Archangel's Desire

Monday, April 27, 2015

Book Blast, Giveaway & Interview: Pyromancist by @CharmainePauls

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Book Blast

 

 

clip_image002Pyromancist

Seven Forbidden Arts

Book 1

Charmaine Pauls

Genre: Paranormal Erotic Romance

Publisher: Satin Romance,

an imprint of Mélange Books

Date of Publication: 19 March 2015

ISBN: 978-1680460339

ASIN: B00UFW1CDW

Number of pages: 252

Word Count: 101 000

Cover Artist: Caroline Andrus

Book Description:

When you play with fire, you get burned.

At the same time as mysterious fires commence to rage through Clelia d’Ambois’ home village in Brittany, France, she starts sleepwalking. Daughter of a Japanese orphan, Clelia’s heritage is riddled with dark secrets that threaten anyone she loves. In a recurring nightmare she sees Josselin, the haunted man who abandoned their village nine years earlier, come for her, but she doesn’t know why. All she knows is that she has to run. As fast as she can.

Leader of a paranormal crime taskforce, Josselin de Arradon is called back to his hometown with a mission–find and kill the firestarter responsible for Larmor-Baden’s blazing destruction. Sensing that Clelia is the key to solving the crime, Josselin kidnaps her to use her as bait. The battle doesn’t turn out quite as he expected. Nothing could have prepared him for the truth, or the depth of his desire for his prisoner.

This is Book 1 of the Seven Forbidden Arts series, but also reads as a stand-alone.

This book contains adult content with explicit language and consummated love scenes. Suited for an audience of 18+.

Available at Amazon BN Satin Romance Smashwords Lulu

Excerpt

Josselin had only spoken to her once. It was on a summer day after school. She had wandered to the dense forest at the back of the schoolyard because she knew that was where she would find him. She stood behind a tree and watched him–studied him–the movement of his hand as he smoked a forbidden cigarette, the manner in which he pulled his fingers through his dark hair, and the way he laughed loudly into his gang of friends, even if his eyes cried, or blazed.

That day, however, he wasn’t with his friends. He was with a girl. Her name was Thiphaine and she was the most popular girl in school. She was blonde and slim and beautiful with blue eyes and red painted fingernails. Clelia watched from her hiding place as Josselin slowly backed Thiphaine up until her body pressed against the trunk of the witch tree. It was a thuja occidentalis but the townsfolk had baptized it so because of its twisted and crippled branches. The setting was eerie for a romantic adventure, and yet, it suited Josselin. He seemed right at home, while Thiphaine looked around nervously. His hand went to her cheek, his palm huge and dark and rough against the porcelain paleness of Thiphaine’s face, while his other hand slipped under her blouse. His gray eyes looked like melted steel when he lowered his head.

His shoulder-length black hair fell forward when he pressed his lips to Thiphaine’s and he moved his hand from her cheek to brush it back behind his ear. Clelia remembered the deliberate movement of his jaw, the way the muscles dimpled in his cheek, the hand under Thiphaine’s blouse, all the while maintaining his composure while Thiphaine came undone under his caress. The beautiful girl made low moaning sounds. Her knees buckled, but Josselin, without breaking the kiss, grabbed her waist, pulling her so tightly into him that her back arched, keeping her up with his arm while he made her weak with his touch and his tongue.

Watching them ignited both yearning and pain inside of Clelia. The hurt she felt speared her heart. The aching in her soul was suddenly greater than the heat in her pores and on her cheeks, but she couldn’t tear her stare away from the forbidden sight. It was Iwig, a boy from her class, who broke the painful spell when he discovered her behind the tree.

“What have we here?” he said.

His eyes darted to the distance where Josselin and Thiphaine were embracing. He knew what she had been doing. He was a tall, blond boy with a strong build, and Clelia disliked him for his habit of hunting abandoned cats with his pellet gun.

“A peeping tom,” he said, taking a step toward her.

When she tried to back away, he grabbed her long braid and tugged it painfully, causing her to yelp.

“Not so fast, witch.” He grabbed her arm and hauled her so that she stumbled into him. “You like to watch, don’t you?” He grinned. “How about a taste of the real thing?”

