Showing posts with label paranormal romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paranormal romance. Show all posts

Friday, 24 July 2015

A Thin Slice of Heaven by p.m.terrell.‏




It's Friday!!!
Whoot! Whoot!

Let's get this summer weekend started with A Thin Slice of Heaven, a juicy paranormal-romance from author p.m. terrell.

You know it's not very often I have such established authors visit my blog, but when I'm lucky enough to have them, I love to find out their thoughts about the publishing industry. 

Sooo, I call p.m. terrell to center stage.
Take it away. 

* * * * 

What would I tell a new author?

My first book was published in 1984, eight years before smart phones, sixteen years before the iPad and fourteen years before Google launched. Most people didn’t have email addresses, queries were done the old-fashioned way with self-addressed-stamped-envelopes for the return of printed manuscripts, and editing was done with red pens. I’ve seen more changes in the publishing industry than I ever could have imagined, and one of the most profound changes has come through the rise of Indie authors and pop-up publishers.

So what would I tell a new author who is just getting started in this industry?

    1) Don’t quit your day job. It was true then and it’s still true today. You might believe your manuscript is the best thing to hit the world since fires and wheels, but trust me: it isn’t. Unless your publisher specifically tells you that they’re investing tens of thousands of dollars in your promotion and marketing campaign, you are not going to have people lined up around the block just for a glimpse of you. You won’t reach the New York Times bestseller list without somebody’s deep pockets, and your income probably won’t fund that yacht you’ve had your eyes on.
    
    2) Get your ego off your shoulder. There really is no room for big egos in the publishing industry. Publishers and literary agents will recognize an inflated ego from miles away and the doors will slam in your face. You are not special just because you wrote a book; you’re only special if you wrote a great one. And you won’t be the judge of that; the public will.
    
    3) Never write to stroke your image. If the reason you are writing that manuscript is for people to praise you, then stop writing now. If you ask someone for an opinion, be prepared for an honest one—and whatever you do, don’t shoot the messenger.
    
    4) Write because it makes you feel good. Every successful author knows what its like to be “in the zone” –as if the words, scenes and characters were being handed to you by some unseen muse. If your book is never published and another soul never reads it, it’s still a worthwhile venture if you enjoyed writing it or the act of writing transformed you.
    
    5) Never preach. Your book should never seek to impart your personal viewpoints unless you already have a claim to fame as a political pundit, religious zealot or noted expert, and the book is an extension of that. Otherwise, keep your opinions to yourself.
    
    6) Have a point. Don’t meander all over the place. Point A is where you started and Point Z is where you’ll end. It’s the telling of how you reached that final destination that is the story, and it must be concise and entertaining. Keep your plot in mind every step of the way.
    
    7) Keep it moving. Life is filled with minutiae. Books are not. Every page must propel the story forward; if it doesn’t, it’s just bogging things down.
    
    8) Learn the industry. Whether you are traditionally published or self-published, it benefits everybody if you can learn as much as possible about this industry: the editing process, the production process, distribution, retailers, publishers, marketing and promotional campaigns, royalty statements, assessing what works and what doesn’t. Because when that book is out of your hands, its success remains in your hands.
    
    9) Have a plan. Develop a strategy for getting your name and your book in front of the public, whether it’s through media coverage, physical book signings, Internet appearances, or a combination. Then be ready at a moment’s notice to change it, tweak it, fix it or start over. This industry is moving fast and, as Stewart Brand stated, “…if you’re not part of the steamroller, you’re part of the road.” He might have said it about technology but it’s true in the publishing industry as well.

   
   10) Remember it is a journey. Writing the book is the easy part; marketing it will be the most difficult task you’ll ever undertake unless you’re already a successful marketing guru. At one time, publishers gave books three months to sink or swim but that isn’t true anymore. You can’t give up three months or six months or nine months down the road. And if you can’t learn to enjoy the ride, it isn’t worth doing.


* * * * 

I have to say that is some of the best advise I've read for a new author in a long time
Thank you so much for sharing.

Now on to the good stuff, so grab a comfy chair and a cool drink because this little gem will have you hooked and wanting more in no time.

