Thursday, December 4, 2014

STEALING TIME INTERVIEW with KJ Waters



STEALING TIME INTERVIEW: with KJ Waters

1.  What inspired you to write?
I am a huge Outlander fan and I was reading Diana Gabaldon’s book, Outlandish Companion, where she describes her unorthodox writing style. She develops chapter ideas and writes them, then later connects the pieces like a patchwork quilt. I have spent a lot of time writing for my various jobs, but never considered writing a novel. After reading about Diana’s strategy I was inspired to give it a whirl. Knowing that Diana could be wildly successful with such a creative (and not anal) strategy was a perfect fit for me.

2.  What’s the one thing that surprised you the most about finishing your first novel?

I’ve spent the last nine years working on my novel. I never thought it would take me so long to get to the end of it. Granted a move halfway across the country, a baby, major surgery, AND writing most of the second book before I decided to make it a trilogy took up a lot of that time. But seriously, nine years?  

3. Where did the idea for Stealing Time come from?

The basic story concept was pulled from my own experience. I moved to Florida in 2004 and three days later, on Friday the thirteenth, Hurricane Charley hit. Within six weeks four major hurricanes hit Florida. It was a very exciting summer to say the least, and the following June on a long trip up the coast the idea hit me to have that as the setting for Stealing Time. I’ve always loved the possibilities with time travel and to be on the other side as the writer of time travel was irresistible.

4. What audience do you feel this would appeal to?

I’ve worked hard to make this appealing to both men and women, and have succeeded in hitting several genres. It is a science fiction novel at the heart of it because of the time travel element, but it is not your typical sci-fi novel. It weaves historical fiction elements throughout and delivers a punch of hurricane disaster tension and keeps you on the edge of your seat with a thriller mentality. Stealing Time is not a leisurely read. I hope to keep you awake way later than you intended because you can’t wait to see what happens next, and I guarantee I will make you laugh. I hope to surprise you and bring you to your knees with the ending, making you beg for more.

Book two continues with the time travel and weather themes and delves deeper into the mechanics of the traveling. I have added depth to the second book by including multiple religious and scientific theories that try to explain how the time travel works, allowing the reader to choose the one that fits their schema. Book two has a few of the same characters while adding several rich personalities including one inspired by Gerard Butler.  

5. What’s the one thing you want the readers of Stealing Time to take away?

I hope to steal their breath away.  I also hope Stealing Time sparks the reader’s creative juices with my unique spin on time travel while bringing a sense of what it is like to live through a powerful hurricane.  After writing Stealing Time I appreciate the modern trappings we all take for granted and thank my lucky stars I’m not stuck in a time where women are treated like bargaining chips to further their family fortunes, at the mercy of men at their greediest and most perverse forms.


Stealing Time Synopsis
As Hurricane Charley churns a path of destruction towards Orlando, Ronnie Andrews and her best friend, Stephanie McKay, scramble to prepare for the storm. The women separate and Ronnie seeks shelter at her boyfriend’s weather lab while Steph invites her friend Nick to stay at her house.

During the peak of the storm Ronnie is hurtled back in time to eighteenth-century London where she is caught in a web of superstition, deception, and lies in a life and death struggle to return to her own time. Steph is thrust into the middle of the hurricane to rescue her cat, but it quickly turns into a living nightmare as Steph is faced with losing everything.

Stealing Time: Book 1 in the Stealing Time Trilogy.

Excerpt:

