JP McLean

Writing Addictive Fiction

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Author Interview With Colleen M. Story

August 18, 2022 By JPMcLean 6 Comments

Colleen M. Story

Colleen M. Story and I met on Twitter in early 2015, and though we’ve never met in person, we’ve kept in touch online. I got to know her through her Writing and Wellness blog, which is a useful resource for all things health-related in the writing realm. Sadly, it was my unhealthy writing habits that prompted her to ask me to contribute to her blog in 2016. I’d blown out my back, which made me reevaluate my habits.

I first came to know Colleen through her non-fiction writing, so it’s been fun to interview her and get to know more about the fiction side of her career. She’s a talented writer with a keen business sense. I invite you to settle in and get to know Colleen M. Story.

Tell us about your new novel, The Beached Ones.

The Beached Ones is a heartfelt supernatural story about the bond between two brothers who grow up in difficult circumstances. With an empathetic approach, it explores subjects like child abuse, suicide, and loss, and how love can get us through even the most traumatic experiences.

The back cover copy:

HE CAME BACK, DETERMINED TO KEEP HIS PROMISE.

Daniel and his younger brother grew up in an abusive home. Daniel escaped. Now an established stunt rider, he intends to go back to rescue his brother. But then one jump goes horribly wrong . . .

He recovers to find himself in Iowa, unscathed, yet his life has drastically changed. His best friend won’t answer his calls. Even his girlfriend is hiding something. Increasingly terrified, he clings to the one thing he knows: He must pick up his brother in San Francisco. In five days.

From the isolating fields of Iowa to the crowded streets of San Francisco, Daniel must fight his way through a fog of disjointed memories and supernatural encounters to face the truth and pay a debt he didn’t know he owed.

What or who was the inspiration behind it?

The idea for this book came to me after watching the movie, Sarah’s Key, which was based on the book of the same title by Tatiana de Rosnay.

The movie had a profound effect on me. The main character is haunted by the death of her little brother, for which she blames herself. At the end of the movie (spoiler alert), unable to shake her guilt, she commits suicide. Close curtain.

That movie haunted me for months. It seemed so unfair, what happened to the main character. And I kept feeling like her story was left unfinished. What happened after the suicide? The Beached Ones gave me a chance to explore that general question, although of course, within an entirely different story.

Of all the characters, which one do you relate to the most, and why?

I relate most to my main character in this story, Daniel Shepard, because I too have younger brothers. I helped raise them while I was growing up and felt very protective of them. I can understand the lengths to which Daniel goes to make sure that Tony is safe. Of course, I can also understand how Tony sometimes irritates his older brother!

You’ve had a long career as a successful writer and blogger; what made you want to write a supernatural fantasy?

Writing fiction actually came first for me. My first novel (Rise of the Sidenah) was traditionally published in 2015, and that was categorized as epic fantasy or general fantasy. Then my second novel, Loreena’s Gift, came out with Dzanc publishing in 2016. I feel that I found my voice with that story, and it was also a supernatural fantasy or cross-genre novel, sometimes called a literary paranormal.

The Beached Ones is categorized by my publisher, CamCat Books, as a supernatural thriller, which I think fits it best, though it’s also been called a literary ghost story.

I have always enjoyed having some sort of fantasy element in my stories, as that allows me to explore themes and topics in a more exciting or thrilling way than I could if I were to stick to strict reality.

My blogging career (mainly with WritingandWellness.com) didn’t get going until after Loreena’s Gift came out. At that time, I was looking for a way to establish an author platform and my previous blog hadn’t attracted much attention. Fortunately, Writing and Wellness took off and gave me a whole new facet of writing (non-fiction) to pursue and enjoy.

How is researching fiction different from researching non-fiction?

I see researching fiction as a fun activity that inspires my imagination. It allows me to take that deep dive into another world that is so important when writing any type of fantasy.

I was lucky enough to be able to travel to research The Beached Ones—I took the same journey the characters take from Harlan, Iowa, to San Francisco, California. I had researched and written the book beforehand, but taking the trip myself helped me improve the story in countless ways.

The Golden Gate Bridge
The Golden Gate — the final destination for my characters

Researching nonfiction, on the other hand, satisfies my never-ending curiosity and desire to learn. I love researching nonfiction topics, then sharing what I discover with others in ways that I hope will benefit them.

Where do you call home, and how did you end up there?

I live in southeast Idaho, which is an agricultural community nestled a short distance from Jackson Hole, Wyoming (and the Grand Tetons), with the West Entrance to Yellowstone National Park only about 90 minutes away.

