1 Year Anniversary Post & Giveaway

THE WINNER HAS BEEN CHOSENThank you to all that entered!

One year ago, I was sitting around playing with an idea – a crazy, fantastical awesome idea. The idea of starting a book blog. I’d played around with the idea ever since December 2011 but never really acted on it. But some blogs along with a lot of cups of coffee made me decide to do it. No one really thought I’d be able to make it through the year, no one thought I’d be able to make it through the year with 15 reviews (that was my goal at the time – haha, that seems so tiny now).

I’ve met some amazing people this year. If I mentioned every single amazing person I’ve met this year, we’ll be here for a very long time. I just want to say thank you to every friend on Goodreads, every follower on this blog, and of course Oceana who’d kill me if I didn’t mention her. I’d also like to thank my awesome friends Zuz (from QWERTY) and Livvy (from Nerdy Book Reviews) who somehow found my blog and cheered me up on Goodreads and here as well with just basically liking my reviews and talking books with me.

Ok guys, enough of this sobby sentimental nonsense and let’s get on to the fun stuff also known as a giveawayyy! I’m giving away my physical ARC of…

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THE NIGHTMARE AFFAIR BY MINDEE ARNETT

The giveaway is hosted by Rafflecopter and I’d like y’all to follow a simple set of rules:

1. You must be at least 13 to enter this giveaway

2. Continental US only :( I’ll be hosting another international giveaway very soon though!

3. No cheating! I’ll know. dun dun dun

And since apparently I can’t post the rafflecopter giveaway in my HTML, you’ll have to follow this link to enter the giveaway, sorry! It’s just the immediate link to the rafflecopter giveaway! Tell me if it doesn’t work and I’ll find another way to host this.

Basically, thanks for sticking with me this year and for those new followers? Thanks <3

 

Interview with Libby Heily

Hey guys, I’m in the process of moving blogs (this one will still be active, don’t worry) so my posting has greatly reduced. But on the upside, I have another interview for you guys! I’m not sure I’m my secret guest is going to do the interview so let’s drop that. A winter giveaway will also be up in the next few weeks.

Libby

When asked why I write, I usually stutter out a made up answer that I can’t remember three seconds later. I can’t remember the very first time I decided I wanted to write, it’s just something I kind of always did. I wrote really bad poems as a kid, then horrible short stories as a teenager and then passable plays in college. I’m an adult now (and nothing you can say can make me change my mind about that) and hopefully my writing has progressed with my age. When I’m not spending my time with made up people in made up places doing made up things – some would call it lying- I’m generally reading, running, watching sports, drinking good beers and eating too much food with the hubby. I’d love to tell you I’m a mountain climber or an astronomer or something cool like that, but I’m not that cool. In truth, some would say I’m nerdy. But the Dr. Who poster above my computer would beg to differ.

Me:  ‪Hello guys, I have Libby Heily here with me. Say hi to the readers!

Libby:  ‪Why hello there!

‪Me: What prompted you to write a novel?

Libby:  ‪I’ve been writing since I was a little kid.  The moment I could make letters, I was writing.  I got serious about writing fiction in college while studying acting.  I started off with plays, then moved to screenplays.  Writing a novel was always my goal, but I was incredibly intimidated.  I had to work up to it.  After writing a good amount of short stories and getting a few published, I figured it was time to attack my white whale, the novel.

Me: Your book, Tough Girl, is very different from what I’ve read before – in a good way. What do you think inspired this idea?

Libby: I always knew I wanted to write a story about a young girl and her dream world. Alice in Wonderland was a huge influence on me.  That was the basic idea and I held onto it for years trying to figure out what I wanted that dream world to be like.

‪The story morphed in time to include a second story I was interested in writing, the one of Tough Girl.  That dream world worked well for Reggie and the challenges she was facing. I used a lot of things I had seen during my childhood, many in Dale City where the book is placed.

That’s the long version, short version is that I held onto the idea of a young girl escaping into dream world and added and subtracted elements until they all came together to make Tough Girl.

Me: Wow, thanks for the very in-depth answer! I thought I sensed a bit of Farscape in it as well but that may have been just me as I had been watching Farscape before reading.

Libby:  ‪Oh, you know it.  I got into science fiction after getting married.  It was actually in my vows to watch and read more sci fi.  Farscape and Battlestar Galactica were big influences.

Me: As an amateur writer myself, I’ve always found it hard to have multiple POVs in a single story. Did you ever have trouble keeping the two POVs apart in your story?

Libby: Not really.  They were pretty unique.  The hardest part I had with POV was deciding how to tell Reggie’s part of the story.  The advice I was given was 3rd closed which made sense.  It would have put the reader right in Reggie’s head without being 1st person

‪‪But, the problem was that Reggie is working hard to distance herself from her life and making her POV immediate would have undercut that (in my opinion).  In the end I opted for more distance using 3rd person.