Chapter 1 – Stormy Weather


August 13, 2004 4:30 pm, Orlando, Florida
When Ronnie Andrews sat down on the red velvet couch, a cloud of particles let loose and floated in the sunlight like fairy dust. Her real name was Veronica, but she hated it with a passion and had changed it to the shorter version in high school to get away from the formal, stuffy sound. Now, the only time she heard it was when her mom was upset.
“Seriously Steph, how can a hurricane hit here today on my birthday?” Ronnie said to her best friend Stephanie McKay. She was one of the reasons Ronnie had moved 1,200 miles away from her mom in Virginia Beach. "I've only been in Florida for three days!"
"Listen," Steph said turning up the volume on the TV. "They're telling us where it's going to hit.”
"Hurricane Charley is completely devastating Punta Gorda on the southern Gulf Coast of Florida as we speak. Here is the current trajectory of the storm." The suit-clad Terry James pointed at a map of Florida. Was he wearing a toupee? His hair didn’t look quite right. "Charley is projected to hug the coast moving north and entering Tampa Bay. Governor Jeb Bush has issued mandatory evacuations for low-lying areas surrounding Tampa. If you're in an unstable structure such as a mobile home or manufactured house you need to evacuate now."
"Hey weather dude, tell us if it's coming to Orlando!" Steph shook her fist at the TV.
The power and danger of Charley intoxicated Ronnie who was both excited and terrified by the storm. Part of her wanted it to be a raging nightmare, just for the dramatic effect. The other part of her wanted to go back home and hide under her childhood bed.
"Steph, that reminds me. Jeffrey has to be at the lab all night to monitor the storm and he canceled on me." Jeffrey Brennan, Ronnie's boyfriend, was the other reason she had moved to Orlando. They'd been dating for the past year and a half. Last March Jeffrey moved to Florida for his job in a weather lab or an applied physics lab, or something like that. Her mind usually shut off when he began talking about it so she wasn't completely certain what he did.
“Jeffrey canceled on your birthday?" Steph made that familiar Scottish ‘auch’ of the Glaswegian variety. "Remind me again why I'm supposed to like him?"
"Steph, c'mon, I've moved down to be near you both. Can't you make an effort to be nice to him? You're the only two people I know here," Ronnie said crossing her arms.
"I'm sorry, love, I just wish you'd find someone who isn't so …" Steph smiled at Ronnie. "You know."
"What, smart and handsome?" Ronnie said. It really bothered her that Steph and Jeffrey didn't get along.
"No, I was thinking you should find someone who isn't such a tadger." Steph's Scottish slang still took Ronnie by surprise, even though they'd been friends for nearly seven years.
Steph sat down and put her arm around Ronnie's shoulders. “Listen, why don’t you pack an overnight bag and we’ll go to my house.” Ronnie’s cat Fluffy jumped on the couch wanting some love, too. Steph pet her long white fur. "It probably won't even hit here. Just some rain and a lot of stramash over nothing."
"You remember what happened to me during Hurricane Isabel? I don't wanna to go through that again!" Ronnie said. That storm had hit her home town of Virginia Beach last September and power had been out for ten days with temperatures over ninety every day.
"Yes, I do. I was glad to be down here," Steph said while giving Ronnie’s shoulder a squeeze.
The phone’s ring made Ronnie jump. She looked at the caller ID. "It's Jeffrey." Steph made a face and turned away to focus on the cat.
Ronnie stood up and walked a few steps into the kitchen to get a little privacy. "Hello.”
“Hey baby, Happy Birthday!" Jeffrey said. "I'm sorry I had to cancel our dinner plans for tonight."
"It's okay, I understand." Ronnie said, not fully understanding but not wanting to sound hurt.
"Can you come here and spend the night?"
"You mean the lab? A few hours ago you said it was against company policy," she said.
"Things have changed. I really need you here."
"Oh, so now you need me there, huh? That's an interesting way to put it," she said. “Steph invited me to her house." Ronnie peeked around the corner and stuck her tongue out at Steph who rolled her eyes.
“But Ron, I have a special birthday dinner for you,” Jeffrey said. They were supposed to go to Del Frisco’s, a fancy steak and seafood restaurant for her birthday. Now it would probably be sub sandwiches or something equally uneventful. Not that it really mattered. “And I have a special present for you, too.”
The heat rose in her cheeks. “I thought I wasn’t allowed to be there.” She covered the mouthpiece and whispered to Steph, “He wants me to go to his lab.”
"He does? The wee bastard," Steph said not looking up from Fluffy.
"Ronnie, you coming or not?" he interrupted.
“If you’re going to shower me with food and expensive gifts, I might consider it. But what about Steph?” She glanced back at her friend who looked away scowling.
“Come on, the lab is a lot safer than Steph's," Jeffrey said. "It’s underground with its own generator, and I have all the supplies we need.” Typical of Jeffrey to miss the point about Steph's feelings.
