Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Win-A-Book Wednesday with...

Posted by: Jax Garren

Angela Korra'ti (and Highland)

The Author

The very first thing Angela ever wrote, at age 8, was a short story about a girl spirited away to rule over the leprechauns for a day. She progressed rapidly to pretending to take notes in class when she was actually writing novels, and writing fanfic before she had any idea what fanfic was! Music has been a part of her life almost as long, thanks to six years playing flute and piccolo in school band and an adulthood dabbling in flute, guitar, bouzouki, and mandolin. In anything she writes, music is likely to make an appearance.

Angela (Anna the Piper to her friends) lives in Kenmore, Washington, along with her partner and housemate, two cats, and a whole heck of a lot of computers and musical instruments. Despite the fact that she is a mild-mannered former employee of a major metropolitan newspaper, rumors that she is a superhero are exaggerated. (Even if she did pull the door off a refrigerator.)

Under the name of Angela Korra'ti, she writes the Free Court of Seattle series (Book 1, Faerie Blood, is available now). As Angela Highland, she writes the Rebels of Adalonia trilogy, now available from Carina Press. Valor of the Healer is available now, and Book 2, Vengeance of the Hunter, will be released in April of 2014.


Official website: angelahighland.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/angelahighlandauthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/annathepiper


The Book

The Rook: An assassin hired by vengeful elven rebels to kill the calculating Duke of Shalridan, Julian walks into a trap and barely escapes with his life. Healed by a beautiful captive in the dungeons, he’s enthralled and vows to free her from the duke’s clutches.
The Hawk: A Knight of the Hawk duty-bound to cleanse elven magic from Adalonia, Kestar has a secret—and heretical—ability to sense the use of magic from afar. He knows something suspicious is happening in the duke’s keep, but he has no idea how deep the conspiracy goes.
The Dove: A half-elven healer with no control over her magic, Faanshi is the goddess’s to command. She’s always been a pawn of the powerful, but after healing two mysterious and very different men, she faces a choice that may decide the fate of the whole kingdom…
Valor of the Healer has roots that stretch clear back into my high school days, when I was hand-writing stories in class! The stories I wrote then eventually became the backstory for a tale I first worked on in 1998, when I wrote the first scene for a story I was at the time going to call Lone Hawk’s Flight. Then in 1999, I joined an online game called AetherMUSH, where I played the first incarnations of both Julian and Faanshi. In 2003, I started work on the very first draft of a novel called Lament of the Dove. And in 2012, the sixth draft of that novel got me my offer from Carina Press.

I’m very proud to now offer a copy of Valor of the Healer in EPUB or PDF format to this week's winner. Book 2 of the trilogy, Vengeance of the Hunter, will be coming out in April 2014. So now would be a really good time to read Book 1! Good luck to all who enter!

Monday, December 9, 2013

Here Be News

Posted by: Unknown
Here Be Magic Group Announcements


WRECK OF THE NEBULA DREAM by Veronica Scott has been selected as a Second Place winner in the annual Laurel Wreath Awards. Often referred to as "Titanic in space" in reviews, the novel is loosely based on the sinking of the Titanic,  but set in the far future on a luxury spaceliner. WRECK OF THE NEBULA DREAM also received an SFR Galaxy Award earlier in 2013.

Here's the story:
Traveling unexpectedly aboard the luxury liner Nebula Dream on its maiden voyage across the galaxy, Sectors Special Forces Captain Nick Jameson is ready for ten relaxing days, and hoping to forget his last disastrous mission behind enemy lines. He figures he’ll gamble at the casino, take in the shows, maybe even have a shipboard fling with Mara Lyrae, the beautiful but reserved businesswoman he meets.
All his plans vaporize when the ship suffers a wreck of Titanic proportions. Captain and crew abandon ship, leaving the 8000 passengers stranded without enough lifeboats and drifting unarmed in enemy territory. Aided by Mara, Nick must find a way off the doomed ship for himself and several other innocent people before deadly enemy forces reach them or the ship’s malfunctioning engines finish ticking down to self destruction.
But can Nick conquer the demons from his past that tell him he’ll fail these innocent people just as he failed to save his Special Forces team? Will he outpace his own doubts to win this vital race against time?
The book is available: Smashwords  Amazon Barnes & Noble All Romance eBooks iTunes
Audiobook Version, narrated by Actor Michael Riffle – Available Now at Amazon and iTunes

Win-A-Book Wednesday Winner

Congratulationss to Linda, the winner of Drynn from last week's Win-a-Book Wednesday! Steve Vera will be contacting you soon about your prize.

