Showing posts with label The Night Has Claws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Night Has Claws. Show all posts

August 28, 2014

Author Kat Kruger: Book Tour (Toronto)

Young adult author
Kat Kruger 
whose supernatural series, The Magdeburg Trilogy
I've completely reviewed and recommended, 
is hitting the road (well, at least into the Toronto area) 
to promote the series' final volume, The Night is Found.  

You've got five wonderful opportunities 
to meet and learn from the popular author of
all from Fierce Ink Press.


Kat Kruger will be at the following locations and times:

ChiSeries Reading
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
8-10 p.m.
The Round Venue
152 Augusta Avenue (Kensington Market area)

The Night is Found book signing
Thursday, September 18, 2014
12-4 p.m.
Indigo at Bay and Bloor


Q & A with Kat Kruger
Thursday, September 18, 2014
7-8 p.m.
Toronto Public Library, Spadina Branch
10 Spadina Road

Writing Workshop with Angela Misri, author of Jewel of the Thames
Friday, September 19, 2014  
1-3 p.m.
Riverdale Library
370 Broadview Avenue

Word on the Street (Toronto): Reading and book signing
Sunday, September 21, 2014
11:45 a.m.
Queen's Park Circle

Word on the Street (Toronto): Wattpad Meet and Greet 
Sunday, September 21, 2014 
3 p.m.
Queen's Park Circle

Say hello from me!

July 09, 2014

The Night is Found: Guest Post by author Kat Kruger


With the recent release of The Night is Found (Fierce Ink Press, 2014), reviewed here yesterday, author Kat Kruger has kindly agreed to share her perspective on writing her final book in The Madgeburg Trilogy.




                 Welcome                    
              * Kat Kruger *              

I don’t think there are words or even an emoji to describe what it’s like to write the last book in a trilogy besides to say that it’s been a bittersweet roller coaster of emotions. The characters of The Magdeburg Trilogy have been with me for several years now, from the black she-wolf standing over an unmarked grave to the mad scientist who sent me down research rabbit holes. The Night Is Found represents the end of their collective journey (although I have in mind to eventually write some graphic novel prequels).

I’ll certainly miss the world and the vast amount of research that it took to build it. In that sense I don’t think I can ever wholly let go of the world. I’m glad I’ve got those prequels to look forward to at some point in the future! Right now I’m feeling some intense post-trilogy blues. When I began writing the series it never dawned on me just how attached I’d get to these fictional people. Sure I cried a little when I finished The Night Has Teeth. I wept even more at the final scene of The Night Has Claws because it was even more devastating to me than the previous book. At that time I should have realized Book the Third was going to hit me hard but by then I was at a point of no return.

So, writing the final book in the trilogy was emotionally taxing to say the least. Closure sucks. Every time one person’s story “ended” I had to take a breather. Overall I think the happy moments outweigh the tragic ones. All the major loose ends are tied up but I’ve also left it open for the reader to imagine life after The Magdeburg Trilogy for Connor and his friends. To me it’s a book about hope and possibilities so to tie everything up too neatly would have felt like a cheat.

It was also a hard book to write in terms of expectations (not just my own). I actually had a few false starts with the final book. “Where to start?” was the question I kept asking myself. It wasn’t until I was on a road trip to New England for my birthday last year that I understood I had to cut the 5,000 words I had already written. That early draft picked up the story in the moments directly following the end of the second book. It wasn’t even fifteen minutes of driving on this trip, though, when a coyote crossed ahead of me on the highway. I know a good sign when I see one. So I introduced the “Wilds” of the North American packs who figure prominently in the first part of The Night Is Found.

Since the first book had a prologue, I felt that the last one needed an epilogue to bookend everything. That final scene is an image that I’ve carried with me since well before I even started writing The Night Is Found. As it developed in my thoughts, it became more and more of a love letter to fans of Arden. It caught me off guard just how many readers connected with him and I hope the epilogue serves as a thank you to everyone who saw beyond his roughness to embrace the fiercely loyal man that he truly is.

Of all the books that I’ve written, this is the one where I left my heart on the page. I will miss each and every one of the wolves of Magdeburg long after the last reader has closed the final page on the series.

   *    *    *   



Here's an early notice about an author event featuring Kat Kruger.

On Thursday, September 18, 2014

at 7 p.m.

author Kat Kruger

will give a talk at

the Toronto Public Library 
(Spadina branch)
Toronto, ON

See the TPL website for details here.


See more about Kat Kruger's writing at http://katkruger.com/ or at her publisher Fierce Ink Press website.

July 08, 2014

The Night is Found: Blog Tour begins


Let the Blog Tour begin!



by Kat Kruger
Fierce Ink Press
978-1-927746-57-8
978-1-927746-59-2 (epub)
978-1-927746-60-8 (Kindle)
301 pp.
Ages 14+
For release July 22, 2014
Reviewed from eARC

Being lost can be so much more than not knowing your location.  It can be the confusion that comes with new knowledge or revelations, and Connor Lewis' learning that he is a werewolf would be reason enough to feel lost and out of touch. For a kid, almost eighteen, going from geeky gamer to werewolf and now to pack leader and target of the Luparii (werewolf hunters), Connor needs a lot of finding to happen.