"Hang on a sec." She covered the receiver. "Are you okay with me going to Jeffrey's lab instead of your place?"
"I wish he'd make up his mind. He's on, he's off. Bloody hell," Steph said.
Jeffrey always seemed to know how to get his way. "Yeah, I guess," Ronnie said.
"So you're definitely coming over? You're coming here now?" he said.
"Yes, I just said I was coming. Why are you so worked up?" Usually he was cool, calm, and collected.
"I just need to know. I have a few things to prepare for you, babe."
"I still don’t understand why you have to be at work today. Most companies are closed for the storm." She was a little mad at him. He had hardly spoken to her since she set foot in Florida.
"Look, I've got one shot at testing the equipment with a storm this size and intensity. There is no reason you can't be here testing out my equipment."
She laughed. "Oh, you're dirty!"
Steph set Fluffy down on the couch, stood up, and turned her back on Ronnie as she gathered her purse and the birthday gift she'd brought for her.
"But babe, you've gotta leave now. I'm looking at the radar and the outer bands of the storm are really close," Jeffrey said.
“Are you sure? We just watched the news. It sounds more like it is heading north of here."
"Charley is wobbling right now so it's hard to say exactly what it will do. Listen, babe, I'll make it worth your while."
Worried about Steph now Ronnie said, "I gotta go. Tell me how to get there."
He gave her directions and they exchanged “I love you's.”
“So,” Steph said walking towards the door with her purse over her shoulder. “You’re going to the gobshite’s mysterious lab, are you then?”
Ronnie never completely understood her dislike of Jeffrey. "Steph, I'm sorry. Are you going to be okay?"
“I’ll be fine. Been through hunners of storms. Just don’t get yourself into a palaver over that man of yours.” She hugged Ronnie. "You'll get your birthday pressie from me tomorrow. And for God’s sake take the K-Y this time. You don’t want your fanny sore.” They had always laughed about that word, especially when anyone talked about their fanny pack. In Scotland it meant something different.
“You’re horrible!” Ronnie smacked Steph’s arm and laughed. “But you do have a point."
“Love, I gotta get on the roads before the skies open up and drown me.” Steph opened the door.
Ronnie hugged her friend. “I’ll call you in the morning to be sure you’re safe.”
“You be careful.” She gave Ronnie one of those hard looks that made her feel like she'd better listen.
“Ta-ta.” Steph walked quickly to her car. Her dark gray pencil skirt and crisp white sleeveless blouse flattered her hourglass figure. Ronnie wished they were parting on better terms.
The wind picked up and blew Ronnie's long blonde hair in her face. She waved at her friend, but Steph ignored the gesture and drove away. She was mad. Ronnie would have to make it up to her tomorrow.
The sky was spectacular—a third of it was clear blue and sunny. A dark boiling cloud took up the remainder like a science fiction movie with poorly done special effects. Every shade of gray swirled and raged looking like she could reach out and touch it. The edge of the cloud, one of the outer bands of the hurricane, appeared razor sharp as it cut its way through the sky.
A combination of panic and excitement buzzed around her head. Hurricane Charley was at her doorstep—she better get out of here. Ronnie went back into the apartment and found the small bag she'd just unpacked that morning so she could fill it with a change of clothes and her toiletries. Fluffy looked at her with beautiful blue eyes framed by silky fur. What she needed was to be comforted rather than left alone in a strange new place. They had only been there a few days and Fluffy didn’t take well to change. Would Jeffrey let her bring Fluffy? Probably not. He didn’t really like cats.
For a second Ronnie considered waiting out the storm with her precious kitty, but the thought of Jeffrey's teasing words and tan chest convinced her otherwise. She quickly set up a safe place for Fluffy to ride out the storm, "Bye, sweetie, I’ll be back tomorrow. You be good.” Fluffy stared at her with her giant sad eyes. She shut the door and tried not to think of what a bad owner she was.
Ronnie climbed in her 1996 Thunderbird, set her overnight bag on the passenger seat and pulled out the directions she'd scribbled on a scrap of paper. West on I-4—that was the one road she could find since the exit was right outside of her apartment. She backed up and nearly ran over a man, who flailed his arms angrily at her before trying to open the car door. In a panic, she leaned on the horn. This had the desired effect of startling him so he would let go. She jammed it in reverse and then peeled out of the apartment complex. When she looked in her rearview mirror she saw the man running after her.
"Well that was weird!" Ronnie said trying to calm down. Bad enough a huge storm was about to hit, but to have a crazy man attacking her car only made things worse. She turned on the radio for a distraction as well as an update of the storm. The weather report provided a snapshot of Armageddon so she turned it off while she fought to steer through the increasing winds.