‪‪Me: Have you found it hard to be a self published author? I know many reviewers are a bit biased against self pubbed.

Libby:  ‪Great question.

In some ways yes.  It is more difficult to get reviews and I don’t have the credibility of being signed to a publisher. However, the freedom is kind of worth it.  I had the ability to do Tough Girl in the exact way I wanted to and I’ve had ultimate control over the story and the presentation. Since it’s difficult to make money writing, I’m happy to have freedom.  I will probably search for a traditional publisher for my next novel, but I was pretty psyched to go at it alone for my first.

Me: What are some of your favourite books? Did they also influence your writing?

Libby: Gosh, talking about long answers!

Favorite plays: A Dream Play, Iceman Cometh, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Zoo Story, The Goat or Who is Sylvia.

Books: Anything by Virginia Woolf or Muriel Spark (in love with the Driver’s Seat), the entire Thursday Next series, Absurdistan, Nothing’s Fair in 5th Grade, Candide, On the Road, the Discworld series, The Color Purple, ect.

I owe a debt to so many writers and I just keep hoping to one day be as good as them.

Me: What are a few of your favourite writing (and/or reading) moments?

Libby:   ‪Writing moment for Tough Girl:  Ultimately, it took me 4 drafts to write Tough Girl (as well as tons of editing).  The plot was intricate and it was difficult to tell how much to involve the dream world in her life and how all the characters affected her.  Half way through draft two, I quit.  I didn’t quit delicately, but with a vengeance.  I had erased an entire character, changed the flow of the story, but could not get it to work.  It was the middle of the afternoon and I went to bed crying.  I sobbed myself to sleep.  I then woke up a few hours later and started working again.  I started a new draft two weeks later.

Reading moment: The Driver’s Seat by Muriel Spark.  I read it because a book group I joined on Goodreads picked it.  I don’t think I would have found it otherwise.

I recommend this book to everyone.  It’s quick, about 125 pages, and it pulls you along at a screaming pace through this insane lady’s day.  And then you get to the end, and you have no idea how you got there or why, but it makes sense.  I’ve read 3 other books by her since then and am going to reread the Driver’s Seat in January, for my birthday.  I don’t know the last time I was so incredibly blown away by a story.  It wasn’t really because of the twists, there can be good twists in bad stories, but it was the overall excellence of the book.

Me: ‪Thanks for the interview Libby! Is there anything you’d like to add?

Libby:  ‪No, I’m good, but thank you!

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000446_00060]

Tough Girl

Fourth Degree Freedom

Fourth Degree Freedom

Twist, Turn, & Burn

Twist, Turn, & Burn

Interview with Nenia Campbell

Nenia Campbell is the author of two books, Cloak and Dagger and Endgame. I recently finished Endgame (review to come) which I absolutely devoured and I am planning on buying Cloak and Dagger as well. Nenia is a fellow reviewer (who some may know as Pikachu Ketchum turned indie author.

GR Author Description:
Nenia Campbell was born and raised in the United States. From infancy, she was fond of books- especially the cardboard ones; they were the most delicious. As she grew older, she learned that ‘devouring a book’ was a phrase not to be taken literally. As a result, she became a very enthusiastic reader. When she discovered that the stories she wanted to read did not exist she became an enthusiastic writer, as well.

Me: Hi guys and say hello to Nenia Campbell! Say hello to the readers, Nenia!
Nenia Campbell: HELLO READERS
Me: I have successfully persuaded Ms. Campbell to do an interview for you guys. Now, *turns to Nenia* what prompted you to write your books?
NC: Hmm… well I used to read stuff online when I was a teenager, and I began to notice that a lot of them were alike and not necessarily in the best ways so I thought, “I bet I could do better.” And after several years of fail, it even sort of started to be true.
Me: Wow, that’s really awesome. What would you say to aspiring authors, like myself?
NC: The most important thing for writing well is reading. Not only do learn what you SHOULD do, you also learn what you SHOULDN’T do.