She opened her mouth to scream, but he had already brought his down and kissed her so hard that his teeth split her lower lip. In reflex her free hand shot up, aiming for his cheek, and collided with its target. The force of the blow shot Iwig’s head back and froze him in his action, but only for a second, before Clelia saw his arm lift. Not able to free herself from his grip, she cowered instinctively, but instead of his fist coming down on her, another pair of arms grabbed Iwig by his shoulders and flung him to the ground.

When she looked up, she stared into the face of Josselin, and what she saw was frightening. His features were twisted into a terrifying expression, and before she could say anything, Josselin bent down and lifted Iwig by his jacket lapels. Iwig’s legs dangled, flapping like fish on soil, while his arms flayed in the air as if swatting flies. Josselin let go of one side of the jacket, his fist arching and hooking under Iwig’s chin, while at the same time unknotting his other hand from the fabric of the jacket. The impact sent Iwig flying through the air. When he hit the ground, she could hear the loud thump as the air was knocked from his lungs. Josselin moved forward, his arms away from his body, his fingers flexing, his shoulders pushed forward, until he stood wide-legged over the submissive body of Iwig. Iwig lifted his hands in front of his face, mumbling pleas for mercy.

“If you ever touch a girl in that way again, I’ll hang you from a tree under a pack of wild boars and watch them eat you from your feet up to your useless dick, until they rip your stomach open and your insides fall out and you beg me to die,” Josselin said.

He spoke very softly, but the woods had suddenly gone quiet. His voice all but echoed in the absence of the sound of birds and wind. From the corner of her eye, Clelia noticed Thiphaine who stood to the side, hugging herself.

“And if you ever lift your hand to a woman again, I’ll cut off your balls and make you eat them and then I’ll feed you to the boars. Do you understand?”

Iwig tried to scurry away on his elbows, but Josselin stepped on his jacket.

“I asked if you understand.”

“Yes. Yes,” Iwig said. He had started crying.

When Josselin lifted his boot, Iwig scrambled to his feet. He didn’t look at Clelia before he ran down the path in the direction of the school. Only then did Josselin turn to her. She shook from head to toe while Josselin studied her quietly. After a moment he walked to her, took her chin in his hand and tilted her head.

“You’re bleeding,” he said, trailing his thumb over her lower lip.

And then he did something that shocked her wildly. He brought his thumb to his lips, slowly, his gray eyes holding hers prisoner while he slipped his finger into his mouth and licked it clean, tasting her blood.

Clelia couldn’t move. She stood still, unable to speak or blink.

He took a white handkerchief from his coat pocket and wiped it over her mouth before pressing it into her hand.

“He won’t bother you again, but you’d better go home.”

She only nodded. He was much taller than her, so that she had to crane her neck to look up at him. He shifted and then his face was obscured by the shadows with the sun at his back. She remembered wondering if he had forgotten about Thiphaine, who still stood to one side, silently observing, her eyes wide. Clelia looked from Thiphaine to Josselin. When life finally returned to her legs and she started to hurry down the path, he said, “What’s your name, girl?”

She stopped. “Cle … Cle…” Her teeth chattered.

He frowned. “Take a deep breath. You’re in shock.”

She did as he instructed, and found her jaw relax slightly.

“That’s better. Now, tell me again.”

“Clelia.”

His lips twitched. “The witch?”

She flinched. That was what her classmates called her.

He didn’t show any kind of emotion. Only his smile became a little bit more pronounced. “How old are you?”

“Fourteen,” she said through parched lips.

“You’re too young to wander alone in the woods.”

When he said that, his voice became soft and dark again, like when he had spoken to Iwig, and without sparing either of the lovers another glance, Clelia sprinted home and curled into a ball on her bed with his bloody handkerchief in her hand.

  Character Interview

Character Name: Clelia d’Ambois

 

Describe yourself what is your worst and best quality?

My grandfather, Erwan, always says that my best and worst qualities are being giving and soft natured. He thinks that sometimes, I am too kind, to my own detriment. I am an introvert, and prefer the company of the animals I rescue to that of people, but then again, I live in a village of 900 people where everyone knows everything about everyone and because of how my mother appeared in Larmor-Baden–a six-year old girl drifting alone in a boat–the townsfolk are wary of me. They say my mother was a witch because natural disasters occurred when she was around, and I inherited the unlucky nickname. I’ve never made any true friends.

 

What is the one thing you wish other people knew about you?

