Showing posts with label jaye wells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jaye wells. Show all posts

27 May 2012

*This title will be released on June 1, 2012*

Blue-Blooded Vamp

Title: Blue-Blooded Vamp
AuthorJaye Wells
Series: Sabina Kane #5
Cover Art: Chris White
Genre: Urban Fantasy
ExcerptYes
Source: Net Galley
Reviewed by: Kristina

  • Mass Market Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Orbit (May 22, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0316178454
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316178457

buy the book from The Book Depository, free delivery 


Sexual Content:
Some sex scenes


Rating:


Excellent - Loved it! Buy it now & put this author on your watch list.


19 October 2011

Cover Art Coverage: 13 New Titles!

This week we have another foray into animated eBook covers, UK readers will enjoy a glimpse of the anthology A VAMPIRE FOR CHRISTMAS.  For the good old fashioned covers, there are series starters, stand alones, and newest editions.  DARKEST KNIGHT has a completely different color palette than the first book of the series, but reminded me instantly of KNIGHT’S CURSE.  I like a little bit of an Easter egg hunt to tie covers together, how much in common do you like your series covers to have?
By the Blood of Heroes by Joseph Nassise
 

(Click to enlarge)

Not Yet Available for Pre-Order.

Description:

N/A


“Cover art for the first book in the Burke’s Marauders series I’m doing with Harper Voyager , BY THE BLOOD OF HEROES, came in today and I think it captures the look and feel of the series quite nicely.  We pitched the series as an alternate history zombie steampunk mash-up, a Dirty Dozen meets Dawn of the Dead, and I think the artwork makes it pretty damn clear what you’re getting.” – Joseph Nassise
  • Series: The Great Undead War #1
  • Artist: N/A
  • Goodreads: Link
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publisher
  • Release Date: May 1, 2012
  • Source: Author’s Blog

Julia’s ThoughtsThumbs up

Abigail’s ThoughtsThumbs up

I’m a fan of the “big head” cover when it involves dog fights and zombies.  The color palette seems very old school to me, I think it works well. I love how clearly this cover expresses exactly what kind of book this is…very cool
Previous Covers in This Series

N/A

  

28 March 2011

RT Booklovers Convention starts on April 6th and if you’re going to be in Los Angeles, you won’t want to miss it.  We paranormal fans are getting some series RT love with several dedicated panels including URBAN FANTASY: Worldbuilding in Urban Fantasy which features Jaye Wells, author of the Sabina Kane series from Orbit which that revolves around a fantastic twist on vampire mythology. 


ATUF: How did you approach worldbuilding in your Sabina Kane series? What initially sparked the main idea for your world?

Book Three in the Sabina Kane seriesJW: World building is a complex process that's hard to distill into a formula, but I'll try to explain how I do it. First, I started with the idea that before I could write about a new world I needed to know why this alternate version of our reality existed. That meant, going back to the beginning and figuring out where these other cultures came from.

 

You asked what sparked the main idea for the world, and that would have to be Lilith. I already had a flash fiction piece where Sabina fist appeared but it gave me very little info for the world. I knew she was a vampire and an assassin, but not much else. But I'd always been fascinated with the stories about Lilith, so I decided she would be the lynchpin for my world building.

 

I began by reading everything I could find on vampire folklore, Lilith, Cain, etc. As I read, I took notes as new spins on these old stories occurred to me. The final document was something like 12 pages long and had tons of snippets from web sites and books as well as my brainstorming notes. From this master document, I started piecing together the big picture of the world: What races I'd include, how their cultures worked, the physical characteristics, etc.

 

Once I had a handle of the broad strokes, I began writing. Many of the finer points of each culture were fleshed out through various drafts, but I always tried to stay true to the existing structure and rules I set forth from the beginning.

 

ATUF: What comes first in your writing?  The world, the characters or the plot?

JW: In the case of the Sabina Kane series, I had a character but didn't know much about her, as I stated above. I had to do the world building first to understand her and the world she lived in. When it comes to urban fantasy, I am firm believer that world building has to be in place before you write the book because the plot and the world should be so intertwined as to be inseparable. I have friends who have tried to back load a world into an existing story with dire consequences. Of course, there are writers out there who will argue it worked for them, so your mileage may vary. It's just what works for me.

 

ATUF: One of the topics being discussed at this panel is new directions in UF.  Where do you see the genre a year from now? Ten years from now?

JW: Wow, that's a tough one to answer. I do see the genre moving away from vampire-centric stories. We're seeing lots of other mythological creatures taking center stage and I assume this will continue. That's not to say vampires will go away, just that we'll see more variety.

