
Author: Diana Rubino
Narrator: Anthony Lee
Length: 8 hours and 26 minutes
Publisher: The Wild Rose Press
Released: June 7, 2019
Genre: Paranormal Romance

Romance writer Mona Rossi's book sales are slipping. She needs new ideas and fast! Her vampire love, Fausto Silvius is a doctor aboard the Romanza, a luxury cruise ship. Holding a "Motion on the Ocean" writer's cruise sounds like a great idea. What better way to combine a career boost with romance? But they soon discover hunters on board who give chase to Fausto and his fellow vampires. While he longs to bring Mona into his world, how can he convince her to join him with fringe lunatics on the hunt? In the prime of her life she's not sticking her neck out for a shot at eternity.

Website⎮Twitter⎮Facebook


Website⎮Twitter

- Anne Hathaway as Mona Rossi
- Vincent Irizarry as Fausto Silvius
- Gwen Stefani as Teresa “Tessie” Lionetti
- James Franco as Quintus Silvius
- Michelle Pfeiffer as Zanna Jones
- Michael Caine as Royal Jones

All About Fausto Silvius, the Vampire Hero of A BLOODY GOOD CRUISE
Basics:
- Age: A youthful 534
- Birthplace: Rome, Italy
- Creature Type: Vampire
- Height: 6’ 1”
- Body Type: Well built and muscular
- Hair: Sapphire blue-black
- Eyes: Espresso Brown
- Occupation: Physician
- Currently Lives In: Lake Como, Italy
Personality:
- Traits: Compassionate, with a thirst for knowledge of cures for all ills, mental, physical and spiritual.
- Motivations: The desire to make people well again using my positive energy.
- Pet Peeves: Loud obnoxious commercials, rudeness in general, and greed.
- Philosophy on Living: Learn something new every day and don’t ruminate over what you can’t change.
- Five Things I Cannot Live Without: A peaceful sunrise, a 5-mile run, my family, my friends, and Mona.
Favorites:
- Food and Drink: Lasagna with garlic bread and a bottle of Bruno Giacosa Barbaresco Asili Riserva red—with Strufoli (honey balls) for dessert.
- Movies and TV Shows: All the Godfather movies, of course—and Goodfellas for some comic relief. Any movie starring Sophia Loren.
- Books: Biographies of the Caesars and cookbooks.
- Fashion: Jeans and golf shirts—to be comfortable. I don’t splurge on designer shoes because they pinch.
- Places to Travel: The Amalfi coast, the Italian Riviera, and Vienna, Austria.
- Other Interests and Pastimes: I play violin, piano, flute, I read all of Mona’s novels, and I sing opera arias in the shower.
Relationship Goals:
To marry and share my life with Mona because she is the love of my life.
More on Fausto, in his own words:
I’m a vampire, born in Rome, from a long line of vampires, dating back to ancient Rome. I inherited it, it’s genetic. I had no choice. I can trace my ancestry to ancient Rome. My ancestor, Cherubino, started a shipping enterprise. He landed on an island in the South Pacific and met a beautiful girl who was known to be named Olimpia. They fell in love right away, she wanted to get away from her abusive husband, so they agreed to escape, he’d rescue her. About 100 miles off shore, they got captured by pirates and their cargo was confiscated. They were being held prisoner in the hull of the pirate ship. They knew they might not come out of this alive, so they wanted to symbolize their eternal love for each other, to meet again in the next life, and for eternity. They couldn’t get married, so they drank each other’s blood to symbolize love and ultimate union. They thought this would unite their souls, and their souls would become one.
The pirates saw them doing this. They killed Cherubino, and one of the pirates, Javier, took Olimpia for his own. He made her drink his blood and vice versa, to pledge their everlasting union. They had a child, who always saw them do this. She married her husband and showed it to him. After a few hundred generations, the bloodline continued and the genes mutated, so that when someone from that bloodline falls in love, they have a need to feed from them.
It’s like the physical desire to have sex with them, but goes beyond that. The legend got passed down, and got distorted. Horror movies were created out of it. But only those of that bloodline know the real truth. They call them vampires, but they’re not like Dracula.
So, I’m undead. I was born during the Middle Ages in Rome. Rome too hot for me, so I moved to England during Mary Tudor’s time.
Over the centuries, our family tried to hide it, we were good Christians, etc. but had to drink blood. But we never want to bite anyone to get it. We don’t attack strangers, or drink from them directly. We just need the blood of whoever our soulmate is. So if we do bite their neck, it’s part of the sex act.
I’m proud of my ancestors, but know most people wouldn’t understand. I love the sea because of my ancestor Cherubino, who had the sea in his blood. I also rever Columbus, he’s my hero.
There are a lot of descendents from that bloodline. They keep in touch and some are very good friends. Some even intermarried. That makes it easy, they already know what they have to do.
Being a good citizen is important to me, but I want to stay close with my own kind. That’s why I became a doctor, a lot of us are doctors. I love to travel, so I took the job on the cruise line. I’m proud of my heritage, yet ashamed on some level. I want to have a noble profession.
But I’m a regular guy in that I have ordinary hobbies: I play violin, piano, flute, I read all of Mona’s novels, and I sing opera arias in the shower. I’m also frugal. The opposite of Mona. I don’t have to live in luxury.
I’m not adventurous, but marrying Lucrezia Borgia was the most dangerous thing I ever did. But I was in love with her, and as a young—well, relatively young—guy, of course I thought it would last forever. I should’ve done more asking around—after all, references on her were easy enough to get.
I’m the first to admit my faults, the number one fault being that I bottle up all my emotions, which is very un-Italian and unhealthy. But Mona has done a good job of bringing me out of my shell. She forced me to blow my top when the Vampire Ball Busters tried to torch my home…I did call the police and they got arrested, but I kept all my anger inside, until she urged me to yell and scream and throw things. I admit, it made me feel good for a while. So now when I get really aggravated or sad or even ecstatic about something, I let it all hang out. Even if I have to go into my private den and close all the doors and windows to have a good scream-fest.