I’m not as frail as I look. I may be short and too slender, but I can be strong and courageous when needed.

 

What is your biggest secret something no one knows about?

That I accidently combusted objects when I was three years old. It hasn’t happened since, but I’m always scared that it will happen again. Especially now that the houses in our village are being burnt down, night after night, and the police can’t determine the cause of the fires. At the same time the fires started, I started sleepwalking. I’m petrified that one day I’ll wake up not in the woods, but somewhere in town, and then everyone will know my secret.

My past is riddled with secrets… who I am, who my mother was, where she came from… I don’t even know her real name. I’m tired of secrets, but the one I’ll protect with all my heart, is my secret love for Josselin de Araddon. In school, he always looked so haunted. I used to sneak around the forest to watch him with his friends, or with other girls. He can never knew how I stalked him. I’ll just die of embarrassment if he ever finds out. And now that he’s back in town, after all these years…

 

What are you most afraid of?

Of Josselin. As much as I fantasize about him, he scares me. He’s so dark and tortured and frightening tall and broad. And he has these silver, mercurial eyes. At times they are grey, like cold steel. They way they darken when he sometimes looks at me frightens me. Especially now that he’s invaded my nightmares, with the fires and my sleepwalking, I know he’s coming for me. I don’t only see it in my dreams; I can also feel it in my gut. What I don’t know, is why. I only know it’s better to run than to wait for my dream to become reality.

 

What do you want more than anything?

I want for the fires to stop so that I don’t have to go into hiding. I want for it all to go away so that Erwan doesn’t have to run because of me. I want my animals with me. It nearly killed me to leave them behind when I went running, especially my wolfdogs. And most of all, I want Josselin to want me as much as I want him. I want him to release me from this room where he imprisons me, and at the same time, I want him to chain me and keep me. I want him to be my first, even if he can’t be my forever.

 

What is your relationship status?

Everyone knows I’ve never even had a boyfriend. Embarrassing, really, if you consider I’m twenty-two. Well, there aren’t that many single men in our small village, and I’ve never travelled beyond the borders of Larmor or the islands. I don’t even have the luxury of claiming a holiday romance.

 

How would you describe your sense of fashion?

I’ve never really cared much for fashion, not that Erwan or I could afford to splash out on clothes. Erwan is a fisherman and I work at the Carnac tourist office, which means I mostly earn money during the summer seasons, when people flock to Carnac to see the mysterious Celtic standing stones. At home I’m taking care of my small zoo of rescued animals, our cottage, and Erwan’s meals, or I’m out on the boat, so I wear what’s comfortable and practical–mostly shorts, T-shirts and flip-flops, or fishing boots and a rain jacket when the sky pours down, as it often does in Brittany.

 

How much of a rebel are you?

I’m not much of a rebel. I’ve always tried to walk the straight and narrow. The real rebel is Josselin. He has always defied authority, rules and society to do exactly what he wants to do. Josselin doesn’t fit in any mold. He won’t be conditioned to live a social acceptable life, and maybe that’s why I–with my uneventful, boring life–admire him so.

 

What do you considered to be your greatest achievement?

The life of every single animal that has been saved has been an achievement.

 

What is your idea of happiness?

A life with Josselin in it.  I’ll take his darkness, and his tainted past, I’ll take anything as long as he decides to stay, even if I know his orders are to kill me. I can’t help him. I’m inexplicably bound to him.

 

What is your current state of mind?

I’m terrified. Erwan just told me Josselin returned to our village with a woman. (Gosh, that hurts so much.) Her name is Maya and she’s asking questions about my mother. I’m sure now that they suspect me of the fires. Will they now try to kill me? Erwan has already gone into hiding and he’s told me to run. I’m so frightened. I’ve never felt lonelier.

 

What is your most treasured possession?

