Archive for the ‘voodoo’ Category

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Portents: Book Two in the Amanda Ryder V. I. Series is now available!

To celebrate her newest release, Shanyn Hosier is having a blog tour and giveaway.

Check out the sneak peek inside Portents.

And don’t forget to enter the giveaway!

You could win signed paperback copies of Portents and Brimstone, Books One and Two!

Portents
Amanda Ryder V.I.
Book 2
Shanyn Hosier

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When all signs point to trouble, can Amanda steer clear of disaster?

Amanda Ryder’s determined never to fail her coven again. Next time, she won’t hesitate to pull the trigger to defend her friends. If only they’d trust her enough to let her set foot outside the Academy…

Frustrated and itching to prove herself, Amanda snags her first Academy mission: she and Toby Laboyteaux, fellow teen witch who “kinda sorta sees the future,” must work together to track down a local swamp monster stirring up trouble in the sticks. But overturned suburban garbage cans and blurry tabloid pictures aren’t the only problems—strained relationships with her new colleagues, a growing guilt-complex, and the waxing moon all add to Amanda’s stress. Add to that the pressure of being hunted by a psychic psychopath, and Amanda’s got plenty on her mind.

Meanwhile, Hamilton Nash swears Marian Dupree and her Academy of bumbling do-gooders have thwarted his plans for the last time. Convinced Amanda’s the subject of his mother’s recent prophecy and the key to his future success, he redoubles his efforts to obtain the mystery girl. But when Amanda proves too slippery a quarry, Nash sets his sights on the next best thing. When a valuable member of the Academy coven is kidnapped, Amanda and her friends are in a race against time. Is a tragic future destined to come to pass?

~~~~~

Excerpt

“Run!” Grady shouted as he moved to intercept their followers.

Jeanine shoved Amanda through the door, then sprinted off, dragging her toward one of

the three white Cherokees parked in a row in the dirt lot.

A gunshot rang out, and Amanda shrieked in terror. Kevin’s firing range scolding came

back to her now—here was a target shooting back at her, and it absolutely made all the

difference in the world.

Jeanine yanked her down behind a car. Crouching, she peeked around the bumper while

Amanda ducked her head down, peering through the gap below the undercarriage. The man and

the woman walked toward them, guns drawn.

“Shit,” Jeanine muttered.

In the next moment, Grady and Lorelei burst through the door of the pool hall, guns

leveled at the pursuers.

“We don’t want any more trouble,” Grady announced calmly.

“Like hell we don’t,” Lorelei snarled.

Amanda pressed her back against the car she and Jeanine crouched behind, her patchwork

heart pounding fit to burst. Jeanine pointed at the nearest Academy Cherokee several yards away,

and the two women began creeping toward it. They’d made it past two cars when more shots

rang out, and the armed man skidded behind a blue Ford F150 parked between them and the

Cherokee.

Lurching to a halt, the two women looked about, searching for an escape. Miraculously,

he didn’t seem to notice them. Yet.

Not far from them loomed a collection of large drums overflowing with garbage. Amanda

grabbed Jeanine’s forearm, then nodded toward the mess. Jeanine’s brow wrinkled with a lack of

confidence, and she shook her head slightly.

Maybe Jeanine misunderstood her intent. Or perhaps object levitation wasn’t her strong

point. Amanda, on the other hand, had plenty of practice.

Amanda gave Jeanine’s arm a reassuring squeeze, then extended her hand toward the

drums. She half-closed her eyes to better focus her attention; imagining an ethereal connection

between her and the inanimate object solidified her will. Then she swung her arm like an

underarm pitch.

Fly!

A garbage can obeyed her command, rushing through the air. The gunman spun around

just as the drum crashed into him, pinning him against the truck. As he went down, aiming

wildly, he pulled the trigger.

Amanda sucked in a breath, clutching at the fiery pain blossoming in her shoulder.

They rushed around the front of the truck toward the downed attacker. Amanda

summoned the gun from his limp hand, then Jeanine grabbed his leg and gave him a zap for good

measure. The man’s body jerked, then lay still once more.

“One down,” Jeanine called out.

“That makes you outnumbered, bitch,” Lorelei shouted at the still-at-large attacker.

Jeanine turned back to face Amanda, then gasped. “He hit you?!”

Already the pain was subsiding into a burning sensation. Amanda gingerly lifted her

fingers to examine her shoulder—her shirt sleeve was ripped and a little bloody, but not

punctured. “Nicked me, I think,” she replied with a shake of her head.

Another shot rang out, followed by glass exploding, then a shriek. Heavy footsteps

pounded toward them, then slid through gravel. Grady skidded around the truck, rolling back up

into a defensive crouch. Amanda was damn impressed by the move and made a mental note to

ask him to teach it to her.

He clamped his hand over Amanda’s mouth, pressing her against the truck with his body.

“Don’t scream. And don’t move,” he rasped in her ear, his breath laboring from exertion.

She nodded. Despite this odd, rough treatment, she instantly felt safer with him around.

He would get them all out of this.

“I’ll cover you,” Grady added in a hoarse whisper as Jeanine nodded and fished her keys

out of her pocket. Amanda tried to hand her the gun but Jeanine refused it, mouthing,

There’s one

in the car

.

Grady spared a glance at the unconscious man. “Keep an eye on him,” he ordered.

Amanda trained the revolver—her least favorite firearm—onto the still motionless attacker with

her good arm.

When Jeanine had the keys in her hand, Grady bid her good luck with a silent wink and a

nod. He shouted, “Get her out of here,” as Jeanine dashed off, his gun held steady and aimed at

the building.

As Grady watched her go, still pinning Amanda against the car, she finally realized the

plan:

Jeanine’s a decoy? Fearing the armed woman would open fire on any vehicle leaving the

lot, Amanda hissed against Grady’s palm, “Wait!”

Her protest was ignored. Silently opening the door, Jeanine slipped into the Cherokee,

slipping into the driver’s seat while keeping as low as possible. The door shut behind her with a

quiet click.

“Now, Jeanie,” Grady roared. He released Amanda and edged forward past the car they’d

hidden behind, firing off several shots.

An answering hail of bullets rang out as Jeanine peeled out of the parking lot in a shower

of gravel and dust. As far as Amanda could see, nothing hit the Cherokee as it skidded onto the

road and barreled away. Her skepticism forgotten in the frantic moment, she offered up a prayer

to a heaven she wasn’t sure existed for protection of her friend.

Please, God, keep her safe!

