Stop by for a May 22 Teaser

Stop by May 24 for an Author Interview

Stop by May 30 for a Teaser

 

 Welcome to the latest stop on the Rotter World Blog Tour!

Today Mr. Baker has a special treat for us. That’s right… an excerpt. :) But first! Let’s learn a little about Rotter World.

Eight months have passed since vampires released the Revenant Virus on mankind, nearly wiping out both species. For Mike Robson, the situation could be far worse. He has joined up with a small band of humans and the last coven of vampires who are riding out the zombie apocalypse in an old fort along the coast of southern Maine. But the uneasy alliance between humans and vampires is strained with the arrival of the creator of the Revenant Virus. He claims to have a vaccine that will make them immune and allow mankind to take civilization back from the living dead. However, the vaccine is located in a secure underground facility five hundred miles away.

To retrieve it, Robson leads a raiding party of humans and vampires down the East Coast, which has been devastated by the outbreak and overrun by zombies and rape gangs. Yet none of the horrors he deals with on the road can prepare him for what he will find in the underground facility. Robson will encounter the greatest threat his group has faced to date, not only from zombies but from betrayal within his own ranks.

Excerpt from Rotter World

By Scott M. Maker

Chapter One

The moan of the living dead shattered the stillness of the night. More than fifty zombies congregated around the warehouse’s front façade, stumbling along with slow, awkward moves.

A handful lumbered around the abandoned military-green shuttle bus parked to the left of the building. Those in front of the warehouse clawed and banged at the sliding metal door built into the wall, each swipe leaving a smear of rotten flesh and blood. Undeterred by the futility of their attempts, the zombies kept up their assault, desperate to get at the food inside. A quiet but steady droning underscored the scene, coming from the thousands of flies feeding off of the living dead.

From their position on a hillock a quarter of a mile distant, the small rescue party carefully studied the zombie horde.

Tibor snarled between clenched fangs. “There are many.”

“Too many,” said Mike Robson. In the green glow of the night vision goggles, the living dead resembled bees swarming over their hive. Robson removed his goggles and placed them on the ground. As the group leader, he was responsible for the lives of his team, and right now they were definitely about to go into harm’s way. He looked across the narrow sound toward the naval shipyard. He did not need night vision goggles to know it had been overrun. “This whole fucking place is swarming with rotters.”

“I don’t like this.” Dravko stared at the warehouse, the irises of his eyes fully dilated so as to see in the dim light. “We haven’t come this far into rotter territory in months. And for what? To save half a dozen survivors? It’s not worth the risk.”

“The boss thinks otherwise,” Robson protested half-heartedly.

“Then let the fucking boss get his ass out here and save them.” Lee O’Bannon spat out the words from underneath his night vision goggles.

“Knock it off,” Robson ordered. Though he would never admit it to the others, he did not like this mission one damn bit. It violated every rule of engagement they operated by, rules that had kept them alive until now. It was dumb ass shit like this that would get them killed one day.

But orders were orders.

“Come on.” Robson crawled backwards down the reverse side of the hillock, followed by the others. Even with the rotters out of their line of sight, the ungodly moaning still echoed through the dark.

The remainder of the rescue party stood a quarter of a mile away, milling around their vehicles and scanning the area for approaching rotters. Robson had brought the usual contingent for a rescue party: nine humans and three vampires; the two Mack trucks mounted with snow plough blades and twin gun mounts in the dump bed; the school bus reinforced with mesh steel gratings attached to the window frames and a cow catcher from an old steam engine welded to the front; and his command car, a Subaru Outback. It should have been more than enough to handle the situation. At least he thought so until he found a swarm of rotters between him and the survivors. He suddenly felt obscenely outnumbered.

Daytona, seated in the driver’s seat of one of the dump trucks, saw them approach. He reached out between the foot-long steel spikes welded around the bottoms and sides of the windows and quietly slapped his hand against the door to get the others’ attention. Everyone turned to Robson.

Daytona nodded toward the hillock. “What’s it look like?”

Robson waved over the others so he would not have to shout. “We got about fifty rotters hanging around the warehouse, mostly by the front doors. A few are wandering around the parking lot.”

“What about the survivors?” asked Jordan, who crouched in the open doorway at the rear of the school bus, nervously rolling the tip of a toothpick between his lips. “Did you see them?”

Robson shook his head.

“Maybe we’re too late,” Jordan said hopefully.

“Those rotters wouldn’t be trying to claw their way into that place if it were empty.

Someone’s still alive in there.”

“So what do we do now?” asked Clark, the driver of the second truck.

“We get them out.” Eleven sets of eyes focused on Robson, waiting for orders.