On I-4 she drove towards Jeffrey’s lab and tried to shake the feeling of impending doom. A few large splats on the windshield startled her, followed by a gust of wind that shoved her car out of the lane. Ronnie overcompensated the turn and hydroplaned on the slick highway. "Crap!" She jerked the wheel in the other direction while the car fishtailed down I-4, barely missing a white Toyota and the guardrail. The driver honked at her and gave her the finger. Her heart nearly beat out of her chest.
Panic returned in full force. Would she make it there without crashing? Did the lab have a covered garage to protect her car from the storm? How would Fluffy deal with the stress of the move and now the hurricane? Who was the weird guy and did he live in the same complex as her? The questions assaulted her and she was fully worked up by the time she pulled off the highway at Jeffrey's exit and called his cell.
He led her through a few turns to a huge building. A wave of excitement washed over her when she saw him—all six feet of his fit, lean body. His dark curly blonde hair plastered against his face from the rain and wind. It had been a month since they had been together and she felt giddy thinking of what they would do later.
She rolled down her window. "Hi honey, I'm here," Ronnie said.
"Hi Babe." Jeffrey leaned in to kiss her, his face wet from the rain. He smelled great. "I'm so glad you made it. It's getting bad out here already."
"I know. I almost got blown off the road," she said.
"Blown, eh? That gives me an idea for later.”
"Jeffrey! You are such a perv!"
"Here scoot over, I want to drive."
Ronnie climbed over the center console to the passenger seat and Jeffrey took the driver's seat. He reached a security gate and inserted an ID card in the box. He parked the car in the covered employee lot and took her in the back entrance using the card to open the basement door.
“I’ve paid off LT at the guard desk to turn off the camera just while I sneak you in.” He took her bag and hoisted it over his shoulder before grabbing her hand.
They walked quickly through several corridors and reached a metal door. Jeffrey used the keypad and his security key once again. The room was about the size of her apartment living room and full of computers, monitors, and cabinets. There were no windows and there was only one door in the back of the room. Out of place in the back corner, squished between the desk and the wall, sat an inflatable mattress with sheets, pillows, and a blanket. A TV on top of the desk had weather coverage on.
Terry James, the local weatherman, nearly frothed at the mouth with excitement. “We have a new trajectory. This is very important for those who have just evacuated from the Tampa Bay area.” His face was serious, but the mystery of toupee or not toupee as Steph said, was distracting. Jeffrey set her bag down near the bed as they both listened intently.
“The mandatory evacuations from low-lying areas for the Tampa Bay area are no longer in effect. The new trajectory is here.” Terry pointed to a cone-shaped path in red and orange covering a huge swath with Orlando in the center.
“If you are in coastal or low-lying areas anywhere in the path of this storm you need to get to a shelter immediately. This is a dangerous storm, in fact, it is one of the strongest to hit southwest Florida since 1960 when Hurricane Donna devastated the area."
Jeffrey took her hand and kissed it. "Babe."
"Shhhhhh!" Ronnie said. Excitement and dread bubbled up in her chest.
Terry continued, "Hurricane Charley has sustained winds of 145 and gusts up to 175 miles per hour. This makes Charley a Category 4 storm. We are expecting it to weaken over land but by the time it makes it to central Florida it will still be a Category 1 or 2 hurricane with sustained winds from seventy to 120 miles per hour."
Jeffrey stood behind Ronnie and pulled her close, his arms around her waist while they watched. "A Category 2 storm would result in damage to roofs, and poorly constructed buildings. We can expect trees to be down with extensive and perhaps total power outages. There is a potential for loss of potable water as well so fill containers with clean water to last three days." Terry went on to detail the areas that would likely be flooded and what kind of damage to expect. Ronnie drank it in, feeling the pull of the storm, the seduction of its power.
Jeffrey turned her around. “Do you know what this means, babe?” He hugged her and picked her up off her feet. "With a direct hit I can try out my equipment and see how it handles hurricane force winds!” He set her down and kissed her. He pulled away and muted the TV. “Babe, this is really big! I’ve only used lab-simulated hurricane-force winds. The original path of the storm was supposed to miss us." He walked a few steps to his desk. "With a direct hit I’m going to get funded as long as the equipment holds up.” He picked up a bottle of champagne and opened it.