This Wednesday we'll have another mystery giveaway; stop by for more chances to win!

Free for the next two weeks:

Ellora's Cavemen, Flavors of Ecstasy, Vol.II, featuring Trapped, a sci-fi romance by Cindy Spencer Pape.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Top 5 Holiday Gifts For The Writer in Your Life

Posted by: Sonya
Have a writer in your life? Don't know what to get them for a holiday gift? Here's a few simple ideas:

1. Books - because we wouldn't be writers if we didn't love books. Books in our genre, books in other genres, fiction or non-fiction, hardback, mass market paperback, trade paperback, digital, books for entertainment, books for reference and research, books to make us jealous and strive to be a better writer, books that soothe, books that challenge, books that make us say why didn't I think of that, books, books, books!

2. Office supplies - because we never have enough post-it notes, or pens, or printer paper, or ink, or notebooks, or those little flag thingies you use to mark pages in reference books, or, well, anything. We always need more.

3. Booze - because our lives are full of rejection, financial and professional insecurity, having to read about semi-literate celebrities getting seven figure book deals, and yet more rejection. And also because eggnog is really super tasty with a shot of peppermint schnapps. :)

4. A literary agent - this one is just for those of us who don't have one.

5. Readers - the main thing we want is for readers to buy our books. For themselves, for their friends and family, our latest release, our entire backlist. The main thing we want, the people we do this for, is readers.

Any other gift ideas for writers? Tell me, writer friends, what do *you* want for the holidays?

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Cookies!

Posted by: Shawna Thomas
This time of year, my mind doesn’t immediately turn to decorations or gift buying (or getting). I’m not thinking turkey or ham or holiday traffic. My thoughts turn toward cookies. I love to bake. Cake, pie, cookies, you name it. I find it therapeutic. Cookies are my go-to dessert because they’re fast easy and there are so many varieties... which leads me back to why thoughts go to cookies at this time of year.

Christmas cookies.


It’s like an excuse to bake as much as I want, as often as I can, and try as many varieties as possible. I can rarely leave a recipe alone. I like to experiment. What if I added coconut... chocolate, etc.  I have my favorites, and those varieties requested by friends and family, but I love to try out new varieties every year.  I bake them for friends, neighbors, family, and this year I’m even selling them.

I think it would be awesome to participate in a giant cookie exchange, but as that’s kind of problematic, how about an informal cookie recipe exchange?



I’ll give you my favorite sugar cookie recipe and if you have a favorite recipe, post them in the  comments.

 I’ve always loved sugar cookie dough, but this one... the cookies are good without frosting.

½ cup butter, room temperature
4 oz cream cheese, room temperature
1 cup white sugar
1 egg
½ tsp almond extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
½ tsp baking powder

Cream together cream cheese, butter and sugar. Blend until smooth. Add egg and vanilla extract. Mix. Add flour and baking powder and blend together.

Divide the dough in half and wrap in plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least one hour. (I’ve refrigerated overnight with no problem)

Take half of the dough and roll it to a ¼ inch thick on a well-floured surface. Cut out the cookies and bake them at 350 for 6 to 10 minutes or until golden brown.  (Cooking time depends a lot on what shape you choose for your cookie) If you don’t like the taste of almond, substitute vanilla.

Cool and frost or decorate as you desire.

Let me know what you think of the cookies! I will check the comments and try your recipes too. I may just pick one I like the best and send you a batch of my famous—in my family anyway—lemon cookies. Because who doesn’t love getting cookies?

