
Slay
Anita Blake : Book 30
Hardcover | 7 November 2023 | Edition Number 1
At a Glance
416 Pages
23.9 x 16.3 x 3.8
Hardcover
RRP $55.00
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'I've never read a writer with a more fertile imagination' Diana Gabaldon
Pre-order the brand new novel in the addictive Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, series.
My name is Anita Blake and my family think I'm marrying a demon straight out of hell. If they'd ever met a real demon, they'd understand the difference . . .
Considering my dark and dangerous past, I never expected preparations for my wedding to Jean-Claude to go smoothly. We've already faced naysayers and a power-hungry ancient evil and come out the other side still standing. But now I need to do the one thing that actually scares me - introduce my very religious, very human relatives to my fiance, the newly crowned vampire king of America.
As I try to keep the peace between the family I left behind and the family I've chosen, dark forces jump at the chance to take advantage of the chaos. With our happy-ever-after and everyone's immortal souls hanging in the balance, it's time to face a hard truth . . .
Blood makes you related, but only loyalty makes you family.
Readers can't get enough of the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, series:
'Anita Blake novels are my addiction'
'Vampires, zombies and guns, oh my!'
'I have loved every single book in this amazing series, have fallen in love and lust with many characters and desperately hope that there will be more'
'I am hooked'
'I couldn't love Anita and her adventures with the supernatural community any more'
Industry Reviews
ISBN: 9781035406425
ISBN-10: 103540642X
Series: Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Novels
Published: 7th November 2023
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number of Pages: 416
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: Headline
Country of Publication: GB
Edition Number: 1
Dimensions (cm): 23.9 x 16.3 x 3.8
Weight (kg): 0.65

Laurell K. Hamilton
LAURELL K. HAMILTON: in her own words...
The old Hammer Vampire films would be one of my first entertainment
influences, especially “Vampire Circus” also known as “Circus of Fear”.
Ages 5 to 7 seemed to have been the most impressionable years.
Learned to read at age 7. (I was an undiagnosed dyslexic.)
Tried to write stories at age 12. Never finished one.
Found the short story collection, PIGEONS FROM HELL by Robert E. Howard
the creator of Conan the Barbarian when I was thirteen, or fourteen. It
was the first dark fantasy and heroic fantasy I’d ever read. In that
moment I knew not only did I want to be a writer, but this is what I
wanted to write.
Read CHARLOTTE’S WEB by E. B. White at age 13 or 14. It was the first
book to teach me a love of language and I still use some of the
techniques I learned from that book in my writing today.
Finished my first story at age 14. It was a horror story where everyone
died horribly except the baby who crawled off into the woods where it
was implied the baby would die a slow and lingering death of starvation
and exposure.
First creative writing class where my teacher told me that the first
vampire story I ever wrote scared her. For a shy 14-year-old there was
nothing better that she could have said. I’d scared a grown-up.
Discovered Edgar Allan Poe, H. P. Lovecraft, and Andre Norton about age
14. The first two would teach me more about language and atmosphere on
paper. Ms. Norton was the first woman I knew that wrote what I wanted
to write. It gave me hope that not everyone that wrote this was a dead
white guy.
I read Stephen King’s SALEM’S LOT and Anne Rice’s INTERVIEW WITH THE
VAMPIRE. Both books would be important influences for me. I also found
a book in our high school library entitle THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE
VAMPIRE BY Anthony Masters. It was a nonfiction book covering vampire
and wereanimal legend around the world. It was also the first book I
ever read with serial killers in it. All of that would have a profound
influence on me as a writer.
Another teacher found copies of “The Writer”, and “Writer’s Digest,” at
the library on sale for 5 cents or 1 penny. She came to school and gave
me an armload of them. That would be the beginning of me researching
how to be a professional writer. I believe I was 15 or 16 at the time.
By age 17 I was collecting my first rejection slips for my stories. I’d
read an article in the above mentioned magazines by Ray Bradbury. He
advised to pick a small room in your house and when you have
wall-papered it with your rejection slips then you will have gotten the
crap out of you and be down to the meat of what you have to say as a
writer and you will sell. I picked the bathroom.
