Our Fearless chapter-by-chapter read-along has been not only a lot of fun for me as an author, getting to revisit a 10 year old story with fresh eyes, and read the whole thing word for word for the first time since publishing it, but it's been a cool chance to share some never-before-talked-about behind the scenes motivations and anecdotes. I asked on Facebook and Instagram yesterday which book you'd like me to do a read-along with next, and consensus was split between Price of Angels, and White Wolf. I decided I'd save Price of Angels for after Fearless, so we can work our way through Dartmoor in order. In the meantime, I'm going to block off Saturdays for a White Wolf read-along. It'll be a great chance for me to get back into the paranormal groove as I start back working on the series, and also to do a deep dive in a way I never have before.
All four released-so-far books in the series are just 99c apiece, so if you haven't checked out the series yet, I hope you'll grab a copy of White Wolf and join us. If you've already read the series, I hope I can provide some new insight and inspiration, and highlight just how crazy real history is!
Ready? We're going to start with the prelude, The Stalker. If you're a new reader, don't purchase the ebook version of The Stalker by itself; it's in the front of White Wolf. I released the prelude by itself in July of 2017, and White Wolf in October. I left the original release of The Stalker up because I selfishly didn't want to delete those reviews. Oops! Oh well. The whole series is an absolute steal, so it all works out.
Okay, that's the last of the housekeeping. Ready for real? Let's dive in.
Anyone who's been here since 2017 will know that the Sons of Rome series is my pet project. I first started playing around with it when I was still in high school. Val and Mia were the first characters. The spark, if you will. Back then, if you'd told me that one day most of my books would be about outlaw bikers, I would have said, "About what now?" Because I was bewitched by the story of an apparitional prince visiting a sick girl.
Over the years, the overall shape and tone of the series changed quite a bit. I added new characters, new creatures, new backstories and historical references. It continued to expand...and expand, and expand. In college, I realized I was setting myself up to write an epic series. Not epic in a way that meant cool, or badass, or like, so totally epic, bro. But epic in the very literal sense of the word. In my mind, it had become a behemoth, spanning centuries, and though I attempted to begin it many times, I was overwhelmed every time.
In 2012, after I released my first book, Keep You, I tried to get it off the ground more seriously, starting with Fulk and Anna's backstory. But even that proved unsuccessful. I was missing a link somewhere. I had all these characters, and all these important points in history, but I hadn't found the perfect beginning.
Turns out I just needed Sgt. James Buchanan Barnes to show up in eyeliner with a red star on his arm to send me down the Eastern Front WWII rabbit hole, and then, finally, Vlad the Impaler, and King Richard, and Alexei Romanov had found their uniting force. I had my beginning, at last, and it was a train bound for Siberia.
But we'll get to all that.
For now, it's about the prelude.
Keeping things tidy, streamlined, and linear was never my goal with this series. It's a tale that I must tell the right way, and that calls for an epic fantasy storytelling approach. When I first started talking about White Wolf in early 2017, I had lots of emails and comments that told me readers were expecting something along the lines of the Black Dagger Brotherhood. Or maybe True Blood. There are vampires, and there are wolves, and there is sex and magic, but in terms of formatting, the series is best enjoyed if you think of it along the lines of Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson. Intricate, layered, ongoing slow burn books building toward a mighty crescendo. For all the creature feature madness, they are very human stories, about romantic love, and brotherhood, and grief, and joy, and finding a place of one's own.
In this sense, it was important for me to open book one with The Stalker. We won't see Fulk, and Anna, and Vlad again for a while, but like the prologue in The Fellowship of the Ring, it's telling you, "This is what's at stake. This is where we're headed. This is important, even if you don't know how important just yet."
He'd brought the night in on his skin, the deeper musk of fur, and blood, and want.
We open on a Walgreens. Nighttime. A young woman stalked through the aisles, and then fleeing, her stalker hot on her heels. I mentioned Fellowship, for the heft of a well-placed prologue, but this one is very different stylistically. Instead of a sweeping pitched battle, I opened on droning tube lights and a nail polish display. A tryst in the dirty strip of woods beyond a Waffle House parking lot in Georgia. Because as much as I love fantasy, and as fantasy-driven as the pacing of this series is, I'm first and foremost a horror reader, and all the best horror stories start very small.
"Hush and blow out your candles." She slid the cake plate across the table toward him.
The candles were blue, and number-shaped. A seven, a five, and a zero.
She said, "Happy seven-hundred-and-fifty, handsome."
He smiled, despite himself, and blew them out in a single breath.
I love Fulk and Anna. I love how much they love one another. Admittedly, this prelude is pretty vague on the broader details of who they are, what century they're from, and why Fulk owns a castle-esque manor house in Virginia. In 2012-2013, I thought I would start the whole series with their backstory. Later, I decided I would go back to it once we were deeper in the series. Now, I'm not sure if it fits with the overarching action of the plot, and might need to be a side story or tie-in/prequel novel instead.
There really was a Baron Strange of Blackmere in England, back in the day, and his name really was Fulk le Strange. If he was a werewolf, and not a man, he would, in fact, be 758 years old today. Anna is much younger; she was nineteen and human when they first met during the American Civil War, and Fulk is lowkey infamous amongst the immortal community for having turned her without the help of a mage. He's a badass. He's also been in his emo phase for several centuries, and doesn't look to be outgrowing it anytime soon.
He and Anna have been living quietly, moving every few years, keeping to rural Southern cities. In the prelude, I tease at their history, but keep it mysterious on purpose. The big reveal here is the fact that Vlad Tepes is a vampire, is alive, and is slumbering, appropriately, in a coffin. In the mythology of this series, once a vampire goes into a deep sleep (I can hear Nandor the Relentless saying "Super Slumber" in my mind), they can only be awakened by a werewolf's blood. Werewolves are vampire Familiars in my universe, providing them with blood, protection, and whatever loyal service is required of them. Fulk isn't Vlad's bound Familiar, but his blood will do the trick of waking him.
In the prelude, we learn that the Ingraham Institute is experimenting with immortal blood and tissue, searching for medical miracles, and trying to put together a force that can fight the war they know is brewing between mortals and immortals. By their logic, Vlad will want to be on the side preserving the world, rather than burning it down or enslaving it.
There are many vampires in this series, most of them original characters of my own, but a few key players the fictionalized versions of real figures from history. The strongest, the meanest, the smartest, and the overall most important to the series as a whole is Vlad.
At the end of the prelude, his eyes open.
I can't wait to continue his journey in the present day when I get back to Lionheart.
Still here? Up next, we're going to Manhattan. And then we're going back to 1942, and meeting the man who makes this whole series work: Captain Nikita Baskin.
Join me on Saturdays for a deep dive into each chapter of White Wolf.