It's a pleasure to have Krystalyn Drown at my blog today! WELCOME!
Title: Spirit World
Author: Krystalyn Drown
Genre: YA Fantasy
Publisher: Entranced Publishing, Blush
Release Date: April 8, 2013
BLURB:
All Riesa Adair wants is a normal life. With the end of high
school only months away and an outstanding GPA to bolster her college plans,
that doesn't seem like too much to ask. Unfortunately, the voices screaming in
her head keep getting in the way. Somewhere between her summer in a mental
institution and her stepfather's attempt at an exorcism, she's learned to keep
quiet about her situation. But, pretending to be normal hasn't prevented the
spirit world from taking notice of her. Both sides of an ever-present war have
focused in on her. Now she'll need all the help she can get to escape a
powerful Spirit threatening to fulfill a prophecy that endangers the entire
human world.
Krystalyn spent thirteen years working at Walt Disney World
in a variety of roles: entertainer, talent coordinator, and character captain.
Her degree in theatre as well as many, many hours spent in a dance studio,
helped with her job there.
Her various other day jobs have included working in zoology
at Sea World, as an elementary teacher, and currently as a support technician
for a website. In the evenings, she does mad writing challenges with her
sister, who is also an author.
Krystalyn lives near Orlando, Florida with her husband, son,
a were cat, and a Yorkie with a Napoleon complex. Spirit World is her
second novel.
GUEST POST:
I recently attended a book signing where a number of authors
were asked the question, “Why do you write YA?” Most of them answered something
like, “I didn't know it was YA at the time. It was just the story that came to
me.”
Afterward, I got to thinking what my answer would be to that
question. I most certainly knew I was writing YA. It's what I enjoy reading, so
I believe it's a natural extension of that. Like many YA authors, I'm stuck
mentally somewhere between the ages of 12-17. Of course, I'm not that age
anymore. I have a job, a kid, and a house, but I like to live vicariously
through my characters. I allow them to do things I never had the guts to do. I
allow them to speak loudly and make bad decisions and experience things for the
first time. I think the teenage years are some of the most exciting years of a
person's life, and while I wouldn’t want to repeat it for anything, I enjoy
seeing how my characters deal with it.
Riesa, in particular, is interesting because she's right on
that cusp of adulthood. She turns eighteen in the novel, and she has to make
hard decisions that turn her from a kid into a person who can stand on her own.
No comments:
Post a Comment