Month: September 2013

Writing Update

Writing Update

I’m nearly at the halfway mark for “Dream Reunion”.  I’ve got nearly 40,000 words written, and I’m up to chapter 7, with two later scenes (probably a full chapter’s worth) written as well.

I’m still hopeful that I can get a draft finished by my self-imposed deadline of October 31st, and then get the book out by the end of November or early December (just in time for Christmas).

I’m making progress on the short piece starring Sara’s parents (tentatively titled “Betty and Howard’s Excellent Adventure”).  I’m shooting for 10,000-20,000 words, and I’m thinking it’ll be a freebie, or at most $0.99, if I can’t make it free on Amazon.  And I’m hoping to have it recorded for audio as well.

“Queen of the Idiots”, unfortunately, is going a lot more slowly than I’d hoped.  I’m still only on chapter 4, and I’m pretty sure I’m not going to meet my deadline of the end of November for a first draft.  Part of the problem is that I’m so used to writing in the first person, and present tense, for the Dream Series books, that it’s really difficult to transition to a different POV and tense (and tone) for Jane’s book.

On the audibook front, “Dream Doctor” should be out hopefully by the end of this week, and “Dream Child” is in production, with six chapters recorded so far, and it’s sounding great.

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Book Tour – Children of the Plague by Greg Carrico

Book Tour – Children of the Plague by Greg Carrico

I’m happy to be hosting a stop on the tour for Greg Carrico’s “Children of the Plague”

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And here’s Greg!

Author Carrico

Gregory Carrico is an Amazon.com Best Selling horror and science fiction writer, and HFA Author of the Year 2013 Finalist. He enjoys crafting bad guys that readers will both care about and despise.

When not creating new worlds and plotting their destruction, he advocates for adopting rescue dogs, and politely urges slower drivers to get out of the passing lane.

Follow Greg at his websitehis blogFacebookTwitterPintrest and Goodreads.  And you can sign up for his newsletter right here.

His book is “Children of the Plague”

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Blurb: In the darkest corners of lower Manhattan, a battle like no other rages. The city is home to a hidden group of survivors of the nanite plague, and a brother and sister born to defend their race. With a touch that can destroy nanites, Lanni, sister of Alex, is their last chance. Can she save her brother? Can she protect mankind’s only hope? Or will she be responsible for the destruction of the last humans on earth? It’s going to be another long day…

You can buy it at GanxyAmazonB&NSmashwords and Kobo.

I will have a review of the book up in the next couple of days as well – I’ll include it in a separate post so you won’t miss it!

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Indie Author Spotlight – Lisa Temple and “Illuminating Gracie”

Indie Author Spotlight – Lisa Temple and “Illuminating Gracie”

I’ve got another great indie author to introduce to you – she’s Lisa Temple, and her novel is “Illuminating Gracie”.

Here’s Lisa…

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Lisa Temple is a lifetime resident of Montgomery, Ala., where she lives with her husband, Dana, with whom she has one son, Temp. She also has two stepchildren, Candice and Chad. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Huntingdon College and a Juris Doctorate from Thomas Goode Jones School of Law. Lisa also shares her life with her beloved animals: Phebe, Flash and Minx. You can follow her blog through the website www.illuminatinggracie.com

And her book is “Illuminating Gracie”

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As an old woman’s lifeless body lies on a cold stone floor, her soul stands before an angel who offers her a miraculous opportunity: the chance to do it all again. But that is easier said than done. In order to change the path her life has taken, she must put aside years of self-loathing and pain, so she can help the young girl she once was become the woman she should have been.

At 17 years old, Grace Bennett is a bitter young woman. Though blessed with a loving family, looks and brains to spare, she hides her light under a bushel, spending most of her time in the darkness of her mind with little more than sarcasm and self-pity to keep her company.

But things are about to change for Grace. While delivering food for her family’s bed and breakfast, she turns onto a desolate dirt road and drives straight into her destiny.

It’s on this isolated country lane that the damaged girl meets a strangely familiar old couple and two mysterious young men. Together the group fights the demons that surround Grace, and they teach her what it means to let her light shine.

