Welcome to Erin Kellison & Laurie London today for the 5th stop in their DarkTour! I was an instant fan of both Laurie’s Sweetblood series and Erin’s Shadow series when I read their debuts last year (read my 4/5 review of SHADOW BOUND by Erin Kellison HERE & my 4/5 review of BONDED BY BLOOD by Laurie London HERE), and can’t wait to dive back into their series with new novellas, both available now, HIDDEN BY BLOOD (read review) and SHADOW TOUCH (review to come). There is also a fabulous DarkTour Prize Pack giveaway too. See details below

The Importance of Setting
by
Erin Kellison & Laurie London
Hi, everyone! Welcome to DarkTour! We’re authors Laurie London (that’s me) and Erin Kellison (that’s her) talking about our Sweetblood and Shadow series. Because we have e-novellas coming out on the same day (Hidden By Blood by Laurie and Shadow Touch by Erin), we thought it’d be fun to hit the blogosphere together. Stay tuned, because we’re giving away a lot of cool stuff at the bottom of this post.
Here in the Pacific Northwest, not only does it rain a lot, but the weather can be depressingly dark. (This is Laurie talking. Erin lives in Arizona and can’t relate to the lack of sun. *Laurie sticks tongue out at Erin*) Many people, myself included, suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder. The way our environment affects us, both physically and emotionally, is strangely fascinating to me, which is probably why setting is an important element in my books.
The majority of the scenes in the Sweetblood world take place here in the Northwest (although there’s a creepy scene from the upcoming Embraced By Blood set in San Diego). And if I can work in an abandoned structure, I’m in writing nirvana!
In my e-novella, Hidden By Blood, the story opens with Finn McKentry, a former Army Ranger, who is being held captive in an abandoned hunting cabin, deep in the woods. He’s a sweetblood, a human whose rare blood, called Sweet, is addictive to vampires and every few days, his captor comes to harvest more. Brenna Stewart is visiting a nearby estate to receive an award that will allow her to continue her medico training. Not one to enjoy crowds and stuffy affairs, she wanders out to the barn to look at all the horses and then this happens:
A movement through a gap in the hedges caught her attention. A horse perhaps? She glanced around but didn’t see any horse fencing in this part of the estate. Could it have been a deer?
It wasn’t as if she was in any hurry to get back, so she decided to investigate. Crickets chirped in the darkness as she passed through the narrow opening in the thick hedge. Just beyond it, moonlight illuminated a small field, but no deer or horse came into view. She was about to turn back to the barn when a faint breeze brought a familiar scent to her nostrils.
She hesitated.
That can’t be right.
She sniffed again, and a knot of panic tightened like a noose around her internal organs.
It was a tantalizing scent. One very familiar to vampires.
Her gums ached as the tips of her fangs emerged. She twisted a strand of her hair and took a few deep yoga breaths. In through her nose and out through her mouth.
It was human blood she smelled. But not just any human blood. Sweet.
And a lot of it.
When I read a good book, I often close my eyes and envision myself as a character in that story world. That’s one of the reasons I became a fan of Erin’s Shadow series. Her lush descriptions of setting pulled me in and made me feel like the character experiencing it.
To read Finn and Brenna’s story, check out Hidden By Blood at Amazon Barnes & Noble or FREE for a limited time at Harlequin eBook Store
HIDDEN BY BLOOD description:
Deep within the forests of the Pacific Northwest, two vampire coalitions battle for supremacy—Guardians who safeguard humanity and Darkbloods, rogues who will stop at nothing to satisfy their craving for the sweetest of human blood.
Now, former Army Ranger Finn McKentry finds himself imprisoned as a blood slave, forced to submit to an enemy more powerful than any he’s encountered before. Only Brenna Stewart, the woman he’d loved and lost, can set him free—but the secret she harbors might lead them down the most dangerous path of all…
About Laurie London:
|
A graduate of Western Washington University with a BA in Business Administration and a former tester/programmer for a Fortune 500 company, Laurie London now writes from her home near Seattle where she lives with her husband and two children. When not writing, she can be found running, reading, or riding and showing her horse. Someday she hopes to qualify for the Quarter Horse World Show – that is, if her horse doesn’t get hurt again. |
| Want to read more from Laurie? |
Hello, readers! It’s me, Erin. When I read Laurie’s scene above, I could sense the mystery and danger of the moment. I thought it was so cool how the reception, during which Brenna receives her scholarship, is such an elegant counterpoint to the brutality she discovers just off the grounds. And the rest of the novella only gets better.
