Friday Reads~The Gladiator and the Guard

FRIDAY READS
Hey friends! We have made it to another Friday and that means we are hosting an author to share why her book will make a great #FridayRead.

 

I’m excited to announce that my young adult action and adventure novel, The Gladiator and the Guard, is now available for purchase!
1

 

This is the second book in the Krillonian Chronicles, sequel to 
The Collar and the Cavvarach.
 

A new book is definitely an exciting announcement! 

 

  1. Tell our readers why they should choose your novel as their Friday Read.

TheGladiator and the Guard is a unique type of story that takes place in a unique setting. Allow me to tell you a little about both.

This is the second book in the Krillonian Chronicles, the first one being The Collar and the Cavvarach. The stories take place in a world almost exactly like our own. Although most aspects of the culture are just about what they are currently on Earth, a few sports are different, such as the martial art known as cavvara shil. The main difference, however, is that slavery is legal there.

The Krillonian Empire rules much of the world. An emperor, who is never named, governs from the capital city, Krillonia, on the continent known as Imperia. Eight separate provinces (independent nations before they were conquered) can be found on nearby continents. Each province, plus Imperia, is allowed to elect its own legislature and decide on many of its own laws, but the emperor reserves the right to veto any of them and make changes as he sees fit. This seldom happens, however, and to most people the emperor is merely a vague and distant ceremonial figure.

The prevalence of slavery is probably what would stand out the most to visitors from Earth. There are nearly as many slaves in the city of Jarreon, where both books take place, as free people, and they are easily identified by the steel collars they are required to wear locked around their necks. From each collar hangs a tag inscribed with the slave’s name, their owner’s name, and a copy of their owner’s signature. On the back of the tag is their owner’s phone number and a bar code that can be scanned to access additional information.

Many families own one or more slaves who do their housework and yard work. Businesses often own a large number of slaves, usually for manual labor, though some are trained for more complex tasks. Those who don’t own their own slaves may “hire in” one belonging to someone else. The accepted rate for an hourly wage is two-thirds the amount that a free person would earn for equivalent labor (the money goes to the slave’s owner, of course).

To read more about the culture of the Krillonian Empire, take a look at this post on my blog.

And the blurb for The Gladiator and the Guard :

Bensin, a teenage slave and martial artist, is just one victory away from freedom. But after he is accused of a crime he didn’t commit, he is condemned to the violent life and early death of a gladiator. While his loved ones seek desperately for a way to rescue him, Bensin struggles to stay alive and forge an identity in an environment designed to strip it from him. When he infuriates the authorities with his choices, he knows he is running out of time. Can he stand against the cruelty of the arena system and seize his freedom before that system crushes him?

  1. What is the book’s back story, what inspired you?

 I’ve had the idea growing in my mind for the last few years. It started as just a picture of the setting and its culture: a world almost exactly like ours, but with legalized slavery. The main characters, Bensin (a 14-year-old slave at the time of the first book, and a martial artist) and Steene (his owner and coach) emerged gradually, along with the plot (Bensin’s struggle to protect and free his younger sister). It wasn’t until after the first book had been published that I thought of the ideas that eventually led to the second book.

  1. Who were your favorite authors as a child and teen?

 As a child, I enjoyed C.S. Lewis, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Beverly Cleary, and Enid Blyton, among many others. As a teen, I grew to love Ray Bradbury, J.R.R. Tolkien, Stephen Lawhead, Fay Sampson, and Frank Peretti.

Imagine a big name author that you love is reading and raving about your book. Choose one of these reactions and explain why.

A. Freak out and shake all over.

B. Google everything you can find about your book and the author

C. Call everyone you know to share your excitement

D. Post immediately to Clean Indie Reads so your friends can freak out with you.

E. Begin to mentally compose a tweet to tell the world.

Definitely d. Probably a as well, but d for sure. Very few people I know in person would understand the true magnitude of such an event, but everyone in Clean Indie Reads see it as the momentous occasion it is and celebrate with me. That’s one of the many reasons I love that group!

It’s one of the reasons I love it too! 


