Guest Post: Erin Cashman

Written By: Kellie - Oct• 02•12

erin cashman

Erin Cashman is the author of The Exceptionals (february2012), a fantastic YA novel about a girl who can speak to animals and her journey to figure out who she is and what is important. 

What a Great Idea by Erin Cashman

Where does an idea for a book come from? I read that the idea for The Hunger Games came to Suzanne Collins while she was watching television. As she flipped through the channels, she saw footage of the invasion of Iraq, and then a reality television show where contestants competed against each other. And then her imagination took over, and the concept for The Hunger Games was born.  Stephanie Meyer said that a dream prompted the idea for the Twilight series.  Sometimes a great idea can strike you like a thunderbolt. BAM! It comes to you. Other times it is a long time in the making.

I had the idea for my debut novel, The Exceptionals years ago.  Growing up, my father often told me that we only use ten percent of our brain power. I often wondered, can some people use more? Did Einstein use more of his brain than most people? Did Shakespeare?  And what about people who are mediums or clairvoyant? My mother believed in ghosts, and she used to visit a medium. Maybe the medium could use a different part of her brain.  This became the foundation for The Exceptionals: a school for students who have “special” abilities. It was an idea that evolved and became fully realized over time. But when it came together in my head as a concept for a book, it immediately took shape.  I loved thinking about what different “specials” the students would have, and what they could do. When I finally sat down to write it, I tried to think of a unique ability for my protagonist, Claire, but I had a hard time finding something that felt right.

A few days later I took my dog for a walk, and two majestic hawks circled above me the entire time. And then it hit me – Claire could communicate with animals! And The Exceptionals was born. It is about a teenage girl who must use her long-ignored ability to communicate with animals to unravel the mystery behind the disappearances of the most talented students at Cambial Academy.  Along the way she uncovers a chilling prophecy and meets a gorgeous but secretive boy – who may know more than he’s letting on.

For my new book, The Legend of the Four, which is a middle grade fantasy/adventure novel, I had vague ideas about incorporating the Irish myths and legends my mother had shared with me as a child. My mother was a great story teller. She believed in fairies, leprechauns, angels and ghosts.  She never understood why some people have to see something to believe it.

For this novel, I did far more research. I read several books on Celtic mythology, looking for inspiration. It was there that I came across the legend of the Tuatha De Danann, an immortal race who possess four magical gifts. This became the foundation for Legend of the Four, which centers on fourteen year old Braeden Greene, who discovers he is half-human, half Dedanian.  The Dedanians, though not immortal, are based on the Tuatha De Dannann.  I imagined that Dedanians had powers in conjunction with nature.  Some can manipulate the water, others the trees or insects, etc.  I changed the four gifts from the legend to better fit my story: a Spear that will find anything that exists in nature, a Cauldron that enables some to see into the future, a Stone of Destiny, and a legendary Sword.   When attacked by an evil Dedanian named Balor, Braeden must leave the world he knows and live in seclusion in a Dedanian village.  There he is trained in their ways and develops his own powerful relationship with the wind.  With the help of his scoundrel of a cousin, Eremon, and the beautiful and fearless Mairenn, he must rely on his wits, his skill and his instincts to safeguard the treasure from Balor, and ultimately, when both worlds are threatened, face him in battle.

Although the idea for Legend of the Four was born in my upbringing and the many stories my mother told me as a child, telling the unique story took many hours of research and writing.

What will inspire my next novel? I can’t wait to find out!

Visit Erin on her website or on twitter. Plus, be sure to tune in tomorrow for my review of The Excpetionals!

Review: Promised by Caragh O’Brien

Written By: Kellie - Oct• 01•12

promised by caragh o'brien

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
Publish Date: October 2nd, 2012
Source: ARC
Goodreads

Rating: 3/5 Birthmarks

Synopsis: After defying the ruthless Enclave, surviving the wasteland, and upending the rigid matriarchy of Sylum, Gaia Stone now faces her biggest challenge ever.  She must lead the people of Sylum back to the Enclave and persuade the Protectorat to grant them refuge from the wasteland.  In Gaia’s absence, the Enclave has grown more cruel, more desperate to experiment on mothers from outside the wall, and now the stakes of cooperating or rebelling have never been higher.  Is Gaia ready, as a leader, to sacrifice what–or whom–she loves most? -Goodreads

Review: I had really been looking forward to Promised as it is the last book of it’s series and was beautifully set up to combine the societies we first met in Birthmarked and Prized. Maybe I hyped it up a bit too much in my head, but I ended up feeling a little disappointed in both the plot and the overall resolution of this super fun dystopian series.

