Greetings, Friends! Today, I proudly bring you a virtual book launch! The book is called The Quest for Home, and it’s written by Jacqui Murray. This is a new genre for me, and I’m excited to share this with you. I hope you’ll enjoy reading about this book. An excerpt will be included.
Q & A:
I had the opportunity for a brief Q&A with Jacqui, and this is what she had to say.
1. This is part of a series. What’s that about?
The Man vs. Nature saga (which The Quest for Home and Crossroads trilogy are part of) delves into man’s ability to survive the unsurvivable, make decisions that could kill him, and makes plans contrary to his instincts. Most (all?) animals operate on an internal compass call instinct. Man has free will—the ability to reject our gut in favor of our intellect or heart.
2. How does the trilogy Dawn of Humanity tie into the trilogy Crossroads?
The first is about man’s life 1.8 million years ago and the second bumps forward to 850,000 years ago.
This sounds exciting!
Summary:
Chased by a ruthless and powerful enemy, Xhosa flees with her People, leaving behind her African homeland, leading her People on a grueling journey through unknown and perilous lands. As they struggle to overcome treachery, lies, danger, tragedy, hidden secrets, and Nature herself, Xhosa must face the reality that her most dangerous enemy isn’t the one she expected. It may be one she trusts with her life.
The story is set 850,000 years ago, a time in prehistory when man populated Eurasia. He was a violent species, fully capable of addressing the many hardships that threatened his survival except for one: future man, the one destined to obliterate any who came before.
Based on a true story, this is the unforgettable saga of hardship and determination, conflict and passion as early man makes his way across Eurasia, fleeing those who would kill him. He must be bigger-than-life, prepared time and again to do the impossible because nothing less than the future of mankind is at stake.
Book information:
Title and author: The Quest for Home by Jacqui Murray
Series: Book 2 in the Crossroads series, part of the Man vs. Nature saga
Genre: Prehistoric fiction
Available at: Kindle US Kindle UK Kindle CA Kindle AU
Author bio:
Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy, the Rowe-Delamagente thrillers, and the Man vs. Nature saga. She is also the author/editor of over a hundred books on integrating tech into education, adjunct professor of technology in education, blog webmaster, an Amazon Vine Voice, a columnist for NEA Today, and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics. Look for her next prehistoric fiction, In the Footsteps of Giants, Winter 2020, the final chapter in the Crossroads Trilogy.
Social Media contacts:
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Jacqui-Murray/e/B002E78CQQ/
Blog: https://worddreams.wordpress.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jacquimurraywriter/
LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/jacquimurray
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/askatechteacher
Twitter: http://twitter.com/worddreams
Website: https://jacquimurray.net
Excerpt:
Chapter 1
Northern shore of what we now call the Mediterranean Sea
Pain came first, pulsing through her body like cactus spines. When she moved her head, it exploded. Flat on her back and lying as still as possible, Xhosa blindly clawed for her neck sack with the healing plants. Her shoulder screamed and she froze, gasping.
How can anything hurt that much?
She cracked one eye, slowly. The bright sun filled the sky, almost straight over her head.
And how did I sleep so long?
Fractured memories hit her—the raging storm, death, and helplessness, unconnected pieces that made no sense. Overshadowing it was a visceral sense of tragedy that made her shake so violently she hugged her chest despite the searing pain. After it passed, she pushed up on her arms and shook her head to shed the twigs and grit that clung to her long hair. Fire burned through her shoulders, up her neck and down her arms, but less than before. She ignored it.
A shadow blocked Sun’s glare replaced by dark worried eyes that relaxed when hers caught his.
“Nightshade.” Relief washed over her and she tried to smile. Somehow, with him here, everything would work out.
Her Lead Warrior leaned forward. Dripping water pooled at her side, smelling of salt, rotten vegetation, mud, and blood.
“You are alright, Leader Xhosa,” he motioned, hands erratic. Her People communicated with a rich collection of grunts, sounds, gestures, facial expressions, and arm movements, all augmented with whistles, hoots, howls, and chirps.
