New Years Resolutions for 2015

I'm really excited to be sharing an excerpt from the newest LGBTQ+ anthology being released this month. I support this book, because ALL PROCEEDS from the sale will be donated to The Trevor Project.

$500 YA Signed Book Giveaway + Gift Card

Derek Murphy, YA author and founder of the YA Author Alliance, is running a giveaway this month, 10 signed books by bestselling authors and a $200 giftcard.

Once Upon A Series

I have way too many series that I've started, but haven't finished for whatever reason and this is a list of those I plan to finish this year.

Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley

Lies We Tell Ourselves is an eye-opening, heartbreaking, and beautifully written novel that will leave an everlasting impression on you.

Showing posts with label book tours: innovative online book tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book tours: innovative online book tours. Show all posts

Friday, July 13, 2012

Guest Post: Book Excerpt for The Wild Princess by Mary Hart Perry



Today, I have such an awesome treat in store for you guys. I'm featuring a beautifully written excerpt from Mary Hart Perry's newest young adult novel, The Wild Princess. It's an exhilirating, romantic historical novel filled with stunning imagery that pops to life on the pages and will definitely leave you entranced with by its rich and enchanting world if you enjoy historical fiction. I would definitely recommend picking up a copy of it for yourself at the end of this month.


The Wild Princess
by Mary Hart Perry
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks
Expected Publication: June 31, 2012
Pages: 432
Age Demographic: Young Adult
amazon | b&n

The astronomical success of the historical novels of Phillipa Gregory and Christine Trent prove that readers simply can't get enough of the British royals--and now Mary Hart Perry enters the fray with an exciting, deliciously sensual novel of Queen Victoria's "wild child" daughter, the Princess Louise.

The Wild Princess transports us back to Victorian England and plunges us into the intrigues of the royal court, where the impetuous Louise brazenly followed no one's rules but her own--even marrying a commoner, which no one of royal blood had done in the previous three centuries. Filled with rich period deal, The Wild Princess is an exciting, enthralling read. The Tudors have gotten the lion's share of attention in historical fiction; it's high time Queen Victoria and her family got their due.

* Summary taken from Goodreads.




Excerpt:


Osborne House, Isle of Wight
Wednesday, January 23, 1901
My dearest Edward,

I write to you with a grieving heart. My emotions are so a-jumble at this moment I can barely stop my hand from trembling long enough to put pen to paper. As all of London wakes to the sad news, you too must by now be aware that Victoria, Queen by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Defender of the Faith, Empress of India—my mother—has passed from this life. Last night I stood at her bedside along with my surviving sisters and brothers, the many grandchildren, and those most favored among her court. We bid our final good-byes, and she drifted away. Among us was the devoted Colonel the Lord Edward Pelham-Clinton, who delivers this letter and accompanying documents, by hand, into your possession.



The doctors say it was a cerebral hemorrhage, not uncommon for a woman in her 80’s, but I believe she was just tired and ready to rest after reigning these tumultuous sixty-four years, many of them without her beloved Prince Consort, Albert, my father, who died before you were born.



She was not a physically affectionate mother, demanded far more than she ever gave, often drove me to anger and tears, and very nearly destroyed my life…more than once. Yet I did, in my own way, love her.



The enclosed manuscript is my means for setting straight in my own mind the alarming events of several critical years in my life. But more than that, it will bring to you, although belatedly—and for that I apologize—the truth. Your mother, my dearest friend, wished to tell you of these matters long ago. Indeed, it was she who compiled most of the information herein, using her rare skills as an observer of human nature and, later in life, as a gifted investigative journalist. I have filled in the few facts she was unable to uncover on her own. For selfish reasons I begged her to keep our secrets a while longer…and a while longer. Then she too departed from this world for a better one, leaving no one to press me to reveal these most shameful deeds. Indeed, Edward dear, I would not even now strip bare the deceptions played out in my lifetime, had they not so intimately involved you.



Do these words shock you? If so, then you had best burn these pages and live the rest of your life in ignorance. But as I remember, you were a curious lad, and so I expect you will read on. However, before you go further, I must ask of you a solemn favor. What I am about to reveal is for your knowledge alone, that you might better understand both the gifts and the sins passed along to you. To share this account with others would cause scandal so damaging that our government would surely topple. Therefore, I implore you to choose—either destroy the enclosed manuscript this instant without reading it, or do the same after reading in private.



Regardless of your decision, I pray you will ever think of me as your devoted godmother and friend, and not hate me for the things I have done to protect you or, on my own behalf, simply to survive.



Be assured of my love,



Princess Louise, duchess of Argyll



March 21, 1871—Windsor Castle, St. George’s Chapel

Under siege, that’s what we are, Louise thought as she observed the mayhem beyond the church’s massive oak doors. Indeed the week-long crush of boisterous visitors had become truly dangerous.



“There must be thousands of them,” she murmured, more to herself than to any of her bridesmaids clustered around her.

Her brother Bertie gently closed the door, shutting out the cheers of the crowd. “It’s all right. The guardsmen have things well in hand.”

Scores of well-wishers from London and the surrounding countryside had arrived on foot and horseback, along with souvenir vendors, draysmen with cartloads of sightseers and hawkers of ale, roasted potatoes and meat pies. They clogged Berkshire’s country roads, converging on Windsor, making virtual prisoners of the royal family and their guests within the great castle’s walls.



Many travelers hadn’t been content with a tourist’s hasty view of Windsor in the days before the wedding. They’d set up crude campsites outside the walls, lit bonfires that blazed through the night. Toasts to the bride and groom turned into drunken revelry. Hundreds pressed against groaning castle gates, hoping for a chance glimpse of the royal couple. Crowd control, never before an issue at a royal wedding, became a necessity. A nervous Queen Victoria called up her Hussars and a fleet of local constables to reinforce the castle’s guardsmen.