Idaho Farm Fields being watered at sunset
Idaho farm irrigation at sunset

We also have the beautiful Snake River running right through the town, and a surprisingly robust commitment to the arts and music considering the smaller size of the area. I’m a French horn player and frequently participate in the symphony and pit orchestras, so I greatly appreciate that.

I grew up in Colorado surrounded by mountains and made the move north when I graduated college. I still get back to Colorado as frequently as I can, but I love Idaho not only for its natural beauty but for the strength and values of the community.

Idaho Park in the Fall
Idaho Park in the Fall

What are you working on next?

I’m excited about my next project, which is a retelling of the old Midas myth. There was a real King Midas who ruled Phrygia around 700 BC, so I’m having fun mixing elements of the historical figure with the mythological legend.

Find a FREE excerpt of The Beached Ones here!

Author bio:  Colleen M. Story is a novelist, freelance writer, writing coach, and speaker with over 20 years in the creative writing industry. Her latest novel, The Beached Ones, was released with CamCat Books on July 26th, 2022. Her previous novel, Loreena’s Gift, was a Foreword Reviews INDIES Book of the Year Awards winner, among others.

Colleen M. Story at Book Signing
Colleen M. Story book signing

Colleen has written three books to help writers succeed. Your Writing Matters is the most recent and was a bronze medal winner in the Reader Views Literary Awards (2022). Other titles include Writer Get Noticed and Overwhelmed Writer Rescue. You can find free chapters of these books here.

Find more at her author website (colleenmstory.com) or connect with her on Twitter (@colleen_m_story), LinkedIn, Instagram, and YouTube.

 

Introducing Canadian Author, Boshra Rasti

December 21, 2021 By JPMcLean 4 Comments

Author Boshra Rasti

I'm delighted to introduce you to Canadian author, Boshra Rasti. She leads an interesting life as an international teacher currently living in Doha, Qatar. Her new book, Surrogate Colony, comes out on February 1st, 2022, but she's offering it now to build up reviews. Boshra's and my books have strong female characters in common, and we had a great online chat. Boshra agreed to answer some interview questions, and I know you'll find her as interesting as I do.

Q: Talk about yourself. Your books. What you’ve written so far.
BR: I once went on a first date and after exchanging some pleasantries, he asked me “what’s your crazy?” I was taken aback by the question and when my initial discomfort with the question died down, I realized it was a very perceptive thing to ask. Everyone just wants to be normal, but to really know someone, you need to realize their neuroses, or oddities. So, I think the biggest neuroses I have is wanting fairness in a very unfair world. That’s probably the biggest reason I write, to advocate for the odd ones, the down-and-outs, the political outcasts, the underdogs.

Q: What is the inspiration for your main characters
BR: Adriana is an odd one, an underdog, but she’s super smart.  She is also persistent and patient. I really admire women who are strong like that. I can definitely resonate with a time in my life where I felt I’d never amount to anything. That I would never fit in, so Adriana is the sort of person I wish I was when I was 18.

Q: What do you hope for readers to be thinking when they read your novel?
BR: I want them to be empowered. The novel’s dedication is: “to every innocent questioner, to every faultless outcast”, so I want people to realize that critical thinking and questioning are a huge part of being homo-sapiens. Don’t let those in charge of the algorithms take that ability from you.

Q: So, what’s next in your writing?
BR: I am really excited about my next novel. It is a YA, dystopian novel called “Pick Your Scar” and it’s about a future world where people live so happily that to come of age, they have to choose a scar that will help them realize pain. They enter an artificial reality where they basically undergo some damage, but the main character actually emerges from the experience with a type of mental illness.

Q: What are some things you like to do to relax when you aren’t writing or working?
BR: I like to run and walk. If running is too painful then I walk. I also really love mindfulness meditation, so I often sit and just breathe. I wish I could say I was into photography or art, or music, but I am terrible at proportions and can’t keep a tune!

Q: Are there any tips you could share with new writers that have worked well for you or was there something difficult you overcame? How?
BR: Goals, Motivations, Conflicts. Every character, every scene, needs to expound on these three things. Otherwise, you have a one-dimensional character going through a story with no backbone.

Q: Where can readers find you?
BR: My readers can find me running in the desert, or the streets of Doha. I am a teacher overseas, so in the summers I come home to Canada and visit friends and family and take in deep breaths of clean air. They can also find me virtually on Goodreads, Instagram, Facebook. I have a website: https://boshrawrites.com/  I really like to interact with my readers, so shoot me a question anytime!