Enjoy!!!









****GIVEAWAY ALERT****
p.m.terrell will be awarding a Celtic Butterfly Suncatcher similar to the one mentioned in the book, symbolizing both the never-ending cycle of life and the metamorphosis of a butterfly to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
*******



A Thin Slice

   of Heaven
by  p.m. terrell


She had arranged to meet her husband in Northern Ireland for a second honeymoon, but when Charleigh arrives at the remote castle, she receives a message that he won’t be coming—and that he’s leaving her for another woman.

Stranded for the weekend by a snowstorm that has blocked all access to the castle, she finds herself three thousand miles from home in a country she knows nothing about.

She is soon joined by Sean Bracken, the great-grandson of Laird Bracken, the original owner of the castle, and she finds herself falling quickly and madly in love with him. There’s just one problem: he’s dead.


As the castle begins to come alive with secrets from centuries past, she finds herself trapped between parallel worlds. Caught up in a mass haunting, she can no longer recognize the line between the living and the dead. Now she’s discovering that her appearance there wasn’t by accident—and her life is about to change forever.


Excerpt

“What’s happening?” Charleigh whispered. Her throat had grown dry and her voice was hoarse with tension. Though she attempted to keep her tone low so they would remain unobserved, it sounded loud and harsh in the strident atmosphere that seemed suddenly to have gripped the village. She felt anxiety growing deep within her and the urge to get back to the castle burgeoned with ferocity and urgency; but she realized with a sickening sensation in the pit of her soul that the growing inharmonious throngs were between them and the sanctuary of her room.

“Do not be afraid, m’ Leah,” Sean answered. He did not whisper but his voice was deep and taut. After a moment, he said, “They are reenacting an event that occurred… some time ago.”

“Oh,” she breathed. She should have felt relief but her insides continued to roil as if his explanation did not match the scene unfolding before her. Nervously, she said, “Reenactors. We have them in America.”

“You have witnessed them, then?”

“Yes. I find them very interesting…” She forced the words past her dry lips. “They reenact battles from the Civil War and the Revolutionary War, mainly.”

As the churning skies turned to the color of tar, Charleigh could discern the sources of the strange glow: they were torches held aloft by dozens of people. More were joining them, stragglers rushing from the village to catch up, while they began to spread apart in a more orderly column as they converged on the flat land they’d crossed on their way into the village. One man in the forefront stopped and began pointing and directing those that followed.


“These reenactments,” Sean continued, “were the people alive?”
Author Bio

p.m.terrell is the pen name for Patricia McClelland Terrell, a multi-award-winning, internationally acclaimed author of more than twenty books in five genres: contemporary suspense, historical suspense, romance, computer how-to and non-fiction.

Prior to writing full-time, she founded two computer companies in the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area. Among her clients were the Central Intelligence Agency, United States Secret Service, U.S. Information Agency, and Department of Defense. Her specialties were in white collar computer crimes and computer intelligence, themes that have carried forward to her suspense.


She is also the co-founder of The Book ‘Em Foundation, an organization committed to raising public awareness of the correlation between high crime rates and high illiteracy rates. She is the organizer and chairperson of Book ‘Em North Carolina, an annual event held in the real town of Lumberton, North Carolina, to raise funds to increase literacy and reduce crime. For more information on this event and the literacy campaigns funded by it, visit www.bookemnc.org.


Where can you find p.m. terrell???



 Follow the Tour!!!

The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here: 






ENTER HERE!!!




Thanks for stopping by today p.m. terrell and the best of luck with A Thin Slice of Heaven.

Cheers,
Nancy

Monday, 24 November 2014

Ghosts of Grace Cottage by Carolyn Wren #giveaway #paranormal romance #christmas








The Goddess's are organizing a Virtual Blurb Blitz Tour for Ghosts of Grace Cottage, a Holiday Themed Paranormal Romance available NOW from Secret Cravings Publishing. 

Ghost and Christmas!!! How does that even work?

Not to worry my friends my guest today, Carolyn Wren, will show us the way to mix these two genres 
seamlessly together.









