Showing posts with label dolamore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dolamore. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Blog Tour: Glittering Shadows (Dark Metropolis #2) by Jaclyn Dolamore



Check out the promo event for the second book in Jaclyn Dolamore's young adult fantasy series hosted by Itching for Books



Glittering Shadows (Dark Metropolis #2)
by Jaclyn Dolamore
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Release Date: June 16th 2015
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Synopsis:

The revolution is here. 

Bodies line the streets of Urobrun; a great pyre burns in Republic Square. The rebels grow anxious behind closed doors while Marlis watches as the politicians search for answers—and excuses—inside the Chancellery. 

Thea, Freddy, Nan, and Sigi are caught in the crossfire, taking refuge with a vibrant, young revolutionary and a mysterious healer from Irminau. As the battle lines are drawn, a greater threat casts a dark shadow over the land. Magic might be lost—forever. 

This action-packed sequel to Dark Metropolis weaves political intrigue, haunting magic, and heartbreaking romance into an unforgettable narrative. Dolamore's lyrical writing and masterfully crafted plot deliver a powerful conclusion.








Originally, the antagonist of this book, Ingrid, was Freddy’s long lost sister! And Sebastian, the revolutionary leader, was originally the spoiled son of a wealthy man whom Ingrid fell in love with, and the true antagonist was a creepy traveling sorcerer. It was an utterly different story. And also a story that was not working at all! It took me some months to figure out what the real story was. Thank goodness for revisions. And time.

The key to figuring out this book? Marlis. Once the character of the Chancellor’s daughter walked into my head, the rest fell into place.

“Dark Metropolis” was inspired by Metropolis, the German silent film by Fritz Lang. As an homage to Lang, in the opening scene of “Glittering Shadows”, Marlis is watching an opera that is basically Fritz Lang’s “Die Niebelugen”, the silent film he made before Metropolis that is a retelling of Wagner's Ring Cycle and Norse mythology. 

The battle scenes in this book were so hard for me! I knew I had to write them, and I wanted them to be good and realistic. But I simply can’t conceive of how a battle ought to go, despite all the time I’ve spent playing Dynasty Warriors games... Luckily my guy is a military history buff. I made him draw me detailed maps and write very involved battle plans!

One of my favorite things about this book is that Freddy gets a new kitten. I want to put that out there, for everyone who was traumatized by the cat death in book one. I would never write an EXCESSIVELY sad pet death, but I still really, really wanted to fit a new kitten in there. At one point I wasn’t sure it was going to work, and I was like, “NOOOO, MUST HAVE KITTEN.”

Many of the names of minor characters and places in this book come from the anime “Legend of Galactic Heroes”, and there are two airships in the book named after Final Fantasy airships. 


Ingrid bent over and rummaged around on the floor. When she came back up, she had Thea’s book of fairy tales. “I saw this poking out of your bag. Running away with clothes and lipstick and a book of Irminauer tales?” She smiled a little. Her teeth were neat and straight.
“Father Gruneman gave it to me when I was little,” Thea said. “At my father’s memorial.” She thought Ingrid might know Father Gruneman, since he’d been a revolutionary leader.
“Father Gruneman must have understood that the forest always calls us home, even here in the city,” Ingrid said, putting the book in front of Thea and opening it to an image of a girl in beautiful stylized robes plucking a mushroom from the forest floor. “The pictures are lovely.”
Thea glanced at her uncertainly. She was still holding Thea’s wounded hand, her touch featherlight but never breaking contact. “Are you going to heal my hand?”
“Yes, of course I am. But it might hurt a lot, just for a moment. Have some more medicine”—Ingrid poured from a bottle on the nightstand—“and look at your beautiful book.”
Thea took the medicine. “It’ll be all right, though?” she asked. The medicine had deadened some of her fear, but in the back of her mind she thought that if she lost the use of some of her fingers, she wouldn’t be able to work many places anymore.
“It will be fine very soon.” Her voice was even, soothing. Thea heard the actual words less and the rhythm more. The words were like water running over rocks, constant and sweet, and she closed her eyes. 
“Your voice is like a song,” Thea said. “My mother used to sing to me when I was sick.” Mother sang all the time, before her sickness. Sometimes it was annoying, Mother throwing open the curtains and waking her up for school singing. But other times it was nice. She wished Mother were here now.
“I could give you a song,” Ingrid asked. “It will help.”
“Okay.”
Ingrid began to chant—it was more like a chant than a song—long, beautiful tones. The music seemed to spin its way into the picture of the girl in the forest, so the colors grew brighter and Thea could almost smell moss and earth. Ingrid’s hand upon her arm was like a thread to another world, not unlike that fairy-tale forest that was a little bit frightening but also full of wonder. Anything could happen. The chant filled her with a sense of Ingrid’s power.
Thea felt something bite her wrist, heard a grinding, and her eyes snapped away from the book.
Ingrid held a bone saw in one hand, driving the blade just above Thea’s wrist with long, slow strokes. The saw was bright with Thea’s blood, but Ingrid had put cloths down so none would drip onto the bedspread or the carpet. Thea saw this through a haze of soothing tones and visions. She tried to say something, but her body was too dulled to speak or move. Ingrid’s eyes were half-closed, almost dreamy, as her lips moved with her strange song, but when she saw Thea looking, her note trailed off. 
“I’m sorry if it still hurts a little.” Ingrid’s words retained their rhythm. “I didn’t think I’d be giving this gift to you. But one must trust in fate.”






