Showing posts with label Cornelia Amiri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cornelia Amiri. Show all posts

Monday, August 9, 2010

In the Author Spotlight: Cornelia Amiri

Cate: Please welcome Cornelia Amiri. Cornelia, will you please share a short bio with us?
Cornelia: When I was five years old, I saw Walt Disney's The Sword and the Stone and I’ve been interested in Celtic history and mythology ever since. In addition to my novel, Druid Bride, I have two novellas with Eternal Press: Queen of Kings and A Fine Cauldron of Fish, as well as seven books with other publishers. I live in Houston, Texas with her family: a son, a granddaughter, and a cat.

Cate: I was a big Once and Future King fan too. :) Tell us about Druid Bride and where it's available.
Cornelia: My Celtic/Romance Druid Bride is set in 1st century Scotland. The hero is a wild, woad tattooed Pictish warrior and the heroine is a noble, headstrong druidess. Here’s the blurb: She carried the seed of rebirth, so what had fallen would rise again. The ghost of her ancestor sent Druidess Tanwen from Britannia to the strange foreign tribe of the Caledonii to wed Brude, son of the chief. But Brude is not about to marry a druidess, even though she has the most beautiful body he’s ever seen. Never mind if his blood boils and he can’t stop thinking of her. He will not wed her. Yet the fate of Caledonia rests in the hands of the Warrior and the Druidess. Will they put their differences aside to fulfill their destiny? Available from Eternal Press. Also available at Amazon in kindle and paperback, Barnes and Noble Online, All Romance Ebooks, Fictionwise and most online bookstores.

Cate: Please tantalize us with an excerpt.
Cornelia:
Together they gulped down the golden mead. Never, not once, did they tear their eyes away from each other.
“As the mead flows through you, let the spirit fill you.” Tanwen walked over to the cauldron and dipped her hand in the dark, gooey, blue dye.
Her finger slinked down his face, streaking both cheeks blue. The woad was warm, her touch hotter. His tinted checks burned. After dipping her hands into the dye again, her ring-bedecked fingers danced over the muscles rippling down his arms, tracing each of his tattoos, following the lines as she painted them blue. He quivered. The gods shielded him through these symbols. The first was a wolf, with an open mouth drawn as a curve. Then the
boar with tusk made from a circle, with a line drawn though it and two knots on each end. His flesh tingled as she painted the lines of a swirling snake.

Cate: Oo, evocative. Love it. What inspired you to write about the theme?
Cornelia: I love the history of the Druids and as I set my book Druid Quest against the back drop of the destruction of the Druid Learning Center on Anglesey (Ynys Mon) by Governor Suetonius and the Boudica revolt in 61 AD, I wanted to tell the rest of the story. This inspired me to write Druid Bride against the back drop of Governor Agricola, who lead the second destruction of the Druid Learning Center and then brought his troops into Scotland to fight the Caledonii in a huge battle on Mons Graupius in 84 AD. Though the Pictish tribes lost that battle they were never actually conquered by Rome. Later, Emperor Harridan put up his famous wall to keep Roman Britannia safe from them and in the fifth century the Picts climbed over the wall and launched raids on Britannia, which shows that though it took many years, they conquered the Romans. This is an incredible era in Scottish history.

Cate: So cool you are bringing it to life in your fiction. What's next for you?
Cornelia: The Wolf and the Druidess, an Erotica/Celtic/Romance novella set in ancient England during Samhain, a Celtic twist to a Halloween/Werewolf story, will be released by Eternal Press December 2010. And I recently submitted an Erotica/Romance set during the 1969 Woodstock Festival. I had such fun writing that. I hope to hear good news on that. And I’m working on my second Steampunk/Romance, set in Victorian London, the heroine’s a ghost, and my 11th Celtic/Romance, a paranormal set in ancient Wales, the hero is a Welsh god. Both of those are works in progress right now.

Cate: Very intriguing! Such a wide variety. Any other published works?
Cornelia: Eight other Celtic/Romance books: Druid Quest, Timeless Voyage, Queen of Kings, The Fox Prince, The Vixen Princess, Danger Is Sweet, One Heart One Way, and A Fine Cauldron of Fish. As well as a Steampunk/Romance under the name of Maeve Alpin, As Timeless As Stone.

Cate: Describe your writing in three words.
Cornelia: Mystical, Ancient, Romantic

Cate: What’s the most challenging aspect of writing? Most rewarding?
Cornelia: Finding the time to write is the most challenging. You have to put writing first to get it done. It takes so much rewriting, so much time, to complete a book, all done by self discipline and self motivation. The most rewarding is knowing you reached the reader, you enriched their lives, gave them a bit of an escape, a bit of an adventure and a little romance. Hearing positive feedback from readers is the absolute most rewarding. It’s the readers that make it all worth while.

Cate: Who are some of your favorite authors and books? What are you reading now?
Cornelia: My absolute favorite books are Celtic/historical/paranormal novels like the ones written by Morgan Llewellyn, Jules Watson, Manda Scott, and Marion Zimmer Bradley. Actually at this moment, I’m currently reading two Asterix Comic Books.