Cover for Surrogate Colony

In MicroScrep, a post-pandemic world, one politician, Arthur Mills, brings all scientists and engineers together to create a vaccine and rebuild a world where harmony ensues. What results is a society where algorithms control who you marry, who your child is, and what position you have.

Adriana Buckowski is not normal. Her eyes are two different colors, making her less susceptible to the system’s propaganda, she has a unique connection with a boy named Zach, and she has questions. Weird occurrences happen as she gets closer to her Calling Ceremony, where she’ll be given a position. When she finally starts piecing together the twisted motives at play in MicroScrep, she becomes a cog in the wheel of the state.

Her only option for survival lies with Zach, and the hope that she will be vindicated through a vigilante group off-grid. But with time ticking against her, will she survive long enough to be redeemed?

Purchase Surrogate Colony here.

And if you do purchase Boshra's new release, please consider leaving her a review. Reviews help new readers find the books, and are especially important for indie titles.

Surrogate Colony Trailer


Blood Mark is now an international best-seller. Treat yourself with a copy for Christmas!

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Blood Mark Collage

Blood Mark Has Launched!

October 19, 2021 By JPMcLean 6 Comments

Blood Mark has launched! And never before have I had such fanfare on release day. Blood Mark is already a Literary Titan Gold Medalist and endorsed by heavy hitters, E.E. Holmes, Jennifer Anne Gordon, Eileen Cook, and Wendy Hawkin.

The early reviews have been great, and I couldn’t be prouder. Thank you to everyone who has supported this book and shared my posts here and on social media.

Order your copy now—you won’t be disappointed:

Amazon.com          Amazon.ca          Amazon.uk

Kobo          iBook          Nook & Barns&Noble          Chapters-Indigo          All other retailers

And if you’re in the Comox area on Saturday, October 23, drop by Blue Heron Books at 1775 Comox Avenue, where I’ll be talking books and signing copies of Blood Mark.

My latest publicity includes interesting conversation and laughs with Alan Warren at House of Mystery, and the gang at The Writers Block on LA Talk Radio. Give the shows a listen and learn something you didn’t know about my writing and the inspiration for Blood Mark.

Read on for an excerpt from Blood Mark, or click on this link for a downloadable pdf version, which you can read later.

Excerpt from Blood Mark

What if your lifelong curse is the only thing keeping you alive?

Jane Walker survives the back alleys of Vancouver, marked by a chain of blood-red birthmarks that snake around her body. During her tortured nights, she is gripped by agonizing nightmares when she sees into the past. It isn’t until, one-by-one, the marks begin to disappear that she learns the deadly truth: Her marks are the only things keeping her alive.

1   |   Jane

August 8

Jane Walker might have been the only person in Vancouver not afraid to be in a downtown alley at half-past midnight. Shadows clung to fissures and corners, morphing into nightmare shapes as she passed. A warm breeze stirred the scent of rotting garbage along with her gag reflex. Rescuing Sadie was getting old. One of these nights, Sadie’s unique way of punishing herself would be the death of them both. And maybe Jane’s bike.

She parked next to Ethan’s Fat Boy in the hopes his reputation would spill over and protect her cherished Honda 500. But the caged bulb above  the back door worried her. It bled a weak circle of light that pooled near the bikes. It was a toss-up whether it would draw attention or act as a deterrent. She said a prayer for the latter and removed her helmet. A slamming door punctuated a heated argument drifting down from a nearby apartment. She raked her long hair forward to hide the worst of the birthmark on her face then walked around the corner, bypassing the dregs of Riptide’s nightly queue.

A bouncer she knew manned the door. His steady gaze slid sideways at her approach. Boos from the lineup he held at bay prompted him to inhale, emphasizing the girth of his chest. He flexed biceps larger than her thighs, tipped his chin, and let her pass.

She nodded her thanks and stepped inside. A cocktail of perfume and stale sweat assaulted her. Thumping music reverberated in her chest as she scanned the bar for Ethan Bryce and found him pouring shots. A seasoned bartender, he worked the room like a ringside bookie at an illegal fight, smiling with one eye and watching for trouble with the other.

“Thanks for calling,” Jane said, pressing into the bar. “Where is she?”

Ethan held her gaze a moment longer than necessary then swiped his head to the left. Jane followed his line of sight to the dance floor, where her roommate swayed out of step with the music. Sadie had gone with tasteful tonight, wearing her LBD, as she called her little black dress. Her client must have been a high roller—unlike the ’roided-up jockstrap now keeping Sadie upright with a hand on her ass and a sure-bet smile on his face.

