HFVBT Presents: Daughter Of A Thousand Years + Giveaway

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Daughter of a Thousand Years by Amalia Carosella

Publication Date: February 21, 2017
Lake Union Publishing
eBook & Paperback; 442 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction/Medieval Romance
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Greenland, AD 1000 More than her fiery hair marks Freydís as the daughter of Erik the Red; her hot temper and fierce pride are as formidable as her Viking father’s. And so, too, is her devotion to the great god Thor, which puts her at odds with those in power—including her own brother, the zealous Leif Eriksson. Determined to forge her own path, she defies her family’s fury and clings to her dream of sailing away to live on her own terms, with or without the support of her husband. New Hampshire, 2016 Like her Icelandic ancestors, history professor Emma Moretti is a passionate defender of Norse mythology. But in a small town steeped in traditional values, her cultural beliefs could jeopardize both her academic career and her congressman father’s reelection. Torn between public expectation and personal identity, family and faith, she must choose which to honor and which to abandon. In a dramatic, sweeping dual narrative that spans a millennium, two women struggle against communities determined to silence them, but neither Freydís nor Emma intends to give up without a fight.

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The Interview

WTF Are You Reading would like to thank Amelia for stopping by for a chat about her wonderful
book...
Daughter Of A Thousand Years

1.  What inspired you to write Daughter Of A Thousand Years?

It was kind of a constellation of events, honestly. I had one more book to go on my contract, and my editor suggested I step outside of my Bronze Age comfort zone to mix it up a little bit. I spent a couple of weeks reading about women from various time periods, thinking, before I finally hit on Freydis – I was already a little bit more familiar and more comfortable with the Viking Age than I was with any other period barring Bronze Age Greece, and I knew that generally speaking, I for sure wanted to give voice to people (in a serious and respectful way) who we, in the west, have been quicker to dismiss -- to acknowledge that perhaps these other, older cultures and people DID have their own meaningful experiences with the numinous or some greater spiritual power. Freydis seemed like a perfect match on that score, and then it was a very natural step to weave that same thread into the contemporary setting with Emma, because for me, that dismissal of other experiences as meaningful is not just something that lives in the


2.  Is it harder writing present-day or past characters and settings?

past.

DEFINITELY present-day is harder for me. I don’t know about anyone else, but all the details from the kind of car a person drives to cultural background of their family to the kind of food they eat for lunch or the job/career they pursue – they all have that much more meaning and symbolism in the modern day. We have so much STUFF to keep track of, and so many subtle status symbols embedded within all that stuff, and you have to negotiate all of that a lot more carefully in a contemporary setting where your readers DEFINITELY know EXACTLY what’s up. As an example of what I’m talking about: I’ll never forget that time in a writing workshop in college when I got heat and criticism because my character said she was Italian-American but had an English last name. Another comment on that (contemporary/present-day) story was that it was too unrealistic that my character was in college but had never been kissed. Oofda! On top of all that, there’s always the temptation in the back of my mind to kind of gloss over the world building, because I can see everything so perfectly as I’m writing, and we all know what a diner generally looks and feels like, right? Who needs detailed description! (Of course the answer is: the BOOK still needs that detailed description stop trying to cheat, Amalia! what’s the matter with you?!) [Author me is already leans more toward description-lite generally sooo.]

This isn’t at all to say that these kinds of details don’t matter in the past – of course we have to negotiate what it meant to be a princess or a noblewoman or a peasant in those periods too, and what symbols and things might need to be accounted for, but to me, it’s a lot easier to navigate. Also nobody is texting or calling anyone, either. Which. Guh.

TL:DR Contemporary settings are the wooooorst! Why do I do this to myself?!

3.  Do you write at home, a cafe, bookstore, your car...etc?

I write at home! Firstly because I am incredibly distractable – I don’t even like having other people in the house when I’m working, if I’m being honest, and distractions when I am deep into drafting make me SO FRUSTRATED. And secondly because I suck as a driver. Not that I’m a bad driver, just that I have weird driving anxiety and I suspect some kind of directional dyslexia (my brain is incapable of KNOWING right from left, and forget compass directions, nope nope nope), so it stresses me out a lot – not a great way to start a writing session!

4.  When writing your characters' attitudes, mannerisms, likes and dislikes.  Do you draw from yourself, people you know?

Of course! I think most of us do, to some extent or another. Sometimes I do it purposefully, and other times it sneaks in behind my back and I don’t realize what I’ve done until it’s too late to do anything about it, or I only figure it out with a reread three years down the line.
For example, in DAUGHTER, Emma hates raisins in dessert foods (particularly her apple pie) – which is a long-standing point of contention between a minority few of us (myself included!) and certain branches of my family. My cousin was one of my beta readers for the manuscript, and when he read that line, he definitely gave me some grief for including it (but he likes to rehydrate old desiccated raisins in his tea so clearly his arguments are invalid.) I also share Emma’s love of Star Wars, and definitely would have been giving any guy I dated a serious side-eye had he fallen asleep in the theater on opening night. EVEN for the prequels.

