Showing posts with label Susan Waggoner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Susan Waggoner. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2012

Neptune's Tears Blog Tour: Interview with author Susan Waggoner.

Thanks to Susan Waggoner for stopping by the blog today as part of the blog tour for her new book Neptune's Tears.




Neptune's Tears by Susan Waggoner
Publisher: Piccadilly Press
Release date: September 2012


It is love against the odds. There is his word, and there is hers. How can they feel so connected?

It is 2218 and Zee McAdams is in her second year as a healing empath at a busy London hospital. When a mysterious young man arrives for treatment, Zee's hard won calm is pierced. She will need all her courage if she's to follow her heart.

Especially when David reveals a devastating secret.



Author Interview: Susan Waggoner. 


 Describe Neptune’s Tears in five words or less.
A futuristic star-crossed romance.


 Neptune’s Tears is set in a future society and contains themes of both dystopian and science fiction, but at it’s heart is Zee and David’s love story? Where did you get the inspiration to write Neptune’s Tears? 

I’ve always been interested in mental phenomenon and it seems logical, to me, that in the future we will make use of the mind’s untapped powers. I remember watching an episode of the original Star Trek TV series that was about an ‘empath’. This concept of a person who is able to use their mental powers to absorb the pain of others and heal them always fascinated me so that’s where that aspect of Neptune’s Tears came from.

Then, a few years ago, when dystopian books became popular, I began to wonder if it was possible to write an exciting love story in a futuristic setting but in a world that was more like to our own. That’s when Zee arrived.  I knew right away that she was an empath, and created a plotline around her.  But guess what?  Zee had other ideas.  She turned out to be much bolder than I’d imagined, and because of that, the book is not at all like my original outline!


 I always think that setting a book in a future society must be a lot of fun. You can make it whatever you want it to be. For Neptune’s Tears what kind of research did you do in terms of world-building? What did you want to add to Zee’s world? What did you want to take away?

The future is impossible predict. You never know what humans will invent or what opportunities they’ll miss. I think a mistake science fiction often makes is to see the world as all one way or the other.  They assume every country will advance at the same pace or that new inventions will solve all our problems, but in reality, when in human history has this ever happened? So I tried to create a world that had experienced some scientific progress but still had the same problems that have always plagued human society, such as war.

If I could add one thing to Zee’s world or even our own, it would be the ability to “shop from the past.”  We are always giving up old things to make way for newer versions, but we lose a lot of great objects from each era.  I wish we had a way of recreating it on demand.

What would I take away from Zee’s world?  That’s a dangerous question!  I’d be tempted to say the anarchists, which seems like a no-brainer, but messing with a world, even for good reasons, can have unintended consequences. If I took away the anarchists, would Zee and David have bonded as they did? 


 What song would you choose as a theme tune for NT?

I’m a big fan of movie soundtracks, so I’d choose the gorgeous music that lit up the screen for Nathan and Cora in The Last of the Mohicans, starring a young and gorgeous Daniel Day-Lewis.  Has there ever been a better on-screen kiss? 


 Can you name three other books that readers of NT might also enjoy? 

These three books may be old but they remain unforgettable classics:
  • Portrait of Jennie by Robert Nathan: A struggling young artist falls in love with a haunting young woman.  Is Jennie real, a wandering spirit, or just a figment of his imagination?
  • I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith: If you’ve ever wondered what life would be like in a falling down castle with a very eccentric, this book has the answers.
  • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith: Growing up in Brooklyn in the early 1900s can be a rich experience, even if your family is always scrambling to make ends meet.


 What book are you currently reading? 

 I’m working hard on the sequel to Neptune’s Tears right now, so I’m treating myself to fun, cosy reads.  I’m halfway through Country Passions by Rebecca Shaw, the fourth book in the Barleybridge series. The series is centred around a village veterinary practice and escaping to the idyllic English countryside is just the break I need at the end of my work day. 


 What was you last ‘five-star-couldn’t-put-it-down’ read?

Shanghai Girls by Lisa See.  The first part of the book offers a tantalizing portrait of glamorous and wealthy Shanghai in the 1930s, when it was known as the Paris of Asia. When the scene shifts to Los Angeles, I was equally fascinated to learn what Chinese immigrants went through to become Americans whilst still preserving their own culture and traditions.


The Neptune's Tears Blog Tour continues tomorrow at Strictly Writing!


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And that's not all! Take a look at the cover for Starlight's Edge, the second book in Susan Waggoner's Timedance series, releasing in 2013 from Piccadilly Press.








Friday, September 21, 2012

Book Review: Neptune's Tears by Susan Waggoner.

Product details:
Publisher: Piccadilly Press
Paperback, 224 pages.
Release date: September 1st 2012
Rating: 2½ out of 5.
Ages: 12+
Source: Received from publisher for review.


It is love against the odds. There is his word, and there is hers. How can they feel so connected?

It is 2218 and Zee McAdams is in her second year as a healing empath at a busy London hospital. When a mysterious young man arrives for treatment, Zee's hard won calm is pierced. She will need all her courage if she's to follow her heart.

Especially when David reveals a devastating secret.



 Set in a futuristic London, Neptune’s Tears, the first in Susan Waggoner’s Timedance series introduces us to seventeen year old Zee McAdams who works as an Empath helping to ease the suffering of others.  Zee’s job requires total focus and dedication. She can’t have any distractions in life.  It would probably be for the best if she never fell in love, but Zee has never even come close to anything like that, so it doesn’t look as though falling in love is going to be something she has to worry about any time soon.