“Yes,” but her answer came out low and scratchy, the beat inside her chest noisy as it tried to burst through her skin. Tears filled her eyes, not from pain but happiness that Nightshade was here, exactly where she needed him. His face, the one that brought fear to those who might attack the People and devastation to those who did, projected fear.
She cocked her head and motioned, “You?”
Deep bruises marred swaths of Nightshade’s handsome physique, as though he had been pummeled by rocks. An angry gash pulsed at the top of his leg. His strong upper arm wept from a fresh wound, its raw redness extending up his stout neck, over his stubbled cheek, and into his thick hair. Cuts and tears shredded his hands.
“I am fine,” and he fell silent. Why would he say more? He protected the People, not whined about injuries.
When she fumbled again for her neck sack, he reached in and handed her the plant she needed, a root tipped with white bulbs. She chewed as Nightshade scanned the surroundings, never pausing anywhere long, always coming back to her.
The sun shone brightly in a cloudless sky. Sweltering heat hammered down, sucking up the last of the rain that had collected in puddles on the shore. Xhosa’s protective animal skin was torn into shreds but what bothered her was she couldn’t remember how she got here.
“Nightshade, what happened?”
Her memories were a blur—terrified screams and flashes of people flying through the air, some drowning, others clinging desperately to bits of wood.
Nightshade motioned, slowly, “The storm—it hit us with a fury, the rain as heavy and fierce as a waterfall.”
A memory surfaced. Hawk, the powerful leader of the Hawk People, one arm clutching someone as the other clawed at the wet sand, dragging himself up the beach.
He was alive!
It was Hawk who offered her People a home when they had none, after more than a Moon of fleeing for their lives through lands so desolate, she didn’t know how anyone survived. Finding Hawk and his People, she thought she’d found a new homeland.
Her last hunt with Hawk flashed through her mind—the stone tip they created like the Big Head’s weapon, how she had hung by her ankles from a tree trunk to cross a deep ravine. How he grinned when she reached the other side, chest heaving but radiant with satisfaction. He told her many of his warriors shook with fear as they crossed. His pride in her that day glowed like flames at night.
For the first time in her life, she felt Sun’s warmth inside of her.
She looked around, saw quiet groups huddled together, males talking and females grooming children. Pan-do bent over a child, whispering something in her ear but no Hawk.
Where is he? But she didn’t ask Nightshade. The last time she’d seen the two together, they had fought.
She couldn’t imagine a world without Hawk. They had planned to pairmate, combine their groups into one so strong no one could ever again drive her away. She hadn’t known there were enemies worse than Big Heads until Hawk told her about the Ice Mountain invaders. They attacked Hawk’s People long before Xhosa arrived. Hawk had killed most and chased the rest back to their home, icy white cliffs that extended from Sun’s waking place to its sleeping nest, bereft of plants and animals. When he saw where they lived, he understood why they wanted his land.
The children of those dead invaders grew up and wanted revenge.
Someone moaned. She jerked to find who needed help and realized it was her. She hoped Nightshade didn’t hear.
He glanced at her and then away. “All the rafts were destroyed.”
She shook, trying to dislodge the spider webs in her brain. Hawk’s homebase was squashed between a vast stretch of open land and an uncrossable pond. They should have been safe but the Ice Mountain invaders attacked in a massive horde. Her People—and Hawk’s—were driven into the water. The rafts became their only escape. Floating on a log platform to the middle of a pond too deep to walk across was something no one had ever done but they must or die. The plan was the rafts would carry the People to safety, away from the Invaders.
That hadn’t worked.
“There were too many enemy warriors, Xhosa,” and Nightshade opened and closed his hands over and over to show her. “More than I have ever seen in one place.”
Images of warclubs slashed through her thoughts, flying spears, the howls of warriors in battle. Many died, beaten until they stopped moving, children dragged screaming from mothers. The giant female—Zvi—sprinting faster than Xhosa thought someone her size could, the children El-ga and Gadi in her arms, a spear bouncing off her back. Her size stunned the enemy, immobilized them for a breath which gave Zvi the time she needed to reach safety.