“Illuminating Gracie” is, at once, a metaphorical tale of the fight between good and evil and a spiritual saga of one girl’s journey from darkness into the light. If you liked “Twilight” and “The Hunger Games,” you will love the story of Gracie.

You can find the book at Amazon, right now.

Here’s an article telling more about Lisa, and her book…

Although she had never written fiction before, about two years ago Montgomery native Lisa Cheek Temple found she had a story inside her that couldn’t be contained. The result is Illuminating Gracie, a story of hope and redemption with a supernatural and spiritual twist.

The novel, classified as Young Adult Fiction, tells the story of 17-year-old Grace Bennett, a lonely and bitter young woman on a path of depression and self-destruction. Her life changes when she meets a mysterious old woman, Mrs. B., her dedicated manservant Willem, and two enigmatic young men who together struggle to bring Gracie into the light and give her the strength to fight her demons – as it turns out, both figuratively and literally.

Temple says she was spurred to begin writing the story shortly after her beloved father was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease. He passed away earlier this year. As she struggled to come to terms with his illness, she says she was troubled by regrets about her past, and the trials her parents went through as she tried to find herself.

The story is not autobiographical, although Temple says there are definitely parts of herself in Gracie.

“To say I put my parents through their paces in my younger years is an understatement,” she says with a rueful chuckle. “But through it all, they were always there for me. My dad was very much my hero and stood by my side and helped me get my life together, so it really threw me for a loop when he was diagnosed,” she says. “I had a tough time with the guilt and feeling bad about it and wishing I could go back and change things.”

Without giving too much away, Illuminating Gracie delves into this idea of the ultimate “do-over.”

One evening, Temple says, she simply picked up a pencil and paper, and began to write. She spent the next several months writing the story out by hand. Somewhere in the back of her mind, she says, she started writing the book as a sort of self-help book for young adults. She started thinking about how to write something that might impart a message – “You’re not alone. Look inside yourself.”

“I had this idea of it also being kind of a warning, like be careful about the decisions you make. But what 18-year-old is going to read a self-help book? At that age, you know everything,” she says with a laugh. “But because I’d never put pen to paper on it, it was just an idea. So how could I get this type of information to kids, without it coming across as preaching?”

Influenced by popular Young Adult Fiction that has been embraced by people of all ages, and which she herself enjoys, like the Twilight series and The Hunger Games, the story began to take an otherworldly turn. However, unlike some other fiction that takes its inspiration from those types of stories, Temple’s characters are much more based in faith.

“I’m not really sure how this came to me, except that it grew out of this idea of the literal and figurative ‘fighting your demons.’ It just leant itself to the idea of angels and demons,” she explains. “I wanted to impart a source of light and hope as opposed to a lot of the dark stuff I was seeing out there. This book certainly has dark elements in it, in Gracie’s depression and her negativity, so helping her to overcome that. I really think the Lord put it in my heart and in my head and that’s what came out on the paper. Every day I got up, the only character I knew was Gracie, and I almost didn’t know what was going to happen to her until it came out of my pencil,” Temple says.

She doesn’t define the book as strictly Christian fiction, but does hope it can be inspirational.

“There’s got to be a gulf between clearly Christian fiction and then on the other side, no spiritual value – drugs, sex and rock n’ roll,” she explains with a laugh. “Maybe there’s room to fill that gap between the two. Illuminating Gracie is not written in a way that would alienate someone who isn’t necessarily a Christian from reading it and getting something out of it. But there’s a spiritual message to it, and it’s something that kids are interested in – this otherworldly type subject, and where do I fit in in the world?”

She hopes that young people like the book, but also feels that people of all ages would enjoy the story.

“First and foremost, I just hope readers have a good time. I meant it to be fun and entertaining, and I hope kids that read books like Twilight read it and enjoy it just on the top level. And then I hope that people both young and old read it and if they need to see something else in it, if they need to see themselves in it, or hope in it, or that it’s never too late to change, they can.

“Who hasn’t, at some point in their life, wished for a chance to do things differently?” she says. “It’s something sort of universal in us.”

Illuminating Gracie is available through Amazon.com, Booksamillion.com, BarenesandNoble.com and many other online booksellers.  It is also available for the Kindle. Temple already is working on a sequel, which will follow Gracie into high school and explore issues of popularity, peer pressure, and the challenges young people face trying to be accepted and figure out who they are.

