Ta da: The Cover Reveal!!

Just out today: the cover art for Werecat #4!

Get it at online retailers as a paperback or e-book beginning June 27th. 🙂

I’m as happy as the cat who ate the canary, and I promise that will be my last feline pun. Right now I’m getting ARCs to reviews to help boost the signal at booksellers and sites like Goodreads and LibraryThing. Through the end of the month, if you want to read and review, I can get out to you an e-ARC gratis. Just drop me an e-mail.

Also, don’t forget: if you sign up for my mailing list above, you get a free e-copy of The Rearing (Werecat #1) so you can get started on the series.

Here’s the blurb for The Sim Ru Prophecy to whet your appetite:

The final installment of the Werecat series, a finalist in 2016 The Romance Reviews Readers’ Choice awards.

A fugitive from two murder investigations in New York City and a bizarre, big cat attack at a bank in Barbados, Jacks Dowd flees to South America to find the ringleader of a shifter terrorist organization deep in the Amazon. The world is on the brink of all-out war between shifters and humans, and Jacks needs to somehow broker a deal for peace.

But a special U.S. intelligence agency emerges as a new, possibly even more dangerous enemy. Both the terrorists and the U.S. government will stop at nothing to get an arcane codex that could unleash an unstoppable threat to mankind or exterminate werecats everywhere. While Jacks dodges danger from both sides and decodes the ancient book, he’s left with the impossible choice of how to use it.

The Jaguar of the Backward Glance

Chavin stirrup-spouted jar

Chavin stirrup-spouted jar from the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore. Image retrieved from Ancient History Encyclopedia http://www.ancient.eu/Chavin_Civilization/

I discovered this intriguing bit of werecat mythology while doing research for the forthcoming, final installment of my Werecat series: The Sim Ru Prophecy. In Chavin culture, a pre-Incan civilization that resided in the region of modern day Peru, potters made clay jars shaped like seated, curled cats. Like ancient Amerindian artwork elsewhere, the cat’s head is exaggerated, almost cartoonish, but the rosette spots are suggestive of the jaguar, which thrived in the region at the time.

According to archeologist Alana Cordy-Collins, a scholar of Peruvian pre-history, these unique jars are also an artifact of an ancient folk belief in human-feline hybrid creatures. In her essay titled: “The jaguar of the backward glance,” published in Nicolas Saunders’ Icons of Power: Feline Symbolism in the Americas, Cordy-Collins states that the jars represent shaman who possess dual souls and have the ability to take the form of jaguars. To the Chavin, a jaguar who is spotted looking over its shoulder is not a big cat but rather a shape-shifting shaman. They preserved that magical secret on their decorative wares.

When I read about that, I was reminded of the anthropomorphic world of Gregory Maguire’s Wicked saga.

“Are you a cat? Or a Cat?”

Jinns by the Ottoman Artist Mehmet Siyah Kalem

Jinns by the Ottoman Artist Mehmet Siyah Kalem, retrieved from Islam and Science Fiction http://www.islamscifi.com/jinns-in-islamic-art/

Werecat mythology is not so common in European cultures (to the benefit of werewolves), but there are imaginative werecat storytelling traditions pretty much everywhere else where cats can be found in the world. For example, in the Middle East, there’s the wonderful folk belief in the jinn, which can take the form of the cat, as well as other animals.

If you have dug into my Werecat series, you know that I took a lot of inspiration from ancient Mesoamerican beliefs and most especially the Olmecs. A lot about the Olmecs remains ‘unpacked,’ which makes their history and religion fertile ground for a fantasy author. Archeologists have yet to even understand their language. But their stone monuments, sculptures and glyphs include representations of human/feline hybrids, which has led to the theory that they worshipped a werejaguar god.

That was plenty enough for me as a departure point for creating the mythology behind Werecat. The main character Jacks learns that werecat ‘rearing’ originated from an Olmec king who sacrificed a jaguar cub at the altar of a feline god and then plunged the sacrificial blade into his own heart. The feline god was pleased and allowed the king to return to the material world as a hybrid creature with the power to shift from man to cat.

In the saga’s final installment: The Sim Ru Prophecy, Jacks must decode an ancient codex called The Bastet in order to appeal to an aboriginal feline deity before the codex’s secrets fall into the hands of werecat insurgents, or equally disastrously, humans, who would eliminate Jacks’ kind completely.

As a promotion for the release, you can get started on the series for free. Just sign up for my mailing list at the top of my sidebar, and I’ll send you a copy of The Rearing (Werecat, Book 1).

 

The Big Werecat Bonanza!

I’ve been dropping hints about this, and the release date is getting close. The final installment of my Werecat series, a 2016 Readers’ Choice favorite, comes out this summer!! Right now, I’m working through the final proofreading of the manuscript and awaiting cover art. To celebrate the upcoming release, I’ve got two promotions going on that can give you a free jumpstart on the series.

First, a little info about Werecat #4. The title is The Sim Ru Prophecy, and it’s a novel-length book that brings the series to a globe-trekking, action-packed finish.

Jacks Cherokee sets off for South America to negotiate a truce with the dissident werecat leader Tepe who has declared war on mankind. Jacks has in his possession an arcane codex called The Bastet, that preserves the secrets of werecat magic, and he’s joined by his loyal boyfriend Farzan, their werelion ally Kwame, and his tiger-stripe tabby familiar Bella.

But a passage in The Bastet known as The Sim Ru Prophecy contains a doomsday riddle that attracts new enemies who are desperate to exterminate the werecat threat. Tepe himself would use it to avenge centuries of werecat persecution once and for all. Caught between worlds, Jacks finds himself as both the chaser and the chased, saddled with an impossible choice: relinquish werecat magic to a covert organization that will destroy his kind, or unleash the great Sim Ru who will restore a pre-historic era when big cats reigned supreme.

Now, the promotions!

I’ve set up a giveaway at LibraryThing where you can enter a drawing for a copy of The Rearing (Werecat, Book 1).  That contest is open from May 1st to May 15th. Just follow this link to the book listing, and look at the upper right hand corner to get to the LibraryThing Member Giveaway site. (It takes some scrolling down to find the book, but this ‘shortcut’ was the only way I could figure out how to get to it).

Next, if you’re more of a Goodreads person, I have a giveaway going on there as well from May 7th to May 16th. You can enter a drawing for a copy of The Trilogy, (Werecat, Books 1-3). Here’s the handy widget where you can get in on that:

 

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Werecat by Andrew J. Peters

Werecat

by Andrew J. Peters

Giveaway ends May 16, 2017.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter Giveaway

I can’t wait to share the cover art for the upcoming book, which is in production! Stay tuned for more details. 🙂