SUMMARY :
Damien is an assassin, a man with no
home and a tortured past. Sold into slavery as a young boy, he is trained to
kill with cold calculation, without remorse. As a reward for his ruthless
success, he is given a chance to earn his freedom from his cruel master. One
last mission. One final person to slay…
Lady Aurora of Acquitaine is the epitome of purity and goodness, beloved by all her people. She lives her life trying to atone for her mother’s cruelty by being a fair and just ruler. Secretly she fears that one day her mother’s murderer will return for her.
When Damien enters Aurora’s life, tempting her with promises of dark passion and forbidden lust, he threatens to tear her peaceful world apart.
Can Aurora’s light heal Damien’s dark spirit or will his evil consume her? The eternal battle of good versus evil, love versus hate, dark versus light, all come to a shattering climax in this historical romance set in medieval England.
Release
Date:
June 26, 2012
Genre: Medieval Romance
Formats: eBook (Kindle, Nook, etc) Kindle, Nook, Smashwords,
All Romance, Omni Lit, Kobo, Diesel, Ibooks, Sony
SOMETHING ABOUT LAUREL O'DONNELL :
Laurel has won numerous awards
for her works, including the Holt Medallion for A Knight of Honor, the Happily
Ever After contest for Angel’s Assassin, and the Indiana’s Golden Opportunity
contest for Immortal Death. The Angel and the Prince was nominated by the
Romance Writers of America for their prestigious Golden Heart award. O’Donnell
lives in Illinois with her four cherished children, her beloved husband and her
five cats. She finds precious time every day to escape into the medieval world
and bring her characters to life in her writing.
Laurel, thank you for visiting A Bookish Libraria today with an interview. Excited to get to know you better. Your book is about one of my very favorite times and places in history! So, let's get started...
1) First of all, please tell us a special something
about what makes you “tick.” When you
aren’t writing, what are you doing? (Aside from being a dad/mom)
My family always comes first. So, when I’m not writing, I’m usually with
them. Either watching Breaking Bad with
my son or shopping with my daughter.
2) You chose a specific genre, a place and time to
write about, what made you choose it?
I’ve always been interested in the medieval
era. The knights in shining armor, the
castles. I remember growing up with the
soundtrack from Camelot in the background, the one with Richard Harris and
Vanessa Redgrave. I would always pretend
I was tied to the stake waiting for my “hero” to come rescue me. Unfortunately, my brother would be the knight
and he never came to rescue me! J
When I was just out of high school, I worked at the
Wisconsin Renaissance Faire. I learned
to sword fight there.
3) Bronte or Austen?
Hemingway or Hawthorne? Why?
Truthfully, I have never read any of them. My first romance was a Kathleen Woodiwiss
when I was in high school. I never had
to read any of these in school. So, I
never got around to it.
4) In your opinion, what makes a book a great one?
Characters.
Everything comes from characters, the plot, the conflict, the love. If the characters aren’t strong, then the
book isn’t good.
5) Which author(s) most influenced your love of
books from childhood?
Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury, Edgar Allan Poe. I was big into Sci Fi when I was young. Then, I began reading romance in high school
along with the Sci Fi authors.
6) Read any good books in the past 6 months?
Escape With a Rogue by Sharon Page. It’s a great page turner and I loved the
characters.
7) Choose 4 guests from any era for dinner. Who would they be and what would you choose
for a topic of conversation?
Steven Spielberg (because I love his movies), King
Tut (I’d like to know about his life and what being a young King was like),
Cleopatra (I’d just like to meet her because she was a very powerful and
influential woman), Jesus (the son of God, what more can I say?). As a topic of conversation I would ask them
all what was the biggest love of their life and why.
8) Which of your characters is most like you?
That’s so difficult!
They each are a little bit like me.
I’d like to think that Aurora is most like me in Angel’s Assassin, but
she is very level headed and I’m hot headed.
She tries to be fair, as do I.
She likes to believe that most people are good, as do I.
9) If you could cast your book for a movie, who
would you choose?
Nobody.
Really. I can’t imagine anyone
playing Damien and Aurora like I have imagined them.
10) Worst habit you have?
Procrastination.
I wait until the last possible moment to do things.
11) How much research did you do before and during
writing?
Before writing, I researched Acquitaine and England
the most. I sought a period in time when
it was relatively quiet. What I mean by
that is that the region was so wrapped up in fighting and battles, I wanted to
find a time when they were rebuilding, a time of relative peace. Of course, I researched the clothing,
knights, etc.
12) Psychologists tell us the thing we think we’d
most like to grow up to be when we’re ten years old is our avocation. What did you want to be?
I wanted to be an actress. I loved the drama and being on stage.