In my Shadow series, settings range from NYC to Arizona, but the locus of all the fun is the Segue Institute, located in the West Virginia Appalachian Mountains. Segue was once the turn-of-the-century Fulton Holiday Hotel. In 1918, the flu pandemic swept through the hotel, though Fulton staff tried to keep the sick confined to the west wing. The dead haunt it now. The hotel soon went derelict, and then, decades later, it was picked up by Thorne Industries. When Adam Thorne’s brother turned into a wraith, Adam renovated the remote hotel and turned it into a high-tech paranormal research center, Segue, with the aim of finding a cure.
Segue includes an auxiliary site, which is an underground holding facility for wraiths. The main building is dedicated to research levels and housing the scientists and staff who work tirelessly to understand the science and magic at work in paranormal phenomena. Extensive grounds surround the area—the vestiges of an old garden, as well as wide fields that stretch to the surrounding tree line, and beyond that, the gated, guarded wall.
It’s to Segue that Shadow Touch’s main character, Ellie Russo, goes with her own unusual problem. Her shadow, wild, passionate, elemental, is separate from her flesh and blood body. Ellie has lived in seclusion trying to control her dark half, but her shadow only grows stronger. With little choice left, Ellie seeks help from Dr. Cameron Kalamos at Segue. And she’s not leaving until she gets it. Here’s a snippet from her arrival:
Ellie Russo halted her Camry at the massive gate to the Segue Institute. Two guards in some kind of body armor, their hands resting on automatic rifles strapped to their chests, took position in front of the car. Her tingle of anxiety grew to a full burn of near panic. She was officially here. The thick metal and concrete gate was twenty feet high, cutting into the heavy white fog of the morning. It extended off to both sides of the road, running along the perimeter of the grounds within. Segue was a fortress, a high-security prison. It was also her only hope for a normal life.
“Not even this place can hold me,” said her shadow from the passenger seat next to her.
“We’ll see about that,” Ellie replied.
The Segue Institute is a lot of fun to write about—its history is rich and its research dangerous. The release of Shadow Touch is also the soft launch of a Segue website. (My husband, so sweet and nerdy, is a programmer. He’s channeled his enthusiasm for my series into creating this website. Thank you, honey!) Content will expand over the summer as the release for my next book, Shadowman, approaches. Check it out at www.segueinstitute.com. There are three “easter eggs” hidden on the site. Find one, and I’ll send you an arc of Shadowman.
To check out Cam and Ellie’s story, find Shadow Touch here: Amazon Barnes & Noble
SHADOW TOUCH description:
Magic
It is bleeding into our world, bringing with it banshees, wraiths, fae from the twisting forests of Twilight. But Ellie’s problem is a very different kind of phenomenon…
Shadow
It ought to be attached to her; instead it has a life of its own. And her dark mirror image is a wild thing, willfully seducing the very man Ellie hoped could help.
Science
Cam has devoted his career to exploring the boundaries between this world and the Hereafter. But nothing could prepare him for the mischief and mayhem of a soul split in two.
Surrender
Who will give in first: the man struggling to unite two halves of one fascinating female; the shadow fighting for freedom to experience the thrill of every emotion; or the woman who is about to discover her own deepest desires?
About Erin Kellison:
Stories have always been a central part of Erin Kellison's life. She attempted her first book in sixth grade, a dark fantasy adventure, and still has those early hand-written chapters. She graduated summa cum laude with a degree in English Language and Literature, and went on for a masters in Cultural Anthropology, focusing on oral storytelling. When she had children, nothing scared her anymore, so her focus shifted to writing fiction. She lives in Arizona with her two beautiful daughters and husband, and she will have a dog (breed undetermined) when her youngest turns five. |
| Want to read more from Erin? |
One winner will receive: BONDED BY BLOOD (book 1 in Laurie’s Sweetblood series), SHADOW BOUND(book 1 in Erin’s Shadow series) & DARKNESS UNKNOWN by Alexis Morgan *Plus* bookmarks and romance trading cards from both series.


GIVEAWAY GUIDLINES
- Open Internationally
- Leave a comment answering “What are some of your favorite settings...fictional or real?”
- Winner will be randomly chosen on June 16th
Interested in guest blogging on All Things Urban Fantasy? CONTACT ME





























I like real settings. It's fun to see what an author does with someplace I've actually been.
ReplyDeletesgiden at verizon.net
I like fictional settings
ReplyDeletemellanhead74 at hotmail.com
I think my all time favorite setting would have to be from the movie Labyrinth. The otherwordly maze and trip-worthy ball are just too good. Plus, any world where Bowie sings and dances in skin-tight leotards has to be first rate ; )
ReplyDeleteI prefer fictional settings. Real usually is too predictable and boring to me.
