Now available wherever books are
sold online
Betrayed-coming to a store near you June 2012
The Guardians’
background is a blend of various mythologies and Judeo-Christian beliefs. Before
I started writing Awakened, I came across the kris dagger, an Indonesian weapon
believed to be forged from an element from the heavens and one from the earth.
The Indonesians/Malaysians believed that the kris has a spirit attached to it,
which could be good or bad. So when owned by an evil person, it did evil things,
but it did good things when owned by a good person. The kris could protect the
wielder from an attack or warn them if there was going to be harmed.
The Kris Dagger became
my Excalibur. I wanted a young man to wield it and even started plotting it from
his POV, but I kept hearing a girl’s voice in my head—an outsider, someone who
wasn’t part of the in-crowd. Intrigued, I decided to focus on the girl, who she
was and her story. To do that, I went back to her background, her people. She
had to be special, have the right to wield the dagger, so I focused on who might
have forged the dagger and why.
I chose the fallen
angel who taught humans the art of war—Azazel. Fallen angels had children with
humans-Nephilim, so it was easy to come up the Guardians’ lineage from there,
making my heroine part angel and part human. Weaving in the powers of the fallen
angels—from the ability to teleport, clairvoyance, see into the future, control
all elements (air, fire, water and earth), manipulate what people see and felt,
and change shape into other beings—made everything come together.
Once I had the people in place, I researched
the Nephilim in details, read books about them and scoured online resources.
Comparing their abilities to those of deities from different mythologies-from
the Titans to Hindu Divas, it’s easy to see why people, me included, believe
most of these gods and goddesses were all Nephilim. Incorporating this into the
Guardians background made sense, so was giving them names like Bran, the famous
son of Sea-god Llyr from Celtic mythology. Making him have water powers
just made sense.
Then there’s the biblical connection:
Genesis 6:4 “The Nephilim
were on the earth in those days--and also afterward--when the sons of God went
to the daughters of men and had children by them. They were the heroes of old,
men of renown.”
According to the bible, a horde of angels was sent to destroy
the Nephilim because they were corrupting and enslaving humans, setting
themselves as gods and goddesses so humans could worship them. But after the
angels annihilated the Nephilim, some were left behind. Combining the biblical
aspect with mythologies made the Guardians real in my mind and so the series was
born.
Most names I use are angel names, but that's another blog post.
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