UFI welcomes Suzanne Johnson Author of The Sentinels of New Orleans Series. Thanks for Joining us!!
Five Prete Species
to Avoid in New Orleans
People in New Orleans say
Hurricane Katrina changed everything. They don’t know the half of it.
In the post-Katrina city, as we
went through the slow, painful process of rebuilding, we knew we could never regain
the lives lost, the homes and livelihoods destroyed, or the loss of a naïve
belief that we were somehow charmed and invincible. Now we know better. It can
all be gone in a capricious gust of wind or a foundation built on unstable
soil.
What we didn’t know about were
the other breaches—the failure of the metaphysical levees between our world and
the preternatural world known as the Beyond. We didn’t know that the wizards
who maintain the borders between worlds were in a crisis of their own, or that
pretes would come wandering into the modern city to live and create mischief
among us.
Most of the prete-control jobs
fall to DJ and her partner Alex Warin. And now that the borders have dropped
permanently, they stay pretty busy. But DJ took a few minutes out between
weregator wrangling and goblin grabs to talk about the five prete species you
might want to avoid next time you’re visiting the Big Easy.
The Historical Undead. That handsome guy in period clothing you see
striding down Royal Street? He’s probably not an actor on his way to lead a
French Quarter tour pretending to be the notorious early 19th-century
French pirate Jean Lafitte. Because in the “new” New Orleans, if a person was
famous enough in human life, he or she lives forever in the Beyond, fueled by
the magic of human memory. So yeah, it’s the real pirate Lafitte, looking as
alive as you or me. You also might run into other famous New Orleanians: DJ has
hired Louis Armstrong as her spy; summoned up voodoo goddess Marie Laveau to
pump her for info; had to turn Truman Capote and William Faulkner into cats;
and she and Captain Lafitte have a….complicated relationship.
Merfolk. Mermen and merwomen (they no longer wish to be called
“maids”) are not the exotic stuff of legend. They are aquatic shapeshifters
descended from the French-speaking Acadians driven out of Canada by the British
in the 1700s. Modern folk call them Cajuns. Most of the merfolk, who live in
clans, work in the fishing industry in South Louisiana, which is sort of
cannibalistic if you think about it too hard. They’re also prone to producing
twins and triplets, are a tad on the grumpy side, but on the whole are an
honorable people. Mostly. Usually.
Loup-Garou. No ordinary werewolves are the Loup-Garou, who are the
lone rogues of the werewolf world. They don’t respect authority; they don’t
travel in packs. They don’t recognize an alpha, because they’re all alpha.
Humans turned Loup-Garou tend to have very poor self-control and often have to
be killed by the wizards’ enforcers.
Elves. DJ wanted to include the elves, even though her exposure to
them has been limited so far. See, she’d gone on a dinner date with the pirate
Jean Lafitte into 1850 New Orleans and…oh, never mind. It’s a long, ugly story.
Take DJ’s word for it: elves are Bad News. Did I mention DJ has elves in her
family tree and can do some of their magic? They do not like this.
Vampires. The vamps haven’t made a big foray into New Orleans yet,
but it’s only a matter of time. One of the vampire Regents, Etienne Boulard,
recently opened a classy French Quarter night spot called L’Amour Sauvage, and
runs a nighttime tour business, Tour Blood, that bills itself as “New Orleans’
Only Authentic Vampire Tours.” DJ went on one of the tours, just to check it
out. It made her feel like a dinner entrée.
So there you have it! Which
prete group would you most want to meet—or to avoid? Leave a comment to win
your choice of Royal Street or River Road, or a signed cover flat for
the upcoming paperback release (June 25) of River Road!
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Suzanne
Johnson writes urban fantasy and paranormal romance from Auburn, Alabama, after
a career in educational publishing that has spanned five states and six
universities. She grew up halfway between the Bear Bryant Museum and
Elvis' birthplace and lived in New Orleans for fifteen years, so she has a
highly refined sense of the absurd and an ingrained love of SEC football and
fried gator on a stick.
Royal Street
Sentinels of New Orleans #1
As the junior wizard sentinel for New Orleans, Drusilla Jaco’s job involves a lot more potion-mixing and pixie-retrieval than sniffing out supernatural bad guys like rogue vampires and lethal were-creatures. DJ's boss and mentor, Gerald St. Simon, is the wizard tasked with protecting the city from anyone or anything that might slip over from the preternatural beyond.River Road
Then Hurricane Katrina hammers New Orleans’ fragile levees, unleashing more than just dangerous flood waters.
While winds howled and Lake Pontchartrain surged, the borders between the modern city and the Otherworld crumbled. Now, the undead and the restless are roaming the Big Easy, and a serial killer with ties to voodoo is murdering the soldiers sent to help the city recover.
To make it worse, Gerry has gone missing, the wizards’ Elders have assigned a grenade-toting assassin as DJ’s new partner, and undead pirate Jean Lafitte wants to make her walk his plank. The search for Gerry and for the serial killer turns personal when DJ learns the hard way that loyalty requires sacrifice, allies come from the unlikeliest places, and duty mixed with love creates one bitter gumbo
Sentinels of New Orleans #2
Hurricane Katrina is long gone, but the preternatural storm rages on in New Orleans. New species from the Beyond moved into Louisiana after the hurricane destroyed the borders between worlds, and it falls to wizard sentinel Drusilla Jaco and her partner, Alex Warin, to keep the preternaturals peaceful and the humans unaware. But a war is brewing between two clans of Cajun merpeople in Plaquemines Parish, and down in the swamp, DJ learns, there’s more stirring than angry mermen and the threat of a were-gator.
Wizards are dying, and something—or someone—from the Beyond is poisoning the waters of the mighty Mississippi, threatening the humans who live and work along the river. DJ and Alex must figure out what unearthly source is contaminating the water and who—or what—is killing the wizards. Is it a malcontented merman, the naughty nymph, or some other critter altogether? After all, DJ’s undead suitor, the pirate Jean Lafitte, knows his way around a body or two.
It’s anything but smooth sailing on the bayou as the Sentinels of New Orleans series continues.
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The Sentinels of New Orleans is a great series. Each new book has been better than the last. Elysian Fields to be released soon. Buy the books guys, you will not be disappointed.
ReplyDeleteConsider me warned! I think I'd avoid all of them and instead just focus on the great food :) Thanks for the fun post!
ReplyDeleteI agree Roger, I have an ARC waiting for me to jump into.
ReplyDeleteThanks, guys! Erin, you probably have the right idea about the food--hard to go wrong in New Orleans with that!
ReplyDeleteHope you guys enjoy ELYSIAN FIELDS--it's my favorite of the series so far!
I love this series. I must say, since Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans has seen more than it's share of the supernatural. I live less than an hour away from New Orleans and have seen some supernatural action as well. So, far I have avoided most of them and I think I will continue to do so.
ReplyDelete^^ i would avoid the vampiores and the elves but others have something quite attracting^^
ReplyDeleteand this series is so fabulous that you don't want to miss it it's time to get ready befire the reklease of book 3 soon^^ and first the novella about Jean!!! a must!
The historical undead sound interesting but I don't know whether it better to avoid them than meet one. I guess it depends on which one it is.
ReplyDeleteInteresting species
ReplyDeleteCan't wait for Elysian Fields! And I'd like to meet Jean. Looking forward to his story too!
ReplyDelete