Reading this book you will definitely not be pining for more action as there is always a lot going on and Gaia constantly seems to have some mission or other that she’s gotten herself convinced she must complete. This girl is stubborn and will absolutely do what it takes to survive. After book two she had a lot of important responsibilities fall to her and she takes it all very seriously.

What I really love about this series is that all three societies that have been introduced (The Enclave, Wharfton and Sylum) are all so drastically different and true dystopians, yet it’s also obvious what they have in common, the things that make us all the same. The most obvious is how Highly valued children are, and while they all come to this for different reasons children are always the future of any civilization.

The first area I really had a problem with was the authors use of Gaia’s love interest, Leon. On more than one occasion it has been mentioned that Leon could be pretty much a sociopath and I never felt myself enamored enough with him that I would stick up for his character on principal, which seemed to be what the author is going for. Mention something like that once and it will always be there in the back of everyone’s kind, and sociopaths are not swoon worthy.

It was really the ending that got me here though. The story concludes but it doesn’t even feel like a resolution, let alone a triumph. In some ways it’s down right disheartening. The characters are still in pretty unhappy circumstances and we don’t get to really see how these three societies will come together. I still really recommend the first two books in this series, and you should probably read Promised just to see how it all ends, but I can’t say I don’t wish things had ended differently.

Buy Promised by Caragh O’Brien
the book @Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions:
@Mundie Moms
@Owl Read It
@Live to Read

 

Bloggiesta Wrap Up

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 30•12

bloggiesta

Ever since I heard about Bloggiesta a few weeks ago I’ve been gradually changing (and hopefully improving) things around here at ReaWrite. This weekend was supposed to the big hurrah of getting things done, but it hasn’t quite panned

out like that yet. There’s still time, but for scheduling reasons, this is definitely the best chance for me to get in a full wrap up post. When I wrote my initial Bloggiesta post, I wasn’t sure what I wanted to focus on but I knew there was a lot I could be doing better. ReaWrite has been around for over a year and a half and I’m still not getting nearly as much traffic as I’d have hoped for at this point.

1. SEO Updates
This was the big one for me as I hadn’t considered it at all in the last year and a half of blogging, so obviously I have a lot of catching up to do. The first thing to do was make a comprehensive list of what I should be updating on every post, and then just get cracking. Obviously, I haven’t been able to update all 400 posts yet, but I’ll get there.

2. Layout
At first I didn’t think this was something I needed to worry about as I’m still in love with my header, but then I discovered that the wordpress theme I was using has some weirdness when it comes to featured images. So, that had to change! I’ve been playing with a few different themes, but I’m still not happy with anything I’ve found so far. Perhaps my layout will need a bigger overhaul than I had planned but I probably won’t get to it by the end of today. We’ll see.

3. Consistency
While not specific to Bloggiesta, from here on out I am going to do my best to have a post a wider variety of content. I do a lot of reviews but that doesn’t seem to be enough to get and keep readers, so I’m going to have to get a little creative here. Wish me luck!

Review: Ironskin by Tina Connolly

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 29•12

ironskin

Publisher: Tor Books
Publish Date: October 2nd, 2012
Source: ARC received via publisher
Goodreads

Rating: 3/5 Fae Scars

Synopsis: Jane Eliot wears an iron mask. It’s the only way to contain the fey curse that scars her cheek. The Great War is five years gone, but its scattered victims remain—the ironskin.When a carefully worded listing appears for a governess to assist with a “delicate situation”—a child born during the Great War—Jane is certain the child is fey-cursed, and that she can help.Teaching the unruly Dorie to suppress her curse is hard enough; she certainly didn’t expect to fall for the girl’s father, the enigmatic artist Edward Rochart. But her blossoming crush is stifled by her own scars, and by his parade of women. Ugly women, who enter his closed studio…and come out as beautiful as the fey.Jane knows Rochart cannot love her, just as she knows that she must wear iron for the rest of her life. But what if neither of these things is true? Step by step Jane unlocks the secrets of her new life—and discovers just how far she will go to become whole again. -Goodreads

Review of Ironskin originally posted at Geek Speak Magazine.

I didn’t realize until after I had finished reading Ironskin that it was inspired by Jane Eyre, written by Charlotte Brontë—it is certainly far from a direct interpretation. If the idea of Jane Eyre in an iron mask gets you all kinds of excited, be sure to go into this read with an open mind. Retellings can be hard to tackle (and even harder to read) and I don’t think Tina Connolly quite managed to capture all of the magic found in the original story; there here are all kinds of interesting concepts in this book, from the awesome to the grotesque, but it’s not for everyone.

