The Twin Jinn

The Twin Jinn and the Alchemy Machine Is Live

Sometimes I love my characters so much they deserve more than one book. I did that for my Isabel Long Mystery Seriesfor adults. And for a totally different writing and reading experience, I created the Twin Jinn Series for middle grade readers.

And exciting news: The Twin Jinn and the Alchemy Machine, the second book in the series, has a Feb. 26 release in Kindle and paperback on Amazon. Here’s the link.

I began writing the series when I lived in Taos, New Mexico, which is a magical place for many people. As a child, I got so much enjoyment going to our town’s library and choosing books to read. For a while, I was fixated on the Wizard of OzSeries. The author, L. Frank Baum, wrote fourteen, and as I recall, I got through many of them. Then there was the Mary Poppins Series by P. L. Travers. A book that caught my interest was The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett.And as a parent and a grandparent, I got to read many, many more.

So, I channeled that book-loving girl to create The Twin Jinn books.

In writing my own, I wanted to create magic beings who live among humans, which led me to genies or jinn, as I call them. I wanted the main characters to be twins — alas, in real life I wasn’t one. Jute and Fina Jinn, brother and sister, are 11 jinn years but 111 by human. They have special powers that include the ability to fly, cast spells, shrink and be invisible. They are at the age where it is time for their parents Elwin and Mira to intensify their training.

Oh, I should back up here to say like most jinn, the family had a master, in this case, a power-hungry man. Elwin and Mira found a way to escape, but he is desperate to get the family back. (My theory for this series is that every powerful and/or rich person has a jinni making that possible.)

I pictured Jute and Fina as kind beings. Being twin siblings, they are also competitive, especially when they play games like Finder. That’s when one invisible jinni tries to find another. (Wouldn’t that be fun?) The twins are curious, especially about the human world, and mischievous. Typically, Fina is the instigator like casting a spell on a mean boy, so he is stuck to the seat and floor in their classroom. They are supposed to keep their powers hidden. Tell that to the kids.

I loved the Jinn family so much that I wanted to plunk them into different situations.

In the first, The Twin Jinn at Happy Jack’s Carnival of Mysteries, the family hides in a traveling carnival’s show, where they put their magical powers to good use for an act.

In the second, The Twin Jinn and the Alchemy Machine, the family lives in a small town where Jute and Fina attend school. They create a machine that turns metal into gold for their science fair project. That book has a Feb. 26 release on Amazon.

In the third, The Twin Jinn in the Land of Enchantment, the family moves to a ranch in the Southwest. I hope to release that one perhaps this summer.

(For those wondering, yes I tried to entice publishers to take on the series. I even had an agent pitching it at one time. But like Fina, I became impatient to take that route anymore.)

And I am fortunate to have the artistic talents of my son Ezra Livingston, who created the illustrations for the books. They capture the books’ magic.

Again, here is the link for The Twin Jinn and the Alchemy Machine. Thank you if you come along for the next adventure.

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