~~~~

About Shanyn Hosier

Born and raised in small-town, rural Indiana, I now live in metropolitan Phoenix, Arizona with an intimidatingly smart and devastatingly handsome husband and two hyperactively cute and talented sons who will one day be Earth’s Overlords (never underestimate the power of Legos). I enjoy cooking, traveling, gardening, sewing, quilting, and embroidery but only when I’m in the right mood and seldom concurrently (I’m kind of streaky when it comes to hobbies). I adore reading and writing in the same way that I love breathing and eating, gaining a similar nourishment from each.

Website / Facebook / Twitter / Goodreads / Amazon Author Page

~~~~~

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Giveaway Prizes:

 

16270671

Signed  Paperback copies of Portents and Brimstone

Click on the rafflecopter link below to enter.

RAFFLECOPTER GIVEAWAY

~~~~

Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For all of my giveaways click on the ghoul below.
.
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bad juju banner

Today is my day on the tour for Bad Juju by Dina Rae

Before we get to my review I have a little treat for ya!

I’ll be discussing voodoo dolls and accessorizing them.

voodoo dolls photo: Voodoo dolls 375818-voodoo_large.jpg

Some people like to use a traditional voodoo doll for their curses. Here’s an example. But always remember to make your doll comfortable before sticking the pins in!

voodoo dolls photo: rag voodoo-dolls-wallpaper.jpg

Lots of people like to create their own special voodoo dolls. I’m not talking just putting somebodies face on the doll.

 Check out these images of some fun ones.

voodoo dolls photo: dracula dracula.jpg  voodoo dolls photo: darkboy darkboy.jpg

and a couple more.

voodoo dolls photo: Doll for Gina GinaDoll2.jpg  voodoo dolls photo: love terorist 1_905149859l.jpg

You don’t have to accessorize your voodoo dolls. From what I inderstand, as long as you follow the directions and believe it will work, it will.

