Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Nancy Holzner - BloodStone

Boston’s diverse South End is known for its architecture and great restaurants, not its body count. So when mutilated human corpses begin turning up in the area, the entire city takes notice. The killer—dubbed the South End Reaper—uses a curved blade for his grisly work. And even though there’s no real evidence pointing to a paranormal culprit, the deaths are straining the already-tense relations between Boston’s human and inhuman residents.

As the bodies pile up, Vicky, her formidable aunt Mab, and her werewolf boyfriend Kane investigate, only to find that the creature behind the carnage is after something much more than blood…

Publishers Weekly says, “Fans of Holzner’s other Deadtown novels will enjoy this solid yarn.”




My Review:


A great urban Fantasy novel, as well as, an amazing addition to the Deadtown Series. The characters continue on from the previous books, Gwen, Kane, Mab, Maria and some of the older characters are revisited.  The plot and pace was very fast and edge of your seat suspense. With a killer on the loose, Lockdowns, kidnapping, and New powers. The Writing style and world setting is as to be expected from Nancy Holzner. Over all a great read. 


5 Stars!!!




Guest Post




I'm really happy to be back at Were Vamps Romance to celebrate the release of Bloodstone, the third novel in my Deadtown urban fantasy series. For today's post, I'm interviewing Victory Vaughn, the series' protagonist . Vicky, who lives in the Deadtown district of Boston, is a shapeshifter who kills other people's personal demons for a living. But that doesn't mean she's not wrestling with some demons of her own...


Hi, Vicky. Could you start off by telling readers a little bit about yourself?


The main thing to know about me is that I’m not human. I’m Cerddorion, one of a race of Welsh shapeshifters who trace our origins all the way back to the ancient goddess Ceridwen. Some norms confuse us with werewolves, but we’re not the same thing at all. Werewolves change into one creature—wolves—for the three nights of the full moon. The Cerddorion can also shift up to three times each lunar cycle, but the moon never forces a shift; we can spend the entire month in human form if we choose to. We can change our shape into any animal (or sometimes strong emotion can cause a shift), and we can do it at any time of the month, day or night.


Among my race, only females can shift. The ability manifests at puberty, and it disappears if the female gives birth. My older sister Gwen chose to give up shapeshifting when she started her family ten years ago. She had her reasons, but it’s not the choice I’d make. I spent years training to fight demons, and shapeshifting is an important weapon in that arsenal. To me, being a demon-fighting shapeshifter isn’t just what I do; it’s who I am. Of course, that makes relationships a little bit tricky. I’ll admit to being commitment shy. I don’t want to care about someone and then get mired in a big swamp of awkward when he decides he wants to start a
family. Not gonna happen. So I keep my distance.


So you don’t date?


I said I’m commitment shy, not a hermit. Gwen is always trying to set me up with human guys— I think she’s hoping I’ll settle down and then we can swap recipes or something—but those dates invariably turn out to be disasters. Besides, I don’t need her help. I’ve been dating Kane (well, sort of) for a couple of years. Alexander Kane is a prominent Boston attorney who also happens to be a werewolf. He’s passionate about securing civil rights for us monsters (don’t let him hear you say the word “monster,” though—to Kane, we’re “Paranormal Americans”). But his job means he works norm hours, and mine means I work nights, so we don’t get together as often as we’d like. But that’s okay, because we both love our jobs. Workaholics understand each other, you know?


Lately, though, I get the feeling that he's starting to get serious. How do I feel about that? 


Um, next question, please..


You know, you're pretty brave when it comes to anything besides relationships. But I won't push. Moving on . . . you live in Deadtown, a section of Boston that’s restricted to paranormals. What’s it like living there?


Deadtown came into being about three years ago, when the zombie plague hit downtown Boston. That was a terrible day, like being in a war zone. I was right in the middle of it. One minute, everything was normal—people were hurrying down the crowded streets to go to lunch and run errands—the next minute all the norms around me were lying dead on the ground. Paranormals were immune, so many of us came forward to help enforce the quarantine zone and deal with the corpses. Except the corpses didn't stay corpses for long. After three days, they started coming back to life. And so Boston found itself having to deal with two thousand newly risen zombies.