Thanks for joining us on The Bookish Libraria!
Thanks for having me!
This was a lot of fun. Hope you
and your readers enjoy it as much as I have.
HERE'S AN EXCERPT FROM "ANGEL'S ASSASSIN":
Aurora
interposed herself before Damien, almost as if protecting him. “Damien’s skills are very adequate. I have seen them in action.”
“But the rest
of us have not,” Harold exclaimed. He
opened his arms to the group of knights who stood about them now, the armored
men looking like the bars of a cage, intent on keeping Damien confined within their
perimeter. “Isn’t that right? How many would like to see Damien’s sword
skills?”
The crowd
around them exploded with applause and “ayes.”
Harold slid
from his horse with an easy dismount. He
ducked the fence to stand before Damien.
“After all, you are protecting Acquitaine’s greatest treasure. I would be betraying my oath to Acquitaine if
I demanded any less. I would like to
know your skills are impeccable. What do
you say, bodyguard? Care to share your
secrets with the rest of us?”
The men around
them mumbled in agreement; some sneered with open hostility.
Every one of
Damien’s senses demanded he attack. His
self-preservation instincts told him this knight was a threat. The beast inside him burned through his
veins, demanding release, demanding action.
But Damien had learned long ago when to keep the beast reined. Now was not the time, nor the place. He placed his hand on Aurora’s back and began
to steer her away, moving through the crowd.
The crowd
opened grudgingly before them.
Harold dogged
their steps, taunting, “Coward. What
kind of bodyguard are you to turn your back on a good fight?”
Aurora stopped
and spun on Harold. “That is quite
enough, Sir Harold.”
“My apologies,
my lady,” he said, bowing. His
judgmental stare remained fixed with acrimony on Damien. “But I believe we do not need an outsider
to protect you. We are able knights,
worthy of first consideration.” He
stepped past her to Damien. “Tell me why
he is afraid to fight me, if he is so good.
Tell me why he will not raise a sword to prove his worth.”
Aurora opened
her mouth to reply, but Damien answered instead, “Because I would kill you.”
Hatred glared
from Harold’s eyes. Damien had seen the
look many, many times before. He stood
still, his body relaxed, ready for anything.
Aurora’s hand
surrounded Damien’s. Tingles shot up his
arm, replacing his readiness to battle with something warm and soft and…
dangerous. Dangerous because he should
be concentrating on the menace before him.
Her tiny tug moved him forward because he let it.
“We must go,”
she said.
Damien remained
still for a moment longer, facing down his adversary. He would have loved to show Harold just how
capable he was. Aurora’s insistent tugs
begged him to leave. He chanced a look
at her. Her eyes were wide with concern,
her lovely brow creased with worry as she stared at Harold. Damien couldn’t stand seeing her so
frightened. She looked at him then with
imploring eyes, and Damien knew exactly what he was going to do. Nothing.
The anguish on Aurora’s face was not worth the price. He wasn’t here to fight this conceited
knight. He wasn’t here to prove himself
to these people.
He saw movement
out of the corner of his eye. Harold’s
punch landed hard against Damien’s jaw, rocking his head, forcing him to take a
step back.
Damien never
once relinquished his hold on Aurora’s hand.
“Damien!”
Aurora called in alarm.
Damien pulled
her behind him, rage swirling inside him.
The coppery taste of blood seeped into his mouth, but he ignored it.
“An adequate
bodyguard would have seen that coming,” Harold mocked.
“Damien,”
Aurora repeated, half begging, half gasping.
Damien spared
her a glance. The tears in her eyes only
fed the stirring beast inside him, demanding revenge. “Stay here,” Damien commanded.
With no indication,
he suddenly rushed Harold, catching his tunic in curved fists, and slamming him
hard into the fence. The wooden post
bent beneath the impact, but Damien didn’t let go as he pushed himself close to
Harold. “An adequate bodyguard would
never have risked hurting Aurora like you just did. Had I ducked, you would have hit her.”
Harold pushed forward, but Damien smashed
him back against the fence again, holding him immobile. “Aurora is my responsibility. Go near her again and you will not live to
see the sun set.”
I hope all of you will have an opportunity to check out this dashing couple and read "Angel's Assassin." Get your copy soon. It's a quick treat for those who love historical romance.
Deborah/TheBookishDame
2 comments:
Thank you for hosting today!
Laurel--Kathleen Woodiwiss was my first historical romance read. It was "Petals on the River."
Congrats on the new release. Angel's Assassin sounds fantastic. Can't wqait to read it. Thanks for the fun and informative interview.
I like your four guests for dinner. That's an ecclectic bunch. Should prove interesting.
e.balinski(at)att(dot)net
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