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Thursday, July 27, 2017

Hunted Fate by Jennifer Derrick Book Blitz & Giveaway


Hunted Fate 
by Jennifer Derrick 
(Threads of the Moirae, #3) 
Published by: Clean Teen Publishing
Publication date: July 24th 2017
Genres: Mythology, Romance, Young Adult

Synopsis:

Alex and Atropos have taken refuge at an abandoned mountain resort compound. Atropos is a wanted woman in hiding, and the downtime with her soul mate is a nice change of pace. But the peace will be short-lived. The authorities are after her for her role in the attack on the city of Charlotte. Zeus has put a bounty on her head. There’s also a war to prepare for—and if she wins, the gods will be deposed once and for all. But first she needs to track down Gaia, and even that won’t be simple. Gaia resides at the bottom of the ocean, and the humans and gods are already hot on Atropos’ trail…
A heart-pounding romantic adventure where Greek mythology and modern-day life collide, Hunted Fate is the third book in the epic Threads of the Moirae series by Jennifer Derrick.


Purchase:

Previous books in the series:
(Grab book 1 - Broken Fate - for FREE!)



AUTHOR BIO:
Jennifer is a freelance writer and novelist. As a freelancer, she writes everything from technical manuals to articles on personal finance and European-style board games. Her interest in storytelling began when she was six and her parents gave her a typewriter for Christmas and agreed to pay her $.01 per page for any stories she churned out. Such a loose payment system naturally led to a lot of story padding. Broken Fate, her first novel, earned her $2.80 from her parents.  

Jennifer lives in North Carolina and, when not writing, can often be found reading, trawling the shelves at the library, playing board games, watching sports, camping, running marathons, and playing with her dog. You can visit her at her official website:www.JenniferDerrick.com.


Excerpt

The Teacher Who Made the Threads of the Moirae Possible

Now that I'm celebrating the publication of Hunted Fate, the third book in the Threads of the Moirae series, it's time to give credit where credit is due. It's true that writers owe a great debt to many people. Most of us were encouraged by parents, teachers, librarians, family, and friends. Many kind people mentored us, encouraged us to enter contests, or gave us a boost in a thousand other ways. All of those people guide an aspiring writer toward a professional career.

But often there is one person at the heart of a particular story, one person whose influence is stronger than any other. It may be a family member who told their tale and made you think, "That should be a book." It may be a friend who said, "You're really into [Subject X], you should write a book about it." It may even be someone you don't know but whom you see in passing and wonder, "What's that life like?" Whoever it is and however it happens, that person is somehow responsible for your story. 

In my case, for the Threads of the Moirae, that person was my English teacher, Mrs. Lapp. She was a fabulous teacher in many ways. She was tough, but fair. She encouraged her students to read widely and she was the first teacher who openly encouraged us to read often-banned books and decide for myself whether book banning was right or wrong. She encouraged our writing and any student could count on her for feedback, ideas, and support. 

(Not related to my books but to my writing career overall, she encouraged me to enter a local writing contest even though I didn't think my work was worthy. I ended up winning. She was right and I was wrong and I learned that I wasn't always the best judge of anything.)

Anyway, part of her job was to teach the Greek mythology unit. At first I was only excited because the text, Mythology by Edith Hamilton, was much shorter than anything else we'd read that semester. (By the way, that classic is still in print if you want to buy it. I highly recommend it as a great introduction to not only Greek mythology, but also Roman and Norse legends.)

The stories were interesting, but not anything that (at the time) I would have predicted would stick with me for years. What made it all click in my head was the way Mrs. Lapp presented the material. 

She brought in slides of Greek ruins and art depicting the gods and goddesses. She let us watch Clash of the Titans (the original movie, not the awful remake). We went off topic and discussed religion, cultural depictions of birth and death, and a hundred other things tangentially related gods and goddesses. We brought in Greek food and bed sheets and had a toga party one day. We didn't just write reports on the material, we picked our favorite gods and goddesses and presented our reports in character. 

(I wish I could say I chose Atropos, but that would tie everything up a little too neatly. No, I chose Artemis, goddess of the hunt, largely because I wanted an excuse to bring my bow and arrow to school. That's right. I was shooting archery long before the Hunger Games made it cool. And no, you'd never get away with bringing a bow and arrow to school these days. Ah, the good old days.)

In short, Mrs. Lapp made that unit fun. It was like she knew that mythology book would be the most engaging thing we'd read all year and she was determined to make the most of whatever interest she could drag out of us before Shakespeare and Dostoyevsky set in. She worked hard to make the material come alive. 

So all these years later, Greek mythology still sticks with me. It's lodged in my brain so tightly that at a family funeral, the idea of being the Death Fate in the modern world popped into my head and Broken Fate was born. 

And speaking of Broken Fate, here's an Easter egg for you, now that you've read this story. When Atropos and Alex first meet, it's in Mrs. Lapp's English class. That's a little salute to the woman who made it all possible. 

Giveaway




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