Happy pinning!

~~~

Bad Juju

1771e-addtogoodreadsblackTitle: Bad Juju

Author: Dina Rae

Genre: Horror

Publisher: Self Published

Formats Available In: Digital

Release Date: September, 2o12

Blurb:

Two teens turn to a Voodoo bokor to right a wrong. Their curiosity with the dark arts backfires into obsession.

Lucien Nazaire flees his Haitian homeland and settles in a Wisconsin trailer park filled with elderly tenants. He hires sixteen year old Jake for odd household jobs. The boy proves to be the perfect candidate to pass on his Voodoo legacy.
Jake LaRue lives in foster care with his abusive uncle. The Voodoo gives him a sense of power within an otherwise helpless situation. Despite his loner status, he instantly connects with Henry, his only friend in high school.
Henry Novak has Asperger’s Syndrome. He fixates on historical events, most recently the 2010 Haitian earthquake. Like Jake, he becomes passionate about the dark side of Voodoo. They learn how to cast spells on those they hate and lust.
Months after the Haitian earthquake, Henry convinces his family to volunteer for the island’s reconstruction. Their mission turns into a nightmare when he mysteriously walks off of the campsite and returns in a catatonic state.
Bad Juju is a balance of horror, romance, and literary fiction intended for adults and mature teens. The plot uses research involving the Voodoo religion.

~~~~

My Review

Tom and Jessica Novak are proud to be doing God’s work. They’ve traveled to Port au-Prince as part of a missionary group with others of their church. They’re going to help with rebuilding the island after the 7.0 earthquake that shook all of  Haiti, causing massive destruction.

Their 15-year-old son Henry’s Asperger’s Syndrome had them questioning their decision. He’s intelligent and quite functional, but changes in routine, surroundings and new faces could cause problems. Henry doesn’t communicate well or understand social interaction.

But Henry’s the one that urged them to go. He’s been obsessed with Haiti. So here they are, the whole family, including Henry’s younger sister Natalie, who’d rather be back home. This is not her idea of a great summer vacation.

Since Henry’s been doing so well, they decide to extend their stay. If they had only left earlier, they wouldn’t be searching for their missing son. Henry has simply vanished and wandering away from the protection of the armed camp is dangerous. There are a lot of bad people out there and he wouldn’t stand a chance against them.

If they had only known the reason Henry wandered away, they never would have brought him there.

My favorite character is Jake. He befriends Henry when they meet in detention class. They aren’t really bad boys, just a couple of kids who got in a little trouble.

Jake is a kind-hearted boy, helping out the elderly residents in his trailer park. He does odd jobs, cleans house and run errands for the less able ones. You wonder how he turned out so well when you learn he suffers violent beatings from his uncle. After losing his parents he came to live with his aunt and uncle and his aunt suffers the same abuse.

Jake brings Henry home with him after school to introduce him to his favorite neighbor, Lucien.

Lucien is a powerful bokor, a voodoo priest, and with his black skin, unruly, long white hair and piercing eyes, he looks every bit the part.

It becomes a regular routine for the boys to visit with Lucien after school and after much pleading, he begins to teach them about Vodun, the voodoo religion, beginning with simple spells and hexes.

Lucien feels death coming for him and can’t bear the thought of all his vast knowledge and power going with him to the grave.

After Jake receives another very brutal and bloody beating, the three decide to create a voodoo doll to rid Jake of his uncle.

This is where it all starts to go weird.

Bad Juju was a surprise. I thought it was going to be all about voodoo, raising the dead, and voodoo dolls. Well, it was. I learned how to do voodoo, what the religion is about, good and dark arts of it, and how to raise someone from the dead. Some of it creeped me out, but a lot of it was really funny.

Having the characters as teen-age boys made this story. Boys will be boys and they had me rocking and  rolling! I can’t wait for you to meet the dead guy.

Getting back to the surprise part, there were several deeper subjects tackled throughout this book and I could tell the author did a lot of research and included that knowledge in the story to make it believable and engaging.

If you’re looking for something different, look no further. Bad Juju has plenty of interesting characters, some tough topics, plenty of laughs, and lots of scary voodoo magic. Oh Yeah, I almost forgot the zombie!

I felt like I got a crash course in voodoo, like voodoo for dummies.