And, last but not least, here’s an excerpt that Lisa has given us, to whet your appetite for the book…

As anxious as I was, I would have had to be dead to be oblivious to the guy’s looks. I had really just caught a glimpse of him, up close, in my headlights, but it was enough to know that he was tall, dark and handsome. When he leaned over to look in my car window, my interior lights allowed me a slightly better view of his face, and what I saw confirmed my earlier instincts – he was exceptionally gorgeous. I wasn’t stupid. I wouldn’t let down my guard just because he was hot. After all, I’d heard of Ted Bundy and was savvy enough to know that not all crazies looked like Charles Manson. But there was no denying that beauty had its privileges, and I felt some of my tension slip away in the wake of the beautiful boy’s extraordinary green-gold eyes.

For some reason, my mind was operating with exceptional clarity in the crisis. I was scared, but not panicked – really almost calm. My underused gray matter categorized my fears and weighed my options, spending no time on needless counting or multiple cortex conversations. I decided to risk cracking my window just a bit and when I did, the boy, sensing I felt threatened, backed up a bit from the side door before saying his first words.

“Well, hey there, gorgeous! It must be my lucky night! You seem to be a damsel in distress.”

He again leaned in slightly toward the window affording me a longer look at his unusual eyes that appeared, at once, bright green and butterscotch gold, mile high cheekbones and movie-star- white smile accented by a single perfect dimple. He was dressed in faded Levis and a black T-shirt – nothing special really – but I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that if I lived to be a hundred, I would never see another boy as pretty as the one that stood before me now.

Pretty – that was the word for him, but not in a feminine way – far from it. There was an indefinable quality about him that raised him above mere “handsome” status. Millions of guys had dark wavy hair, white teeth and beautiful eyes, and many guys were gorgeous. But this boy, he was something different – something that couldn’t be printed on a page or described with words. His looks transcended such futile characterizations.

And when this other-worldly creature – this angelic Adonis – leaned in my window, flashed his bright smile and called me “gorgeous,” that’s when I knew with absolute certainty that this was all just a dream. The isolated mansion, the strange old folks, the new job, the cleansing catharsis, and the sexier than sexy boy were all just a part of my slumbering subconscious.

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Indie Author Spotlight – Jane Goodwin and “Heart of the Witch”

Indie Author Spotlight – Jane Goodwin and “Heart of the Witch”

I’ve got another great indie author to introduce to you today.  She’s Jane Goodwin…

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Judy Goodwin developed a passion for writing at a young age, creating picture books from the time she could read and write. She continued this passion throughout her schooling, earning her BA degree in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona. Along with the passion for English came a love of all languages, and Ms. Goodwin went on to study other languages as well, including German, French, and Japanese. She spent time as an exchange student in Germany, which helped to develop her love of other cultures.
She has published short stories in small press and online magazines including Space and Time, Dreams and Nightmares, and Beyond Centauri. With the advent of eBooks and indie publishing, she decided to move into the brave new world of publishing with the debut of her first novel, Heart of the Witch.
Her second novel is anticipated in 2014, entitled Journey to Landaran.
You can follow Judy at her website, her Amazon Author page, or at Diamond Print Press.
Her novel is “Heart of the Witch”
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A male witch in a world where witches are burned at the stake. A goddess trapped in a circle of stone. A girl searching to find where she belongs. All will come together in the Heart of a Witch.
You can buy it, right now, at Amazon and also Barnes & Noble.
And to whet your appetite, here’s an excerpt that Judy has very kindly provided for us…
He burst through flames, hollering, then he was inside, smoke curling up from burns on his flesh and the smoldering remains of his clothing. He was not safe, not yet; all around him was fire, a wide ring which spared only the ground he stood on. It crackled at his back, cooking the air that he breathed, warning him that he could not stay long in this refuge.
Beyond the fire towered the ring of mountains, and they seemed nearer than ever, the purple heights and cool shadowed passes calling to him. He choked on fumes, gazing at the thick flames which still blazed between him and his goal. The ground was bare within the circle. No magic. If he remained here he would die.
He glanced behind as a lick of flame passed close to him, searching for Alden, his father, or the wolf beast, but none of them were present.
A cool breeze brushed his cheek, parting the waves of heat for a second, and he suddenly realized he was not alone, that there was a woman standing out there, just beyond the ring of fire. She wore a long flowing robe which seemed to reflect several colors at once, from yellow to green to deep russet brown. Her hair fell all the way down to her feet, adorned with bird feathers.
“Do not forsake me,” she pleaded, holding pale hands out to coax him on. The flames and the heat hid her face from him but he knew she was beautiful, that to leave her would break his heart.
“Help me!” He shouted, swooning as the fires slowly baked him.
She bowed her head, and he caught a glimpse of her pale ivory cheeks, flushed with emotion. “I am sorry, but I cannot. I too am imprisoned.” She glanced up, and he froze as the indescribable weight of her gaze pierced through him, pinning him. “You must come to me.”
She released him from her gaze and turned away, slowly making her way back up the foothills to the circle of mountains. A fresh breeze swept at her robes, then fanned the flames around Zerrick, threatening to overwhelm him. As tiny sparks ignited on his clothing, forcing him to plunge forward, he could still hear her voice ringing in his ears.
“Free me!”
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Book Tour! KC Sprayberry and “Take Chances”

