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Dark Communion by CJ Perry @goddessfish @DarkCommunion

By Lauriej
Dark Communion by CJ Perry @goddessfish @DarkCommunion
Dark Communion by CJ Perry @goddessfish @DarkCommunionDark Communionby CJ Perry
Dark Communion by CJ Perry @goddessfish @DarkCommunionGENRE:  epic fantasy
BLURB:
The minotaurs have kept Ayla and Deetra's people in chains for 200 years. With nothing left to live for, and a death sentence in her womb, Ayla trades her soul for a chance to break the curse which holds her people in slavery. Armed only with her faith, she and Deetra start a revolution, and bring about the return of the Goddess of Darkness.
EXCERPT
The minotaur caught up to Deetra and pushed her down into the sand. Deetra rolled away, but he stood over her, menacing and taunting her. She kicked out at his crotch but missed.
Ayla gave the heavy iron bars a futile shake. “Open this! Now! DEETRAA!”
Alex pried Ayla's hands off the gate and held them. “You can't save her! We have to go, now!”
Ayla snatched her hands away from him. Deetra screamed from the arena floor and the crowd cheered. Ayla turned to look but Alex grabbed her again, by the shoulders.
“We have time to run, but only if we leave now!”
“Get off of me!” Ayla slapped Alex in the mouth. He recoiled and held a hand where she hit him. Ayla pushed him by the chest and accused the other men in the ready room with her eyes.
“Open it.”
Butch pushed between the others and shoved Alex out of the way.
“You heard the Priestess.”
Ayla eyed him as he bent at the knees. He gripped the bottom bar of the portcullis and rolled his shoulders to ready himself.
“My people are still loyal to the Night Goddess.”
The other men lined up on either side of him.
Ayla gave Alex a stern look. “Are mine?”
He shook his head, defeated, and took his place next to Butch. “We’re gonna die.”




AUTHOR Bio and Links:
My deep and abiding love of fantasy began when I was six when I first saw the 1981 film Dragonslayer on VHS with my father. He loved fantasy movies too, but didn’t have the courage to be a dork about it like I did. That movie was a gateway drug that led me straight to the hard stuff - CS Lewis. I was far too young for such potency but by the time I was ten I had read the whole series. That’s when I found my first Dungeons and Dragons group. When I started playing, my friends and I used pre-made campaign settings and published adventures, but I quickly grew restless with their limitations and trite story lines. I needed my own persistent world: something adaptable to my whim and that no one else owned.
Back in my day, there was no internet, so I took out every book about castles and medieval history from the school library and read them in Math class (I'm still terrible at math as a result). I came up with an entire world and brand new history. I read books on cartography and hand drew maps of my new world. I created a cosmology, a hierarchy of gods, and the tenets of their religions. I read the Dungeon Master's guide a dozen times, and every fantasy novel I could get my hands on.
Then, one day, I sat down and told my friends, "Hey guys, wanna try my story instead?" Even 15 years after the original D&D campaigns ended, former players tell me that they share our incredible stories with their children. I'm honored to say that most of those players still have their original character sheets 16-20 years later, and a couple have even named their children after them.
Now, I'm 39 years old and a loving father of 2 girls, and I still play those games on occasion. My passion has evolved into putting those ideas and amazing stories on paper for the whole world to enjoy. My first novel took me and co-author DC Fergerson 10 years to write and topped out at 180,000 words. Being too long and too complex, I finally ended the project and took its lessons to heart.
I learned that Dungeons & Dragons did not translate well into a novel. D&D made for great times, but also for some meandering plot lines, pointless encounters, and poor character motivations. No matter how memorable some of the moments were, if I wanted anyone to read my story, I needed to learn a lot more about writing.
I threw myself into being a full time student of novel crafting. I read every book on writing by Dwight Swain I could find. I paid Chuck Sambuchino (Editor for Writer's Digest) to critique and edit my older work. I took James Patterson's Masterclass, went to college, and joined online writing communities. All the while, I read my favorite fantasy novels again, only this time with a mental highlighter. I reworked my stories, outlined them, and decided to start from the beginning.
Many, many years later, I am in the final edit and proofreading stage of Dark Communion, the first installment of the Shadowalker Chronicles. My role as a father of two girls heavily influenced the characters I’d known for over 20 years, shaping them into women that my own daughters could respect. My characters took on a depth and quality that brings them off the page and into the minds of readers, because they have become all too real. I was privileged enough to work on two careers at the same time to accomplish this feat - a fun-loving and involved stay-at-home dad, and a full time writer.
Links:https://artofthearcane.wordpress.com/http://www.cjperry.net/https://twitter.com/DarkCommunionhttps://www.facebook.com/DarkCommunion/Amazon pre-purchase link:https://www.amazon.com/Dark-Communion-Preview-Godswar-Chronicles-ebook/dp/B01L2T0LU6/
TENS LIST
What are your 10 most favorite books?My Side of the Mountain   This book reminds me of life in the Catskill Mountains of New York. I grew up there and spent plenty of time in the woods, so I felt like Sam and I had a lot in common. I tried to make acorn pancakes once – it was pretty gross.Dune   The main character Paul goes from displaced royalty to the messiah of an entire universe. It’s one thing to change the course of one world, but to change the course of hundreds is amazing. There’s epic sci-fi and then there’s Dune. It was published in ‘65 but still feels modern no matter when you read it.When True Night Falls   There is no darker anti-hero than Gerald Tarrant. Eyes of the Dragon   Stephen King tried his hand at fantasy and it was outstanding. I loved this book as a kid, and the villain Flagg, has appeared in other stories like The Stand. It was the second fantasy book I ever read. Firestarter   King really illustrated what raising a little girl pyrokineticist would be like. Imagine waking up to your child screaming because she lit her own hair on fire. He compares her “fire training” to toilet training and makes Charlie a completely believeable and loveable character. Not only that, but King had the courage to take the story all the way. He didnt shy from the making Charlie that badass she needed to be. The Soulforge   If you’re a fan of Dragonlance, how can you not love Raistlin’s origin story?Dragons of Autumn Twilight   I wrote an in-depth review of this book for my blog. It was my first foray into fantasy and I absolutely loved it. I must have read this book a hundred times. Test of the Twins   This was an amazing book.The Gunslinger   The Man in Black fled across the desert and the Gonslinger followed. The most epic first line ever… followed by a haunting story that leaves you somehow satisfied with having more questions in the end than you started with. Motherhood   It’s an alien abduction story that pulls no punches. Too often the abduction is a plot device, and not the plot itself. Motherhood finally pulls back the curtain and takes you through the journey of an abductee. For a short book, it explores so many themes and addresses so many questions about things like consent and societies treatment of the mentally ill.  Lindsey Williams is an amazing author.
GIVEAWAY
CJ Perry will be awarding a $10 and a $20 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to two randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter during the tour.
a Rafflecopter giveaway

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