Cover Reveal of Consecrated

Cover Reveal of Consecrated

It’s Time!

For Another Cover Reveal!!

‘Tis the season for cover reveals! This one is for another “bonus” story in the Awakened world. I wrote it over Christmas and then had to wait for my darling daughter to have time to work on the character art for me, which didn’t happen until spring break. But she’s finished it, and I have the cover, and it is SO BEAUTIFUL, so naturally, it’s time to share!

Consecrated will be available in May as an eBook all by itself, and I’ll also be getting a PRINTED EDGE PAPERBACK of the THREE novellas ready to go soon too! (Maybe not at the exact same time, but hopefully close.) The paperback will combine the two novellas already out, Captivated and Celebrated, with this newest on, Consecrated. Together, the paperback will be called Fathomed: The Awakened Mer Novellas.

The compilation will have a cover all its own, but I don’t have that quite ready yet. So…below you’ll get a peek of what the background and printed edges might end up looking like, but the full reveal for that one will come after my other illustrator friend, Caroline, works her magic on the character art. =)

But for now…CONSECRATED!

Let’s meet…

Luciana

As the Crown Princess of Soltierra, Luciana’s role is to summon the water from the desert every week. And every week, it nearly kills her. The waters barely heal her. She knows she’s too weak to see her kingdom into the future…while her little sister is exactly what they need. But the law of inheritance is immutable. The only way for Solara to inherit instead is if Luciana dies without another heir.

And so, she has made up her mind to do just that. And to remove herself from the path of a visiting prince with strong magic to try to encourage him to fall for her little sister. She’ll simply go with the consecrated brides to Isla Anahi for the annual Meeting…and pray the Voice of the Wind will show mercy to her people and bring the next generation magic enough to sustain them.

A king who knows his own weakness…

Koa

Koa, the first king of the Alliance of the Seven Tides, learned his weakness twenty-five years before, when he met the Atla mer and the king of Daryatla. He left the encounter with a new faith in the One…and a realization that while magic had strengthened on the other side of the continent, their own had grown weak. Every year, he leads the consecrated grooms to Isla Anahi, where new marriages are made in the hope of a stronger tomorrow.

But Koa fears that the very tradition that was meant to guarantee that both the Calm Water mer and the Sun People of Soltierra had Awakened enough to secure their future will be the thing that destroys them. And with a growing threat from pirates pressing on his territory, he doesn’t know what to do but pray that the One will show them the way through these tumultuous currents.

A visiting prince…

Bleu

Son of King Seidon and Queen Arden of Daryatla, Bleu knows very well that he’s been invited to Soltierra for a matchmaking venture with the younger princess, Solara. And that’s fine–he’s ready to find the wife the Triada has in store for him, one who can match him in magical strength. And when he hears a whisper in his soul promising him just that, he knows true hope.

Except…nothing ever seems to go to plan.

The inseparable duo…

Solara & Iraja

Princess Solara and Iraja have been best friends, practically sisters, all their lives. And they both know exactly what they need to do.

Solara needs to convince Bleu to forget about her and leave, because she has no intention of playing into her mother and sister’s plans to be the one to carry on the line while Luciana sacrifices all chance at happiness–and life.

And Iraja needs to convince Solara to fall in love with the prince. Because Iraja owes everything to the queen, and the queen has spoken. And how hard can it be to help Soli see how perfect Bleu is…and how much Soltierra needs the strength he can bring?

Evocative settings

Soltierra

In this novella, we have several settings. First we see Aureluz, the capital city of Soltierra, a desert oasis with lush gardens and a sprawling palace.

Then we move to the tropical Isla Anahi, where sparkling sands meet turquoise waters, palm trees waving in the wind.

And finally, we dive with the mer into the depths of the Calm Waters and explore the sea in the pearl-pod caravans of the nomadic mer.

A Bonus Story in Roseanna’s

Awakened World

I did something crazy in this, guys. It’s just a short novel. Came in around 56,000 words. That’s less than half the length of Awakened.
(But more than twice the length of Celebrated.)