4 Stars

~~~~

Amazon UK / Amazon USA

~~~~

I’ve also read and reviewed these books in The Halo Trinity

Halo of the Damned

HaloOftheDamned - Book One

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A chain of advertising agencies, a new breed of humans, and a fallen angel to worship… Andel Talistokov is known for his slick advertising agencies across the globe. He is a fallen angel that uses advertising as a weapon for Satan‘s work. His growing power emboldens him to break several of Hell‘s Commandments. Furious with his arrogance, Satan commands him to return to Hell after finding his own replacement. Yezidism, an ancient angel worshiping religion, quietly expands throughout the West. Armaros appears as a guest of honor during their ceremonies. He mates with young women to produce nephilim, a mixed race of humans and angels. They are alone and unprepared for their supernatural power. Joanna Easterhouse, a recovering drug addict, steps out of prison shortly after her mother’s fatal accident. She and her sister, Kim, unravel their mother’s secretive past. Intrigued, they learn their bloodline is part of a celestial legacy. Both worlds collide. Halo of the Damned is a horrifying tale that weaves research together with suspenseful twists and turns.

My Review

~~~~~

Book Two in the Halo Trinity

Halo of the Nephilim

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Can a fallen angel, his band of broken souls, and his nephilim children change the world?

Armaros the Cursed, Satan’s favorite of the Fallen, falls once again after breaking the rules.  Fearing an eternity of punishment, he desperately attempts to save himself by sending a bird to his island.  The SOS message is received by his beloved congregation.  They prepare the great Armaros’ kingdom for his return.  Can his loyal worshipers rescue him from the pit? Halo of the Nephilim is the sequel to Halo of the Damned.

My Review

~~~~

Halo of the Madonna

A short prequel to the Halo Series

Halo of the Madonna

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After leaving her family’s angel cult to start a new life, Lydia Easterhouse’s past comes back to haunt her. Halo of the Madonna is a short prequel to the Halo series (Halo of the Damned and Halo of the Nephilim).

My Review

~~~~~~~

About Dina Rae and where to find her

Image of Dina Rae

Dina Rae is a new author here to stay.  As a former teacher, she brings an academic element to her work.  Her three novels, Halo of the Damned, The Last Degree, and Bad Juju weave research and suspense throughout the plots.  Her short story, Be Paranoid Be Prepared, is a prequel of sorts to The Last Degree, focusing on the James Martin character.  Dina also freelances for various entertainment blogs. Dina lives with her husband, two daughters, and two dogs outside of Chicago.  She is a Christian, an avid tennis player, movie buff, and self-proclaimed expert on several conspiracy theories.  She has been interviewed numerous times in e-zines, websites, blogs, newspapers, and radio programs.  When she is not writing she is reading novels from her favorite authors Dan Brown, Anne Rice, Stephen King, Brad Thor, George R.R. Martin, and Preston & Childs.

Blog / Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Twitter

~~~~

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Giveaway Prizes:

A Feature Page In Reader’s Shadow

  • PTBT Book Bundle featuring Spark (Karyn Pearson), Memories Of Hel (Jason Dodge), Birth Of An Empire: The Beginning & Consequences (Catrina Taylor) and Bad Juju (Dina Rae)

Click on the rafflecopter link below to enter.

RAFFLECOPTER GIVEAWAY

~~~~

Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For all of my giveaways click on the voodoo dolls below.
voodoo dolls photo: LED Voodoo Dolls VoodooDolls2006.jpg
.

~~~~

Residue Banner

Welcome to my stop on the Residue Tour for Laury Falter.

What do you think of her dazzling cover art?

Wait until you read the synopsis for Residue and the intriguing excerpt.

You’ll be hooked.

And don’t forget to enter the giveaways. Yes, there are two!

Residue Cover

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Book Info from Goodreads:

Kindle Edition, 300 pages

Published April 13th 2012

more details…ISBN13: 9780985511067

Edition language: English

Original title: Residue

Series: Residue Series #1

Links to buy Residue:

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes and Noble

Synopsis from Goodreads:

When Jocelyn Weatherford is whisked away from a preparatory academy in upstate New York to live with her extended family in New Orleans, she is unprepared to encounter the dangers awaiting her. Yet even as she is thrust into an unfamiliar world of witches and voodoo magic, the greatest threat of all may be the boy she has fallen for.

While handsome and charming, he is also a Caldwell… a member of the family the Weatherford’s have been feuding with for centuries. As their forbidden love grows it becomes the volatile spark that forever changes their world and everyone in it.

Please enjoy this fun excerpt.

I’m a witch.

I…am…a…witch. The realization repeated in my head like a constant, blinking light as I lay in bed, unable to sleep.

The house was silent now, Miss Mabelle being the last to make any noise and that had been over an hour ago. Even the soothing blues music someone had been playing in a nearby house had ended.

I was alone with my thoughts now, or just one to be precise.

I am a witch.