Louise stepped away from the chapel’s doors, fingering the delicate Honiton lace of her gown. Strangely, she wasn’t worried about being hurt by the mob of well wishers. What concerned her was what her mother’s subjects might expect of her.



To do her duty as a princess, she supposed, whatever that might mean to them. Or simply to “be a good girl and don’t make trouble,” as her mother had so often scolded her since her earliest years.



Standing at the very foot of the church’s long nave, Louise tried to reassure herself that all the pomp and fuss over her marriage was of no consequence. It would pass with the end of this day. The mob would disperse. The groundsmen clear away the mountains of trash. The important thing was—she had agreed to wed the marquess of Lorne as her mother wished. She was doing the responsible thing for her family. Surely, all would be well.



Louise rested her fingertips lightly on Bertie’s arm. The Prince of Wales stood ready to escort her down the aisle. She desperately wished her father were still alive to give her away. On the other hand, Papa might have talked her mother into letting her wait a little longer to marry. But, of the six girls in their family, it was her turn. In the queen’s mind, Louise at 23 was already teetering on the slippery verge of spinsterhood. An unwed, childless daughter knocking about the palace was a waste of good breeding stock.



Louise felt Bertie step forward, cued by the exultant chords of organ music swelling to the strains of the Wedding March’s intricate harp obbligato. She matched his stride, moving slowly down the long rose petal-strewn quire toward her bridegroom.



Another trembling step closer to the altar, then another. Wedding night jitters? Was that the source of her edginess?



Definitely not. The panic swelling in her breast could have little to do with a bride’s fragile insecurity regarding her wifely duties in bed. Louise felt anything but fragile and more than a little eager for her husband’s touch. Nevertheless, she sensed that something about the day was disturbingly wrong. Sooner or later, she feared it would snap its head around and bite her.



She closed her eyes for a few seconds and drew three deep breaths while letting her feet keep their own pace with the music.



“Are you all right?” Her brother’s voice.

She forced a smile for his benefit. “Yes, Bertie.”



Taking short controlled breaths I took this moment of solace to re-gain my bearings. And that's when I saw it: a blurred swirling black hole in the corner of the trailer.



“He’s a good man.” The Prince had trimmed his dark mustache and looked elegantly regal, dressed in the uniform of their mother’s Hussars. He had initially stood against the marriage, believing his sister should hold out for a royal match. But now he seemed resigned and loath to spoil her day.



“I know. Of course he’s good.”



“You like him, don’t you?” Not love him. They both knew love didn’t enter into the equation for princesses. The daughters of British royals were bred to marry the heads of state, forge international alliances, produce the next generation to sit upon the thrones of Europe.



“I do like him.”

“Then you’ll be fine.”

“Yes,” she said firmly. “I will.” Somehow.



Three of her five bridesmaids—all in white, bedecked with garlands of hothouse lilies, rosebuds, and camellias—led the way down the long aisle, leaving the two youngest girls in Louise’s wake to control the heavy satin train behind her. The diamond coronet Lorne had given her as a wedding present held in place the lace veil she herself had designed.



She felt the swish of stiff petticoats against her limbs. The coolness of the air, captured within the church’s magnificent soaring Gothic arches, chilled her bare shoulders. Yards upon yards of precious hand-worked lace, seemed to weight her down, as though holding her back from the altar. An icy clutch of jewels at her throat felt suddenly too tight, making it hard to breathe.



Her nose tingled at the sweet waxy scent of thousands of burning candles mixed with perfume as her guests rose to view the procession. The pulse of the organ’s bass notes vibrated in her clenched stomach. Ladies of the Court, splendid in silks and brocades and jewels, the gentlemen in dignified black or charcoal grey frock coats, turned heads her way in anticipation—a dizzy blur of smiling, staring faces as she passed them by.



But a few stood out in sharp relief against the dazzling splendor: Her dear friend, Amanda Locock beside her handsome doctor-husband, their little boy wriggling in Amanda’s arms. The always dour Prime Minister Gladstone. A grim-faced Napoleon III, badly reduced in health after his recent defeat by the Prussians. Her brothers and sisters: Affie, then Alice and Vicky with their noble spouses. A predictably bored looking Arthur, always solemn Lenchen and young, fidgety Leo. Bertie’s lovely Danish wife Alix clasped a hand over each of their two little boys to keep them quiet.



Louise lifted her gaze to the raised box to her left where she knew her mother would be seated. Beatrice, youngest of Louise’s eight siblings, sat close by the queen, gazing down wide-eyed at the ceremony. Victoria herself, a plump figure in black mourning muslin six years after her husband’s death, her grim costume relieved only by the rubies and blues of the Order of the Garter star clipped over her left breast, looked down on the wedding party as though a goddess from Mount Olympus.



They’d all come to witness Louise’s union with the striking young man waiting for her at the chapel’s altar. The marquess of Lorne. John Douglas Sutherland Campbell. A stranger to her in many ways, yet soon to be her wedded mate. Beside him stood his kinsmen in striking Campbell-green kilts, sword scabbards strapped to hips, hats cocked forward.



Louise felt an almost equal urge to rush into her intended’s arms…and to turn around and run back out through the chapel doors. Into the fresh spring air, breaking through the crowd to escape down Windsor’s famous Long Walk and into the countryside. To freedom.



But was that even a possibility now?



All of the country had lapped up news of her betrothal as eagerly as a cat does cream. Hadn’t the newspapers been chock full of personal details for months? The chaperoned carriage rides through Hyde Park. The elaborate French menu for the wedding feast. Everything, from the details of her gown to advertisements placed by a London perfume manufacturer announcing their newest fragrance, Love-Lorne, had been gossiped about in and outside of the Court.



And then all of that fled her mind as Bertie deposited her before the archbishop and beside Lorne. Her husband-to-be stood breathtakingly handsome in his dark blue dress uniform of the Royal Argyllshire Artillery with its bits of gold braid, burnished buttons, and shining black leather boots that shaped his long legs to above the knees. A silver-hilted sword hung from the wide black patent belt that encircled his narrow waist. His hair, a glorious pale blond mane brushed back from his face, long enough to feather over his collar, looked slightly risqué and tempted her fingertips.



