2024 COVERS

Lawless In Leather
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Broken: A Romantic Science Fiction Eco Adventure
Wolf's Prize
Knightqueen
Wicked Ways
Unbreak My Heart
Curiosity Killed the Vampire
From Across the Sea
Angel In Armani
Edge of Night
The Witch's Tangle
Three Vampires And A Baby
Banshee, Death and Disarray: Holly Harrow: A Point Muse Cozy Paranormal Mystery
Damaris: A Scifi Alien Romance
The Shattered Court
Moon Blessed
Falling for Mr. Fake It

2024 covers

Welcome to the Dark Side!

We are writers mainly from Australia and New Zealand who write speculative fiction with romantic elements. Be it fantasy, paranormal, dark urban fantasy, futuristic and everything in between.

Thursday, 21 March 2013

Magic Thursday - Goddess of the Moon + Giveaway



I’ve always loved myths and legends and ancient gods and goddesses. One of the aspects that I love about my Roman/Druid books set during the 1st century in Britain is the mysticism that surrounds the Druid peoples. This was a time when gods and goddesses were integral to every day life—but the thing that really captures my imagination is the goddess culture.

The heroine of BETRAYED (released yesterday from Ellora’s Cave!) is Nimue. She appeared right at the end of book #3, CAPTIVE, and was an acolyte of the Moon Goddess Arianrhod. I knew next to nothing about Arianrhod at that point but when Nimue wouldn’t leave my mind because her story had to be told, I knew I was going to have to do some research.

Legend has it that Arianrhod’s uncle, the magician King Math, was required to keep his feet in the lap of a maiden whenever he wasn’t at war, in order to retain his sovereignty and power. When Arianrhod and her brother-god Gwydion’s younger brother fell in love with her Gwydion, God of Illusion, manufactured a war which entailed Math leaving his domain.

The younger brother immediately took advantage and raped the maiden. How is this love? But I digress...

Upon Math’s return, and learning that his maiden could no longer perform her duty, he married her and then punished his two nephews. His punishments involved turning them into a mated pair of deer for a year, then a mated pair of wild hogs and finally a pair of mated wolves. At the end of each year the brothers produced one offspring (I’m not going there! )

Finally the punishment ended but Math still required a maiden as his footholder. Gwydion suggested his sister, Arianrhod. She was brought to court and had to step over a magical wand to prove her virginity. As she did so she gave birth to twin boys, one who slipped into the sea and swam away and the other was taken by Gwydion who raised him as his own.

Arianrhod was humiliated and shamed before the whole court, forsaken by her brother Gwydion and later thwarted by her son. She retreated to her castle and later drowned.

Unimpressed by that ending that appears to punish a woman for not conforming to a certain patriarchal worldview, I dug deeper.

Arianrhod’s name means “starry wheel” and her palace, or castle, was the Aurora Borealis. She is one of the Triple Goddesses, a Moon Goddess associated with reincarnation and is connected to the womb, death, rebirth and creation. She is a weaver of the fates and could shapeshift into an owl—symbolic of wisdom.

In short, Arianrhod was a powerful goddess in her own right and would have been a strong, independent woman and a primal figure of feminine power.

Too powerful, perhaps, for a patriarchal society to accept?

I’d found the hook I’d been looking for. Nimue is strong, independent and doesn’t need a man to protect her. But when she’s captured by Tacitus, a Roman Tribune, her world is turned upside down and she and Arianrhod’s fates become inextricably entwined.




Betrayed

In 51 A.D., Druid priestess Nimue is injured and enslaved by the hated Roman Legions. Even though she is drawn to her captor, she’s determined to escape and complete her mission for the Briton king and her duty to Arianrhod, the goddess she is bound to.

The tough Roman warrior who captures her is far from the brutal barbarian she expects. His touch inflames her desires and passion burns between them. Though Nimue does not accept her enslavement, her heart surrenders to her enemy. When Arianrhod appears to her in the form of an owl, Nimue knows the union is blessed.

Roman warrior Tacitus is enchanted by the fiery beauty who shows no fear and challenges him at every turn. Though enslaving her goes against his heart, he’s determined to make her his. No woman has ever heated his blood as she does. But when he discovers her true nature as one who actually communes with the gods, his loyalties are torn between his heritage and a woman who could destroy everything he’s ever believed in.

A Romantica® fantasy erotic romance from Ellora’s Cave




I have an e-copy of Betrayed to giveaway to one lucky commenter on this post. Just leave a comment or let me know if you had the power of shapeshifting, what would you love to shapeshift into? (Personally I’d like to shapeshift into the smexy woman in Clive Owen or Henry Cavill’s arms. Just saying…)



The Mabinogion, translated by Lady Charlotte Guest. Welsh legends collected in the Red Book of Hergest, a manuscript which is in the library of Oxford University.

Arianrhod’s legend is in the Fourth Branch, Math, the Son of Mathonwy

10 comments:

  1. I would shape shift into a powerful big cat. I love legends. I have been exploring all sorts lately.
    debby236at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Debbie,

      I love big cats (and small cats too!) They're so graceful.

      Yay! Another lover of legends. I find them fascinating and spend far too much time researching them!

      Delete
  2. Oooh...I'm definitely going to have to add this series to my to-read list. Grr, I think I'm up to about 800 books on the to-read list now. There is just not enough time in the day to get all the reading done I'd like.

    As for having the power to shapeshift, I think I would most love to shift into a wolf. I've been basically obsessed with them since my childhood when I read books like Julie of the Wolves by Jean Craighead George, and White Fang by Jack London, as well as watching the movie Balto.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Danielle,

    I hear you on not having enough time in the day to get all the reading done! There are just so many fabulous books :-)

    Oh wow, Balto takes me back!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Something powerful & magical like a dragon would suit me.

    marypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Mary,

    A dragon would be awesome!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Angelina Jolie

    bn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi bn100,

    Angelina Jolie is a great choice! (especially in the arms of Clive or Henry...!)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh dear, shades of my teenage years coming here to haunt me, as I think I'd have to be a horse. Not just any horse, (of course - lol, sorry). Pegasus! my all time favourite.
    Congratulations Christina. will share etc etc.
    Wishing you all the best

    ReplyDelete
  9. LOL SE! If you're going to be a horse, then it should definitely be Pegasus!!

    Thanks so much for the congrats and the shares :-)

    ReplyDelete

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