Showing posts with label Lexi Revellian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lexi Revellian. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 December 2013

Wolf by the Ears by Lexi Revellian

Another book by Lexi Revellian and another genre for her to be listed under.  This time it's the "wrong place, wrong time" mystery genre.  Tyger gets a cleaning job at a very rich Russian's house, then gets mixed up in his affairs.

As usual with this author's works, the story is well written and well paced.  there's friendship, romance, chases, murder, bad guys and good guys.

I enjoyed this story.  It wasn't over-the-top with heroics, it was one girl against the bad guys, doing the best she can.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00H7IM0FG/?tag=jookuf-21


Sunday, 3 November 2013

Off The KUF Volume 1

This is the first of 3 volumes of short stories, drabbles and novellas from the KUForum's authors.
I am a big fan of many of the authors who hang out there, so I knew I'd like this book.  I was wrong, I loved it.

From the start with Lynda Wilcox's story 'Intelligence Test' to 'The Last Story' I was enthralled throughout.

I'll just mention some of my favourites.

The first one 'Intelligence Test' is a great opener.  Malcolm is up for a job which is on offer at the Foreigh Office.  The test seems way too hard in a simplistic way.  Who will get the job and what is the job anyway?

The very next story is by David Haynes and of course is one of his trademark creepy, macabre stories - a bit of a ghost story.

'Blackberry Crumble' by Cecilia Peartree is a longer "short" and I really enjoyed that one.  It is always great to read a new Auto story from David Wailing.

Rosen Trevithick has 2 parallel stories in this collection.  One is a Troll version and it is interesting to read them together.

'The Last Story' by H.K. Abell was intriguing and interesting and as it progressed it made me wonder about the sanity of the author.  The ending is well weird, but I think I liked it.  I thought it was an interesting way to finish off this collection

Of the 30 stories in this collection there was only one I didn't like, which is not bad going for such a large collection.

There are highs, there are lows, there are scares, there are laughs and there's the origin story of The Imp.  Oh and Trolls.

There are definitely some new authors here for me to go and investigate.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GDLGTCS/?tag=jookuf-21


Sunday, 9 December 2012

The Ice Diaries by Lexi Revellian

The Ice Diaries is set in London in the near future, but after a pandemic has hit Britain hard and snow has hit even harder.  The snow is 20m high and only the tops of tall buildings poke out.  

The story is told by Tori, who lives alone in a luxury apartment.  She has lost her fiancé and doesn't know if he's dead or alive, but she has gained friends who have set up home nearby and they form an insular community, doing foraging raids on the nearby Argos and other shops.  They can only access the shops by breaking in above snow level and lugging all the stuff up the flights of stairs.

As I was reading the story, I was trying to imagine myself and what I would do.  Would I try to make it to a warmer climate, even though they didn't know if there was anywhere to go to?  Would I risk moving from a safe (for the moment) home?  At some point, things would run out, but would that be before the snow melted?

As with other Lexi Revellian books, this was an easy read.  I enjoyed the characters and could easily put faces to them.  Perhaps the baddies were a bit cartoonish, but I did like the two-facedness of the main baddie.

So yet another good read to go with Lexi's other four books.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00A4ZRIRO/?tag=jookuf-21






Saturday, 30 June 2012

Interogating Lexi Revellian

Lexi is an author who can turn her hand to numerous genres.  After the chick-lit contemporary fiction of Remix to the sci-fi of Replica, she published the fantastical fantasy books featuring Torbrek.



 


How do you strike the balance between writing something you want to write and writing something that people want to read, in terms of the compromises you make, if any?

No compromises. I write the sort of book I want to read, knowing many readers share my taste. If a publisher wanted me to add graphic sex and violence to Replica to make  it a standard thriller, and offered me a six figure sum, I’d decline. Haughtily.


What excites, attracts or appeals to you about the genres you write in?

Gah! Don’t mention genres – I have an aversion to pigeon-holes. My novels are hybrid. Some of my strangest reviews are from readers who assume they are pure chicklit, romance, thriller, or  mystery, and judge them on those terms. I like twists and surprises and humour, and all my novels have a romance in them. Literary fiction, ‘beautiful’ writing, leaves me cold.


Do you have a box, drawer, folder etc. where you keep thoughts and ideas for future stories? 

I have a pile of scrap A5 paper with gnomic sentences on, sometimes scrawled in the middle of the night. I write everything down, or I forget. You never know when inspiration will strike, or what you will overhear. I once cycled past a man and his Labrador. He was saying earnestly to the dog, “Now it’s no good you sulking…”

Each book I write has its own separate document of notes, where I put ideas, lists, character biographies and bits I’ve cut. Also a picture file; photographs of people, places, maps and plans.


How do you manage plot bunnies (ideas that invade your mind that aren’t usually helpful to the story you’re writing but breed like...er...bunnies)?

Plot bunnies? I don’t get those. I want some!


How much of you is in your characters? Which of your characters is the you that you’d most like to be?

