Author: Andrew

  • I’m Coming Out – Kinda

    I’m Coming Out – Kinda

    People who’ve followed me for some time know that although I write mainly non-romance, speculative fiction—fantasy, paranormal, urban fantasy—I’ve also written some MM Romance. As it would happen, in 2017, the rights to my two published MM Romance stories reverted back to me. I took this as a sign.

    What was my epiphany? That I needed to create a new pen name for my MM Romance. So I did. Starting now, all my romance stories will be published under the pen name Andy Gallo. (I’ve already been asked why that name – well Andrew is my real name, but most people call me Andy, and I wanted a last name with a G because – well Gordon – and my ethnicity is Italian, so Gallo fit.)

    Here’s “Andy’s” first post. If you’re of a mind, click, read and follow:

     

    Be My Friend:

     

    So why the split? For a while I’d been contemplating separating my speculative fiction from my MM Romance. I’ve more than a few readers who don’t like romance. I’m not sure having them both under the same pen name makes sense. I don’t want my speculative fiction readers who dislike romance to think all my spec fic will have romance in them. Nor do I want people who like their romance without much spec fic, to think I don’t write contemporary romances.

    By creating “safe zones” for each genre, it will cultivate a stronger following for each. And I’m able cross promoting some with each pen name.

    Now the extra work is a bit of a bugger, but I’m going to give it a try.

    Interestingly enough, on the eve of when I planned to announce the new pen name I read this article.

    Author Pen Names: 5 Reasons they’re a Bad Idea in the Digital Age by Anne R. Allen

    Anne makes a lot of good points and it did give me more than a moment of pause, but for me, I think I lose people because they can’t decide what I’m writing. For those who like both genres, you can follow both of me. Or you can pick one because there will be links to the other ‘me’ on both sites.

    As for why now? (Un)Masked is being re-released on October 30th. Either I did it now or I’d never be able to separate myself. More on the return of (Un)Masked in a few days.

     

     

  • Running the Bases with Kim Petersen

    Running the Bases with Kim Petersen

    We will start off with an easy one. Tell us a bit about Millie.

    Millie is a gifted young woman with a feisty disposition. She sees the world in colors and love, and strives to understand the connection between imagination, thought-creation and the limits we present ourselves.

    Do you have more in store for Millie? If so can we get a sneak peak? If not what is next for you?

    Millie has gone on to develop her extraordinary gift and challenge the evil serpent entity, Apepsis in my new release, Angels & Vixens, a thrilling urban fantasy that follows Millie and her brother Ace as they race towards a nail-biting showdown. Here you will find a sneak peek:
    http://www.kimpetersen.com.au/angels—vixens-exclusive-chapter-one-preview.html

    Up next? I’m joining a handful of writers and traveling across the US in November in a writing collaboration retreat hosted by J. Thorn and Zach Bohannon. By the end of the retreat we’ll have a book to publish. Super excited!

    Not including writing, what is your dream job

    I would love someone to pay me to travel the world and report on the local cuisine (think Anthony Bourdain), how interesting his life and experiences must be; and someone actually pays him to do this! The only drawback with this is, I’d probably end up the size of a house 😉

    What would they most like to see more of in the fantasy genre?

    Every writer has a message to convey, whether we’ve dressing our characters and beasts with magic and gifts, malice and sorcery, we can mold the story to address subjects that are important to us as individuals or society in general. That’s the beauty of writing, we get a voice. We can change the world with one reader at a time, I’d like to see more controversial/important subjects addressed in fantasy. If a writer feel passionate about a particular subject, chances are, there are people who need to hear about it.

    About Kim Petersen

    When Kim found herself divorced with 3 kids in 2007, she did what any thirty-something woman would do – she went to see a clairvoyant for the very first time.

    The elderly woman peered into a crystal ball, studied her palm and deciphered a deck of playing cards in a way Kim had never before witnessed, while foretelling a vivid future laden with happiness, abundance and a mysterious dark man from across the seas.

    Although it was determined there would be more children in her life, the gifted woman warned Kim against the notion, instead encouraging her to embrace the freedom that would come along with the growth of the three that already waddled behind her.

