Amanda Lees

Amanda Lees

About

I'm an author of adult, young adult and children's fiction and non-fiction.  I'm also an actress, screenwriter, journalist & broadcaster. So many hats to wear and I love them all!

Intersection

Intersection

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Description

<p>FBI agent Alexis Toles is dispatched to New Rochelle, New York, to investigate threatening letters sent to Congressman Christopher O’Brien, and to protect his ex-wife, Cassidy, and six-year-old son, Dylan. But when she gets to New Rochelle, Alex discovers that there is more to the situation than simple stalking or political agendas; she finds that she has growing romantic feelings for Cassidy—and that the feelings are mutual.</p><p>As Alex and Cassidy explore their budding romance, they must surmount many obstacles in explaining their relationship to those around them, including Dylan. All the while, the investigation continues, and the disturbing, convoluted, and complicated web surrounding the threats begins to unravel, placing the characters’ lives in grave danger.</p><p><i>Intersection</i> is a taut political thriller that combines the action and suspense found in hit television shows like <i>24</i> with the insight and drama found in the widely popular fiction of LGBT authors such as R. E. Bradshaw and Stacey D’Erasmo. It is sure to appeal to fans of intrigue, mystery, and romance, and to provide positive role models for marginalized groups and relationships.</p>

Story Behind The Book

KUMARI Goddess of Gotham was written as a tribute to my mum, who died a couple of months before I got the idea for a series which would reflect my own exotic upbringing. I wanted to celebrate an extraordinary person and an incredible life. I was born in Hong Kong to parents who indulged a thirst for travel and adventure which I have inherited. My father had spent many years in India and Nepal before meeting my mother in the middle of a steamy jungle in Borneo. I wanted to write the kind of book that encompassed my heritage. The sort of book I would have loved as a child and, indeed, an adult. This is a book that takes big themes and explores them with humour but also pathos. As someone who was sent to boarding school and hated it, it reflects that sense I always felt of being an outsider trying to fit in. As I wrote Kumari, I fell in love with her. She's gutsy and determined but also sensitive and all too fallible. I wanted her to epitomise the girls I see around me - young girls who are not afraid to take on the world on their terms and win through despite everything. Of course there are large parts of the thirteen year old me in her (and I'm not saying which parts!) but she's forever destined to be a creature apart and that is both her tragedy and her triumph.

Reviews

<p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">‘A magnificent debut full of wit and humour…If you were to put a kingdom beyond the world, Manhattan, a goddess-in-training and a pet vulture you wouldn’t think there would be a story to be told.  Well you’d be wrong.  Amanda Lees has drawn these supposedly disparate elements together into something that really has more than a little something.  It’s wild, it’s wacky, it’s frightening and full of adventure. It’s an unmissable treat and the first in the Kumari trilogy.’ <em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;">Lovereading4Kids </span></strong></em></font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3"> </font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">‘The heroine of Amanda Lees’s unusual and colourful debut, Kumari, Goddess of Gotham, is, like all the best heroines, plunged into a situation of menace right from the very start of the book, and she spends the rest of the novel trying to fight her way out of it. Unlike the many other self-indulged New York teenagers who preen themselves as if they were goddesses, Kumari is the real thing - a goddess-in-training from a royal kingdom, where her mother has recently died and her only friend is a bedraggled baby vulture named Badmash.</font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">Kumari somehow finds herself in our world, the World Beyond, and is forced to adapt to strange buildings and odd people. Her initiation into modern American life is portrayed in a way that is both touching and funny - her first encounter with a burger, for instance, leaves her reeling in horror at the bread-like disc, with “yellow ooze spilling from its centre” and a side order of “pale strips, with some red sticky sauce”.</font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">Used to people in her palace wearing elegant saris and sandals, Kumari is placed in the hands of a motherly foster carer who resembles a “giant plum” with her hair a dazzling confection of twisted curls topped off with mauve tips.</font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">To make the unusual heroine appeal to today’s children, Lees cleverly allows her to pick up some of her new language from The Simpsons - with comic results - and ensures that she falls in love with a boy and has her first kiss.</font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">The contrast between Kumari’s world and our own provides the dramatic tension over the course of this powerful and touching novel about an outsider trying to fit in.”</font></span></p><p></p> <p><font size="3"><em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;">Vanessa Curtis, Glasgow Herald</span></strong></em><span style="font-family:Arial;"></span></font></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3"> </font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">Everyone should love this book……magical, different and has a baby vulture in it! What more could anyone require? I loved it! </font></span></p><p></p> <p><font size="3"><em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;">Sue Chambers, Waterstone’s</span></strong></em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;"></span></strong></font></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3"> </font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">‘An original mix of fantasy and reality. Kumari is a sweet, unusual and trend-setting new character.’ <em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;">Chicklish</span></strong></em></font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3"> </font></span></p><p></p> <p><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">‘Kumari is a great heroine - feisty and determined, but also sweet-natured and lovable and entertainingly fallible.’ <em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;">Write Away</span></strong></em></font></span></p><p></p> <p><em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;"></span></strong></em></p><p><font size="3"> </font></p> <p><em><span style="font-style:normal;font-family:Arial;"><font size="3">‘Kumari is a gutsy heroine riding an entertaining rollercoaster of life.’</font></span></em></p><p></p> <p><font size="3"><em><strong><span style="font-family:Arial;">Julia Eccleshare</span></strong></em><span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';"> </span></font></p>