Jane strode through the dancers and stopped short of her. “Sadie?” she shouted over the music.

Sadie lifted her head from Jockstrap’s shoulder and struggled to focus. “Narc?” She blew at a stray blonde curl. Jane winced at the nick­name Sadie rarely used in public.

“You know her?” Jockstrap asked.

“Shurr. Tim, meet Narc. Dance with us.” Sadie reached for Jane. Her mascara had smudged, leaving charcoal shadows under her eyes. It’s what two lines of coke and a few too many vodka chasers looked like.

Jane took her hand. “Let’s go home.”

“She’s with me tonight, honey,” Jockstrap said, tugging Sadie’s arm away from Jane. He looked down to Sadie with a smarmy smile. “Aren’t you, baby?”

Sadie squinted up at him. When she looked back at Jane, sparks of awareness surfaced. She pushed against his chest. “I gotta go.”

“You don’t gotta go,” he said, dragging her back. “Stay with me, baby. We’re having fun, aren’t we?”

“How about I bring her back tomorrow?” Jane said. “When she’s not wasted.”

Sadie stumbled as Jockstrap twisted to put himself between the two women. “I’ve made an investment here.”

Charming, Jane thought, recoiling from his stale-beer spittle. She was quick in a fight and had the advantage of being sober, but Jockstrap had a hundred pounds on her and a hard-on with a destination.

She knew Ethan wouldn’t tolerate her pulling a knife in Riptide, so she’d have to dissuade Jockstrap some other way. She looked to the floor. For Sadie, she’d expose her marks. Only for Sadie. An eyeful of ugly often gave her a split-second advantage. He was already wobbling—shouldn’t be too hard to knock him on his ass.

She shifted the grip on her helmet, widened her stance, and drew in a calming breath. Then, in one swift motion, she swung the curtain of hair away from her face. “She’s going home,” Jane said, pressing upward into Jockstrap’s personal space to ensure he got a good look at the thick blood-red birthmark that slashed an angle from her forehead to her temple. It looked like the work of a medieval battle-axe.

He shrunk back with a familiar snarl of revulsion. Already primed, Jane was ready to launch when a firm hand landed on her shoulder, halting her.

“Everything all right here?” Ethan asked, squeezing harder than he needed to. Jane felt a pinch of resentment at his interference.

Jockstrap’s gaze darted to the figure standing behind Jane. Ethan wasn’t big, but his reputation was. You didn’t cross him unless you had generous sick-leave benefits.

Jockstrap’s nostrils flared. He pinched his lips. Neither man moved. Long seconds later, Jockstrap faltered and blew out a deflating breath. His bravado and sure-bet attitude faded along with his hopes of getting laid. He released Sadie with a little shove. “Go on then,” he said. “Take out the trash.” He stalked away and called over his shoulder, “And it’s Tom, not fuckin’ Tim.”

“Yeah,” Jane mumbled, “not fuckin’ Tom, either.” With a shake of her head, Jane settled her hair back into place. She wrapped a steadying arm around Sadie’s shoulder and turned her around, bumping into Ethan, who stood in their path.

“You okay?” he said, but his expression was a warning. She’d forced his hand and he didn’t like that.

“Yeah. Watch my ride? I’ll come by in the morning to pick her up.”

“Jimmy’ll keep an eye on her,” Ethan said, before he swaggered back to the bar.

Ethan’s faith in the stubble-faced panhandler who hung around the bar was a mystery to Jane.

She opened Sadie’s purse and fished out her keys.

2   |   Rick

Rick Atkins kept his back to the dance floor and gazed at Sadie’s reflection in the mirror behind the bar. Not that Sadie would recognize him in glasses and a full beard, but vigilance had served him well to this point. He wouldn’t tempt fate when he was so close to his end­game.

He watched the woman who called herself Jane flash her markings like a blowfish in the face of the predator shark who groped at Sadie. Jane had no inkling of the damage she was capable of inflicting. But not for long. Rick downed his beer and slinked out the door.

3   |   Jane

August 9

Jane parked in Sadie’s spot behind the Victorian house she and Sadie called home. The Kitsilano mansion had dodged the wrecking ball of the sixties but not the callous renovations of the seventies that left its old bones mutilated.

The pungent aroma of pot lingered in the hallway. Their new neigh­bour no doubt—his was the only other apartment on the basement level. Jane hadn’t yet met him.