Jaclyn Dolamore was homeschooled in a hippie sort of way and spent her childhood reading as many books as her skinny nerd-body could lug from the library and playing elaborate pretend games with her sister Kate. She skipped college and spent eight years drudging through retail jobs, developing her thrifty cooking skills and pursuing a lifelong writing dream. She has a passion for history, thrift stores, vintage dresses, David Bowie, drawing, and organic food. She lives with her partner and plot-sounding-board, Dade, and two black tabbies who have ruined her carpeting.









Thursday, June 5, 2014

Blog Tour: Dark Metropolis (Dark Metropolis #1) by Jaclyn Dolamore




Dark Metropolis (Dark Metropolis #1)
by Jaclyn Dolamore
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Release Date: June 17th 2014
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Synopsis:

Cabaret meets Cassandra Clare-a haunting magical thriller set in a riveting 1930s-esque world.

Sixteen-year-old Thea Holder's mother is cursed with a spell that's driving her mad, and whenever they touch, Thea is chilled by the magic, too. With no one else to contribute, Thea must make a living for both of them in a sinister city, where danger lurks and greed rules.
Thea spends her nights waitressing at the decadent Telephone Club attending to the glitzy clientele. But when her best friend, Nan, vanishes, Thea is compelled to find her. She meets Freddy, a young, magnetic patron at the club, and he agrees to help her uncover the city's secrets-even while he hides secrets of his own.

Together, they find a whole new side of the city. Unrest is brewing behind closed doors as whispers of a gruesome magic spread. And if they're not careful, the heartless masterminds behind the growing disappearances will be after them, too.

Perfect for fans of Cassandra Clare, this is a chilling thriller with a touch of magic where the dead don't always seem to stay that way.


by Jaclyn Dolamore


One of the first things I think about when I write a book is the music to match! Dark Metropolis is based on 1920s Germany, so I listened to a lot of music from the period as well as music that captures a dark "modernist" sort of atmosphere. Here are 10 songs from the Dark Metropolis playlist. You can check out the songs on my Youtube playlist here!: 




1) Kanonensong from The Threepenny Opera by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill

When thinking of music to accompany Dark Metropolis, The Threepenny Opera sprung to mind immediately. This was a German musical that frankly, just SOUNDS like it comes straight out of some smoky 1920s venue. Many of you may know one of its famous tunes "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer" in its American version, "Mack the Knife". I'd heard just a few songs from it myself before writing this book, but I bought the whole album and it's brilliant. It's hard to choose between the dark rollicking "Kanonensong" and some of the other great tunes like "Pirate Jenny" and "Alabama Song".


2) I, Robot by The Alan Parsons Project

"I, Robot", with its eerie choruses on an instrumental backdrop, definitely brings to mind factories and bustling modern streets of a 1920s-30s city.


3) Behm 5-Uhr-Tee Im Strandcafe

An actual recording of a cheerful little foxtrot from 1920s Germany, I can certainly imagine the characters dancing to this very tune! If only Freddy knew how to dance...


4) Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (Reprise) by David Bowie

One of the best David Bowie tracks (split into three songs on the album, but they really have to go together) from 1976, there is such a dark, brooding majesty to this that I feel just has the right mood for the book.


5) Boys Will Be Boys covered by Goldfrapp


This song just *screams* "Cabaret".


6) Fascinating Rhythm by Gershwin

I have a lot of dark, broody music on the playlist for Dark Metropolis, but I think Thea at her heart is a pretty sunny person (even if she doesn't have much chance to show it under circumstances!) and this song makes me think of her because it's so catchy and bouncy. Plus, it's just irresistible! I could listen to it a hundred times. Actually, maybe I have by now, considering how long I've been working on this book...


7) Bittersweet by Roxy Music

All my Facebook friends will know, I am OBSESSED with Roxy Music. My favorite band of all time by miles. So yeah, I try to work their music into a playlist whenever possible. This song has actually made me think "I want to write a dark 1920s book" since the first time I heard it. It's too perfect. As always, Bryan Ferry writes the soundtrack of my imagination.


8) Metropolis by Kraftwerk

It's by Kraftwerk, one of the most artsiest, Germaniest bands ever, and it's called Metropolis. Do I even have to explain why this is here?


9) Isolation by Joy Division

Another piece that just set the dark, modern mood for me.


10) The Original Soundtrack to Fritz Lang's Metropolis, by Gottfried Huppertz

I've actually listened to the entire soundtrack of the 1927 film Metropolis, which is like 2 hours long, quite a few times during the writing of the book. Seriously, half of what makes a movie good is the soundtrack, to me, and Metropolis has a really great one...the themes just feel so iconic.


Jaclyn Dolamore was homeschooled in a hippie sort of way and spent her childhood reading as many books as her skinny nerd-body could lug from the library and playing elaborate pretend games with her sister Kate. She skipped college and spent eight years drudging through retail jobs, developing her thrifty cooking skills and pursuing a lifelong writing dream. She has a passion for history, thrift stores, vintage dresses, David Bowie, drawing, and organic food. She lives with her partner and plot-sounding-board, Dade, and two black tabbies who have ruined her carpeting.