DANCING WITH THE LION: BECOMING by Jeanne Reames
XairÄ“! That’s ancient Greek for “Howdy.”
[KHAI-rae]
Welcome to my blog tour for Becoming,
Book 1 of the Dancing with the Lion
duology, about the young Alexander before he became “the Great.” It’s an
historical coming-of-age tale with a love story embedded.
Best known for conquering most of his known world before the
ripe old age of 33, Alexander made even Julius Caesar weep (for not being him).
But who was he before his meteoric
rise? And how did his best friend and lover, Hephaistion, give him the
emotional support needed for him to become Megalexandros
(the Great Alexander)?
Dancing
with the Lion Website:
Contains everything from cut scenes, to videoblogs of Macedonia
(Northern Greece, where Alexander grew up), to audio pronunciations of those
weird Greek names!
For our GIVE-AWAY,
I’m going to offer something a bit different. Yes, there’s a $10 gift
certificate from Riptide Publishers. BUT, for the lucky winner, you get your very own scene request.
Want to see a scene in the novel from a different character’s point-of-view?
Want to know what happened after a scene ended, or before it began? Or is there
something you’d like to see that wasn’t in
the novel? Ask for it! I’ll write it just for you.
About Dancing with the Lion: Becoming
Two boys, one heroic
bond, and the molding of Greece’s greatest son.
Before he became known as Alexander the Great, he was
Alexandros, the teenage son of the king of Makedon. Rather than living a life
of luxury, as prince he has to be better and learn faster than his peers,
tackling problems without any help. One such problem involves his increasingly
complicated feelings for his new companion, Hephaistion.
When Alexandros and Hephaistion go to study under the
philosopher Aristoteles, their evolving relationship becomes even harder to
navigate. Strength, competition, and status define one’s fate in their world—a
world that seems to have little room for the tenderness growing between them.
Alexandros is expected to command, not to crave the warmth of
friendship with an equal. In a kingdom where his shrewd mother and sister are
deemed inferior for their sex, and his love for Hephaistion could be seen as
submission to an older boy, Alexandros longs to be a human being when everyone
but Hephaistion just wants him to be a king.
About the series
Dancing with the Lion
Alexandros is expected to
command, not to crave the warmth of friendship with an equal. In a kingdom
where his shrewd mother and sister are deemed inferior for their sex, and his
love for Hephaistion could be seen as submission to an older boy, Alexandros longs
to be a human being when everyone but Hephaistion just wants him to be a king.
About Jeanne Reames
Jeanne Reames has been scribbling fiction since 6th
grade, when her “write a sentence with this vocabulary word” turned into
paragraphs, then into stories…and her teacher let her get away with it—even
encouraged her! But she wears a few other hats, too, including history
professor, graduate program chair, and director of the Ancient Mediterranean
Studies Program at her university. She’s written academic articles about
Alexander and ancient Macedonia, and does her best to interest undergrads in
Greek history by teaching them (et al.) to swear in ancient Greek.
On Facebook: facebook.com/jeanne.reames.3
On Instagram: instagram.com/jeannereames
On Twitter: twitter.com/DrReames
Giveaway
One lucky person will win a $10 voucher for
Riptide. But this giveaway also
includes something much more personal:
Your very own SCENE.
I’ve committed to write, for the give-away
winner, a scene of her/his/their choice.
Would you like to see X scene described from a
different character’s POV (point-of-view)?
Or would you like to know what happened just
before X scene, or right after?
Or maybe there’s something I didn’t write about at all, but you’d
like me to write it for you?
There are some parameters, especially for the
third category (write a scene not included). The request is subject to my
agreement that the characters would engage in the requested behavior. So keep
that in mind. (I wouldn’t write a scene wherein Alexander beat his dog, for
instance.)
But I look forward to the winner’s scene
challenge!
I have some “cuts scenes” as well as “missing
scenes” (in the year between the novels) that will be available on my website (https://jeannereames.net/Dancing_with_the_Lion/cut_scenes.html) after July 1st
When done, this one will join them.
Each tour stop is a chance to enter by leaving a comment below. Entries close at midnight, Eastern time, on June 6, 2019. Contest is NOT restricted to U.S. entries. Thanks for following along, and don’t forget to leave your contact info!
Comments
jlshannon74 at gmail.com
Jeanne
humhumbum AT yahoo DOT com