But I, um, kinda did two romances and four points-of-view. So it’s kinda like a two-in-one.

And I hope you love it as much as I do!

Ready? Here it is!
The cover of Consecrated!

What do you think??

Not surprisingly, I LOOOOOOVE it!! Xoe did such a fantastic job on the character art, and those tropical colors in the background…ah.

Since this one has three settings, I decided that for the cover, I wanted the “in between” one–Isla Anahi, where the sea-dwelling Calm Water mer and the desert-dwelling Soltierrans meet. 

Xoe went all out researching the styles for Luciana, combining Native/South American designs with a bit of Pacific Island beauty for the character herself. Isn’t the result just stunning??

NOW…

THE PAPERBACK!

I’ve had many of you ask if the novellas will be available in print, and the answer is YES! Not individually, but as a compilation. Fathomed will be available soon and will have CaptivatedCelebrated, and Consecrated in it. If you want the ebook, you can get Consecrated separately…if you want that pretty printed-edge paperback to match the others in the series, then you can pre-order that now too!

 I don’t have the design finished–Caroline is working on her version of Luciana for the cover of that one. But I’ll reveal it as soon as I have it, and I expect to ship these this summer! (Aiming for June, but I need to see when the press can fit us in.)

It might end up looking something like this (with, you know, Luciana on there too). Or it might not. We’ll see. But regardless, here’s a placeholder image. 😉

The Official Description

Two kingdoms. One fragile magic. A sacrifice that could save them—or destroy them all.

Every week, Crown Princess Luciana drains her life to summon water from the desert—and every week brings her closer to death. But while Luciana is ready to do whatever is necessary for Soltierra, her sister refuses to accept that they ought to put the kingdom above each other. A visiting prince may well be the key to renewing their kingdom’s strength…but only if Luciana is willing to sacrifice any hope of her own future.

Beneath the waves, King Koa of the Calm Water Mer faces a different kind of desperation. His people’s magic is fading, pirates threaten their shores, and the ancient traditions meant to preserve life may instead ensure their extinction. He and the group of mer grooms travel to Isla Anahi for the annual Meeting with Soltierra’s consecrated brides convinced that something must change if they have any hope of their two kingdoms surviving into the next generation. The law governing them all is immutable…but what if the only way forward is to break the tradition that has governed them for centuries?

As faith, love, and duty collide, the fragile bond between land and sea begins to fracture. And unless the ancient laws are rewritten, both kingdoms may fall beneath the weight of the very magic meant to sustain them.

Word of the Week – Glowup

Word of the Week – Glowup

A couple weeks ago, a reader made the request that I look into the origins of the word “glowup,” because it always made her smile when she heard it. Who was I to say no? 😉

Glowup is a very new word, dating only back to 2013. It entered the vernacular specifically through African American Vernacular English (AAVE) and hip-hop culture and then diffused into the mainstream from there. The first recorded use was in rapper Chief Keef’s song “Gotta Glo Up One Day.” In the song, the word was used to mean that rather than just growing up, he wanted to get wealthy and gain status. 

By the late 2010s, however, the word began to be used for a makeover, often including before and after images of people or spaces. These days, it’s been expanded to include positive changes to attitude, mental health, and any personal achievements.

So there we go! A new word but one which has already evolved a bit to go from strictly wealth-and-status to any improvement…and definitely one to make you smile.

 

Word Nerds Unite!

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My Very Very Very First Book

My Very Very Very First Book

Time for something that’s just pure fun.

A month or so ago, my mom was going through a bookshelf and found something odd stuck in one of their books. She pulled it out and laughed…because this wasn’t just random paper. This was my very, very, very first book.

In primary school, each year from second grade on, my teachers assigned us a big project of writing and illustrating our own books. Talk about an assignment MADE for me! I was already writing stories by this time, but I’d never turned one into a real book before. 😉 

So in second grade, I created this (ahem) masterpiece. Written and illustrated by Roseanna Higson (my maiden name, of course). And please note the copyright page, added by my mom, LOL.

