Book Blitz: PSS Chronicles by Ripley Patton

Posted November 25, 2013 by Julie S. in Blog Tours / 0 Comments

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Today is my post during the book blitz for the PSS Chronicles series by Ripley Patton. This book blitz is organized by Lola’s Blog Tours . The PSS Chronicles consist of 2 books so far: Ghost Hand (PSS Chronicles #1) and Ghost Hold (PSS Chronicles #2). To celebrate the one year anniversary of Ghost Hand, Ghost Hand will be free on Amazon and Kobo and Ghost Hold will be for sale for $0.99. Also don’t forget to stop by the Facebook anniversary event

ghost hand

Ghost Hand (PSS Chronicles #1)

by Ripley Patton

Genre: Paranormal Thriller

AgeCategory: Young Adult

Blurb: Seventeen-year-old Olivia Black has a rare birth defect known as Psyche Sans Soma, or PSS. Instead of a right hand made of flesh and blood, she was born with a hand made of ethereal energy. How does Olivia handle being the girl with the ghost hand? Well, she’s a little bit morbid and a whole lot snarky. Her mother thinks her obsession with death, black clothing, and the local cemetery is a bid for attention. But when Marcus, the new guy in Olivia’s calculus class, stares at her like she’s a freak, Olivia doesn’t like it. And when her hand goes rogue, doing things she never imagined possible, Olivia finds herself running for her life with Marcus from a group of men bent on taking the power of her hand for their own nefarious purposes.

You can find Ghost Hand on Goodreads

You can download Ghost Hand for free here: – AmazonKobo

 

Ghostghost hold Hold (PSS Chronicles #2)

by Ripley Patton

Genre: Paranormal Thriller

Age Category: Young Adult

Blurb: Olivia Black is back. Only this time she’s not the one in need of rescue. Samantha James, rich, popular, and an award-winning composer at age seventeen, is the next target on the CAMFers’ list. In order to convince Samantha to come with them, Olivia and Passion must pose as cousins, blend into the most affluent high school in Indianapolis, and infiltrate a mysterious cult known as The Hold. Olivia doesn’t expect it to be easy, even with the PSS guys backing them up. But what she discovers over the course of the mission will call into question everything she ever believed about herself, her family, and especially about Marcus, the guy she is undoubtedly falling in love with.

You can find Ghost Hold on Goodreads

You can buy Ghost Hold here: – Amazon

 

Interview:

– What does Olivia like to do in her spare time?

Read, explore the woods and gullies around Greenfield, think morbid or snarky thoughts, glance at Marcus. She also does art, not painting but dark, brooding collages out of random things she finds lying around.

– How did your interest in reading and writing start?

I’ve loved to read for as long as I can remember. I read everything, science fiction and fantasy especially, and I can remember reading the encyclopedia set we had and almost every entry would give me an idea for a story. But I didn’t really write anything significant until I was in eighth grade when my mom was terminally ill with cancer. I wrote my first poem about her impending death titled “When We Fly.” I also wrote a science fiction short story for my English teacher about the sun suddenly getting too close to the earth, and she loved it, and a writer was born.

– Are there things you have in common with your main character Olivia or any of the other characters?

Well, Olivia and I are both introverts. I have somewhat of a fascination with death and I happen to love cemeteries and hate doctors. I once had a picnic on a sarcophagus in my favorite cemetery for a first date. Obviously, Olivia and I have also both lost a parent to cancer. And I have something in common with Passion. I too was raised in a Christian home, though my parents were wonderful.

– The books in the PSS Chronicles series are Paranormal Thrillers, what in this genre appeals to you and why did you decide to write this genre?

Well, first, I write genre YA because I love to read it. A writer should always write something they want to read. Plus, I have two teenagers so they help me keep the work current and enjoy the finished product. And as much as Paranormal Romance has been the go-to young adult genre recently, I don’t find romance as compelling as action, adventure, or intrigue. Romance is fairly predictable. Either they end up together, or they don’t. Including the thriller element in my books allows me to turn and twist the plot a lot more, which I find challenging and interesting. And of course, there can still be some romance to sweeten the pot.

– How did you come up with the inspiration for the PSS Chronicles series?