Let’s not forget Book 1: 


Bensin, a teenage slave and martial artist, is desperate to see his little sister freed. But only victory in the Krillonian Empire’s most prestigious tournament will allow him to secretly arrange for Ellie’s escape. Dangerous people are closing in on her, however, and Bensin is running out of time.  With his one hope fading quickly away, how can Bensin save Ellie from a life of slavery and abuse?

What is the Collar for, and What is a Cavvarach?


The story is set in a world very much like our own, with just a few major differences.  One is that slavery is legal there.  Slaves must wear metal collars that lock around their neck, making their enslaved status obvious to everyone.  Any slave attempting to escape faces the dilemma of how and where to illegally get their collar removed (a crime punishable by enslavement for the remover).  


Another difference is the popularity of a martial art called cavvara shil.  It is fought with a cavvarach (rhymes with “have a rack”), a weapon similar to a sword but with a steel hook protruding from partway down its top edge.  Competitors can strike at each other with their feet as well as with the blades.  You win in one of two ways: disarming your opponent (hooking or knocking their cavvarach out of their hands) or pinning their shoulders to the mat for five seconds.

 
Click here to order The Collar and the Cavvarach from Amazon 
for $2.99 a discounted price of just 99 cents through May 30th!

 

The Gladiator and the Guard, with another awesome cover by the talented Jack Lin!

 

Click here to order The Gladiator and the Guard in Kindle format from Amazon 
for $2.99 a discounted price of just 99 cents through May30th!

Click here to order The Gladiator and the Guard from Smashwords (for Nook or in other digital formats) for $2.99 a discounted price of just 99 cents through May 30th!

 

Annie Douglass Lima spent most of her childhood in Kenya and later graduated from Biola University in Southern California. She and her husband Floyd currently live in Taiwan, where she teaches fifth grade at Morrison Academy. She has been writing poetry, short stories, and novels since
her childhood, and to date has published twelve books (two YA action and adventure novels, four fantasies, a puppet script, and five anthologies of her students’ poetry). Besides writing, her hobbies include reading (especially fantasy and science fiction), scrapbooking, and international travel.

Connect with the Author Online:

Email: AnnieDouglassLima@gmail.com

Annie, it has been a pleasure to host you today on Friday Reads.
Best of luck with your new release.

 

Interview with author Annie Douglass Lima

Annie's Series

 

On May 2, 2015 we hosted Annie Douglass Lima when she revealed the cover of her new novel,  The Collar and the Cavvarach. Today she has agreed to an interview and we are delighted to have her here.  So let’s get started!

 

Annie, tell us a little bit about yourself, where you are from, your family, and your Christian background. 

I was born in Southern California but raised mostly in Kenya, where my parents were missionaries. I’ve been a Christian since I was a young child Annie Douglas Limaand always knew I wanted to serve the Lord overseas somewhere. After college, I spent a year teaching in a one-room schoolhouse in Indonesia with Mission Aviation Fellowship, which was an incredible experience. Shortly after returning to the States, I married my husband Floyd, and the two of us lived in the States for several years while I taught in a Christian school in Southern California. Eventually God put all the pieces into place for us to move overseas, and now we’re serving at Morrison Academy, a missionary school in Taiwan. I’ve been teaching fifth grade here for eight years now, and I love it! Floyd and I feel totally at home in Taiwan.

Which of the places where you lived growing up was your favorite and why? Do you have a special memory of it? 

I consider Nakuru, Kenya, to be my hometown, and a big piece of my heart will always be there. It’s a quiet town on the shores of Lake Nakuru, which is rimmed with a ribbon of pink visible from miles away, from the thousands of flamingoes that live there year-round. Nakuru is within walking distance of Menengai Crater, the largest crater of an extinct volcano in the world. I have lots of fun memories of hiking in the crater with my family, as well as camping and watching wildlife at Lake Nakuru National Park. At night from our home we could hear the flap and twitter of flamingoes flying overhead. I love Nakuru!

Nakuru sounds magical. I would love to visit there. How did you end up living in Taiwan? 

