All her life, clever Aemi has been a slave in the Village of the Rocks, a place where the sea and sky meet. She’s heard the stories about the fabled People of the Sea, a people who possess unimaginable technology who live below the waves in the dark, secret places of the ocean. But she never dreamed those stories were true.
When a ship emerges from the ocean and men burn her village, Aemi is captured, and enslaved below the waves in Itlantis, a world filled with ancient cities of glass and metal, floating gardens, and wondrous devices that seem to work magic. To make matters worse, her village nemesis, the stuck-up mayor’s son Nol, was captured with her, and they are made servants in the same household beneath the sea.
Desperate to be free, Aemi plots her escape, even going so far as to work with Nol. But the sea holds more secrets than she realizes, and escape might not be as simple as leaving…
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Author Interview with Kate Avery
Ellison
Describe Of Sea and Stone in six words.
Atlantis, steampunk, sunlight, seawater, secrets, romance.
What books have you read
and loved lately?
I am almost finished with Finnikin of the Rock by Melina Marchetta, and it’s an absolute
delight. Witty, immersive, and utterly compelling fantasy that reminds me very
much of my beloved Megan Whalen Turner books.
Ice cream or cake?
Ice cream cake, of course! It’s the best of both worlds.
What authors have
influenced your writing style the most?
I grew up on a pretty steady diet of mystery, actually, so I
feel like classic mystery authors like Agatha Christie had a strong influence
on me. When I was a teenager, I started reading fantasy by authors like Robin
McKinley, Gail Carson Levine, and Sherwood Smith. The Blue Sword, Ella Enchanted, Crown Duel...I loved those books. I
also had a huge love of historical fiction, so Ann Rinaldi, Elizabeth George
Speare, and Eloise Jarvis McGraw influenced me a lot as well. As far as more
recently-written books that I didn’t grow up reading, I continue to be an awe
of fantasy authors Megan Whalen Turner (The
Thief, The Queen of Attolia, etc.) and Melina Marchetta (Finnikin of the Rock), dystopian author
Suzanne Collins (The Hunger Games), and
contemporary young adult authors Lucy Christopher (Stolen) and John Green (A
Fault in Our Stars).
If you had to pick a shoe
that represented your writing style, what would it be?
Have you seen those canvas shoes where an artist has drawn
original artwork on the front and sides and is selling them online? I think my
books are like that—in some ways they feel familiar, but they have their own
surprises and twists that make them unique.
Who has been the most
supportive person in your writing career?
My husband. About two years into trying to get published, I
was ready to give up on my stories and get a job doing something tremendously
ill-suited for me, like being a secretary (I am a very bad secretary. Very
disorganized). He convinced me to give it more time, and he is probably the
sole reason I am published today. He is my first reader, my strongest
encourager, and my most reliable critic.
Are you working on anything
else currently?
Yes!
I’m currently hard at work on the second book in the Secrets of Itlantis
series, and I’m also working on a few secret projects on the side—one is a more
traditional fantasy, another is a post-apocalyptic novel. I hope to have more
details about them for my readers very soon.
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I live in Georgia with my wonderful
husband and two spoiled cats. When I'm not writing, I'm usually catching
up on my extensive Netflix queue, reading a book, giggling at something
funny online, or trying to convince my husband to give me just ONE bite
of whatever he's eating.
Learn more about my writing and books at my blog (http:// thesouthernscrawl.blogspot. com/), find teasers for upcoming works on my Facebook page (https://www.facebook. com/kateaveryellison), and subscribe to my new releases newsletter to be notified of new novels as soon as they hit stores (https://tinyletter. com/kateaveryellison)!
Learn more about my writing and books at my blog (http://
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