It’s also important that you don’t expect to be good right off the bat. The books that are published have (presumably) been rewritten several times and I think it’s critical to keep in mind that even Harry Potter most likely started out as something jotted down on a napkin. :)

Me: I know you love to read and review, so you must have some favourite books and genres? Do your favourite genres and books influence your writing?
NC: My favorite genres are science-fiction, gothics, and nonfiction. I read a lot of psychology books and books about pop science.
It’s difficult to pick out an ultimate favorite out of the many books I’ve read but some of the highest ranked ones are “Fire and Hemlock” by Diana Wynne Jones, “Ready Player One” by Ernest Cline, “Poison Study” by Maria V. Snyder, “Heir Apparent” by Vivian Vande Velde, “Jane Eyre” by Charlotte Bronte, “Ella Enchanted” by Gail Carson Levine, and “White Oleander” by Janet FitchI definitely think the books I read influence my writing. There’s a distinct psychological flavor to all my books because of my university studies, and I’m definitely edgier and geekier than a lot of my peers, I think, when it comes to the content of my YA romances.
Me:  I adore Poison Study as well. Wonderful characters and a beautiful plot.

How did your love for reading start and what is your fondest book related memory?

NC: I’ve always been an avid devourer of books- both literally and figuratively. I ate books, then I drew on them, and then, around age four, I learned to read them. It was pretty much love at first sight.One of my more amusing book-related memories happened in middle school, when I got on academic probation for having a low gpa. I was very disorganized and always losing my homework, because I crumpled it into a ball instead of filing it in a binder like a normal person. Anyway, my parents grounded me- and since they knew I never watched tv anyway, this meant taking away all my non-school-related books. I was devastated.
Me: Oh god, they took your books!?! For how long? I would never be able to live without non-school-related books.
NC: Until I got my grades up. So I spent a month or two in abject misery. It worked, though- I never dipped below a 3.0 ever again, and even graduated from my college cum laude. So parents, take note!
 
Me: I hope my mum doesn’t see that or it’s good-bye books and I’ll have no one other than you for that.
 
NC: Haha, well you said you’re not letting her on GR right? so you should be safe

Although this could work to my advantage. Hmm….
Me:  She reads my blog. dun dun dun. I might have to exclude some of your post.
NC: CENSORSHIP *gasp*
Me:  I am an evil tyrant. You said this was like HG anyway.
NC:  I see that now.
Me:  Do you travel during your writing? Would you like too?
NC: No, I don’t. I usually write in bed or at the table with a mug of tea. I like being alone and relaxed when i write because otherwise I can’t focus.
Me: Computer or by hand?
NC: I write notes and story information by hand but story writing is almost always done on the computer
Me: Do you feel like you can safely review and write? As a reviewer, I’m sometimes scared to ever get my writing published because I won’t be able to review.
NC: Yup! I feel like I’m pretty fair as a reviewer and try not to impose any standards on others that I don’t already follow borderline-religiously myself. Except for typos. I suck at editing my own work- but thankfully, I have some editors now.
I’ve been challenged before but I’m usually able to refute negative commenters with examples that can at least make them see where I’m coming from. Worst case scenario, I just say, “Let’s agree to disagree!” or, if they’re really rude, “I respect that you like the book.” There’s just no point in arguing with trolls, period. :)
Me: That’s definitely a good strategy! I’m glad that I’ve never encountered any trolls on my own posts.
How long does to take to write the first manuscript on average?
NC: Hmmm. Well one of my WIPs (work in progress) took me 6 months to write. The first draft of Endgame took me three days. So it really depends.
Me: Wow! Three days? Well, we’re reaching the end of this interview, is there anything you’d like to add?
NC: I have a lot of stories planned! And I hope my indie-author status doesn’t scare people away from reading my books. I’m really very friendly. :)
Me: Thank you so much for agreeing to do the interview with me and I can’t wait for more! People, read her books. They’re good!

Endgame: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16115048-endgame

Cloak and Dagger: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16107708-cloak-and-dagger
btw: Nenia isn’t my mystery guest. dun dun dun. The mystery is killing you, isn’t it?

Guest Post – Sheryl Steines

Please enjoy this guest post by Sheryl Steines, author of the action-packed urban fantasy, She Wulf. Then read on to learn how you can win huge prizes as part of this blog tour, including a Kindle Fire, $550 in Amazon gift cards, 5 autographed copies of She Wulf, and 5 copies of its companion, The Day of First Sun.

Time Travel? Yes, I think so!

A guest by Sheryl Steines

If you could go anywhere, meet any person, in any period of time, where would you go, what would you do, who would you meet? I know this is all hypothetical, but hey, I write in the pretend–in the fantasy. So suspend your disbelief, and come play with me for a moment.

Not such an easy question to answer, is it? One option would be to go and meet someone long dead–perhaps Elvis circa 1959 makes your heart swoon. Would you take the opportunity to meet a favorite entertainer, or maybe you want your trip to count for something meaningful? But what if you made a change, saved a life, corrected a wrong, how would your alterations affect the future? An interesting notion, don’t you think?

