Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Death Came to Dinner by Dahlia Rose Aurora Cosme Series Book 1

Are you ready for Book one in the most amazing new series!
Aurora is not what you would expect, hit by lighting, talks to the dead and a best friend who is stronger than death itself? Aka Madame Laveau! Now she had to be a detective and solve a murder that happened in her own house. Oops she forgot FBI Agent, Andy Garrett, who has no time for voodoo, the supernatural or nothing he can’t explain. But his kiss sent energy through all her senses! Get your copy now and fill in the rest for yourself!!
** New Release ‘Death Came To Dinner’**
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2LQhsVm
B&N: http://bit.ly/2Qiwnba
Google: http://bit.ly/2RnzPpO
Smashword: http://bit.ly/2F3MlEZ



I have to say (THIS) book was awesome. I couldn't put it down and then I didn't want it to stop. I'm a New Orleans girl and one of my favorite people slash legends is the famous, Marie Laveau Voodoo Queen, so this was a page-turner for me. Dahlia put a new twist on how Aurora gets her powers, which had me saying...get out of town. I loved the suspense of the storyline and the romance. It will have you loving the characters and parts of this will have you smiling if not laughing. Especially if you're thinking about how would you react? 
    I'm a big reader besides writing myself and I love to read Christine Feehan, Maggie Shayne, and Heather Graham, but she's my newest best read. Not that it really matters as I'm just one person but to me with this book I give her the highest praise possible. 

 I can't wait for book 2 to come out and I might just send her a message and see if I can become a beta reader. Do you think she'd go for that? hahaha... it can happen.. I just have to believe. 
   So if you in search of a new read, please check the book out, and come leave a comment on her Amazon and here I'd love to know what you think of it.  

Thursday, September 14, 2017

A Daughter's Justice

Greetings from Mississippi. I finally published my new story. My husband and I did the cover ourselves. What an accomplishment! A Daughter's Justice, it's a different genre then my paranormal fantasy. This new story is more of a contemporary suspense, romance, with a passion for steampunk wrapped up with a little bit of magic.

This is my blurb...
Merrick Hardin, a relentless defense attorney by day, lives a double life as a steampunk vigilante by night. After seeing her father murdered as a young child, Merrick, A.K.A. Jynx, vows revenge. After years of careful planning, Merrick is close to avenging her father when the eye-witness to her most recent case is wounded on her watch.

Command Sergeant Major Stone testified on the murder of a prominent Senator’s wife as the eye-witness. Only to be shot by the crime lord’s minions immediately after being released from protective custody. He awakens to find himself staring into the eyes of a beautiful woman named Jynx.

Things are not going exactly as planned when Merrick Hardin is left with no option but to hide Major Stone in her basement after she rescued him from an assassination attempt. 

 Afraid to admit to her alternate identity now that they’re both madly in love, Jynx worries that Stone will abandon her if he finds out that she is the really Merrick Hardin, the attorney who was responsible for the release of the crime lord and him getting shot. Grab your copy today, and leave me feedback. I would love your comments. Here is my amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/Daughters-Justice-Paula-V-Hardin-ebook/dp/B075K268P7/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1505430596&sr=8-1&keywords=Paula+V.+Hardin
and it's also available on Itunes for the iPhone. 

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Spreading some love to my readers and fans

I just wanted to reach out and tell everyone how much you mean to me.  For years I was the one who was the fan, reading other author's work, but now I'm both. There are certain author's whom I admire intensely and would bend over backwards to please them.

Now, I'm in awe, humbled to the roots of my soul because I have fans who tell me how much they love me, and how much they love my books.  When it happens it makes me catch my breath because I KNOW that feeling!!! I  have those same emotions for my mentor, my authors whom I adore.

I wanted to send out my heart to you and want you all to know, I love you all. I cherish our friendships and love hearing from you. You make me want to write more
and put out more books to keep you happy.

So this is a huge thank you for all your support and love. Keep in touch. When I have another book signing please come out and visit. It'll be great to meet you all in person. My next event in March 4th in Houma, LA


Love to you all.
Author Paula V. Hardin

PS,
   I have a different genre coming out
I'm working on the cover as we speak, it'll be called, "A Daughter's Justice" It's a contemporary Suspense Romance with steampunk elements.
I'm now working another vampire romance for all my fang peeps.

Friday, October 7, 2016

Re-Imaging Adam Frankenstein by Author Sheila English

Today, I want to introduce Author Sheila English. This lady is amazing on so many levels. Not only is she super sweet, she's wise, caring, just an all around good person. Let's talk about her new book shall we?  