"I'm glad you're excited. It scares me, Jeffrey." Ronnie jumped at the sound of the cork popping. "Dom Pérignon! Jeffrey, you've really gone all out!" Although it did seem like he was celebrating the storm as much as her birthday.
He handed her a plastic glass, filled another for himself, and lifted it, “A toast to the birthday girl.” Ronnie touched her glass to his. Plink. They laughed at the pitiful noise the plastic made. She took a big sip and the cool bubbly liquid slid down her throat, adding to the electricity running through her veins. “You go wash up and we’ll eat. I have a special dinner for us.” He nodded to the door at the back of the room.
Ronnie opened the door and found a small sterile bathroom with a brass drain in the middle of the floor. It smelled like paint and bleach. She closed the door behind her.
***
Jeffrey opened the desk drawer and pulled out a small medicine bottle and twisted the top off. He walked to the food that sat on the edge of the desk in take-out containers. Opening the Styrofoam lid, he took a plastic fork and gently lifted the crusty top of the twice-baked potato and emptied the contents of the bottle into the steamy pocket. He could hear the toilet flush. With his finger he mixed it around and gently put the potato back together. With his fingernail he marked an ‘x’ on the top of the Styrofoam and closed the tab on the container.
***
Ronnie washed her hands and dried them with the paper towels and opened the door.
“Here sit down.” He held out the chair. On the table sat carry-out containers from Del Frisco’s Steakhouse, the same place he was going to take her to before the storm interfered. He opened the box in front of her to reveal a feast of lobster tails, veggies, and a twice-baked potato.
“Oh man,” she said, “my absolute favorite. Thanks, babe.”
He leaned down to kiss her. "Yes, nothing but the best for Miss Andrews. Jeeves, get the lady more champagne." Pretending to be a waiter, he poured her another glass, napkin draped over his arm.
This quelled some of her fears about moving so far from home. The awkwardness between them since he left Virginia started to evaporate. She could feel the knot in her stomach unravel a little. The champagne was helping, too.
They enjoyed the feast and talked about the storm and the new job she would be starting on Monday. Ronnie watched his hands and his mouth as he talked and ate and couldn't help but imagine them on her. After dinner Jeffrey handed Ronnie a small box wrapped in gold foil paper.
“What wonderful wrapping, did you do it?” she asked.
“What, are you kidding? Of course not. It would look like crap if I had. Open it.” He looked like the Cheshire Cat with a huge smile and mischief in his eyes.
She slowly unwrapped the box and opened it. It was the watch—a rose gold antique watch she found in London in June with Steph on her post-graduation trip. She had just finished her master's degree in business and wanted to tag along for Steph’s biannual trip to Glasgow, Scotland where her family lived. They had taken a long weekend and visited London. In a quaint antique shop they found this watch. She couldn't afford it but Steph had taken a picture of her wearing it.
“It is beautiful!” Tears stung her eyes while she moved to sit on his lap so she could hug and kiss him.
“Where did you find it?” she asked. “I can’t believe it.”
“I didn’t. I stole your picture and had a replica made. It's not exactly like the one you saw since all I had was the 2-D picture.”
“They did a great job, Jeffrey. It looks exactly like it.” She put it on her wrist and he helped fasten the safety clasp. “Definite brownie points, Jeff. When did you steal the picture?”
He smiled triumphantly. “I took it when you were in the shower the last time I was up in Virginia Beach. You didn’t notice it was missing, did you?”
“No, you sneak!” She kissed him again.
“I had the idea when you came back from your trip. I tried to get the one you saw in London but it sold before I could buy it. This one is better though—waterproof to eighty feet, extra clasp to make sure it doesn’t ever come off, and brand spanking new.”
“I wouldn’t want to swim or go spelunking with it on.” The rectangular face was made out of the rose gold as well. It was a beautiful piece.
“Oh, you can swim with it. It is not going to come off. I’d like you to wear it all the time, maybe not spelunking in a muddy cave, but all the time.” He kissed her softly again. "Think of it as part of me protecting you from the world. It's especially made to give you good luck!"
"Aw, that's so sweet. I'll wear it all the time."
Neither of them were ready for an engagement. This watch was about the closest thing she could think of to a commitment. It must have cost a lot just in gold alone not to mention the price for someone to replicate it.
“Hang on, I have to check something.” He walked over to his computer and typed for a few minutes. She watched TV but they were just going over the trajectory again. She wondered how Steph was doing and remembered Fluffy. She felt a bit sick to her stomach. Was she freaking out? And what was Steph going to do during the storm? 


