Happy Birthday to me! And my present is a chat with author Suzanna Allen. Welcome, Suxanna!
SC: Tell me a little bit about your main character of this book.
SA: Annabelle Walsh adores all things esoteric; she considers herself a witch even if she has yet to successfully cast a spell, and her best pals think she's a little bonkers. She has so much faith and good will and such a good heart! When her long-term boyfriend dumps her, her journey of healing takes a turn for the supernatural, namely a Pooka called Callie. Pookas are mischievous Celtic mythological creatures who don't usually have much to do with humans but Callie and Annabelle are connected ancestrally; as much as Annabelle yearned to experience a magical event, the reality is not what she expected...
SC: We like all things esoteric as well. And creepy. Do you believe in the paranormal and if so, do you have an experience you can share?
SA:I do!
SC: YAY!
SA: I was born in New Jersey (Jersey Devil represent) but I now live in Ireland. I have never had so many serious, believable conversation about ghosts in my life.
I have a friend who has a cottage down the country, and one of its many compelling features is a fairy tree. Fairy trees are the property of the Fair Folk and not to be interfered with. The trees are generally Hawthorn and often found alone in the middle of fields, and are portals for that race to move in between worlds. The one on my friend's property was near the cottage; I left a crystal at its base in tribute and thought nothing of it — until I was woken up in the middle of the night by music playing. The first song was very loud, rough, heavy metal-ish grinding instrumental. The second was a lilting, light, lyrical tune, exactly the sort you'd think you'd hear in Faerie.
In the morning, I asked my pal if they'd been woken by music? Maybe a car driving by in the night? And they said they heard nothing and it was the Fair Folk playing for me. I still get chills thinking about it.
SC: Cool! What titles are you working on now that you can tell us about?
SA: I have two more novels coming out in the next year: A Most Unusual Duke on 28 December, and A Duke at the Door in August 2022. They are the second and third books in my Shapeshifters of the Beau Monde series, in which I've mashed up regency Era historical and Shapeshifters. Think Bridgerton meets werewolves! The first book, A Wolf in Duke's Clothing, is currently on sale, and I'm looking forward to growing the series beyond these three titles.
SC: Thanks for stopping by. Let's take a look at your book now.
Excerpt:
Annabelle lit candles and sat down on the floor. She tried deep breathing for a few seconds, and feeling slightly calmer, took her tarot deck out of its wooden box and shuffled the cards. She let her breath flow in and out; it lulled her, cleared her head, calmed her down, and the smell of the burning wax soothed her, as she tried to formulate a mature, non-attached-type question. Not: Will Wilson come back to me, please, please?
Her breathing hitched. Yeah, definitely not that. “Okay. The issue is… Wilson. Um. Do we have a future together?”
She turned over a card. The Knight of Pentacles, reversed.
“Damn it.” Reversed, this Knight meant carelessness, a standstill in affairs. “Okay, so if things are at a standstill, that means they can move forward again, right?” She turned another card.
Three of Swords. Sorrow due to loss. Well, duh, Annabelle thought, and then winced, as if she’d said it out loud. As if the cards could hear.
She turned over the next card. The Wheel of Fortune. Not always a good sign, though, as it could mean an unexpected loss rather than a gain, even when in the upright position as it was now. “I don’t know what any of this means,” Annabelle mumbled, knowing full well what it meant. This was all about the now, and she didn’t like the now.
At moments like these, Annabelle found it was usually a good thing to stop pulling cards.
Queen of Cups. She shivered. That was her court card. Good natured, intuitive, a loving female figure, one whose imagination often outweighed her good sense.
Strength. The beautiful woman grasped the lion by the jaws, symbolizing the power of the human spirit to overcome any obstacle. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The Sun. “Summertime? Two months from now? I’ll be better in two months?”
Annabelle gathered up the reading and returned the deck to its box.
She continued to sit. She tried to go back to the deep breathing but got bored. She thought about how she’d never had much luck reading Wilson’s cards. Maybe it never worked because it was almost always post-coital, the only time he was ever mellow enough to entertain the idea. She could never make sense of his configurations, none of the images seemed to relate to the others, she’d pull card after card and make a spread that was meaningless, confused. He would lose interest and patience. She would feel as though she’d failed. Ugh.
She’d like to blame it all on him, but she supposed her own muddled thinking got in the way as well; always hoping he was asking about the future of their relationship, whether she would marry him, whether she would like an emerald-cut diamond in a platinum setting, as opposed to a three carat marquis-cut in white gold.
Someday, maybe, she’d find that remotely amusing.
But not today. Rising, she left the candles burning and got some incense going as well.
Lavender: soothing, healing. She wanted healing. She wanted that fistful of pain out of her chest. She wanted all her lessons learned in a six-week correspondence course, she wanted a whole, strong heart, she wanted Wilson back, she wanted all the sadness to leak out of her pores, she wanted her life back. Herself back. Now.
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