He took her hand in his. At his touch, she finally settled inside herself.



During the ceremony Louise was aware of her bridegroom’s eyes turning frequently to her. She did her best to meet his gaze, to bring a little smile to her lips and hope that some of it slipped into her eyes for him. Like her, he had blue eyes. But, while hers were a soft shade, the mesmerizing sapphire brilliance of the young marquess’s eyes never failed to startle people on meeting him for the first time. He was a Scot, one of her mother’s northern subjects. When his father passed, he would become the duke of Argyll. A minor title, but better than none at all in her mother’s view. For Louise’s part, titles were of no consequence. They marked a man as neither good nor bad, kind nor cruel, rich nor poor.



"She had every reason to believe they’d get along well, even though they’d not once been left alone together. Still, their escorts had been discreet, allowing them to speak freely. Lorne had even shyly kissed her on the cheek, last night. In time, they might fall in love. She’d like that. And even if they didn’t, he would give her the children she so longed for. Life was full of compromises.



The archbishop was speaking in that sing-song voice of his that was at once soft yet somehow carried to the very back of the grandest church. Louise let the words wash over her, a warm and calming stream. She daydreamed of her honeymoon—Lorne making tender love to her, his soft hands opening her gown to touch the places on her body that most longed for his caresses. And she would discover ways to please him.

The images in her mind brought a rush of heat to her cheeks. She raised her eyelashes shyly to glance up at him in anticipation.



Their gazes met.
He grinned and winked. Did he know what she was thinking?



It was at that moment something odd caught her eye. A motion off to her left and above. Startled, she turned her head just far enough to take in her mother’s box.



John Brown, once a lowly ghillie in the queen’s stables at Balmoral in Scotland, and now her personal attendant and self-appointed bodyguard, stood behind Victoria physically blocking a man who seemed to be trying to force his way into queen’s box. A frisson of alarm shot through Louise.



“Steady,” Lorne whispered in her ear, grasping her hand. “Brown’s handling it.”



The archbishop, too, seemed to have noticed the disturbance, but he droned on, the ultimate performer under pressure.



Louise glimpsed Victoria waving off Brown. The stranger bent down as though to whisper something in the queen’s ear. He wore rough riding clothes, a long dung-brown overcoat of a less than fashionable cut, in what appeared to be scuffed leather. He looked unshaven. As if he hadn't bothered to even run a comb through his spiky black hair. In one hand he held not a stove-pipe top hat that was the only acceptable headwear for a gentleman in London—but a strange wide-brimmed style of black felt hat she’d never seen on any head in all of England.



Louise turned back to face the bishop, fearful of missing the rest of her own wedding. The next time she glanced back, the stranger had gone.



Lorne squeezed her hand, as if to say, All is well.



Was it? She shivered but forced a smile in return.



Then all at once, the archbishop was giving them his blessing. A joyous “Hurrah!” rang out in the chapel. Her new husband kissed her sweetly on the lips, and every concern fled her mind at this excruciatingly joyful moment.



All she could think of was the night that lay before them—her first night as a married woman.



Amanda Locock stood beside the dressing table in the bridal suite at Claremont House while Lady Caroline Barrington unpinned Louise’s hair and brushed it into soft golden-brown waves down her back. "I'm so sorry about bringing Eddie with me to your wedding dinner and concert,” Amanda said.



The music that followed the lavish meal at Windsor had been one formal event too many for a restless four year old. Amanda walked him up and down the great echo-y hallway outside the grand salon until he’d fallen asleep on her shoulder. She’d been able to bring him back inside in time for her to hear the lovely Bach violin solo, played so beautifully by Herr Joachim.



“You know how unpredictable my husband is. He promised to watch Eddie while I stayed for the reception and concert, but one of his patients was in urgent need of him."



Louise waved off her concern, reached up and ruffled the little boy’s hair. No longer a toddler, Eddie still loved to be propped on his mother's hip. He buried his face shyly against her breast now, looking pink-eyed and exhausted by the day's activities.



"You know I love to see Eddie any chance I get." Louise opened the drawer in her dressing table and pulled out a tin of salt-water taffies. "What you need, my darling, is a little more energy to get you through the rest of the day."



"More sugar?" Amanda rolled her eyes. "Henry has this notion that my indulging the child with sweets keeps him up late at night." But she laughed as he selected with great concentration a single candy from the tin. "Here, love, let me unwrap that for you. Then you go sit on your favorite chair over there and suck on it while I talk to your godmother."



He's growing so fast," Louise said, her eyes misting with affection as she watched the child stride away from them. "Soon he'll be all grown up."



"I know. That's why I'm particularly happy with the news I have to tell you." Amanda bounced on her toes and felt she might burst like an iridescent soap bubble with happiness.



"News?"



"I'm with child.” She giggled at Louise’s shriek of joy. “Henry says the baby will be here in August." They had tried for a brother or sister for Eddie for years, but after miscarrying two babies she’d nearly given up hope. “I didn’t say anything to you sooner because of the other times, you know.” The thought of her lost babes nearly undid her.



Louise shot to her feet, tears in her eyes, nearly knocking over Lady Car in her haste to reach Amanda and clasp her in her arms. “Oh, my dear, I’m so happy for you. Maybe a little girl then?”



“We’ll see. Why so weepy? Are they tears of happiness for me?”

“Of course.”



Amanda knew better. “You and Lorne will have your own brood in no time. You’ll be tripping over little ones.”



Louise laughed and wiped away her teardrops. “I’d love that. Truly.”

“Your Royal Highness,” Lady Car interrupted with a meaningful glance toward the door.

Louise smiled. “Yes, of course.” She turned back to Amanda. “Speaking of Lorne.”



