Genre: Fantasy
About anotherscribessLocation: Northglenn, CO Home Region: Age:27 Website: http://amandahelms.com Favorite novels: American Gods, Anansi Boys, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, Pride and Prejudice, Southern Vampire Series, Mercy Thompson series Favorite writers: Charlaine Harris, Patricia Briggs, Dave Eggers, Neil Gaiman Favorite music: I try to fit music that fits the theme of the novel--from Evanescence to Linkin Park to Sarah McLachlan Non-noveling interests: Baking, hiking, catching up on TiVo |
Joined: September 20, 2008 This Year: Official Participant NaNoWriMo History: NaNoWriMo posts: 124 NaNoWriMo buddies: 32
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Brief Author Bio: I hate writing these things, so I'm copying what I did for my website. Amanda Helms does not perm her hair. Nor does she sleep with curlers. Her hair is naturally curly. It simply requires a bit of product to define the curls. That’s it. Yes, really. Now that the matter of her coif is settled, let us move on. Amanda received her Bachelor of Arts in English from Abilene Christian University in West Texas. Although she enjoyed her time there, she much prefers the mountains and again resides in her home state, Colorado, where she edits for an educational publishing company. In her free time, she writes contemporary fantasy, indulges in baking therapy, and tries to keep her activity up so that she may eat the results. She is a member of Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers and Pikes Peak Writers. While at ACU, and in a departure from her current chosen genre, her story “Losing Joy” won first place in the 2003 Conference in Christianity and Literature Student Writing Contest. In 2004, her story “Insulation” placed second. She fell in love with writing and fantasy at a young age, penning stories based unsubtly upon The Neverending Story at age nine. At ten she wrote a less fanciful story featuring her friends, which her teacher kindly allowed her to read to the class (granted, though, it was toward the end of the school year and her teacher might simply have wanted to kill time). By twelve, she knew she wanted to be a writer. Amanda is currently developing what she hopes will become her first published novel. |
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Synopsis: Disenchantment
When a charm-maker attempts to exact revenge upon an old flame, a sorceress, he sets in motion a chain of events that causes the sorceress to fall in love with the local baron (who's not the sharpest sword in the smithy) and therefore turn the baron's betrothed into a dog. Which wasn't at all what the sorceress intended.
Feeling somewhat responsible, the charm-maker attempts to turn the dog back into her human self, but a difficult task becomes even more complicated with the arrival of the charm-maker's and sorceress's old master, who has ideas about tearing apart the barony for its black gold, which he wants to send to a far-off (read: transdimensional) place called Amreeka...
Excerpt: Disenchantment
“No dungeons?” she exclaimed louder than was wise, glamour or no glamour, spell of compulsion or no. “What sort of manse is this, not to have dungeons?” Honestly, where had the lords of old done their torturing? Particularly in what had started out as a fort, by all the celestial spirits?
The servant’s gaze wandered past Aelis constantly, not truly focusing on anything. “No dungeons, Lady,” the girl said in a monotone. “It’s the land, you see. Not stable enough for digging underground. It would cause the building to collapse.”
Aelis chewed her lip as she tapped at her thigh with a finger. “Well then, where are prisoners held?”
If at all possible, the girl’s blank look turned blanker. “Prisoners?”
She clenched her teeth to keep from throttling the bespelled girl. Then she would have two bodies to take care of, instead of just the unconscious one. “Yes, prisoners! Enemies of the barony to be held for questioning, thieves, you know, prisoners!”
“Yaric doesn’t get prisoners, Lady.”
And the girl went back to sweeping the stairs, as she had been doing when Aelis had placed the spell upon her. Aelis had half a mind to slap the girl into obedience, but instead spat out a spell of forgetting and wheeled about on her heel to reascend the staircase. She wasn’t accustomed to relying upon physical force to induce unconsciousness, so she had no idea when Lyra might start coming to again. And that she couldn’t allow.
Her mind spun as she tried to think of a plan. If Darnett could see her now, he would give her a thorough tongue-lashing. His philosophy was that one should always go into one’s endeavours with a plan, and a backup plan, and another backup plan in case the first failed. And even then, one ought to remain flexible.
Well, she had remained flexible, which was what had gotten her into this spot of bother in the first place.
The girl was still breathing when Aelis returned to her. Drat. She’d half-hoped her blow had been severe enough to kill the girl. But of course if an annihilation spell were to work, that would be far superior, as she would be left with no corpse to contend with. Death by brute force, on the other hand, would warrant either hiding the body or coming up with a scapegoat to blame the murder upon.
The things she did for love.
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