Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Virtual Book Tour + #Giveaway: The Variant Conspiracy Trilogy by Christine Hart @chris_a_hart @GoddessFish


THE VARIANT CONSPIRACY TRILOGY

Christine Hart

GENRE: SciFi Romance


BLURBS:


Series

What if the men destroying our world were doing it on purpose? The Variant Conspiracy trilogy follows 19-year-old Irina Proffer as she connects the dots between her cryptic employer's work and an international plot to transform Earth. All while she navigates love and grief, both for the first time.

As Irina comes of age within a subculture of human mutation, she and her friends hunt a group of corporate eco-saboteurs. They discover a singular ancient evil that wants nothing more than to wipe out all life and remake our planet. As Irina pieces together visions of the future, she must figure out a way to change an outcome that seems ‌inevitable



Book 1: In Irina's Cards


Irina Proffer leaves mundane small-town life behind when she experiences visions inspired by a strange deck of tarot cards. To get answers, she travels from her northern British Columbia home to the province’s coastal capital. She quickly discovers a world of fringe genetic science and supernatural mystery.

Working for Innoviro Industries, Irina is drawn in by a powerful first love and compelling, yet dangerous questions about the nature of the company’s business. Meeting other ‘variants’ brings Irina closer and closer to the dark truth about her origins. She finds herself at the heart of two overlapping love triangles as she scrambles to escape her employer’s grip.

Before she leaves the city, Irina realizes she has merely scratched the surface of a frightening conspiracy on a global scale.



Book 2: The Compendium


Irina and her renegade variant friends are scrambling to pick up the trail of their former employer, Ivan, and his globally catastrophic scheme. After strategically sharing their story with the media, the group heads south from Vancouver to Seattle hoping to recruit more experienced - and lethal - variants to their cause.

Their attention develops a laser focus on an engineered disaster mere days ahead of them. Ivan is using what staff and resources remain of Innoviro Industries to set off a violent earthquake in San Francisco. While they fight to stop the earthquake, Irina pushes the love of her life Jonah as far away as she can, trying to keep his unstable genetic degradation in check.

Irina's friends think they've seen the worst that Innoviro could bring forth by the time they reach a secret facility in the Mojave Desert. As they near the property, the group uncovers a horror none of them had ever imagined.



Book 3: Terra Nova


The end of humanity and an unrecognizable future Earth are now days away. After their first glimpse of the Terra Nova virus, Irina and her variant friends know their former employer’s plans are almost at hand. Their failed attempt to publicize Ivan and Innoviro Industries’ horrific activities has left them utterly reliant on their own wits and weapons.

After surviving a catastrophic earthquake in San Francisco and destroying a secret viral testing facility, Irina’s crew has traveled by a variant portal to London. On the other side of the world, they begin tracking when and where Terra Nova will be unleashed on the world. They know stopping Terra Nova is only the beginning of unraveling Ivan’s plans to reinvent the planet, but if they can’t stop this virus, there will be no one left to save.



Excerpt from Terra Nova:

I surveyed the dark London alley, its air heavy with odors of fat and fuel. Go-go boys gyrated in the window of a dance club across the adjacent street. Club music reverberated off the buildings around me while I pulled my boyfriend Jonah through an interspatial portal.

Welcome to Soho,” I said.

Our former co-worker Melissa gave him a half smile. Jonah rubbed his arctic blue eyes. In the dark alley, his black hair glistened like wet ink. He stood tall beside me, gripping my shoulders protectively as though he didn’t trust our surroundings. I still smelled the dust of the Mojave Desert and the soot from the trailer fire on his damp T-shirt.

Wild. We’re really in London.” He smiled down at me. “What is Soho?”

It used to be the red-light district.” Melissa unzipped and stepped out of her dusty dirt-biking pants. She discarded them in the back corner of the alley. Her remaining clothes were a simple white waffle shirt and denim shorts. She unraveled her disheveled hair and re-wound her bun carefully.

That’s why Evonatura chose it. You can have an interesting cast of characters like variants and all their weird and wonderful talents in this neighborhood without standing out too much.”

My friend Faith stepped through the portal and nearly bumped into Jonah. She stumbled forward. Her purple dreadlocks picked up a shaft of electric blue from a black light across the street.



