vamps and werewolves hanging out in high school, I think it’s great that we have such variety in paranormal literature. If I want to read classic vampire horror, I can grab a copy of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Or, if I’m in the mood for a sexy, sophisticated vampire with expensive taste, I can read The Vampire Lestat. I don’t have to limit my reading choices and neither do you!

What kind of paranormal novels do you prefer? Gothic horror or urban fantasy? Classic vampire or paranormal romance? Those of you who write paranormal or dark fantasy, tell me about the settings you’ve used in your own work. What do you look for when you go paranormal property hunting?

Categories: books, paranormal property hunters, paranormal romance, vampires, vamps, werewolves, witches, Writerly Posts | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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