When Rodolfus de Aquila a.k.a. Roul, pack leader and owner of Fenrir Pharmaceuticals, chose to take a bullet meant for Connor, he gave the young man the task of bringing together the packs of Europe.  With the Luparii in possession of Wolf's Bane, a bio-weapon cure against lycanthropy produced by Henri Boguet, and with the Hounds of God led by magistrate Breber aiming to kill off werewolves, Connor needs to determine how best to organize the packs quickly. To that end, Connor and Amara travel to New York City to learn from the werewolves who'd left the Old World in the 1600's to avoid persecution and were rumoured to have become unified.  Meanwhile, Arden is tasked with visiting other packs and warning them of the Luparii and inviting them to Paris to witness their damaging effects.

Connor and Amara are received by a NYPD captain, Marrock, and the bored rich girl Esrin, who represent the Founders, short for the Wolf Conservation Foundation.  They manage their own pack as well as seven territories (wildlife sanctuaries) of the Wilds, werewolves who are ignorant of the outside world.  When the Luparii make their presence known using a device made by Phenix Industries, the arms technology business that funds the Founders, Connor recognizes that,
"I have a sense that what we bury here today is any hope of understanding of how to make things right overseas." (pg. 168)
Things overseas aren't necessarily faring any better.  Madison, Connor's love interest, has been under wraps at Fenrir Pharmaceuticals in Frankfurt since he accidentally bit her and changed her into a full-fledged werewolf.  Trajan, the biochemist, has been using her as a test subject for an antivenin for Wolf's Bane but Madison wants to play a part in helping Connor. Unfortunately, because of her relationship to Connor, Madison has become a commodity that has the Luparii, the Hounds of God and even ex-boyfriend Josh trying to get to her.

The complexity of The Night is Found is wild. Based on critical information from the first and second books in the series, The Night Has Teeth (Fierce Ink Press, 2012) and The Night Has Claws (Fierce Ink Press, 2013) respectively, The Night is Found twists the key characters of Connor, Madison, Arden and Amara into new personas as they accept their new attributes (bitten, cured, healed, safe, human, wolf, werewolf–whatever) and try to make things right while working with and against others.  Kat Kruger's characters are so real that I'd consider looking up some of the companies and locations mentioned in the book to see if they truly exist.  Yeah, I know werewolves aren't real (I do have to keep reminding myself of that) but Kat Kruger has developed all her characters so fully that it's sometimes hard to believe they're not.

If I hadn't enjoyed the first two books, keeping the storylines straight would've been difficult.  But I did, and I could, and appreciated Kat Kruger's complex storytelling all the more.  She's able to juggle the multiple subplots of teen angst and romance as well as biotechnology and belief systems easily with the paranormal and create a riveting tale that's imbued with sarcasm, sweetness and savagery. And still Kat Kruger convincingly allows Connor, Arden, Amara and Madison to un-lose themselves and amicably position themselves in their paranormal reality now that The Night is Found.

 ≈ ≈ ≈ ≈ ≈ ≈ ≈ 


Here's your CHANCE TO WIN a free digital copy of the entire Magdeburg Trilogy:
Just leave an appropriate comment below about why you'd like to read the whole Magdeburg Trilogy, and I'll choose a winner for Wednesday.

Easy peasy.

July 07, 2014

The Night is Found: Blog Tour begins tomorrow

Starting tomorrow
right here on CanLit for LittleCanadians

Fierce Ink Press

presents

Take a Walk on the Wilds Side 

blog tour

for 

the final instalment in

The Magdeburg Trilogy
by Kat Kruger




 The Night is Found 


Here's what we'll have:
  • a giveaway of digital copies of ALL three books in The Magdeburg Trilogy (and all you have to do is add a comment to the blog post);
  • my review of The Night is Found; and 
  • a special blog post by author Kat Kruger about finishing her trilogy.

Please check in tomorrow and the next day for the blog tour's stop here at CanLit for LittleCanadians.

† † † † † † † † †


Many thanks to Fierce Ink Press for the opportunity to share in this wonderful event

June 09, 2014

Cover Reveal: The Night is Found



The Magdeburg Trilogy 

by author Kat Kruger
published by Fierce Ink Press 

began with


The Night has Teeth
by Kat Kruger
Fierce Ink Press
978-0-988-10671-0
294 pp.
Ages14+ 
2012



followed by

The Night has Claws
by Kat Kruger
Fierce Ink Press
978-0-9917937-5-4 (pb)
978-1-927746-02-8 (ebook)
269 pp.
Ages 14+
September, 2013



The trilogy is set to be completed 
with the publication of the final book

The Night is Found
to be released in July

but the spectacular cover 
has just been revealed 
by Fierce Ink Press

and here it is!