Book Tour! KC Sprayberry and “Take Chances”

I’m happy to be hosting today’s stop on the book tour for KC Sprayberry and her upcoming Young Adult  novel “Take Chances”

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First, let’s meet the author:

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KC Sprayberry started writing young, with a diary followed by an interest in English. Her first experience with publication came when she placed third in a Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge contest while in the Air Force, but her dedication to writing came after she had her youngest child, now a in his senior year of high school.

Her family lives in Northwest Georgia where she spends her days creating stories about life in the south, and far beyond. More than a dozen of her short stories have appeared in several magazines. Five anthologies feature other short stories, and her young adult novel Softly Say Goodbye, released in 2012. During 2013, more young adult stories have been released: The Ghost Catcher, Who Am I?, Family Curse … Times Two, and Amazon Best Seller, Canoples Investigations Tackles Space Pirates.

You can find her on the web at:

her Amazon Author PageLinkedInTwitterFacebookGoodreads, her Website,her  BlogAuthorgraphGoogle +JacketFlap and Solstice Publishing

I’m going to turn things over to KC for a few minutes to talk about a topic that her novel deals with:

Surviving School Violence

Violence in our schools never happens to us. It always happens to someone else. Right?

Wrong!

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School violence goes on in every school, every day, but it’s not always what makes headline news. When what we like to think of as the impossible happening actually does, we are at a loss as to how to explain how some survived and others didn’t.

 

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Take Chances is a book about a teenage girl on the cusp of moving forward with her life, getting ready to graduate, to leave behind the familiar and venture into the unknown alone. Julie Bond has a lot more going for her than most high school graduates. She’s spent most of her life abroad, living in Europe. Yet, even though she’s gone through this experience once, even though her dad took the time to teach her techniques to avoid injury or death if the impossible happened a second time, she’s as unprepared as anyone else when it does happen.

 

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Julie has survival skills most teens don’t, but even she is shocked into inaction when faced with another situation where her life is in danger. Those with her have absolutely no training, most of them are teens looking forward to graduation, a summer of fun, and college, yet all of them instinctively react in such a way as to protect each other and themselves.

What are those things that are now being touted as a way to survive what no one wants to endure?

  1. Don’t engage the shooter. No matter how much you want to call this person a dummy, a fool, or stupid, bite down on those feelings.
  2. If you’re in the same room, do nothing to enrage the person. Look for ways to escape, to draw attention to the situation.
  3. If you’re not in the room, get away. Don’t freeze as if someone switched on a light and caught you goofing around.

This all sounds like good advice in theory, but does it work?

 

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Walter Philbrick and Hector Delgado are part of a team comprised of former American Special Forces and SWAT members. They now teach survival skills for students caught in this situation. Here’s what they have to say:

“Look for ordinary items that can be used as weapons. Weapons could be hot coffee, full soda cans, small TVs, letter openers, staplers, statues, rolls of coins, or fire extinguishers could distract, injure or stop the attacker.”

