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Sink your fangs or park your broom; the books are coming alive and I'm buried in them!

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Special Feature for Today: The Handfasting by David Burnett GIVEAWAY, Author Stalk, and Blog Hop!!!


ISBN-13:
978-1490320878

ISBN-10:
1490320873




Ten years had passed since they had joined hands in the ruins of the old abbey church. Standing before the high altar, they were handfasted in the Celtic custom, engaged to be married.
A rose bush had bloomed beside the ruined altar. Steven had reached out to caress one of the flowers.
“I’ll find you,” he had said. “In ten years, when we have finished school, when we are able to marry, I’ll find you. Until then, whenever you see a yellow rose, remember me. Remember I love you.”
In those ten years, Katherine had finished college, completed med school, and become a doctor. In those ten years they had not seen each other, had not spoken, and had not written.
It was what they had agreed.
For a decade, she had been waiting, hoping, praying.
Today ─ her birthday─ she finds a vase of yellow roses when she reaches home.
Steven, though, is not Katherine’s only suitor. Bill Wilson has known her since they were in high school. He has long planned to wed her, and he finally decides to stake his claim.
The Handfasting is a story of love renewed, a suitor spurned, a vicious attack, a struggle for healing. It is a story of love that survives.






David Burnett lives in Columbia South Carolina, with his wife and their blue-eyed cat, Bonnie. The Reunion, his first novel, is set in nearby Charleston. The Handfasting is his second novel. While most of the events in the story take place in New York City, psychologically, the story is set in the rural South of the 1970’s.
David enjoys traveling, photography, baking bread, and the Carolina beaches. He has photographed subjects as varied as prehistoric ruins on the islands of Scotland, star trails, sea gulls, and a Native American powwow. David and his wife have traveled widely in the United States and the United Kingdom. During one trip to Scotland, they visited Crathes Castle, the ancestral home of the Burnett family near Aberdeen
David has graduate degrees in psychology and education and previously was Director of Research for the South Carolina Department of Education. He and his wife have two daughters.