Interview with Christine Hart

    What is your favorite part of the book?

    I love speculative stories that blur the line between fantasy and science fiction. That’s something I tried to achieve with this trilogy. I love world-building that takes something fantastic and shows the reader a bit of science behind the curtain. If a character can perform magic or has superpowers, I want to know how it works. I want to believe it could be real, in our world. I think that’s why I prefer mutants to monsters.

    In Book 1, In Irina’s Cards, there is a conversation between Irina and her long-lost twin brother Ilya, in which he explains the difference between her psychic ability and his telepathy. She also discovers documentation from her employer explaining the difference between naturally born mutants and genetically created ones. In the latter case, the books include characters who were engineered before birth and some who underwent transformations as young adults. The story doesn’t include hard science, but my intention was for the reader to feel like that information was in a database or filing cabinet, somewhere just beyond the characters’ reach.


    Does your book have a lesson? Moral?

    Irina is an underdog protagonist. And even once she teams up with fellow variants, they face an uphill battle. The books pit young idealists against an evil corporation, within the context of global environmental welfare at stake. I don’t think the story teaches a lesson as much as it satisfies readers who want corporate polluters to face actual justice and permanent consequences.


    Are your characters based off real people or did they all come entirely from your imagination?

    Irina is partly a younger version of me. But she faces circumstances, hardships, and losses that I didn’t. Her friends, co-workers, and allies are all snapshots of people I’ve known, combined with other characters from film and television, but nothing as concrete as replicating an entire person. For me, part of the fun of world-building is crafting people from scratch too.


    Of all the characters you have created, which is your favorite and why?

    I feel closest to Irina, because of all the characters in this series, she has the biggest piece of me. I don’t feel like she’s my favorite, but I do love that I was able to give her abilities and experiences that I’ll never have. In that light, every character in the books, even the villains, has powers I find interesting or impressive.


    What character in your book are you least likely to get along with?

    I would have a hard time getting along with Melissa. She is proper, conventional, and emotionally withdrawn, although she and Irina warm up to each other eventually. But Melissa is loyal to Innoviro Industries, and its CEO, Ivan, far longer than she should have been. My kids would call her a ‘Karen’ even though I did redeem her in Book 2, The Compendium.


    What would the main character in your book have to say about you?

    If Irina met me, she would see a mother rather than a peer. But I think she would appreciate my creative lifestyle and alternative artwork. We both occupy a space on the cultural spectrum that exists on the non-conformist side.


    Do you want each book to stand on its own, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?

    Most of my work is set in or around the Canadian province of British Columbia. I try to keep my style and themes consistent, as a woman, mother, and speculative fiction writer. But beyond that, my books and short stories mostly stand on their own.

    I have dabbled in connections between stories. In collection I’m releasing next year, I have a short story, “Lunar Bloom”, that features characters from my debut YA novel, Watching July. It’s not a sequel in any way. I just wanted to experiment with that interconnectivity. I wanted to find those characters again, nearly two decades after I created them, and see what life had brought them and how they would respond to an entirely new incident.







AUTHOR Bio and Links:

Christine Hart is a writer of speculative fiction for youth and adults. She also runs an online metalsmithing shop, Hart Fabrications.

Christine’s backlist includes YA, NA, and MG titles. Her first collection of adult fiction, Weird Stories of Strange Women, is coming in 2026.

When not writing, she creates wearable art from recycled metals, vintage glass, and unusual gemstones. She shares her eclectic home with her husband and two children.

Learn more about Christine and her work at hart-fabrications.com and christine-hart.ca.

Connect with Christine Hart

Bluesky ~ Instagram ~ TikTok ~ Amazon



 

Giveaway:


$20 Amazon/BN GC





Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.


49 comments:

Goddess Fish Promotions said...

Thank you so much for featuring THE VARIANT CONSPIRACY TRILOGY.

Marcy Meyer said...

Sounds like a good trilogy.

traciem said...

What's your ultimate summer writing anthem- a song that gets the creativity flowing?

Christine Hart said...

Great question! I've been listening to a lot of Folk Rock at the moment, specifically Yaelokre, First Aid Kit, Hozier, and Paris Paloma. If I had to pick just one song, I think Labour is the one that churns up the most feeling.