Almost to himself, Nightshade motioned, “I’ve never seen him this brave.”
Xhosa didn’t understand. “Him?” Did he mean Zvi?
“Pan-do. His warriors attacked. They saved us.” Nightshade locked onto the figure of Pan-do as he wandered among the bedraggled groups, settling by an elder with a gash across his chest and began to minister to the wound.
“I remember,” Xhosa murmured. When the People were trapped between the trees and the water, prey waiting to be picked off, Pan-do’s warriors pounced. That gave Xhosa precious time to push the rafts out onto the water. It seemed none of the enemy knew how to swim. Pan-do sliced through the Ice Mountain invaders without fear, never giving ground.
Nightshade motioned, “He isn’t the same Leader who arrived at our homebase, desperate for protection, his People defeated.”
Xhosa’s hands suddenly felt clammy. “Is Lyta alive?”
Since the death of his pairmate, before Xhosa met him, Pan-do’s world revolved around his daughter, Lyta. He became Leader of his People to protect her. When he arrived at the People’s homebase, Lyta stood out, unusual in an otherwise homogenous group. First, it was her haunting beauty, as though she shined from within, her hair as radiant as Sun. Awe turned to shock when she walked, her gait awkward on malformed feet. She should have been destroyed as a child but Pan-do said he had never considered it. He explained that in Moons of migration, before joining Xhosa’s People, Lyta had never slowed them down. He didn’t expect that to change if the two groups traveled together.
And then she spoke. Her voice was like bird’s song and a gift to People exhausted from the day’s work. It cheered up worried adults and put smiles on the faces of children, its melodic beauty convincing them that everything would work out.
It was more than a Moon after his arrival before Pan-do told Xhosa what he valued most about his daughter. Lyta could see truth simply by watching. No one could hide a lie from her, and she never hid it from her father. Pan-do kept it secret because the people it threatened might try to silence her. He only told Xhosa because Lyta had witnessed a conversation about a plan to kill Xhosa.
One of the people Lyta didn’t recognize but the other, he was someone Xhosa trusted.
When Nightshade nodded, Yes, Lyta lives, Xhosa relaxed but only for a moment.
“Sa-mo-ke?”
Nightshade nodded toward a group of warriors. In the middle, eyes alert and hands energetic, stood Sa-mo-ke.
She sighed with relief. Pan-do’s Lead Warrior was also Nightshade’s greatest supporter outside of the People. When he first arrived, Sa-mo-ke spent Moons mimicking her Lead Warrior’s fighting techniques until his skill became almost as formidable as Nightshade’s with one critical difference. While Nightshade liked killing, Sa-mo-ke did so only when necessary.
Nightshade motioned, “Escape came at a tremendous cost, Xhosa. Many died, the rafts were destroyed, and we are now stranded in an unfamiliar land filled with nameless threats.”
It doesn’t matter, she whispered to herself. We are good at migrating.
She jerked her head around, and then motioned, “Where’s Spirit?”
The loyal wolf had lived with people his entire life. He proved himself often while hunting, defending his packmates, and being a good friend. An image flitted across her mind, Spirit streaking toward the rafts, thrusting his formidable body like a spear through the shocked hordes. The enemy had never seen an animal treat People as pack. Then, the wolf swimming, paws churning the water into whitecaps, gaze locked onto Seeker. Endless Pond was too deep for him to touch the bottom so his head bobbed up and down, feet paddling like a duck’s as he fought to stay above the surface.
Nightshade gestured, “The attackers almost killed Spirit.”
She bit her lip, concentrating. “I remember Mammoth’s trumpets.”
The rare hint of a smile creased his mouth. “Another of Pan-do’s tricks. It saved Spirit and probably all of us. He brayed like a herd of Mammoth thundering toward the shoreline. The invaders fled for their lives.”