    Kim left the aroma of scented candles and zesty tingles with her mind whirling with excitement and a new-found adventure buzzing through her thoughts – the prospect of more children the last thing to inflict upon her fantasies. Not when there was a dark mysterious man out there awaiting a magical rendezvous.

    Two years passed until one evening a friend invited Kim to a birthday bash at a local pub. Her mother was in town so she eagerly accepted a night away from the kids where she would get to act and feel like an adult. She dressed in her winter dressy threads, drank way too much wine and sizzled up that tiny dance floor like tomorrow would never come – when it did arrive, she awoke with a throbbing headache, a churning stomach and phone call from a mysterious man who came from Holland.

    It wasn’t long before they became inseparable and two more children emerged from her overly fertile womb, lending to the frantically busy life she now leads while writing her heart out between feeding and cleaning after small army of kids!

    Kim discovers abundance around every dusty corner, every load of washing and every cooked meal each day – even when at times she is certain she might be better off if they put her away someplace safe!

  • Contest Update and Winners

    Contest Update and Winners

    My “Help Me Give Away 10,000 Copies of The Last Grand Master Contest.” is over. Thank you so much to everyone who signed up and who shared the contest.  I didn’t get close to 10K copies, but it was a good effort nevertheless. 🙂

    As part of the contest, we had some prizes to give away.  The software selected the winners and they’ve been notified.

    $50.00  Amazon GC: Kim

    $25.00 DSP Publications GC:  Cheryl and H.B.

    Thanks again and be on the look out for more info on the release of Book Five: When Heroes Fall, the conclusion of the Champion of the Gods, series.

    Enjoy the Journey

    -AQG

  • Renewal: A QSF Tradition

    Renewal: A QSF Tradition

     

    QSF has a new book out, the latest in our series of flash fiction anthologies:

    Re.new.al (noun)

    1) Resuming an activity after an interruption, or
    2) Extending a contract, subscription or license, or
    3) Replacing or repairing something that is worn out, run-down, or broken, or
    4) Rebirth after death.

    Four definitions to spark inspiration, a limitless number of stories to be conceived. Only 110 made the cut.

    Thrilling to hopeful, Renewal features 300-word speculative fiction ficlets about sexual and gender minorities to entice readers.

    Welcome to Renewal.

    Mischief Corner Books (info only) | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Goodreads


     

    Excerpt

    Because these stories are only 300 words each, we’re not supplying long excerpts, but here are the first lines of several of the stories. Enjoy!

    “Griselda pulled the weeds from between the rows of Valerianella locusta plants in the garden, careful not to disturb the buds that would grow into the babies that were her only real income-producing crop.” —The Witches’ Garden, by Rie Sheridan Rose

    “I didn’t know how truly the world was in trouble until I went journeying to look for Anisette’s bluebonnets.” —Bluebonnets, by Emily Horner

    “The ship’s drive malfunctioned at the worst possible time.” —The Return, by Andrea Speed

    “Before we continue, there’s a rather macabre fact about me I should share.” —Rejuvenation, by Christine Wright

    “When I died they buried me at the bottom of the garden and returned to the fields.” —Below the Hill, by Matthew Bright

    “The world is ending and I can’t look away from your eyes.” —Sunrise, by Brigitte Winter

    ““Losing one’s superpowers to your arch nemesis sucks donkey nuts, I tell ya. And trust me when I say I suck a lot of them.” —Rainbow Powers, by Dustin Karpovich

    “The day I was born again was damp, rainy—a good day for rebirth, all things considered.” —The Birthing Pod, by Michelle Browne

    “Intwir’s twelve eyes roved over the container, taking in the cracked outer lock and the elasticated fabric stretched tightly over its exterior.” —In a Bind, by S R Jones

    “‘You’ve reached Androgyne HelpLine. Press one to start service. Press two to interrupt or cancel service. Press three—’” —Auto-Renew, by Ginger Streusel

    “The doctor tells me that my wife is dying, but I already know.” —I Will Be Your Shelter, by Carey Ford Compton

    “‘San Francisco was the first to go dark, followed by Los Angeles.’” —When Light Left, by Lex Chase

    “My fingers lingered on the synthetic skin, trailing soft patterns across my work.” —Miss You, by Stephanie Shaffer