As I wrote She Wulf, my time travel adventure, I developed the idea of changing the past and how that might lead to the future you are trying to change. Maybe our interference might just be a self-fulfilling prophecy. That’s when The Terminator movie struck me as so relevant and important in how I shaped my ideas of time travel.

For those who don’t know, The Terminator is a science fiction adventure where machines take over the world. The machines are human like cyborgs, ruled by an artificial intelligence program called Skynet, whose sole mission is to annihilate humanity. In opposition, the resistance was created by John Connor and they are winning the war. In an effort to prevent the resistance from being founded, the cyborgs send back one of their own, to murder John’s mother Sarah, before he’s born. To protect her and ensure he is even conceived, he sends back one of his soldiers (his father), to protect her. Got all that. So finally to my point, and I realize this all imaginary and takes place on celluloid but really, had the cyborgs never sent back the terminator, John Connor never would have sent back his father and he wouldn’t have been born. But what can you expect from a bunch of cyborgs anyway?

For me, in She Wulf, you couldn’t just decide one day to go to the past unless you found yourself there when the past was actually the present. Huh? Picture it this way. It’s 2012 and you want to go to the past, let’s say to the year 1900. You can’t go unless during the year 1900, you actually showed up. I know, it’s all theory, but that’s how it happened when Annie Pearce finds herself falling through a time portal, back to eleventh century England. She understands the concept of time travel, of altering the past and how it can affect the future which makes her reluctant to get involved. But she realizes that she had already been there, in the year 1075, had already altered time and whatever she touched or changed or created, was meant to be touched, changed or created.

So still think time travel is cool? I know sometimes we’d like a do-over, the ability to change a decision, to not have to live through pain and despair. But sometimes, these things make us who we are. Each experience shapes us, each tear, each laugh, adds to our self. We gain something. All those things that I’ve experienced, including the loss of a child, made me who I am. Without that, could I have written She Wulf?

So time travel–can you see it? What if it was real and I could look at it from a purely joyful perspective, without those darned consequences hanging over my head. Maybe an afternoon with Elvis would be fun.

As part of this special promotional extravaganza sponsored by Novel Publicity, the price of the She Wulf eBook edition is just 99 cents this week–and so is the price of its companion, The Day of First Sun. What’s more, by purchasing either of these fantastic books at an incredibly low price, you can enter to win many awesome prizes. The prizes include a Kindle Fire, $550 in Amazon gift cards, and 5 autographed copies of the book.

All the info you need to win one of these amazing prizes is RIGHT HERE. Remember, winning is as easy as clicking a button or leaving a blog comment–easy to enter; easy to win!

To win the prizes:

  1. Purchase your copy of She Wulf for just 99 cents
  2. Purchase your copy of Day of First Sun for just 99 cents
  3. Enter the Rafflecopter contest on Novel Publicity
  4. Visit today’s featured social media event

About She Wulf: Annie is sent through an ancient time portal with only a prophecy to guide her; she struggles with a new destiny as she tries to figure out a way to destroy an un-killable demon and return home. Get it on Amazon.

About The Day of First Sun: A vampire, a rogue wizard and an army of soulless zombies are par for the course for Annie Pearce and Bobby “Cham” Chamsky of the Wizard’s Guard. But when the non-magical princess, Amelie of Amborix, is murdered by magical means, a deeper plot unfolds. Get it on Amazon.

About the author: Behind the wheel of her ’66 Mustang Convertible, Sheryl is a constant surprise, using her sense of humor and relatable style make her books something everyone can enjoy. Visit Sheryl on her website, Twitter, Facebook, or GoodReads.

She Wulf Excerpt

Please enjoy this excerpt from She Wulf, an action-packed urban fantasy by Sheryl Steines. Then read on to learn how you can win huge prizes as part of this blog tour, including a Kindle Fire, $550 in Amazon gift cards, 5 autographed copies of She Wulf, and 5 copies of its companion, The Day of First Sun.

 

Someone screamed; a terrified, naked shrill cry in the distance. There were sounds of hollering, screeching, grunting, stomping. The ground rumbled under Annie as she threw several layers of animal skins to the ground.

Spencer jumped up; the coven roused themselves.

“The mead hall,” he said as they threw open the door and ran to the village center.

Chaos turned to determination as the coven traveled through the forest toward the mead hall. Annie knew the Vikings were running, screaming, panicked— but all she could hear were footsteps, and her heart pounding in her chest. Spencer had come with her; she didn’t know where he was now. She only knew the steady rhythm surrounding her as the coven followed the trail. Instinctively she went into battle mode. This was what had brought here. Her adrenaline pumped through her, her heart beat quicker, her blood boiled with rage, and she ran faster.