Josselin’s handkerchief, with my blood on it. One day, when I was following Josselin after school to spy on him, like I always used to do, he took Tiphaine to the woods and kissed her by the witch tree. It broke my heart, but I couldn’t look away from the forbidden sight. The way his jaw moved as he slanted his lips over hers, his hand under her blouse… it made me ache in a way I didn’t know of believed possible. And then Iwig discovered me where I hid behind a tree. I hated him because he used to hunt cats with his pellet gun. Iwig knew what I was doing. He laughed and accused me of being a peeping tom, which I was, and then he tried to kiss me. He split my lip with his teeth, and I slapped him. He was going to hit me, but before his fist came down on my face, Josselin had grabbed him and hurled him to the ground. The things he threatened Iwig with were terrifying. He spoke softly, but it echoed in the dark forest because everything, even the birds, had gone quiet. Josselin told Iwig if he ever touched a girl without her permission again, or lift a hand to a woman, he’d hang him from a tree under a pack of wild boars and let them eat him from his feet up. Iwig ran away, and I was shaking with the shock of the experience. Josselin then wiped away the blood from my lip with his handkerchief and pressed it into my hand. I ran home and curled into a ball on my bed, the handkerchief under my pillow. I have slept with it there ever since.

 

What is your most marked characteristic?

I am a fire sign, which means that I am giving. They say fire is the only element not from earth, that gives without the need to take. I don’t know about all of that. I only know that I can’t stand to see any human being or animal suffer. I want to make the world a better place. If I could, I’d take away all the hurt and pain.

 

What is it that you, most dislike?

Cruelty to others, especially to helpless animals.

 

Which living person do you, most despise?

Iwig, for his horrible habit of hunting cats with his pellet gun.

 

What is your greatest regret?

That I never knew my mother, who died giving birth to me. I can’t help but feel responsible for her death.

 

What is the quality you most like in a man?

Compassion. Josselin has so much of it, if he’ll only allow himself to see the good that’s inside of him.

 

What is the quality you most like in a woman?

A caring nature. My grandmother was like that. How I miss her!

 

Who is your favorite hero in fiction?

Heathcliff, in Wuthering Heights, maybe because his wildness and darkness and all-consuming obsession remind me of Josselin. Yes, I suppose I see Josselin in Heathcliff’s character, only with a lot more tenderness.

 

Which living person do you most admire?

My grandfather, Erwan. Not only did he adopt my mother when nobody else would come near her, but he loves me for who I am, despite my unnatural ability to combust objects. He taught me the real values of life, and that goodness prevails. He has provided for me and taken care of me for all of his life, always putting my grandmother and me first. I admire him for the solid, good person he is. I hope that one day, I will make him proud.

 

If you could change one thing about yourself what would it be?

I just want to fit in. I would like to look like everyone else, like the Breton people, so that my physical appearance isn’t a constant reminder to everyone that I don’t belong here.

 

What is your motto?

Do to others what you want to be done to yourself.

 

  Giveaway

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  About The Author

 

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Charmaine Pauls was born in Bloemfontein, South Africa. She obtained a degree in Communication at the University of Potchestroom, and followed a diverse career path in journalism, public relations, advertising, communications, photography, graphic design, and brand marketing. Her writing has always been an integral part of her professions.

After relocating to France with her French husband, she fulfilled her passion to write creatively full-time. Charmaine has published six novels since 2011, as well as several short stories and articles.

When she is not writing, she likes to travel, read, and rescue cats. Charmaine currently lives in Chile with her husband and children. Their household is a linguistic mélange of Afrikaans, English, French and Spanish.

Read more about Charmaine’s romance novels and psychological short stories

www.charmainepauls.com

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Book Blast, Giveaway & Interview: The Witch’s Daughter by @RonDVoigts

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Book Blast

 

clip_image002_thumb[1]The Witch’s Daughter

A Cavendish Brown Mystery

Book 1

Ron D. Voigts

Genre: Paranormal Mystery

Publisher: Champagne Book Group

Date of Publication: March 2, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-77155-176-2

ASIN: B00U0W28LC

Number of pages: 219

Word Count: 72K

Cover Artist: Ellie Smith

Book Description:

Investigative reporter and recent widower, Cavendish Brown, is unemployed and floundering. Coerced into returning to his childhood home by the town's eccentric matriarch, Cavendish finds himself involved in murder, deceit, and a not-so-subtle attempt at matchmaking.

Joined by Jane, a disturbed psychic, and Alexandra, a young Goth woman with uncanny abilities, they follow leads into the hills of West Virginia to catch the killer. A sheriff who shoots first and asks questions later makes solving the case difficult for the trio. Adding further complications is an ex-girlfriend with a mob hitman on her trail who seeks Cavendish’s help.

