Monday, August 10, 2020

PERSIAN BETRAYAL - Terry Brennan - One Free Book

 

Add caption
Welcome back, Terry. Why do you write the kind of books you do?

The type of action/adventure/suspense books that I write are the same kind of books I read as a kid and continue to read up until this day. I can’t remember if my love for the genre started with the Sherlock Holmes stories, but I think the Fu Manchu series of adventures by Sax Rohmer preceded Sherlock. Today I eagerly await the next Joel Rosenberg thriller, and I’ve come to love the Charles Lennox detective mystery series by Charles Finch. He spins a great feel for Victorian London. 

Besides when you came to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in your life?

Boy, this is tough. Different kinds of happy, eh? I was filled with awe at the birth of my children. I was struck by the immensity of God’s favor the day I married Andrea (and, honestly, that joy continues to grow each day, now 40 years later). And I pulled off the Interstate, turned into an empty parking lot and literally danced around our car the day my agent called and said, “Hello, mister author,” for the very first time. 

Yes, that is a wonderful feeling. How has being published changed your life?

I never thought I’d be this busy at 73. 

It’s been 15 years since I started writing the first novel and writing has continued to drive my days even now that I’m “retired.” I’ve been successful enough that I keep writing books and keep having them published, but not so much that I’m on TV or slogging through multiple city book-signing tours (but I wouldn’t turn one down). Andrea and I live in a small house on a cul de sac, seven minutes from two of our grandchildren. The life of a published author is quiet, but busy. My days are filled to overflowing – sometimes with anxiety when I’m stuck or up against a looming deadline. Sometimes with tending a large vegetable garden and multiple beds of flowers. Busy … but I’m blessed. 

What are you reading right now?

For the last several years I’ve belonged to a book club with a bunch of guys I’ve known for a couple of decades. We just finished The Power of One, an older book about the rise of apartheid in South Africa, and we have just started A Cross to Kill by Andrew Huff, a fellow Kregel author. At the same time, I’m now reading We Hope for Better Things by Erin Bartels on my own and just finished The Martian by Andy Weir. Waiting on hold is The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel (her Station Eleven book was awesome!). 

I’ve featured, Andrew’s books on my blog, too. What is your current work in progress?

The Empires of Armageddon series is complete (we’re currently doing last edits on Book 3, Ottoman Dominion, that comes out in November), so I took a bit of a break and I’m now onto a number of different projects. I’ve “finished” a non-fiction book, Rescuing the Hidden Hearts of Men, that I continue to find needs polishing and improving to move forward. I’ve also resurrected two books – Hunger’s Ransom and Jacob’s Portion – that I wrote years ago. I believe I’ve become a much better author since I completed those manuscripts and it’s clear both of those books need a good bit of work. But they are both solid stories, so I’m trying to breathe life into them and make them viable. And I’m nurturing the seed of an idea that may be called The Crimes of Lough Neagh

What would be your dream vacation?

Two stops. As much for Andrea as for me – back to Jerusalem for a couple of weeks just to soak up the animate presence in that amazing city, then a couple of weeks return to Paris. Preferably in the mid-Fall season, after the tourists and before the cold rains. Jerusalem breakfast in one of the myriad pastry shops that dot the city; lazy lunch in a Paris sidewalk bistro and then a languid stroll through the flower market on Ile de Cite in the shadow of the wounded cathedral of Notre Dame. 

Sounds wonderful! How do you choose your settings for each book?

Mostly, I try to write a lot about what I know. My six books thus far have all been set, ultimately, in the Middle East. The Jerusalem Prophecies series is rooted, at the start, in New York City (where we lived for 10 years) before heading to Jerusalem and The Empires of Armageddon series is launched from the Washington DC area (where I once worked and we’ve visited regularly) before landing in Istanbul, Tel Aviv, Amman, and Ankara. Since my books are often tagged “end-times-thrillers” it’s understandable that a great deal of the stories play out on the stage of Israel and the rest of the Middle East

If you could spend an evening with one person who is currently alive, who would it be and why?

These questions are killers. I think, Henry Kissinger … though, since he’s 97, the meeting should be scheduled soon. Former US Secretary of State and National Security Advisor in the administrations of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, he’s also a decorated veteran of WWII. Imagine the perspective Kissinger has on Watergate and the Nixon White House. 

What are your hobbies, besides writing and reading?

