The Crossroads Tour: Day 3 Judith Graves

Each day of The Crossroads Tour, a new question will be revealed on The Crossroad Blog Tour main page and each day the answer to that question will be found within one of the 16 different blog posts by Crossroads Tour authors. Your job is to get the question, read the blog posts, and collect all 16 answers by the end of the tour, on Halloween. Go HERE to get today's question and links.

Today's guest for the Crossroads Tour is author Judith Graves.  She is actually the organizer behind this really cool author/blogger tourfest. I had a wonderful privilege of reading and reviewing Under My Skin (Skinned, #1) just before it came out.  To read my review, click here.  Her second book in the Skinned series, Second Skin, will be out in 2011.  Not sure I can wait until the next book is out....wonder if I can hack into her computer when she isn't look.  I need some more Alex!  *sigh*


Did you have a book that you read either in Middle School or High School that scared you the most? What was it and what about it scared you?

Stephen King books freaked me out in high school. They still do, that’s why I love his stuff. ;) Ray Bradbury’s stories were favs – not scary, but odd / disturbing tales.

Did you have a paranormal experience that prompted you in writing the story that you did?

I have a phobia – I’m scared of creepy old dolls. Yes, there’s a story behind my fear. Let’s just say dolls so lifelike they seem to be breathing…well, maybe they are! Eryn shares my distrust, which made a lot of Second Skin, Book 2 in the Skinned series, fun to write. She runs into a few devilish dolls I wouldn’t want to mess with. Better her than me.

Where did you get the idea for your story? Did you use a real life situation and put a twist on it?

Kind of the opposite. I took an unlikely situation (mythological beasties from different regions fighting over one bit of unclaimed territory) and plunked it down in a small town similar to mine.

Did you have a favorite paranormal/horror story writer as a child/teen that you wanted to emulate? If so, who and why?

Not consciously, but if I thought I’d managed to give my readers the heebie jeebies in a few key scenes, then I’d likely credit Stephan King. I’m forever looking over my shoulder when reading his work.

What kind of research did you do for your story and did you run into anything weird while you were doing research?

While researching the windigo (a mythological creature of First Nations origins that I mention in UMS, but we actually get to “see” in Second Skin), I discovered the term “Windigo Psychosis.” Even today people swear they have “turned windigo” and crave human flesh. There have been murder cases with this as a defense. Is this a purely a cultural response or something more?

What helps you to create characters that people will feel passionate about either in liking them or disliking them?

I like to read, and write, about characters with flaws. Perfect people are perfectly boring. I endeavor to make my characters multi-leveled, layered like onions…to have hidden depth or unexpected quirks. And you never know if you can trust someone until you’ve battled werewolves together. ;)

Thanks Judith for stopping by and answering a few questions.  And thanks for organizing this great tour.

For more information about Judith Graves and her books, check out her website: http://judithgraves.com

You can find her on twitter: @judithgraves

The Crossroads Tour: Day 2 Tonya Hurley

Each day of The Crossroads Tour, a new question will be revealed on The Crossroad Blog Tour main page and each day the answer to that question will be found within one of the 16 different blog posts by Crossroads Tour authors. Your job is to get the question, read the blog posts, and collect all 16 answers by the end of the tour, on Halloween. Go HERE to get today's question and links.

Today's guest for the Crossroads Tour is author Tonya Hurley. Her third book in the Ghostgirl Series, Lovesick, came out in July. If you haven't read Tonya's books, go out and get them. They are a fun read and perfect for the Halloween season.


Description from GoodReads:
Before she can rest in peace, Charlotte Usher must return to the tragic site of her death: high school. Once there, her assignment is to help a designated teen solve a personal problem in time for the allimportant prom. But no one explained what happens if you fall in love with your class project. Charlotte would die (again) for love but facing the all-too-familiar feeling of invisibility may be too much for her to swallow.

Thanks Tonya for stopping by and sharing with readers some of your Halloween experiences.

What was your most embarrassing/funny/scary Halloween experience or costume?

One year my twin sister and I went as Siamese twins. Strange, awkward, but true.

Do you have any Halloween Traditions that you continue to celebrate with or have created for you and your family?

Every year we go on a quest to find the largest pumpkin we can possibly find. We’ll drive anywhere to get it. (Wonder how far she will have to drive this year! =D)

Thanks Tonya for sharing your family Halloween tradition with us.

For more information about Tonya Hurley and her Ghostgirl Series, check out her webite: http://tonyahurley.com

To find her on Twitter: @ghostgirlbooks

For additional fun, check out the book trailer for Ghostgirl: Lovesick.  It is so good.

The Crossroads Tour: Day 1 Lucienne Diver

Each day of The Crossroads Tour, a new question will be revealed on The Crossroad Blog Tour main page and each day the answer to that question will be found within one of the 16 different blog posts by Crossroads Tour authors. Your job is to get the question, read the blog posts, and collect all 16 answers by the end of the tour, on Halloween. Go HERE to get today's question and links.

My first guest for the Crossroads Tour is author Lucienne Diver . Her second book in the Vamped Series, ReVamped, came out in September. By commenting on this post and following the directions below, you will have an opportunity to win a signed copy of VAMPED. If you haven't read Lucienne's  books, go out and get them. They are a fun read and perfect for Halloween.


Description from GoodReads:
Gina Covello's Perks and Pitfalls
of Vamp Life
1. Hello?! Eternal youth and beauty!

2. Free. Designer. Clothes.

3. My hot new boyfriend Bobby went from chess dud to vamp stud.

4. No reflection! First order of business: turn my own stylist to stop the downward spiral from chic to eek.

5. Vampire vixen Mellisande has taken an interest in my boyfriend, and is now transforming the entire high school into her own personal vampire army. If anyone's going to start their own undead entourage it should be me.