They were through the forest and into the clearing that surrounded the mead hall. Annie’s senses changed, grew clearer and louder. She heard terrified voices; smelled fear hanging in the air. The anxious cries of the Vikings moved through her. She listened to the growling and grunting and the rage and horror the demons brought forth. It crowded her as they broke through the wooded area.

Swords swished in the air; metal sliced through flesh. Anxious, chaotic screams greeted them as they entered the massacre.

Blood covered the earth and stuck to their shoes and clothes. Large dark patches already drenched the ground around the hall and rolled off the dead bodies that littered the ground. Annie was sick. Women and children ran from the mead hall in the direction of the coven village, away from the demons that had overtaken them.

She reached down and pulled a small boy out of the way as a demon lunged for him. She threw her first jinx at the demon, surprised by the strength of her magic. The creature flew through the air and landed on another demon. The demon on top grunted, punched the beast below it and stood up. The one on the ground rose and looked around, confused at first until it focused on a Viking running past. It reached its large hands over and plucked the Viking from mid-run and held him in the air.

Terror filled the night; panic surrounded her as she conjured a small fireball. It hovered above her palm; it grew in size and strength, and she released it toward the demon. Its lightweight clothing caught fire easily. The demon hopped around in one spot, patting down the fire, but the flames grew and inched their way upwards before consuming the demon’s skin. It screamed; pain mixed with terror. The battle stopped around them and the warriors watched, entranced by the only known means to kill the demons.

“Fire!” Annie yelled to them. “Kill them with fire!”

As if the coven awoke from a trance, fireballs lit up the night, flying through the air and consuming the demons. Fire ate away at Annie’s demon’s flesh and crackled its bones. They popped until there was nothing left but ash. The last of the monster’s scream reverberated in Annie’s ear as the wind picked up and scattered its smoking remains in the air. She lit another ball of fire above her palm and threw it in the pile of ash, burning any possible traces of the demon. The blaze flashed and died down to nothing. She ran toward another creature.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

About She Wulf: Annie is sent through an ancient time portal with only a prophecy to guide her; she struggles with a new destiny as she tries to figure out a way to destroy an un-killable demon and return home. Get it on Amazon.

About The Day of First Sun: A vampire, a rogue wizard and an army of soulless zombies are par for the course for Annie Pearce and Bobby “Cham” Chamsky of the Wizard’s Guard. But when the non-magical princess, Amelie of Amborix, is murdered by magical means, a deeper plot unfolds. Get it on Amazon.

About the author: Behind the wheel of her ’66 Mustang Convertible, Sheryl is a constant surprise, using her sense of humor and relatable style make her books something everyone can enjoy. Visit Sheryl on her website, Twitter, Facebook, or GoodReads.

Interview with Sheryl Steines

Please enjoy this interview with Sheryl Steines, author of the action-packed urban fantasy, She Wulf. Then read on to learn how you can win huge prizes as part of this blog tour, including a Kindle Fire, $550 in Amazon gift cards, 5 autographed copies of She Wulf, and 5 copies of its companion, The Day of First Sun.

1. When you start a book do you know how it will end or do you create the ending as you go along?

I have a rough idea of what the book will be about and I have some scene ideas and a rough ending. When I wrote The Day of First Sun, I knew that a high profile, non-magical person was going to be murdered by magic. I wrote out a paragraph of things that I wanted to see in the story and began writing. I didn’t look at the paragraph again until after the book was published and realized that I didn’t keep to my original thoughts at all. I tend to work without an outline because I feel tied to the story as if I’m trying to make everything fit. I prefer to let it flow and change. I like the freedom and the discovery. Sometimes I’m wildly surprised.

2. Do your book characters ever visit you in your dreams?

Yes and no. Not as much when I’m sleeping, but I daydream about them all the time. It’s how I work out characters and storylines. It’s almost as if a movie is playing in my head and I can change and add to storylines.

3. What are your favorite authors as either an adult or a child?

When I was a kid, I loved Nancy Drew. I read every one of them, but I didn’t just want to read them, I wished I had wrote them and started to write my own detective stories when I was seven. As I grew older, I read Judy Blume and Stephen King. Both made me feel something and from that I wanted to keep writing. I still read Stephen King and was very inspired by his autobiography On Writing. It was J.K. Rowling though, that reminded me of what I loved to read and that’s what inspired me to write my own fantasy novel.

4. How do you go about finishing a chapter when you can’t get it right?

I skip it…Just kidding. No, actually I’m not. Sometimes, I make a note in all caps reminding me I haven’t finished the chapter and other notes that I might be thinking about for the chapter and start the next one. Sometimes you just need to move on. The answer will eventually hit you upside the head when you least expect it.