ReplyDeletespamscape [at] gmail [dot] com
I love a mix. There are some amazing castles and incredibly charming villages in Europe. They can easily stand alone. I also like fictional. It really depends on the story.
ReplyDeletetwoofakind12@yahoo.com
I like fictional settings, they always seem more magical.
ReplyDeleteglow_in_the_dark@live.com
Small towns.. where things aren't what they seems to be!..lol that being said.. I like castles, outer space and any place where BUSINESS can be done. *wink*
ReplyDeleteI love exotic settings, like Europe & Asia. I also enjoy stories set in the South. I also love fictional settings, especially made up magical kingdoms.
ReplyDeleteJennie
un3xpectedfate[at]hotmail[dot]com
you know i have to say i love them both. i like picturing the places ive seen as i read but also places i can only dream of going one day when they paint the picture from there words. and i love made up ones too. if the author can get me to believe it then its like magic.
ReplyDeletebabydoll82959307(at)aol(dot)com
I love fictional setting more because it allows you to use your imagination and imagine a place or places like that. I do like real settings also. I like to see what an author does with a real setting in their books. Please enter me in contest. I would love to read these books. They all sound really good. Tore923@aol.co
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love what Stacia Kane did for her fictional setting in City of Ghosts or Ilona Andrews with her Atlanta. These two are my most favorite fictional UF settings based on real cities.
ReplyDeleteimpy80(at)hotmail(dot)com
Awesome settings, ladies! I love dark, gritty settings filled with shadows and hints of menace...sounds like you both deliver nicely on this. :)
ReplyDeleteErin, your husband rocks! Checked out the Segue site and it is amazingly cool. Tell him "well done!" (Oh, and I think I spotted an Easter egg in Talia's hair on the Personnel page...never did find the others, though...good hiding job!)
I guess I like both real and fictional settings, but my favorites always seem to be when the author combines the two. Thanks for hosting - please enter me.
ReplyDeletebevsharp@desch.org
I love when the settings are real - I think it makes even the paranormal romances a little realer :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for the chance to win :)
mikki-mano@hotmail.com
I like both. I like settings like Scotland and on Ranches. But I also like under water settings and settings in places like Atlantis and underground in caves.
ReplyDeletemiztik_rose@yahoo.com
Thanks, everyone, for stopping by. You've listed some of my favorite settings, too. One of the elements I love about paranormal romance and urban fantasy are the variety of settings you'll encounter as a reader. While I love historical settings (especially Scotland), there's something exciting about picking up a PNR/UF book and not knowing where it will take you.
ReplyDeleteFictional settings I like are - Valdemar (Mercedes Lackey), The World of the Blood (Anne Bishop), the world for both Del and Tiger and Cheysuli (Jennifer Roberson), Fearun (Foregotten realm) - They all have that element of magic that feeds my needs. With the latter it has my elves especially drows and dragons. Valdemar because well I love the Hawkbrothers, the Companions
ReplyDeleteReal life settings in books - New Orleans, Scotland, Ireland
I love islands and tropical locations. I love "what to pack" scenarios in books :)
ReplyDeleterobin [at] intensewhisper [dot] com
I like fictional settings and cities I would like to visit.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the giveway.
CrystalGB
Crystal816[at]hotmail[dot]com
I like real setting more.
ReplyDeleteteenage_17(at)abv(dot)bg
I love real settings.
ReplyDeleteGFC follower
Vivien
deadtossedwaves at gmail dot com
I like both, fictional setting because it's fun to see the world in which the characters we read inhabit and the real setting like major cities.
ReplyDeletegfc follower
van
Littopandaxpress(at)yahoo(Dot)Com
Ooh tough question! I do like a fictional setting though. I love entering new worlds that don't really exist. I love getting lost in them so much.
ReplyDeleteBut with real world settings you can give something familiar and twist in the paranormal and supernatural, I like that too. Although just real world settings with real world characters and real world problems? That's a pass!
jessica[dot]agreatread[at]gmail[dot]com
Great post! :D Some of my favorite settings have always been Ancient Egypt, Asia and fairy tale settings.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this awesome giveaway! :)
Giada M.
fabgiada (at) gmail (dot) com
I love when authors create their setting in a big city. I think it's cool to see the world that they have created and made seem so real when it's actually a fictional place.
ReplyDeleteiqb99@yahoo.com
I like fictional settings. I really liked the setting in julie kagawa's Iron Fey series...especially that of the iron kingdom
ReplyDeleteelizabethjhoskins@gmail.com
I love when a real location is re-imagined and a layer that I didn't anticipate added.
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone for stopping by! Keep 'em coming!
