Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Discover Bitroux: High Country today & Giveaway

 


Discover Bitroux: High Country by Jordan Harcourt-Hughes today and make sure to enter the tour wide giveaway as the author is giving a  randomly drawn winner will be awarded a $25 Amazon/BN gift card. The tour is sponsored by Goddess Fish Promotions and find all the tour stops HERE. Make sure to enteron other blog posts as well to up your chances of winning.


Talking with author Jordan Harcourt-Hughes:


What is your favorite ice cream flavor? 
Caramel. And possibly licorice. I don’t think people appreciate licorice as much as they should. Although admittedly, it is a very distinct flavor. I’m currently loving licorice-flavoured chocolate as well! 

Describe your writing space. I mostly write in cafes, actually. One day I’m going to attribute a book to all of the cafes and baristas who have kept me caffeinated in the early hours of the morning! 

What’s one of your biggest beefs in life? By far the thing I find most challenging is incongruence. I don’t like it when people aren’t incongruent in their actions and behaviour. You see this when people say one thing and then go and do something completely contradictory. Or, when people are saying one thing and their bodies are sending a different signal. I find it truly exhausting, and I wish humans didn’t feel the need to do it so much! 

Why do you think this kind of behavior is so prevalent? I think a lot of it is fear-based. People want to be seen to be doing the right thing, and saying the right thing, even when they don’t feel fully aligned with it. And, people can also be scared to be judged by others. So, we act in a way that won’t raise eyebrows, even when those actions aren’t in line with our personal values. 

How does this impact you in daily life? I find that I really gravitate to people with very little personal ‘noise’ around them.

This means that they say what they think and do what they say they are going to do.

This kind of congruence is, to me, very healthy.

I find it really joyful to have this kind of clarity when I’m engaging with someone, and it makes me feel very comfortable and relaxed.

 I don’t have to spend energy trying to read between the lines, and I’m not picking up on any dissonance – which is where there are mixed signals creating a confusing environment. 

How do you explore this in Bitroux? I wanted to explore a type of communication that doesn’t rely on words. That’s why I started looking at the potential of hahma current (a type of electricity in the books) as a conductor of frequency.

Then I started playing with the idea of different frequencies having the ability to carry particles of intelligence that can be intercepted and translated by our bodies. As we digest these particles, they make their way up through our subconscious, into our conscious awareness, as knowledge and insight.

In this way, data is processed in an individual way for everyone, and completely bypasses our logical brain – which is where so many of our judgement and control mechanisms sit.

I think that if we could be more intuitive in our communication with each other, we could also be more congruent, and less motivated by fear of what others think and fear of how we are being perceived. 

 


Bitroux: High Country

Author: Jordan Harcourt-Hughes

Genre: Science Fiction


If Merouac ever thought his life’s work would culminate in leading the metal workshops of the Transcontinental Railroad Project, he was sorely mistaken. 

 

Now, his true challenge lies in navigating the other-worldly abilities he’s only beginning to understand—abilities that allow him to tune metal to interdimensional frequencies.

 

While trying to be a guardian to his niece, Evra, he’s realising she may have more to teach him than he ever expected. At the same time, his decision to help an interdimensional race find refuge underground puts him at the centre of an even deeper mystery.

 

As reality reshapes itself around him, Merouac faces a growing realisation: the world of Ahm is on the brink of a profound transformation, and everything he thought he knew may soon be shattered.


 Excerpt One: 

There was something about that zone of quiet concentration. It was always somewhere in the middle of those quiet moments where the blue light of the Top Hats had started to appear at the edge of his gaze. It had always been hard to see the things directly in his sight; they shifted and moved and always seemed hazy and insubstantial. He wondered if, in those moments, he had drifted into the Maolfi state without realising it.  

 

He kept working. The surges of static came and went, heating his body, and then leaving, giving him a sense that his whole body was buzzing, vibrating. He kept moving, concentrating only on the wood. And things started to shift, but not in the way he had anticipated.  

 

Soon, two piles had been moved and Merouac was starting to feel a welcome feeling of tiredness. He contemplated leaving the last pile of wood for the morning but kept moving instead. Then, something sounded.  

 

He looked up. Nothing. Had anything made a noise at all? He felt sure he had heard something. All was still. What was it that he thought he had heard? Like someone or something was crashing through the trees, perhaps. He shook his head. Nothing unusual stirred, the flickering lights continued and below he could see hummers and their fluorescent markings shimmering in the trees.   

 

Then he realised. He hadn’t heard it. He’d felt it.  

 

He closed his eyes, tried to make his way to the place the Faurin called the Maolfi state. Kii had wanted him to find a place of deep listening. And perhaps what he was just starting to understand was, that you could listen with all your body, and feel sound in other ways than just noise. 

 

After a time, he opened his eyes again and saw spheres hovering in the air, full of something he couldn’t quite comprehend.  

 

Reaching out to touch them, they felt full and weighty and yet his hand could partially pass through them. They were not solid, and yet they were full. Like bubbles being blown by some invisible child, they formed and hung in the atmosphere.  

 

They grew larger, then fuzzier, then collapsed from their own weight, dripping a strange sentience that dispersed back into the atmosphere. Often, they formed again straight away, the same spheres, the same size and colour, the same weight, only to burst and disperse once again.  

 

Some of the smaller ones were only as large as his hand. Others, twice the size. And then hovering at greater height, larger spheres his whole body could have walked through. They shifted and mutated, formed and faded, pulsed and glowed. They were magical.   

 

‘This is different,’ he said out loud, and grinned.  

 

 

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AUTHOR Bio and Links: 

Jordan Harcourt-Hughes  is an abstract painter, writer and communications professional. She’s passionate about all aspects of creativity, life-long learning and personal wellbeing.  Over the last fifteen years she’s led, coached and developed creative professionals across the Asia-Pacific region.  

Jordan’s books, studio workshops, courses, coaching and resources are an invitation to explore the rich landscape of creative experiences open to all. 

High Country is Jordan’s second novel set in the world of Bitroux. 

Website: https://jordanharcourthughes.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jordaninthestudio/

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

 https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/10795591.Jordan_Harcourt_Hughes


5 comments:

Jordan Harcourt-Hughes said...

Thanks for having me on the blog!

Goddess Fish Promotions said...

We appreciate you featuring BITROUX today.

traciem said...

What does your writing process involve?

Sherry said...

I really like the cover.

Michael Law said...

This looks like a great read. Thanks for sharing.

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