Cate: Where can you be found on the web?
Cornelia: Please drop by my website at http://www.CelticRomanceQueen.com And please follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/CelticRomanzqEn and befriend me on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/CelticRomanceQueen

Cate: Is there anything you’d like to ask our readers?
Cornelia: What books of mine do you like the most? What would you like to see more of in my books? What do you like the most about my writing voice or style? What do you like the least about it? Do you prefer novels or novellas? What would you like to ask or tell me?

Also I wanted to leave the readers with another short excerpt from Druid Bride:
He gasped. “I am honored. Druids seldom share their sacred secrets with anyone.”
“You are to be my husband. I will share all with you.”
Tanwen flashed a challenging grin. His heart leapt in his chest.Gods, this woman is dangerous. “You still insist that I am to wed you.”
“Yes.”
Her voice was warm and sultry. It made his skin tingle.“Boudica would not have sent me here if it were not to be.”
He had to be strong. He could not let this creature and her druid magic enchant him into a marriage he didn’t want.
“Nevertheless, you shared your secret with me. I shall share mine with you.” He leaned closer. “Heather mead.”
“I have heard of a mead brewed from heather that makes the Picts invincible to their foes.”
“It is so.” She’s falling for the trap, he thought. “As mistletoe grows on oak, moss grows on heather. Bees feed on the heather and make a special treat: heather honey. We brew mead from that honey, along with heather tops. It is all we need, no barley.” A small voice inside him said, A few cups of heather mead, and she’ll answer all my questions.
Her bright eyes gleamed with curiosity. “Due to the moss on the heather?”
“Yes, that is the secret. It also makes the mead stronger.”
Tanwen smiled. “Let us drink of this heather mead, together.”

Cate: Readers, Cornelia is giving away an autographed trade size paperback of Druid Bride to a random commenter... so start commenting. Cornelia Amiri will draw the winner’s name, notify the winner and post the winner’s name here.

Thanks for being my guest, Cornelia! Best of luck with all your projects.


Sunday, May 16, 2010

Cornelia Amiri in the Author Spotlight


Peace Love Music
by Cornelia Amiri

I wrote Peace Love Music with those three words in mind, a fun, hot summer read full of good vibes.  With Peace Love Music, visit the 1969 Woodstock festival with my barefoot heroine, Jodi and be a part of what’s known as the greatest weekend since creation.  Who wouldn’t love to put aside three days of their life for peace, love, and music … to be startdust, to be golden, to get back to the garden. 

Here’s an excerpt:
Blue picked it up and cradled it on his lap. “I know that Tim Hardin tune he sang on Friday. Did you hear it?”

“No, I got to the stage about the time Arlo Guthrie came on.”

“I think you’ll dig it, the song’s got a sweet groove.” Blue’s long fingers danced on the neck of the guitar as he strummed the strings with his other hand.

Jodi’s thoughts stilled as Blue sang, “Love me only.” She couldn’t speak, couldn’t breathe, she just felt wrapped in warmth as he crooned, “Would you love me anyway, would you
have my baby?”

Spirals of heat swirled in and around her. This was the only place she wanted to be, in this teepee in the rain.

Blue sang out in his course voice, raw with emotion, “Save my love from loneliness.” As he sang the next words. “Save my love from sorrow.” Every pore of her body tingled. Blue’s eyes burned into her soul, as his long fingers stroked the strings and fondled the frets of his guitar while he sang the next lyrics, “I give you my only-ness. Give me your tomorrows.”

Here’s the blurb:
Jodi’s birthday breaks her free of the foster care scene and launches her on a journey of self discovery. She thumbs her way to Woodstock to groove on peace, love, and music. The moment Blue spots Jodi strutting toward him barefoot in the rain, he’s overcome with déjà vu. She doesn’t share his feeling that they were lovers in a previous life, thinking it’s half crazy, still she feels she’s meant to be with the irresistible hippie. As an adult now Jodi’s free to be naughty rather than nice and he’s the man who can make her wildest dreams, the sensual ones, come true.  Is she headed for a love-in at his tepee?

Here’s another excerpt:
The music released Jodi’s emotions―set them free. She screamed out her pain, screamed out her new freedom. No more foster homes. Now she was on her own, discovering herself, her true spirit, finding Jodi.

The audience rewarded Crosby, Stills Nash and Young with thundering applauds and then the Paul Butterfield Blues Band took the stage. Their brass instruments rang out as the band sang, “Baby, I’m just drifting and drifting like a ship out at sea.”

Jodi grooved to the soulful sound of the harmonica and the electric guitars as the two instruments sang to each other, while the singer belted out, “Baby, I didn’t even know your name.”

When the Paul Butterfield Blues Band ended their set, Jodi looked around her. It was no longer dark, they had moved into the next day, Monday morning. She noticed the field had far less people than when they first sat down. Though the area around the stage was still crowded, the slope of the hill was muddy, trash-strewn, and nearly empty.

Blog Contest
I’m having a blog contest, must be 18 are older to enter, just post a comment with your email and I’ll draw a winner for a free pdf eBook of Peace Love Music. 

Peace Love Music is published by Eternal Press, available in eBook and paperback from most online book stores as well as from http://www.eternalpress.biz/

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