Friday, July 3, 2020

SPOTLIGHT w/INTERVIEW - URBAN FANTASY - A QUEENS PRIDE (Feline Nation, #1) by N.D. Jones



A QUEEN'S PRIDE
Feline Nation, #1
by N.D. Jones
Date of Publication: June 26th 2020
Publisher: Kuumba Publishing

Cover Artist: Ravenborn Covers
Genre: Urban Fantasy

ASIN: B07Y7N8VDH
Number of pages: 220
Word Count: 71,524 (appx)




Tagline: Revenge Is Best Taken with Claws





BLURB

Lies. Murder. Vengeance.


For centuries, humans descended on shifters' lands, killing and claiming. They devoured all in their path--gold, God, and glory their battle cries. From the flames of destruction on the Zafeo continent, two nations emerged--the human territory of Vumaris and the feline nation of Shona.

No more wars.

No more bloodshed.

Eight decades of peace.

For eighteen-year-old Asha, traveling to Vumaris with her parents, lion alphas of the Kingdom of Shona, should've been a simple matter. Recommitting to an eighty-year-old peace treaty between their countries should've been easier still. Yet, greed and corruption know no boundaries of time and place. So when a group of mercenaries converges on Sanctum Hotel, hellbent on kidnapping Asha and assassinating her parents, her family trip turns into the bloodiest night of her life.

Will Asha lose those closest to her heart--her parents and Ekon, a young bodyguard she loves. If so, will she forgive her enemies or seek divine retribution?

Only time will tell, and it's running out for Princess Asha of the Kingdom of Shona.





Excerpt:
Asha flipped from one television station to the next, her mind more on the way Ekon had made her body feel than on finding a show for them to watch before Mafdet took over the post and sent Ekon to his suite. While Zarina had raised Asha to speak her mind, she had also taught her to do so with forethought and care. Zarina may have a tendency to shock people, but it wasn’t because she hadn’t calculated the impact of her words before uttering them. But her mother had yet to teach her how to curb her thoughts when her body wanted to do the talking for her.
Foregoing the television, she clicked it off and dropped the remote control onto the couch cushion beside her. She ached in places she wanted Ekon to touch. If she were alone in the suite and in her bed, she’d close her eyes, slip her hand inside her panties and—
Knock. Knock. Knock.
Opening eyes that had closed of their own volition and dropping the hem of her dress she hadn’t consciously lifted, Asha sat up—embarrassed and breathless.
The knock came again.
Asha stood. Waited. A Shieldmane would announce himself, even Mafdet who had a key to the suite. Her parents would call, if they required something of her, expecting Asha to come to them, not the other way around.
By the time the third round of knocking sounded, Asha had moved closer to the door, scenting more than the human on the other side.
“Miss. Miss. Are you inside? We have an emergency. We need to evacuate this floor.”
The man knocked again--hard and urgent.
Peering through the peephole, she saw a tall man dressed in the same uniform she’d seen the front desk workers wear. He appeared both anxious and impatient. If there was a fire or gas leak, the man’s emotions were justified. Asha and Ekon needed to get out of there.
She unlocked and opened the door. Mistake. Asha stepped backward, and the human stepped forward, shutting the door behind him.
A gun she hadn’t seen through the peephole pointed at her.
“Don’t scream. Don’t fight. If you follow my directions, you won’t get hurt.”
If he didn’t have a gun leveled at her stomach, Asha could’ve misinterpreted his smile as a sign of kindness.
“You’re making a mistake.”
“No, I’m making the world better for humans.” Gun hand steady, the man who clearly wasn’t a hotel employee, scanned the outer room of the suite. “Is someone in here with you? A guard?” Green eyes tracked up and down her body. “Yeah, as pretty as you are, there has to be a guard nearby. Where? Bedroom? Bathroom?”
Asha wouldn’t tell a lie, only to be caught in one, but she also wouldn’t reward the human’s threat of violence with the truth.
“Fine. I’ll take your silence as a yes.” He drew closer, blond hair pulled back in a shoulder-length ponytail Asha would rip from his scalp if given an opportunity to strike. “We’ll just wait right here for whoever is in that other room to come out.”
They waited. It didn’t take long since Ekon had already been in the ensuite for five minutes. Asha knew why he’d made a quick escape. She hadn’t been toying with him when she’d asked to see him naked. She’d very much wanted to feast upon his body … and with more than her eyes.
The door to the ensuite creaked open.
The human shoved the barrel of the gun against her ribs, his breath smelling of cigarettes when he whispered in her ear. “I knew someone was in here with you. You’re too important to be left alone. But didn’t your parents ever warn you about opening doors to strangers?” His other hand found one of Asha’s curls and twisted it around his finger. “I told them I could get you to open the door for me. It was the uniform, wasn’t it? No need to answer, little girl. Now, let’s see who came to play.”
Ekon appeared in the living room, having reached them on soundless feet. If not for the creaking door, the human would’ve never known he approached. As it was, though, it was Ekon who was taken by surprise.
Asha saw the moment her gentle boyfriend morphed into her deadly Shieldmane. His eyes darkened, eye teeth lengthened, sharpened, and his fingernails transformed into long, curved claws.
Ekon stalked toward Asha, his focus on the gunman.
In a swift upward movement, the human pointed his handgun at Asha’s head. “Calm down, kitty, or I’ll splatter her brains all over this white carpet.”
Ekon halted.
“That’s good. Real good. Put those fangs and claws away, friend.”
“I’m not your friend. If you want to make it out of this room alive, you need to get that gun away from her and leave.”
“Yeah, no, that’s not going to happen. She’s why we’re here. Where we go, she goes. You’re the one I don’t need.”
A lion roared, and Asha had never heard a more beautiful sound.
“That would be my father.”
The roar was followed by gunfire, then what sounded like all-out war in the hall.
“Fuck! Fuck! What in the hell are those guys doing?”
“They’re fighting my parents, which means they’re dying. If you give Ekon your gun, you won’t have to die with them.”