There’s a bit of me in most of my characters, and the weird thing is, they then influence me. It’s as though writing them makes me acknowledge a hidden part of my psyche. I’ve become more assertive and outspoken since writing fiction, as if my characters showed me different ways of handling life. On a more trivial level, I hardly swore till I wrote Ric Kealey and Jeff Pike. 

If I had to be one of my characters, it’d be Caz Tallis, Remix’s narrator. She has a pretty good life – interesting job restoring rocking horses, gorgeous boyfriend, trusty best friend who is in love with her, and she’s happy.


Do you become so wrapped up in your writing that your spouse wonders if they're married to you or one of your characters?

I am spouseless, but when she lived at home the offspring used to do a lot of eye-rolling and at one point banned all mention of my books. So yes, I do get obsessed.


What type of book do you like reading? Is it the same genre as you write?

Genres again… I like an absorbing read with a satisfying (not necessarily happy) end, humour and believable characters. My two favourite authors I reread are Jane Austen and Mary Renault. I am no longer prepared to finish a book that’s hard going. All the best books are easy reads.


What lengths do you go to to convince us readers that your book has the X factor?

I research, I rewrite to make the read as smooth as possible, and revise in the light of beta readers’ comments. My daughter reads as I go along and tells me if she thinks the story is heading in the wrong direction. She is generally right. She also updates slang as necessary. I am fond of advice, though feel no obligation to take it, and am always ready to seize on suggested improvements.


How do you feel when a reader points out the spelling mistake(s) you have made?

Mortified. I have to correct it instantly, NOW! I take pride in my writing being typo-free, and am a good proof reader.  I’ve learned always to check brand names, as they are easy to get wrong.


What do you like most about visiting KUF/forums?

I like the friendly ethos, something that is alarmingly absent from some forums I have been on, and the other Kuffers. And I like the design of the site. Lou is a gent.


What is on your near horizon?

I am a third of the way through the WIP, currently called Ice Diaries. It’s set in a post-pandemic 2018, in a London covered by twenty metres of snow. My heroine, Tory, lives among a small group of survivors, the sort of people you’d meet at an Islington dinner party. One night she finds a man face down in the snow who has a disruptive effect on her little community…


Where can we find you for more information?

My website, blog, and Amazon Author Page. I always answer readers’ emails, and am still fretting about one who mistyped her email address so I couldn’t reply.

Sunday, 22 April 2012

Time Child and Other Stories by Lexi Revellian

Time Child was a series of shorts about the same day in a woman's life - her 28th birthday where her younger self appears from the past to shape her future.  It was an intriguing read seeing where her choices leads her to.

The "other stories" were short shorts that Lexi had written some time back and were interesting especially since they were pre-kindle.

In all a nice little read.

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B006VX4IAS

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Hearts and Arrows by KUF Authors

I have just finished reading this and am wondering which story was my favourite and it's hard to pick one. They are all different, yet good in their own way.

I have read novels by four of these authors and have rated them all at least 4 stars.

The other authors are on my radar even more now.

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00764VOT4/

Saturday, 31 December 2011

Trav Zander by Lexi Revellian

Trav Zander by Lexi Revellian is the sequel to Torbrek and the Dragon Variation

It introduces a new character Trav Zander to the now familiar Tor and follows on from the first book.
When I started reading it, I must admit the thought past through my mind "do I want to be reading this?" but that thought soon disappeared as I got into it and the story got going.

Yet again Lexi has delivered a sparkling story. I have decided that I was picturing Tor as Mila Jovovich in Joan of Arc when she was undercover. All the characters are well fleshed out and believable and I look forward to the promised third book of this alleged Trilogy (and the rest as who says a trilogy must be 3 books - not Douglas Adams and not Robert Rankin)

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B005N8X6G4/


Torbrek and the Dragon Variation by Lexi Revellian

Lexi mentioned she had just published her first two books so I had a nose. Torbrek... is a fantasy about dragons and princesses and knights and battles etc. I am not all that interested in this kind of book, but since I loved Remix and Replica, I thought I'd check out the samples when I went to bed last night. Well, I'd got to 30% of the book before I was too exhausted and had to sleep . I read another third this morning before I had to go out visiting and finished it off this afternoon.

What a blummin fantastic book.

It was very light, but not childish at all. There were story strands with numerous characters but you never got distracted or confused (this is no Game of Thrones )

The main character is a girl who pretend to be a boy, but I was glad that that didn't go on for too long. She's no-nonsense and likeable.

I think I can officially say I need never download a sample of Lexi's books ever again (maybe if you do a Western, but other than that ... ) as she is superb storyteller and writer in 3 genres now.

A big thumbs up from me.

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B005N8X3J4


Replica by Lexi Revellian

This was so different to Lexis's other book, Remix, but the quality is the same.

I find Lexi's writing really easy to read. There could have been confusion about which Beth was being written about, but I don't think I got confused once. The story was gripping and hard to put down.

I now rate Lexi Revellian as one of my new favourite authors and look forward to her next offering .

www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B004VS6XFI