“Daytona, Clark. You go in first and plough the area, then set up a barricade on either side of the doors. Dravko, Tibor, and Sultanic are with me in the bus. Lee, you and Rashid take the Outback and hang back. Keep an eye out for swarmers.”

Jordan sighed. “Wish Mad Dog was with us. He could take out a dozen of those things without breaking a sweat.”

“Screw that,” said O’Bannon. “With that open cut on his arm, the smell of blood would only incite ’em into a frenzy.”

“Knock it off.” Robson said it louder than he wanted, and then lowered his voice. “We don’t have Mad Dog with us. If we do this right, we should be in and out in a few minutes. Any questions?”

None.

“All right. Let’s rock.”

Daytona pulled down over his brow the brim of the black baseball cap emblazoned with the NASCAR logo and started the truck’s engine. Clark did the same. In the bed of each truck, the gunners took up position in one of the mounts welded onto the front corners of each dump bed, strapped themselves in, and switched off the safety locks on their AK-47 assault rifles.

Caylee, the petite brunette who manned the forward gun position on Daytona’s truck, looked down at Jordan and blew him a kiss. He removed the toothpick, responded with a flirtatious smile, and then placed it between his lips.

The hiss of airbrakes and the grinding of gears accompanied the sound of revved up MP8

diesel engines as the two Macks set off, pulling away from the rest of the party and slowly gaining speed as they disappeared around the hillock.

As Whitehouse turned over the ignition on the school bus, Jordan, Dravko, Tibor, and Sultanic stepped inside and took up seats near the rear. Robson climbed in last, closing and securing the rear door behind him. The bus lurched forward and set off after the trucks.

O’Bannon followed close behind with the Outback.

The noise of the approaching vehicles attracted the zombies’ attention. The horde turned to watch the twin Macks cross in front of the hillock and race around the outer rim of the parking lot. The trucks swung left in front of the warehouse and increased speed, Daytona hugging the front wall with Clark directly behind and to his left. Oblivious to everything but the approaching food, the zombies lumbered en masse toward the trucks.

Daytona slammed into the mass of living dead, the truck shuddering with the impact.

Clark hit the outer edge of the horde a second later. Bones shattered and bodies ruptured. Some of the older, more decayed rotters exploded, venting noxious fumes from pent-up bodily gases and decay that filtered into the cabs. A gore-laden mist of human blood and dislodged flies formed around the ploughs, splattering the windshield of each vehicle. Other rotters not smashed outright were either dragged along the building’s façade and torn apart, or knocked down and crushed under the wheels. Within seconds, the two trucks had cleared the doorway, leaving behind a small lake of blood and body parts, as well as a few rotters that struggled to get back on their feet.

The trucks circled around and made another sweep in front of the warehouse door, taking out the few zombies that escaped the first pass. This time the trucks veered left into the parking lot and stopped a few yards from the warehouse. Several zombies lumbered toward the Macks, instinctively knowing food was inside. High-pitched beeping echoed across the lot as Daytona and Clark shifted into reverse. Clark’s truck slammed into one zombie as it climbed to its feet, knocking it over backwards onto the pavement. The rear wheels backed over it, bursting its torso and spraying its organs across the asphalt, leaving only its head and arms thrashing about. The trucks pulled up on either side of the doorway, leaving just enough room between them for the bus to back into. A pair of rotters roamed between the trucks, staring aimlessly at the vehicles.

No one noticed the single zombie in a naval officer’s uniform, its legs crushed to pulp, crawling on the ground along the wall as it disappeared under the rear of Daytona’s truck.

Whitehouse drove the school bus into the parking lot and swung it perpendicular to the warehouse, shifted into reverse, and backed the bus between the trucks, placing the rear quarter between the two vehicles. He looked over his shoulder at the men in back.

“Go!”

Robson opened the rear door. He paused, fighting back the urge to retch as the stench of rotting bodies wafted through the door, along with hundreds of flies. The sound of automatic rifle fire snapped him back to his senses. They needed to haul ass before the remaining rotters closed in on them.

Sensing food, the two rotters caught between the trucks lumbered toward the school bus.

“We’ve got this,” growled Dravko.

Dravko morphed into his vampiric form. The facial features transformed, his ears elongating, his forehead furrowing, his nose flaring, his teeth becoming a mouthful of fangs, until he looked more bat-like than human. His fingers lengthened, and the fingernails extended into three-inch long talons. He jumped to the ground in front of the closest rotter, which stood only a few feet away. It jerked toward Dravko and moaned, its arms outstretched to grab its prey. Dravko slapped the rotter’s arms away and grabbed its head by the jaw and skull, careful not to get his hand close to its teeth. The rotter bit frantically at thin air. Turning his hands in a circular motion, Dravko spun its head completely around. The rotter went limp. Dravko let it go, and the body dropped to the pavement.

