Monday, May 2, 2022

The Raven and the Pig by Lou Kemp



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Lou Kemp will be awarding a $25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner, a 2nd randomly drawn winner a mug and pen with the book image and a 3rd randomly drawn winner will win a eBook via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Why do you write in your genre? What draws you to it?

Process of elimination partly. I hate straight fiction, and non-fiction, or anything that is more about emotions than it is about a great plot. Seeing something you’ve always wondered about (you know magic exists… it is real….), or could imagine as being more than you see is like an unending Christmas present. Wide-eyed wonder will envelop you and is something you can reread any time you want.

What research (or world-building – for fantasy/paranormal/Sci-fi) is required?

None, I just sat down with some great atmospheric music, and emptied my mind until Celwyn walked in. He’d already named himself. I do research some of the locations, which are real life, for local color.

Name one thing you learned from your hero/heroine.

To share, not keep the danger for myself, let the exhilaration fly everywhere for everyone.

Do you have any odd or interesting writing quirks, habits or superstitions?

Nice question. Initially, it has to be written long-hand with a quality fountain pen in black ink

Are you a plotter or pantser?

Pantster, all the way. What fun is it knowing ahead of time what will happen?

Look to your right – what’s sitting there?

A wall. If you had said straight ahead, it would have been a fat cat that wouldn’t move from in front of my screen.

Anything new coming up from you? What?

Celwyn and his crew continue their adventurers. I’m working on book six now. They travel west to the Spanish coast and confront something that has bedeviled and terrorized Nemo for a long time.

Do you have a question for our readers?

Yes. I call the Celwyn series a steampunk adventure mystery, with a bit of romance thrown in. What do you call it?

As the music dies, the magician Celwyn is mortally wounded. His darker, immortal brother Pelaez brings him back, barely, with his magic. The party of protagonists travel on the Nautilus to the Cape Verde Islands and the healer of immortals. During the journey, Professor Kang and Bartholomew can not tell if Pelaez will keep his brother alive. Captain Nemo is ready to evict Pelaez forcibly, and keeping Celwyn alive is the only thing that restrains him.

After Celwyn is saved, the healer requests payment for his services. This sends the adventurers to the catacombs in Capuchin where their experience is one they will not forget. Before it is over, several of the protagonists question why it seems everyone from warlocks and vampires to witches, seem to be congregating in their world. Before it is over, some of them become surprising allies, and a few of their allies turn against them.

In part II, work on the new flying machine begins in earnest bringing attention from the Mafioso and a cherub-like warlock called Duncan. After a final battle with Duncan, the flying machine is destroyed and everyone at their compound is murdered by one of their own.




Read an Excerpt

Prelude
The rolling hills near Odessa, north of Constantinople 1867

With each step he took, Professor Xiau Kang sensed the intensity, and importance of what he would find. Above all, he felt the weight of his sadness. He had done his best to ignore that there was no guarantee Captain Nemo had located Thales, if Nemo failed to find him, Jonas Celwyn would be dead within a matter of days, perhaps hours.

A long time ago, on the Zelda, the magician had doubted a mechanical man could feel. Kang paused, swaying on his feet as he fought to regain his control; at this moment, the automat knew real despair, a wrenching grief that they would lose Jonas. He swallowed hard and walked faster, climbing to the top of the berm.

There she was! The long black submarine lay still in the water. A single sailor stood on patrol, and another perched in the cage on top with a spyglass.

Kang called, “I’ll get Mr. Celwyn. Please let the Captain know we’re here.”

Conductor Smith joined him as they ran back to the coach. The others had seen them and began unloading the magician onto the stretcher that Kang had fashioned for this moment. He skidded to a stop and grabbed Celwyn’s hand.

“The Nautilus is here. It isn’t far.”

In the distance, a low hum reached them; the sound sputtered and grew stronger.

The magician’s eyes opened slowly, like a thread from his memory raised his lids, impelling him to look. Everyone, including Jonas, gazed upward, as if they had already known what was to come.

The noise grew louder, and then a bright yellow flying machine crested the low hills and headed toward the estuary.

“Yes!” Kang shouted, raising his fist in triumph.

The plane swerved to the north, banked, and then flew toward them again in a wide arc.

“Oh, my God, it’s Bartholomew,” Elizabeth exclaimed.

Bartholomew wore a broad smile and his scarf fluttered in the breeze as he sailed over them. He waved. As he banked again, the engine revved and he turned, descending for another pass. Celwyn raised himself onto an elbow to wave back.

“Hurry,” Kang said. “Bartholomew is going to land. We have to get Jonas onto the ship.”

About the Author:
Early work was horror and suspense, later work morphed into a combination of magical realism, mystery and adventure painted with a horrific element as needed.

I’m one of those writers who doesn’t plan ahead, no outlines, no clue, and I sometimes write myself into a corner. Atmospheric music in the background helps. Black by Pearl Jam especially.

More information is available at LouKemp.com. I'd love to hear from you and what you think of Celwyn, Bartholomew, and Professor Xiau Kang.

Milestones:

2009 The anthology story Sherlock’s Opera appeared in Seattle Noir, edited by Curt Colbert, Akashic Books. Available through Amazon or Barnes and Noble online. Booklist published a favorable review of my contribution to the anthology.

2010 My story, In Memory of the Sibylline, was accepted into the best-selling MWA anthology Crimes by Moonlight, edited by Charlaine Harris. The immortal magician Celwyn makes his first appearance in print.

2018 The story, The Violins Played before Junstan is published in the MWA anthology Odd Partners, edited by Anne Perry. The Celwyn series begins. Present The full length prequel, The Violins Played before Junstan, to the Celwyn book series is published on Kindle. The companion book, Farm Hall is also published where Pelaez, another immortal magician and Celwyn's brother, makes his first appearance. The remaining books in the series: Music Shall Untune the Sky, The Raven and the Pig, The Pirate Danced and the Automat Died, will be available beginning in August 2021.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/LouKempBooks
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Lou-Kemp/100070730154592/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/LouKempAuthor/

Amazon buy link: https://www.amazon.com/Raven-Pig-Book-Celwyn-ebook/dp/B09KXFWBZC

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8 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing your Q&A and book details, I like the cover, synopsis and excerpt and I am looking forward to reading this story

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  2. Thank you for the great blog posting, it is appreciated. Love the flower rating system, too. A big thank you to Goddess, they are a wonderful service to authors. If you have any questions, please let me know.

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  3. This sounds like an interesting book

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  4. Great interview, video and excerpt, I can't wait to readThe Raven and the Pig! Thanks for sharing it with me and have a splendid day!

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