Who doesn't love Frankenstein? I know I love Val Helsing version. Now Sheila English has done the impossible, she twisted it into a new direction. I was captivated by her vision.  Page by page I was pulled in wondering what would be next.

Plus she has more work coming, so look for Author Sheila English. Peeps, this lady is going someplace.



What if the Frankenstein creature didn't die in a fire,a crumbling castle or on a glacier? What if he never died at all?

Adam Frankenstein, a product of science and magic. A creature of horror, come-to-life. In this re-imagining of Mary Shelley's famous creature, Adam is still alive and his stories are that of legend. A lonely and reluctant hero looking for redemption and salvation through the ages.

Four stories, through the years, follow Adam as he struggles to understand his place in a world of men who would reject him, kill him. He looks to create humanity in himself while questioning those who were born with it.

Mary Shelley's League of Supernatural Hunters: Origins of Adam

Mary Shelley learns of supernatural creatures and real meaning of the word monster as she encounters a man unlike any other. A creature not born of woman, but created from the body of a circus strongman killed while trying to save a lion tamer. She must decide who to trust, the vampire, the witch, the mad scientist or the creature. Either way, Mary's seen enough to know she will need an army to fight those things not easily killed.

 Frankenstein's Companion

19th century England, friendless and alone in the world, Adam Frankenstein, the creation of a mad scientist and his witch lover, becomes an assassin for hire. When a powerful mage hires him to find his kidnapped daughter and kill the man who took her, Adam strikes a bargain of his own. The mage has an immortal dog and Adam will do anything to own it.

The Therapist and the Dead

Brooklyn, New York in the 1980's was a place where monsters could blend in. Life has been long and cruel, so Adam keeps his appointment with Dr. Stein, the most expensive and sought after psychologist in the city, to talk of immortality and murder.

 Adam Frankenstein, U.S. Marshal

Adam joins the 21st Century, and takes up residence in Houston, Texas. While waiting for his next mission from the League of Supernatural Hunters, he becomes Adam Frank, U.S. Marshal. His new partner is Marshal Rebecca Hughes, a by-the-book woman with a non-nonsense approach to life, with no idea who he really is, but that's all about to change. When he wakes up dead and learns someone has stolen his dog, Texas may not be big enough to hold his wrath.

So if I made you interested in this book. You can find it here.

https://www.amazon.com/Adam-Frankenstein-Collection-Short-Stories/dp/1537375210/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1475847640&sr=8-1&keywords=Adam+Frankenstein

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Historical Romance Author Elizabeth Guider








Today we're chatting with Historical Author Elizabeth Guider about her book, "Milk and Honey on the Other Side"  and what's coming next.
 





What brought you to write this book? 

It's hard to grow up in the Deep South and not be steeped in historical lore and absorbed in the whole issue of race. Plus, I wanted to write a love story that captured just how difficult it was to prosecute a love affair across the color divide, especially for the woman in question. The period of the 1920's was one of huge social change though and that made it possible for the characters to eventually figure things out for themselves.

Why spend months/years of your life writing this book?

I had been writing as a journalist for thirty years and it seemed like a fun, if challenging, change of pace. With of course its own hurdles and its own gratifications.

What are you trying to achieve with this book?

Ideally, to reach people who wouldn't ordinarily know or care much about the politics or the people or the passions of 100 years ago.

What got left out in the final draft? 

A couple of very minor characters, a long riff on race which didn't need to be there, and a lot of excess ADVERBS.

Where there alternate endings you considered?
If so, what were they??

I did consider not letting the two main characters end up as they did but deep into the writing I figured out a plausible way for their reunion. 

What's next for you? What are you working on now? 

I've gone back to my freelancing as a journalist and am toying with two different ideas for a next novel, one historical and one contemporary. Hope to begin in ernest by year end.

What made you want to start writing?

When my grandmother from New Orleans came to live with us in her latter years, she shared my bedroom. A voracious reader, she and I read all of Charles Dickens together. Took about two years. From then I went on to George Eliot, Anthony Trollope, Henry James and into the 20th century with James Joyce and William Faulkner. It all paid off: I graduated valedictorian of my high
school class and went on to do a Ph. D. in Renaissance literature and history at New York University.

What things have you read that have especially helped your writing?

In the last few years I've read a lot of contemporary novels, especially from writers like Anthony Doerr, Jonathan Franzen, Donna Tartt, Elena Ferrante, Ian McKeowan, etc., and, in doing so, I've taken a few notes on their differing styles, their use of perspective, their voice,  even the arresting punctuation or grammatical constructions that they use.

What's the hardest thing about writing for you? Finding the time to do it on a regular basis.

