Curse of the Thrax + Giveaway
ABOUT THE BOOK:
The children of the Godswood Village grew up hearing stories about the Thrax, a fearsome dragon “with scales like iron plates and teeth as long as battle swords.” Because the Thrax had not been seen in over 100 summers, these always seemed like fairy tales to Jaykriss, the 14-year-old son of Glyndich, the powerful village War Chief.
Until the Thrax returned—and killed Jaykriss’s father.
Jaykriss dreams of avenging his father’s death by subduing the Thrax and recovering the Bloodsword, a treasured family heirloom Glyndich lost while battling the dragon. But can he?
My Review
Mr. Murphy took me on a fun, magical journey. This book was a pleasure to read. So much so that I was already about a third of the way in before I came up for air. Jaykriss, Marda, Sola, Zamarcus, the Dark King, and Thrax made up quite the eccentric cast of characters. Which in turn made the story come alive and kept it interesting. There was so much happening in the story that it made reading it a breeze. Jaykriss is cool and I did like him but a favorite of mine was Sola. She was the strong, female type. So I was cheering for her the whole time. Fans of fantasy and adventure will enjoy this book. This is the way to start out a trilogy. I am sure the next book will be just as good if not better.
About the author
Mark Murphy has been a doctor since 1988.
He has been a writer his entire life.
After spending his early childhood reading anything he could get his hands on and roaming the marshes and maritime forests of coastal Georgia--where he collected myriad seashells and arrowheads and fossils and fancied himself a swashbuckler of the highest order--Mark entered the creative literary world by winning a local poetry contest in the fifth grade. Later that year, he wrote, directed and starred in his own play about the signing of the Declaration of Independence and started his own self-published classroom newspaper.
It was the high-water mark for Murphy's elementary school literary career.
In high school, Mark continued to write. He served as Editor of the high school newspaper and won a few awards for his editorials, critical reviews, short stories and poetry. He also attempted several times to start a novel. Alas, those attempts went nowhere, rarely making it beyond the first chapter--or the next call from his girlfriend, who was far more interesting than anything he could write about.
When he enrolled at the University of Georgia as a journalism major, he seemed destined for a literary career.
But he loved science. And he missed science.
Mark changed majors to Zoology with plans of becoming a marine biologist, like Jacques Cousteau. He even spent the better part of a year doing marine biology research. A good bit of that time involved tossing about on the Atlantic in a converted shrimp trawler that had once been used as a drug-smuggling boat, a leaky vessel that stank of diesel and dead fish. It was this experience that made him realize that he did not want to be the next Jacques Cousteau (or the first Jacques Cousteau, for that matter). Instead, he dedided to follow in his father's footsteps and go to medical school.
After graduating from the University of Georgia as a First Honor Graduate, with a 4.0 GPA, Mark enrolled at the Medical College of Georgia. After receiving his M.D., he moved on to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to begin his residency training in Internal Medicine. Mark's training at UNC was filled with interesting experiences; he took care of a dying sitcom star, a fallen tele-evangelist, several corrupt politicians and a serial killer while in Chapel Hill. He began to realize that medicine afforded physicians with a unique perspective into peoples' lives --an observation that would serve him well later.
Continuing his training in Chapel Hill as a Fellow in gastroenterology, Mark wrote several book chapters and academic articles--but his creative writing muse had withered away to nothing.
In 1994, Mark returned to his home town of Savannah, Georgia to start the practice that would ultimately become the largest gastroenterology group in South Georgia.
The untimely death of Mark's friend Lisa Erickson led him to write a short story, The Funeral, as a gift for her husband. This story was published in a collection of short stories in 2004. Returning to creative writing, Mark attended the Iowa Summer Writing Festival and began writing short stories once again. Two years ago, he started writing a well-received regular opinion column in his hometown newspaper, the Savannah Morning News.
Recently, Mark decided to tackle trying to write a novel once more.
It turned out better this time.
Mark lives in Savannah and is married to Daphne, his high school sweetheart, who remains a very pleasant distraction. They have two grown children.
- Give us a brief summary of The Curse of the Thrax
Jaykriss is a typical teenager. He’s
bored with school, the girl he loves doesn’t even know he’s alive, and he and
his mother disagree—a lot.
Not everything is typical in Jaykriss’s life, however. Glyndich the Great, Jaykriss’s warrior father, died fighting a dragon—and in doing so lost the Bloodsword, a treasured heirloom that is the family’s symbol of power.
Jaykriss lives in the Godswood, a tiny village deep in the forest near the ancient Priestbain, the fortress home of the Godswood priests. The priests rule the Godswood through their close relationship with the all-powerful Dark King. Jaykriss and the rest of the villagers just barely get by, surviving despite plots by the priests, constant threats by groups of half-human mutants—and, of late, by the Thrax itself, an enormous dragon once thought to be extinct.
But one day, all of that changes.