Interview with Mona Rossi, heroine of A Bloody Good Cruise
By Diana Rubino
- If you have 2 hours free time tonight, what would you rather do? Why?
- Soak in my hot tub overlooking the Tuscany Hills with a chilled glass of Gianni Brunelli Brunello di Montalcino Riserva from right there in Tuscany. Fausto bought me a case of this for our one-year anniversary. It’s a deep ruby red with intense aromas of notes of leather and cherry. Upon sipping, you get an astringent taste. At $389 a bottle, I splurge when I sell a book—then I buy another bottle when the book sales hit the 1,000 copy mark.
- But when I can’t be so decadent I drink Beaujolais Nouveau, produced in the Beaujolais region of France. (sorry, Fausto, it’s not Italian.) It comes out once a year, and goes on sale the third Thursday of November. If you don’t get to a store in time, you can miss out. It sells out fast. Distributors deliver it to stores at 12:01 a.m. local time. I’ve seen people in line waiting for it. I’d do that for a Springsteen concert, but not for a bottle of wine!
- Yes, I’m a Springsteen fan, and that’s something else I’d do with two free hours—go to one of his shows or blast his CDs and dance like crazy. But along with the wine, I’d have Sinatra or Dean Martin playing in the background, with a vanilla candle. And if I’m feeling indulgent, I’ll bring three white chocolate truffles, and eat them fast so they don’t melt.
- What kind of books do you love to read? Why?
- The same kind of romances I write—suspense, where the heroine gets into one mess after another. I read out loud, it improves my diction for when I speak at writers’ conferences. I also like to browse cookbooks. I take a snapshot of the recipe in my head, then go and improvise.
- My favorite author is Linda Howard. She writes such pulse-pounding suspense. And I know this sounds hokey, but when I met Fausto, I began reading Anne Rice. Fausto and his family aren’t the same kinds of vampires she writes about, but it gave me some perspective. To me, the original book Dracula, by Bram Stoker, was scary as hell. But I do consider it one of my favorite books because it was so innovative. I never believed in vampires before that book, and look where I am now!
- I like to go to Goodreads to seek out new titles. I don’t read the reader reviews, though. Too many of them have misled me. I just read the book summary and make up my own mind.
- What is your stress buster?
- A Pilates class or watching my favorite shows while working out on the elliptical trainer—I watch comedy working out, certainly not the news—I want to bust stress, not increase it. I have DVDs of some classic sitcoms: I Love Lucy, the Dick Van Dyke Show, All in the Family, Seinfeld—and some live standup: Joan Rivers, Phyllis Diller, Richard Pryor, the pioneers, the greats. No comedians working the clubs today come close to those legends. Moving for an hour to comedy—or music—is the best way to relieve stress and work it all off. When not on the elliptical, I’ll get out my iPod, close the door, pull the shades and torch some calories dancing to my cardio mix—a scientifically engineered mix of songs that burn 450 calories—one of my warm up songs is Scream by Usher, one sprint song is Pump It by Black Eyed Peas, a recover song is Goin’ In by J.Lo, and a cool down song is Halo by BeyoncĂ©.