What do you wish you knew before you started? More about how to pitch to potential publishers and then how on earth to promote to the readers who most likely will be interested.

Why did you choose to write in your particular field or genre? If you write more than one, how do you balance them?

As I suggested, I've always loved history and doing research. Then coming up with characters to properly and convincingly people the period in question.

Where did your love of reading & writing come from? As I said, from my grandmother, then my parents and the great English teachers I had in high school and college. I learned early on it was important to figure out what was GOOD to read, meaning well-written, informative, provocative, eye-opening, and fulfilling rather than reading just to be moving the eyeballs.

How long have you been writing? As a novelist, four years. My first novel, The Passionate Palazzo, set in Rome in 1978 when I was living there, came out in 2013.

What was the hardest part of writing this book? The hardest part about writing Milk and Honey on the Other Side was not letting the fascinating history of the period get in the way of a good fictionalized story.

What did you enjoy most about writing this book?

That I think I captured the feel of the place and the time in which the story is set and the way people behaved -- and that readers will be able to sense it too.

What is the biggest thing that people THINK they know about your subject/genre, that isn't so? I don't think a lot of  people (especially young people) know just how hard it was for women to assert themselves back 100 years ago, nor just how fraught with danger relations between the races were, especially if those relations had any hint of the sexual.

What is the most important thing that people DON'T know about your subject/genre, that they need to know? 

How much the country, even the South, was beginning to change after the Great War and into the 1920s, starting with women getting the vote and throwing off their corsets, as it were.
What makes your book stand out from the crowd?

I think it's both a compelling love story and at the same time a family saga shaped by the political and cultural winds blowing across the country at the time (1918-1930).

What question do you wish that someone would ask about your book, but nobody has? Write it out here, then answer it. How did you presume to write about a young black man since you are a not-so-young white woman?

I fell in love with this character -- who is based on a number of black men I have been acquainted with over the years. What they have in common is their decency and their striving to better their lot. I tried to imagine just how much MORE difficult that would have been 100 years ago, but I knew there were such people. In fact, I had always heard stories about such folks when growing up. I wanted to try my best to draw such a portrait in the character of Curtis Jefferson in the novel.

What does your "writing cave" look like? Hardly a cave. In Vicksburg, where I wrote half the book, it was on the sunporch in the house I inherited from my mother, full still of her beautiful plants and with hummingbirds and neighborhood cats outside the many windows. In Los Angeles, my preferred space is a patio table in the backyard, where I can sit under an umbrella and work most months of the year.

Do you use music as inspiration? Can you tell us about what type of music inspires you? I usually opt for silence when I write but when I edit I sometimes turn to Bach's Brandenburg Concerti or big band music from the '30's and 40's.

Must have beverage & snack while writing? In the morning when I'm writing a cup of strong coffee is just the ticket: if at night I'm happy with what I'm editing, a glass of cold white wine from the California Central Coast is just the thing. 


Thank you for sharing your process, and thoughts about your book.  
You can find her, 
 

Name: Elizabeth Guider

Email address: elizabethguider@hotmail.com

All social media links: All under my name: Facebook (authorElizabethGuider), LinkedIn, Twitter (#GuiderElizabeth), Goodreads



BUY LINKS

https://www.amazon.com/author/elizabeth.guider

https://www.foundationsbooks/library

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7080392.Elizabeth_Guider

PLUS www.lulu.com, BarnesandNoble, Baker&Taylor, Smashwords,
 




Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Dark Erotic Romance Author Ivy Love



What a title. Ivy Love
writes Dark Romance, or as she likes to call it, Erotic Romance with a twist.



Tell us a little about yourself. Where were you raised? Where do you live now? Do you have any pets?
·      I live in the fun and naughty Sin City aka Las Vegas.  I work full-time and get my writing done at night and on the weekends.  I am a huge animal fan and have four dogs of my own. 

At what age did you realize your fascination with books? When did you start writing?
·      When I was in grade school, I was the classic nerd.  I didn’t and still don’t mind being a nerd at all. Back then, I spent more time reading books “above my grade level” and getting lost in them, than paying attention to the people around me. I loved the journey each book would take me on, I still do. 

When I was thirteen I hand-wrote my first hundred-page story. It was then I fell in love with writing. The moment I realized that I could not only lose myself in books, but in my own words.
   

Who are your favorite authors to read? What is your favorite genre to read? Who inspires you in your writings?
·      Ah, this question is so tough.  I love reading and I read a variety of authors.  I would say that a few of my “go-to” authors are MJ Fields, Sandra Brown, Dean Koontz, Cherise Sinclair, Maya Banks, Jodi Ellen Malpas and Stephen King, just to name a few.  I’m a horror/mystery junkie.  I love scaring myself and trying to figure out the mystery. 