I love both of them, l actually couldn't choose because they both offer unique things and l like to change from one to another!
ReplyDeletebooksforcompany @gmail.com
I enjoy books set in outer space and in fantasy worlds. As far as real settings, I enjoy books set in England, Scotland, and the US.
ReplyDeletemarlenebreakfield(at)yahoo(dot)com
I love to read about a place I have been too, but living in rural Australia and reading mainly US authors that is a rare occasion.
ReplyDeletejodie(at)kjwarden(dot)com(dot)au
I'm pretty flexible about location. It depends on the type of book I'm reading. Paranormals, I like dark gritty cities. Contemporaries, I like small towns and a good ole' western setting for some hot cowboy action is good as well. :)
ReplyDeletemiranda.grissomATgmailDOTcom
I tend to like settings in places that I haven't visited before. It doesn't matter what location it is as long as it leaves me wanting to go there.
ReplyDeletelenikaye@yahoo.com
I love a setting to be real to me. Some of the most realistic settings sprang from someone's imagination. In other books, I have been able to walk the streets of New Orleans, Seattle and San Diego long before I ever visited those cities. Imaginary or realistic, the key is creating a sense of place.
ReplyDeleteflip at ida.net
One of my favorite settings would be New York... I just love to read about it. Another favorite place comes from any of Juliet Marillier's books - she writes about some fictional (altough based on reality) places in the British Isles. ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the giveaway!
catarina_romeira at hotmail dot com
I like real settings, especially if the places are somewhere I've been before. It's kinda neat to picture that place in a new way.
ReplyDeletejuliecookies(at)gmail.com
There are two settings, both real, that I simply adore! There's Savannah, Georgia and how it's so perfect as a setting for a story about witchcraft and coven life. And then there is New Orleans and how it is perfect for pnr stories like SK's Dark Hunter Series and Adrian Phoenix's Maker's Song Series.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great event!
Kate
mleger0546 (at) rogers (dot ) com
Interesting post, I enjoyed it. I love books set in New Orleans, Melbourne and anywhere in Canada. Really, I like any setting, as long as it fits the story and is described well so that I feel like I'm there.
ReplyDeleteHi ladies! I really don't have any preference. I like reading about real places that I have never been to before and about imaginary places also. They all take me away. I have to agree with some of the other posts though, I love reading stories set in New Orleans. Thanks for the fantastic contest! bpatrick64113@sbcglobal.net
ReplyDeleteI love real ones like London, australia, NZ, NOLA, and some of the made up ones are fun like Judy Mays Medeira and her other planets.
ReplyDeleteAs far as real life settings go I love Scotland and Ireland. In fantasy, I loved the world in CL Wilson's Tarian Soul series.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great post and giveaway!
rootml1 AT hotmail DOT com
i like to read about anywhere Its my mini vacation
ReplyDeletemeandi09@yahoo.com
aww I like real settings, is fun and wonderful to see through the authors. Each one gives a different perspective.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, thanks for this chance :)
itzel_library@hotmail.com
I like Urban Fantasy, Fantasy, Paranormal settings - where other beings and surroundings not in are normal world are present. I also enjoy European, Asian, and small town settings. LOL I love all kinds of settings its like a vacation everyt ime I open a book.
ReplyDeletepams00 @ aol.om
Fictional. Even some of the real ones are fictional to me since I've never been there and really don't have the experience to picture it in my mind.
ReplyDeletemeredithfl at gmail dot com
I like fictional and real settings. Real if it is a setting in Europe or America - I like the idea of something mythical happening at a real place. Fictional only if the author has built that setting so it feels real to the reader - I've come across many great fictional settings.
ReplyDeleteGabbie-ethela AT hotmail DOT com
I like real settings for my fiction such as crime, adventure etc. But with the proviso that the author has to paint the actual place well for me to buy into it, especially if it is a place that I have never been to. Just naming a place and not giving me a sense of what it is like is useless.
ReplyDeleteFor fantasy I like imaginary world and here world building is even more important as it is obviously a world I do not know and I need to know what is different and how things work there.
Thanks for the giveaway and for opening it to worldwide entries.
Much appreciated.
Carol T
buddytho {at} gmail DOT com
I don't really think too much about settings unless it really pops out to me since I'm so focused on the characters, but one of my favorite settings is the world created by Ilona Andrews in their Kate Daniels series.
ReplyDeletelilazncutie1215[at]yahoo[dot]com
I love mix. Some familiar places with fictional changes in them.
ReplyDeletekapranova.sofija@gmail.com
Good luck to everyone in the give away. I would like to enter.
ReplyDeletecolliena@aol.com
I prefer real settings, I like imagining something extraordinary happening in a very ordinary place.
