Thursday, March 10, 2016

A Dangerous Love by J.C. Morrows {Blog Tour Spotlight, Interview, and Giveaway}



Genre:  Fiction, Romance, Fantasy, Dystopian, Christian, Young Adult
Publisher: S&G Publishing
Publication Date: February 23, 2016
Number of Pages: 96
​Before he was King . . .

Before she was Queen . . .

Before their son was forced to choose his bride from among twenty-five strangers . . .

There was another royal romance.

Prince Devron was never meant to be king. He was given the opportunity to choose his bride . . . for love instead of political advantage.

Shiara - the lonely, orphaned weaver - never expected to meet Prince Devron, much less have him propose marriage.

Could this be her very own fairy tale ending?
​ Purchase link: 

http://www.amazon.com/Dangerous-Order-MoonStone-Short-Stories-ebook/dp/B01B13Y9MO/ref=pd_sim_sbs_351_4?ie=UTF8&dpID=51JmxmrZZ4L&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL160_SR107%2C160_&refRID=0KKTDA3TW6Z1G585F10G

J​C Morrows - Bestselling author of YA Christian speculative fiction, drinker of coffee and avid reader - is a storyteller in the truest sense of the word. JC has been telling stories in one form or another her entire life and once her mother convinced her to write them down, she couldn't stop.

She finished her first speculative fiction novel purely for the enjoyment of her mother - also known as her biggest fan.

She gives God all of the glory for her talent and ability!


Interview via SLB Tours

1. What genre are your books?  What draws you to this genre?

The Order of the MoonStone series falls under the general genre of YA Inspirational Speculative fiction, but if you want to get technical about it, the books fit into dystopian, romance, futuristic fantasy and steampunk (though I'm not a fan of the work “punk”).

Fantasy/Sci-fi/Speculative has always been my favorite genre to read AND write. I am drawn to the infinite possibilities that come with speculative fiction. There is nowhere you can't go... nothing you can't do in the fantastical worlds and adventures that await you there.

2. Do you write full-time or part time?  How many days a week do you write?
I write full-time – often seven days a week. If I take off more than one day at a time, it interrupts my flow, making it difficult for me to get back into the story the next day.

3. Do you ever get writer’s block?
Every author, whether they call it writer's block or not, has parts of their story that may hang them up. I hit brick walls in my stories all the time, but I don't let it block me. I simply move to another part of the story until I find my way past the section that is giving me difficulty. Often, I find that the reason it was giving me trouble, was because it didn't need to be there to begin with.

4. What book are you currently reading?
“Storm Siren” by Mary Weber

5. What tips would you give a potential writer?
WRITE! Pray! Read! NEVER stop!
Currently do not have this documentation. 3/3/2016.  Will update if/when I receive this material.

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