Immersed in a never-ending spiral of clues and secrets, he must unlock the darkness that surrounds the enigmatic Jane, stay ahead of the law, and come to terms with his own grief.

Available at Amazon BN Kobo Champagne Books

Excerpt

I stood on the spot with the shovel we had found earlier, staring at the ground where Jane told me to dig. My heart pounded in my chest, and I considered whether this was a good idea. “If a body is here, it might have been buried a hundred years ago. People do die and are buried. It could be sacrilegious to uproot somebody. There are laws about doing things like that.”

Alex sat on the chopping block. She took a long draw on her cigarette, exhaled the smoke and watched it linger in the still air. “I’m sure whoever it is won’t mind.”

How stupid would it sound to tell anyone I was out in the woods with a chain smoking Goth girl and a psychic who could divine the past by touch, digging up a body? If one was buried here, it may lead to a story. The headlines would read “Editor, Goth Girl and Psychic Dig Up Civil War Hero.”

I took a deep breath and scooped out the first shovel of dirt, paused and peered in the hole. No body. I dug and tossed a few more spades full. Nothing. I scooped out more earth, still finding nothing. My pace became less ginger. Dig. Toss. Dig Toss. Dig. Thud!

Whatever I hit seemed solid. I worked the shovel more carefully, taking smaller bites of dirt. Something pale contrasted against the dark earth. Using the tip of the shovel, I moved aside more ground until I exposed something long and slender. I’d seen skeletons pictured on anatomy charts at the doctor’s office and more than a few body parts while in Afghanistan, doing a stint in the Army, but I was no expert on bones. “I found a tibia or maybe a femur.”

Alex tossed her cigarette, ran over to the hole and stared into it. She knelt down and brushed back dirt with her hand. “It’s a root.”

“Can’t be.”

She grabbed it, and what looked like a bone bent as she tugged on it. I knelt next to her and examined it closer. It sure looked like a root.

Jane, who had been poking a stick at something in the grass, came over and pointed to a spot about two feet over. “Dig here. Not there.”

I repositioned myself and began digging again, wondering how many more roots I would dig up that looked like bones.

The air grew heavy, and my clothing damp as I dug. The sounds of the forest became distant, and all I heard was the shovel striking the ground and my heart beating. The last time I’d worked up a sweat digging a hole was boot camp at Fort Jackson. I didn’t like it then, and my current sentiments were the same. I tossed a shovel full of dirt and spotted something.

Rather than shout for Alex and discover I had found another root, I took it and rubbed the soil away. Definitely this had to be a bone. Picking through the dirt, I found more bones, like from a chicken.

Alex came over and looked down into the hole. “Phalanges or metacarpals.”

Surprised she’d know the correct names, I stared at her. “Really?”

“I took an anatomy class in college.”

I stepped back and let Alex pick around in the hole. She found more small bones and sorted them on the ground until they began to form the arrangement of a hand. “I’d say a body is buried there.”

Alex took the shovel and removed dirt from the excavation. She took her time and paused occasionally to peer into the hole. Where I was a bulldozer plowing through the soil, she worked more like a seasoned archeologist on a dig.

As a reporter on the Gazette, I often teetered on the fine line separating legal from criminal. My informants were druggies, boosters and mechanics. I’d done interviews at crack houses, brothels and chop shops. When I came to Maiden Falls, I figured those days were behind me. Things here would be safe, mundane and predictable. Yet, here I was, digging up a dead body.

Alex found more small bones and placed them with the first ones. “Hey, we keep this up we’ll have a complete Mr. Bones in no time.”

A chill passed through me. This was a Frankenstein movie, and we were the grave robbers. We’d take the body parts to the mad scientist and get a bag of coins. Things could not be creepier, and I really didn’t want to see a dead body, even if the flesh had already gone to the worms.

We took turns digging, and I worked more cautiously. Alex did the detailed stuff like cleaning the dirt off the bones and arranging them with the others. She named them as she found them. Humerus. Ulna. Clavicle.

“Were you pre-med at college?”

“No.”

Jane sat in the grass nearby and watched. She seemed indifferent about the body we unearthed, and I speculated what conditions had molded such a strange being.

“Look here.” I pulled back a tattered shirt and pointed to a broken rib. “Looks like someone shot him.”

Alex looked closer. “Maybe.”