****GIVEAWAY ALERT****
Carolyn will be awarding a $50 gift card to winner's choice of Amazon or Secret Cravings Publishing to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
*******



Ghosts of

Grace Cottage
by  Carolyn Wren


Eloisa Waters is creating a new life for herself.  After travelling for twelve months, she comes home at Christmas, purchasing a small country cottage in a sleepy English village, despite the fact its previous owner was a recluse, the original owner was supposedly a witch, and it’s now rumored to be haunted!

On the first night in her new home, sensual erotic dreams surprise and delight her.  Only these aren’t dreams.  The rumors are true.  Two handsome Regency ghosts inhabit the cottage, becoming corporeal at night, trapped by a curse, compelled to satisfy every desire of the new owner.

Elly begins to fall in love with Anton and Phillipe, her charming ghostly lovers.  But is there more? Can the curse be broken? Or does Elly risk her own soul. As Christmas approaches, and memories surface, how will Elly choose?  How can she possibly leave behind the Ghosts of Grace Cottage?  






Excerpt
“Est-elle blesse!”

“Peut-ĂŞtre s’est-elle cognĂ©e sa tĂŞte?”

Elly moaned. “I’m not hurt, and I didn’t hit my head. Can you speak more slowly and in English? My French skills deteriorate when I’m in pain.”

“Pardon…sorry, English. You frightened us.”

Her eyes snapped open. “I frightened you?” She scrambled backwards. “You...” She swallowed. “You’re…dead!”

She hadn’t imagined it. Two men knelt on the floor beside her. Two truly gorgeous men. One blond and one dark-haired, they were dressed in some sort of period costumes. Regency if she had to take a guess. It appeared as if they were standing behind a film of gossamer thin material, giving them an unusual translucent look.

“Eloisa, please….” the blond man said.

Elly scrambled backward a few more feet. “How do you know my name?”

“You talk to yourself,” he replied with an elegant, one-shouldered shrug.

“Oh, right, yes I do, but that doesn’t excuse the fact you’re dead.”

The dark haired man, who was drop-dead gorgeous, no pun intended, raised his hands in a gesture of surrender. “Eloisa, yes, you are correct. We mean you no harm. We are always here. You are seeing us now because you needed to.”

Having the dead theory confirmed, snapped Elly out of her shock. “Ghosts don’t exist.”

A hint of a smile tilted the blond man’s mouth. “I thought that too until I became one.”

“What do you mean I’m only seeing you now because I need to? What do you mean you’re here for me?” Am I repeating myself?

“It is the curse.”

“I’m cursed?” Her words came out as a high pitched squeak.


“No, we are.”



Author Bio 


I was born in England. My parents loved to travel as my dad spent many years in the navy. By the time I reached the age of 12 we had traveled pretty much around the world on cruise ships.

This sounds fun and exciting unless like me you can get sea sick sitting in a bathtub. Lets just say boats do not feature highly in my books.


I still love to travel, but I use planes. All of my life I have written stories in my head. I would rewrite and add characters to TV shows, edit and change novels I was reading, invent scenarios and scenes to amuse myself on long journeys. But strangely I never wrote any of them down. About three years ago I woke up with a scene so clear in my head I knew I had to put it down on paper. Now, what should I do with this one page of prose? I know, I will email it to some friends. The friends approved, in fact they asked what book it was from. I shyly admitted it was my own work and the reaction was immediate...please write the next bit! I did and I have not stopped writing since.





Where can you find Carolyn???

Website ~ www.carolynwren.com









 Follow the Tour!!!

The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here: 







ENTER HERE!!!




Thanks for stopping by stopping by today Carolyn and good luck with  Ghosts of Grace Cottage.

Cheers,

Nancy

Tuesday, 28 October 2014

The Tithe by Elle Hill #interview #giveaway #paranormal romance






Happy Tuesday!!!
Only a few more days until the Friday night scary-fest! Woo Hoo! I can't wait! I just love Halloween!!

In the mean time, I've got a interview and a new romance for you guys to take a peek at. It's something a little different that I think you might just enjoy. 
Check it out!