Tell us a little about your latest book?
·      My latest book that is out, is called Lost in Me, Found in You.  I wish I could tell you that I had this amazing back story for this book, but I don’t. I have great stories for some of my other books that are in progress, not this one though.  I just started writing.  I had the idea of two friends both of them who were at different points in their life. This book was originally two separate books, but it was combined into one larger story with additional scenes and chapters.

Liz and Isabella are best friends, they’re each struggling and they each have decisions that they’ll have to make.  Each decision they make has consequences, but through it all they will support one another until the very end.  

Her buy links: 
 


 
Find Ivy Love on:

Author website
·      www.booksbyivy.com

Facebook Page

Twitter Account

Email*

Friday, September 30, 2016

Introducting Mulit Talented Author Steve Soderquist

Greetings to all, Today we're talking to Author Steve Soderquist on his writing, what are his plans and what's next in his writing.




What brought you to write this book? 

Farm House was inspired by an actual house in Croswell, Michigan where I was staying while finishing up the novella, ‘One for the Road.’ The matriarch of the house had a then nineteen-year-old daughter and she seemed to have opened her home to many a wayward young adult. As the home itself was so out of the way from civilization and surrounded by fields of farmers’ corn, I wondered how long it would take anyone to notice if one of those kids just went batshit crazy and started killing every other person? Hence, a book was born!
Why spend months/years of your life writing this book?

Every book written, once it gets to the stage of commitment is like one of your kids. You will have it for the rest of your life and will forever want to correct something about it. When a book grows from a concept, to a thought, to an idea, then to being written down and worked on, then the vigorous re-writes and edits, it becomes a part of the writer. I certainly have favorite parts to all my books, but no one book stands above the rest. I enjoyed writing Farm House as much as I did the short children’s story…just in a different way.

What are you trying to achieve with this book?

Fear…plain and simple. Isolation and not being able to run for help, having nowhere to run to for help, is a terrifying concept. It’s easy to say, “Oh, I would run down the road as fast as I could!” But when the chips are down…when the lights are out and it’s dark out and the road has no signs and the next house is twenty miles away, and you can feel the killers breath on your neck; the strength runs out of you like water through a sieve.
 
What got left out in the final draft? 

I originally had a whole chapter dedicated to Karen Foster (the mother) and her childhood and an experience she had that led her to be as gracious as she was to these seemingly misfit teens, but it really didn’t add to the story. As Stephen King so aptly puts it: “Sometimes you gotta kill your darlings to move the story along.”

Were there alternate endings you considered?
If so, what were they??

Without giving away spoilers, there were originally going to be less victims, but it didn’t fit with the mood of the story as a whole. Suffice to say, this story is about three people when it starts, and is about three people when it ends. ;-)

What's next for you? What are you working on now?

With respect to my duties as co-owner of Foundations, LLC with Laura Ranger, I am currently finishing edits on a novel I previously released called ‘SEEDS’ and a YA novel long in coming called ‘Jessica.’ However, there are only so many hours in the day and as all writers know, getting in ‘the zone’ is at times easier said than done. 

What made you want to start writing?

My love of reading! Even as a child I had a voracious appetite for books…any books. Without knowing it, I loved challenges. I read ‘20,000 Leagues Under the Sea’ at ten even though I didn’t understand half of it. I re-read it so much eventually it started to sink in. The genre mattered to me not at all. V.C. Andrews, Anthony Burgess, James Clavell, J.R.R. Tolkien…if it was in English, I was down with it.

What things have you read that have especially helped your writing?

I’m a firm believer that you will learn as much from badly written books as you will from great ones. When it comes to craft, everything is illuminating. Styles of writing differ greatly but when it comes to mechanics, I cannot stress how important good, solid English 101 is. There may be such a thing as a natural story-teller, but there is no such thing as a natural story-writer. Learning all the little doo-dads of composition, grammar, punctuation, Parts of Speech…all these are learned through study and practice. Writing an enthralling, engrossing, (pick your adverb) book and making it seem, well, seamless, is likened to a paint-by-numbers painting. The goal is the same. Don’t let the numbers show when you’re done.

What's the hardest thing about writing for you? *

The middle is my personal danger area. It comes down to feeling lost, bored, frustrated, confused, or a combination of any and all. When the characters are just standing around twiddling their thumbs and waiting for me to come up with something, I can feel the weight of their stares…lol. Once I get over this hump and its game-on time again, the rest falls into place nicely.

What do you wish you knew before you started? 