5. Describe your reaction when you saw and held your first book?

I think I was numb when The Day of First Sun was published. Almost as if I had only done it to satisfy a selfish desire. It didn’t seem real. It was when I held She Wulf in my hands for the first time that I was overcome with emotion. This book consumed me for so long and I was so amazed by the final product and it seemed more than just a fantasy.

6. What is your biggest achievement to date?

Writing my first book. I always wanted to and never gave myself the opportunity. One day I decided it was time. It changed my life, gave me confidence. I lost the extra baby weight, changed my wardrobe, straightened my hair and gave my girls a role model, an example of taking control of one’s life and being the best person you can be.

7. What’s your favorite color?

Pink. I’ve always been a girly girl. As much as I’d like to be a sporty girl, I’m just not. It’s all about the pink, purses and shoes.

8. Favorite sound?

I love the sound of rain on the roof. Not during the sunlight hours, but early in the morning when it’s still dark out. I snuggle under the covers. It makes me happy.

9. If you weren’t a writer, what would you be?

An interior decorator. I love being creative and crafty and picking paint colors and getting lost in a fabric store. It’s almost as good as getting lost in a bookstore.

10. Worst fear?

I fear the alligators under the bed. Since I was a kid I can’t sleep without something covering my feet incase they come and get me. Don’t laugh, Stephen King admitted the same thing in an interview once.

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————–

As part of this special promotional extravaganza sponsored by Novel Publicity, the price of the She Wulf eBook edition is just 99 cents this week–and so is the price of its companion, The Day of First Sun. What’s more, by purchasing either of these fantastic books at an incredibly low price, you can enter to win many awesome prizes. The prizes include a Kindle Fire, $550 in Amazon gift cards, and 5 autographed copies of the book.

All the info you need to win one of these amazing prizes is RIGHT HERE. Remember, winning is as easy as clicking a button or leaving a blog comment–easy to enter; easy to win!

To win the prizes:

  1. Purchase your copy of She Wulf for just 99 cents
  2. Purchase your copy of Day of First Sun for just 99 cents
  3. Enter the Rafflecopter contest on Novel Publicity
  4. Visit today’s featured social media event

About She Wulf: Annie is sent through an ancient time portal with only a prophecy to guide her; she struggles with a new destiny as she tries to figure out a way to destroy an un-killable demon and return home. Get it on Amazon.

About The Day of First Sun: A vampire, a rogue wizard and an army of soulless zombies are par for the course for Annie Pearce and Bobby “Cham” Chamsky of the Wizard’s Guard. But when the non-magical princess, Amelie of Amborix, is murdered by magical means, a deeper plot unfolds. Get it on Amazon.

About the author: Behind the wheel of her ’66 Mustang Convertible, Sheryl is a constant surprise, using her sense of humor and relatable style make her books something everyone can enjoy. Visit Sheryl on her website, Twitter, Facebook, or GoodReads.

Cover Reveal + Giveaway: The Mad Scientist’s Daughter

As you probably know, I love Cassandra Rose Clarke. Assassin’s Curse was one of my favorite book this year and in a long time. I am amazingly happy to be one of the eight people who are going to be revealing the beautiful cover of Cassandra’s new book: The Mad Scientist’s Daughter.

Without further ado, The Mad Scientist’s Daughter!

There’s never been anyone – or anything – quite like Finn.

He looks, and acts human, though he has no desire to be. He was programmed to assist his owners, and performs his duties to perfection. A billion-dollar construct, his primary task is to tutor Cat.

When the government grants rights to the ever-increasing robot population, however, Finn struggles to find his place in the world.

I would have made it all fancy with a Rafflecopter widget (I even made an account and a giveaway thing) but I found out it doesn’t work on a WordPress hosted site. I am NOT buying my domain for a giveaway. I might buy it if I find I need it.

To enter the giveaway:

Yeah, that’s really it. :) Friending me on Goodreads is not mandatory but get’s you another entry (if you are already friended, you get a free entry).

Guest Post With Michael Sussman

Writing From Your Unconscious

One way to approach writing fiction is to let your unconscious mind lead the way.

This is not to denigrate the conscious mind. It is a critical component of the writing process, especially once you’ve completed a first draft and must begin reworking and polishing your material.

But I have found that when it comes to generating that first draft, it pays to let your conscious mind take a backseat and allow the subterranean realms of your mind full sway.

My favorite quote on this issue is from Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Robert Olen Butler: “Please get out of the habit of saying that you’ve got an idea for a short story. Art does not come from ideas. Art does not come from the mind. Art comes from the place where you dream. Art comes from your unconscious; it comes from the white-hot center of you.” 