I thought it would be fun to show you this glimpse into my writing beginnings!

So here we go. Photos of the actual book, with the text typed out below to be easier to read (with spelling mistakes preserved, LOL, and marked with [sic].)

The Brave Princess

by Roseanna Higson

Illustrated by
Roseanna Higson

Printed 1990
All rights reserved to printer

Once there was a princess that was very nice and happy. Her name was Beauty. She lived alone in a gigantic castle in a far-away land. She was sixteen years old. She was independent

and intelligent. She loved nature and protected it and cared for it.

The princess was special for many resons [sic]. She had magic powers and she was very brave too.

She was energetic and the best friend in the land. She was pretty and had long brown hair. She liked to play with her pet

unicorn and do gymnastics. Everybody loved her very much. She loved her pet unicorn. She had a magic twisted horn that could tell the weather and light up. She could

live forever. Virita was a nice pet that was loving and caring and she could talk. She was pink and she had a horn made of gold. She lived outside the big castle.

One day the princess was

getting ready for her seventeenth birthday party. She was very happy that all of her friends could come. She made a huge delicious chocolete [sic] birthday cake and scrumptios [sic] creamy orange sherbert [sic] ice cream. They would all play “Pin-the-Tail-on-the

Donkey” and open presents. She was almost ready when all the animals started knocking at the door. When she opened it they almost blew right into the castle! The wind was so strong that Beauty almost lost her crown!

She quickly shut the door and Virita

said that a hurricane had come! The unicorn got frightened for a minute and then remembered Beauty’s magic powers. She said if she put the sun and rain together it would make a rainbow and block the wind. That way they would all be safe! The

unicorn warned her not to step outside but she did anyway. Her hair was blowing then she cast the magic spell and the hurricane couldn’t get through the rainbow! So she went in and told the animals that is was safe now. The princess went upstairs and got in bed to rest for her birthday.

When she woke up the next day she got

dressed and made breakfast. All the animals came in to eat. They were having pancakes and eggs. After breakfast she braided her hair and put in a bow. She was happy and cheerful because her land had been saved. She put her favorite red dress on and went downstairs where all the animals were waiting. After that they sang “Happy Birthday!” It was the best

birthday ever because all Beauty wanted was to have friends and be happy.

And there you have it. The very first book written and illustrated by Roseanna. Hope you got a kick out of it much like I do. 😉  

Word of the Week – Snug & Snuggle

Word of the Week – Snug & Snuggle

My husband and I are a very snuggly couple, so it was only a matter of time before one of said, “I wonder where the word snuggle comes from? Clearly snug, but…like, tight? Because you’re coming in close?”

Turns out…not exactly. Because the “tight” meaning of snug is actually one of the latest to the game.

Snug‘s original meaning dates from the 1590s and was “compact, trim” or “protected from the weather,” specifically of ships. Related words in Scandinavian languages are snoggrsnugg, and snøg, which meant things like “neat and tidy” or even “short-haired.”

In the early 1600s, that idea of being tidy and protected had morphed into “in a state of ease or comfort.” We see this still in the expression (from the 1760s) of “snug as a bug in a rug.”

Snuggle dates from the 1680s, meaning “to move this way and that to get close to something for warmth or affection,” presumably from that notion of “state of comfort.”

The British slang of snog/snogging  for a snuggle or kissing is a variation on the spelling that harkens back to those Scandinavian roots and dates from around 1945.

In my own family history, my kids made snug a verb when they were little, proclaiming that the cats were “snugging up against” their legs. I now can’t think of that particular feline habit by any other name, LOL.

 

Word Nerds Unite!

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A Holy Week of Suffering

A Holy Week of Suffering

Holy Week has long been the most precious week of my year. Even in high school, this was the week that brought my focus fully onto Christ in a way nothing else ever can. This is the week that inspired my first novel, A Stray Drop of Blood. This is the week when my hubby and I started dating. This is the week, especially the end of it, when we enter into Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, when I pause normal life to focus on the enormity of what my Savior did for me.