There it is – what was used in Take Chances to take control of the situation – fire extinguishers.

“Say what?” you ask. “Fire extinguishers? That doesn’t make sense.”

In fact, it does make sense, but this avenue isn’t to be used unless you believe you and those with you have a chance to overwhelm the shooter without being a target. However, you must always remember to ensure that you aren’t going to make matters worse.

I won’t give away a plot moment here, but I will say this – the teens involved in my fictional school violence didn’t shrink like violets. They stand as a group against the shooter. Not all of them survived, but the situation could have been much worse.

Also, as was emphasized in my book. The gun wasn’t responsible for what happened. It was the individual who decided to use one. Yes, it was horrific. Yes, it was preventable, but it wasn’t anyone’s fault except the shooter’s.

Now, to the book itself…

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Julie Bond grew up in Europe as a military brat. She found her very first permanent home in Landry, GA as a teen going into high school. Almost four years later, she’s having pre-graduation jitters and flashing back to an incident of school violence she experienced in Europe. She attempts to convince herself that it can never happen again, but continually finds herself flashing back to that day no matter how hard she tries.

The people around her present any number of problems for Julie, and she’s hard put to keep from drowning under all the issues. Then Michael–a cool guy she’s had a crush on for the last three years—returns from traveling the US as a photographer, and Julie now has one more thing to distract her as she prepares to leave high school. One thing she firmly believes in: no one will ever invade her classroom with violence again.

Once again, the impossible happens. Once again, she’s in a classroom with a madman holding a gun. Once again, she must survive.

Watch the Book Trailer here…

And here’s a brief excerpt…

The idea he’ll give up his dreams of college sounds impossible. When Hugh found out he needed a scholarship, he worked hard to achieve top grades in all his classes. He succeeded but the idea of receiving a failing grade throws him into a panic, and he’s not the only one. I suffer from the same problem, but only because WWE– my mom, who is no wrestler, puts them to shame with her drama – threatens to declare me an incorrigible teen if I ever bring home anything below an A.

“Yeah. They did.” He takes off at high speed. “State made me think I could actually get an art degree. I’ll have to find a job if I don’t get that paper finished.”

I run after him, slamming into a couple of other teens, and apologizing. He slows before we reach our classroom.

“Don’t tell anyone else about the job,” he says. “I couldn’t handle it if they knew.”

Another secret, one I have no idea I want to keep, and there’s far more involved than he’s telling me.

You can also get KC’s previous books for free:

Softly Say Goodbye and Who Am I?

Follow KC on tour tomorrow, at…Michele Biring-Pani’s Raven Reviews.

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Book Tour – “Dream World (book 1)” by SJ Hitchcock

Book Tour – “Dream World (book 1)” by SJ Hitchcock

I’m happy to be hosting today’s stop on the book tour for SJ Hitchcock and her new book “Dream World” (book 1).

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And here’s our author for the day…

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Sarah Hitchcock was born in Norfolk, in a small town called Kings Lynn.  She always was a keen reader, and one day decided to attempt to write her own, and never looked back.  Today she has many novels in various stages of editing and re-writing.  Her current WIP, is in the final stages of editing, and will be out later this year as an ebook.

After finishing high school and then training to work with children, Sarah started her first job. She currently works as a pre-school teacher.

Sarah has four children, and three dogs, and a partner who has had to put up with her rambling on about all her WIP’s.

She recalls spending hours thinking about her characters and their storylines.  To this day, she often falls asleep thinking about where she can take new and old characters.

You can follow here on her blog, Facebook, Twitter and Wattpad.

And now I’d like to turn the blog over to SJ for a few minutes…

 

 

SJ does have a new book out, too, so let’s tell you about “Dream World”…

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Debbie who witnesses the death of her mother, and uses her dreams as a way to escape the real world.  Where she feels safe and loved, in Joshua Lawson’s arms, the guy from her favourite TV show Victor, and from her favourite poster above her bed.

Karen is ignored by all her family, she really just wants to be loved by them, and takes out her anger on her former best friend, Debbie and anyone who gets in her way.