Amanda gasped. “What a ninny I am, standing here gossiping with you while your new husband is waiting to take you off to bed.” She laughed, thrilled for her friend. No matter what Louise might think, Amanda was sure that marriage would agree with her friend. Children meant so very much to her, and Lorne seemed such a stable counterpart to Louise’s sometimes impulsive nature. “Come, Eddie. Let’s run along and let your Auntie Loosy be alone with her new husband.” She cast Louise a knowing look and teased, “Don’t need no pointers from an old married woman, do you now?”



Louise lifted her gaze to the ceiling but watched Lady Car out the door before she responded. “It’s not as though it’s the first time; we both know that.”

Amanda smiled. “’deed I do.” She had started toward the doorway when Louise reached out to clasp her arm and hold her back.

“What do I tell him?” Louise’s face was tight with anxiety, her voice tremulous.



Before she answered, Amanda pushed her son a few steps in front of her and out the door. “You wait for me right there,” she instructed him then ducked back inside the bedchamber.”The truth,” she whispered. “What else?”

“I was wondering, maybe I could just say…nothing?”

“And you think the man won’t realize you’re not a virgin?” Amanda laughed.

“That’s wishful, girl.” She winced. “Sorry I’m reverting to my old ways, Your Highness.”

Louise cuffed her gently on the arm. “Stop that. We stand on no formalities, you and I.” She sighed. “I had guessed, from things my mother said in recent days, that Lorne might already know. So, why bring it up? I mean, it’s quite possible she’s told him about my wild years.”

“About Donovan, you mean?”



Louise shut her eyes and nodded. “I truly did love him, you know. To think he so suddenly took off. Not a word….”

“Most of them do, dear.”

“Well, I suppose I was naïve.”

“Very.”

“And I didn’t know that—“



“Now isn’t the time to blame yourself.” Amanda touched Louise on the shoulder and gave her a comforting smile. “You were so very young. We both were. Anyway Donovan is in the past. I can’t imagine Lorne will reject you when he finds out you’ve had someone before him. Someone who really didn’t matter. Or at least…he doesn’t now. Lorne’s such a sensible, modern man.”



Louise bit down on her bottom lip and gave her an anguished look. “I don’t know what to think.” She groaned. “But it would make sense that Mama would have told him I’d had…experience. Why else would she champion a marriage with someone who wasn’t a royal? A man with such a minor title.”



“I don’t understand all the fuss.” Shaking her head, Amanda peered out the door to check on Eddie. Lady Car was entertaining him, coaxing the little boy to march up and down the hallway like a Beefeater. “You make it sound as if it’s never been done before, marrying a commoner.”



Louise let out a bitter laugh. “Not for over three hundred years has a child of an English monarch married outside of the royal families of Europe.”

Amanda winced. She hadn’t realized that. “Then your mother must have discussed this with him, don’t you think?”

Louise shook her head. “I just don’t know.” She looked down at her hands, clenched in front of her. “I do need to tell him. I know that, Amanda. It’s only fair. And if he is upset…well, I must then deal with the consequences.”


Want to pre-order

The Wild Princess

by Mary Hart Perry?


You can do so by visiting my Amazon Store and adding them to your shopping cart. While you're there, feel free to look around, you might find something else you want. I hope you enjoyed the beatifully written excerpt from The Wild Princess by Mary Hart Perry. If you haven't read it yet, then I definitely suggest you pre-order a copy for yourself or even for someone else if you think they'll like it.


ABOUT MARY HART PERRY

Website || Twitter || Facebook || Goodreads

Mary Hart Perry lives in Maryland with her husband and two feline writing partners: Miranda and Tempest. She teaches at The Writer's Center in Washington, DC and is an inspiring speaker for international and regional organizations interested in the joys of history and fiction writing. She is an advocate for teen and adult literacy. You can reach her at Mary@MaryHartPerry.com. She invites you to "like" her Facebook page and follow her on Twitter @Mary_Hart_Perry.

Author information taken from her Author Website.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Guest Post: Excerpt & Giveaway for Pack of Lies by Staci Weber & Sara Dailey

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Today, I'm lucky enough to be sharing an awesome excerpt from an amazing book that I think you guys will fall in love with, Pack of Lies by Staci Weber and Sara Dailey. It's Book #1 of the Red Ridge Pack and it looks like it's going to be a super phenomenal paranormal brimming with wow factor! So, if I were you guys (and I will be) I would totally check this out.

Did I mention there's a giveaway?! lol. Because, one lucky follower will be receiving an e-copy of Pack of Lies.


Pack of Lies
by Staci Weber & Sara Dailey
Publisher: Boroughs Publishing Group
Expected Publication: April 6, 2012
Pages: 204
Age Demographic: Young Adult
amazon | b&n

The last thing Allison Wright ever expected when she moved to Red Ridge, New Mexico was to come muzzle to muzzle with the wolf of her dreams.

Seventeen-year-old Allison Wright is convinced she’s losing her mind. Uncontrollable mood swings, hot flashes, and the urge to punch anyone who gets in her way are suddenly becoming everyday occurrences. Before her erratic behavior gets out of hand, Allison’s mother finally comes clean about her dark secret. Mom is a werewolf, and soon Allison and her brother Aiden will suffer the same fate. When Allison reaches her breaking point, the family leaves their life in Texas to move to Red Ridge, New Mexico where they rejoin the pack that Allison’s mother left behind almost 20 years ago.

Unfortunately, not everyone in Red Ridge is thrilled about Allison’s arrival, especially when she attracts the attention of the very handsome, very taken, soon-to-be alpha, Cade Walker. Little does Allison know, her mere presence is causing a rift in a once unified pack. Not only has Cade been forbidden from being with Allison by his father, the pack’s alpha, Cade’s girlfriend, Kendall Stuart, will stop at nothing to get Allison out of the picture. Well on her way to becoming the next alpha’s mate, Kendall expects to rule the pack by Cade’s side even if it means teaming up with a rogue werewolf with an agenda of his own. Determined to get rid of Allison permanently, when Kendall and the rogue join forces, all hell breaks loose and no one in the pack is safe, especially not Cade and his true mate.