 

In a decade? Who knows? I think the success of urban fantasy signals a change in fiction in general, in that the meshing of genres will be more common as we move forward. We're seeing it already that the strictly defines "rules" of genre are becoming more malleable. Here too, I should say that the term "Urban Fantasy" is mainly a function of marketing rather than a set of guidelines for authors to follow. Will what we write today still be called UF in the future? Who knows? We've certainly seen other hot genre monikers fade away. Chick Lit is a perfect example. It was a very hot genre for a while but these days most of those types of books are simply called "Women's Fiction."

 

ATUF: What urban fantasy series world do you most wish was yours?

JW: Mine. Honestly. I wrote the series I wanted to write. I admire many of my colleagues' stories, as well as their successes, but if I wanted to write something else I would have.

 

ATUF: How do you go about researching a world that isn't real?

JW: I covered a lot of this in the first question, but I'd add that Urban Fantasy exists in a world very much like our own-only different. It's a meshing of the real world with elements of the fantastical in a way that makes the fantastical seem possible in our real lives. The way I approach it is to take mythology we're all familiar with and tweaking it just enough so it doesn't seem like myth anymore.

 

ATUF: What are the differences between creating human and non human characters? 

JW: Well, the important thing to remember is that whether you're writing about a vampire, an alien or a alcoholic detective, all good fiction is really about being human. Therefore, any non-human characters you create have to have just enough recognizable characteristics of being human that the reader can relate to them in some way. This could either be their personality flaws or the conflicts they face.

 

Obviously since my series has very few human characters, I prefer to write non-humans for the time-being. That doesn't mean I don't still write about humans, though. It's just that writing about mages or vampires allows me to explore human conflicts and issues in a way that relies more on metaphor and theme than straightforwardly addressing those very human issues. But writing non-humans also gives me more flexibility and imagination than writing about a plumber or a teacher or a housewife.

 

ATUF: What are the top three elements that are vital to establishing a vivid and detailed world?

JW: You must be innovative, your choices must be deliberate and you must know more about the world than you can fit in your story.

 

ATUF: How do you keep all the details of your world organized?

JW: I keep a notebook. Each race has its own section with rules, notes, cultural overviews, etc. Of course the world has expanded and deepened since I'm now four books into the series, but I try to keep track of all my new elements in the book, so I don't forget them and have to waste hours flipping back through books to remember them.

 

ATUF: What is the best way to establish worldbuilding in urban fantasy without subjecting readers to info dumps?

JW: If you’ve done your job correctly, you shouldn't need many info dumps. Sure some finer points might need a paragraph or so to explain, but any more than that and you're not letting your characters and plot do the heavy lifting. Another possibility is that your world is unnecessarily complex or doesn't have its own internal logic. Some of learning how to avoid them also takes practice and the heavy hand of a good critique partner.

 

ATUF: What are you most looking forward to at the RT Conference this year?

JW: Seeing old friends and making new ones. It's so great to catch up with everyone after spending so much time communicating virtually.

 

ATUF: Which panel other than your own are you most excited about?

JW: Seeing old friends and making new ones. It's so great to catch up with everyone after spending so much time communicating virtually.

 

ATUF: Thanks so much for stopping by Jaye. Come back anytime!

-------------------------------------------------

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Jaye Wells began her writing career as a magazine editor and freelance writer. Eventually she realized she found facts boring, so she left them behind to tell lies for a living. Her lifelong fascination with the arcane and freakish blended well with her choice to write urban fantasy. Her hobbies include eavesdropping, collecting pet peeves, and sarcasm. She lives in Texas, where she does not have big hair but does occasionally say "y'all."

Visit Jaye online:

Website|Blog|Facebook|Twitter

 

 

 

 


Interested in being interviewed on All Things Urban Fantasy?  CONTACT ME

27 May 2010

Review: The Mage in Black by Jaye Wells

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Book Description

Sabina Kane doesn’t have the best track record when it comes to family. After all, her own grandmother, leader of the vampire race, wants her dead. So when she arrives in New York to meet her mage relatives, the reunion puts the fun in dysfunctional. Not only is mage culture completely bizarre, but everyone seems to think she’s some kind of ‘Chosen’ who’ll unite the dark races. Sabina doesn’t care who chose her, she’s not into destiny.

But the mages aren’t Sabina’s only problem. In New York’s Black Light District, she has run-ins with fighting demons, hostile werewolves and an opportunistic old flame. Sabina thought she’d take a bite out of the Big Apple – but it looks like it wants to bite back.