Not only is my mind full of cookie thoughts,  I’m celebrating my upcoming release, Journey of Wisdom, which is the third book in the Triune Stones series. I don’t think Ilythra ever made a cookie in her life, but she’d probably eat one or two.


Journey of Wisdom comes out December 30th, just in time for New Year’s reading!

So please, leave your favorite recipe or a link to your favorite recipe in the comments below!

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Win-A-Book Wednesday with...

Posted by: Jax Garren


Steve Vera


Afflicted with wanderlust at the age of seventeen, Steve has lived in seven states, served briefly in the U.S. Air Force as a Pararescue Trainee, and has a profound aversion to mint chocolate chip ice cream.

During the dark times of adolescence, instead of stealing cars with his miscreant friends, Steve turned to the world of novels and fantasy epics as his escape. His lifelong dream, since fifth grade, was to conjure worlds and whisk people away, just as others had done for him.

He currently straddles two worlds—one foot in his hometown of Elmwood, CT, the other in Sunnyside, Queens, NYC. He has a great, fat, good-for-nothing but entirely lovable planet of a cat—The Jetes, who is a welcome distraction…most of the time.

Drynn...


The heroes of two worlds, Earth and Earth’s magical twin Theia, reluctantly join forces to fight the Lord of the Underworld.

And just who are these heroes? In this corner, representing Earth is Skip Walkins, former Philadelphia detective and Air Force Special Operations Commando and present police chief of Rolling Creek, Montana (mad cheering); and in this corner, representing Theia, five of the baddest warriors ever to walk either world—the magic-wielding, sword-swinging, Shardyn Knights (more mad cheering). To make things a little more chaotic, throw in one reforming sociopath: Donovan Smith, the rogue demi-god who unwittingly opened the grave in the first place and released the Lord of the Underworld. Together, this triad of heroes must not only survive Asmodeous’s wrath, but they must stop him from returning home to Theia and enslaving his world to feed on. Of course, our heroes will have to not kill each other first.


Praise for Drynn, Book I of the Last of the Shardyn:


“Reads like vintage Dean Koontz—fast-paced and suspenseful.” –DD Barant, author of The Bloodhound Files series.

“A deep gripping story that tickles the reader with This. Just. Might. Someday. Happen…”—Linnea Sinclair, author of the Dock Five Universe series.

Hello, friends!

Steve here. The Last of the Shardyn trilogy has been peculating in my mind since high school. It's the story I've always wanted to read but could never find, no matter how many libraries, book stores, or garage sales I scoured. Book II, Through the Black Veil was just released by Carina Press on Nov. 25th, 2013. What better way to kick off the trilogy than to offer Book I, Drynn, on Win-A-BookWednesday?? Good luck contenders! Hope you love it.

Steve out.

Twitter: www.twitter.com/stevewvera
Facebook: http://goo.gl/iSVY3

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Writing for that long-ago me

Posted by: David Bridger
I'm looking at a photograph of me, aged eight, with my mother and sisters. Dad had died three years earlier, leaving us to live on in genteel poverty. When I was seven Mum moved us to Wallasey Village, where a line of her family had lived for hundreds of years, and we made our home there.



My parents had taught me to read before I started school, and after Dad died during my first frozen winter term I immersed myself in books. My infant school teacher was Mrs Woods, a wonderful woman who cared for the clever little boy who'd suffered such a terrible blow. I loved her. It was a good school where I was cocooned emotionally and stretched mentally. I was safe within a small group of warm friends in real life, and a big group of adventurous friends in the worlds of my books. It was the best place I could have been for those first two years.

Not so the school I moved to at seven. Wallasey Village was a snobby little place in those days, and St George's Primary School was run accordingly. They ignored my glowing report from the infant school, refusing to believe that establishment could possibly meet their high standards, and they ignored my mother because she was a penniless young widow with zero social clout. Classes in St George's were streamed in four levels of ability, from A to D, and they placed me in the D class to observe me and decide for themselves exactly how able this supposedly clever boy actually was.