Images of pointy hats, black cats, and broomsticks entered my mind but I hadn’t seen a single one of these since arriving in New Orleans, making it more difficult to accept this new found understanding of who I really am. Maybe a cauldron on the stove or a wand stowed away in a drawer would have made it easier on me. There were none of these things here.

The witch world had been hard to swallow because they didn’t appear to be anything other than normal. There was nothing in their clothes or overt behavior that would identify them as having any kind of supernatural ability or sharing a lineage with those who do. As Jameson had told me on the first day I’d arrived, they attempted to hide this secret culture that I unknowingly hailed from.

But it was undeniable to me now. I’d snubbed this fact, the truth about my ability and my ancestry, because there had always been an explanation for the unexplainable. It was an illusion…a hoax…a magic trick.

Tonight had changed all that…

Don’t forget to enter the giveaways!

Giveaways

Giveaway #1: Three (3) signed copies of Residue; US only

Rafflecopter Giveaway

&

Giveaway #2: Eight (8) ecopies of Residue: Mobi or Nook only; gifted from Amazon or B&N; open internationally 

Rafflecopter Giveaway

~

Residue Banner

You can visit all stops on this awesome tour at the link below.

Tour Schedule

 

 Author Info:

ResidueAuthor Photo

Laury Falter is the author of the bestselling Guardian Trilogy. She writes young adult paranormal romances and urban fantasy when she’s not taking her stray dogs for a walk or enjoying a date night with her husband.

Laury has released two series, the Guardian Trilogy and the Residue Series (a spinoff of the Guardian Trilogy books), and is currently releasing her third series, the Apocalypse Chronicles.

To learn more about Laury and her novels, visit her at:

Website

Twitter page

Facebook page

Goodreads page

Untitled-1

Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

You can find all of my giveaways here.

Go here for my list of free e-books.

 

Who knew that he knew voodoo so well.

Bad Juju

by Dina Rae

Bad Juju

1771e-addtogoodreadsblack

.

Tom and Jessica Novak are proud to be doing God’s work. They’ve traveled to Port au-Prince as part of a missionary group with others of their church. They’re going to help with rebuilding the island after the 7.0 earthquake that shook all of  Haiti, causing massive destruction.

Their 15-year-old son Henry’s Asperger’s Syndrome had them questioning their decision. He’s intelligent and quite functional, but changes in routine, surroundings and new faces could cause problems. Henry doesn’t communicate well or understand social interaction.

But Henry’s the one that urged them to go. He’s been obsessed with Haiti. So here they are, the whole family, including Henry’s younger sister Natalie, who’d rather be back home. This is not her idea of a great summer vacation.

Since Henry’s been doing so well, they decide to extend their stay. If they had only left earlier, they wouldn’t be searching for their missing son. Henry has simply vanished and wandering away from the protection of the armed camp is dangerous. There are a lot of bad people out there and he wouldn’t stand a chance against them.

If they had only known the reason Henry wandered away, they never would have brought him there.

My favorite character is Jake. He befriends Henry when they meet in detention class. They aren’t really bad boys, just a couple of kids who got in a little trouble.

Jake is a kind-hearted boy, helping out the elderly residents in his trailer park. He does odd jobs, cleans house and run errands for the less able ones. You wonder how he turned out so well when you learn he suffers violent beatings from his uncle. After losing his parents he came to live with his aunt and uncle and his aunt suffers the same abuse.

Jake brings Henry home with him after school to introduce him to his favorite neighbor, Lucien.

Lucien is a powerful bokor, a voodoo priest, and with his black skin, unruly, long white hair and piercing eyes, he looks every bit the part.

It becomes a regular routine for the boys to visit with Lucien after school and after much pleading, he begins to teach them about Vodun, the voodoo religion, beginning with simple spells and hexes.

Lucien feels death coming for him and can’t bear the thought of all his vast knowledge and power going with him to the grave.

After Jake receives another very brutal and bloody beating, the three decide to create a voodoo doll to rid Jake of his uncle.

This is where it all starts to go weird.

Bad Juju was a surprise. I thought it was going to be all about voodoo, raising the dead, and voodoo dolls. Well, it was. I learned how to do voodoo, what the religion is about, good and dark arts of it, and how to raise someone from the dead. Some of it creeped me out, but a lot of it was really funny.

Having the characters as teen-age boys made this story. Boys will be boys and they had me rocking and  rolling! I can’t wait for you to meet the dead guy.

