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Back in March of 2008, author Melanie Nilles first posted here at Myth, the Universe, and Everything, talking a bit about the angel lore she was using in the series that became her "Dark Angel" novels. Since then, she's released several e-books, including the first two stories in the "Dark Angel" series. The third volume, Crystal Tomb, is releasing this week! I'm honored to be one of the hosts on Melanie's blog tour, and am hoping for a fantastic book birthday for her newest title. She's offering a prize for commenters here at MtU&E, so be sure to read to the end of the post!

To check out the first book in the "Dark Angel" series, you can currently download it for free at amazon or Barnes & Noble. You can also follow Melanie's adventures here on livejournal at [livejournal.com profile] amsaph.

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Crystal lore applied in Starfire Angels

When Alana emailed asking to host a day of my blog tour, I felt a little giddy inside. It's an honor to be asked back. Yes, back. I've been here once before, a couple years ago, when Starfire Angels was going to be a different book with a different name, before it was rewritten into something greater. It's done well for itself, and I'm proud to announce the release of the third book in the series, Crystal Tomb. (The second book, Broken Wings, was released last August.)

In keeping with the theme of myths and legends in books, I want to discuss crystal lore and how it applies in the series. Crystals have long been considered to have mystical powers connected to the earth from which they come. I actually knew very little about the metaphysical properties of crystals when I started writing the books, but that changed in searching for what might best represent the Starfire crystal in the stories.

First, a little science. Crystals contain structures formed by repeating arrangements of molecules or ions throughout. The internal arrangement of those particles is often related to the external appearance. I assume everyone understands what atoms and molecules are. Often, we think of salt, which has a cubic appearance, or quartz with its hexagonal points when we think of crystals, but they aren't always faceted in these ways when we see them. It all depends on the molecular arrangements, which is revealed by the external shape. Crystals can contain other crystals or strands within them (phantoms or rutilations). They may also be polished or cut, such as gemstones, which changes the external appearance; but the crystalline structure remains intact.

Crystals are more than a geologist's inspiration, however. They have also inspired mystics. The history of using crystals in healing can't be dated. It has been with us for as long as we can trace our history.

In science, we learn that everything is made up of atoms, which are constantly in motion, even when matter is in a solid state, thus everything has energy. This energy resonates at a particular vibration, which varies for each object; thus the shatter of a crystal wine glass from a high musical note. In the study of crystal healing, it is understood that each crystal has a unique vibration that affects the body's energy and can realign it so that the negative energy can be cleared and the body cleansed to promote healing. Some crystals are thought to be record keepers said to hold the imprint of all that has gone before and open the self to spiritual wisdom.*

In many science fiction series, crystals are often seen as data storage devices or to align energy in a particular way, such as the Go'a uld ships on Stargate SG-1 using crystals rather than circuit boards in their devices, which was adapted into the Prometheus, Daedalus, and other ships of that fleet. Babylon 5 used memory crystals like we use flash drives, for data storage. In real life, we're not far off—lithium and quartz and silicon are in our computers and clocks.

Given all this, I didn't consider it a big leap to create a living, sentient crystal as my Starfire. Originally I needed a tool to give my angels the powers attributed to angels in mythology. But it couldn't be just anything. In a trunked novella from many years earlier, I had a story of a living, magic crystal that needed protection from those who sought to abuse its power. In that story, it had fallen to the world from the stars and was called the Starfire. I took that and modified it to give me what I needed, but there was one thing missing.

The Starfire needed a reason for existing, and I gave it one. It had to be special and it had to be plausible, not magic. I decided that the new Starfire would be from another dimension, one where solid matter can't exist, where only energy can. But in crossing dimensions, that energy must become solid matter, so it formed a crystalline structure, which would allow its energy to be contained and the entities to live. But in that form, they could not move. They could only influence the atomic energy in contact with them, whatever its form of matter. They were subject to the whims of physics and the intelligence of creatures which discovered them.

In giving the Starfire a background and history, it took on a life of its own. I'm still continuing to learn more about it, and learning about the metaphysical beliefs of crystals has helped to open up possibilities. My own spiritual beliefs have given me something more in deciding how the Starfire entities fit into the setting of the story. In Crystal Tomb, readers will gain a larger glimpse of the crystal's purpose in the series beyond life after death.

Learn more about the Inari as angels on Earth in the Starfire Angels series (Starfire Angels, Broken Wings, and Crystal Tomb) at the website at starfireangels.melanienilles.com.
To enter the drawing of a Starfire crystal (aqua aura natural quartz point) and a set of the ebooks in your choice of formats, please post your comments on or before June 1st. (Comments may include questions for the author.)
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* For more information on crystals, I recommend The Crystal Bible by Judy Hall. (Walking Stick Press; Cincinatti, Ohio. 2003)
alanajoli: (Default)
On Friday, the students asked me for weird facts that I'd learned about Branford that they might not know. To my surprise, they'd already gotten most of the fun stuff I've been the most excited to learn! But despite how much this group already knew, they were a great audience, and they had a lot of enthusiasm, not just for history, but also for comics and fiction and the other fun stuff that I work on. They also asked me some questions that I'm hoping to cover in upcoming columns!