So how do you access your unconscious? For some, this comes naturally. Others, like me, must coax the muse out of hiding. This is best done, in my experience, by entering into the twilight state between waking and dreaming. Walking, jogging, communing with Nature, taking a hot bath, daydreaming, self-hypnosis, and meditating can all help. So can writing down your dreams or practicing lucid dreaming.

I often begin with an image, or even a title, and let my mind play around with it. Many writers prefer to work from an outline, but I find that too constricting. I like to let my imagination take flight, trusting that a good story will emerge. Writing my novel, Crashing Eden, I often started a new chapter with little or no idea where the story was heading next. That kept me interested, as if I were the reader!

In the words of E.L. Doctorow, author of Ragtime and Billy Bathgate: “Writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.”

So, when working on a first draft, try to let your writing flow, unimpeded by conscious judgment or analysis. You’ll write a deeper, more genuine story if you allow your unconscious mind to guide the way.

Guest Post: Michael Sussman

 Yay! I’m hosting my first ever tour! Say hello to Michael Sussman, author of Crashing Eden!

Synopsis:
For one boy and his friends, the path to Paradise comes at a cost—one they may not be prepared to pay.

When a biking accident leaves 17-year-old Joss Kazdan with the ability to hear things others can’t, reality as he knows it begins to unravel.

A world of legends exists beyond the ordinary life he’s always known, and he is transported to the same Paradise he’s studying in World Mythology. But the strange gets even stranger when his new friends build a device that delivers people through the gates of the Garden of Eden.

Now Samael, the Creator God, is furious. As Samael rains down his apocalyptic devastation on the ecstasy-seeking teens, Joss and his companions must find a way to appease Samael—or the world will be destroyed forever.

 

 

Author Bio:
Michael Sussman is the author of Crashing Eden, a YA fantasy/paranormal novel, and Otto Grows Down, a children’s picture book featuring illustrations by Scott Magoon.

Dr. Sussman is a clinical psychologist and has also published two books for mental health professionals. He’s the author of A Curious Calling: Unconscious Motivations for Practicing Psychotherapy and the editor of A Perilous Calling: The Hazards of Psychotherapy Practice.

He resides in the Boston area with his son, Ollie.

Links:

Buy from Amazon: http://amzn.to/KHk6aE

Buy from Amazon UK: http://amzn.to/MZ4iT7 (paperback), http://amzn.to/MRuJM4 (e-book)

Buy from Barnes & Noble: http://bit.ly/KST7Fy

Buy from Smashwords: http://bit.ly/IPTc0l

Author’s website and blog: http://www.MichaelSussmanBooks.com

Twitter: @MichaelBSussman https://twitter.com/#!/MichaelBSussman

Facebook Fan Page: http://www.facebook.com/CrashingEden

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Visionary Fiction by Michael Sussman

When I first heard the term visionary fiction, what came to mind were such literary giants of the past as Dante, Milton, Goethe, Blake, and Whitman. Each of these authors bends toward the future, envisioning a human race struggling to evolve toward a higher spiritual plane.

Two of my favorite twentieth century writers, Nikos Kazantzakis (Zorba the Greek, Saint Francis, The Last Temptation of Christ) and Hermann Hesse (Siddhartha, Narcissus and Goldmund, Steppenwolf, The Glass Bead Game) were firmly in this tradition. Their novels portray protagonists who are striving to reach a more enlightened state of being.

Only recently have I discovered that visionary fiction is resurfacing as a “new” literary genre. In collaboration with ten other authors, we’ve formed the Visionary Fiction Alliance, and invite other novelists to become involved.

So what exactly is visionary fiction?

Perhaps the most cogent answer I’ve come across is from author Michael Gurian, who defines the genre as “fiction in which the expansion of the human mind drives the plot.”

According to Gurian, what moves the story along in visionary novels are such things as visions, hallucinations, mystical experiences, paranormal abilities, channeling, precognitive dreams, eerie coincidences, profound insights, and a feeling of being “utterly at one with the world.”

Visionary fiction overlaps with several better established genres, such as science fiction, fantasy, magical realism, and new age fiction. What seems to be unique about visionary fiction is its focus on the expansion and evolution of the human mind, imagining new frontiers for the human spirit.

Although I didn’t set out to write visionary fiction, my first novel—Crashing Eden—seems to meet all of the relevant criteria. Still, the story ultimately defies categorization in that it can also be read as a tongue-in-cheek send-up of both organized religion and new age mysticism.

The last word goes to that quirky comedian and philosopher, Steven Wright, who said: “I was a peripheral visionary. I could see the future, but only way off to the side.”

Liebster Blog Award 2012

 

First of all, thank you to Nerdy Girl for tagging me! Totally did not see that coming (well and the fact I didn’t know about the Liebster Awards) :) Second of all, sorry for not posting in a week (almost a week). Third of all, I have no idea how to do this so don’t expect anything more than rambling.  Truly sorry about that.