They descended a couple of steps and made their way down the dimly lit hallway to their apartment, Jane keeping a grip on Sadie’s arm. They shared a small one-bedroom unit. First one home in the evening got the bed. She slipped her key in the lock and gave the door a shove, com­forted by the heft of the steel against her shoulder. A door the landlord would never have agreed to if he’d had to pay for it.

Sadie staggered in ahead of her. Jane turned the lock and shot the two  bolt locks. Thieves would find the sparse apartment a waste of their efforts, but the locks weren’t to dissuade thieves. Jane set her helmet on the floor and heeled off her boots, careful not to dislodge her boot knife.

She helped Sadie to bed and tucked her under the sheet. The mattress and box spring rested on the floor beside a table lamp that Sadie had rescued from a dumpster. She was already fast asleep when Jane returned with two aspirins and a glass of water. Jane set them on the parquet floor, also known as the bedside table.

Back in the living room, she double-checked the bolt locks. She’d gotten a deal on the door from a demolition warehouse but would have paid full price if she’d had to.

She changed into her sleep pants and an old cotton work shirt and settled on the sofa, drawing a quilt up under her arms. Though she was glad to have Sadie safe at home, she hated leaving her bike downtown, regardless of Ethan’s faith in Jimmy.

Her thoughts drifted to Ethan. He was the only man Jane could remember whose gaze didn’t skitter to the left of her face when he looked at her. It was as if he didn’t see her birthmarks, or that one anyway.

Port wine stains, the doctors had called them, though they hadn’t shared with her that they’d never seen specimens so uniform. Or exten­sive. The stains strapped her body. When Jane was ten years old, her guardian had allowed her to be stripped and photographed. That small humiliation still haunted Jane—so much so that only Sadie had seen all the hideous birthmarks. A handful of men had gotten a preview—men who’d fooled her with sweet words and then cut her to the quick when they didn’t have the fortitude to accept all of her.

The skin beneath the stains hadn’t thickened with age, as the doctors had predicted, but the stains themselves had morphed into an intricate pattern. It looked as if the birthmarks had been applied with a blood-red rubber stamp in thick rows.

The only treatment available to rid her of the crimson stains was laser, a painful and expensive procedure not covered by any health insurance she could afford. And because the birthmarks were vascular, the doctors warned her that the treatment might not work. It could even make the stains worse.

That didn’t sway Jane from her plan to attempt the removal process as soon as she’d paid off her Rebel. It wouldn’t be long now. She’d begin with the biggest offender: the two-inch-wide red line that tracked across the left side of her face, from mid-forehead to her ear. Hiding that one from curious stares was the most difficult. Two of the others, one on the back of her hand and one on the top of her foot, posed seasonal challenges but were nothing gloves and boots couldn’t cover.

Jane rolled over and gave in to the sleep that tugged at her. With the door bolted, the dreams could come. Not that she could stop them. They came when they wanted, without warning or apology. Vivid dreams that she could recall in painstaking detail, even when she didn’t want to.

And when the dreams came, nothing could wake her until they’d run their course.

Visiting Dream

Jane finds herself in a hospital room. The young woman in the room is pacing. She’s been in Jane’s dreams before. Her name is Rebecca Morrow. Jane read it on an envelope in an earlier dream. That time, Jane had been  in Rebecca’s tiny apartment, where Rebecca had been all smiles, snuggling with a man who had a rumbling laugh. Jane doesn’t know her or the man, which is unusual.

This time, Rebecca’s demeanour is furtive, guarded. Her hair is long and in need of washing. She wears two hospital gowns, one open in the back and, over it, one open in the front. Surgical socks cover her feet. She’s folded her arms tightly across her chest, pulling her shoulders into a hunch. Her circuit takes her from the wire-mesh-reinforced window to the bed to the open door.

Jane doesn’t know why she’s here with Rebecca. She scans the room looking for clues. Only a hospital bed and a padded chair furnish the space. No personal belongings. No warmth. No sharp edges. Austere. Jane senses it’s a psych ward.

A kindly woman, short in stature and wearing a bright, busy smock, pushes a cart of linens past the door. Her dark eyes are ringed in blue and set in a deeply lined leather face. She acknowledges Rebecca with a warm smile.

Sometimes hairstyles or clothing reveal the dream’s vintage, but Jane sees nothing to which she can pin a year or a decade. No disco hair, no visible tats or piercings.

When a nurse appears at the doorway, Rebecca freezes in place.

The nurse sounds as if she’s speaking through water, her words indiscernible. This is a change from the dreams Jane had as a teenager. Back then, the dreams were silent movies.

