Hollow’s End Blog Tour!

Hollows End Button 300 x 225

 

I’ve got a really cool one to show you today!! 🙂 I am still sick, so please forgive any extra typos or strangeness. No worries, already went to the doctor and have lots of meds, but just incase LOL. OK, back to the goodies! 

Hollow's End

Hollow’s End

The Legend Series

Book One
Marianne Morea

Genre: YA paranormal romance/ horror

Publisher: Coventry Press, Ltd

ISBN: 0988439638

ASIN:  B00EUM92OO

Number of pages: 242

Word Count: 91,568

Cover Artist: Kim Killion

Amazon   BN   iTunes   

Book Description:

The dark water of the Hudson River isn’t the only blackness looming in the distance of the quaint river town of Sleepy Hollow. Two hundred years of secrets and lies are bleeding into the present, and high school seniors, Hunter Morrissey and Rowen Corbett, find themselves linked with unseen forces shrouded in mystery and violence.

Truths, buried and long forgotten, have risen at a time when the veil between the living and the dead is at its thinnest. Only Hunter and Rowen hold the key to locking the past in the past, and setting old wrongs to right. Can justice be served? Can the two find a way to straddle both worlds and solve the mystery when they don’t understand the clues?

Inspired by historical events that surround the village of Sleepy Hollow and the famous legend that shares its name, this Young Adult Horror takes you on a journey full of history and suspense with a splash of romance and the paranormal.