Book 2 in The Sabina Kane Series

Review:
THE MAGE IN BLACK
picks up almost immediately after the events in Red Headed Step-child.  Sabina and Adam (and Giguhl the demon/cat) are on their way to New York to embrace her paternal mage heritage after being betrayed by her maternal vampire side. Once there, she ruffles more then a few feathers including the local werewolf pack, a demon fight club, and the mage council itself. 

The Kum-N-Go’s roadside-chic interior was bathed in a sickly fluorescent glow. The aroma of stale smoke, urinal cakes, and rotgut coffee had me breathing through my mouth on the way back to the ATM. It was my turn to pay for gas, so getting cash took priority over raiding the snack aisle for the moment. –Opening of THE MAGE IN BLACK

The world building that I fell in love with in Red Headed Step-child is back portraying the Dark races (vamps, weres, mages, and the fae) as the children of Lilith and Cane.  Keeping with biblical apocryphal, Vampires are vulnerable to the forbidden fruit (Sabina loads her gun with apple wood bullets). Very cool.  And there are references to prophecies of Lilith’s return which finger Sabina as the Chosen one. 

In THE MAGE IN BLACK Mages and Vampires are, to quote Buffy, really unmixey things.  Millennia of distrust and jealousy have brought them to the brink of war.  As a half-blood, Sabina Kane is the embodiment of that animosity which makes her a hard character in every sense of the word.  She’s physically formidable, emotionally jaded, and self-destructive when it comes to personal relationships.  Wrap that all up into one person and she can be hard to take. Without fail, you can expect her to be brash, sarcastic, and aggressive regardless of the situation.  Sometimes I liked her behavior, other times I found her off-putting.

Overall, THE MAGE IN BLACK is a fun, gritty urban fantasy with a brutally tough heroine who never seems to catch a break.  The tone never gets too dark with the addition of the mischief demon Giguhl.  And there is an interesting romantic conflict for Sabina with the mage Adam and the vampire Slade. The ending is less of a conclusion, and more of a set up for the next Sabina Kane novel, Green-Eyed Demon which is due out March 2011. Despite some minor flaws, I’m looking forward to it.

Sexual Content: References to sex. A graphic sex scene.

My Rating (out of 5):
imageimageimageGood - A fun read with minor flaws. Maybe read an excerpt before buying.

Click HERE to read an excerpt of THE MAGE IN BLACK


Product Details

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  • Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Orbit; 1 edition (April 1, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 031603780X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316037808
  • Cover Art: Craig White

*Disclosure: I received this book courtesy of Orbit books


Disagree with my review?  Contact me your review for this or any other book I’ve reviewed and I might use it for 2nd Opinion Review

18 February 2010

Cover Art: Green-Eyed Demon by Jaye Wells

Look what Book Chick City found?  The cover for Green-Eyed Demon by Jaye Wells.  This is the third Sabina Kane book.  Craig White is the artist.  I think this is my favorite one in the series yet.  There is no release date yet. 

image

The clock is ticking for Sabina Kane. She has to save her sister from her mysterious captors. And in order to do that, she has to broker a deal between the mages and the vampires before all hell breaks loose. But as much as Sabina is focused on surviving the present, the past won’t be ignored. Before she can save those she cares about, she’s got to save herself from the ghosts of her past. Because the past is haunting her. Literally.

18 September 2009


Jaye Wells posted the cover and blurb for her new book The Mage in Black (Sabina Kane book 2) follow up to her urban fantasy debut Red-Headed Stepchild.

Oooh! What have we here? Yes, my friends, the cover for The Mage in Black. I love, love, love Sabina’s I’m-gonna-kick-your-ass expression.
Now, some of you might be confused because you’ve already seen another version of this cover. For some reason, an older version was uploaded to a few sites. But, as far as I know, this cover is the cover. Of course, we’re still several months away from the release of the book (April 2010), so there might be a few minor tweaks.
What do you think?
Edited to Add:
Some people have asked for a blurb for the book. Ask and you shall receive, my friends:

THE MAGE IN BLACK
Sabina Kane doesn’t have the best track record when it comes to family. After all, her own grandmother, leader of the vampire race, wants her dead. So when she arrives in New York to meet her mage relatives, the reunion puts the fun in dysfunctional.
Not only is mage culture completely bizarre, but everyone seems to think she’s some kind of ‘Chosen’ who’ll unite the dark races. Sabina doesn’t care who chose her, she’s not into destiny. But mages aren’t Sabina’s only problem. In New York’s Black Light District, she has run-ins with fighting demons, hostile werewolves and an opportunistic old flame.

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