Getting back to the surprise part, there were several deeper subjects tackled throughout this book and I could tell the author did a lot of research and included that knowledge in the story to make it believable and engaging.

If you’re looking for something different, look no further. Bad Juju has plenty of interesting characters, some tough topics, plenty of laughs, and lots of scary voodoo magic. Oh Yeah, I almost forgot the zombie!

I felt like I got a crash course in voodoo, like voodoo for dummies.

     

And now please welcome Dina Rae. She’s here to tell us about zombies! Afterwards, follow the link to enter her amazing giveaway!

Do You Know Your Zombies?

With the so-called zombie apocalypse approaching, one must be educated about the different kinds of zombies before prepping for defense.  First, there is the most common and believable-the human that turns into a zombie because of mental collapse, disease, infection, and/or radiation.  They stagger around dazed and confused and cause panic to others.  Then there is the man-made monster kind or the kind Hollywood and horror authors like me tend to capitalize on.

Zombie interest continues to fascinate the world.  Jeffrey Dahmer drilled holes then poured acid down his victim’s heads in hopes of creating his own zombie.  His madness didn’t work.  Can man make his own zombie?  Are these monsters real?

According to Wade Davis, author of The Serpent of the Rainbow, zombies are real.  They are a product of the Voodoo religion.  He was originally hired by a pharmaceutical company to find out about the drugs Voduists used in their death rituals.  He believed that datura also known as zombie’s cucumber was a plant that could medically make one who ingested it appear to be dead for a certain length of time.  Sounds like the stuff Juliet used to fake her death.  Could Shakespeare known about the magical zombie-making plant?

Datura or sometimes Cimora, a close relative of Datura’s, eventually wears off but leaves the victim in a state of confusion, highly susceptible to the art of persuasion.  Presto!  A zombie slave is at the captor’s disposal.  Mr. Davis didn’t just find his datura flower, but witnessed zombie phenomena as he immersed himself within the Haitian culture.

Bad Juju is a unique blend of horror, romance, and fantasy.  Besides The Serpent and the Rainbow, I read volumes of other Voodoo material and watched hours of TV specials.  Some of the terms I learned can be found below:

Bokor: A wizard who practices black magic, a zombie maker.

Loa: deity/spirit

Ghede Family: A family of loas known as the spirits of the dead.  Three barons rule the family.  Baron Samedi is the loa of resurrection.  Baron Kriminel is the most feared loa associated with cannibalism and souls.  He’s honored on The Day of the Dead.  Baron LaCroix is the loa of the dead and sexuality.

Poppet: Voodoo doll

Ti-bon-ange: “little good angel”  The part of the soul that represents a person’s individuality.

Gros-bon-ange: “great good angel”  Part of the soul that is collected into a reservoir of the Cosmos or spirit world.

Baka: Voodoo spirits in animal form.

Loup Garou: werewolf

Djab: a devil

Dessounin: Death ritual that separates the gros-bon-ange from the body.

Bizango Society: Secret society of Vodouists.  They have Freemason-like qualities such as aprons, secret handshakes, oaths, hierarchy, and symbols.  Legend states they change into animals at will.  They are known for stealing black cats and boiling them to death for Voodoo services.  They drink each other’s blood from a human skull chalice.

You need to check out Dina’s Holiday Bonanza: An Unholy Trinity of Dina Rae’s Novels. Go here to enter her awesome giveaway. Gift cards and books, books, books!

About Dina Rae and where to find her

Image of Dina Rae

Dina Rae is a new author here to stay.  As a former teacher, she brings an academic element to her work.  Her three novels, Halo of the Damned, The Last Degree, and Bad Juju weave research and suspense throughout the plots.  Her short story, Be Paranoid Be Prepared, is a prequel of sorts to The Last Degree, focusing on the James Martin character.  Dina also freelances for various entertainment blogs.
Dina lives with her husband, two daughters, and two dogs outside of Chicago.  She is a Christian, an avid tennis player, movie buff, and self-proclaimed expert on several conspiracy theories.  She has been interviewed numerous times in e-zines, websites, blogs, newspapers, and radio programs.  When she is not writing she is reading novels from her favorite authors Dan Brown, Anne Rice, Stephen King, Brad Thor, George R.R. Martin, and Preston & Childs.

Blog

Website

Goodreads

Facebook

Twitter
To purchase Dina’s books, click on images below.