Excerpt: Chapter 1

he alarm clock buzzed, its repetitive blare piercing what was left of my sleep. I opened my eyes half way and peered at the red digital numbers staring back at me through dim light. With a groan, I slammed my hand on the clock’s hard plastic top, hoping to hit the snooze button and not the volume. Closing my eyes, I rolled over tucking one hand under my pillow and the other under my chin. But it was too late. My conscience was wide awake and already sparring with itself. Get up! You’re going to be late again. No, I won’t, just five more minutes…
‚Rowen! It’s six-thirty!‛ my mother’s voice shot from the hall.
Five minutes. Just five more minutes.
‚Rowen!‛
‚I heard you the first time!‛ I yelled at my closed bedroom door. Why did morning have to come so early and be so loud? I groaned again. If I didn’t get out of bed soon, she’d come upstairs looking for me, and that was the last thing I wanted.
Yawning, I reached over my head and stretched, arching my back to let the blood flow into my resting muscles like a reveille call. Up and at ‘em, troops!
My mother was up early, even by her standards. I wasn’t surprised, though. It was that time of year again. The time when our little shop, The Silver Cauldron, became the town headquarters for spells and charmed candles and, of course, witches brew. The season when the quaint river town of Sleepy Hollow transformed into a mecca for all things creepy.
With my crazy mother organizing everything from the kids
T
ragamuffin parade to the annual costume ball, there was never a spare minute to think or breathe. On top of everything else, she took over as coordinator for this year’s Blaze—over 4,000 hand carved jack-o-lanterns lining the historic three hundred-year-old Van Cortlandt estate. It was no wonder I didn’t want to get up. I was exhausted just being her daughter. My mother, Laura Corbett, was Sleepy Hollow’s unofficial official town witch, and in a place where everyone knows everyone, that’s saying a lot.
‚It’s just Halloween,‛ I mumbled flipping my covers back, but in our house it was never just Halloween, nor was it ever just about trick-or-treating. It was the Witch’s New Year and one of the biggest sabbats on the wheel of the year. Not that I believed in that sort of junk. That was my family’s thing, not mine, even though my mother and grandmother had been trying to make it mine since the day I was born.
I swung my legs over the side of the bed and sat for a moment. I’d heard it a thousand times, ‚We’re different, Rowen, embrace it. People would kill to be able to do what we can.‛ Like people needed more reasons to think I was half a freak. And as to wanting to be like me, uh… I didn’t think so.
‚Rowen, hurry up! I need to talk to you before you leave,‛ Mom’s voice called again.
My room looked like a tornado hit. Clothes and shoes everywhere, and the books and math sheets I reviewed last night were still in a haphazard pile across my desk. Two empty Coke cans topped a pile of candy wrappers, and a large, half eaten bag of potato chips lay crumpled on the floor next to my backpack.
Oh God, I didn’t.
At the incriminating sight, my hand shifted to my stomach, and a familiar self-loathing settled onto my shoulders. I slumped a bit, cringing inwardly at what the scale would read this morning.
With a sigh I pushed myself to stand and slid my gaze to the clothes I somehow remembered to set out. My lateness was reaching epic proportions, yet school was only halfway through the first semester. Most of the student body had learned to get out of the way when I came barreling in for homeroom.
Mom seemed to think my tardy nature would improve once I earned my driver’s license, but of course, that didn’t happen. I was seventeen and already driving for the past year. We lived around the corner from the high school, and senior privilege or not, I didn’t relish the idea of
taking my mother’s minivan.
Grabbing my outfit from the back of my desk chair, I walked into the bathroom and snapped on the light. I had no problem envisioning my mother, coffee cup in hand, impatiently waiting for me to come downstairs while she planned her latest concoction for the store.
When my mother says she needs to talk it usually means extra work for me, and considering how busy it’s been I’m surprised it took her this long to ask. Not that I mind helping out at the shop with all its curiosities, but I can’t seem to stomach the people who come in just to gawk. Of course, the townspeople wouldn’t dare insult my mother that way, but the tourists loved to look at the whole lot, including us.
I took inventory of my face in the mirror, running fingers over the puffy skin beneath my eyes, trying to ignore the glare from the bathroom’s overhead lights. Telltale dark smudges from my late date with calculus were evident beneath my lower lids, making my hazel eyes look a little muddy. ‚Now, that’s attractive,‛ I grumbled reaching for my makeup remover. Giving each eye a quick swipe, I checked my reflection for any marked improvement. No such luck.
Most of the time, I liked the way I looked. From the dark curls and high cheekbones I inherited from my dad, to winning the genetic lottery for great skin courtesy of mother’s side of the family. Most of my friends hated that I never got zits or blemishes, but Mother Nature evened the playing field, seeing to it I gained weight if I so much as looked at junk food.
I muttered an expletive thinking about the bag of chips I’d massacred and pushed the bathroom scale under the vanity with my foot. One of these days I’d learn not to let the number glaring up at me from between my feet dictate the kind of day I would have, but today was not that day.
The Corbett’s tended to be on the fleshy side, or at least that’s what it looked like in all the family pictures. I wouldn’t know firsthand, though, my dad having died when I was little, and his parents before I was born. Then again, having a mother who leaned more toward the vegetarian line helped a lot in that department.
Gathering my hair, I twisted it into a loose bun at the top of my head. There was a peculiar tension building in my stomach, and I didn’t think it was the potato chips. I was out of sorts, restless for some reason, and a dull ache throbbed behind my eyes. I grabbed my toothbrush and turned on the tap, breaking one of the cardinal rules of my house by letting the
water run while I brushed my teeth.
A calculus test was scheduled later this morning, but I was never one for being neurotic over grades. So why was I so edgy? I rinsed my mouth and stuck the toothbrush in its holder. The blunt pounding behind my eyes escalated and I winced, tilting my head down against the pain. That was when I saw it, or thought I saw it.
I stood motionless with my hand frozen in place as I stared at the water in the sink. The slow drain had allowed the flow to gather in the basin and ribbons of red curled and spread like blood streaming into the water. It didn’t look like rust or red clay or anything else. It looked like blood, swirling and coating the white porcelain with streaks and tiny clots. Worse yet, it smelled like blood, with a sharp, metallic tang that lingered in my nose and throat. I gagged, squeezing my eyes shut.
A wave of dizziness hit and I gripped the edge of the vanity, sucking in short shallow breaths trying to work up enough air to yell for my mother. I swallowed against the sour bile taste in my mouth and counted to ten, and when I opened my eyes, only clear water flowed in the sink.
My hand shot forward turning off the tap, and I pumped the lever handle behind the faucet a bunch of times. I held my breath ‘til the last of the water ran down the drain. Did I say half a freak? How about a full-fledged weirdo, complete with psychotic visions? Backing up, I grabbed hold of the towel rack and sank to the floor, the cold tile adding to my already goose-pimpled flesh.
Minutes passed and though my heart rate slowed, my mind raced. Was this some leftover nightmare skewed from Chiller TV? Part of me wanted to yell for my mother, but the other part knew she’d make a huge deal about it, and I didn’t have time for a protection spell or whatever else she’d think to do.
The clock was ticking, and I needed to get myself together and out the door. Afraid to tempt fate and run the water in the sink again, I wet a washcloth under the bathtub tap. ‚No more sleep deprived delusions for me, thank you.‛
The problem was this didn’t feel like a byproduct of too little sleep. Something happened, I sensed it. Gran told me the night of my birthday that my aura was bleeding. Happy birthday, darling, and by the way… Gee, thanks. Love you too, Gran.
That night my mother made light of it, telling me everyone’s aura bled from time to time, it’s part of coming into your own—yet I hadn’t
missed the look she shot my grandmother. And what the hell did that mean? Was I coming into my own as a strong, independent woman, or did some weird, cosmic witchiness hit me square in the face courtesy of my messed up gene pool? Right now, I didn’t want to know. I wanted to go to school and take my exams like any other normal teenager.
After slapping on deodorant and body mist, I dressed, not bothering with make-up. I unfastened my claw clip and finger combed my hair before throwing it back into a messy bun, then grabbed my homework and shoved it into my bag. I allowed one last look in the mirror, hesitating about the no make-up, but no amount of cover-up would camouflage my fear-induced, chalk-white cheeks. Instead, I plastered a smile onto my face and headed downstairs, praying my mother’s instincts would be too preoccupied to notice.
The blissful aroma of fresh brewed coffee filtered from the kitchen, making my mouth water before I walked through the doorway. Even more sublime, the scent of homemade pumpkin bread floated alongside the smell of fresh ground walnuts. ‚Hey,‛ I mumbled, scraping one of the chairs back from the table. ‚Smells good. You had time to bake this morning?‛
‚I know how much you like pumpkin bread, so why not,‛ my mother answered, putting a warm slice in front of me. ‚I thought it’d be nice for us to have a treat together, especially since I’ve been so busy lately and haven’t been around much.‛
She thought right, and I took my first easy breath of the morning. ‚Mmmmmm, incredible,‛ I said with my mouth full.
Reaching for her mug on the counter, she patted my shoulder and I cringed. The moment she touched me she’d know something was up. On cue she jerked her head around, eyes already probing.
I exhaled. ‚Cut it out, Mom, come on. I’m tired, that’s all.‛ I shrugged her off purposefully, but she wasn’t buying it. ‚I’ve got a huge math test today, and calc’s been kicking my butt since the beginning of the year, so can we not do the Wicked Witch of Westchester County thing this morning?‛
Taking a deep breath, my mother looked at me the way she looks at her rune stones when trying to divine a hidden meaning. ‚Okay, Rowen, if you say so. But whatever it was you saw…‛
‚I know, Mom, relax. Like I said, I’m just tired. Didn’t you have something you needed to talk about? It must be important or why else
would you need to bribe me,‛ I said, waving my pumpkin bread her way before plopping another piece into my mouth.
My mother flashed me a half smile, knowing I’d used one of her trademark moves usually reserved for arguments with Gran. ‚You’re right, but I think I could do better than pumpkin bread if I wanted to bribe you. Truth is, with New Year’s a little less than two weeks away, the store is going to get crazy the closer it gets, and with everything I’ve got going I could really use your help.‛
‚It’s October, Mother. New Year’s isn’t for two months.‛
‚You know what I mean, smart ass, Samhain is next week. And in case you’ve forgotten, Halloween is a fire sabbat that requires a ritual cleansing to protect the town and honor the wandering dead.‛
‚Yeah, but jack-o-lanterns? Seriously?‛
‚Pumpkins are the easiest way to get everyone to participate without them really knowing. Unfortunately, they aren’t going to carve themselves, and we’re short of volunteers.‛
‚I know,‛ I said taking another bite of my pumpkin bread. ‚Don’t worry, I’ll do my part until every last jack-o-lantern is carved and placed.‛ I wondered what the prissy town supervisor’s wife would say if she knew my mother had orchestrated a pagan ritual involving the entire town right under her pious nose.
As if reading my mind, Mom smirked. ‚I knew I could count on you, Rowen, but do me a favor. Don’t be such a teenager this week. The veil between the living and the dead is at its thinnest. I want you to pay attention, okay?‛
I nodded, and she gave me a smile, but for the first time in my life my mother’s smile didn’t reach her eyes.