Lastly, Mark whose shipped off to the UK to live, while his parents are on tour for the next year. And Mark has always lived in the shadow of his cousin.

You can buy the book in many,many places – here they all are:

 

And here’s the author’s dream cast for the book…

Debbie Conway – Dakota Blue Richards

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Wendy Allan – Lara Goodison

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Karen Langley – Ella Purnell

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Mark Hobson – Carlos Pena

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Joshua Lawson –  James Maslow

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Simon Portman –  Jamie Campbell Bower

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Book Tour! Andrea Buginsky and “Destiny”

Book Tour! Andrea Buginsky and “Destiny”

I’m happy to be participating in the book tour for Andrea Buginsky’s new novel “Destiny”  Make sure to read all the way to the end, as Andrea’s got a giveaway as a part of her tour.

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And heeeereee’s Andrea!

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Andrea Buginsky is a freelance writer and author. “The Chosen,” a middle-grade fantasy novelette, was her first book, and was followed by “My Open Heart,” an autobiography about growing up with heart disease. “Nature’s Unbalance” is the second story in THE CHOSEN series. Andrea is currently working on another series: a YA fantasy. To learn more about Andrea, visit her on her website.

You can also follow Andrea on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pintrest.

I’ll turn the blog over to Andrea for a few minutes now…

World Building

When creating stories, authors don’t just create characters; they create worlds. In fantasy books, these worlds are often built to the author’s imagination. Some may create a vision of the Earth back in time or in the future; some may choose a portion of the Earth we never dreamed of; and some may choose another planet far away, either real or imaginary.

When I first starting writing THE CHOSEN, my first fantasy, I enjoyed building the world of Phantasma. I had magical creatures that lived there, of different sorts, and with many different powers. I set it up to have separate regions where they all came from, with a royal village in the center. The Kingdom was there, and it was home to the Queen and King of my stories.

When I created New Avalon, I had to come up with something that would be realistic enough to be on Earth, but fantastical enough to fit in my storyline. I had a lot of fun inventing it, dreaming about it, and even seeing it. It’s a place I wish truly existed, because I would love to see it.

But just coming up with the idea for a new world is not enough. You must build that world from the ground up. You have to be an architect for a dream world. You have to include various landmarks and creatures; describe everything your characters see, taste, smell, touch and hear; and you have to keep it consistent throughout the book and the series.

I found the best way for me to build my worlds is to shut my eyes and just type exactly what I see. I can focus completely on the world I want to build, write it all down, then go back and make any adjustments I need to. Then, I can keep what I wrote for reference for the future books in the series. When I did this for DESTINY, I was so intrigued with what I saw, that I fell instantly in love with my new world, as I’m hoping my readers will.

What is your favorite fantasy world? What kind of fantasy world would you create?

Here’s her book…

Destiny (2)

Constantly teased and taunted by the popular girls, Elena Baxter desperately wants to fit in. On her sweet sixteenth, she receives two shocking gifts: telekinesis and the surprising truth about her heritage. With high hopes that things will be different now, Elena returns to school to find that nothing has changed. Only this time her hurt feelings and frustration boil into something even she cannot understand.

When her powers explode, chaos ensues and she learns that her new ability is greater than she ever desired. As she learns to control her powers, Elena discovers there’s so much more to her heritage than she ever imagined.

You can buy the book at Amazon, right now!

And here’s a brief excerpt to tide you over until you do…

As Elena bounded back up the stairs, her mom watched, smiling, thinking about the last 16 years, and of all this next one would bring.  She knew there would be a lot of changes, more so than Elena could possibly know, and she was looking forward to every one of them.  She could hardly wait for Isabel’s arrival the next day so they could finally tell Elena the truth about who she was, and help her to blossom and start to become whom she was meant to be.

…and, last but not least, here’s Andrea’s giveaway:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Oh, one more thing…here’s her whole tour schedule, so you can follow along every day!