With a jingle of keys, the nurse unlocks a door opposite the bed. It’s a bathroom. She ushers Rebecca inside and supervises her use of the facilities. The nurse then guides her to the bed and hands her a small paper cup. When Rebecca reaches for it, the sleeve of the hospital gown rides up her arm, exposing white gauze bandages. A suicide attempt? The nurse doesn’t take her eyes off Rebecca until she’s washed down the pills with a few sips of water.

Jane wants to leave, but she’s stuck in the dream. It will release her when it wants to and no sooner. Jane breathes deeply, forcing herself to control the sense of helplessness these dreams bring on.

Rebecca drifts into a drugged sleep. She tosses her head from side to side and incoherent words tumble out.

Jane watches Rebecca sleep until her attention is drawn to the doorway. A doctor, if the white coat is any indication, approaches the bed. The man’s hair is short and gelled. He’s handsome. Tassels adorn his shoes, and his fine wool slacks have sharp creases. He studies Rebecca’s face while she sleeps, adjusts her blanket, then touches her cheek with his fingertips.

Jane woke with a start. Her dreams always ended abruptly. At least this one hadn’t left her retching. Or screaming. Jane checked the time. Two o’clock in the morning; four hours before she had to get up. She rarely had a second visiting dream in one night. Relieved to have it done with, she rolled over and bunched up the thin pillow.

She thought about the doctor’s gesture as she drifted to sleep. It felt off—inappropriate. Jane wanted to believe the doctor’s caress stopped at Rebecca’s cheek, but she wasn’t that naive anymore. Her dreams had seen to that. People carried out unthinkable deeds in her dreams when they thought no one was watching. Dreams Jane wished she could forget.

An Award, A Book Trailer, and Publicity News

October 8, 2021 By JPMcLean 8 Comments

I'm thrilled to announce that Blood Mark has received a Gold Literary Titan award. The Literary Titan also interviewed me, and you can read the interview here.

5-star gold Literary Titan medal
https://youtu.be/EP3rL9ZGWBk

And if that wasn't exciting enough, here's your first look at the new book trailer for Blood Mark.

On the publicity front:

Mark your calendar! On October 23rd from 11 am to 2 pm PST, I’ll be at Blue Heron Books in Comox, BC (1775 Comox Avenue) signing copies of Blood Mark. I’d love to see you there. Stop by for a chat.

On November 1st, from 1 to 2 pm PST, I’ll be live with Beth Worsdell on The Witty Writers Show. It’s a Facebook live event (https://fb.me/e/1AEuXW5bC). We’ll be talking about writing and Blood Mark, you’ll have a chance to ask questions, and I’ll be giving away a paperback copy of Blood Mark. Click the Facebook Event's  "Going" button and share to be entered for the draw. So please join us—it’ll be fun.

Blood Mark is available for pre-order from Amazon
And Kobo

Here is Literary Titan's Review of Blood Mark.

Blood Mark, by J.P. McLean, is set in Vancouver and tells the story of Jane Walker who was abandoned at birth and thrown into the system after a series of tragedies. She meets Sadie, a troubled teen who sticks with her as they make their way in life. Jane’s past is mysterious and this mystery is driven by what she believes are red birthmarks snaking around her body. Jane would do anything to get rid of these unsightly marks and has a stable job at a garden center to earn the money to have them removed. Sadie, who lives with Jane, works as a waitress while still caught up with the seedier side of Vancouver. We learn that Jane also suffers from vivid dreams where, while in a deep sleep, she visits people known to her in the past and sees things happening – often terrible and frightening events. Jane meets Ethan and things start to change when her birthmarks start disappearing and her dreams take a disturbing and deadly turn.

Blood Mark is an action packed thriller and Jane’s character reminded me of Lisbeth from The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest. All the characters are gritty and flawed, which I enjoyed because they all felt authentic.

This story has one of the most unique twists to the crime fiction genre I’ve seen this year. Is it a crime thriller or a paranormal romance novel? It is a fantastic blend of both. This is pulled off by the meticulous writing of JP McLean, who has created a detailed backstory to both the protagonists and the world, making them both captivating and alluring.

The story flowed well and the plot developments were easy to follow. This is key to ensuring readers know exactly what is happening in a novel that has wild twists and terrifying nightmares that bleed into reality.

Blood Mark is an enthralling dark fantasy novel with captivating characters that will appeal to anyone looking for a crime thriller with a unique supernatural setup.

You can download an excerpt and read more about Blood Mark here.

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