And in the book I’m drafting now (also contemporary because I hate myself I guess?), my character’s love for The Lord of the Rings is inspired by my cousins – Lord of the Rings is basically their Star Wars. A friend of mine once involved me in his search for the perfect pea-coat that I feel like DESERVES to be a part of a book someday, and another friend told me about his ongoing saga in battling an impertinent Opossum that I gifted to a secondary character recently. These are all small examples but I think they illustrate pretty well how the purposeful inclusion generally happens :) When it’s accidental – well, those are usually elements I don’t necessarily want to point out to the world, because they speak to something more personal that I didn’t realize I was trying to work out. But that’s kind of an inherent danger for any kind of artist who is sharing their work!

5.  Do you have any writing rituals?

Not really, I don’t think. I generally quickly (sometimes less quickly) check my email and Facebook before I settle in to write for an extended period, but I don’t want to call it a ritual because it feels more like a bad habit. Most of the time, the less I do before I start writing for the day, the more productive I am overall and the faster I get in the zone.

My Thoughts

 Daughter Of A Thousand Years is the story of two woman.  One the daughter of the legendary Erik The Red.  Sister to the equally formidable and Lief Eriksson, and a woman determined to live life by her own rules...at any cost.  At a time when daring to do so could cost her life.
The  other, her modern day counterpart Emma.  A woman also struggling to live her life on her own terms.  Though in her case,  said terms could cost her father his career.

Both woman have essentially the same problem.
Religion, or more specifically, their choice to worship Norse gods in the face of Christianity.
Strangely enough however, here also lies a problem for the reader as well.  At least in the case of the modern story-line
Said problem arises simply because while Freydis' issues with religious persecution are understandable.  Given that she is a women daring to practice "the old ways" in an increasingly more Christian Greenland; in the year 1000 A.D.
Emma is a professor in New England.  A citizen of the U.S., and living in the year 2016.  Her religion, or lack thereof, should be little more than a shake of the head at best, to even the most pious members of her community.
Not the explosive elephant in the room that ticks ever louder as the pages turn, and has a grown woman cowering in fear and lying to herself and everyone else for the majority of this book.

While Freydis deals with her problem head-on.  Going so far as to abandon her husband for her warrior lover, and sail away for freer shores.  Poor Emma chooses a far more passive and more "damsel in distress" method of not dealing with her "problem".

Bless her heart...
Grab the Tylenol people! 
You're gonna need it!
To throw at Emma!

Which is a thing to love about this book.  It proves that there are all kinds of hero.  Even those that you have to look at more than twice to figure out just how they got to be one in the first place.
In the case of Emma...
She had a whole lot of help! 
Freydis...not so much!

What that means for the reader is a juxtaposition of the fierce and the fearful, the meek and the magical, the indomitable and the docile.  The two journeys merging on one path.  Two souls fighting an age old battle in the pursuit of the same destiny. Freedom!

About the Author
03_amalia-carosella-author
Amalia Carosella graduated from the University of North Dakota with a bachelors degree in Classical Studies and English. An avid reader and former bookseller, she writes about old heroes and older gods. She lives with her husband in upstate New York and dreams of the day she will own goats (and maybe even a horse, too). For more information, visit her blog at www.amaliacarosella.com. She also writes myth-steeped fantasy and paranormal romance under the name Amalia Dillin.




Learn more about her other works at www.amaliadillin.com
You can connect with Amalia Carosella on Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, and Google+.
Sign up for her newsletter, The Amaliad, for news and updates.

 

Blog Tour Schedule

Thursday, February 16 Review at Let Them Read Books
Friday, February 17 Review at Just One More Chapter
Sunday, February 19 Review at Carole's Ramblings  
Monday, February 20 Review at 100 Pages a Day
Tuesday, February 21 Review at Oh, for the Hook of a Book!
Wednesday, February 22 Review at Book Nerd
Thursday, February 23 Interview at Yelena Casale's Blog
Monday, February 27 Review at Ageless Pages Reviews  
Tuesday, February 28 Review at A Bookish Affair
Wednesday, March 1 Review at The Maiden's Court
Thursday, March 2 Spotlight at Laura's Interests
Friday, March 3 Spotlight at Passages to the Past  
Monday, March 6 Review at Luxury Reading
Tuesday, March 7 Interview at Books, Dreams, Life
Thursday, March 9 Review at History From a Woman's Perspective
Friday, March 10 Review at CelticLady's Reviews Review & Interview at WTF Are You Reading?

 

Giveaway

To win a $25 Amazon Gift Card & a Thor's Hammer/Mjölnir Pewter Pendant, please enter via the Gleam form below. Rules – Giveaway ends at 11:59pm EST on March 10th. You must be 18 or older to enter. – Giveaway is open to residents in the US only. – Only one entry per household. – All giveaway entrants agree to be honest and not cheat the systems; any suspect of fraud is decided upon by blog/site owner and the sponsor, and entrants may be disqualified at our discretion. – Winner has 48 hours to claim prize or new winner is chosen. Daughter of a Thousand Years

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