Excerpt


Theirs was the only room on the third floor of the small hotel, so no one noticed when they walked, hand in hand, down the short hallway. Katherine had never done anything quite like this before, and her hand shook as she took hold of the rail at the top of the stairs. She looked at Steven and smiled nervously as he squeezed her hand in reassurance.Small lights gleamed on the landing below, but the stairs were dark, her steps unsteady, and she stumbled twice on the way down. Steven was holding her arm, though, and he caught her each time she tripped. They stopped as they reached the hotel’s front door.“Are you all right?” he whispered.“Fine. It’s just dark.” She hugged him. “Really.”“You have the key?”She reached into a pocket and pulled out the ring that held both the key to their room and the one to the hotel’s door. “Got it.”They opened the door and slipped out into the darkness. Even though it was summer, the night air was cold and Katherine pulled her sweater around her, tightly. Only in Scotland, she thought, would she need a sweater in August. It was just after midnight, and the small Scottish town was effectively closed for the night. Their hotel was dark, except for a light in one room on the second floor. The other hotel, directly across the street, was also dark.They turned to the left and walked down High Street toward the central plaza. They passed two pubs, one on each side of the street, both closed. Farther down, a third one, the Golden Lion, appeared to be open—lights were visible through the window at least. Katherine thought it unlikely that many patrons were still inside. If so, they were surely sipping their last pints for the evening.They reached the plaza, the one part of town that was brightly lit. It was surrounded by shops—a candy store, a shop that carried Scottish woolens, two cafés, and one filled with what Katherine called tourist junk—stuffed Nessies, t-shirts with cute slogans, tartan ties, plastic swords, anything that might induce a tourist to part with a few pounds or dollars.The Mercat Cross, the ancient symbol of royal authority, stood in the center of the plaza. Some fifteen feet high, it had occupied the same spot in the center of town for over five hundred years, witnessing the town’s gradual change from a place of pilgrimage, to a bustling market town, to the tourist attraction that it had become in recent years.The tourists came to see the ruins of the great abbey, much as the pilgrims in centuries past had come to see it in its glory. Katherine and Steven were going to the abbey, tonight.High Street ran through the plaza and they continued for two more blocks before turning left on the B road that ran toward the ruins. The buildings blocked the lights from the plaza and they had to watch their steps to stay on the sidewalk that ran beside the narrow road. Since it was late, there was no traffic—if a car should come speeding along, the driver would be as surprised to find them on foot, as they would be to see the car.The walkway ended abruptly and they stepped off onto the grassy shoulder.When Katherine looked up, she could see the stars. She had been in Scotland for almost six weeks and this was the first time she had seen them. Perhaps it was a good omen.Ten minutes later, they reached the abbey. The floodlights that illumined the ruins had been turned off and a single streetlight in front of the visitor center provided the only illumination. A chain hung across the entrance to the abbey grounds. Few visitors would walk out from town,and since there was no place to park, other than in the car park, the chain effectively closed the site to visitors.Steven started across the road, but Katherine held back.The abbey seemed ominous in the darkness, and Katherine could easily envision that the spirits of the monks who had once lived within its walls still hovered about.Steven must have felt her hesitate because he squeezed her arm.Katherine looked up into his eyes. Coming here had been her idea and she wondered if he still thought it was a good plan.“You’re sure?” she whispered. “You want to do this?”Steven nodded and hugged her. “Positive.”They crossed the highway, stepped over the chain, and hurried across the brightly lit lawn, stopping when they reached the shadows of the abbey’s walls. They had to walk slowly because the ground was uneven and littered with stones, but they finally reached the side entrance to the abbey’s church.The church had held up better than the rest of the abbey. When the abbey had been disbanded in the mid fifteen hundreds, the church had continued to be used as the parish church for another two centuries. The walls were mostly complete, and the stone floor was still in place. A roof and windows were all that would be needed to make the building serviceable again.Katherine switched on a penlight when they entered the church, confident that it would not be seen by a passing motorist. Walking through the nave and the choir, they approached the high altar—the altar itself was gone, but the raised platform, on which it had stood, remained.To one side, a yellow rosebush was in full bloom. The fact that it could survive in the abbey was amazing on its own, that it bloomed each year in August, even more so. It was said that a sixteenth-century abbot had removed stones from the floor in order to plant the bush and that it bloomed once each year, on the anniversary of the last mass said by the monks. Its water source was a mystery. The yellow rose had been adopted as the symbol of the abbey, and later as the symbol of the town itself.Together, they knelt in front of the space where the high altar had stood. Katherine unfolded a sheet of paper, placing it on the ground. Steven held the light as they joined their right hands and Katherine wrapped a purple cord around them. She picked up the paper, and Steven began to read.“I, Steven Andrew Richardson, take thee, Katherine Lee Jackson, to be my betrothed wife, as the law of the holy Kirk shows, and thereto I plight thee my troth.”Katherine looked into his eyes. “I, Katherine Lee Jackson, take thee, Steven Andrew Richardson, to be my betrothed husband, as the law of the holy Kirk shows, and thereto I plight thee my troth.”A smile spread across Katherine’s face. She wanted to jump and shout, but she remembered that they were not supposed to be in the abbey. She put her arms around Steven and squeezed as hard as she could.He hugged and kissed her in return. “We are engaged now?” he whispered.“According to Celtic custom we are. I am bound to you forever, unless you release me. You are bound to me.”They knelt in silence and she whispered a prayer, asking that they would be able to carry out the plans they had made. When she had finished, she raised her head and looked at Steven. Her eyes followed his toward the rosebush. The moon had risen behind the abbey and its light streamed through one of the small round windows on the side of the nave, falling on a single rose at the end of an especially long cane.He reached out and pulled the rose toward them. The fragrance was sweet, reminding Katherine of a perfume that had once been her favorite.“Whenever you see a yellow rose, Katie, think of me.” He said quietly. “Every time you see one, remember that I love you.”Steven released the rose and took her hand in his. “Everything will work out. You’ll see.”After another minute, he helped her to her feet and they retraced their steps to the entrance. A light raked across the door just before they reached it, and he peered around the wall.Two police officers stood at the chain, shining lights around the ruins.“They couldn’t have seen my light,” she whispered.“Just a routine check. If they had seen the light, they would have come in.”After several minutes, the officers drove away. Katherine and Steven hurried down the road and returned to town.The police car was in the plaza as they turned onto High Street.“Good evening, Officer,” Katherine said as they passed.“Good evening, ma’am. It’s a bit late for a stroll.”“We’re going in now, Officer. Good night.”“Good night, ma’am.”Reaching the hotel, Katherine looked back down the street. The officer was still watching them. She inserted the key, opened the door, and carefully, they climbed the stairs.Reaching their room, they changed clothes and kissed good night. Then, as they had for the past two weeks, Katherine lay under the covers, Steven on top. He put his arm around her and they slept.




  1. What would you say was the most fun about writing this book?
Bill Wilson is the villain in The Handfasting. During the final re-write, one of the goals became to show him clearly as the despicable person he really was. Don’t get me wrong, he already was bad, really bad, and I thoroughly enjoyed writing supporting scenes to highlight his character.
  1. Give us some insight into the main character. What does he/she do that is so special?
In The Handfasting, Katherine Jackson and Steven Richardson meet while they are touring Great Britain during the summer after Katherine finished high school. They fall in love and become engaged to marry.  Circumstances cause them to be separated for the next ten years
In those ten years, Katherine finishes college, completes med school, and becomes a doctor. For a decade, she waits, hopes, and prays that Steven will keep his promise to find her, and, on her birthday, he does.
Steven, though, is not Katherine's only suitor. Bill Wilson has known her since they were in high school. He has long planned to wed her, and he finally decides to stake his claim. His methods leave a lot to be desired, and the conflict turns vicious.
Katherine is a strong woman who finds herself in an impossible situation, and she is forced choose the future that she wants.
  1. What are you working on right now?
Tentatively titled, To Love Again, I am working on the story of Drew and Amy, two people in their mid-fifties.  After their spouses die, Drew and Amy meet and fall in love. Adolescents may face parental opposition when they fall in love, but all sorts of people - children, grandchildren, friends and acquaintances - have strong feelings about this relationship! Not all of those feelings are positive ones.
What happens when one becomes involved in a program designed to help a person discover what she really wants out of life? In Masquerade, a sequel to my first book, The Reunion, Allison Bannister, one of the main characters from that book, finds that a lot of unexpected things can happen! I am not completely satisfied, however, with how Allison copes with the surprising outcomes, and it will be interesting to see whether Masquerade or To Love Again is published first..