Tibor lunged off the back of the bus, morphing into his vampiric form in mid-flight. He landed on the second rotter’s chest, clutching its head and knocking it backwards. As they toppled to the ground, Tibor used his strength and speed to slam the rotter’s head against the pavement with such force that the back of its skull collapsed beneath his hands, covering them in gore. Tibor wiped his hands on the thing’s soiled clothes and kicked the corpse under Clark’s truck.

Dravko morphed back into his human form and turned toward the school bus. “It’s clear!”

Robson jumped out and ran the twenty feet to the warehouse. Jordan followed, taking up a guard position by the left of the sliding door. Dravko and Tibor fell back and joined Sultanic by the open door to the bus.

Robson banged on the door with a closed fist. The clanging metal reverberated over the moaning of the zombies. “Open up!”

The rate of gunfire from the Macks’ dump beds increased, accompanied by an increase in moaning. A dozen rotters converged on the vehicles, those from the parking lot as well as some that stumbled around from the sides of the warehouse, each desperate to feed. Most crowded around the cabs, clawing at the metal and frantic to get at the drivers, but unable to get through the rows of foot-long spikes that surrounded each window. A few rotters attempted to push between the school bus and the trucks, only to be taken down by the gunners. Out in the parking lot, O’Bannon and Rashid stood by the open doors of the Outback, shooting through the head the few rotters that approached.

Robson banged much harder. “Damn it! Open up!”

He heard the door being unlatched from the inside and watched as it lifted off the ground and above his head. Two men faced him. One was about fifty, with a graying beard and disheveled hair. The other wore Air Force camouflage field dress with the nametag Thompson embroidered on his left chest. Thompson pointed a shotgun at Robson.

“Relax, man.” Robson tried not to focus on the steel grey barrel aimed at his face.

“We’re your rescue party.”

Thompson lowered the shotgun. “Can’t be too careful.”

“How many of you are there?”

“Six,” responded the man with the grey hair. “Including myself.”

“Well, haul ass if you want to get out of here.”

The grey-haired man turned back into the warehouse. “It’s safe. Come on.”

Four people emerged from the warehouse, one man in Air Force cammies, two in blue overalls, and a woman in her mid-twenties in a blood-stained lab coat. Robson ushered them toward Dravko and Tibor, who helped them into the school bus. He turned to the grey-haired man.

“Is that everyone?”

“Yes.”

“Then let’s go.”

Robson led the two men toward the bus when Jordan suddenly screamed with an intensity that made his blood run cold. He turned around to see a rotter in a naval uniform had emerged from under the rear of the truck and snuck up on Jordan without being seen. It had wrapped its arms around Jordan’s ankle and buried its teeth into his calf. Jordan pummeled his fist into its face, trying to push its head away, but the rotter had broken skin. Blood gushed from around its mouth. Yanking its head back, the rotter tore off a chunk of Jordan’s flesh and chewed it.

Jordan withdrew his .44 Magnum, placed the barrel against the rotter’s skull, and pulled the trigger. Its head disintegrated, showering Jordan and the wall with gore. Jordan fell back against the wall and slumped down, his face contorted in pain.

Robson ran up to his friend and examined the leg, already knowing the prognosis. The wound measured four inches in diameter and sunk through the skin deep into the muscle. Blood flowed from around the jagged edges and formed a puddle on the asphalt.

From above him in the dump bed of the truck, Caylee cried out. She unhooked herself from the gun mount and started to climb down. Robson yelled up to her. “Stay there!”

“But Jordan’s–”

“I’ve got this! Just keep the rotters off my back!” When he saw Caylee crawl back into her mount, Robson turned to Jordan. “Are you okay?”

“Damn.” Jordan averted his gaze from the wound and winced. “I’m infected.”

“Come on. Doc can fix you up.”

“It’s no use and you know it,” Jordan grunted through clenched teeth.

“At least he can give you some morphine for the pain.”

“I’ll turn before you get me back.” Jordan spit out the toothpick and placed the barrel of the Magnum against the base of his jaw. “I just hope it was worth it.”

Before Robson could stop him, Jordan pulled the trigger. His youthful features distorted grotesquely as the bullet ripped through his skull, fracturing the skull in a dozen places and splattering his brains across the wall.

From above him, Robson heard Caylee scream. She abandoned her gun mount and started crawling up the rear of the dump bed, tears streaming down her face. Robson knew if she made it to Jordan, he would never get her back onto the truck. He refused to lose two people on this rescue. Picking up the Magnum, he aimed it at Caylee. “Get back to your position.”

“I want to be with Jordan.”

“He’s dead. Get back to your position.”

“No!”