What is the Liebster Blog Award you may ask? Well, the Liebster Blog Award is an award given to bloggers who currently have under 200 followers. The award winners are to (a) share eleven facts about themselves (b) answer eleven questions asked by the blogger who tagged them (c) come up with their own set of eleven questions to ask bloggers and (d) tag eleven bloggers who they think are worthy of this award.
-Nerdy Girl

Eleven Random Facts

  1. I love mythology. Norse, Greek, Roman, Egyptian.
  2. I love BBC.
  3. My secret love is Rick Riordan books.
  4. I am addicted to Goodreads.
  5. My book site used to be Shelfari. My username was Rogue (from X-Men).
  6. I prefer books to people. You can throw annoying books across the room, unlike with people.
  7. Seven is my favorite number.
  8. I have a little brother named Alex.
  9. I love PS3 games. Assassin’s Creed is probably one of the best I’ve played.
  10. My favorite Harry Potter book is probably the last one or the fourth one.
  11. When I blog, I usually watch TV.

Eleven Q & As:

1. Does a book have to have a happy ending for you to like it?
Happy ending are fun. They give you this everything is happy feeling. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t like them. But are they necessary for me? No, not really. I do like them but at times the ending of a book needs something more.

2. Do you use your local library? If no, why not?
Of course I do! Almost all the books I read come from the library.

3. What got you into blogging?
It was my mom actually. I made one for school. It was a life and family blog (very different from this one). Last year, I stopped. I had no muse anymore. So, in December I decided to make a goal. An early New Year’s resolution. I would make a book blog and post at least 20 reviews. As you can probably tell, I surpassed that goal weeks ago. I found book blogs more entertaining to write than life blogs. So I kept going. 

4. If you could only ever read one book again, what would it be?
If I could only read one book again, I’d read Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. That book was my world and still is. I would be happy as long as I could read that one book. Well, actually I’d be depressed as hell but you know what I mean.

5. Do you find that you associate music and books or that you separate the two as entirely different entities?
I believe that (good) music and (good) books both tell stories, just in different mediums. I mean music is poetry, isn’t it? I definitely put books and poetry together.

6. How do you feel when you hear your favourite book is getting turned into a film?
A mixture of extreme happiness and extreme sadness. I’m glad that others will see the story even if they don’t see all the magic that was in the book. But I know that somehow someone is going to mess it up. I don’t know how or when, I just know they will. Preferably, STAY AWAY FROM MY BOOKS! 

7. What’s your favourite genre of books? Why?
Favorite genre would have to be YA science fiction or YA “horror” (which is really just any paranormal story). I do love a well written paranormal romance though. I love the mythology of paranormal species. The better developed a history, the more interesting. YA science fiction is very interesting. I love all the futuristic settings in the books.

8. You’ve been told you’re moving to an alternate universe and there is the possibility to take one character from a book with you. Who would it be and why?
I’d take Penryn from Angelfall. That girl is smart and knows how to handle herself. I mean an alternate universe has to be evil right? It says so in the books ;)

9. How do you treat your books? Are you protective or do you not care?
I would never hurt my books :( I never bend pages or write in them. A few are quite… loved though.

10. What got you into reading? And how long have you been reading?
My mom encouraged reading from a very early on. Plus I’m sure reading is picked up by osmosis. I’ve been reading since 1st grade. I took a break from reading when I was 7 or so and was into “Pokémon” and Nintendo’s.  Oh and the PS3 phase (which I haven’t out grown yet). But anyway, I’ve been reading for 6 years give or take.

11. Is there a book you really want to read and you haven’t read it yet?
Yeah, definitely yes. Many of them in fact. Stormdancer, Throne of Glass, but mostly Game of Thrones.

Questions for Bloggers:
1.  Are books important in your life and if yes, why?

2.  Hardcover or paperback? Why?

3. Do you prefer YA or adult books?

4. Why do you blog?

5. You are in a library with all the books in the world. But you can only read five of them. Which ones would you choose?

6.  Do you listen to music while reading? Watch TV? What do you do?

7. Do you pay attention to what page number you are on?

8. Do you buy before you read?

9. What is your guilty book pleasure?

10.  Do you have a favorite book?

11. What book defines your childhood?

Eleven Bloggers:

  1. Qwerty
  2. MyReadingHabit
  3. The Book Addict’s Guide
  4. Breathless Book Reviews
  5. Wake Up at Seven
  6. Cait’s  Corner
  7. Happy Go Lucky
  8. Genius Book Reviews
  9. The Headless Owl 
  10. Refuge in Books
  11. Ginger Read and Review