Mark of the Dragon
by JW
Troemner
GENRE: Urban
Fantasy
BLURB:
Rosario
Hernandez doesn't ask for much. She'd like to sleep on a bed instead of a
sidewalk, to know where her next meal is coming from, and maybe, if she's really
feeling optimistic, to get a girlfriend. More than anything, though, she wants
her best friend Arkay to not murder anyone— because Arkay is a dragon, claws
and all, and she has a penchant for vigilante justice. When Arkay's latest
escapade goes sour, Rosario gets stuck with a stolen van and a cooler full of
human organs. Now they're on the run, and it's not just the cops who want
answers. The owner of the cooler is still out there, and they want to replace
what they've lost— by any means necessary.
Excerpt:
The
Cooler:
“What
have ya got there?” Raimo asked when his inspection reached the back of the
van.
“No
clue,” I said, coming around front. “The guy we got this from said he was
delivering something.”
“Like
what, a case of beer?” He tipped the box back a few inches, and it made a wet
gravelly sound. “It looks like a cooler.”
“Must
have been some excellent beer,” I said, tapping the padlock that sealed the
lid. “You don’t get ice boxes like this at Walmart.”
An
excited grin crossed Raimo’s face. “Let’s find out, shall we? Give me a
second.” He vanished into the garage and came out with what I could only
describe as a murder weapon. “Watch your fingers, Hiccup.”
This
wasn’t a friendly little set of bolt cutters. It had wicked blades nearly as
long as “Isn’t that a bit excessive?” I asked.
“I
know, right?” he squealed. “I just got her in. Isn’t she gorgeous? I’m going to
call her Matilda.”
“Ooh,
did Raimo get a new toy?” Arkay called from inside. “I wanna see!” She bounded out to join us, bits of moisture
still dripping down from her damp hair.
The
padlock could probably have been pulled off with a solid pull, but Raimo caught
the remaining sliver of metal between Matilda’s jaws with an almost dainty
twist. Another roar, and the pieces fell away.
“All
right,” Arkay said, taking the lid with both hands. “Let’s see what we’ve got
here.”
Matilda
hit the floor with a solid thunk as Raimo stumbled back. “Jesus Christ!”
It
took me a moment longer to make sense of the metallic, meaty smell and the
sudden flash of red.
Interview with JW Troemner
What inspired you to write Urban Dragon?
As
much as I love horror and urban fantasy, a lot of times I’d find myself rooting
for the monster instead of the heroes—weirdly often, I’d see a monster that
wasn’t actually hurting anybody until the intrepid heroes outed it, invaded its
territory, or actively started attacking it because it looked scary. How many
of these monsters would meet up at Werewolves Anonymous or whatever and share
stories? “So there I was, minding my own business, when these human weirdos
started shouting Latin at me and tried to light me on fire…”
When or at what age did you know you
wanted to be a writer?
Probably
in the fourth grade.
I
got put in a group project with my crush, and our assignment was to figure out
how we would go about colonizing Venus (we had a great teacher). We had so much
fun doing it that I started writing a story based on our colonization plan, and
he would illustrate what I’d written. So naturally, I kept writing just as an
excuse to keep him talking to me and drawing my characters.
I
got a slow dance out of it at the end of the year, so I’d call that one a
success.
What is the earliest age you remember
reading your first book?
Actually
reading? Maybe four or five. I used to climb into a tree with my favorite
picture books and read there. And sometimes I’d fall out of said tree, because
climbing with a bunch of books in hand is probably not the best idea anybody’s
ever had.
Maybe
that’s where Arkay gets her love of climbing.
What genre of books do you enjoy reading?
Speculative
fiction. Pretty much everything I read for pleasure is either sci-fi or fantasy
in one way or another. The genre can encompass the best parts of every other
genre and then make it even better.
Do
you like murder mysteries? The Dresden
Files has a murder mystery with fairies.
Historical
romance? Add magic powers and a nation-crippling curse, and you’ve got The Wrath and the Dawn.
Coming-of-age
family drama? Angie Sandro’s Dark
Paradise has that, but also with voodoo.