On a routine hunting trip, Jaykriss and his best friend are chased by the Thrax. Terrified, they seek refuge in a forest cave hidden behind a waterfall. The cave shelters an eccentric hermit, a refugee from the Dark King, whose home is filled with books from ancient times. The hermit teaches Jaykriss that all is not as it seems in his world. The mutants and dragons are actually relics of a biological disaster that ravaged the planet years before. The Dark King, revered as a god, is a vicious ruler who will do anything to stay in power. Jaykriss realizes that although he is not a warrior like his father, he can use his instincts and intellect to confront the Thrax, recover the Bloodsword and save his family. He may, in fact, be The One Who Leads, prophesied to save the entire human race. But is Jaykriss ready for his destiny--or will it consume him?
Not everything is typical in Jaykriss’s life, however. Glyndich the Great, Jaykriss’s warrior father, died fighting a dragon—and in doing so lost the Bloodsword, a treasured heirloom that is the family’s symbol of power.
Jaykriss lives in the Godswood, a tiny village deep in the forest near the ancient Priestbain, the fortress home of the Godswood priests. The priests rule the Godswood through their close relationship with the all-powerful Dark King. Jaykriss and the rest of the villagers just barely get by, surviving despite plots by the priests, constant threats by groups of half-human mutants—and, of late, by the Thrax itself, an enormous dragon once thought to be extinct.
But one day, all of that changes.
On a routine hunting trip, Jaykriss and his best friend are chased by the Thrax. Terrified, they seek refuge in a forest cave hidden behind a waterfall. The cave shelters an eccentric hermit, a refugee from the Dark King, whose home is filled with books from ancient times. The hermit teaches Jaykriss that all is not as it seems in his world. The mutants and dragons are actually relics of a biological disaster that ravaged the planet years before. The Dark King, revered as a god, is a vicious ruler who will do anything to stay in power. Jaykriss realizes that although he is not a warrior like his father, he can use his instincts and intellect to confront the Thrax, recover the Bloodsword and save his family. He may, in fact, be The One Who Leads, prophesied to save the entire human race. But is Jaykriss ready for his destiny--or will it consume him?
This story is really an amalgamation—a
coming-of-age story combined with a fantasy tale set in a unique dystopian
universe. It tells of a boy striving to
become a man without the guidance of his father. He also discovers that the
order of the world be has grown up in is vastly more complex than he ever
imagined. Things he thought were
absolute truths were, in fact, lies; institutions he had been told could be
trusted were, in fact, inherently untrustworthy. Religion, politics, relationships, the
twisted tangle of people grasping for power and influence—all of the trappings
of adulthood are coming to fruition in Jaykriss’s young life. I’m biased, of course, but I think it’s a
rollicking adventure set in the firm foundation of a boy trying out his (figurative)
wings for the very first time—something we can all identify with.
- What inspired you to write
Jaykriss’ story?
I have two sons who I have watched grow into fine young men. They have been fortunate enough to have two
loving parents to help them with advice and life examples. But like all
parents, I have worried at times what might happen to them if something
happened to me. Would they understand the value system I would want them to
have? Have I provided them with a robust
enough framework for dealing with life’s adversity? In this story, I gave Jaykriss a loving
father—and I snuffed him out before the story ever starts, so that the reader
only sees him in Jaykriss’s memories and flashbacks. Still, Jaykriss ends up as
a fundamentally decent person—and he draws deeply on the many lessons his
father taught him. I thought that
premise made for a compelling story. I
then created a fantastic world filled with secrets and unexpected
creatures—sort of like real life adolescence, actually, except that these
secrets and creatures are elements that we are not familiar with. And that makes it more interesting.
- What is the greatest lesson that
Jaykriss learns in his adventures?
I re-hashed a saying from T.H White’s “The Once and Future King”
in this work—“Might does not make right; right makes might.” It’s a statement
Jaykriss recalls from his father’s repertoire, but it’s at the core of
Jaykriss’s belief system. The Dark King
is the embodiment of the Machiavellian idea that absolute power corrupts
absolutely. He abuses his vast power and influence to subjugate his people and
keep them in the (intellectual) darkness, shrouding himself in mysticism and
thinly-veiled threat. From Zamarcus,
Jaykriss learns about science and literature and all of the things the Dark
King has tried to keep hidden from the people in order to stay in power. Jaykriss is determined to set things
right—and, in so doing, to break the choke-hold the Dark King has on knowledge
(and upon his people). Learning what his
skills are (intuition, perceptiveness, and an insatiable need to do the right
thing) as well as his weaknesses (he is not the warrior that his father was,
for example—but his father is dead,
after all, and Jaykriss is not) can help Jaykriss to grow into the complete
person he will become by book 3 in the trilogy.
- When you were becoming an adult,
did you have an experience that taught you what Jaykriss learns?
Several. Here’s one
example: My mother died at a very young age. She was always a powerful source
of advice for me. Having her life end
prematurely forced me to grow up faster—but I found that I had absorbed a lot
more of her life lessons than I had realized. She speaks to me every day. Jaykriss hears his father speaking inside his
head all through this novel—cajoling, encouraging, shepherding him along life’s
way.
- What is Jaykriss’ biggest flaw?
He’s a hothead. He tends to
go off “half-cocked” sometimes, without thinking through all of the potential
consequences. Part of that is just the
inherent impatience of youth. In that respect, Marda (his best friend and
cousin), Zamarcus and Sola, his girlfriend--all of whom are older than
Jaykriss--often serve as wellsprings of mature advice.