Isn't it amazing?

And just to get you really excited about its July release, 
here's the final paragraph from my review of 
The Night has Claws
so that you know (sort of) what's coming.


Hold onto your book or device because The Night Has Claws may start with the emotional and physical clean-up of story-lines fromThe Night Has Teeth but it ends on an even messier closing. I don't mean messier as in confused but rather in terms of catastrophic ruin.  It breaks apart with secrets revealed, relationships and alliances exposed and shattered, and upcoming hostilities and combat forecast. The reader may still be hopeful for reconciliation between Connor and Madison and Arden and Amara but surprisinglyKat Kruger has you cheering for the motley band of protagonists and even laughing along at times. (Honestly, how often can a writer use the admonishment "Bite me" as a double entendre?) And there's even more action, surprises and affairs of the heart coming because we know that where The Night Has Claws leaves off, Book Three will launch and continue to thrill.



So, make a notation on your calendar for the release of 
The Night is Found,

my review on July 8th, 
and 
 guest post by Kat Kruger on July 9th

I can hardly wait!
Can you?

September 14, 2013

The Night Has Claws (The Magdeburg Trilogy, Book Two)

by Kat Kruger
Fierce Ink Press
978-0-9917937-5-4 (pb)
978-1-927746-02-8 (ebook)
269 pp.
Ages 14+
Release September 24, 2013
Reviewed from advance release ebook

When Kat Kruger ended her award-winning first book in The Madgeburg Trilogy, The Night Has Teeth (reviewed here on January 13, 2013), it was bloody mayhem.  Really.  Seventeen-year-old Connor Lewis had learned that he is a pure werewolf whose "nature" was only revealed after born-werewolf Amara had accidentally bitten him.  His special nature had drawn the attention of Henri Boguet, one of the bitten "monsters", whose biotech company has developed an antivenin for werewolf bites as well as a cure he calls Wolf Bane.  And Connor's school friends, Madison and Josh, had revealed that Josh had bitten Madison, condemning her to a life as a monster too. Even though Josh is still in love with Madison and desperate to make things up to her, Madison and Connor have an affinity for each other. With the nature of one's werewolfness determining the allegiances one has, Connor is confused understandably about whom to trust.

The Night Has Claws begins with three different story lines which will ultimately converge.  First, with Boguet being captured, he is remanded to custody to stand trial before the High Court of Madgeburg, the werewolf court.  Secondly, Madison who has shot Boadicea, Boguet's associate, believing she was going to harm Connor, focuses on what she has done, what is on the USB stick Boadicea tried to give Connor, and how she feels about Connor and Josh.  Lastly, born-werewolf Arden, Amara's mate, who'd appeared to die by Boguet's hand (teeth, actually), had been buried along with Boadicea by the Hounds of God (a society of the bitten).  But Arden had not died, though he desperately wished he had, becoming human instead, getting Boguet's cure through his venom. 

So we've got Connor sticking close to Arden and helping him survive as a human while learning from Arden how to live as a werewolf.  But through it all, Connor must decide to whom he will ally himself:  Roul (Rodolfus de Aquila), leader of Arden's former pack, or the Hounds of God to which Josh and Madison belong. 

In Quedlinburg, Germany, where the High Court of Madgeburg officiates, all gather for the prosecution of Boguet by Heaven's Hand, the organization that governs werewolves.  In addition to Connor, Roul, Arden, Amara, Madison, and Josh and their related groups, the Luparii (marked by white armbands) who act as an intergovernmental European task force to limit and maintain control of the werewolf populations show a strong presence.  On the surface, the court and Heaven's Hand profess to protect all life with the singular law of condemning to death any who bites a human but, as with many organizations in which individuals carry their own emotional baggage and opinions, hypocrisy creates exceptions and thus friction.  While Boguet may be the official defendant, Connor and Arden become targets for the judge, Breber. While Madison may come to their aid with surprisingly revelations about Boguet, instead of quelling both judicial and physical attacks, her news launches a new barrage hitherto unknown.

Hold onto your book or device because The Night Has Claws may start with the emotional and physical clean-up of story-lines from The Night Has Teeth but it ends on an even messier closing. I don't mean messier as in confused but rather in terms of catastrophic ruin.  It breaks apart with secrets revealed, relationships and alliances exposed and shattered, and upcoming hostilities and combat forecast. The reader may still be hopeful for reconciliation between Connor and Madison and Arden and Amara but surprisingly Kat Kruger has you cheering for the motley band of protagonists and even laughing along at times. (Honestly, how often can a writer use the admonishment "Bite me" as a double entendre?) And there's even more action, surprises and affairs of the heart coming because we know that where The Night Has Claws leaves off, Book Three will launch and continue to thrill.