* Summary taken from Goodreads.




Book Excerpt

by: Staci Weber & Sara Dailey


Excerpt:

I picked up on a scent that stopped all thought, all movement, leaving me standing completely still, breathing in a smell that I would never forget. A mix of earth, and musk, and honeysuckle, and sandalwood filled my senses leaving me with a need, a need to find this thing that was suddenly making me salivate, suddenly making me ache with desperation.

Without hesitation, my nose hit the ground as I began to track the enticing smell. I didn’t look up. I didn’t stop moving. I didn’t stop to think about what I might find. None of it mattered. I needed to find the source of that wonderful scent.



In the near distance, I heard a rustling in the brush, which ceased the mission that had held me spellbound. I stopped dead in my tracks and looked around, spooked by what I might find, but what I saw was the last thing I expected.



Peering out from behind a tall oak, a wolf was watching me. We just stood still, staring at each other, neither of us moving a muscle. His amazing green eyes were in sharp contrast to his deep, dark fur. He was a much bigger wolf than me, strong and lean, and the glint in his eyes told me that he was no ordinary wolf.



Giveaway!!! Giveaway!!! Giveaway!!!


a Rafflecopter giveaway



Want to purchase

Pack of Lies by Staci Weber & Sara Dailey?


You can do so by visiting my Amazon Store and adding them to your shopping cart. While you're there, feel free to look around, you might find something else you want. I hope you enjoyed the excerpt from Pack of Lies by Staci Weber & Sara Dailey. If you haven't read it yet, then I definitely suggest you pick up a copy for yourself or even for someone else if you think they'll like it. You definitely can't go wrong with such a thrilling and supsenseful paranormal that is sure to get your blood racing and your heart pumping.


ABOUT STACI & SARA

Website || Blog || Facebook || MySpace

Both Sara Dailey and Staci Weber are avid readers, English teachers, friends, wives, and soccer moms. They have been teaching together for the past eight years, and writing together for four. Pack of Lies is the second young adult novel for this duo.

Author information taken from her saraandstaci.com.

This is a release day all reviews blog hop, so make sure you visit each one of the blogs on the hop for interesting reviews on Pack of Lies by Sara Dailey & Staci Weber.

Follow this awesme tour for more chances to win Pack of Lies and be sure to leave comments along the way. We LOVE IT when you share YOUR THOUGHTS with us!




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Monday, June 11, 2012

Guest Post & Excerpt for Riser by Becca C. Smith

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Today, I'm lucky enough to have Becca C. Smith guest posting on the blog about her young adult sci-fi paranormal novel, Riser. Funny little tidbit, I hadn't realized that she was the author who had written one of my favorite teen graphic novels for Ghost Whisperer (which, was totally one of my FAVORITE shows on television) Ghost Whisperer: The Haunted. I think I actually have that one on my shelf along with another one and just didn't know I'd already had one of her books. Awesome!

But, I really hope you enjoy the guest post and the excerpt today!


Riser
by Becca C. Smith
Publisher: Create Space
Expected Publication: June 5, 2010
Pages: 368
Age Demographic: Young Adult
amazon | goodreads

Black swirling holes churning madly in the center of every corpse. This is how eighteen-year-old Chelsan Derée sees the deceased. Her ability to connect to the black spinning holes allows her to control every dead thing within a four-mile radius.

But that's the least of her problems. It's 2320 and Chelsan Derée has to survive another year of high school, which for her is pure and utter torture, mainly due to the fact that her schoolmate Jill Forester's favorite activity is making Chelsan's life a living hell. If that isn't enough, Chelsan's impossible crush on Ryan Vaughn makes her brain do somersaults on a regular basis, especially since she is positive he doesn't know she exists. And being eighteen Chelsan has to deal with the pressure of whether or not she should take a little pill called Age-pro, which cures aging, making the world eighteen forever and highly over-populated.

When Chelsan's mother, Janet, is brutally killed, along with everyone else in her trailer park, Chelsan finds out that she was the intended target. Chelsan must use her power to raise and control the dead to save herself, protect her friends and take down the man responsible for murdering her mother.

* Summary taken from The Riser Saga.




Guest Post:

Creating Worlds

by: Becca C. Smith


My favorite part of writing is creating new worlds. I admit, my weakness is fantasy and sci-fi because of the endless possibilities. There’s nothing like sitting down with a cup of tea or coffee, maybe a few pastries, and completely escaping into another world, whether it be writing one or reading one.

In my book Riser I had a lot of fun creating a surface level Utopia, but in actuality it is Dystopian to the core. The book takes place three hundred years in the future and people can live forever as long as they take a pill called Age-pro. Of course, the pill only stops the aging process, you can still die accidentally, but as long as you stay away from sharp objects you should be safe, lol.

And with immortality I thought that death was the perfect contrast, so I gave my main character the ability to control dead things.

But by having something as simple as Age-pro in the future, it gave me all the material I needed to have a ball creating a truly crazy future.

Just something as simple as what I call “elf-immortality,” can stir up all sorts of ideas. I say that being a complete and total nerd, lol. The meaning refers to Lord of the Rings where the elves live forever, but they can still be killed by weapons. If humans had this kind of immortality they’d never want to leave the house. Crime and murder would go down because no one would want to run the risk of dying pre-maturely. Population would get out of hand. Crazies would want to keep their kids kids forever and they could by giving them Age-pro. People would question religion since they aren’t going to die. Some would refuse to take the drug whereas some would drop religion altogether.

Each book I write in the series goes deeper and deeper into the consequences of an ageless society.

But, by far, coming up with the world is always the most fun!