Author Info
N. D. Jones, Ed.D. is a USA Today bestselling author who lives in Maryland with her husband and two children. In her desire to see more novels with positive, sexy, and three-dimensional African American characters as soul mates, friends, and lovers, she took on that challenge herself. Along with the fantasy romance series Forever Yours, and a contemporary romance trilogy, The Styles of Love, she has authored three paranormal romance series: Winged Warriors, Death and Destiny, and Dragon Shifter Romance.





The Book Junkie Reads . . . Interview with N.D. Jones . . .

How would you describe your style of writing to someone that has never read your work?
My writing style is logical, sequential, and detail-oriented. With Crimson Hunter, an urban fantasy retelling of Little Red Riding Hood, I started the first chapter near the end of the story with a pivotal battle between witches and werewolf shifters. What followed chapter one is a story that explains how the characters came to be where readers find them in chapter one. That was my first time taking that approach to storytelling. It proved a fun challenge. 
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Do you take your character prep to heart? Do you nurture the growth of each character all the way through to the page? Or do you build upon your character during story creation?
I do take character prep to heart, particularly my heroine, hero, and antagonist. For the heroine and hero, it’s critical to show how they’ve grown throughout the novel. Personal growth can take many forms and need not always involve the main characters' relationship with each other--although growth is important in this area, too. I focus on my characters’ desires and goals, as well as their efforts to achieve them. 
My characters also develop during story creation. Events and characters I may not have planned influences my characters-challenging them, defining them, exploring them in a way I may not have anticipated when I initially set out to write the book. Thus, although I take time to create primary and secondary characters, as well as engage in tons of research and know significant events I want to cover, I do not know every little detail of my stories before I sit down to write. I do leave room for in-the-moment ideas. Or thoughts that come when I’m not consciously plotting. Some of my best book ideas have come when I’m doing something other than thinking about my book. So, planning combined with flexibility is my process for character and book development.
Do you have a character that you have been working on for a long time that still isn't quite ready, but fills you with excitement to work on the story?
I recently finished the first draft of Lies, Lust, Love. It’s the final book in my Winged Warriors paranormal romance trilogy. I introduced Nathaniel, an archangel, in Fire, Fury, Faith, the first book in the series. F3 was my first published book way back in 2012. The next year, Heat, Hunt, Hope, the second book in the series, was published. From there, I went on to write over a dozen books. Now, eight years later, I’ve finally revisited the series and wrote Nathaniel’s overdue story. In 2012/2013, I didn’t know where to take him or what his and his love interest story would be. I always felt bad about not completing the series, although each book was a standalone read. Nathaniel’s story deserved to be told, and the series deserved a proper conclusion. In the end, L3 is a full-length novel; whereas, F3 and H3 are novellas. I feel a wonderful sense of completion—concluding the stories of three great couples and one lovable series.
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Have you found yourself bonding with any particular character(s)? If so which one(s)?
Although I’m primarily a paranormal romance author, I’ve written a contemporary romance trilogy—The Styles of Love. Dr. Angela Styles-Franklin from The Gift of Second Chances is the character I’ve bonded with the most. Probably because we have so much in common—age, profession (educators), and family. The Gift of Second Chances is about a couple with twenty years of marriage and three children between them. They also have a short-lived affair between them. Writing about and researching infidelity was an emotional journey. We all know someone who has either been cheated-on or cheated-on a partner. Sometimes, a person has been the betrayed as well as the betrayer. It’s painful. But it’s also real and doesn’t have to be the end of a relationship. In this novel, Angie and Sean, the hero and heroine, became friends I cared about. Friends whose marriage I wanted to save. 
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Can you share your next creative project(s)? If yes, can you give a few details?
My next creative project is Mafdet’s Claws. It’s the second book in my Feline Nation duology. Mafdet is a wonderful supporting character in A Queen’s Pride. She’s a cheetah shifter with a painful and violent past hinted at in A Queen’s Pride. Mafdet’s Claws pulls back the curtain on Mafdet’s past, revealing the strength of the woman and cheetah.
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1 comment:

  1. Thank you very much for sharing A Queen's Pride, and for being an invaluable stop on my new release tour.

    Stay safe,
    N.D.

    ReplyDelete