The Atlantis Bloodline
by C.A. Gray
Genre: YA Fantasy
When sweet Ada Edwards meets the mysterious Kaison Hughes, lead singer of the biggest band in the
world, she can't understand what he sees in her. Despite everyone's warnings about him, she's rapidly
falling in love. But it's obvious he has a secret, and he's not all he appears to be.
Kai's life isn't his own, and his fame isn't the half of it. As a member of a secret organization known as
the Elioud, descended from the Atlantean daughters of the Pleiades, he's been commissioned with a
task: to reintegrate the lost line of Maia into their ranks. It just so happens that Ada is the one they've
been looking for. He doesn't know what they intend to do to her, and he doesn't care. All he wants is the
prize for a successful mission: one unqualified wish, which he intends to spend on his beloved sister's
freedom.
There's just one problem: Kai's falling in love with Ada, too.
C.A. Gray is the author of three YA Amazon bestselling trilogies: PIERCING THE VEIL (magic and
quantum physics meet Arthurian legends), THE LIBERTY BOX (dystopian metaphysics and mind control
technology), and UNCANNY VALLEY (dystopian coming-of-age with neuroscience and super intelligent
A.I). She starts with some scientific concept that she's interested in learning more about herself, and then
creates lots of epic chaos and high-stakes action to go along with it. Her stories are free of gratuitous
violence, language, and sexual content, and she abhors depressing endings... but they're not all kittens
and rainbows either! She also listens to and reviews audiobooks on her website
(www.authorcagray.com), Goodreads, Instagram, and on her podcast, Clean Audiobook Reviews, where
she also occasionally interviews other authors.
By day, C.A. Gray practices naturopathic medicine, podcasts, and writes medical non-fiction under her
maiden name (Lauren Deville). She lives in Tucson, AZ with her husband Frank, and together they
maintain an occasionally contentious film review blog (under her real name: Lauren Baden. Three
names. Yes.) She's kind of the queen of multitasking--so in her spare time, she creates whatever meals
or crafts she found most recently on Pinterest, drinks lots of coffee (Aeropress btw) and occasional wine
(reds--and she saves the corks for craft projects), works out (while listening to audiobooks), and studies
the Bible (about half of the podcasts on Christian Natural Health are scripture meditations). ...She does
sleep, too.
Join her newsletter for best-of-the-month reads, freebies and giveaway information, as well as new
releases! http://eepurl.com/F3rof
GUEST POST
How
long have you been writing?
I’ve
been writing since I was in elementary school…
although
back then all my main characters were cats (go figure). I’ve
got about 12 shelves’
worth
of journals throughout my life, and have always felt that words are
incredibly powerful. I minored in Creative Writing in college. I
guess I always knew I’d
end up writing eventually.
Do
you see writing as a career?
It
switches from hobby to career the moment I begin to make a living
wage. So, not there yet. ;)
What
do you think about the current publishing market?
I’m
very grateful that I’m self-published, because I don’t have a
publisher telling me what extra content I need to insert, or what I
need to remove. Also, since I’ve been hybrid published before, I
can say that I’d have to do all the marketing myself anyway, so why
not at least keep the profits? I just wish I’d realized all this
back in 2011 when the self-publishing market was just taking off…
I’d be in a very different place right now if I had!!
What
is your writing process? For instance do you do an outline first? Do
you do the chapters first? What are common traps for aspiring
writers?
I
brainstorm a world and a general gist of the story, and then I
outline the story in broad strokes. Next I outline the nitty gritty,
down to what happens in each chapter. Then I write from the outline,
in roughly 20 page chunks, editing as I go. I send each set of 20 to
my primary editor (my mom, whose maiden name I borrowed as my pen
name) and make whatever edits she recommends as I go. Then when I
finish the story, I reread the whole thing and edit it to the best of
my ability before shipping it off to her and to my other editors!
Do
you believe in writer’s
block?
Most
difficult are those days when I have to make myself write, but I’m
really distracted by something else (which is basically writer’s
block). It’s
super hard to focus, and I don’t
feel like I’m
writing anything worth saying, but I do it anyway. That’s
the key to getting through it: you write at the appointed time,
whether you feel like it or not.
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