Ironskin is set in an alternate history version of our own world, where World War I was fought against the fey, who have no bodies of their own but our able to inhabit our dead in order to fight their battles. Creepy. The story is set several years after the war, while society is still trying to recover and war victims are cursed with fey abilities. Great imagination went into shaping this book and the end result is a steampunk type world full of beautiful dresses, elegant gentlemen and technology powered by essence of fey.

I have no idea how this book ended up being classified as a Young Adult title. Jane, the main character is 21 years old, with a full time job focused around raising a child. She has already been through so much, and in no way does she read as a young character, still figuring out who she is, though this is not to say she doesn’t experience real growth throughout the course of the book. Jane is well written and it is easy to get inside of her head to understand what it is she wants. I was rooting for her from page one.

Admittedly, the romantic aspect of the book came off as somewhat forced, rather than something the characters grew into. Jane barely spends any time with this book’s version of Mr. Rochester before deciding she loves him, and shortly after that she decides she is not good enough for this mysterious, absentee father of a man. Edward was far from swoon-worthy and he and Jane had very subtle chemistry – still, their romance didn’t seem out of place for the time period.

Meanwhile, the relationship between Jane and her charge Dorie is so much fun to watch unfold. Not only do they both have to learn to trust each other, but it is obvious to the reader early on that Jane can learn a lot from this strange little girl. I love reading about oddball children who are more than they appear to be and Dorie fit that niche perfectly.

The best part of this book was easily the climax and ending, but I won’t give too much away. Things tend to lag a bit through the middle, but it’s well worth sticking it out to see how this story comes together. By the end of Ironskin, I was satisfied. It looks like there is going to be a sequel, but it doesn’t feel all that necessary. Either way, this is worth picking up if you’re looking for a read full of both magic and class.

Buy the book @Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions:
@Forever 17 Books 
@My Book Bindings
@Book-Marks the Spot

Whisper Falls Cover Reveal

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 28•12
Whisper Falls

Title: Whisper Falls (Whisper Falls #1)
Author: Elizabeth Langston
Publisher: Spencer Hill Press (www.spencerhillpress.com)
ISBN: 978-1-937053-42-0
Release Date: November 19, 2013
Formats: Paper, e-book
Whisper Falls
Synopsis: While training for a mountain bike race, high-school senior Mark Lewis spots a mysterious girl dressed in odd clothing, standing behind a waterfall in the woods near his North Carolina home. When she comments on the strange machine that he rides, he suspects something isn’t right. When Susanna claims to be an indentured servant from 1796, he wonders if she’s crazy. Yet he feels compelled to find out more.Mark enters a ‘long-distance’ relationship with Susanna through the shimmering–and temperamental–barrier of Whisper Falls. Curious about her world, Mark combs through history to learn about the brutal life she’s trapped in. But knowledge can be dangerous. Soon he must choose between the risk of changing history or dooming the girl he can’t stop thinking about to a lifetime of misery.
This book sounds amazing and I am so beyond excited for it. If you want to be added to the ARC list you can go through the Spencer Hill Press reviewer form.

Interview: Valerie Estelle Frankel – The Harry Potter Fandom

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 27•12

Valerie Estelle FrankelToday is the big day! Everyone’s favorite wizard writer releases her first adult book, and it has NOTHING to do with Harry Potter. I’m a little nervous, but definitely excited. So, for the big day I’ve got something a little special planned. I got the opportunity to ask author Valerie Estelle Frankel some questions about her book Harry Potter, Still Recruiting: A Look at the Harry Potter Fandom so we can all take a minute to remember what we love about Harry Potter before diving into the next Rowling adventure.

ReaWrite: Hi Valerie, thank you so much for joining us at ReaWrite to celebrate J.K. Rowling’s first non-Potter release, The Casual Vacancy. First off can you tell us a little about who you are and what you write?

Valerie: Sure! I’m the author of a series of parodies, from Henry Potty and the Pet Rock (book one) to Henry Potty and the Deathly Paper Shortage (book seven)…Of course, I never really bothered to write books 2 through 6. Following that, I wrote several nonfiction books on the heroine’s journey. My latest releases are Katniss the Cattail, a book on naming in The Hunger Games, and Harry Potter, Still Recruiting: An Inner Guide to Harry Potter Fandom. Teaching with Harry Potter and a second book on The Hunger Games are coming in 2013.

