Friday, October 8, 2021

SPOTLIGHT w/INTERVIEW - GOTHIC PARANORMAL - SMOKE AND MIRRORS: A Vampire Romance by Elise Nelson

Smoke and Mirrors: A Vampire Romance
by Elise Nelson
Date of Publication: May 25th 2021 
Publisher: Shattered Glass Press
Cover Artist: Covers and Cupcakes 
Genres: PNR, Gothic Romance, Vampire Romance
ISBN: 1777632935 
ASIN: B08ZT1JTF9 
Number of pages: 409 pages
Word Count: 120,857 words

Tagline: In the shadows, nothing is ever what it seems

BLURB
Caroline Blake is a young reporter with a past almost as cryptic as her future. She never put much stock into her late aunt’s eerie tales of monsters and demons until she takes an assignment to cover the elusive Ashdown family’s Harvest Festival. As part of her assignment, she must live at the family’s mansion for six weeks and help prepare for the event.

No one has seen the family since the tragedy that occurred at the last festival almost thirty years prior. As the only female reporter on-site, Caroline must hold her own while uncovering why the family closed their doors all those years ago.

Perhaps the most challenging part of her assignment is dealing with her working partner, William Ashdown. The handsome lord of the house seems bent on testing her patience every time they meet. Still, there is something intriguing about him that she can’t ignore.

Caroline is soon swept into a world of generational secrets, unsettling mysteries, and unexpected romance. Amidst all the uncertainty, one thing is sure: in the shadows, nothing is ever what it seems. 


Excerpt
I could never forget that day. There was an eerie stillness in the air as we stood there, waiting. Chills dimpled deep into my skin, and I swore it was watching me. It was watching all of us. A thing too far away for us to see but close enough to feel the slimy chill of its gaping stare. Like the unnerving lick of a wild animal. Or being scratched in that spot of your back that you can’t quite reach.

I could never forget how it all felt. The stale air clasping my skin, as if paralyzing me in place. The blind panic coursing through me. The sound of muffled breaths and stifled cries suffocating the air around us while we did our best not to make a sound.
None of us really knew what we were waiting for, and somehow that made it worse. Maybe we wouldn’t have been so utterly petrified if we’d known what we were up against. But we didn’t. We just stood there in the dark, the dewy mist of twilight teasing our tired eyes, and tried not to scream.

My aunt always told me to beware of the monsters in the closet. Of demons and shadows. Mythical beings she read stories about at bedtime. Creatures from the corners of our eyes and the echoes in our footsteps. She sang me eerie lullabies of cautionary tales, sinking in stories rich with disaster and fear so I would recognize any such creature if I ever saw one. When she’d speak these rehearsed sermons of the undead, her hands would tremble, and her eyes would go wide and far away—the shocking blue around her pupils turned into stagnant crystals ready to drop and shatter at any moment. It was as if she had left this world altogether and I had to wait for her to return.
I always wondered where these stories came from and why Maggie recited them to me every night before I went to bed. As a teenager, I thought she was simply out of touch with reality— that there was something about her that wasn’t quite right. I heard it when she spoke and saw it in those wide crystal eyes. Her lyrics never made their way into my mind, at least not until I was much older. They just swirled inside the little head that she cradled and brushed before bedtime.
I was a very protected child in a small home, in a small town, hidden deep within Western Europe.
When she died, I left the only place I’d ever known. I had no one else in Fairbrooke worth staying for.

So I moved to Brakerton Heights.



Author Info
Elise Nelson is a writer of fiction, non-fiction, poetry, comics, and articles. She has published under a few different pen names since she was nineteen and has been published in literary periodicals, including The Nassau Review and Essig Magazine. She has also worked as an editorial intern for Christopher Matthews Publishing as well as a writer and editor for many other companies, magazines, and websites. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree from Boise State University, where she studied English literature, creative writing, and multimedia storytelling. She is currently a writer and editor for Jotaku.net and enjoys writing Star Wars fan fiction in her spare time.


The Book Junkie Reads . . .Reckless Dreams  Interview with  . . . Elise Nelson . . .

Do you feel that writing is an ingrained process or just something that flows naturally for you? A little bit of both. I’ve studied writing extensively over the course of my life. I took private writing classes when I was in the middle school, I took creative writing classes in high school, and I studied writing and literature for my Bachelor of Arts degree. However, I also naturally love writing, so it flows out of me as well. I mean, I started studying it as a kid, and then throughout my life, because it was something I was good at and liked doing, so there’s an element of that. But I think writing is an ongoing learning process as well. I am happy at how far I’ve come and look forward to growing more. I think I grew a lot in the process of writing this book, too.  

 
What mindset or routine do you feel the need to set when preparing to write (in general whether you are working on a project or just free writing)? I am really bad at routines in general, but when I’m working on a project, I try to work on it first thing in the morning, or at least after I get ready for the day. If I’m in the thick of things, I find myself waking up excited to write anyway, though, so it’s easy those days/weeks. I very much dislike editing my work though, haha, but we all have to do it. And in regards to preparing myself to write, when I’m working on my books, I listen to instrumentals. It gets me in the write mind space.


Do you take your character prep to heart? Do you nurture the growth of each character all the way through to the page? Do you people watch to help with development? Or do you build upon your character during story creation? Yes, very much. I create background bios for them, much of which usually doesn’t even get put into the book (it’s more for myself and for making them three-dimensional; it also helps if I want to write future books about them as well). I nurture the character every step along the way, from outlining to the very end of editing.

 
Have you found yourself bonding with any particular character(s)? If so which one(s)? I LOVE William and Caroline, the protagonists and romance interests in Smoke and Mirrors. I found myself swept up in their story as if I hadn’t written it myself. I grew to really love them and was sad, in a way, to finish the story because I didn’t want to let them go. BUT I am going to write more books and create this into a series, mostly because I want to and partially because I have a lot of demand from readers to make more books about this couple and the Ashdown family.

Can you share your next creative project(s)? If yes, can you give a few details? Right now, I’m working on a Hades and Persephone spin-off, and I’m excited for that to hit shelves. I’ve been enjoying the characters and the shifted dynamic from what I was doing before. It’s enemies-to-lovers, which is a trope I adore, haha. I’m also working on some fantasy work with a popular comic writer. It’s called Blade of the Butchered King, and you can read the first few pages on his Patreon here. He created the story and we are co-writers in bringing it to life. 

https://www.elisenelsonauthor.com/
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https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21519109.Elise_Nelson

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