As a transplanted Midwesterner, I'm still adjusting to the idea that New England has about 150+ years on the type of history I'm used to thinking about -- more in my area, if you count the Dutch settlements. In my history classes growing up, our local history conversations started in 1803. Witch hunts and whipping posts had long gone out of style. And, frankly, the attitude in the nation was a different one. Manifest Destiny wasn't far off as a national policy, and that fear of devils lurking in the woods that Hawthorne's writings made so popular was replaced by that pioneer mentality of being willing to fight off whatever threatened the right to homestead. Or, at least, so I recall it from my own education.

And, of course, those are just the written records of the regions. There's a lot of local history that precedes settlement by Europeans and their descendants. Doing research for an upcoming column on the Quinnipiac, I started reading a book written about the Indians of Connecticut in the 1800s, and the tone of condescension is just incredible. That type of history is extremely hard to read (and I'm glad I was able to get in touch with the folks at the Algonquin Confederacy of the Quinnipiac Tribal Council, who gave me both traditional and documented answers that didn't leave such a bad taste in my mouth).

Now, I've visited the Parthenon, the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, and enough other ancient sites to know that the 1600s weren't actually that long ago. And yet, the difference in the way we experienced life between then and now is a profound one -- and it's looking at the differences in world view that I enjoy most about looking at local history. Even when those world views can be hard to swallow.

--

In other news, I know it's been awhile since I had a guest blog or an excerpt posted at the site, and I'm working on improving the occurrences. I'm happy to say that we've got one upcoming that won't even happen on a Friday! Friend of the blog Melanie Nilles ([livejournal.com profile] amsaph) is celebrating the release of Crystal Tomb, the third book in her Dark Angel Chronicles, and Myth, the Universe, and Everything is an official blog tour host. (Starfire Angels, the first book in the series, is currently available as a free ebook at amazon.) Keep an eye out for her to appear here on May 30th!

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Between a blog entry of [livejournal.com profile] amsaph yesterday and a contest and interview of [livejournal.com profile] mdhenry, I've come to a realization. If urban fantasy authors weren't so prolific online and so incredibly friendly to fellow bloggers, I don't think I'd even be reading the genre.

No, seriously.

YA paranormal is sort of a different beast--I've been reading contemporary fantasy in the jfic and the YA sections since I was itty, either with children getting sucked into a fantasy world or having strange things happen to them because they picked up a magic coin. It's not a far stretch from those to books about kids with paranormal abilities, and from there, books with teens whose lives are intersecting with a supernatural world all around them. YA paranormal as a whole has always had a shape--real world kids interacting with crazy paranormal stuff.

Urban fantasy, however, seems to be the heir of a couple of different venues, but a lot of the tropes are born out of the horror genre. As a kid, I never liked horror. I don't like to be scared, and I've never liked scary movies. The word "thriller" tells me I need to avoid the product. But the majority of my reading these days includes zombies and vampires and werewolves--all traditional folk creatures that have run wild in the *horror* genre, and none of which, as creatures, would have encouraged me to pull a book off the shelf as little as three years ago. But when I started following [livejournal.com profile] fangs_fur_fey back at the beginning of 2007 (maybe the end of 2006), not only were all of these great writers posting exciting things about using folklore, their writing processes, and just general fun stuff about their lives, they all seemed to be really cool people. And that personal connection is apparently what I needed to really start actively seeking out UF. (And of course now there are the Deadline Dames and the League of Reluctant Adults, which I'm following a little more regularly than FFF these days.)

[livejournal.com profile] lyster and I were talking not too long ago about internet presence driving book sales, and I'm coming to acknowledge that I'm the market share--I'm a person who definitively buys books based on my web familiarity with the writers, and I'll even wholeheartedly embrace a genre that wasn't really my thing if as a community, they're really awesome. It's an interesting way to think about what I read.
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By reading Melanie Nilles's blog ([livejournal.com profile] starlet97), it's easy to pick up her interest in angels. Because of the impact of angels on her own life, she's chosen to write about them in her young adult novel Dark Angel and its as-yet-untitled sequel. She is also the author of the forthcoming "Legend of the White Dragons" series, of which Dragon Prophecy and Dragon Legends are due out this year. You can visit her at her own blog or at the livejournal community that she moderates: [livejournal.com profile] fantastic_realm. Thank you, Melanie, for being a guest of the blog!