I made friends in that class. It was almost like a holiday for me, unaware as I was of the small town snobbery shaping my life and my mother's seething fury about it. We played a lot, and painted. I read, of course. Mrs Williams was a pleasant teacher and I was happy with my new friends.

For four weeks. That's how long it took whoever made those decisions to pluck me from my new cocoon and drop me into the cold, hostile, alien atmosphere of Mrs Midgely's class in the B stream. Not the A stream. I had an A stream brain, but a poor boy from a scruffy infant school in another town didn't belong in St George's A stream. So Mrs Midgely's class it was. And she was a monster.

Four weeks earlier, at the very beginning of their junior school careers, my new classmates had started learning the times tables. I hadn't. D stream classes didn't do them. I didn't know what they were and before Mum had a chance to start teaching me quickly, Mrs Midgely seized upon my inability in order to prove to everyone concerned that I didn't belong in her class. She humiliated me every day, in public, at the front of the class. Times tables were chalked on a big rolling board and she made me spend my lunchtimes alone in there, standing right up against the board to learn those tables while everyone else was playing right outside the classroom windows.

I learned my tables fast, but she'd marked my card and the rest of that school year was a hell of verbal assaults and public humiliations, as befitting the scum she'd decided I was.

The other kids were already cowed by her. No moral support there for me. They were only little children. I remember kind, sympathetic smiles from a girl named Fiona, who I think I sat next to for a while, but most of that year's schooling was a traumatised blur for me.

I retreated into my books. Mum was worried sick about me. I don't remember her using the word depression, but if I'd have been one of my kids that's what I'd have been thinking. There was a narrow space in the living room between our upright piano and a warm air heating vent in the wall. I used to squeeze into that space with a book and a jam sandwich, and go somewhere else for hours of every day. Anywhere else. And then somewhere else again.

I got through it. We do, don't we? I never recovered academically to the point Mum had dreamed of for me, and my teenage years were as troubled and underachieving as you'd expect. English language and literature and art were easy. Everything else, not so much. But in my 20s, several years after I'd kicked the dust of Wallasey Village from my heels forever, I discovered the joy of numbers for myself and my mathematical studies enabled me to find pleasure in the sciences too. More importantly, I fell in love with a wonderful woman and we built a warm loving family together.

My books are for anyone who enjoys them. Including that sad, private, quiet, watchful little boy jammed in-between the piano and the wall with his head stuck in yet another story.

David Bridger's two recent YA releases are A Flight of Thieves & Damage Control.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Here Be News

Posted by: Unknown
New Releases


A young adult Christmas ghost story in space with sweet f/f romantic elements.


17-year-old Kath Preston and Jen Stenberg are junior damage control engineers on the generation starship Romeo, 582 years into its 800-year journey from frozen Earth to the planet Nirvana. When they were schoolgirl best friends, Romeo's population was doubled by taking on their fellow survivors from its stricken sister ship Juliet, in the disaster that claimed the life of Kath's heroic father, Peter.

On a quiet Christmas Eve ten years later, when Kath and Jen have the duty, disaster threatens once again. The lurking ghost of the Juliet and a murderous rogue crewman stalking Romeo's decks combine to threaten the ship's safety and the lives of those they love.

Can they step into Peter Preston's hero shoes?

23,560 words

Available from:

Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
OmniLit All Romance
Smashwords


Link List

‘Sherlock’ series 3 UK premiere date announced: January 1!

A Map of the United States' Mythical Lake Monsters: "This map might send you down the cryptozoology web research rabbit hole, but Atlas Obscura has descriptions and illustrations of some of these fantastical beasts, including the Eel Pig of Herrington Lake and the ape-like Honey Island Swamp Monster."

‘Princess Bride’ Actor Cary Elwes Inks Book Deal: "Actor Cary Elwes has landed a deal with Simon & Schuster’s Touchstone imprint to pen a book about his memories making The Princess Bride movie. A publication date for As You Wish: Tales From the Princess Bride has been scheduled for Fall 2014."

Discussion about diversity in Speculative Fiction. This post caused a stir. Check the comments section for links to opposing viewpoints.

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