“Do you have a better explanation?”

The trauma of seeing exposed human bones no longer seemed as threatening. I stood back and let Alex continue the exhumation. I feared the moment when we’d get to the head. A grinning skull with hollow eyes gave me a chill.

  Character Interview

Character Name: Cavendish Brown

Character Bio: Leaving home at eighteen, Cavendish joined the Army Rangers and did a stint in Afghanistan. He came back and went to school at New York University. He almost flunked out, drinking too much, partying with friends, when he met Emma. She turned him around and he graduated with a degree in journalism. They married and moved to Charlotte where he worked at the Gazette. She died a year ago from leukemia. He slipped back into his old ways, frequenting bars, drinking too much, and got into a barroom fight. Facing time and a lawsuit, he agreed to return to his hometown, Maiden Falls, WV, and run the town newspaper; in exchange, Marbella Wellingway, the richest lady in town, got all the charges dropped. That’s where his story starts in The Witch’s Daughter.

 

Describe yourself what is your worst and best quality?

Worst quality? Hmmm. I drink too much at times and become moody. Best quality. Loyalty and keeping my word.

What is the one thing you wish other people knew about you?

I really loved my wife Emma. She was my life and reason for living.

What is your biggest secret something no one knows about?

I think I’ve seen dead people, walking around.  Sometimes I think it’s my imagination, but they sure looked real. I don’t really believe in ghosts but I know what I’ve seen.

What are you most afraid of?

Losing someone again.  I lost Emma. What if the next person I fall in love with goes away too. I am afraid that I might them too.

What do you want more than anything?

I never told anyone this but my dead wife visited me.  She said things. Well, I’d love to see her one more time, to touch her, to hear her voice.

What is your relationship status?

Single, a widower. I had gotten together with an ex-girlfriend but that didn’t work out. My boss’s daughter, Alex Wellingway, tried to get me into bed one time, but I think we were drinking too much.

How would you describe your sense of fashion?

I have none, wearing whatever I first find in the closest. My wife Emma would say, “Cavey, if left to you, you’d only have two items of clothing. A T-shirt and jeans.”

How much of a rebel are you?

I got in trouble a bunch of times while in high school. Never listened to the good advice of my parents. I beat the crap out of a guy shortly after graduation, after I learned he was going out with my girlfriend. Then I joined the Army and left town quickly.

What do you considered to be your greatest achievement?

I’ve won a few awards while working as a reporter in Charleston. The greatest thing was marrying Emma.

What is your idea of happiness?

Being with someone you love.

What is your current state of mind?

I was depressed for a long time after my wife died. At times I didn’t care about myself and maybe wanted to die. But I understand now. Right now I feel nothing. I guess I’m looking for my place in life.

What is your most marked characteristic?

I don’t know if you’d call it a characteristic, but the folds on the palm of my right hand make a star of sorts. No one else in my family has the trait. I chalked it up to a genetic anomaly.  Maybe it means something.

What is it that you, most dislike?

Jerks that pick on people who can’t defend themselves. I’ve knocked a few them down a notch or two.

Is there anyone you dislike?

For a long time I  didn’t like this guy named Lou Houser.  I thought he had stolen my girl. But we made our peace.

What is your greatest regret?

Not having more time with Emma.

What is the quality you most like in a man?

Honesty.

What is the quality you most like in a woman?

A warm smile.

Who is your favorite hero in fiction?

Superman. Sounds crazy, huh? I always thought it would be fun to fly, swoop in and rescue someone.

Which living person do you most admire?

I’ve always admired the Dali Lama.  He seems so at peace with everything. I like that quote of his. “Our prime purpose in this life is to help others. And if you can't help them, at least don't hurt them.”

If you could change one thing about yourself what would it be?

I don’t know. I realize I’m not perfect but I figure I am who I am.

What is your motto?

I really don’t have one.  I guess the one I like is “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can; and wisdom to know the difference.” Maybe it’s something to aspire to.