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Twitter: @kamajowa
Webpage: kjwaters.com
Blog: Blondie in the Water: http://kjwatersauthor.blogspot.com/
About me page: http://about.me/KJWaters







Friday, November 21, 2014

GOTH TOWN: Five Questions for JESSE GILES CHRISTIANSEN

Five Questions:
JESSE GILES CHRISTIANSEN

In celebration of the new release of GOTH TOWN, I decided to have some fun by taking a peek into the diabolically talented mind of Jesse Giles Christiansen by asking him five questions. I made sure that these questions were embarrassing enough to humiliate, shame and keep him off social media forever if answered honestly!  

Being the trooper he is, Jesse took up the challenge and here are the results! Hope you check it and GOTH TOWN out!!! After all, what would you do if they took away Christmas? 

Link to Buy: http://tinyurl.com/qabsgeh




Five questions

1. What’s the single most important thing needed to become a successful writer?
Write directly from the soul, focus on what you can control, and let go of what you can’t. In my writing career so far, it has surprised how little is in the control of the author. I wake up every  day and ask myself three questions. 1. How can I create better art than yesterday? 2. What can I do today to get more eyeballs on my work? 3. Why do I do what I do? (The answer cannot be wide recognition, because that is not a controllable goal). 

2. In terms of highs and lows, what’s the best and worst thing you’ve experienced in your writing career? Describe your darkest writing day on earth and the one that brought you the most joy. Please describe each in minute detail so we can live vicariously.
My best days are when I’m looking at the computer screen and words are appearing in front of me that I can’t believe are coming out of me. Creating great work is surreal, almost astral. The feeling is incomparable, and at the end of the day, I think that feeling is what keeps us going. The next great feeling is the excitement to share your work with readers and literary professionals. I felt this way about PELICAN BAY and, recently, GOTH TOWN, though all my novels have brought me this feeling to some degree. If I don’t get that feeling, I’ll trash the novel and start over. My worst days are when I share art and run into stifling apathy and deep resistance. I have to remind myself why I do this, or else I might give up.

3. I’ve heard great writing described as “an economy of words”. Do you agree? Disagree? What is your take on how to select the procession of words necessary to tell your story? 
Hemingway’s one of my literary idols because he was able to get rid of everything not needed. This is one of my greatest challenges as a writer, but I feel I’m evolving more every time I write. This is why we have editors. But writers have to be editors to a large degree, as well. I think of books as wonderful sculptures of clay that move others, but lack details to move them thoroughly. “Economy of words” is all about sculpting until you can see every slant and angle … every crevice. If you have to wait years to get a literary work there, do it; it will pay dividends. I feel that GOTH TOWN is closest I’ve come to such athleticism. It is a freeing feeling … much like a man who wants to fly inventing better wings with each attempted flight.

4. Your fairy godmother has just granted you a private coaching session with any living writer. Which writer would you select and what are the questions you would ask him/her?
It would be Hemingway. I would want to know first and foremost, how he achieved such athleticism in his prose? How did he move the world with the simplest of words? I’d also like to know how he dealt with the extreme ups and downs of being a writer. What kept him going on those dark days?

5. To close, I would love for you to share the opening and closing paragraphs of the acceptance speech you’ll give after winning your very first Bram Stoker award.  (pssst … be humble!)
Hmm … love this question! I want to write a full-fledged horror novel one day, as I love to read and watch it myself. PELICAN BAY and GOTH TOWN have many horror elements in them, spooky drifts …
        I believe it is not me, but my literary work that thanks you. That I stand here today is evidence that I have mastered this genre and its novels to a degree that I am receiving your recognition for it. Thank you hardly seems adequate, however. I think more of a salute is appropriate. You have saluted me, and should I want to return the salute, my objective will not be to think very much about this award after today, but to honor all of you by dedicating the rest of my life towards how to create even better works than these … so that one day I can be the one standing in your place and saluting the one up here.

Yours in literature,
J.G.C.