Christine Hart said...

Thank you Avid Reader for hosting my trilogy today!

Pippirose said...

The book sounds like an intriguing read. Great cover.

Sherry said...

This looks like a very good book.

Michael Law said...

This looks like a fantastic read. Thanks for sharing.

LV said...

Sounds like a great read. Thanks for sharing.

Daniel M said...

looks like a fun one.

Rita Wray said...

I liked the excerpt.

LV said...

What is your favorite season?

Christine Hart said...

Summer, hands down. I grew up in one of the hottest parts of Canada and I still live for the really warm days.

LV said...

What are your thoughts about a rainy day?

Christine Hart said...

I like rainy days, which works well living on the West Coast. I like to stay in on rainy days, but we get so many that we have to give our umbrellas and rain boots a workout too.

LV said...

Do you prefer to relax by the pool or spend the afternoon hiking in the woods?

sohamolina said...

Question for Author--What inspired you to become a writer?

Christine Hart said...

That's a tough one, because I enjoy both. But staying active is important to me, so I'd probably pick hiking.

Christine Hart said...

I took a wandering path to get here. I went to uni intending to become a lawyer, but I shifted to professional writing and communications, planning to become a technical writer. It wasn't until my mid-twenties that I finally gave fiction a try. And I'm glad I did!

sohamolina said...

Question for Author-- What are some of your favorite books to read?

Christine Hart said...

I choose my next read a few different ways. I love SFF, so I often see a new title on social media that grabs my attention because of a quirky speculative premise. Sometimes I pick up a book that one of my kids is reading. (They're 10 and 13 starting the summer with Percy Jackson and The Maze Runner.) And I also belong to a book club, which is great for getting me out of my comfort zone and reading something I normally wouldn't pick up.

LV said...

What is your favorite season for writing?

Christine Hart said...

I try to write year round, but I think I'm most productive in the fall. It must be the back-to-school energy in my house. Everyone is motivated.

LV said...

Do you prefer to write in the day light hours or night time?

LV said...

I hope everyone has a wonderful weekend.

LV said...

Do you prefer the beach or the pool?

Christine Hart said...

I used to rely on writing at night when I worked full-time. But now that I'm older, I get too tired to write at night. 10am to 2pm works best now.

Christine Hart said...

Beach for sure. I think lake and ocean beaches are tied though. :)

LV said...

Do you have any plans for the 4th of July?

Christine Hart said...

I'm in Canada and our holiday is on the 1st. But plans are not all that different. Usually a bbq, maybe a fireworks display. I promised my kids we'd get sparklers.

LV said...

I hope you are enjoying the Canadian holiday. Be safe.

Christine Hart said...

We are having a good one! I hope yours is fun too. 🫶

LV said...

Was there another author who inspired you to write?

Christine Hart said...

I've been inspired by a lot of authors over the years. But the most inspiring moment I remember goes back to my university years. I was completing an English and Professional Writing degree to work in communications. I had no intention of writing fiction. Working for the university, I interviewed Eden Robinson for a graduate profile. And after the interview was over, I asked her how she kept going after a bad grade or a bad review. She told me to do it anyway. I loved that simple idea that you can trust your own judgement enough to persevere through tough feedback. It took me a few more years to even try fiction. But I never forgot that conversation.

LV said...

Is this your first piece to be published?

sohamolina said...

How do you handle writer's block?

LV said...

I hope everyone has a safe 4th of July.

sohamolina said...

How did you choose the title for the book?

Anonymous said...

This trilogy were the 4th, 5th, and 6th books for me.

Anonymous said...

I've always said that overcoming writer's block is a case of mind over matter. I sit down to write and make something happen, knowing that I'll go back and revise again and again.

Anonymous said...

I sometimes choose story or book titles because I like the cadence of the phrase. I think In Irina's Cards was one of those.

LV said...

Happy Saturday! Time for a good book.

LV said...

How do you name your characters?

LV said...

Do you plan any future sequels?

LV said...

How do you begin writing a book like this?

sohamolina said...

Thank you for sharing

LV said...

Do you have any hobbies beyond writing?

LV said...

Dogs or cats?

LV said...

Did you grow up in the city?