 

 

  Giveaway

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About The Author

Originally from the Midwest, Ron D. Voigts calls North Carolina clip_image004_thumb[2]where he and wife have a home just off the Neuse River. Ron’s writes dark mysteries with a supernatural flair, but his reading in more eclectic tending towards whatever catches his interest. When not writing and reading, he enjoys watching gritty movies, playing games on the PC, and cooking gourmet meals.

http://www.authorrondvoigts.com

https://twitter.com/RonDVoigts

https://www.facebook.com/AuthorRonDVoigts

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25076479-the-witch-s-daughter

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4939421.Ron_D_Voigts

Book Blast, Giveaway & Interview: Toxic Bad Boy by @AprilBrookshire

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Book Blast

 

clip_image002_thumb[1]Toxic Bad Boy

Beware of Bad Boy Trilogy

Book 3

April Brookshire

Genre: mature young adult contemporary romance

Date of Publication: March 30th, 2015

Number of pages: 220

Word Count: 70,000

Book Description:

Caleb and Gianna’s lives were ruined by a brutal attack. She ended up in the hospital and he was thrown in juvie.

For Caleb, being apart from Gianna is worse torture than being locked up. He’s unable to help her through the aftermath of the assault and dealing with the confinement of youth corrections.

Gianna is lost, her mind going to dark places. She loves and misses Caleb, but doesn’t know how to deal with the upheaval and panic attacks. Emerging, are new threats to her safety and her relationship with Caleb.

While Gianna struggles with her ability to be Caleb’s girlfriend after he’s released, Caleb struggles to hold on to the only girl he’s ever loved.

This is the third book and conclusion to the Beware of Bad Boy series.

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Book 1 Available at Amazon

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Book 2 Available at Amazon

Author Interview

Did you always want to be a writer? If not what did you want to be?

I went to college for Economics, but writing fiction is much more fun. I’ve always thought up stories in my head, it just didn’t occur to me until a few years ago that I should write them out.

When did you first consider yourself a “writer”?

When I self-published my first book, Young Love Murder.

How long did it take to get your first book published?

I’ve never tried the traditional route. Self-publishing has worked for me so far and seems like less of a hassle.

Do you do another job except for writing and can you tell us more about it?

Writing is my only job right now. I used to own a scrapbooking supply business, but my only focus at this time is writing.

What is the name of your latest book, and if you had to summarize it in less than 20 words what would you say?

Toxic Bad Boy.  Mature young adult about stepsiblings who fall in love.  Caleb is trying to hold on to the girl he loves.

Who is your publisher? Or do you self-publish?

I self-publish.

How long does it usually take you to write a book, from the original idea to finishing writing it?

Plotting takes 2-3 days. If I’m free from distractions, I can write a book in a month. But life is never distraction-free when you’re a single mom, so that month’s worth of writing usually gets stretched out to two. Plus, editing is quite a process, too.

What can we expect from you in the future?  ie More books of the same genre? Books of a different genre?

The next book I’m working on is the second in the Young Assassins series (new adult romantic suspense). After that I’m working on an adult contemporary romance. This summer, I hope to get out the third book in the Dead Chaos series (zombie apocalypse with urban fantasy).

What genre would you place your books into?

The Beware of Bad Boy series would have to be considered mature young adult. It’s like a young adult and new adult fusion.

What made you decide to write that genre of book?

I’d read a lot of young adult where the teens were mature to the point of having boring personalities. I wanted to write a young adult book with humor and edge.

Do you have a favorite character from your books? And why are they your favorite?

Caleb from the Beware of Bad Boy series is an entertaining character, but Jackson from the Young Assassins series is more of a mystery and badass assassin.

How long have you been writing?, and who or what inspired you to write?

I’ve been writing for a little over 5 years. Reading romance stories from different subgenres inspired me.

Do you have a certain routine you have for writing? ie You listen to music, sit in a certain chair?

I always listen to music while writing. I have different Spotify and iTunes playlists, sometimes for a specific book.

Do you read all the reviews of your book/books?

I shouldn’t, but I do. Usually a good thing, sometimes very bad. Not every book is for everyone.

Do you choose a title first, or write the book then choose the title?

It can go both ways. I always know the title at least halfway through writing a book.

How do you come up with characters names and place names in your books?

The internet is a magic portal of knowledge. If I don’t already have experience with a place, I’ll research it online. Sometimes names come to me and other times I find them online on name meaning websites.

Are character names and place names decided after their creation? Or do you pick a character/place name and then invent them?

I pick the character name or place first.

Do you decide on character traits (ie shy, quiet, tomboy girl) before writing the whole book or as you go along?