Then David walks into her life, and guess what? Zee falls head over heels in love with him. But there’s a problem. It turns out David is no ordinary guy. He’s an alien, and so the love between David and Zee is dangerous and forbidden. It must be hidden.  In Zee’s society aliens are eyed with suspicion.  A lot of people are convinced that these aliens who live amongst them are up to no good, that they are keeping secrets. And from the shady way that David acts whenever he’s around Zee, it looks as though they might be right.

The premise of Neptune’s Tears is an interesting one, but unfortunately everything that piqued my interest in the book, and all the elements I initially enjoyed in my reading of it – the futuristic society where people live their lives in the constant threat of terrorism and the part Zee might play in fighting that threat - were overshadowed by the all-consuming romance that dominates this book. It’s not that I’m not a fan of romance; I am, just not of the Insta-Love kind that’s portrayed here.  Zee and David’s was a relationship that didn’t really ring true for me and I found that it detracted from the plot which suffered from a lack of description and of world-building as a result.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Read All About It #3 - Recent Exciting Book News & Deals!



It's been a while since I've done one of these posts (slacker!) and I know I've left out lots and lots of  exciting book deals (boo me!). I've included some pretty awesome upcoming titles here though including  new books from  Jessica Warman (Between) and Rebecca James (Beautiful Malice) and a 2013 debut that's being described as a Black-Swan like tale of spooky happenings at a ballet school. Read on for more...


The Suffering Half by Jessica Warman

I recently read and loved Between by Jessica Warman so I'm really looking forward to this next book from her which releases in September 2012. How good does this sound?! Can't wait!

More About the Book

Rachel and Alice are an extremely rare kind of identical twins—so identical that even their aunt and uncle, whom they’ve lived with since their parents passed away, can’t tell them apart. But the sisters are connected in a way that goes well beyond their surfaces: when one experiences pain, the other exhibits the exact same signs of distress. So when one twin mysteriously disappears, the other immediately knows something is wrong—especially when she starts experiencing serious physical traumas, despite the fact that nobody has touched her. As the search commences to find her sister, the twin left behind must rely on their intense bond to uncover the truth. But is there anyone around her she can trust, when everyone could be a suspect? And ultimately, can she even trust herself? Master storyteller Jessica Warman will keep readers guessing when everything they see—and everything they are told—suddenly becomes unreliable in this page-turning literary thriller.


More About the Author 
Twitter:  @jkwarman


Diabolical by Yelena Black 


ETA: Title Change: Dance of Shadows by Yelena Black

I'll be keeping an eye out for this debut in 2013, a spooky tale set in a prestigious ballet school, which is publishing simultaneously in the US, UK and Australia from Bloomsbury.  The first in a trilogy I can see this one being very popular!

More About the Book

A Black Swan–like trilogy about a 15-year-old who starts witnessing spooky goings-on at her prestigious ballet school. When Vanessa Adler becomes suspicious of the controlling choreographer at her academy, she stumbles upon the fact that he is staging a performance in which "the school's dancers become pawns in a world of demons."


Little Deaths by Rebecca James 


I loved Beautiful Malice, and I've been eagerly awaiting the next book from Australian author Rebecca James. It looks like Cooper Bartholomew is Dead, the book Rebecca was working on has been put on the back-burner for now, but Little Deaths is set to publish in January 2013, and I can't wait to read it!


More About the Book

It was a baby. A baby crying. Crying and crying and crying,’ she says, her face pale, her voice sharp with urgency. ‘It was so clear. Didn’t you hear it? You must have heard it!
 
Tim Ellison needs a place to live and when he finds a cheap room to rent in the perfect location in Sydney it seems almost too good to be true. The rent is cheap but the room comes with a condition. The owner of the house, the young and beautiful Anna London, has agoraphobia and is more or less housebound. Tim will be responsible for bringing food to the house, and helping with any other supplies she may need.

Anna is quiet, beautiful and inhibited and Tim struggles to get to know her. When odd and frightening things start occurring in the house – unexplained messes, bizarre graffiti on the interior walls, broken windows – he starts to wonder what he has got himself into. Anna finally begins to open up to Tim. As his feelings for her soften and develop into admiration, and even love, he learns about her tragic past and becomes increasingly embroiled in the mysterious world of Anna London and her sinister house.


More About the Author

Twitter: @rebecca_james_



Neptune's Tears by Susan Waggoner

Billed as The Time Traveller's Wife meets ER, Neptune's Tears is the first in a two part YA romance to be published by Piccadilly Press in Autumn 2012. I think this one sounds great, and very romantic too, which is always a bonus. Looking forward to reading it, and its sequel Starlight's Edge which will publish in summer 2013.

More About the Book

Set in 2218, Neptune's Tears tells the story of star-crossed lovers, Zee and David. She is young and idealistic, struggling with the stress and emotional demands of her work as an empath; he is a patient in need of her help. But the path of their love is anything but smooth, for David is a traveller from the future, and burdened with a terrible secret. As their relationship develops, Zee realises that she will have to sacrifice everything she cares about for a life with David.

What the Publishers Are Saying

'I'm really very excited about Timedance. "It's simply one of the best romances I've read in a long time.  It's an original, highly imaginative story, and the central characters are so real.  The futuristic setting adds a quirkiness to the story and is very cleverly handled. I read the material one evening and made a pre-emptive bid when I finished.' - Brenda Gardner, Managing Director, Piccadilly Press.




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Additional info & quotes

Please note:  Release dates and book titles may not be final and may be subject to change.