My Review:

I love Halloween, I love things that have that feel to it. So, you know I was loving a Sleepy Hollow themed book. Except it was so much more. It wasn’t just a retelling. It went from both views of the legend and the present day and how witches, wiccan, and the craft came to be. It’s just more. I really enjoyed it. Yes this one is Young Adult, and yes there is a LOT of research that went into this. I can just tell that the author probably slaved herself away, but that didn’t make the story any less. It made it so much more interesting. 

Rowen, the quiet wallflower,  and Hunter, the heart throb jock socialite jock have an adventure with some horror coming. It’s also got the shock effect. There were several jaw dropping moments that I just couldn’t help it.  It’s the kind of story you love. the good girl finally gets prince charming, who really is prince charming and not the devil in disguise. 

There is a lot of history. If you like the background of a story full of rich information, you are going to be in heaven here. Some of that information was just so interesting. Even though I am not a history buff, I couldn’t help but love some of those! Plus, there is a little extra after the ending that will have you salivating for more!  Like I am totally wanting more. You guys should totally check it out if you ever had any kind of interest in witches or the headless horseman! 🙂 5 SCARY PAWS! 🙂 

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Author Interview:

WELCOME! First, tell me a little about your book 🙂….

My latest release is a departure from what I normally write. In fact, it is also my debut novel into the Young Adult genre. The book is called Hollow’s End, and it is a YA horror with a splash of history, romance and the paranormal that was inspired by historical events that surround the town of Sleepy Hollow and the famous legend that shares its name. In the story, two hundred years of secrets and lies are bleeding into the present, and high school seniors, Hunter Morrissey and Rowen Corbett, find themselves linked with unseen forces shrouded in mystery and violence. Truths, buried and long forgotten, have risen at a time when the veil between the living and the dead is at its thinnest. Only Hunter and Rowen hold the key to locking the past in the past, and setting old wrongs to right. 