  1. What genre are your books?
I don’t set out to write a particular genre. I write the story and the genre develops. My first two books have been romances.
  1. What draws you to this genre?
I cannot imagine that anyone would not like a good love story. It makes me feel good when people find true love and overcome obstacles that threaten to keep them apart.
  1. What is your favorite color?
Blue. I wear blue clothes – shirts, ties, pants, suits, sweats and sweaters. I use a blue mouse with my computer. I once lived in a blue house, I drive a blue car, and I have a wife, a cat (named Bonnie Blue), and two daughters, all of whom have blue eyes.
  1. What is your favorite food?
I have to choose one??? Bread wins, hands down: loaf bread, rolls, bagels, pretzels, biscuits, muffins, pancakes, waffles, flat bread, banana bread... I like white bread, whole wheat bread, potato bread, and multigrain bread.
I bake bread, usually rolls of some kind, almost every Sunday. I bake biscuits and muffins during the week. I once came across a “bread diet,” and neither my daughter nor I could think of anything that could possibly be better.
  1. Are you a cat or dog person? Why
Cats. Cats are small, cuddly (when they want to be), and independent
Priscilla and Pawley (the “Gray Ghost of Pawley’s Island,” a reference to her color and to a spirit that walks the beach before storms strike Pawley’s Island on the Carolina coast), Boule do Neige (French, snow ball) and Jenny have all lived at the Burnett house over the years. Our cats to tend to have long lives: Priscilla and Neige each saw their eighteenth birthdays.
Bonnie Blue (If you have ever read Gone with the Wind, you will understand the reference) lives with us now. .She is pure white with deep blue eyes. She is also deaf. Once she was lying on my wife’s cell phone when it rang. Bonnie did not even move! Of course, we tend to forget that she is deaf, and we talk to her as if she could hear every word we say.
  1. How are you published (*i.e. indie, traditional, or both) and why?
My books have been independently published. Traditional publishing requires me to find an agent who likes my book, who can find a publisher who likes my book, who may help me find readers who will like my book. By publishing independently, I skip the two initial steps.
  1. Do you have any amusing stories from your adventures in the writing world?
When my daughter was in college, I would tell her to find a quiet place to study, and I objected when she began to take her schoolwork to the coffee shop of one of the bookstores in town.
When I began to write, in what” quiet” location did I choose to work? Starbucks, of course! I do some of my best work while sipping coffee at Starbucks. When writing a first draft, I aim for one thousand words a day, and it generally takes me about one hour, and one tall cup, to meet my goal.
  1. What is your favorite motivational phrase?
“All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.” - St Julian of Norwich
  1. What is your favorite book and why?
 I do not have a favorite book. However if you look at what I have read over the past few years, you’ll find several authors to whom I have turned several times.
Susanna Kearsley’s time-slip romances are captivating and the methods by which people pass between times are always different and interesting. Michael Wallace writes about a fundamentalist Mormon group in southern Utah. His action scenes are gripping. Christopher Reich is a master of the spy novel. Michael Baron places his characters in impossible, heart-rending situations
I loved the Harry Potter books. I read the first volume after hearing a member of our State School Board ranting about how evil it was. I wondered how it could possibly be as bad as the woman claimed. Well, I was hooked. My daughter gave me the last two volumes, with delivery on the day of release.
Finally, Harper Lee is one of the master story-tellers of all time. It is a shame that To Kill a Mockingbird was her single book.
  1. What advice would you give to your younger self?
When I went to college, I was planning to study journalism. I changed my major to psychology. I would tell my younger self not to stop writing.


  1. To end: Give us three Good to Know things about you. Be creative.
1                    I enjoy history. When our children were little, we took them everywhere –Charleston, Williamsburg, New Orleans, Boston. Once, after we toured several battlefields in Virginia, my daughter Carrie told us that when you have seen one battlefield, you’ve seen them all: video, monuments, empty fields, trees, maybe a creek…
2                    I attended the University of Georgia. “Go Dawgs! Sic ‘em!”
3                    I have a PhD in educational research, and I spent thirty years as a statistician/ data analyst. I was director of research at our state’s department of education. Talk about “doing things by the numbers”! Having forsaken the “certainty” of math, I’m happy, now, as I write.





Buried Under Books Blog Tours

1 comment:

  1. Melissa, thank you for hosting David on The Handfasting tour today.
    Shaz

    ReplyDelete