In a single move, Sultanic jumped onto the side of the Mack and vaulted over the rim of the rear bed. He scooped up Caylee in his right arm and dragged her to the front of the truck, holding her in place. She pounded her fists against his face, screaming to be released until her yelling became a pitiful sobbing. Sultanic hugged Caylee tight, as much as to comfort her as to restrain her.

“Hurry up!” yelled Dravko.

Robson sprang up and raced back to the bus. Dravko offered his hand, but Robson shoved it aside as he climbed in. Dravko closed and secured the door, and then yelled up to Whitehouse. “Let’s get out of here!”

Whitehouse shifted into gear and pulled away from the building, pushing aside the rotters gathered around his cow catcher. Daytona and Clark fell in behind him. O’Bannon and Rashid climbed back into the Outback and brought up the rear.

Once the vehicles were clear of the immediate threat, Dravko sat down in the seat across from Robson. “There was nothing you could do for him.”

“Easy for you to say. It wasn’t one of yours that we lost.”

Dravko glared furiously at Robson for a moment before storming up toward the front of the bus. Robson knew Dravko was only trying to be consoling, but at this moment he did not really care.

As the rescue party pulled away, Robson took one last look at Jordan. Several rotters had already descended on the corpse in anticipation of a warm meal.

Rotter World is available at Barnes & Nobles || Smashwords || The Book Depository || Amazon

About the Author

Born and raised in Everett, Massachusetts (just outside of Boston), Scott M. Baker has spent the last twenty-two years living in northern Virginia.  He has authored several short stories, including the e-chapbook “Dead Water” by D’Ink Well Publications; “Rednecks Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things,” which appeared in the autumn 2008 edition of the e-zine Necrotic Tissue; “Cruise of the Living Dead,” which appeared in Living Dead Press’ Dead Worlds: Volume 3 anthology (August 2009); “Deck the Malls with Bowels of Holly,” which appeared in Living Dead Press‘ Christmas Is Dead anthology (October 2009); and “Denizens,” which appeared in Living Dead Press’ The Book of Horror anthology (March 2010).

Scott’s first zombie novel, Rotter World, which details the struggle between humans and vampires during a zombie apocalypse, was released by Permuted Press in April 2012. He has also authored The Vampire Hunters trilogy, which has been published by Pill Hill Press and received excellent reviews from Famous Monsters of Filmland and Fangoria, among others. Scott has finished his fifth novel, Yeitso, a homage to the monster movies of the 1950s set in northern New Mexico, which is currently with a publisher, and has begun his next novel, Hell Gates, the first in a series of young adult novels set in a world in which the realms of Hell and earth have merged.

When he is not busy writing, Scott can either be found relaxing on his back deck with a good cigar and a cup of iced coffee, or doting on the four house rabbits that live with him.

Please visit the author’s website at http:\\scottmbakerauthor.blogspot.com.

Giveaway Time!

Scott Baker is giving an autographed copy of his book Rotter World to one Canadian or American reader. PLUS++++ an eCopy to one International reader. Simply leave a comment along with your email address and you’re in!

Follow the Rotter World Blog Tour

05/13/2012 MaryAnn at All Things Writing Review
05/14/2012 Jess at Wonderland Reviews  Interview
05/15/2012 Reena at Ramblings of an Amateur Author Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis
05/16/2012 Rea at Rea’s Reading and Reviews  Guest Blog
0/5/17/2012 Jessica at Wickedly Bookish   Interview
05/18/2012 Amanda at Good Choice Reading Review
05/19/2012 Kate at I just wanna Sit Here and Read! Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis
 

When the zombies arrive will you be ready or will you join the ranks of the undead? Welcome to the next stop on the Zombie Apocalypse Preparation Blog Tour.

We have David Houchins & Scot Thomas with us today. If you want to survive the Zombie Apocalypse, I suggest you pay attention. :)

Reena Jacobs: You mention a million and one writers in your foreword. If you had to survive the Zombie Apocalypse on a deserted island and could only bring the works of one author, who would it be?

David Houchins/Scot Thomas: Well, since we only mentioned a pair of writers, of the two mentioned, I’d take King.  Reading the same two books would get boring.  Chuck Palahniuk would be another choice, but his work’s not for everyone.  Tom Robbins also stands as a contender.  How did we end up on this island?  I mean, if you’re planning a vacation you should be able to bring what you want, and if you’re stranded somewhere, it doesn’t seem likely that you’re just going to happen to have an author’s entire body of work along with you.  That being said, if I were to plan something like this and had the long term knowledge, I’d kidnap all three and make my own human-author-centipede to create the ultimate storytelling machine.  I’d be its agent and we’d conquer the island, and then, the world.

RJ: Here’s crossing our fingers there’ll be something worth conquering after the zombie apocalypse. :) I’m told you grew up as poor black kids on another planet before reincarnating as white redneck children on earth. What was your happiest memory before Fuckyermomma’s big explosion?