 

Emerald Barnes 9/16/2013 Interview
Wayne Murphy 9/17/2013 Excerpt
A.R. Silverberry 9/18/2013 Interview
Tammy Hall 9/19/2013 Review/Promo
Sharon Martin 9/20/2013 Promo
Laurie Jenkins 9/21/2013 Author Spotlight/Character Interview
Vincent Morrone 9/22/2013 Guest Post
JLB Creatives Blog 9/23/2013 Interview
Sheenah Freitas 9/24/2013 Guest Post
James DiBenedetto 9/25/2013 Guest Post
Sheila Deeth 9/26/2013 Guest Post
Lisa Day 9/27/2013 Author Spotlight
Alexia Boesen 9/28/2013 Review
Bonnie Trachtenberg 9/29/2013 Guest Post

 

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Book Tour! “The Bridge of Deaths” by M.C.V. Egan

Book Tour! “The Bridge of Deaths” by M.C.V. Egan

I’m happy to host for today’s one-day Book Blitz tour for M.C.V Egan and her novel “The Bridge of Deaths”

About The Author:picture087

M.C.V. Egan lives in South Florida. she is fluent in four languages; English, Spanish, French and Swedish. From a young age became determined to solve the ‘mystery’ of her grandfather’s death, she has researched this story for almost two decades. the story has taken her to Denmark, England and unconventional world of psychics.

Website | Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads

Peace In Time Book Blitz

Genre: Historical Paranormal
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publishing
Release Date: June 14, 2011
Amazon

On August 15th, 1939 an English passenger plane from British Airways Ltd. Crashed in Danish waters between the towns of Nykobing/Falster and Vordingborg. There were five casualties reported and one survivor. Just two weeks before Hitler invaded Poland with the world at the brink of war the manner in which this incident was investigated left much open to doubt. The jurisdiction battle between the two towns and the newly formed Danish secret police, created an atmosphere of intrigue and distrust.

In the winter of 2009-2010 a young executive, Bill is promoted and transferred to London for a major International firm. He has struggled for the better part of his life with nightmares and phobias, which only seem to worsen in London. As he seeks the help of a therapist he accepts that his issues may well be related to a ‘past-life trauma’.

Through love, curiosity, archives and the information superhighway of the 21st century Bill travels through knowledge and time to uncover the story of the 1939 plane crash.

The Bridge of Deaths is a love story and a mystery. Fictional characters travel through the world of past life regressions and information acquired from psychics as well as archives and historical sources to solve “One of those mysteries that never get solved” is based on true events and real people, it is the culmination of 18 years of sifting through sources in Denmark, England and the United States, it finds a way to help the reader feel that he /she is also sifting through data and forming their own conclusions.

The journey takes the reader to well known and little known events leading up to the Second World War, both in Europe and America. The journey also takes the reader to the possibility of finding oneself in this lifetime by exploring past lives.




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Juggling

Juggling

One of the perils of writing a series is the sheer number of characters to keep up with.  I’m nearing the halfway point of “Dream Reunion” and it’s really a trick to keep the story focused and on track, bring out the themes and sub-plots I’m trying to highlight, and also do justice to the ever-growing cast of characters surrounding Sara.

The fact that it’s all written from Sara’s first-person POV makes it a little easier, but I feel pulled in as many directions as she is.  She’s got a husband, five kids now, both her parents and also a mother and father-in-law, as well as a brother and a best friend who both have families of their own, and her business partner as well.  Giving all of them at least a little bit of “screen time” is a challenge, especially because every one of them is very selfish and wants the spotlight for themself!

And it’s going to be even trickier once Sara gets to her ten-year college reunion in a chapter or two; there will be several returning characters from the first and second book who’ll all be trying to push their way onto the page as much as possible.  We’ll see how that all works out…

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Indie Author Spotlight – Fran Veal

Indie Author Spotlight – Fran Veal

I’m absolutely thrilled to spotlight a fantastic fellow indie author, Fran Veal, whose second novel, “Finding My Way Back” was just released last month.

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Fran Veal fell in love with the book Little Women in the third grade, and that was the spark that ignited her desire to write.  If Jo could write then she felt she could, too.  Her first attempt at writing stories was in the fifth grade when she began writing and drawing a cartoon for her friends.  The drawing, to be honest, was terrible, but the stories must have been pretty decent because a friend recently informed her she’d kept some of them because “she always knew Fran would be a writer someday.  Fran graduated to writing romance in ninth grade, which was more interesting and, no, there were no pictures (much to the readers’ relief).