GOTH TOWN 

PROLOGUE
by JESSE GILES CHRISTIANSEN©2014



JAKE RAYNER is the only one, other than Samantha Bryant, who had the vision.
He’ll never forget the first time it happened. He was out for a walk in the woods by himself, a practice highly discouraged by the Overseers.
He was always surprised at how little everyone questioned the rules of the Overseers. Many of them seemed so ridiculous. Then again, they owed everything to them. There would have been no life here at all, if not for them.
That afternoon the hazy air was happy and it seemed to seep into everything. Jake was reckless to allow it to seep into him. His feet, his legs, his fingers, even his thoughts, were reckless.
I know they’re going to find me. I just know it. Then they’re going to hook me up to the Recalibration Machine again.
But that day he didn’t care about a single thing. He was mad with life. Life was mad in his veins. Life was livid in his veins. 
Everything spoke to him. The birds’ songs were like shrilly operas stuck in fortissimo. The creek sneaking along by his side crackled and popped the way a long-asleep radio wakes up hungry and eager to play. The wind in the pines moaned softly like a lonely lover. 
Then it happened.
He felt dizzy at first, his head so light he thought it might float away. Something surged inside him that could have been swallowed lightning, rising, writhing, and climbing up to his head.
The memory came.
Memories were demons; they were even more forbidden than being all alone; they were not allowed to even start. When they went in for their weekly screening, any evidence of memories prior to the Anti-Emotion Movement was immediately erased. It was for their own good. Really. They had to believe in the Overseers. They gave them everything, and asked for so little in return. The Overseers picked them up after the Great Fog.
He just stood there and could not stop the memory. Oh, it was so warm. That swallowed lightning curled up, balled up in his head and took to nuclear fusion, forming a miniature sun to melt all the work of the entire Overseers’ brilliant technology.
But what an afternoon it was.
The first flash was of shiny boxes wrapped in fancy bows under a tree that someone had stuck in a living room. What a bizarre image. Why would someone put a perfectly good tree in a living room? Perfect madness. Perfect madness, indeed. And the poor, poor tree.
The tree was wrapped with winking lights, and as he stood there, letting this memory take root, he could see the pines around him dressed the same. They were beautiful, and he overflowed with the urge to take all the pines in the forest, shrink them down, and put them into everyone’s homes.
Ridiculous. Utterly ridiculous.
He heard footsteps, and the beautiful, horrible, absurd memory vanished. The memory vanished like the scent of a woman riding with you on a train—a woman you know you will never see again.
He waited for the Goth Town Police to arrest him. And he cherished those seconds as the taste of a curious and wild memory remained for a few seconds on his lips. Those few seconds were more blissful than the rambunctious air that crept all through the forest that afternoon and shot rays of perilous hope into everything. In those few seconds, he tried to chase the echo that was home to that taste. That scent of a woman on a train. He tried to return to it with the desperation of a legless man waking from a Boston Marathon dream.
But at least the taste was there when they handcuffed him.
At least the flicker.
A gray haunt … at least …
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jesse Giles Christiansen is an American author who writes compelling literary fiction that weaves the real with the surreal. He attended Florida State University where he received his B.A. in English literature. He is the author of PELICAN BAY, an Amazon #1 list bestseller, outselling Old Man and the Sea by Hemingway. He's just released what is one of the most unique Christmas stories in years, GOTH TOWN
One of Christiansen's literary goals is to write at least fifty novels, and he always reminds himself of something that Ray Bradbury once said: "You fail only if you stop writing."

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PELICAN BAY (The Captain Shelby Trilogy Book 1)

  
“Christiansen offers a tale sure to entrance readers—a story of love and wisdom and the mystery of a forgotten graveyard under the waters of PELICAN BAY.”” – Man Martin, author of Paradise Dogs

Some things are better left alone

After Ethan Hodges discovers an undersea cemetery just off the beach of Pelican Bay, South Carolina, he seeks answers from a grandfatherly fisherman named Captain Shelby. The captain wants the past to remain buried, and he warns Ethan to stay away. But Ethan doesn't listen.

Ethan's best friend and secret love interest, Morgan Olinsworth, joins in the investigation, unearthing intriguing secrets about the mysterious fisherman. When Captain Shelby is suspected of murder and disappears, a manhunt ensues, revealing a truth that unnerves everyone in Pelican Bay.