DH/ST: Setting the charges.  Trust me, the place deserved it.

RJ: Okay… now you’ve got me wondering if Earth will be next. What’s surprised you most about humans and the human culture?

DH/ST: Mostly the fact that they haven’t become aware that they’re subjected to the mind-numbing torture that is reality television.  An intelligent populace would realize that it’s intellect-killing garbage and violently retaliate against those that try to force them to view its awful jackassery on a daily basis.

RJ: Okay… let’s just move on and pretend I didn’t spend hours and hours watching television yesterday. How much of you/your life do you put into your stories?

DH/ST: I don’t think it’s possible to leave yourself out of a written work.  What you like, dislike, want, fear or whatever, it’s going to spill out in some way shape or form.   Being that this was more of an instructional piece laid out in our combined unique style, it was so loaded with our brand of wit that it should be handled only with latex gloves.

RJ: Give us a brief description of a story you have hidden in your crypt of rotting corpses? And will it ever see the light of day?

DH/ST: There’s a guy who does a thing in a place which leads to stuff.  Also, boobies.

RJ: Tee hee… he said boobies. Do you have any advice for other writers?

DH/ST: Write, share your work with those that won’t heap undue praise on you for mediocre work.  I was hesitant at first to show what we’d done to my wife thinking that she’d have nothing but good things to say.  After the first hour, she sent me back the file (she was reading it at work, it was a slow day) and it had so much figurative red ink on it that I thought I was back in school.  She pointed out that some things didn’t make sense, out of place words, misspellings, and unnecessary hate speech.  She was our first line of editing after that and she helped immensely.

Having someone like that is invaluable.  If you lack that kind of creative feedback, well, keep writing, if you can re-read what you’ve put down and surprise and amuse yourself, it’s probably not all shit.

RJ: Anything special you’d like to say to readers? What about to the undead?

DH/ST: We’re nearing 70,000 fans now, we’ve gained gained around 50,000 since we started the first book, and they keep coming in and being supportive on a daily basis.  We wouldn’t be doing this without them.  Those who have read the book, by all means, keep it handy.  It may prove useful someday, possibly as toilet paper, but that’s still a use. Also, keep a look out for updates on our future work and keep reading the page.  As far as the undead, well, invest in a helmet.  It won’t save you, but it’ll make us swing twice.

“We guarantee this is the only tool you need to survive the zombie.

OK, that’s not really true. But when the SHTF you’re going to want a survival guide that’s not just geared toward day-to-day survival. You’ll need one that addresses the essential skills for true nourishment of the human spirit. Living through the end of the world isn’t worth a damn unless you can enjoy yourself in any way you want. (Except, of course, for anything having to do with abuse. We could never condone such things. At least the publisher’s lawyers say we can’t”

Zombie Apocalypse Preparation: How to Survive in an Undead World and Have Fun Doing It! is the first zombie apocalypse survival manual with entertainment in mind.  What fun is living in a world of the undead if you can’t have a bit of fun?  The apocalypse is not just about survival it’s about enjoying your new found life.

Inside the covers of this book you will not only find the way to pick the right weapon, building, and survival methods but you’ll find entertaining ways to dispose of the undead, entertain yourself and your group, and dispatch your former friends and family members with a smile on your face and a song in your heart.

Available at Barnes & Nobles || Smashwords || The Book Depository || Amazon

About the Authors

David Houchins was born in Toledo, OH in 1978.  He was raised in the city of Houston, TX, and now resides in deep South Texas.  His hobby of giving his farts exotic names and personalities led to his passion for writing.  He is armed and considered extremely dangerous.

Scot Thomas: Born Austin, Texas in 1973.  Grew up in Corpus Christi, TX until the age of 19 when he joined the U.S. Navy.  After four years in some of the most inhospitable climates on earth he left the Navy for a job in the South Texas oil fields.  Several years later he landed in Broadcast news.  Scot has won several awards for his work as a producer.  Scot has always had a sense of humor and desire to make people laugh.  On January 16, 2010 he and David Houchins founded Zombie Apocalypse Preparation on Facebook.  The page now has more than 65,000 fans and is updated every day.  The page slowly turned into the first book on survival in the zombie apocalypse all while smiling.  Houchins and Thomas are currently working on the second book and have plans for a few other projects.