The main idea for PSS or Psyche Sans Soma, the birth defect that Olivia Black and other characters in the series suffer from, came from the real medical phenomenon of phantom limbs. I have a friend who is an amputee. Even though his right leg is gone, he can still feel it. He can feel the grass between his toes when he walks in the back yard. He can get a cramp in the middle of the night in the leg he no longer has. And this is true even of people who aren’t amputees but were born without certain limbs. It seems our brain has a map of our body that isn’t limited to its fleshly manifestation. So, for the PSS series, I took that idea and ran with it. I asked myself, “What if those phantom limbs actually existed? What would they look, and act, and feel like? How would society react to them? And what power would they hold?’

What was the inspiration for Olivia?

Olivia is a combo of my inner Goth, my daughter, and the self I wish I’d been brave enough to be as a teenager.

– How many books will the PSS Chronicles series contain?

Three or Four. I’m not sure yet. I have to see how long book three is first, and find out what happens.

Who designed the covers for your books and how went the process of developing them?

Kura Carpenter of Kura Carpenter Designs did Ghost Hand. I was really happy with her work and it ended up almost exactly as I’d envisioned it. I have a very personal connection to my covers. I often get visions of them in my head while I’m writing the book and that vision may even influence what I write or how things happen in the book. Because of that, I love and need to be involved in the process of cover design.

As much as I loved Kura’s work for Ghost Hand, I decided to use Scarlett Rugers for the Ghost Hold design. Of course, I wanted it to match the first book while being its own unique thing. I think she did an amazing job with that. And I love the cover we ended up with. Just an interesting tid-bit, the cover for Ghost Hold was actually designed well before I wrote the end of the book and it certainly influenced the mood and details the reader encounters in the Eidolon scenes.

Which scenes do you find the easiest to write?

Whenever Olivia is being snarky, I find it almost too easy to write. My kids and betas help me cut back on some of that. They help me keep Olivia likeable. I guess I’m full of a lot of natural snark and Olivia is my mouth-piece for it.

– Which scenes do you find most difficult to write?

The romance and the violence. In Ghost Hand there is actually a chapter titled “Blood and Romance” and it was really hard to write. For me, I hate for romance to be too sappy or cheesy, but I like real, sweet, genuine moments, so I’m always pulling back and making sure that’s what I have. In books, romance is often written in a very formulaic way that we all know doesn’t actually happen. And it can be hard not to fall into that pattern, but one of my recent reviewers said the relationship between Marcus and Olivia was one of the most naturally developing teen romances she’d ever read. I felt very proud of that. 

As far as the violence, it is just hard to put the characters I love through some of the stuff they have to experience. Sometimes, I just don’t want to do it and so my inner muse goes on strike. When that happens, I just give myself space from the book and remember that trouble builds character- literally.  

– What do you like to do in your spare time?

I love to read, of course, especially YA. I like to hang out with other writers and bookish nerds. I love to hike and garden and generally spend time in nature or with my pets. And I love to travel when I have the money.

Faves:

– season?

 Autumn for sure. I love, love, love it.

–  time of the day?

Very late at night when everyone in the world is asleep except me and the cat.

– animal?

Hawks. I have dreams about being a hawk all the time. And flying is awesome, by the way.

– colour?

 Deep red.

– quote from a book?

 “You can’t avoid orphan stories, child. Every story is an orphan story. We are all orphaned sooner or later.” 
― Gabrielle ZevinAll These Things I’ve Done

This or That?

Tea or Coffee? Neither I don’t drink tea or coffee.

E-book or hardcopy? Both.

Cake or cookies? Cookies.

Cats or dogs? Both.

Books or movies? Both.

Laptop or desktop? Laptop. In bed. With a cat on top.

 

About the Author: Ripley Patton lives in Portland, Oregon with one cat, two teenagers, and a man who wants to live on a boat. She is an award-winning short story writer and author of The PSS Chronicles, a young adult paranormal thriller series. Ripley doesn’t smoke, or drink, or cuss as much as her characters. Her only real vices are writing, eating M&Ms, and watching reality television.

You can find Ripley here: – Website FacebookTwitterGoodreadsGoogle+



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Posted November 25, 2013 by Julie S. in Blog Tours / 0 Comments

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