Pan-do is clever.
Nightshade grimaced. “But the storm worsened and the rafts foundered. Many of the People managed to cling to logs long enough to crash onto this shore. Then, they saved others. But many died.”
He opened and closed his hands to show how many.
A stillness descended as Nightshade’s gaze filled with a raw emotion he never showed. It shook Xhosa. Nothing frightened her Lead Warrior.
She gulped which hurt her insides. Shallow breaths worked better. Rolling to her hands and knees, she stood which made her head swim and she threw up.
Finally, the dizziness subsided and Xhosa asked, “Hawk?”
Nightshade peered around, hands fidgeting. He examined something on the ground, toed it with his foot. “When the tempest destroyed the rafts, he dragged many to shore, to safety. The last time, he did not return. I tried to find him.”
Soundless tears dampened her face. Nightshade touched her but Xhosa focused on a trail of ants and a worm burrowing into the soft earth. Her vision dimmed and she stumbled, fell, and then crawled, happy for the pain that took her mind off Hawk. When she forced herself up, everything blurred but she inhaled, slowly, and again, until she could finally see clearly.
How dare Hawk die! We had plans. Xhosa shoved those thoughts away. Later was soon enough to deal with them.
“His People—do they know?”
Notes:
Thank you so much, Jacqui, for allowing me to take part in this exciting time, and to share this wonderful book with my readers! And, last but not least, congratulations!
Thank you, Friends, for reading, liking, lurking, and commenting,
Discover more from Kymber @booomcha.com
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Thank you for sharing such a great attention setter and holder. Kymber Hawke I love the same books as you like in this trilogy.
Thank you so much. It’s lovely of you to stop by and comment. I hope you have a happy holiday season.
I really like these book blast things you’ve done. It’s introduced me to some stuff I never would have otherwise found. 🙂
I’m sorry I didn’t see this way back when you wrote it. How neglectful of me. ❤️ If you read this series, I’m sure you enjoyed it. 😀
Sounds exciting!
I think so, too.
Wonderful to find Jacqui Murray and her latest prehistoric fiction book on you blog today! Thanks for sharing… I’ve got both books on my kindle and sure look forward to delving into our prehistoric past…
Thank you, Bette. I am so excited that I got to share this on my site. I can’t wait to delve into these books, too!
Thank you Kymber for introducing me to this book. It’s my kinda story and I definitely will be searching for my copy very soon. I enjoy history a lot. I’m weird like that. Prehistory is even more fascinating because we know so little and discover new things about our ancient heritage every day that give us insights into the way we lived and what our environment was like.
Thank you so much. I’m glad you think you’d like to read this book. I can’t wait to get started on this trilogy! I love history, too, but never considered prehistory much. I agree with you that it must be more fascinating.
After we finish taking over the world, we should become adventure archeologists. I’ll bet Cesare would like that as long as we didn’t interrupt his naps. 😁
Yes, Cesare and I are so with you on this! 😀 Cesare has agree to forgo one of his shorter naps to accommodate us if need be.
I am thrilled beyond words. This is going to be a great adventure and Cesare is a real trooper who is no stranger to noble self sacrifice for the good of his humans. No wonder his army of chickmonks and squirrels adore him. Ok, now which archaeological mystery does Cesare want to solve first?
All good points about Cesare! Well, I wanted to possibly go to Roanoke and figure out what happened to Virginia Dare. But, Cesare has heard of Easter Island, and he insists there are chocolate bunnies there. He’s much too intrigued to let this go.