You
can do the same thing but in space, or with time travel, or post-apocalyptic,
or whatever, and every new combination brings with it a new spin on the old
tropes.
What is your favorite book?
At
the moment? Definitely An Ember in the
Ashes by Sabaa Tahir. The book is gut-wrenchingly brutal at times, but the
world is fascinating and the characters make my heart ache.
You know I think we all have a favorite author. Who is your favorite author and
why?
Terry
Pratchett.
His
characters were wonderful, his worlds were vivid and impossibly detailed, and
if snark was a sport, he’d be barred from Olympics so the rest of us mortals
could have a shot.
But
I think the thing that resonates most with me is that his books are
simultaneously infused with so much anger at the shortcomings of the world and
this indomitable faith in the human spirit. His last books, especially, seemed
to ride on an undercurrent of awe at all the amazing things people could
accomplish if they just got half a chance.
If you could travel back in time here on earth to any place or time. Where
would you go and why?
I
feel like I have a moral responsibility to go back to 1921 or so and kill
Hitler. And while I’m at it, probably Goering and Goebbels and a few others,
because what kind of responsible adult leaves a job like that half done?
If
he’s taken, I don’t think anybody would complain if I threw Columbus overboard.
On
second thought, maybe I shouldn’t be allowed to have a time machine. There’s
just too much temptation to go back and try to fix things, and we all know what
that does to the time stream.
When writing a book do you find that writing comes easy for you or is it a
difficult task?
Getting
words on paper by itself can range from easy to grueling, but on the whole,
creating a book is freaking hard. It’s kind of like assembling a piece of IKEA
furniture when you don’t have the instructions and you don’t even necessarily
know what kind of furniture it is. There are so many interlocking parts that
need to be put together just right. Sometimes you spend all your time
assembling what you swear is a couch and it turns out to have been a coffee
table the whole time—but hey, it’s one heck of a great coffee table.
Do you have any little fuzzy friends? Like a dog or a cat? Or any pets?
I
have a cat named George and two dogs, Baldur and Freya, who are all on the
patently huge end of the spectrum, and who all believe that their rightful
place on this earth is squarely on the lap of the nearest human.
What is your "to
die for", favorite food/foods to eat?
There’s
not one food in particular that stands out, so much as a flavor. I’m a nut for
pretty much anything spicy. The hotter, the better.
At
one point I infused a bunch of oil with ghost and scorpion peppers to make what
I lovingly called my “zombie scorpion oil”, which I then used in cooking pretty
much any meal I was going to eat on my own. Friends and family couldn’t even be
in the house while I was preparing food with it, because the fumes were just
that bad.
Do you have any advice for anyone that would like to be an author?
The story you tell might not
be the one that every reader needs to read. That’s fine. Tell the story that you need to tell.
AUTHOR BIO:
JW
Troemner was born in Germany and immigrated to the United States, where she
lives with her partner in a house full of pets. Most days she can be found
gazing longingly at sinkholes and abandoned buildings.
Giveaway:
$25 Amazon/BN.com GC
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.
16 comments:
Thank you so much for hosting me today, Nancy!
If you could spend a sunny day anywhere how would your perfect day look like?
congrats on the tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
Great interview! Thank you for sharing it with us, good luck with the release and with the book tour! :)
Enjoyed the excerpt and interview. Thanks for the giveaway chance.
Thank you for the excerpt.
Great post, I enjoyed reading both the excerpt and interview. Thanks for sharing :)
Thank you for your question, Mai!
If it could be anywhere, I'd probably spend that day in the Black Forest in Germany. I got the opportunity to go there to do some research for the sixth book in this series. It's a beautiful place.
Lisa, Thank you!
And Clojo, it's great to see you again. How are you doing?
Marcy, Rita, Victoria, thank you for reading!
It's 3 AM over here, so I'll be turning in for the night. Thank you again for having me!
A great interview. I'm glad you got your slow dance.
This book sounds like something I'd really enjoy reading, thank you for sharing!
Shared on G+ to help spread the word, have a great day!
Thank you, Mary! I'm glad I did, too.
Nikolina, thank you so much for spreading the word!
Congrats on the new book and good luck on the book tour!
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