Gardening. I have an over 400 square foot vegetable garden, surrounded by a metal fence called “hardware cloth” to keep the field mice and chipmunks from eating all the harvest. I grow the standards – tomatoes, green peppers, green beans, zucchini, along with strawberries, beets, carrots, lettuce, onions, garlic, cucumbers, and three different kinds of herbs and a peach tree. Andrea and I also love flowers, so we’ve surrounded our home with color. I have three perennial beds – one 40-feet long – and annuals growing front, back, and sides of the house – and in front of the utility shed. It takes work! But it’s one way I get my exercise. 

And that sounds beautiful. What is your most difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome it?

Organization. There are two kinds of writers – architects and gardeners. Guess what kind I am. Plant the seed, water it, let the sun shine on it, watch it grow, and see what happens. And usually I start a book with one idea and a vague expectation of the destination. The book grows, too. So I get lost a lot. Boxed into corners. Too much research. Whole sections (some very good) with no home. Editors asking me questions like, “Well, what is his motivation? Why would he do that?” Huh? He’s got to … it’s part of the action. 

But I’ve gotten better. Because of the world-wide stage upon which my books play out, over a significant number of time zones, the significant number of characters, and the rapid shifts in action from one locale to another, keeping the scenes in the correct order was a challenge. 

For each book, I created an Excel spreadsheet “Outline/Timeline” for myself that tracked the “date/time stamp” for each scene. I also included the “date/time stamp” in the book with each change of scene to help orient the reader. Each line of the spreadsheet also included a short, descriptive sentence about the content of each scene. That way, if I needed to move scenes in the book, I also moved the scenes on the spreadsheet to make sure the “date/time stamps” were correctly aligned. 

This Excel spread sheet was a God-send and really helped me remain organized in so many ways. 

What advice would you give to a beginning author?

Try tennis. 

Okay, never mind. Writers gotta write. That’s what we do. 

The “key to success” in writing is not in a book, not in a seminar – though those are great resources and can be extremely helpful. The key to becoming an author is to diligently sit in front of your computer and write. Books and seminars are great for honing your craft, discovering how to become more adept as a writer. But the success is in the actual writing. In being disciplined enough to keep going back to the computer screen. It’s putting in the work, sharpening and focusing – and editing – until what you can’t get any better. 

So enjoy the writing and the creating of stories for what it is - exercising the gift God gave you. 

We are storytellers, an ancient and cherished profession. We remember and honor the past, spin tales of the possibilities of the future and entertain in the present. Not a bad way to spend a day. 

So, keep at it. Never give up. Write all the stories in your heart and all the words God gives you. And celebrate the gift. 

Tell us about the featured book.

Three ancient empires are rushing toward a collision in the volatile Middle East; an official high in the US State Department is conspiring with a foreign power against the US President; a centuries-old prophecy is unveiled that herald’s Christ’s imminent return; and malevolent created eternal beings – fallen angels – are determined to invalidate Biblical prophecy so they can manufacture a different ending to the Bible … reverse the outcome of the battle of Armageddon. 

In Ishmael Covenant, the first book of the Empires of Armageddon series, Diplomatic Security Service agent Brian Mullaney is banished to Israel to protect new US Ambassador Joseph Atticus Cleveland. Mullaney and the ambassador are thrust into the cauldron of Middle East conflict, both political, spiritual, and personal. They come into possession of an ancient, lethal metal box that supposedly holds a second prophecy that could threaten both the nascent peace treaty between Israel and all its Arab neighbors – the Ishmael Covenant – and also reveal the insidious plot of their evil enemies. Mullaney finds himself fighting for the life of the ambassador and his daughter, fighting for his own crippled marriage, and fighting a spiritual battle, for which he is unprepared, against the agents of evil who are determined to destroy the box, the prophecy, and the Middle East as we know it.  

The story in Persian Betrayal commences exactly where Ishmael Covenant ends, with the destruction of the Hurva Synagogue in Jerusalem by agents of the Turk, who is still trying to destroy the prophecy of the Vilna Gaon and the lethal metal box that protects it. Mullaney finds himself propelled into the midst of a spiritual battle that is manifested in the physical realm: the Turk’s Disciples leave death and destruction in their wake as they attack the US Embassy and the Ambassador’s Residence in Tel Aviv at the same time, but fail to secure the box of power; Ambassador Cleveland goes AWOL – without his security detail – to confront Turkish President Emet Kashani about the rumors of a Turkish attempt to steal the nuclear weapons at the Incirlik Air Base; and Mullaney is enlisted by an eight-foot angel to become the Final Guardian of the Gaon’s lethal box. 