Don’t miss the rest of the blog tour

05/06/2012 Scott Thomas ZAP Tour: Jessice, Wickedly Bookish, Review
05/08/12 Scott Thomas ZAP Tour: Jess, Wonderland Reviews, Review
05/10/12 Tea and Book Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis
05/11/12 Scott Thomas ZAP Tour:  Reena, Ramblings of an Amateur Writer, Interview
05/11/12 Scott Thomas ZAP Tour:  Tracee, Review from Here, Review
05/12/12 Scott Thomas ZAP Tour: Ali, Simply Ali Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis

 

Welcome to the next stop on the Serpent Passage Blog Tour. Today, Todd Allen Pitts, author of Serpent Passage, is here to share a bit about himself and his book. Please welcome him!

Reena Jacobs: Congratulations on your debut release, The Serpents Passage. I visited your website and see it’s the start of a series. Please share with us a little about it.

Todd Allen Pitts: The Serpent Passage is about a teenager, William, who (on the day of the Summer Solstice) feels compelled to rescue a woman with his scuba gear from drowning in a cenote (lake) in the Yucatan. He subsequently gets pulled into an underground cavern where he finds her. They make their way out through a strange underwater passage of flashing lights that propels them back into the times of the ancient Maya. Of course they don’t realize they’re back in time at first, but when they come across a pyramids in pristine condition and get in the way of a planned sacrifice, they begin to realize what happened and they become intertwined in the conflicts between Mayan kingdoms. William is awarded a magical gem, called the bloodstone, that puts him in the path of Mayan gods and demons. William hopes to find a way back home, but he falls in love with a Mayan princess, and begins to realize he may have a more important reason for being there. A Serpent Priest says that he knew of his coming and had been waiting for his arrival. That is the basic setting that takes you on a wild ride in the times of the ancient Maya.

RJ: There’s been a lot of talk about the Mayan calendar and the year 2012. How does the Serpents Passage series relate to it?

TAP: Many believe that either a cataclysmic or consciousness-changing event will occur at the time when the Mayan Calendar ends in 2012. Without giving too much of the overall series plot away… The main character, William, is pulled back in time to around 1000 A.D., around the Post Classic time period when the Mayan kingdoms of the southern regions were abandoned and were migrating north to Chichen Itza. William discovers that he has a task to complete in the past, ultimately related to saving the bloodstone (a gem that has a connection to the Mayan gods), and the construction of the Castle of Kukulcan (that serves a cosmic purpose to save the legacy of the Maya, while also assisting mankind in this transformative period at the end of the Great Cycle in 2012).

RJ: I imagine writing about a period a thousand years ago took a lot of research. Will you tell us a little about what your research entailed?

TAP: I started scuba diving when I was 12, and it has always been a passion of mine. On a diving trip to Cancun in 1998, I decided to take a sabbatical from my career in technical writing to get my PADI Scuba Instructor license, which takes about three to six months on a fast program. I ended up staying there for two years to work as a dive instructor and dive master. While living there, I became fascinated with Mayan culture and began exploring ruins. Besides for the popular ruins of places like Chichen Itza and Tulum, I was intrigued by the more remote ruins, like Dzibanche and Kohunlich, and I began wondering what it must be like to live in those times. I read many books to learn as much as I could about their culture and beliefs, their gods and demons, and about the Mayan Calendar.

One day, while having lunch at a famous cenote in Bacalar, called the Cenote Azul, I had an inspiration for the start of my novel, and I began writing it later that night. I wrote the first draft in about 6 months. It went through years of rewrites and changes after comments from literary agent input. Along the way, the explosion of data on the internet aided my continued research.

I have to remind people that although I know a lot about the culture, beliefs, and history of many of the Mayan kingdoms, the purpose for that knowledge was to weave colorful detail into my fictional story, so the readers could learn about an amazing culture while being entertained with adventure, romance, and mysticism through interesting characters and situations.

RJ: I love the idea of taking history and making it one’s own. You have a background in technical writing. What led you to step into the world of fiction writing?

TAP: I always enjoyed fictional writing since I was a child, and writing a novel had been a lifelong dream of mine. Out of college I got into technical writing because it was a way to immediately make good money doing something I enjoy (writing). I think my creative side helped me to also be a better technical writer, because I would think outside the box. But after many years, I felt a ‘calling’ to go after my deeper dreams and pursue the type of writing that I knew would give me the most satisfaction in my life. I love becoming immersed in my writing projects, as I ‘see’ events unfold like a movie in my head, and don’t always know what will happen next until I get there. I love that part of the creative process.

RJ: How has your technical writing experience helped you on the fictional side?

TAP: Being a technical writer helped me to be a better fiction writer because I became more critical of my own writing, and more conscious of my word choice and sentence structure. Perhaps more importantly, I had learned to accept and incorporate feedback (critique) along the way.

RJ: It makes sense that developing the skills to be clear and concise in technical writing would be a huge benefit in fiction writing. :) I’m not sure why that’s never occurred to me before, but I love the parallel. Which author has inspired you the most?