Do you recall how your interest in writing originated or did you always just know?

I’ve always been making up stories, long before I could ever write them down. Writing is the way I express myself best, it is the way I channel my own brand of magic. The stories I like most are the ones that allow me to merge my love of writing with my love of history. That’s one of the reasons Hollow’s End is so near and dear to my heart…that and the fact that I have family ties to the actual village of Sleepy Hollow.

Are experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?

Everything I write about comes from me. Whether it’s an actual experience or a dream that felt real enough for me to have a reaction to it and write it down. I’m an avid traveller, so I use those experiences in my books. There isn’t a place my characters go to or live that I haven’t been to myself.

How do you choose when/which characters die in your books?

Yes and no. It may sound crazy, but sometimes the story and the characters tell me someone has to die. It’s never a pleasant thing to write…even if it’s one of my villains…but death is a part of life, and since my books have horror elements and take place in cities with nefarious underground cultures, violence and death are bound to be a part of it.

If you had to do it all over again, would you change anything in your book?

Yes. I would have waited to publish my first novella, Hunter’s Blood, and given it a definitive ending instead of a cliffhanger. Many people hate that. I would have also fleshed out the story more and made it a full length novel.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Research. Since history and fact are elements that I cherish, I always want to make sure I get things right. For Hollow’s End I spent hours and hours at the Sleepy Hollow/Tarrytown NY Historical Society, pouring over genealogies and documents and questioning the historians and archivists there. In my Urban Fantasy, Twice Cursed, one of my characters is a NYC homicide detective, so I spend a tremendous amount of time interviewing detectives and even visiting the morgue to make sure my descriptions were dead on. Research my me tedious and meticulous, but it is one of the elements that makes a difference in a story being just meh, and a story being fantastic.

What book are you reading now? Or what genre?

I am actually between books right now. I just finished Philippa Gregory’s The White Princess. I believe it is considered Historical Drama. I’m between books because I have started writing book four in my Cursed by Blood Saga, and I never pick a new book when I go from outlining my next story to actually sitting down to write. I can’t have the distraction of someone else’s characters in my head…my own characters speak loud enough!

Who designed the cover? And do you help with them?

I just changed cover artists when I had the current cover for Hollow’s End designed. The artist’s name is Kim Killion of The Killion Group. She’s amazing, and she is currently redesigning the covers for the Cursed by Blood series, too. She allows me a lot of input…I mean who knows my characters better than me? Right?

Did you learn anything from writing your books and what was it?

Yes, as a matter of fact I did. While researching Hollow’s End, I came across another lesser known urban legend that is something relatively unknown outside of Sleepy Hollow. It is the legend of the Bronze Lady. The legend goes that if you walk through the cemetery at night you will hear the sound of a woman crying, but it’s not a woman, it’s the bronze statue of a lady outside the tomb of Civil War General Samuel Thomas. The story says that if you show her kindness and compassion she will grand you her favor, but if you mock her grief she will haunt you to death. Pretty cool, huh?

Do you have anything specific that you want to say to your readers?

Yes. I want to say thank you. Readers are a writer’s lifeblood. People think that writers would still write even if no one read their books, and I guess that’s true…but when an author gathers a following, or when their book has touched someone so much that they email to say how they enjoyed it…there is nothing like the thrill that brings. So, yes… a huge hug to all my readers and a big fat thank you!

About the Author:


I’m a New Yorker, born and bred, and for the most part my stories and my characters embody the grit and complexity of the city. An avid traveler, I use my experiences from around the world in all my books. There isn’t a place my characters live or travel to that I haven’t been myself.

Like most authors, my love affair with the written word started as a child with the books I read. Even today, I love to read almost as much as I love to write. My favorite stories are the ones that transport me, that bring me to places and introduce me to characters that leave me breathless…the ones that spark the fire of my imagination, allowing me to dream in the world of ‘what if?’

I’ve always been a scribbler, and from the time I could write my name I’ve been making up stories. So it was no surprise when I earned degrees in both Journalism and Fine Art, but after working in the trenches of Madison Avenue as a Graphic Artist, I decided to do what I love most full time. Write.

In the meantime I am also a founding member and former President of The Paranormal Romance Guild, a not-for-profit organization for readers and authors of the genre…and when I’m not ‘bichok’ (but in a chair hands on keyboard), I’m spending time with my husband and our three kids, traveling to exciting, romantic places …for inspiration, of course!

http://www.mariannemorea.com/

https://www.facebook.com/mariannemoreaauthor

https://twitter.com/MarianneMorea

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4228374.Marianne_Morea

What do you have to say?