Excerpt:

Chapter Zero Year: 2320

Okay, let me explain. My gift, or curse (I'll let you decide for yourself) to put it simply is I can raise the dead. I know, sounds cheesy, but fortunately, or unfortunately it's true, and I don't mean just people. Basically, anything that had any kind of life: plants, animals, insects, plankton, anything, I can bring back. The only catch is, they're not really alive anymore they're just animated, like zombies I guess, but I control them. Plants are the easiest. My mom's garden is the prize of the trailer park, and she should take no credit whatsoever.



Animals and people are more complicated, maybe because there are so many working parts. I'm really not sure. My ability is still kind of a mystery to me. I have no clue why I have this power. It's not like I've ever heard of anyone else having this particular skill either, except in books and movies. I appear to be an anomaly in this world.



I was three-years-old when I knew I saw things differently than everyone else. My pet goldfish, Larry, died and a black spinning hole appeared in the center of his body. I thought it was just about the coolest thing I had ever seen. When I told my mother about it, she gave me a look that I'll never forget. It was a mixture of confusion and horror. She simply nodded and made me promise that I would never under any circumstances tell anyone else about what I saw. I was instantly ashamed and scared at her reaction, but something in the way that she said it made me keep my promise.



After that, I saw the black holes everywhere, from the tiniest dead insects, to the neighbor's dog when he was hit by a hover car (don't ask), to Ms. Thompkins when she died from a heart attack. The churning black masses had become second nature to me by then. At that point, I still didn't know why I could see them and I was scared to death to talk to anyone about it. I kept to myself mostly, afraid I would slip and say something to a neighbor or friend.



It was a very lonely childhood.



It wasn't until I killed my stepfather Bruce that I figured out that I could raise the dead. I never wanted to take Bruce's life: hurt maybe, kill no. And that's saying a lot seeing as he used to use my mom as a punching bag. He'd make me sit in the corner of our beat up trailer and watch him kick the living crap out of her. He'd laugh when I'd scream, he'd laugh when she'd scream, he'd laugh when he'd scream on the few occasions my mom fought back and actually inflicted pain on him.



Bruce was a jerk, but he didn't deserve to die, not like he did, not like how I killed him. I still can't believe it had been eleven years since it all happened. It felt like yesterday and forever ago all at once.



It was a day like any other day, Mom did some invisible transgression to piss Bruce off and he took it as a cue for another beating. Mom was having one of her comatose days, where I could tell she was just going to take it and hope that he got bored quickly from her unresponsiveness.



Bruce slammed her against the flimsy trailer wall of the kitchen with his beefy forearm. Tiny bits of ceiling floated down like snow on his greasy balding scalp. He sneered at her with glee, but she wouldn't give him the satisfaction of eye contact. She just kept her eyes down, arms dropped harmlessly at her side. Bruce went on a

furious rampage. He punched her, pulled her hair, kicked her stomach, tried anything to get a response out of her, but she just lay there like a rag doll on the peeling linoleum floor.



Then he wheeled around to face me.



"NO!"



Finally, a reaction from my mother. Bruce was in ecstasy. He stormed towards me like an enraged bull. I could almost see steam coming out of his bulbous nose. Then WHACK!

I could literally feel every vertebra in my spine as all forty-five pounds of me slammed against the wall from the impact of Bruce's fist to my stomach. My world started to spin; everything was in blurred double vision. My mother's hysterical screams echoed in my head like a horrific nightmare. I couldn't focus.



PUNCH!



CRACK!



I could feel my nose crunch when he hit me a second time. It felt like it was really runny, but when I tried to wipe it clean my hands came away covered in blood. The combination of Bruce's frantic laughter and my mother's anguished screeches made it impossible to think clearly. I think I started to whimper at this point. My ribs were so bruised it hurt to breathe let alone move my chest to have a good cry like I wanted to.



These are the moments in life where you don't think rationally. In fact, you don't think at all, you just let your survival instinct take over. It becomes about you or your killer.



And I was no martyr.



I tried to blink fast enough to clear my vision.



THWACK!



My right eye started to swell from Bruce's backhand making it even more difficult to focus. At this point my mother, like a wailing Banshee, propelled herself onto Bruce's back and started pounding her fists onto any piece of flesh she could find. I could hear Bruce's low chuckle at my mom's feeble attempt to stop him. From the sound of his amusement I could tell that today was the most fun he'd had in years.



Taking short controlled breaths I took this moment of solace to re-gain my bearings. And that's when I saw it: a blurred swirling black hole in the corner of the trailer.



WHAM!



Bruce had thrown my mother clear across the room. Her body collapsed into unconsciousness as her head punched a hole through the trailer's wall.



I screamed a horrible, terrible scream: a scream that only a child could make whose world had just been crushed, whose mommy had just been smashed against a wall, leaving her daughter alone, defenseless, a scream that would make any human who possessed an ounce of parenting instincts come running, without thinking, without rational thought. And I couldn't stop. Even Bruce had to cover his ears from the onslaught of shrieking. But Bruce's instincts weren't to mother, they were to destroy and he started towards me.



And seeing him, fists raised, plowing forward, I suddenly felt inexplicably tied to that black swirling chasm across the room. I was a part of it. It was almost as if strings connected us together. And I did the only thing I could.



I made it attack Bruce.



At first I didn't know what I was doing, but I suddenly understood that I physically controlled the black holes. I was connected to them like they were an extension of my own body, like they were my own limbs.



Bruce bellowed in pain as we both realized at the same time what I had brought back to life.



A black widow spider, full of venom and ready to attack.



Over and over I made the spider tear its fangs into Bruce's body: his neck, his arms, his legs, his chest. Bruce swatted the spider, squished the spider, tore it in two, but nothing he did could stop it. It was mine.



It was already dead.



He couldn't kill it again.



He fell to his knees. The poison was flowing through his body now. I could see a small black tornado forming in Bruce's chest.



Fear overtook every fiber of my soul as I realized what I had just done, what I was still doing. I dropped my connection to the spider instantly. It fell lifeless to the floor once more, the black void churning madly in its center.