--

I appreciate the opportunity to share something about myths in stories. In particular, I want to focus on angels. Yes, those winged messengers of God, or whatever name a particular religion assigns.

The three major religions of the world all share a belief in angels. Some may say that angels aren't myths, but that's not the opinion shared by everyone. I believe they're real, but not as artists portray them.

For my story, Dark Angel, I wanted to cast angels in a new light. Instead of the usual supernatural beings, I thought it would be fun to make them real but not as we expect. I asked myself "What if..." (Yes, a writer's favorite question, because every story expands on a "what if" scenario.) In this case, I thought "What if we see angels in pictures with wings--since I'd never read a Bible passage that mentioned angels having wings though found in my research it's mentioned once--because they weren't angels as we know? What if they were alien visitors; but because early civilizations didn't understand or accept that idea that the world wasn't only one of a million in a vast universe, they saw them as supernatural beings, messengers of a higher power--or in this case of a far more advanced civilization?"

Because I wanted to use that and keep it plausible to what I knew of angels in the Bible (I'm Catholic), I wanted to have a way to make these beings match much of that. I gave them a purpose, which came from an element of a story I wrote in college. In this case, some of their species have the power to hide their wings because of a special symbiosis with a higher intelligence, or rather a collective of creatures from another dimension. I won't go into details--you'll have to read the book ;) --but I will say that it fit what I wanted to do. As Emeril would say, BAM! I had my explanation for how they could hide on Earth among humans, since they otherwise looked human.

In doing my research, I discovered that the different religions all mentioned angels, though they have different purposes and different backgrounds. In the Christian beliefs, there are seven orders of angels with different terms of service to God. They are messengers, warriors, and guardians and will appear to men. In Islam, they serve only Allah and are not seen but do His work. Islam also mentions djinn, who can change shape and who may turn against Allah. This reminded me of the fallen angels of Christian beliefs. So, I found similarities and disparities.

Usually, we think of angels as helpers. That was the way I used them. If my aliens came from an advanced civilization, they might come to help us. I'm an optimist and took that road. However, even aliens can have their problems. The fun part was then to bring those problems to our world as those jealous of the small group with powers hunted them down.

Using angels as the basis for a young adult story came easily. I fell in love with the work and the characters. The idea is one not often explored, except the usual angels as a supernatural being battling demons, the fallen.

Myths can be used in many ways to inspire new stories. We just have to think outside the box. And having wings would be fun too!
alanajoli: (Default)
My deadlines have reared their ugly heads. They pace back and forth, watching as I scramble, my fingers raging against the keyboard, brow dampened with sweat, stomach twisted with anxiety. Also, we had two super cloudy days, which sapped all my motivation--this only adds to the anxiety when I manage to come back to myself out of the gloom. Add to this that before I got the contract from MWP I'd planned my social life for the month (yes, lots of D&D, as that's pretty dominantly how I socialize), and you can imagine that I'm going a little nuts trying to fit it all in. So, my poor journal has gotten left behind!

To give you the quick update (if you're not already listening to Secret Identity Podcast, where I guest host the gaming segment Action Point Counter Point with evil mastermind Max Saltonstall of Anonycon and Secret Identity super star Brian LeTendre, and which just had its 100th episode--congrats, guys!), I have one week to get a draft done of my Serenity adventure. The working community over at MWP is just awesome: they have community boards that aren't quite the same as forums, where you can upload all of your progress and edit joint documents. Thus far, I've suggested art-work to be featured in the adventure and have posted my original pitch. Tomorrow I'll start inputting my actual work into the template and hope that my progress goes quickly!

The reason I haven't gotten further on that is that I've also got three assignments for reference projects due this month. One is technically due in March, but since I'll be at DDXP over the deadline, it needs to be finished before I go. Which means you're probably not going to hear much from me the rest of the month, except in short spurts.

Since I do have guest blogs ready to go, however, you may start seeing those this month as planned. Writers in the line-up include Melanie Nilles ([livejournal.com profile] amsaph), the founder of [livejournal.com profile] fantastic_realm; Mark Vecchio, faculty at Simon's Rock College and mythology expert; Lora Innes of The Dreamer, who is one of my comic buddies from over at DrunkDuck.com; and Carrie Vaughn, author of the "Kitty the Werewolf" series. So stay tuned! Good things are happening, even though I'm vaguely in absentia.

And don't forget to keep up with Cowboys and Aliens II, as exciting things are happening over there, as well. I can promise you some real action coming up--hand to hand, even! We also appreciate all the folks who vote for us on Buzz Comix and Top Web Comics, as the more attention we get, the happier we (and our publisher) are. :)

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Alana Joli Abbott

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