- What is your favorite food? What food do you seek when you’re sad, sort of a comfort food?
- Cheesecake made with cottage cheese—it’s healthy and low fat, and tastes every bit as good as ‘real’ cheesecake but much lighter. I also make honey balls, “Struffoli” which is a Christmas treat, but I make them year round. I added the recipe below. Every morning I make a healthy smoothie with almond milk, coconut milk, yogurt, either spinach or kale, cinnamon, and protein powder. If I use chocolate powder, I also add peanut butter. You can’t even taste the spinach or kale, but it does turn the smoothie green. I also do some creative things to oatmeal—top it with cinnamon or nutmeg. I make it with a green tea bag instead of plain water for a healthy boost.
- Describe yourself in one word.
- Determined.
- What makes you happy/sad/disappointed/frustrated/hopeful/angry? (Pick one)
- What makes me angry is intolerance. After I went through with Fausto and his family, I saw first-hand what someone different must go through to gain acceptance. I’m trying to change that by giving talks about vampires, explaining who we really are, so someday prejudice against us—and anyone else the ‘majority’ deems ‘different’ will be an ugly thing of the past.
- What are your wildest dreams/fantasies/kinks/quirks?
- My wildest dream is to live a week in Ancient Rome, as a Senator’s mistress.
- What do you most want out of life, and what’s its opposite?
- I most want social acceptance and its opposite is to disappear in the crowd, to be an ordinary citizen.
- What would you never say, do or think?
- I’d never insult someone just to show I’m better or smarter.
- I’d never let anyone boss me around.
- I’d never think I’m inferior to anyone because of my new status as a vampire.
- What are some of your faults?
- I’m too assertive at times. I still worry about what people think of me. I overcompensate to get them to accept and like me. I make a mess after cooking and don’t clean it up right away. This drives Fausto nuts. He’s a neat freak. Another fault that also drives him nuts is that I put off going to the doctor.
- Any new projects, work in progress?
- Since I joined the vampire world, I began writing The Dark Side, a vampire romance set during the War of 1812 Salem MA, about the (fictional) son of historical figure Deacon Brodie, a larger-than-life Scotsman who faked his own death in the 1700s.
- What is your advice to aspiring writers?
- Even though your first, second, third, or even fourth novel may never see print, not a word is wasted if it's considered a learning experience. I also believe that you must write from the heart, and your passion will shine through in your work. There are many roads to success, but patience is the best way.

Aug. 8th:
Viviana MacKade
The Book Junkie Reads . . .
KayBee's Bookshelf, A Literary Blog
Aug. 9th:
Valerie Ulmer | Romance Author
Lynn's Romance Enthusiasm
Aug. 10th:
Notes from 'Round the Bend
Readeropolis
Nesie's Place
Aug. 11th:
Jazzy Book Reviews
Momma Says To Read or Not to Read
Locks, Hooks and Books
Aug. 12th:
My Creatively Random Life
T's Stuff
Aug. 13th:
Dab of Darkness Book Reviews
Turning Another Page
Jazzy Book Reviews
From the TBR Pile
Aug. 14th:
Teatime and Books
Audiobook Fascination
The Book Addict's Reviews

➜Sign up as a host here
The post looks great! Thanks for hosting us! Diana
ReplyDelete