College found me enrolled in the creative writing program. I would be
kicked out of that program at the end of my sophomore year. The head of
the writing program told me I was a corrupting influence on the other
students. I’d gotten into the writing program on the strength of two
short stories; a vampire story and a Lovecraftian story that had my
first sex scene in it. The teacher thought she could cure me of wanting
to write horror. When she realized she couldn’t “cure” me, she decided
to destroy me. She told me I’d never make it as a writer, and pretty
much crushed me. I finished out my English degree with literature
courses, and went to the biology department. I would get my bio degree
in two years time. People ask me, “Have you sent her your books? Have
you let her know what a success you are?”
No, because she didn’t believe I couldn’t succeed as a writer, she
feared I could. She feared I would go out and do exactly what I have
done, corrupt millions. Wahaha!
I wouldn’t write another word for over two years. I moved to Los
Angeles and got my first cooperate job. Started submitting
stories again, and getting nice rejection notes from editors. I started
my first book, two pages a day every day before work.
Discovered hard-boiled detective fiction in the local library. Biggest
influence was Robert B. Parker’s Spenser books.
Moved to St. Louis. Went to my first Science Ficiton convention,
NamethatCon. Attended a writing workshop taught by Emma Bull, Will
Shetterly, and Stephen Gould. Put through the beginning of my first
novel, NIGHTSEER, and a short story with Anita Blake in it. The
workshop didn’t teach me to be a better writer, but did teach me to be
a better editor of my own work. It also introduced me to my
writing group, The Alternate Historians.
I sold the next story that I sent off in the mail. “Stealing Souls” to
Marion Zimmer Bradley.
I met my first agent at one of these conventions. By age 29 I
held my first written and published novel, NIGHTSEER, in my hands. It
was heroic fantasy just like one of my first heroes Robert E. Howard.
Then the bottom fell out of the fantasy market. My second novel a
sequel to NIGHTSEER was rejected by my editor. I took a work for hire
for a Star Trek novel that would be, NIGHTSHADE. But no one wanted
anything else book length from me and I knew I couldn’t make a living
on short story sales. My career seemed to be over before it really
began. In desperation I went through my files of unsold short stories
to see if anything in there could be turned into a novel. I found the
story, “Those Who Seek Forgiveness,” starring Anita Blake. I’d
collected some very nice rejections for it. Editors loved it, but
didn’t know what to do with it. Horror editors thought it was science
fiction, those editors thought it was fantasy, and those editors
thought it was horror. There was no such thing as paranormal thriller
back in the late 1980s. Mixed genre was a dirty word in publishing,
because it didn’t sell, or that’s what they told me.
I sat down and began to write a novel in Anita’s world. I had about 70
pages done when I went to Archon a St. Louis convention. There I would
read those few pages to a packed room. Why a packed room for an unknown
writer? They thought I was Melissa Snodgrass who was doing scripts for
Star Trek: Next Generation. She’d had to cancel at the last minute, but
her name was still on the door of the room. Since they didn’t know what
she looked like, and didn’t know me, they sat down for her, but stayed
for me reading what would eventually be GUILTY PLEASURES, the first
Anita Blake novel. I read them those pages because I needed to know I
wasn’t wasting my time. When I finished reading the room was dead
silent, and my heart fell to my feet. I thought they hate it. Then out
of that silence came gasps, applause and cries of, “When will it be
published?” I had no idea. “Read us more!” I couldn’t, because I’d read
them all I had, but it gave me hope and I went home and finished it.
GUILTY PLEASURES would take at least two years to sale. Everyone liked
it, but no one wanted to buy it. It was the same problem that I’d had
with the short story. It would finally sale to Penguin Putnam, as an
Ace original. I got a three book contract out of it, and I was
ecstatic. After my first series dying with only one book out, I knew
there’d be at least three Anita Blake novels. As I write this I am
about to go out on tour for the 17th Anita Blake book, SKIN TRADE.
Follow Laurell K. Hamilton on Twitter
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