The fact that the Triduum (Holy Thursday through Easter) is also the biggest celebration in the liturgical year is one of the things I immediately loved about the Catholic tradition. In the Baptist church we spent fifteen years in, David and I were often left feeling let down by the disinterest in this holy time, when we wanted to do something each day and…no one else did. So we created our own traditions, but they never felt quite enough. Well, I can say in all honesty that the daily services and masses definitely feel enough. They are enough. They are, in my humblest of opinions, the most beautiful services to be found. The washing of the feet on the Thursday…the focus on the cross and fasting on Friday…and the candlelit vigil on Saturday…gah! I LOVE THEM.

This year, though, will be different for me.

This year, my Holy Thursday starts in an infusion chair in the cancer center.

Tears fill my eyes as I type this. Because, friends, this is not how I want to be spending my Holy Week. I want to be focusing on Him, not the churning of my stomach. I want to be thinking about the cross, not my exhaustion. I want to be celebrating His miraculous resurrection, not trying to drag myself out of bed.

As I realized that this, my fifth infusion of Enhurtu, would be on Holy Thursday, I very nearly reached out to my oncology team to say, “Could we postpone this a week, so that I don’t have to be sick over Easter?” Because the last four…they hit me hard. Even after my clear scans (praise God!) meant dialing back the nastiest part of the drug cocktail, I was still fighting exhaustion for five days and nausea for ten. Last cycle, the week following infusion, I didn’t feel much like me. My brain was a bit foggy. I felt subdued. It was hard to joke (my standard response to pretty much anything), hard to be creative. “You feel so far away after an infusion,” my husband said. And I knew what he meant, because I feel it too. Me, my personality, my spark, is so subdued in those days. I hate it–but it’s the reality.

I didn’t make the request, for a variety of reasons. But as I settled that in my mind, it made room for more thoughts. And they are this:

Maybe this is the perfect time to not feel like me–because maybe then I can focus more on HIM. Maybe this is the perfect time to be raw, emotional, and weak–because maybe then I’ll understand a bit better how HE felt. Maybe this is the perfect time to be suffering–because oh, how HE suffered.

Maybe I need to pause and realize that these holy days are not about me making them enough. They’re about HIM making them enough. Enough to fill me. Enough to sustain me.

Enough to save me.

This isn’t the Holy Week I wanted. But I pray it’s the Holy Week I need. I pray that as I sit in that infusion chair, I can reflect His light. I pray that as we experiment with a new med regimen to try to get the nausea under control, just enough me is there to cling to Him. I pray that as I’m no doubt fighting exhaustion, I can put myself in the garden with the disciples who succumbed to it too, and I can hear my Savior’s bid to pray with Him. To be there with Him. To watch with Him, because His time had come. The hour was nigh.

And all creation held its breath.

Whether we feel it or not, these days are so precious. Because we are pausing to remember the most amazing miracle. The Word who spoke the world into being, the Word that came among us, the Word that was silenced will ring out again in victory in a few short days. And all creation will shout with Him.

I pray that, whatever your traditions, our Lord meets you in a special way this coming weekend too. I pray that we, who are always held so tenderly in our Father’s hand, will be moved in new ways as we contemplate the suffering of our Brother, the sorrow of His death, and the joy of His resurrection. I pray we, too, rise anew with Him. On Sunday and every day. 

This weekend, I will likely suffer–just a bit. I’ll probably be tired. I’ll probably feel sick. And I’ll give it to Him, who suffered unto death. Who sweated blood. Who was beaten, lashed, had a crown of thorns pressed cruelly to His brow. Who suffered the most agonizing death ever devised by man, and who did it willingly.

For you. For me.

He stretched His arms wide to the world, by His own choice. 

And He defeated that suffering. Won the victory over death. And promises us all that even though we’ll encounter suffering of our own, there is a purpose. And it is Him.