I crawled over to Bruce's body, leaving a trail of blood from my broken nose. He was convulsing on the ground, his body seizing from the poison coursing through his veins. He was dying and there was nothing I could do about it.



"What did you do?" My mother's voice cut through the near silent grunting and gagging of Bruce's dying moments.



She had seen the whole thing.



"I...I couldn't think of what to say." My mother looked relieved, guilty and horrified all in one condemning expression. I wasn't sure if she was upset about losing Bruce or that her seven-year-old child had just become a murderer. Bruce's eyes rolled back in his head. His last breath was rattling and eerily hushed. It seemed to last an eternity. As if the oxygen in his lungs didn't want to leave his body and clung to whatever life it could hold on to.



I stared into my mother's eyes. She couldn't speak. She couldn't move. A small line of blood trickled into her eye from a gash on her forehead, but she didn't flinch. She just looked into my eyes with a blankness more terrifying than any emotion could be.

"Chelsan"...she finally croaked. Her voice was gravelly from screaming.



That was all she could say. It was agony to see her so dead in the eyes, face, body... just staring. I would have given anything I had just to stop her from looking at me with those empty eyes. Her vacant stare felt like a howl of pain so excruciating I almost covered my ears from the silence. At least then I would have been able to hear my own muffled heartbeat. Any noise would have been better than the oppressive judging stillness.



And that was when I realized what I had to do. To break her out of this coma she was encasing herself into. I turned to Bruce. To his raging black abyss spiraling like a whirlpool deep inside his chest. And I switched him on. Just like the spider. He was a bit clumsy at first. I had to concentrate as hard as my seven-year-old brain would let me just to get him in a sitting position. But after a moment or two it became easier and easier and he began to feel like an extension of me. It was an eerie sensation as my thoughts mirrored Bruce's movements. I would think of his arm moving and it would move. I would think of him speaking and...



"Janet?" I made Bruce call to my mother.



His voice snapped her completely out of her stupor. She watched him in shock and overwhelming relief. Bruce.



And then I made him cry. Cry like he never could do when he was alive. I made him cry until his face and



My clothes were drenched with his tears. I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry, I made him repeat over and over as he sobbed in the aftermath of the day's destruction.



Mom crawled over to the two of us, renewed hope in her eyes. Whether she knew what I was doing or not, she didn't say. All that mattered was that she wanted to believe it. She needed to believe it. I could see it in her face. I made Bruce embrace the two of us with a tenderness he was never capable of before. I was doing this for me as much as for my mother at this point. Feeling his strong arms around me, holding me close, affectionate, loving. It was the first time in my life I felt like I had a father: a real dad. I nestled in closer. When my mom saw this she did the same. We both had contented expressions on our bloody bruised faces. I let Bruce sputter and jabber about how much he loved the two of us, how he would never hurt us again, how he was a changed man...



And he was.



After that day he became the best father anyone could ever ask for.



I still find it funny in a strange and disturbing way, that Bruce is a better father dead than he ever was alive.



He's the easiest for me to control now because he was my first, and I've had a lot of practice since. It's almost as if he's really alive sometimes. But every time I watch his face go slack when he's watching his holo-tv or he stinks so bad I have to puppeteer him in the shower, I remember.



He's dead. Truly dead. And it's my fault.

Want to purchase

Riser by Becca C. Smith?


You can do so by visiting my Amazon Store and adding them to your shopping cart. While you're there, feel free to look around, you might find something else you want. I hope you enjoyed the guest post and excerpt from Riser by Becca C. Smith. If you haven't read it yet, then I definitely suggest you pick up a copy for yourself or even for someone else if you think they'll like it.


ABOUT BECCA C. RISER

Website || Twitter || Facebook || Goodreads

Becca C Smith received her Film degree from Full Sail University and has worked in the Film and Television industry for most of her adult life.

Becca is the author of the teen horror/sci-fi novel, Riser. She is also the co-author of the teen graphic novel Ghost Whisperer: The Haunted and also wrote and illustrated Little Family Secrets, a graphic novel based on the true story of her great aunt who was famous for murdering her husband.

She currently lives in Los Angeles, CA with her husband and two cats Jack and Duke.

Author information taken from her The Riser Saga.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Guest Post: Author Interview with M.A. Abraham

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Today, I have the incredibly talented M.A. Abraham talking with me about her novel, Gabriel. It's a wonderful fantasy novel, filled with enchanting Elves, beautiful worlds, and exciting daring adventure. This book is definitely a must read, for anyone who enjoys fantasy and interesting characters. It's brimming with fantastic adventures and heroism that shines on the pages.


Question and Answer with M.A. Abraham


Hi, Mary Ann. It's nice to have you visiting with us on the blog today. Your book, Gabriel, is filled with such rich fantasy and detail that it's mesmorizing and echanting. Could you tell us a little bit about the mythos or inspiration behind it, please?

Hi, it is great being here, and thank you for having me. Also, thank you for the kind words about my book. Gabriel is a book that came to mind about 2 weeks after my mother died. I have no idea where it came from. I just sat down one day and wrote the outline for it, though the outline didn’t last long. Only a few chapters into the book I realized that the characters were leading me in a different direction. I just followed along like a good puppy.

Gabriel is such a loyal and duty bound hero and warrior, to get to know thorughout the novel. I really enjoyed getting to know him throughout the book, but it seemed almost as if he and Eden share a few differences. Do you think these differences in their strengths and weaknesses as far as their relationship goes, made them strong and better people?

Gabriel has been forced into who and what he has become because of the war, and the more you read about him the more you realize that. He is sure of himself, of his capabilities, but he gets a little blindsided when he meets Eden. He doesn’t know what to think at first. Marious has to point out the obvious to him. Eden is a character that will challenge him, bring him back to life in many ways. She is a strong person with a demanding talent that tends to take over her life at times. Gabriel is her anchor as she is his light. Theirs is not only a clash of personalities, but direction, but neither can control the inevitability of their love. It shows that fate is stronger than either has the will or desire to fight. Together they complete each other, they become much stronger when they unite.