TAP: There are so many wonderful writers out there, that it’s hard to say. However, when I was young, I read The Sword of Shannara by Terry Brooks, and I was so enchanted by the way the author created a whole new world inside my head. It was at that moment that I knew I wanted to be a fiction writer. Since then, I have read many other books, of course, and have been amazed by the work of authors throughout time, but I’d have to say that Terry Brooks was my earliest and most inspirational influence to become a writer (just by chance, I suppose) and I also enjoyed the way he wrote in such descriptive and colorful manner.

RJ: Do you have any advice for other writers?

TAP: To write about what interests you, because then your passion in your interests will show through in your writing and make it believable and engaging to your readers. For example, I utilized both scuba diving and my interest in the ancient Maya in The Serpent Passage.

RJ: Anything special you’d like to say to readers?

TAP: Just that there are many types of writers out there, and it’s important to find your own voice. My preference is to write in a somewhat casual tone that people of all ages can enjoy and talk about together. I suppose that would classify me as a YA writer today. I also like to write in a very descriptive manner, so that you can picture in your mind what’s happening, and carry those images with you after setting the book down, as though you’ve just watched an adventurous movie, and dream about it later that night.

RJ: I understand exactly what you mean. I love the imagery written words put into my head. What are you working on now?

TAP: Of course, I’m working on the sequel to The Serpent Passage, called The Bloodstone. It’s finished, and going through final editing passes, cover design, etc. After I get The Bloodstone out there, I’ll take a diversion and go back to the first book to turn it into a screenplay, and begin to market The Serpent Passage Series as either a movie trilogy or a TV series. Then, of course, on to the final book of The Serpent Passage Series, called The Castle of Kulkulcan. I do have other ideas for new projects, but those will have to wait until I finish this series.

Thanks for the questions…

Todd

About the Author

Todd grew up in the Northwest, where he used to write stories to entertain his family. He has a B.A. in Communications and worked in technical publications for most of his career. Over the years, Todd wrote numerous technical manuals that have been published in print and on the internet. His success as a technical writer led him to managing large technical publication departments. Throughout his professional career, Todd continued to write fiction. Todd was inspired to write The Serpent Passage while exploring Mayan ruins and working as a scuba instructor in the Yucatán.

Find Todd Allen Pitts online at:

Website: http://www.toddallenpitts.com/
Facebook Link: http://www.facebook.com/serpentpassage
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/toddallenpitts
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-bXRApoI9As&feature=player_embedded

Serpent Passage is available at Barnes & Nobles  || The Book Depository || Amazon

Follow the Tour!

May 7th to May 11th  The Serpent Passage by Todd Allen Pitts.  Be sure to stop by these Blogs for Interesting Interviews and information and a giveaway.

5/7      Adventures of frugal mom   (Interview and book synopsis)

           Rea’s Reading and Reviews  (interview )

           Red Headed Bookworm (Bio / Book Synopsis)

5/8      Book’s Reviewed by Bunny  (Bio/Book Synopsis)

5/9      Wickedly Bookish (interview and give away)

5/10    Ramblings of an Amateur Writer (interview)

5/11    A Few Words (Bio/Book Synopsis)

 

You’ve come to the next stop on the Shadow Visions Blog Tour. Welcome! Welcome! Welcome. :) Today we have Gabriella Hewitt, authors of Shadow Vision with us to share a bit about their writing. Yes… that’s right, authors. :) So let’s get to the interview, shall we?

Reena Jacobs: Two authors, one name. Who is behind the pseudonym?

Gabriella Hewitt: Gabriella Hewitt is the pen name of creative writing talents Sasha Tomaszycki and Patrizia M.J. Hayashi. Together they weave tales of romantic suspense and dangerously sensual paranormals. Check out the website www.GabriellaHewitt.com to find out about upcoming releases and events on her blog.

RJ: How do you determine which book ideas to write?

GH: Our list of story ideas would put a child’s Santa list to shame. ( : We have all kinds of sparks for new stories and new series. But we only have so much time and have to be realistic about what we can tackle. We have started stories and then put them aside if they don’t seem to be coming together. Our agent says it as well, in today’s publishing world you have to be able to produce, produce, produce. That doesn’t mean we won’t go back and try to rework those half-finished stories, but we will do so when we really know where they need to go and how to get them there. In the meantime, we’ll move on to a story where all the ingredients fall into place and run with it.

It’s no surprise then that we actually make a few attempts before we hit the right story to get a series off the ground. For both of us, plot tends to come first and we have to go back and really work on building characters. We’ll see scenes in the story and then think of how to connect them together.

RJ: I like that strategy. What’s the easiest part of the writing process?