Please give us the first page of the book.

Hurva Square, Jerusalem, Israel

July 20, 2014, 1:14 p.m.

Rabbi Chaim Yavod raced into Jerusalem’s Hurva Square, choking on the thick, swirling stone dust that encased the square in a malevolent fog. He leaped over huge shards of fractured stone and concrete—white, arched remnants of the Hurva Synagogue’s once magnificent dome. A symphony of horror filled the square nearly as thick as the stone dust—moans of the wounded and maimed; wails of survivors as they stumbled over the bodies of those who were not; shrill and urgent sirens promising help but not prevention.

Only moments earlier he had been sent to fetch Rabbi Herzog’s car. Then, in a mounding tide of rumbling destruction, the world that Chaim Yavod knew best was obliterated. 

The convulsions of the first explosion ripped the door of the black Toyota out of Yavod’s hand and knocked him back onto the uneven surface of the small parking lot. The ground shifting under his shoulder blades, Yavod felt three additional explosions shudder the stones of the street. He looked up, above the rooftops toward the north. What looked like a volcanic eruption of smoke, stone, and debris was roiling ever higher over the square that contained the Hurva Synagogue—outside of the Western Wall, the most revered symbol of Jewish worship in Jerusalem

Now Yavod frantically scrambled through the destruction in the Hurva Square toward the smoking, shattered remains of the synagogue. The sickening fear tearing at his heart pushed aside any concern about delivering the envelope inside his jacket pocket—the decoded second prophecy from the Vilna Gaon. Israel Herzog, chief rabbi of the Israeli Rabbinate Council, his friend and superior, was probably somewhere under the collapsed dome and crumbled walls of what had once been Israel’s most beautiful synagogue. Was Herzog alive . . . any other members of the council who were with him? Could he save them? Yavod pressed on through the escalating havoc. 

How can readers find you on the Internet?

Website:  https://www.terrybrennanauthor.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/terry.brennan.5201

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorTerryBrennan/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/terrbrennan1 

Readers, here are links to the book. 

https://www.christianbook.com/persian-betrayal-2-terry-brennan/9780825445316/

https://amzn.to/3ip1nVF - Amazon Paperback

https://amzn.to/2Cjcznm - Kindle

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. You must follow these instructions to be in the drawing. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory or country if outside North America. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.) 

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

 The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book. 

If you’re reading this on Goodreads, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link:

Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com

8 comments:

Lucy Reynolds said...

I enjoyed the interview and the book sounds very interesting. I also garden and have been canning green and wax beans. Blessings from WV.

Nancy P said...

Sounds intriguing. Terrific cover. FL

Melissa M. said...

I'm a fan of Joel Rosenberg, so I think I'll like your books!
-Melissa from TN

Terry Brennan said...

Thanks for the comments. We've just come out of eight days without electricity because of the tropical storm. It's nice to have my computer back, and the Internet that goes with it.

Hi, Lucy - I'm envious. My green beans are a deep disappointment this year. Planted pole beans and bush beans ... not one bean from the vigorously growing pole plants. They're outta here for next year. And not much from the bush beans. Hope you get to check out the book.

Hi, Nancy - I liked the cover, as well. Wait until you check out the cover for the final book of the series. That one I love. It's creepy.

Hi, Melissa - I think I've read every one of Joel Rosenberg's books. He's an informed and entertaining writer. It's a blessing to be compared to an author like Rosenberg. Thanks

Caryl Kane said...

Hey Lena and Terry! "Persian Betrayl" sounds like a page-turner!

Caryl K in TEXAS

Connie Porter Saunders said...

Persian Betrayal sounds great! Thanks for sharing.
Connie from Kentucky
cps1950(at)gmail(dot)com

Sharon Bryant said...

Enter me!!
Conway SC.

Terry Brennan said...

Hi, Caryl - Thanks for your interest in Persian Betrayal. So far, the book is getting great reviews - all reviews on Amazon are either 5-star or 4-star. Hope you get to read it.

Hi, Connie - Thanks for checking in from the Bluegrass State. I think you'll really enjoy Persian Betrayal when/if you get a chance to check it out.

Hi, Sharon - Good luck on the giveaway.