ReaWrite: Harry Potter, Still Recruiting: An Inner Look at Harry Potter Fandom, features a lot of essays on a wide variety of topics, I had no idea how vast the fandom was. What was the most surprising thing you learned while researching this book?

Valerie: How much thought goes into translating it into foreign languages. I mean, how would you translate butterbeer? Or Tom Riddle, who has to unscramble properly? It’s a huge job. I was also delighted by all the different projects people have—a crafter might also host a fansite and design costumes, or make butterbeer and teach potions. Potter fandom is such an involved, active world.

ReaWrite: Besides your parody books, have you taken part in any fandom activities?

Valerie: Certainly! I’ve spoken at a Potter conference or two each year since 2007, where I generally sell books at the craft fairs, read fanfiction, and speak on topics from mythology in the series to the feminine symbolism of Horcruxes. (Both are on my site at HarryPotterParody.com incidentally). I’m indistinguishable from all the other fans and speakers…except for my outfits. Instead of being another Luna or Bellatrix, I’m known as flying-pig-hat girl and the witch with the five-foot hat. At Ascendio, we got the theme park to ourselves after hours. I took hundreds of photos, danced, and drank way too much butterbeer. Such fun!

ReaWrite: For readers missing Harry, how would you recommended keeping the magic alive?

Valerie: Join a fan group on Meetup.com…or start one if there isn’t one around. Attend a wizard wrock concert. Throw a Yule Ball or start a book group. Hang out on the chatrooms…I’m sure they’ll be busy with the new book out. Visit the theme park or wait anxiously for the one coming in California. Play on Pottermore. Read the best fanfic,

like Methods of Rationality. Or wouldn’t you love a delightful Harry Potter parody?

ReaWrite: Haha, of course! What are your thoughts on Pottermore?

Valerie: Like the movies, computer games, or anything else, it’s a new way of experiencing the  story, which adds some extra insight. To say nothing of pretty pictures, interactivity, and bits of delightful backstory. It’s no substitute for reading the books (hey, neither is any movie) but as I’ve found while teaching, it’s an easy version for struggling young readers who want to get in on the phenomenon. Conflicting opinions on Pottermore are available in the numerous essays in my book.

ReaWrite: How would you guess the future of the Harry Potter fandom unfolds from here?

Valerie: Oh, it’s not over. More Pottermore chapters are being released, there’s a new theme park and one on the way. The Studio Tour in London shows off all the movie props. With all these, you can go to Hogwarts in ways never seen in any book series. Add to that new wizard wrock, hundreds of Quidditch teams, fifty top colleges with Harry Potter classes, new fanfic and art based on the epilogue, and new nonfiction too, and you can see it’s bigger than ever. The Harry Potter Bibliography can point you toward the latter.

ReaWrite: Finally, will you be reading The Casual Vacancy?

Valerie: Try and stop me.

You can visit Valerie at her website and learn more about many of your favorite fandoms, and of course if you want to learn more about the Harry Potter fandom, then pick up Harry Potter, Still Recruiting: An inner look at the Harry Potter Fandom.

The Word on the Street (Toronto) Wrap Up

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 26•12

the word on the street

The Word On The Street- September 23rd, 2012

On Sunday I attended Canada’s largest book festival, The Word on The Street. I was at the Toronto event but it takes place all across the country and is a must visit for bookish Canadians. I had attended last year and really enjoyed it but I wanted to step up my game a bit this time and volunteer as well as there’s no such thing as a lousy opportunity to get involved in the book community.

The event has a little bit of everything for everyone. There are children’s activity tents, book readings, talks from authors and publishing industry folk, and more book deals than I can wrap my mind around. They even had a special tent just to promote The Hobbit movie! Fun! I spent my morning checking out the various tents and talking to fellow book lovers. The crowds got a little intense at the major publishers tents but when book discounts are on the line, that can be expected.

In the afternoon I put on my The Word on the Street volunteer t-shirt and made my way over to the ScotiaBank Giller Prize tent where I volunteered as a Co-Stage Manager for the afternoon. The morning crowd seemed to think the afternoon was going to be a nightmare as David Suzuki and Jeff Rubin would be doing a talk, but everything went fairly smoothly and I had a lot of fun. I didn’t get to hear all of the talks but I handed David Suzuki his mic, so that’s something. Right?!