Goddess Fish Promotions is organizing a Virtual Book Tour for THE TITHE by Elle Hill, a Sci-Fi Paranormal Romance available now from Soul Mate Publishing.










****GIVEAWAY ALERT****
Elle will be awarding a $50 Amazon GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
*******


Thanks for welcoming me to your blog, Nancy. I admit I’ve never written erotic romance, but I have enjoyed reading it.


What is your biggest inspiration?
Anything that moves me inspires me. I can just as easily find inspiration in a pop song or in a discussion with my romantic partner as I can reading a really good book. Most recently, the main character of Dean Koontz’s novel, Innocence, inspired the story arch of the novel I’m currently writing.


Where did you get the inspiration to write The Tithe?

If I tell you, you have to promise not to judge me, although I see from your blog you’re also a fan. I got the idea from, ahem, Katy Perry’s “E.T.” song. Yeah, seriously. Listening to it for the first time, I thought, “Wouldn’t it be cool to write a book that blurs the line between angel and demon, scary and sublime?”  


10 Things we don’t know about you.
  1. I hate mornings.
  2. I used to co-run an animal rescue. It’s how I ended up with way-too-many animals.
  3. I got engaged in July.
  4. I was born and raised near Boise, Idaho.
  5. My favorite color is red.
  6. I have a Ph.D. in sociology.
  7. I am certifiably arachnophobic.
  8. My oldest sister and I went to college together, took the same classes, and graduated with the same degree on the same day. She was summa cum laude, though, and I was merely cum laude.
  9. I hate with a fierce passion talking on the phone.
  10. I’m lactose intolerant. Rest assured, though, that doesn’t stand between my true love, ice cream, and me.


5 Things you love about being an Author and 5 Things you hate.

LOVE
  1. I get to do what I love best!
  2. Writing stimulates my greatest impulses: to express myself, to evoke critical thinking and feelings in my readers, and to combine words in new and creative ways.
  3. I suck at painting and photography, but for some reason, words and grammar make sense to me.
  4. Call me shallow, but there’s something kind of neat about saying, “Yes, I researched that for my third novel…”
  5. I get to play god in my own, made-up worlds.

HATE
  1. The pay sucks.
  2. Once people learn I write, I am forever their proofreader and literary agent.
  3. The literary market is flooded with books during a time when fewer Americans are reading.
  4. Can’t… stop… proofreading others’ letters, emails, tweets, and posts. Forgive me.
  5. Did I mention the pay?

5 Thing you didn't know about being an Author but now do.
1. The importance of book covers.
2. That being talented isn’t enough to ensure you sell a lot of books.
3. The joy of holding one’s published book.
4. After submitting to an editor, it may well take more than a year before the book is published.
5. How essential it is to have other people read the novel and provide feedback before it’s published.


What research went into The Tithe?
The Tithe almost exclusively features characters with varying physical, emotional, and cognitive abilities, so the bulk of my research involved investigating the causes, effects, and experiences of various dis/abilities. My main character, Joshua Barstow, has a condition known as Charcot Marie ToothSyndrome. I extensively researched this condition, made a page-long cheat sheet, and hung it by my desk throughout the year I wrote this novel. Also, my two main characters live with chronic pain. I researched chronic pain, read forums about how to cope with it, and used my own experiences to round everything out.


Why did you pick paranormal romance genre?
I went into paranormal romance with eyes happily open. Science fiction, fantasy, horror, and romance are the genres I read, and my ideas for new books plop quite naturally into their waiting arms. That said, this is my first science fiction romance novel.


What's in a name?
I’d decided on the name of this book before I’d even ironed out the plot. All I knew was that people with disabilities were going to be sacrificed in order to maintain a utopia. I had Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” in mind when coming up with The Tithe.


The hardest part about writing is…
Picking up the next day. I have a scheme that sometimes works, sometimes not. I try (this is the hard part) to stop during an exciting part of the scene. Then, when I come back the next day, I can jump right in to the excitement. Good advice that’s sometimes quite hard to follow. 