Not surprisingly, the city wouldn’t let them leave the quarantine zone. Us, either. Paranormals got thanked for our help by being restricted to the area that came to be known as Deadtown. With time, the authorities used genetic testing to determine who’s human and who’s not— and they required all paranormals to take up residence in Deadtown or leave the state. Because Massachusetts is one of only a handful of states that grants paranormals any rights at all, most opted to move in.


Deadtown comes alive (so to speak) at night. Like vampires, the zombies don’t do well in sunlight. They won’t vanish in a puff of smoke or anything, but sunlight damages their skin.
(And zombies don’t heal, so that’s a definite problem.) Dusk to dawn is when things happen here. Most zombies do manual labor on the construction projects that are constantly underway converting stores and office buildings into housing—Deadtown used to be a business district, so it wasn’t set up to become home to a couple thousand zombies, not to mention vampires, werewolves, and assorted other nonhuman creatures. It’s crowded and, to tell the truth, it’s dangerous. Humans aren’t allowed in without permission, for their own good. My neighborhood is full of creatures with superhuman strength and bad attitudes. Vampires (mostly) live by the rules and (mostly) stick to their one legally allowed pint of blood per donor per day. Werewolves make their way to one of the state-sanctioned retreat centers for the three days of each full moon. But zombies are still learning how to control their reanimated bodies. The slightest whiff of human blood sends them into a frenzy of hunger, and zombie blood-lust isn’t something any human would want to experience.


Tell us about your job as a demon slayer.


I call myself a demon exterminator because I kill people’s personal demons for a living. For as long as my race has existed, the Cerddorion have been sworn enemies of demons. Personal demons are the most common, and some people will pay me a lot to rid them of a demon infestation that causes nightmares or keeps them awake at night with worries. I give them peace of mind. My job is a lot like psychotherapy, except instead of a couch I use a flaming sword.


What advice do you have for people who are struggling with their own personal demons?


There are three main kinds of personal demons: Drudes, Eidolons, and Harpies. Drudes are dream-demons. They’re the source of most nightmares, and they feed on fear. Eidolons feed on guilt or anxiety. Some Eidolons manifest as apparitions; others are a presence that keeps you awake at night, feeling like some hideous parasite is gnawing at your bones. And Harpies are revenge demons; people pay black-market sorcerers to conjure Harpies and send them against their enemies.


The thing about personal demons is that they don’t have independent existence. They’re conjured by overpowering emotion—fear, guilt, hatred. When emotions like those are left unresolved, they grow, and they take demonic form. So my best advice is to face negative feelings before they fester and grow into something you can’t control. I’d give you that advice even if you hired me. After I’ve clear out a demon infestation, if you don’t deal with the root emotion that conjured the demons, they’ll eventually come back. Face your fears. Face your guilt. Face your enemies. That’s how you conquer your demons.
________________________________


Bloodstone, the third novel in Nancy Holzner's Deadtown series, is now available. For information on Nancy and her books, visit her website. You can also find Nancy on Facebook
and Twitter, and blogging with other fantasy authors at Dark Central Station.








Nancy is offering a tour-wide giveaway- readers can enter at each stop.

Nancy is offering 5 book giveaways- 5 winners.

Each of five winners gets his/her choice of a signed copy of Deadtown, Hellforged, or Bloodstone.

This giveaway is open to US only



Please follow Nancy and Bewitching Book Tours:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nancy-Holzner/163746834500
http://twitter.com/#!/NancyHolzner
http://www.facebook.com/BewitchingBooktours

link to form:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEQ4akN0dkpkNmJRUFFmeFlUbk9rQmc6MQ

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks to Melissa for inviting me to stop by Were Vamps Romance. I always enjoy visiting this awesome site!

@Karen I'm glad you're enjoying the series. (Just wait'll you see what Vicky has to deal with in book 4! LOL)

Jen B. said...

I have been following this tour around the web (I am sure I have missed stops but I am trying). I love UF and this series sounds like just what I like to read. Nancy Holzner is a new author to me. Thanks for the giveaway!
jepebATverizonDOTnet

Victoria said...

I love character interviews and Vicki is great. Not a bad name either :). Sounds really good.

vsloboda(at)gmail(dot)com

lindalou said...

I loved your interview... I've not read any of these books so I appreciate the info. Thanks for the giveaway!
lindalou(at)cfl(dot)rr(dot)com

SJ said...

Great Interview! I love the series.

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