One of my favorite things about fantasy novels or any books in particular, are the characters and whether or not, I can relate to them or easily connect. Eden was such a breath of fresh air. I adored how she was wild and carefree, a warrior like her brothers and was determined to not let herself be any man's possession. Can you share with my followers, a little more insight to her character?

Eden is a demanding character in some ways, yet she is a loving and giving Elf. It is not always easy to see, I have had people accuse her of being immature and selfish, of being too caught up in the forest about her. They don’t see how she feels one with the forest almost as if she is a part of it. She tends to be compulsive about her talent as it is new to her. She has been moved from one form of life to another and needs to get used to so much. Finding a Life Mate in the form of Gabriel is equally overwhelming, he is also a very strong and powerful character. She is very close to her family, loving each one in her own way for who they are, as well as accepting towards those she meets. A good example of that is when she meets her grandfather for the first time, but you would have to read the book to know about that.

The world builiding was simply phenomenal and awe inspiring. It was one of the best things about the book, with all of the lush descriptions and the mythos interwoven I found myself getting truly lost in this enchanting world full of so much potential. I think this was of the few fantasies that I've read in a while, which involved elves and I simply loved that aspect of it. Were you always creatively inspired by eleves or were just looking to write something different than the norm?

The Elves were an inspiration. I love fantasy in all its forms and have noticed how they tend to be pushed into the background or treated as evil. In different societies in the world Elves are beautiful, magical beings. They are not evil or cruel, though like any other creature they can probably be in the right circumstances. In Gabriel the world is just coming to light, I have set the platform for the next stage as well as shown the direction. They have built their world and will continue to do so in the next story. They are evolving and as they come out of the darkness that was the war they were caught up in and back into the light of their peaceful world, they are finding hope for the future in the love of one another. They are learning to live again as Elves.

What three things did you enjoy, while writing Gabriel?

I rather loved the chase, the game of cat and mouse between Eden and Gabriel. I really enjoyed Marious’ relationship with his uncle. I loved it that the world was coming together for the Empire, and that it was going to become so much more than it was. There was a future for them that could be pure and beautiful.

What three things did you not enjoy while writing Gabriel?

The editing was brutal, I didn’t really write the book with the idea of ever releasing it to the public, so I didn’t take care with the wording. (Not good). I was not happy with Eden’s brother and his actions, (again you would have to read the book to know about that), but not to worry, he will get his. I also felt I could have done better, but they say that is a common thing.

If you had to describe Gabriel in three words, what would those three words be?

Gabriel is determined, crafty, and very sure of himself. He is a very complex Elf. When he commits to a relationship it will be with all his heart and soul. As far as he is concerned, Eden is his.

Moving away from Gabriel for a moment, what are your top three favorite fantasy books and their author's and why?

I love Mary Stewarts Merlin Trilogy. It shows the legend in a different light completely. I thought that was cool. Anne McCaffrey’s The Rowen, the whole series is great reading. Saving the best for last, CL Wilson’s Tairen Soul series… that is a true writing marvel as far as I am concerned. It is not only a magical story, but it is so well written and put together it is amazing.

Were you inspired by all or one of these in particular, while writing Gabriel?

I can’t say I really was. Neither of the first two fall into this form of book and before I ever read the Lord of the Fading Lands I had already written Gabriel and had it stashed in my closet.

How does it feel to know that people are reading Gabriel and enjoying it?

I am sometimes astounded that it has been so well received. I have heard virtually nothing negative about it. I have to admit I was very nervous about allowing it out of hiding. I am excited that people are telling me that they are finding happiness in the reading. It is a wonderful thing to find fulfillment in a book.

As an author, do you think that there could be any room for improvements in your writing or in the direction of where the next installment of this series may lead you?

There is always room for improvement that is why I am not quite satisfied with the end result of anything I do. Nothing is perfect. My editor says there are times I need a smack on the back of the head.

If you had any advice to offer to aspiring fantasy would-be author's, what would it be?

I don’t consider myself much of an expert on that front, but don’t doubt yourself, and make sure you have a good editor. Above all, have faith in what you do and believe in.

Thank you, so much for joining me on the blog and sharing your amazing novel with us. I really enjoyed it reading it a great deal, it was such a fantastic and enchanting read. I cannot wait for the sequel.

Thank you for allowing me to come, and I am so very happy you liked the book. You also know Marious’ Story isn’t that far off either. We are not too far from finishing the Editing. Further releases on the series will be available on my website http://maabraham.com and my FB page. Feel free to drop in anytime.


"Want to know more about M.A. Abram's fantasy filled novel, Gabriel?"


GABRIEL BY M.A. ABRAHAM



He has returned from the wars a hero to his people, savior of their Empire and honored as such, but his world is empty, despite the peace he has won for his people. There is no light where he lives, no soft touch to comfort him, to push away the darkness of his memories. He lives only to serve his King and the world he lives in. He is the High Lord General Gabriel Eagle Claw, Commander of the Combined Elven forces Sent into the outside world to bring their people home he travels with his troop to the valley where he has been told they await his coming. There he is to find the Life Mate to the King and bring her safely to his side, but there is more, for there is a mystery he must solve and claim for his own. She who will bring light and love to his soul, she is his Eden. His one and only, his true Life Mate, his love and he vows he will bind her to him forever.

She is like a forest creature, wild and free. Warrior trained along side her brothers. She guards the life and spirit of the forests that surround them, as well as those who live in the valley with them. She also guards a secret, for she is more than just a simple Elven maiden tending to the care of the elements they live in. Within her lives the talent to communicate with the very trees she treats, they tell her tales, stories, tidings of things that have passed. To them she is their guardian. To them she is Tratchar, she who heals their ills, beloved of the Sentinels and their salvation. Beautiful and proud she is no man’s possession, nor shall she be, this she is determined she will never be.


"Want to purchase a copy of Gabriel by M.A. Abraham?"





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