Jungle Beauty Goddesses Series:
Pretty
Blue, Aquatic Ball, Dirty Ball
by C. G. Sturges
Jungle Beauty
Goddesses
“Pretty Blue” Book 1
If you were given
planet Earth as a gift to develop its life forms—would the world be a better
place than it is today? What would your primary expectation and goal be for
each human? Would you give them free will or plan their destiny? Would you
demand that your humans worship you as their creator? Would you be available to
assuage their every desire; and acquiesce to their demands, prayers, and
wishes? Would you grow to resent them for living the life you imagined?
The Jungle Beauty
Goddesses were free-spirited goddesses who enjoyed their freedom as the youngest
children—and the last deities born to their parents—creators of the universe.
Per the family tradition of being awarded a planet, the septuplets were given planet
Earth as a gift for their birthday. Their siblings, also gods and goddesses of
the universe since the beginning of time, warn them about the challenges of
selflessness, power, worship, and divine duty.
The seven sisters
struggle to maintain their own freedom as limitless beings, while sibling
rivalry makes it difficult to accept their collective duty to fulfill the
family obligation to the deity-hood as creators for planets.
The entire universe
threatens to collapse due to their negligence and disobedience. They question
the boundaries of their divine powers as they ponder whether it is possible to
mold a being to be superior to its creator.
Jungle Beauty
Goddesses
“Aquatic Ball” Book 2
Sometimes your worst
nightmare is having everything you ever wanted. Upon visiting planet Earth, the
Jungle Beauty Goddesses discover that the life forms they created are in danger
of extinction, and an unforeseen dominant species has positioned itself to take
dominion.
Unprepared and
disillusioned about how to access their highest vibrational frequency; the
Jungle Beauty Goddesses face their own demise.
The only way they can
save themselves, their planet, and ultimately the universe is by managing to
align with their deity powers and the wisdom of their highest selves in the
face of their worst fears, disappointments, and betrayals.
If you had the power
to make anyone in the world fall in love with you—would you? Jungle Beauty
Goddess Afar revokes her deity vows and takes her destiny into her own hands by
participating in the life she was born to create for others.
Afar embraces the
deepest, darkest nuances of her shadow self with brutality, dignity, and
integrity. She brazenly unleashes the murkiest qualities of the human condition
and leaves the chaos for her unsuspecting sisters to clean up or suffer the consequences
of losing the planet given to them by their parents--creators of the universe.
Jungle Beauty Goddess
Afar’s actions give a new meaning to the saying, “Hell has no fury like a woman
scorned.”
Excerpt:
“They will never have to worry about
a male demanding to be let into their being or feeling betrayed by another
female who decides to do so. Their fishtails represent the wholeness of
femininity; nothing can be taken away or added to who they are as complete
beings. They are capable of reproducing themselves without males. I have
decided that ten percent of the hybrid fish human water beings will be males;
however, they will not be capable of reproducing, and they will only be attracted
to other males. This is the best way for me to control masculine energy so that
it aligns with feminine power and domination.” Afar continued to style the hair
on various heads, never looking up at Mada.
Swish. Bloop. Engh.Engh. Engh.
Swoosh. Blurp. Blurp. Sheesh. Sheesh. Bloop. Engh.Engh. Engh.
The loud silence of the hybrid half
fish half human beings, swimming in the aquariums, fills the air in the room
between Afar and Mada.
Mada walks around the table to Afar,
places his hands on her shoulders, pulls her close to him, and asks, “Why are
you so aloof, distant, and cold?”
“You mean like your kisses,
dahling?” Afar quipped, looking deeply into Mada’s eyes.
“What happened to you? Have you gone
mad?...Where is the woman? I fell in love with? Hhmm?” Mada asked.
“Under the apple tree waiting for
the man who promised to adore her, pacing back and forth searching for him
night after night, year after year; listening to the echo of his voice in her
head promising that he would love only her,” Afar says nonchalantly before
laughing deeply. “She is where you left her, dahling.”
Interview
with C. G. Sturges
Who
is your favorite author and why?
Delores Cannon is my favorite author. I read books 1, 2,
and I am currently reading book 3 of the Convoluted Universe series. I love
reading stories about past lives and how they impact our current life decisions
and choices. I love learning about different galaxies and life forms throughout
the universe. Many of her clients have had experiences with aliens and other
entities from different realms. In Ms. Cannon’s books she does past life
regression readings with people all over the world who share stories that are
fascinating proof that we are multidimensional beings.
What,
in your opinion, are the most important elements of good writing?
Good writing is telling the truth even if it hurts—even
if it makes others squirm—it needs to be told. Raw unfiltered honesty is the
most important element in writing to me. I think it is so important to convey
the emotional and psychological nuances of your characters. If I can’t get
inside of the character’s head, I have a hard time getting into the book. Good
writing has something to say that causes
another human being to laugh, cry, blush, feel aroused, irritated or
angry. I need to feel something! It doesn’t matter if I agree with the writer
or character. Good writing downloads a story from the collective unconscious
into our consciousness and brings it to life inside of our imagination.
Where
did you get the idea for this book?
I started making life-size cloth dolls in my mid-forties
unexpectedly. The cloth dolls were extremely opinionated and bossy about how
they wanted to look; and many of them shared stories with me about their
lives. The entire idea for the Jungle
Beauty Goddesses came to me in a dream and I realized that the life-size dolls
that I was making were characters in my book series. I had dream about seven
little girls flying around in space with their father. I woke up, meditated,
and journaled. I learned that there would be seven books. I had never written
fiction in my life and didn’t see how this idea would come to fruition. Here I
am now 7 years later, in my mid-fifties, writing fiction, and marketing the
Jungle Beauty Goddess books series for the first time.
AUTHOR Bio
and Links:
Cassandra
George Sturges is the author of "A Woman's Soul on Paper,"
"Success & Beauty is an Attitude," "The Illusion of Beauty:
Why Women Hate Themselves & Envy Other Women," and "Why Racism is
a Mental Illness." For many years, she was an advice columnist for Today's
Black Woman Magazine and is currently a full-time psychology and sociology
professor at a college in the mid-west. She is a high school dropout who
graduated with her General Education Diploma and eventually earned five college
degrees including two masters and a doctorate degree. In her late forties, she
began making life-size fabric sculpture, cloth dolls that turned out to be the
main characters in her Jungle Beauty Goddesses coming of age, modern creation
Nubian Mythology fantasy fiction, sensuous, romantic series. She is the mother
of two adult children, a grandmother, and for over 20-years has shared her life
with her twin flame.
Cassandra
George Sturges Social Media Links:
Giveaway:
$50 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.
5 comments:
Do you let your friends and family read early drafts of your book?
Sounds like a great book.
Great cover, thanks for sharing!
Thanks so much for sharing your book and for the giveaway also. Greatly appreciated!
Thank you so much for sharing your platform with my Jungle Beauty Goddesses Book Series. Much appreciated :)
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