This holiday season we are featuring guest blogs from a number of authors. We want to offer you cool books to check out for yourself or gifts, and also give these great authors a chance to crow a little about their works!
Please help me welcome Barb Caffrey today, where she discusses ghosts in her new book.
Aaron Lazar
www.lazarbooks.com
The Importance of Ghosts in AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE
copyright 2014, Barb Caffrey
When Aaron Paul Lazar approached me
regarding holiday guest blog opportunities, I wasn't sure what to say. What
haven't I talked about yet with regards to my comic young adult urban
fantasy/romance novel AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE?
And then it hit me. Ghosts. I haven't talked about them, and
they play an important part in the ELFY
duology (AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE is book
one, with book two scheduled to come out in April of 2015).
"But Barb," you protest. "Your book sounds
like it has so much going on as it is. It's a comedy. It's a romance. It's a
mystery. It's an urban fantasy. It has alternate universes—" (I wrote a
blog about this a while back, and it's a good one.) "And
now, it has ghosts, too? How do they fit in?"
Yes, AN ELFY ON THE
LOOSE has ghosts. Specifically, there's a ghost character named Egbert who
takes an inordinate amount of interest in my hero Bruno the Elfy and his
romantic companion Sarah (formerly known as Daisy). And it's partly because of
Egbert the ghost that Bruno and Sarah have a chance to win the day.
But he's not the only ghost in play. (Nope; that would be
too easy!) There are other ghosts alluded to in AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE, including Bruno's parents and possibly a few
of Sarah's relatives…and they all matter.
You see, Bruno can communicate with the dead. (Me being me,
I called him a Mage of Communication, the shorthand for that being—you guessed
it—a Communicator.) And that's why these ghosts can help him out…or at least
interfere in his life.
The reason this intrigued me initially is simple: Bruno had
no idea he could communicate with the dead before he came to our version of
Earth. He also had no idea that he was an Adept of an unusual kind, that his
powers were both formidable and dangerous, and that he had many enemies—nor did
he understand that the aircar accident that had badly injured him and killed
his parents had been engineered by a high-ranking member of the Elfy High Council
in his home Elfy Realm…someone who has some rather unusual ties to Egbert.
So here he is; a short, magical Elfy in the Human Realm
(otherwise known as our Earth). He doesn't know what's happened to him. He
doesn't even know why he's there. But
he meets Sarah, he's immediately drawn to her— and her to him—his teacher
Roberto the Wise tries to rescue him (with disastrous results), Sarah hides
Bruno, a Dark Elf shows up…
And then we meet Egbert. We don't know why he's there,
either, as he doesn't identify himself right away. But we know he's friendly,
we know he has taken an interest for some reason in both Bruno and Sarah, we
know he understands the Elfy Realm (even if we don't know why), and we know that
he, too, has power. So he can,
indeed, affect the outcome—years after his own death—and he can help Bruno
figure out exactly why Bruno is in the Human Realm at all.
Now that I think about it, there are some few parallels
between Egbert and Charles Dickens' character The Ghost of Christmas Past. Like
Dickens' ghost, Egbert knows what happened in the past. And he wants a better
outcome for the living…while they still have time.
Granted, my characters Bruno and Sarah are being threatened
by a Dark Elf, a being inimical to Elfys and humans, not their own past as is
Ebenezer Scrooge. Bruno in particular is under immediate threat due to Sarah's
parents' hostility toward all Elfys. And there's a reason Egbert cares about
these two—a pressing, compelling reason that I refuse to spoil.
But there are parallels nonetheless, because in AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE (as in Dickens' A CHRISTMAS CAROL), ghosts matter. Only
a few remain able to make their wills be known and their wishes understood, but
those few continue to be important and influential.
In our world, of course, the only way a person can matter
after his or her death is in our memories. Or, if you believe in the positive
Afterlife, perhaps our deceased loved ones can do something there that helps us
out in some way we'll never understand until we rejoin them.
But in my conception, ghosts—at least some of them, like
Egbert—can still do things to bring about positive change. That creates more
drama, more suspense, more surprises…and sometimes, more laughs as well.
Because in AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE, some
people are so irrepressible that even death itself cannot keep them down.
In conclusion, if you've been looking for a magical,
heartwarming, suspenseful, romantic, and riotously funny story—with
ghosts—that's like no other this Christmas season, look no further.
Because AN ELFY ON THE
LOOSE is here.
BARB
CAFFREY is a writer, editor and
musician from the Midwest. She is the author of the
humorous urban fantasy/romance AN ELFY ON THE LOOSE, and is the
co-author of the Adventures of Joey
Maverick series (with late husband Michael B. Caffrey). Other stories have
appeared in HOW BEER SAVED THE WORLD,
STARS OF DARKOVER, and BEDLAM'S
EDGE. Barb is a huge baseball fan (Go,
Brewers!), reviews books at Shiny Book
Review, follows politics, is mystified by the Maury show, and
wonders when her little dog will ever stop doing "the paw
trick." Find her at Elfyverse, Facebook, or Twitter.
Thank you so much, Aaron, for having me again at Murder by 4. I appreciate it!
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