A day with Elle Hill behind the scenes.
I get up, give one of my cats his insulin, sit down in front of the computer, and get to work. I answer student emails, read and research for my classes, and prepare class discussions. I leave the house to teach, come back, talk baby talk to my cats and dog, plunk back in front of the computer, open my writing file, and let my fingers do the thinking for a couple of hours. My fiancé comes home, we eat dinner, I medicate the cats and dog, and I may either bond with my family or go back to writing.

It’s a small but ridiculously happy life.



Ideal writing space.
I bought my first house a few months ago, and for the first time in my life, I have an office. I’m tickled fuchsia! I packed the room with my desk, a bookcase, my work materials, and various cat toys (in a vain attempt to get the cats not to lie on my keyboard while I type). Take that, add coffee, and I, per Virginia Woolf, now have a room of my own.


Where do ideas come from?
Shi-Shi, the fat muse of inspired writing, of course!


Thanks again for letting me share my ideas. Have a gorgeous autumn.

My pleasure Elle.

Now let's move onto the good stuff.



THE TITHE
by  Elle Hill


Every seven years, the towns sacrifice their sick and disabled. No one has ever survived the angels’ harvest. Until now.


“Every seven years, seven persons from each of the ten towns must go into the desert, where they will enter into the realm of Elovah, their God.”

No one knows exactly what happens to these seventy Tithes, but everyone knows who: the “unworkables,” those with differing physical and mental capacities. Joshua Barstow, raised for twenty years among her town’s holy women, is one of these seventy Tithes. She is joined by the effervescent Lynna, the scholarly Avery, and the amoral Blue, a man who has spent most of his life in total solitude.

Each night, an angel swoops down to take one of their numbers. Each night, that is, except the first, when the angel touches Josh… and leaves her. What is so special about Josh? She doesn’t feel special; she feels like a woman trying to survive while finally learning the meanings of friendship, community, and love.


How funny that she had to be sacrificed to find reasons to live.


EXCERPT
Josh shook her head. “It sounds so sad.”

“It wasn’t. You can’t have sadness unless you know happiness. I knew neither.”

They sat in silence for a few minutes.

Finally, in a voice mere decibels from a whisper, Josh asked, “What about now?” Shameless, she knew, but maybe voicing the question would exorcise it.

“Why are you asking a question you already know the answer to?” he asked in his inflectionless voice.

“I don’t,” she insisted.

“Everything changed when you touched me,” he said.

After a confused moment, and with many darting glances, she asked in a low tone, “In bed?”

“In the hallway. You touched me, and my life cleaved into a before and a now. Before, I existed, and it was fine. I was content. And then, you. Everything cracked open, and I felt as if I’d just reminded my senses to function. Now, everything feels so raw. Sometimes just the passing of time abrades my skin. Being with you is exquisite and real. And painful.”

Very carefully, Josh put her hands on her knees and leaned forward. She stared at the wall opposite them, against which Taro no longer pressed himself. In she breathed, and out. In and out.

Josh straightened her posture and rubbed her calf with her other foot. “What can I do to make it hurt less?” she asked him.


Blue’s lips thinned into a smile. “I don’t want it to hurt less. Every second that scrapes my skin is another one I spend with you.”


AUTHOR BIO 


Born in Idaho during the height of disco, Elle Hill now chicken-pecks at the keyboard while rocking out to Donna Summer and KC and the Sunshine Band. She worked in Idaho for several years as a secretary and journalist before moving to California and selling her soul to academia. After receiving her PhD in Sociology, Elle Hill became a not-so-mild-mannered college instructor by night and a community activist during the remainder of her waking hours. Always a journalist and writer at heart, one of her favorite pastimes includes publishing commentary on the political and social state of the world; some of her thoughts are posted on her blog at ellehillauthor.blogspot.com.


Elle welcomes visitors to her website at www.ellehill.com. She also urges everyone to become a superhero and adopt their next non-human companion from a local animal shelter.





Where can you find Elle???




FOLLOW THE TOUR!!!

The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here: 






ENTER HERE!!!





Thanks for stopping by Elle and the best of luck with THE TITHE.

Cheers,
Nancy