GH: The research! We love to read history and we find mythology fascinating. Yup, we are geeks and are proud of it. Our favorite myths are Aztec, Greek, Egyptian, Norse, Caribbean and Celtic. You can see a lot of our research ends up in our stories. Shadow Warriors is based on Aztec mythology with a modern twist.

RJ: What’s the hardest part of the writing process?

GH: Rejection. I don’t think any writer truly gets over that hump but you learn to make the best of it. Gabriella Hewitt is two parts that make one whole. So we probably have more rejection letters than most writers combined. LOL!

RJ: Yeah… rejections are tough. With hindsight being 20/20, is there anything you would have changed with your publishing journey?

GH: Write. Write. Write. We began writing in 2005. Dark Waters is the first novel we sold in 2007 and is still one of our favorites. There was a long period between our first book and then for a long time there was nothing. Life got in the way. We’ve been given a second chance with the Shadow Warrior series and we know this time around that no matter what comes up that we need to get our butts in a chair and tune everything out. We now have a routine and make time to type.

RJ: I know what you mean. Seems like everything can get in the way of writing if one lets it. Do you have any advice for other writers?

GH: Think big, dream big and go big. Never stop believing that you will be big someday. Very few writers grab that gold ring on the first try. Study craft, keep writing, and don’t give up. The market is changing rapidly, which means there are more and more opportunities for writers to succeed.

RJ: Anything special you’d like to say to readers?

GH: There is always something going on at our blog http://www.GabriellaHewitt.com

We even have two free recipe ebooks on Puerto Rican and Latin American cooking that we are giving away as freebies.

RJ: What are you working on now?

GH: Currently, we are working on the third novel in the Shadow Warriors series, a modern day paranormal romance based on Aztec mythology filled with excitement, suspense and passion. SHADOW VISIONS is the second book in the series and is available now from Samhain Publishing. The first book, OUT OF THE SHADOWS, is also available.

We also have another installment in the Ever After series planned to be released later in the year.

SHADOW VISIONS (c) 2012 Samhain Publishing

Manuel has been tracking down a demon bent on sacrificing women with hummingbird tattoos. He is in danger of losing his humanity to his eagle spirit until he comes across Ixa Reyes, a beautiful San Diego Detective working on the same case, who also bears the mark of Huitzilopochtli. She is his salvation and redemption from a past filled with failure. Only she wants nothing to do with him or her heritage.

When a demon kidnaps her grandfather, the wind god, they must work together to save him and all mankind. He has twenty-four hours to help her control her elemental power over wind, that is if he can control his own desires to claim her body and soul. Because if he should fail, then the god of war will bring in a new era filled with blood and destruction.

When the last Shadow Warrior falls, so will humanity.

Available at Barnes & Nobles || Amazon

Follow the Tour!

Sunday May 6, 2012   Kate, I Just Wanna Sit Here and Read!, Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis
Monday May 7, 2012  Susan, A Soul Unsung Guest Blog
Thursday May 10, 2012   Reena, Ramblings of an Amateur Writer, Interview, Give Away
Friday May 11, 2012   Ali, Simply Ali, Interview
Wednesday May 16, 2012  Lisa, Bodice Rippers, Femme Fatales and Fantasy, Review
Friday May 18, 2012 Shauni, Tea and Book Guest Blog
Monday May 21, 2012  Kate, I Just Wanna Site Here and Read, Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis Give Away
Friday May 25, 2012   Suzie, Books Reviewed by Bunny, Interview
Friday May 25, 2012  Amber, Sapphyria’s Steamy Book ReviewsBio/Excerpt’/synopsis
Tuesday May 29, 2012  Jess, Wonderland Reviews Review
Tuesday May 29, 2012  Molly, Reviews by Molly Review
Thursday May 31, 2012  Melissa, Adventures of a Frugal Mom, Review
Thursday May 31, 2012  Damaris, Good Choice Reading Guest Blog Give Away
June 5, 2012  Mel, Journey with Words, Guest Blog, Give Away
June 5, 2012  Shae, Understanding Shae’s Story Review
June 7, 2012  Danielle, Ramblings from this Chick, Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis, Give Away
June 7, 2012  Molly, Reviews by Molly Guest Blog
June 11, 2012  Nikki, Storm Goddess Book Reviews & More Review
June 11, 2012  Jessica, Wickedly Bookish,  Guest Blog
June 13, 2012  Stephanie, Miraculous, Review
June 13, 2012  Liz, Fictional Candy Bio/Excerpt/Synopsis
June 13, 2012  Melissa, Adventures of a Frugal Mom, Review, Guest Blog
June 16, 2012  Susan, A Soul Unsung, Bio/Excerpt/Synipsis, Guest Blog
June 16, 2012  Michelle, Indie writers review, Review
June 16, 2012  Jessica, Wickedly Bookish, Interview

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