- How will we see Jaykriss grow as
the trilogy progresses?
He will be roughly 16-20 years old in Books 2 and 3 (he’s 14 in
this novel), so his life will contain a lot more “mature” conflicts as the
trilogy progresses. In Book1, Jaykriss finds out a lot about his strengths—but
Book 2 in the series is all about learning one’s limitations, and Book 3 is all
about Jaykriss combining the positive and negative knowledge of himself that he
has acquired in the first two books to become a more complete person (and a
more formidable foe for the Dark King). To paraphrase the philosophy of
Nietzsche, all of the adversity Jaykriss goes through ultimately strengthens
him. However, it also makes him more cynical, so some of the innocent veneer of
youth we see in Jaykriss in Book 1 will burn away in the later works. He becomes a somewhat less trusting soul—but
he is also less vulnerable, less naïve, and more capable of making the hard
choices that leaders must make. Finally, his love for Sola blossoms further,
bringing Jaykriss a depth of spirit that he could have never achieved without
her influence. He sublimates all of his
own ambitions and desires to serve hers, and she does the same for him. The two
of them have a sort of “Gift of the Magi” relationship that influences every aspect
of their respective decision-making. They ultimately make each other stronger
by caring more about each other than they do about themselves. The idea that
love can be a catalyst for altruistic behavior ends up being a central theme in
the trilogy. Sola and Jaykriss are truly
made for each other, and it shows in every aspect of this work.
- What is your favorite part about
the world you’ve created?
This is a bit of a spoiler, but the mere fact that Jaykriss’s
world is an alternate version of our own is terribly interesting to me. It just goes to show that people are people,
and they do the things that people do irrespective of the universe they dwell
in. Power, honor, sex, food, security
and living a meaningful life will all play a role in any human being’s
existence. Jaykriss’s world is no
different from our own, really. It just
has dragons.
- You’re a very successful doctor.
Why did you decide to become a writer?
Writing and medicine are like fraternal twins—different, and yet
the same in many respects. Both disciplines involve using one’s powers of
observation. Both require empathy, and an ability to understand what a person’s
true motivations are. But medicine
employs the scientific method, rooted in facts and data. Creative writing is, by its own definition,
creative, allowing one the latitude to express oneself artistically. I find
them to be complementary. Being a writer
has made me a better doctor, and being a doctor has made me a better writer.
And let’s make one thing clear: the compulsion to write is part of my
constitutional makeup. It’s a basic
physiologic process, like breathing. So
I didn’t “decide” to become a writer. I
decided to become a doctor. I have been
a doctor since 1988, when I graduated from medical school. I’ve been a writer
my entire life.
- Does your work in medicine influence
your stories?
Of course it does. In many
respects, being a doctor is like being a soldier—you see a number of “great and
terrible things,” to quote physician-author Ethan Canin. Doctors are afforded little windows into the
lives of a number of other people. We
see people at the diametric extremes of their lives—great personal triumphs,
crushing personal defeats, life and death, pain and absolution, etc. It all
makes for great storytelling. All a physician-writer has to do is pay attention
and find a way to tell the tale.
- The Curse of the Thrax is your second novel. Did you encounter new challenges that
you didn’t have with your first book, The
Shadow Man?
Well, they are completely different works. The
Shadow Man was a thriller, set in my hometown, about a serial killer
surgeon. It was easy to write because
the protagonist was a physician living where I live. It was also frightening, violent and, at
times, quite graphic, as books about psychopathic murderers usually are. The Curse of the Thrax is a young adult
(YA) book, set in a completely different world that I created inside my head.
So those two descriptors (genre and locale) delineate a fundamental difference
between these two works. YA books are
also aimed at a different audience. The
violence in a YA novel is more restrained; there is no foul language, and
graphic sexual situations are off-limits.
There’s the whole discovery element, as well; character development is
critical in any novel, but a YA protagonist is often developing his or her
value system right before the reader’s eyes.
So things are inherently more malleable with the characters in a YA
book. Adults, by contrast, are more
predictable in their behavior, more hard-wired.
That makes writing about them a tad easier—unless they are being
intentionally deceptive, as sociopaths will do sometimes. There may be one or two sociopaths in The Curse of the Thrax, but they are, at
least at this point, less prominent. The
story is truly about Jaykriss and how he deals with the world. By contrast, the
sociopathic killer in The Shadow Man was
the worst villain I could possibly imagine—and without him, the entire story
simply did not exist. Heck, the book was named after him!
- When will the second book in the
series be released?
Here’s my timeline: The Curse of the Thrax comes out June 1. Right now, I’m working on a romance novel, set in the 1960’s, called The Lost Year. I should finish that sometime this summer. I’ll start work on Book Two of the Bloodsword Trilogy after that--I’ve already completed the outline--and I expect that will take me 9 months or so to finish, and a few more months to edit, market and publish. So the second book in this trilogy should be out around the summer of 2016.
I have 1 copy to giveaway to US or Canada. Leave a comment with your email address. Winner picked June 11th.
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