I guess I'll just have to save everyone from fashion disasters and other fates worse than death.



Thanks Lucienne for stopping by and sharing with readers some of your Halloween experiences.  


Do you have any Halloween Traditions that you continue to celebrate with or have created for you and your family?


Halloween has always been my favorite holiday. I met my husband when we both worked as actors at a haunted house, and I continue to find any excuse to dress up in costume to this day.

I’ve always loved creating. From the time I was old enough to sew, which is as far back as I can remember, I made costumes for my sister and myself. There were no store-bought costumes for us! A bat, a black cat, a horse, a goddess, a butterfly, an alien…we were so many things. Anything we could imagine and I could cobble together.

I trick-or-treated well into college. I had an excuse! I lived in International House, which was a very special floor of one dorm dedicated to students from all over the world and those of us who wanted to live and learn among them. Many of the students had never trick-or-treated or seen snow or done any number of things that we had fun showing them. I’ll never forget the year we took our friend Yukio, from Japan, trick-or-treating. She wore a fabulous traditional kimono and wooden shoes. We wondered how she was ever going to make the rounds without destroying her feet, but she never complained. We hit house after house, garnering some funny looks and questions about whether we weren’t too old for all this, but we persevered and made it back to campus with quite the impressive haul. The next day, I saw Yukio giving the chocolate away! Horrified, I told her that the candy was the whole point of trick-or-treating, but it hadn’t been so for her. In fact, Yukio’s version of delicacies was slightly different than ours—something involving crackers and see-through fish.

Later in college, we found excuses to dress up with alter-ego parties, where you were supposed to come as your polar opposite. (For anyone interested, my recurring character was Butch-the-auto-mechanic. He was scruffy and dirty and yes, he stuffed. He also scratched, spat and swaggered.)

If that wasn’t enough, there were plays, Renaissance Faires, and all kinds of extras. My husband and I even had our own theme wedding, a late fourteenth century medieval affair. My die-hard Roman Catholic family was so relieved we didn’t have our ceremony at the haunted mansion they even dressed up in garb for the big day.

When our son came along, he did so with his very own outré fashion sense. Rarely did he leave the house between the ages of two and six (give or take) without a costume or a cape. Superheroes were his thing…Batman, Robin, Spiderman, Superman, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles…you name it. He still keeps a costume bin in his room, which gets busted into whenever he has friends over. So, we’ve infected him, raising the next generation fiction fan. We’re very proud.

I can’t speak for everyone, but I know that I live too much in my head. The appeal of a costume is that you get to live in someone else’s head for awhile. You’re not just wearing a piece of cloth or latex or whatever, you’re wearing a persona. You get away from your everyday worries and responsibilities and you give yourself over to make-believe. As big blue superhero The Tick says, “Reality is just a one-trick pony.” I tend to like taking imagination out for a spin.

For more information about Lucienne Diver and her books, check out her website: http://luciennediver.com 

You can find her on twitter: @luciennediver


To enter to win a signed copy of VAMPED please fill out the entry form. Here are the rules:
1. Only one entry per person
2. All entrants must be 13 years or older.
3. Contest is open until October 31, 2010 at 11:59 PST
4. Contest is open to international participants.
5. Commenting on the post will earn you an additional entry.
6. Winner must respond within 48 hours of notification or a new winner will be announced.




Good luck and happy reading! The Crossroads Tour is going on until October 31, 2010. Check back to see what other fun giveaways will be happening. Tomorrow author, Tonya Hurley will be stopping in.

Book Review - When Wishes Come True

Author/Illustrator: Per-Henrik Gurth
Publisher: Lobster Press (October 1, 2009)
Age Level: 3 to 6 years
Source: Copy for Review
Rating: 4 out of 5 Stars

Description from GoodReads:

The touching story of Little Bear will show children that wishes really do come true. Little Bear closes his eyes and wishes and wishes and wishes to become an astronaut in outer space … a pirate on a ship … a king in a magical castle! But when he opens his eyes, his wishes haven't come true. He is still Little Bear living in the Arctic tundra. Mother Bear helps him see that many of his wishes do come true, from swimming with playful belugas to watching the dazzling northern lights. And much to his surprise and delight, Little Bear discovers that he was Mother Bear's own wish come true! Children and adults alike will be touched by this reassuring tale of love and hope by celebrated children's book author and illustrator, Per-Henrik Gürth. 

 Some books are simply "awwwww" books.  You read them and you say "awww".  Per-Henrick Gurth's When Wishes Come True has that effect on the reader.  As I read through the book, I found that I really enjoyed the easy back and forth between the mother polar bear and the baby bear.  Little Bear like any young child has wishes of becoming an astronaut, or a pirate, or a king.  And as I read the pages, I could almost hear the voice of a small child speaking those exact words.  The beautiful illustration lend both a sense of realism and magic to the book and compliment the text. 

Mother Bear's response to Little Bear is gentle and at first practical.  Her reminders of small wishes that he experiences on a regular basis help Little Bear to see that all is not lost.  However, it is in the ending when Mother Bear lets Little Bear know that he was her big wish come true, that the "awww" factor increased for me.  

When I thought further about the book, I realized that Gurth's story is a solid contender in this category of books that speak to the bond of mother and children geared for our youngest readers but does not pull ahead of other books.  Unfortunately, I can easily list about a dozen picture books that have been just as solid. This led me to give the book 4 stars instead of 5. With that said, it is a beautiful book and would be a welcome addition to any collection of books.