ReplyDeletespav05(at)gmail(dot)com
Great post! I am looking forward to reading both of y'alls series!
ReplyDeleteAs to the question-- both! :-)
justforswag(AT)yahoo(DOT)com
I prefer real settings that are slightly altered versions of what we know, like what Ilona Andrews does with Atlanta.
ReplyDeleteSorry forgot to post my email. It's scr15@duke.edu
ReplyDelete[From comment 52]: I prefer real settings that are slightly altered versions of what we know, like what Ilona Andrews does with Atlanta.
I like both as long as the author builds the world or location correctly.
ReplyDeleteaudie@wickerness.com
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI like real settings. It takes less set-up to get a handle on the surroundings so I can get into the plot easier. When the settings are fictional there's that effort involved on the part of both the author and the reader to explain and understand the world the character is in.
ReplyDeleteBrittanynoelle (at) gmail (dot) com
HOGWARTS!!! :D Otherwise, I'm pretty easy to please ... I don't generally mind where authors set their books, because - when the setting plays a huge role (i.e. the book is very atmospheric) - I'll almost always fall in love with it.
ReplyDeletebella-on-toast [at] hotmail [dot] com
I like for there to be a very real place and then another dimension that the characters must go to. You kind of get the best of both worlds . Thanks for the chance to win. I have read Shadowtouch and *loved it, but I haven't read the other two.
ReplyDeleteGreat giveaway!
ReplyDeleteI like a mix of both.
marieimy (at) gmail (dot) com
I like a mix of both. It can depend on how the author describes the setting too.
ReplyDeletestrangecandyreviews at gmail dot com
thanks a lot for this awesome giveaway and for making it international!!
ReplyDeletethe setting which i like the most would be a modern day realistic setting with a little bit of darkness where paranormal or urban fantasy is concerned and with real characters to which i can relate with.
justjanhvi at gmail dot com
I love both fictional setting are fun because the worlds authors think up are fun to read about and real setting are nice also because they can give descriptions that make you feel like you have been there
ReplyDeletektalley28@gmail.com
I love settings, fictional or real, that feature wide open spaces that an adventure can be had in!
ReplyDeletepaisleyfox (at) gmail.com
I used to think I only really liked fictional settings like in Harry Potter and LOTR because it was more fun but then I read Charlaine Harris' Sookie Stackhouse series and she just captured the area (Lousiana, Texas, etc) so well that it made me look for more UF books and now I'm hooked on all things paranormal too :D
ReplyDeletebells DOT franco AT gmail DOT com
Great stories have great settings. They really do create the atmosphere and tone, and pull the reader in.
ReplyDeleteI have read wonderful stories that have just the right balance between fictional and real. With a real setting, I have a true place to picture myself in, and perhaps hope to one day visit, while with a fictional setting I can imagine.
I love real settings that are rich with history, culture and mystery, such as Ireland and England.
cambonified (at) yahoo (dot) com
I am a total series junky and am always impressed with authors minds when they come up with their settings. I am the most uncreative person and cannot come up with ideas to save my life...but you authors amaze me! Some of my favorites are woods and caves or stories that travel backward or forward in time!
ReplyDelete“What are some of your favorite settings...fictional or real?
ReplyDeleteAh that should be the fictional settings, because all authors have incredible minds and big fantasy. Every writter has this 'thing' that pushes him/her to the top in making the best word that you'd deffinately would love to live. I should say that for me the Hunger games has the ultimate fictional alternative world. Most of the time when I'm reading some book I somehow pop up in the setting of the book and pretend to be a fictional character just because I like more the fictional worlf than the real one.
BTW great giveaway! Hope this time I could win!
mpp1501@gmail.com
I usually prefer stories to be set in real cities and places already existing. I like to think that on the streets I'm walking at night in a parallel universe another world is alive, where different creatures roam. Makes life more exciting, don't you think? :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you for the great giveaway!
stella.exlibris (at) gmail (dot) com
I like stories that occur in real cities, but also fictional ones. I don't have a preference really. I like a setting that I can easily picture in my mind, and that doesn't take 20 pages to explain!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the giveway!
ceeenndee at gmail dot com
I like when the fiction setting if overlaid with a real setting. The story takes place against the backdrop of a real city and real landmarks that if you visit you can recognize. Dresden Files and Chicagoland vampires - Chicago for an example.
ReplyDeletebacchus76 at myself dot com
I don't prefer either, because it all depends on how the author conveys the setting. A real enviromment can be as exquisite and magical as a fiction one, if the words are right. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for opening this contest internationally.
i love your website. and your post is really great.! will comeback for more.
ReplyDelete