I figure out the characters traits of characters before or early on in writing.

Are there any hidden messages or morals contained in your books? (Morals as in like Aesops Fables type of "The moral of this story is..")

Sometimes there are hidden messages or morals, but my number one goal is always to entertain readers.

Which format of book do you prefer, eBook, hardback, or paperback?

I read ebook most often, but I also own a ton of paperbacks and hardbacks. If an author is a favorite of mine (like Kresley Cole), I’ll buy all of her books in paperback or hardcover.

What is your favorite book and Why?  Have you read it more than once?

I don’t have a favorite book exactly, but I’ve read all of Kresley Cole’s Immortals After Dark books more than once (I reread the series once or twice a year).

Do you think books transfer to movies well? Which is your favorite/worst book to movie transfer?

I’ve never seen a movie that was better than the book. It’s why I haven’t read the Hunger Games books. I’m worried I’ll think the movies suck. New Moon from the Twilight series was a mess as a movie. Vampire Academy ended up being a parody of the book.

Your favorite food is?

Papa John’s pizza.

Your favorite singer/group is?

I don’t have a favorite, I have lots of favorites, including The Sounds, Thirty Seconds to Mars and Coldplay.

Your favorite color is?

All shades of blue.

Your favorite Author is?

Kresley Cole and Kristen Ashley.

  Giveaway

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About The Author

April Brookshire is the author of the Beware of Bad Boy and Young Assassinsclip_image008_thumb[1] series. She also co-authors the Dead Chaos series. She writes under the contemporary romance and apocalyptic fantasy genres and has a few projects in the works for 2015.

Growing up with four brothers, she doesn’t like chick flicks but devours romance books of all genres. A book addict, she’s read almost two thousand books to date.

April lives in a suburb of Denver, Colorado, where she raises her young son. When she isn’t writing, she’s usually reading, but also enjoys attending concerts and plays in the numerous venues of the city.

www.aprilbrookshire.net

http://aprilbrookshire.net/blog/

https://twitter.com/AprilBrookshire

https://www.facebook.com/AprilBrookshireAuthor

https://www.pinterest.com/aprilbrookshire/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5154295.April_Brookshire

Spotify Beware of Bad Boy Series Playlist https://play.spotify.com/user/aprilbrookshire/playlist/3gWTK6pvAGbV7DjtwTl1XY

Friday, April 24, 2015

Cover Reveal: Forbidden Love by Tamaria Soana @Tamaria_Soana

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Presented by: Sparkle Book Tours

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Forbidden Love by Tamaria Soana

Audience: Adult 18+ - Genre: Erotic Romance - Format: Ebook - Publisher: Tamaria Soana - Cover by: Shades of Rose Media - Expected Date of Publishing: Mid June
 
 
blurb

What happens when you meet your destiny but you both belong to someone else?
Carmelita Heaton married her high school sweetheart. The first few years of marriage were bliss. As her husband climbed the corporate ladder and began to travel for his job, they slowly grew apart.
Before long, their marriage was reduced to seeing each other a few times a month in passing leaving no emotional connection. In the midst of all this, Carm needed to find a new job because the doctor she worked for was retiring. Her life starts to spin out of control when she begins her new job as an RN for an OB/GYN.
Doctor Dylan Gates’ professional life needed to run smoothly since his personal life was falling apart. His wife Lydia suffered a nervous breakdown a few years prior after she lost her twin sister. Doctor Gates threw himself into his work. He’s a man set in his ways, but when his long time nurse moved out of town; he's forced to hire someone new.
Dylan and Carm’s instant attraction leaves them both struggling to do the right thing. How long can they fight to stay away from their destiny?
 
about the author
Tamaria Soana is middle-aged but feels like her life has just begun. She writes contemporary romance stories with a high heat level that always end with a ‘happily ever after’. Growing up, she loved to read and make up new places in her head to escape to. In her late teens she began writing short stories and poetry. It wasn’t until her late thirties before she began to spin a full story.
She’s married and a stay-at-home mom of two beautiful young girls. They reside in Western New York. Cuddling up with a good book under an electric throw is her way to escape the cold Buffalo nights.
Besides writing, she co-owns Shades of Rose Media and produces book trailers. Three of her book trailers have been featured on the USA Today’s Happy Ever After site.
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