I am thrilled to have Alex Nader, wordsmith extraordinaire , and his muse stop by today for the Beasts of Burdin blog tour!
I had a few questions for Mr. Ty Burdin himself, and Alex's muse was kind enough to indulge my curiosity.
Welcome Alex, his muse, & Ty!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So, Ty—is that short for
something?—how in God’s name did you become a demon hunter?
Yeah, Ty is short for Tyler
Burdin, but I’m not much on formal names, so Ty’ll do. Demon hunting’s a family
business. You could say I was born in to it.
Why a fedora?
Why is the sky blue? Hell, if I
know, it just happened that way.
Tell us about your first kill.
That was so many years ago, it’s
all a blur now. There was a demon, I imagine I shot it a couple times, and then
I took its head off. It’s pretty much been rinse, wash, repeat since then.
Nora. She is faithful enough to
move half-way across the country with you. Is there something you’re not
telling us?
Well, if I told you, that would
successfully undo my not telling you, wouldn’t it?
Seriously, how did you know it
was the dog? Do you secretly hear animals’ thoughts?
I have a knack for making guesses
at historically opportune times. Sometimes it works in my favor and sometimes I
just end up with a new scar to brag about.
And finally, Jack or Johnnie?
As a true fan of scotch, Johnnie
would be first choice, but as long as there’s a proof on the label, I’ll take a
double.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Release Date: February 10, 2014
Publisher: J. Taylor Publishing
Demon hunter Ty Burdin hung up his guns, knife, trench coat and fedora a year ago. Bags packed, hands washed of all demon politics, he’s done. Forever.
In fact, to get far far away, he dragged Nora, his rockabilly secretary, from Miami to the Tennessee mountains where he’s lived a life of peace—if peace can be defined as drowning in scotch and taking private eye jobs to keep the lights on. Jobs for real people. Not demons.
No demons.
He’s retired from that. Remember?
Demon hunters aren’t a dime a dozen, though, and when Ty’s brother asks him for a favor—just one—what’s a brother to do? Agreeing to take down one hillbilly demon shouldn’t take that long. In. Decapitate. Out. Favor complete. Back to the office where Nora and his bottle of whiskey are waiting.
Unfortunately for Ty, staying retired doesn’t seem to be in the cards, and an avalanche of bad luck draws him right back to an agency he despises and the career that nearly cost him his sanity.
This time, Ty has no way out and will have to face his own demons just to survive.
In fact, to get far far away, he dragged Nora, his rockabilly secretary, from Miami to the Tennessee mountains where he’s lived a life of peace—if peace can be defined as drowning in scotch and taking private eye jobs to keep the lights on. Jobs for real people. Not demons.
No demons.
He’s retired from that. Remember?
Demon hunters aren’t a dime a dozen, though, and when Ty’s brother asks him for a favor—just one—what’s a brother to do? Agreeing to take down one hillbilly demon shouldn’t take that long. In. Decapitate. Out. Favor complete. Back to the office where Nora and his bottle of whiskey are waiting.
Unfortunately for Ty, staying retired doesn’t seem to be in the cards, and an avalanche of bad luck draws him right back to an agency he despises and the career that nearly cost him his sanity.
This time, Ty has no way out and will have to face his own demons just to survive.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt:
“He’s adopted, and good morning,” I say, opening the drawer to my desk and digging through it.
“It’s not morning. It’s past noon, you lazy drunk.” Her tone is accusing, but there’s a slight smile to her ruby red lips. I really do think Nora gets enjoyment from trying to keep me in line. Her rockabilly style, all tattoos and polkadots, might scare some people off, but honestly, I think it’s kind of cool.
“Fine, I was wrong about the time, but you’re wrong, too,” I say.
“Oh, yeah? How’s that?” Nora kicks her hip to the side and props a hand on her leopard print skirt.
“I’m not drunk. I’m hungover.” I pull out a flask full of scotch and take a long drink. “I’m working on getting back on track, though.” I tip the flask toward her.
“I swear someone’s gonna find you in a ditch one day.” Her voice has a trace of concern, but it’s mostly drowned out by annoyance.
“In my line of work, that’s almost a guarantee. Now, can you tell me why you disturbed my ugly sleep?” Ugly sleep is a gross understatement. No amount of alcohol ever seems to drown out the vision of the young, innocent girl burned into my memory. The scene is even more ominous in my dreams than it was in real life.
A thunderclap breaks the silence of my memories. Nora stares down at me, hands stuck together. “Wake up, drunkard. Hartnet’s been trying to reach you on the phone for the past fifteen minutes.”
The pocket of my jacket buzzes, probably been ringing the entire time. Nora walks over to where it hangs by the door and withdraws the phone. “Jesus, Ty. You’ve got four missed calls, ten new messages, and over twenty emails. Do you ever check this thing?”
“No.” I have the phone, but honestly, I hate it.
Nora sets the still ringing phone on my desk, puts her hands on her hips and, using only facial expressions, guilts me into picking up.
“Hello,” I say into the phone that smells of smoke. I use my free hand to dig out cigarettes and a lighter.
“Ty! Finally, man, where you been?” Hartnet asks.
“Oh, you know me. I just got back from hiking the Swiss Alps with Edmund Hillary.”
“Real funny, Ty, but I imagine you’ve been spending more time with Jim or Jack.”
“God, no, I hate southern whiskey,” I say. “I prefer a fine scotch, Macallan to be specific.”
“You prefer whatever’s in front of you as long as there’s a proof label on the bottle,” Hartnet says.
I don’t have any argument for that. “So, what do you want?”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About Mr. Nader
Alex lives in the tourist infested hills of east Tennessee with his amazing wife/muse and three superb children. He would tell you more about how awesome they are, but you probably wouldn’t believe him. When he’s not hanging out with them he’s making pizzas. When he’s not doing that he’s working at a bookstore and occasionally he jots a few words down. He’s a big fan of good music, good storytelling, and mixed martial arts.
He once wrote a short story about pirates to his wife via text message that blossomed into a full length novel and never stopped after that.
He once wrote a short story about pirates to his wife via text message that blossomed into a full length novel and never stopped after that.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thanks for having me by, Terri. Hope to be back one day.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure! And, you'll definitely be back some day. :)
DeleteGreat character interview.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, fedoras are super cool ;)
VERY cool. hehe Thanks for stopping by, Lynda!
Delete