Well, I’ve traveled to a total of nineteen different countries, and I always wanted to live overseas.  My husband and I prayed for God’s timing, and when both our careers showed signs of being close to a good transition point, we started looking into jobs in other countries.  I applied to teach at a number of different international schools, and Morrison Academy here in Taiwan was just the one where God opened all the doors.  So here we are!

I have enjoyed reading your posts on Facebook, especially the ones where you are sharing a recipe or trading for jam or other interesing items. I made the recipe you shared for Banana Monkey Jam and it is delicious. With so much  that is good in your life, what are you most grateful? 

I have so many blessings in my life that I hardly know where to start! The best is God’s love and His gift of salvation, but He’s given me so much else: a wonderful husband, a job that I love in a country I love, the gift of writing, opportunities to travel, a supportive family, online friends who have helped me so much in my writing – the list could go on and on!

What led you to work on the Annals of Alasia series and does your newest novel The Collar and the Cavvarach tie in with it? 

The inspiration for my first fantasy novel, Prince of Alasia, came from a dream I once had about a prince who was forced to flee from invaders and live in disguise in a poor neighborhood in his kingdom. I wrote the sequels, In the Enemy’s Service and Prince of Malorn, to tell different sides of the same story. The Collar and the Cavvarach is completely unrelated to that series. It takes place in a different world, but one very similar to our own, with a nearly identical culture, level of technology, etc. The biggest difference is that slavery is legal there, and the main character is a slave whose life goal is to protect – and free – his younger sister. Things get more difficult when he is sold away from her, but his martial arts skills and the chance of winning the Krillonian Empire’s biggest tournament give him hope of a different way to save her.

How would you characterize your intended audience of readers and why did you choose that particular audience? 

Annie  final+coverThe genre of The Collar and the Cavvarach is young adult action and adventure, and it could also be considered speculative fiction. While this isn’t technically a dystopian story, fans of the dystopian genre would probably enjoy it too. One of my beta readers said it reminded her of The Hunger Games (but she liked my book better!). I didn’t actually choose that audience, at least not deliberately. I just wrote the story that came to me, and that ended up being the audience it fits best.

What kind of major theme or message have you intended to communicate through your writings in The Collar and the Cavvarach, and what motivated the message? 

There is a strong theme of social justice, as well as family loyalty and courage. I hope this story will make readers think about the value of human life and perhaps take a second look at some of the practices we accept or choose to turn a blind eye to in our own culture. Legalized slavery sounds so impossibly evil that it’s easy to think we could never let it happen in this day and age, but how many other wrongs do we overlook just because it isn’t convenient to do anything about them?

What are your current activities and future plans in your writing career? 

I’m working on two more novels at the moment. King of Malorn will be the next one in the Annals of Alasia, and I’m hoping to have that published sometime this summer. The other one is The Gladiator and the Guard, which takes place four years after the events of The Collar and the Cavvarach. I drafted it last November (it was a NaNoWriMo project just like The Collar and the Cavvarach), but it still needs a LOT of work. I hope to have it ready for publication by about this time next year, but we’ll see.

 

Where can readers purchase your new release?

 

The Collar and the Cavvarach on Amazon

 

 The Collar and the Cavvarach on Smashwords

 

 The Collar and the Cavvarach on Kobo

 

The Collar and the Cavvarach on Barnes & Noble

 

The Collar and the Cavvarach on Google Play

 

The Collar and the Cavvarach on Apple iBooks

 

And if readers would like to connect with you online, where will they find you?

Email: AnnieDouglassLima@gmail.com

 

Blog: http://anniedouglasslima.blogspot.com

 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AnnieDouglassLimaAuthor

 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/princeofalasia

 

Goodreads: http://bit.ly/ADLimaOnGoodreads

 

Google+: http://bit.ly/ADLimaOnGooglePlus

 

Amazon Author Page: http://bit.ly/AnnieDouglassLimaOnAmazon

 

Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/AnnieDouglassLima

 

LinkedIn: http://bit.ly/ADLimaOnLinkedIn

Thank you for the interview, Annie, it was a pleasure having you here. I wish you much success with your new novel.