It’s hard to say what I wish I knew, as I count all experience as good in relation to where I’ve now come. Without the bumps and bruises, I wouldn’t have toughened up, and certainly if the lessons learned were just fed to me wouldn’t have close to the impact as they have been, metaphorically beaten over my head. When I look back on the months, and even years, spent learning what I have, it would no doubt seem daunting if looked at in anything but hindsight. I regret nothing.

Why did you choose to write in your particular field or genre? If you write more than one, how do you balance them?

I love the challenge of writing different genre’s. I think most writers do! The best books I’ve read and experienced have been a collage of many genre’s with perhaps one or two as the main theme. Reviewers have tried to pigeon-hole me, calling me a ‘horror writer’ and that’s a myth I quickly dispel. I am a writer who wrote a horror novel. I also wrote science fiction, young adult, children’s, thriller and suspense, and paranormal novels…and that’s only to date.

Where did your love of reading & writing come from?

Curiously, I am not sure. My house growing up was hardly what could be called a library of reading material. If there was a book around, chances are it was mine. I seemed to gravitate naturally to the written word. I loved the story-telling. I respected the art. So much so, I did not even conceive of trying myself until I was seventeen.

How long have you been writing?

Let’s see. ‘Professionally’ (what I consider when I got paid for publication) almost seven years now. Off and on, about 39 years. When I say professionally, I can honestly say that’s when I took it seriously and learned how to write, not just sat down and typed something down. Ironically, I never fared well in school and English was a study of boredom for me. When I began to learn how important it was to craft language when writing a story down, I admit it completely fascinated me. I made it a life goal to learn as much as I can and share what I’ve learned in an entertaining and non-cluttered way. I like to show folks how to get from A to B without trying to sound either like dry wood or like an English calculator. I enjoy teaching as much as anything else and my writing seminars are something I completely enjoy doing.

What was the hardest part of writing this book?

Diving into the deep, disturbing psyche of my main antagonist. Hey…I’m a lover, not a fighter. Some of the shit she did and thought chilled me to the bone. It’s not in my nature to think like she does but the very fact it disturbed me that much only told me I was being honest as a writer, and giving the book it’s proper due. If I pull back, I cheat not only the character and myself, but also the reader…and that I refuse to do.

What did you enjoy most about writing this book?

The absolute courage displayed by ordinary people under extraordinary circumstances. This book ultimately–despite its horrors–is a love story of the most sacrificial kind. There is no love greater than someone who is willing to lay their life down for you.

What is the biggest thing that people THINK they know about your subject/genre, that isn't so?

That it is just another jump-scare horror book. It’s been my experience that while movies can certainly fall under a cookie-cutter label when it comes to regurgitating the same ol’, same ol’, books have a way of taking on a life of their own…especially horror novels. I can say the book is unique because quite simply, I wrote it. I listened to nothing but my own head and heart and therefore, so did all the characters. They are as unique as a fingerprint and just as complicated.

What is the most important thing that people DON'T know about your subject/genre, that they need to know? 

It’s not all scary! There are times you will feel compassion, or feel sad, or find yourself laughing out loud. You will cheer for the hero’s and feel triumph when they win as easily as you may cry when they lose. It’s a story of the heart, not just ‘Boo!’

What makes your book stand out from the crowd?

One of the greatest compliments I get is the fact my lead is female. Both of them! There may be lots of slasher stories out there, but how many are girls, eh?

What question do you wish that someone would ask about your book, but nobody has? Write it out here, then answer it. 

Q: Why pick on a girl to be the psycho killer?
A: Because I grew up with four step-sisters and know exactly how insane teenage girls can be, so don’t think I’m fooled for a second.

What does your "writing cave" look like? 

My writing cave is in my mind. Over the years I’ve been in a room all by my lonesome, shared an office space with someone, and have been right out in the middle of the melee and mayhem. When I am in the zone, I am in the zone. Bombs could go off around me and it wouldn’t disturb me.

Do you use music as inspiration? Can you tell us about what type of music inspires you?

Generally, for writing I prefer no music, however when it comes to editing almost anything goes. My tastes in music are as eclectic as my choice of genre’s. Anything from Iron Maiden to Taylor Swift to Def Leppard to Toby Mac to Toby Keith is okay in my book.

Must have beverage & snack while writing?

Water and Neccos! Any hard candy, really. I used to be a smoker (37 years) so there is still a connection mentally when it comes to taking a break and having a smoke, so it helps. ;-)

Here is where you can find him: 

Email address: steves@foundationsbooks.com

All social media links:

Business Website: http://foundationsbooks.com/

HIS BOOKS ARE:

Paperback and Hardcover can be purchased at:

Amazon:
Smashwords:

Barnes & Noble:

Kobo:




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