It wasn’t until Fran had a teen daughter of her own that she actually began writing again.  Finding My Escape was her debut novel.  The sequel, Finding My Way Back will be released August 23, 2013 with the third and final book in the series coming out in early 2014.  She’s also working on a comedy geared more toward adults, Five Strikes, with fellow writer, Bryden Lloyd.

Fran currently resides in the beautiful city of Murfreesboro, TN with her husband of twenty-seven years, fifteen year old daughter, and one extremely snarky cat.

You can find Fran at her website, on Facebook, and on her Amazon Author page.

 

Fran’s book is “Finding My Way Back”

FranA

 

Three weeks ago I walked in while my parents were being murdered.  I escaped, but I need to put my life back together again.  There’s just one problem – I don’t know where to begin.

My parents weren’t who I thought they were.
My best friend isn’t who I thought he was.
The killer isn’t who I thought he was.
And scariest of all, I’m not who I thought I was.

FINDING MY WAY BACK is a Young Adult tale of adventure, self-discovery and romance, with a twist of the paranormal. It’s the sequel to the Kindle bestseller FINDING MY ESCAPE.

You can buy the book at Amazon (and you can read MY review of it right here…spoiler alert – I loved it!).

I should note that this book is the second book of a trilogy, and the first book, “Finding My Escape” is also on Amazon (and I reviewed that book as well; again, I loved it!).

I’ve also got an interview with Fran…read on!

 

Who is your favorite author?
I have many favorites, but if I had to pick one, it would be Ted Dekker. He can weave a story better than just about any writer I’ve read. His stories are very interconnected, yet you can pick up any book in one of his series and start reading without reading the earlier books.
How do you describe your writing style?
My writing style is what I would call ‘tight’. I try to use just enough description to give the reader the idea of what’s going on without overwhelming them with unnecessary detail.
Use no more than two sentences. Why should we read your book?
You should read my book because it’s unique and hard to put down. And because I said to (kidding).
Have any of your characters been modeled after yourself?
I think I see a little of myself in a lot of my female characters, or at least how I’d like to see myself. I wish I’d been as self-assured as Hannah when I was her age. Hannah’s grief was very real to me because I had just lost my father when I was writing Finding My Escape. I also had a very good friend who was murdered. I definitely see a lot of myself in the Aunt Laura character. In fact, I’m thinking of doing a Romancing the Stone type story with her as the center-piece once I finish the Finding My Escape series.
If you could exchange lives with any of your characters for a day which character would you choose and why?
Well, my characters see a lot of action in a typical day, but they also face a lot of danger! I think I’d change places with Hannah for a day, but only if it could be one of the days she spends with Josh in Valeria. I really want to see that world!
What books have most influenced your life?
How much space do you have? Let’s see…Little Women was the first book that got me thinking about writing. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory opened my imagination. The Nancy Drew series expanded my vocabulary and gave me a love for mysteries. And classic British literature such as Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice showed me that the road to love doesn’t always have that fairy tale aspect to it.
If you could select one book that you could rewrite and add your own unique twist on, which book would that be and why?
There are probably a lot of books I’d like to get my hands on, but I think I’d like to take Gone With the Wind and have Melanie’s character just slap Scarlet silly for going after her husband and expose her for the ruthless, self-serving individual she was.
Beatles or Monkees? Why?
Monkees! I grew up watching the Monkees in the sixties and didn’t even really know who the Beatles were other than the name until the 70’s. I had the biggest crush on Davy Jones. I loved the song Last Train to Clarksville. It’s about Clarksville, TN which is close to Fort Campbell, KY and the 101st Airborne division. As a child, I just liked the song, and especially that it’s about a town from my state, but as I grew up, I realized the song had a deeper meaning. The guy in the song is telling the girl to take the ‘last train to Clarksville’ to meet him so they can have one last night together before he’s shipped off to Vietnam. Fun trivia question for your fans – what did Mike Nesmith’s mother invent? (Answer at the end of post.)
Who should play you in a film of your life?
 They’re making a film of my life? Okay, seriously. I think I’d like fellow Tennessean, Meagan Fox to play me when I was younger, and Sandra Bullock to play the older me.

 

 

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