Giselle at BookNerd.ca also attended and got to see a bit more of the actual festival than I did (and took some awesome pictures), so be sure to check out her The Word on the Street Recap post. I wish I had gotten a chance to say hello to this awesome Canadian blogger but it looks like she had a great time.

Top Ten Tuesday- Series I Haven’t Finished Yet

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 25•12

top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is a feature hosted by The Broke and The Bookish! This week’s topic discusses series that you have not finished for one reason or another. For me, these are all series I hope to continue one day and am basically just trying to balance between all of the other books I’m reading. Not giving up on them yet!

In no real order…

1. Women of the Otherworld by Kelley Armstrong
I started this series way late in the game so I have a lot of catching up to do. I’m about halfway through and still loving the series.

2. Raine Benares by Lisa Shearin
Ever since this series was featured in one of The Guild’s music videos, I’ve been determined to like it. The first two were kind of a miss for me, but I stuck it through and really enjoyed #3. We’ll see how it goes from here.

3.  The 500 Kingdoms by Mercedes Lackey

4. As The World Dies by Rhiannon Frater
I only have one book to go, and there is a bit of a deadline for it as it’s part of my upcoming Zombie Week: Halloween Feature. I’m not ready for this series to end though, I’m so in love with it! It’s basically zombies meet chick-lit, and I can’t get enough of this series.

5. Fever by Karen Marie Moning
If I’m perfectly honest with myself, I probably wont ever finish this series. There was just so much hype for it that I went a little crazy and prebought books that I now have no interest in reading. Maybe one day I’ll go through a steamier faze and want to pick these up again.

6. The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare
I recently reread book one and am finally inspired to continued with the series. The Jace character reminds me a lot of someone I know and I think that may have been what hooked me this time but I will be picking up book two fairly soon.

7. Gone by Michael Grant
I always seem to be just a little behind with this series but it’s so good, I just don’t want to get to the point where reading the next book in this epically twisted series isn’t an option.

8. The Tudors by Philippa Gregory
I’m trying to read these somewhat in order and loved The Other Boleyn Girl as much as everyone said I would. These books are a pretty big undertaking, but one day I will find time.

9. Firelight by Sophie Jordan
Hidden, the final book in this series recently came out but I haven’t quite been in the mood for it yet. This series about dragons is a must read for anyone looking for something a little different in YA fantasy.

10. The final spot is a special mention to all the series I want to finish, that I haven’t even started yet! There are too many to count, and on day I will get to them!

Review: Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 21•12

Ender's Game cover, Enders Game

Publisher: Tor Science Fiction
Publish Date: July 15th, 1994
Source: Purchased
Goodreads

Rating: 5/5 Battle Games

Synopsis: In order to develop a secure defense against a hostile alien race’s next attack, government agencies breed child geniuses and train them as soldiers. A brilliant young boy, Andrew “Ender” Wiggin lives with his kind but distant parents, his sadistic brother Peter, and the person he loves more than anyone else, his sister Valentine. Peter and Valentine were candidates for the soldier-training program but didn’t make the cut—young Ender is the Wiggin drafted to the orbiting Battle School for rigorous military training.

Ender’s skills make him a leader in school and respected in the Battle Room, where children play at mock battles in zero gravity. Yet growing up in an artificial community of young soldiers Ender suffers greatly from isolation, rivalry from his peers, pressure from the adult teachers, and an unsettling fear of the alien invaders. His psychological battles include loneliness, fear that he is becoming like the cruel brother he remembers, and fanning the flames of devotion to his beloved sister. 

Is Ender the general Earth needs? But Ender is not the only result of the genetic experiments. The war with the Buggers has been raging for a hundred years, and the quest for the perfect general has been underway for almost as long. Ender’s two older siblings are every bit as unusual as he is, but in very different ways. Between the three of them lie the abilities to remake a world. If, that is, the world survives. -Goodreads

Review: Wow, wow, wow! There are certain books that people always tell you to read, while you promptly ignore them, putting off recommended books for the shiny new titles lining your bookshelf, then one day you take the plunge and fall in love, wishing you’d done it sooner. I could have reread this book at least five times by now! Ender’s Game is a fantastic scifi read! It had been described to me as the scifi version of Harry Potter, which it really isn’t but there are some of those same beloved elements and no matter what your style is, you’ll find some element of this book that will rock your world. Yup, I loved this book so much I’m talking in cheesy, decades old slang.

The main comparison to Harry Potter comes in the form of the space commander school that Ender is sent to when he’s six years old. Only the very special qualify for this honor and once Ender arrives it changes everything for him, setting the stage for him to change the future of mankind. So, to say this book operates on an epic scale isn’t too far of a stretch.