At least I’ll have Jacqui’s books to read on the way there. 🙂
Oh yes indeedy, Kymber. Easter Islands are indeed a mystery that gives up its secrets with tiny morsels of chocolate bunny and old bones. We can fly our ultralight planes down to Huasco Chile and land on the soccer field at Stadium Guacolda. What a grand entry that would be with Cesare in his Grand Marshal uniform and we in our best Indiana Jones apparel. I think we should overnight and explore the Rio Huasco near by and see if we find and ancient relics of indeterminable value. Next we can set sail to the eastern shore of Easter Island and make landfal at Moaï where yhe stone giants will greet us. I offer that we should return to Huasco, mount our ultralight steeds and make our way to Ronoke where my sources say we need to further explore the deep forest east of the settlement. It is rumored Virginia Dare took up residence in a Block House, a small fort offering early warning to the settlers. Virginia was a feisty one, and she would not stay home to darn socks when there was sneaky Frenchmen about pestering the village. I have a compass. Do you have a pocket knife?
No, but I have toenail clippers. Will that work? 😀
LoL! Definitely, every good explorer should have toenail clippers. I have an extra pocket knife for you. It’s one of those that has all kinds of cool little tools. You never know when you may need to saw your way out of a bamboo forest and it has a little saw blade just for that reason. 🤠
Excellent! And, thank you! You know, I’ll probably get distracted by all the tools. I can’t wait to try them out. Cesare wields a mean machete, so at least we have that, too.
I think we have this totally under control. Those little Swiss Army Knives make awesome fidget tools and with Cesare on the machete, what could possibly go wrong? Oh wait, I need to find my canteen…🤠
Oh, yes, the canteen. Perhaps we should make a list. But, then, that doesn’t sound like much fun. Cesare already has his explorer’s outfit picked out, and the hat looks real smart on him.
You are so right about the planning part. When one plans to excess it is an expedition not an adventure. The fun of adventure is to rely on your intuitive skills to use the resources at hand. I am so pleased with Cesare’s willing accompaniment. He’ll be a dashing figure to the local indigenous people. Who could be wary of us with Cesare at our side to win the hearts and minds of the people. I’ll meet the two of you at the aerodrome Monday morning. After donuts and coffee with an ample share of catnip, we’ll be off in our ultralights to Easter Island. Tallyhooooooo…..
Sounds like the best plan ever! 😀
Ha ha ha haaa! At work we say, “no plan is a good plan.”
Words to live by, I say. 😀
Indeed, I think I have lived by it like an ancient chickmonk mantra 😂
I knew we were meant to be friends. haha 😂😂
We true INFJ’s find each other like shelter in a storm. That’s when mind reading becomes normal. 🦹🏻♂️🦹♀️
I’m sure you’re right about that. 😀
That would probably make Cesare a little nervous if he thought we could read his mind too. Cats keep a lot of secrets.
That they do. I shudder to think what he would even say if he could speak hooman. Not that he would ever lower himself to speak our language. 😀
Waaa haaa haaa! Cats are a prideful being. I’m sure it’s because they lived with royalty in the past. It’s probably why they call them Aristocats. 😉
Yes, I’m sure you’re right. But if you ask Cesare, he will say HE is descended from royalty. 😀
LOL 😆 after centuries of heritage among the royal houses, I guess Cesare IS royalty. I’m sure he recieves the royal treatment regardless of his pedigree.
Oh, yes, he wouldn’t have it any other way. 🙂 His wish is my command.
A labor of love, no doubt. I can see in Cesare’s contented face where he approves your posts, that he stays very close to Cat Nervana. A clever and content commander among his army of subordinates who love and admire him.
You should have seen the fierce beastie yesterday, chasing his feather toy. Luckily, he is able to vanquish enemies quickly, and for good. 😀 Then, he returns to his nirvana state.
Clearly Cesare is a Master of fierce catlery. He could teach us a lot about conserving energy too 🤔
He could teach us so much, but he refuses until we figure out how to give him thumbs. He just won’t be reasonable about that request. lol
Hmmmm, I think we can get him a pair of bio-thumbs made for his size.
That would be perfect! I think he’ll love that.
Thank you so much for your warm welcome, Kymber. I’m honored to be invited despite my lack of a Sim! I look forward to chatting with your community.
Thank you so much, Jacqui. Not having a sim is no problem around here. There are others like you. 😀 lol I’m so glad we got to do this!