While Ender is very young throughout the entire book (the book spans several years) he never reads as such, which might be annoying if it weren’t for the fact that this kid is a super genius. He can be a bit of a MarySue at times but it never becomes a problem as the adult characters make a very big deal out of how long they’ve been looking for someone just like him. That doesn’t mean things are easy by any stretch. Ender is constantly set up to fail and there are always hints of worse to come. This weighs heavily on him and at points becomes the most prevalent aspect of his personality. Ender has to do it all, all the time.

The book is set in a significantly farther along version of Earth, at least in terms of technology. Some of the tech aspects are insanely cool, but there are a lot I wish they had explored on farther. But, I won’t hold it against Ender’s Game as there are plenty of other books in this series where everything can get fleshed out a bit better. While this book is essentially standalone, and wraps up really nicely there are a lot of interesting questions about the universe these characters live in that can be tackled later on in the series.

Buy Ender’s Game
@Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions:
@Twisted SciFi 
@The Book Hunt
@Rounded Pages

Interview: Dan Krokos

Written By: Kellie - Sep• 20•12

Today we’ve got an interview I am really excited about… Dan Krokos, author of False Memory (you can read my review here). I got a chance to ask him a few questions about his life, his writing and… MMOs?! Awesome!

Kellie @ ReaWrite: First off, can you tell us a little bit about who you are and what you do?
Dan: I’m 26, and I basically spend most of my days in front of a computer. When I’m not letting the internet suck up all my time, I write books.

Kellie @ ReaWrite: How long did False Memory take to write from concept to completion?
Dan: This is a hard one. I got the idea for it from a previous manuscript I’d written, but then I revisited it when I decided to try my hand at YA. I didn’t really do much until a few months later, and from there I worked on it on and off for several months. In real time it was years, but in actual work time I would say 4-5 months.

Kellie @ ReaWrite: What is a typical writing day like for you?
Dan: I used to procrastinate all day, and then squeeze in writing in the late afternoon, but now I’ve gotten to the point where I physically unplug the ethernet cable from my computer. It’s been incredible working that way. Now if I could only unplug earlier in the day.

 Also, there is coffee involved.
Kellie @ ReaWrite: What was the hardest part of False Memory to write?
Dan: Definitely the emotional bits. I love action and think it’s probably what I’m best at. But getting inside the head of a teen girl proved difficult at first. It got easier with book 2, and luckily I had many female readers who were able to help get me in the right headspace. I don’t know if I’ll be trying it again though!

Kellie @ ReaWrite: What can you tell us about The Planet Thieves?
Dan:  I’m beyond excited for it. It’s the book I always wanted as a kid, a pure adventure story. A little over a year ago, I was really starting to miss Harry Potter. I wanted a story that had the same size and scope, but that was also just plain epic and fun. It’s a really big story, so what I describe below is just the very beginning of the book.

Mason Stark is 13, and he’s a few weeks from staring his second level of education in the Earth Space Command. He’s spending some time on a ship (to get some real experience) when it’s boarded by the Tremist, an alien race that humans have been at war with for decades. The cadets manage to evade the Tremist, but the rest of the crew gets either captured or killed. The cadets not only have to retake the ship, but soon they discover the ship was carrying a weapon that will change the war. A weapon the Tremist now possess.
Also, it’s safe to assume there is planet thievery involved.
Kellie @ ReaWrite: Any sentence that involves “planet thievery” is okay by me! Coming off of your first publication, what are your ultimate writing goals?
Dan: To do everything. Goals keep me motivated. I love working toward things. Publishing a book was an enormous dream of mine, but I have to keep moving forward. I’m working on an adult book, and I also love writing screenplays. I find that switching up the genres and kinds of projects I work on keeps me versatile. I don’t ever want to be stuck doing one thing.
Kellie @ ReaWrite: And finally, for something completely different… Your bio says you play MMOs (massively multi-player online games), what are you currently playing:
Dan: Well, at the moment I’m working on two separate books, both due soon, but I have an active World of Warcraft subscription. All my buddies started playing again, so I decided to dabble a little bit. Before that I played Star Wars: The Old Republic. But what I REALLY enjoyed playing this year was Mass Effect 3. It has a better story than most books/movies/tv.
Kellie @ ReaWrite: Thanks so much Dan! I can’t wait to read your next book.
You can visit Dan online at his website, or follow him on Twitter.