    Included Authors

    ‘Nathan Burgoine
    A.M. Leibowitz
    A.M. Soto
    Abby Bartle
    Aidee Ladnier
    Alexis Woods
    Andi Deacon
    Andrea Felber Seligman
    Andrea Speed
    Andrea Stanet
    Anne McPherson
    Bey Deckard
    Brigitte Winter
    Carey Ford Compton
    Carol Holland March
    Carrie Pack
    Catherine Lundoff
    CB Lee
    Christine Wright
    Colton Aalto
    Daniel Mitton
    Dustin Blottenberger
    Dustin Karpovich
    E R Zhang
    E.J. Russell
    E.W. Murks
    Ell Schulman
    Ellery Jude
    Eloreen Moon
    Elsa M León
    Emily Horner
    Eric Alan Westfall
    F.T. Lukens
    Fenrir Cerebellion
    Foster Bridget Cassidy
    Ginger Streusel
    Hannah Henry
    Irene Preston
    J. Alan Veerkamp
    J. P. Egry
    J. Summerset
    J.S. Fields
    Jaap Boekestein
    Jackie Keswick
    Jana Denardo
    Jeff Baker
    Jenn Burke
    Joe Baumann
    John Moralee
    Jon Keys
    Jude Dunn
    K.C. Faelan
    Kelly Haworth
    Kiterie Aine
    Kristen Lee
    L M Somerton
    L. Brian Carroll
    L.M. Brown
    L.V. Lloyd
    Laurie Treacy
    Leigh M. Lorien
    Lex Chase
    Lia Harding
    Lin Kelly
    Lloyd A. Meeker
    Lyda Morehouse
    M.D. Grimm
    Martha J. Allard
    Mary E. Lowd
    Matt Doyle
    Matthew Bright
    Mia Koutras
    Michelle Browne
    Milo Owen
    Mindy Leana Shuman
    Naomi Tajedler
    Natsuya Uesugi
    Nephy Hart
    Nicole Dennis
    Ofelia Gränd
    Patricia Scott
    Paul Stevens
    PW Covington
    R R Angell
    R.L. Merrill
    Rebecca Cohen
    Redfern Jon Barrett
    Reni Kieffer
    Richard Amos
    RL Mosswood
    Robyn Walker
    Rory Ni Coileain
    Rose Blackthorn
    Ross Common
    S R Jones
    Sacchi Green
    Sarah Einstein
    Shilo Quetchenbach
    Siri Paulson
    Soren Summers
    Stephanie Shaffer
    Steve Fuson
    Tam Ames
    Terry Poole
    Tray Ellis
    Vivien Dean
    Wendy Rathbone
    Xenia Melzer
    Zen DiPietro
    Zev de Valera

  • Guest Author—Cheryl Headford Talks Shade’s Champion

    Today one of my favorite authors, Cheryl Headfor, stops by for another visit. This time to share an excerpt from one her favorite stories.  Don’t expect fluffy and light stories when you read Cheryl’s work, but do expect to be wowed. Shade’s Champion was re-released September 15, 2017. So if you like a good story with a hard where the main characters have to work hard for their happy ever after, check out Cheryl’s new story. You won’t be disappointed.

    Shade’s Champion:

    Sixteen-year-old Shade has spent years imprisoned in a dark cellar after being snatched off the street as a young child. Events since his release have left him traumatised and desperate to die.

    Dory is a lively and engaging seventeen-year-old with mental health issues that make him a slave to his dangerously uncontrollable emotions.

    When Shade comes to the secure children’s home, Eastbrook; because no one else wants him, the manager appoints Dory as his champion, an appointment Dory takes very seriously indeed.

    As friendship turns into something else, something new and exciting, they struggle to find their feet, but every step leads to more complication.

    When a spiteful act separates them, it seems their love is doomed before it ever had a chance, but when Dory falls ill, it’s up to Shade to pick up the standard and become his champion, although it might already be too late.

    Excerpt:

    “You were the one who asked Dory to be Shade’s champion.”

    Penny laughed and sat back in her chair. “That was different, and you know it.”

    “Was it? Was it really?” He also sat back and steepled his fingers.

    “Don’t start your psycho-crap with me. You know it was different.”

    “I’m not so sure. You did it because you knew Dory was up to it, and you knew Shade would benefit from it.”

    “I didn’t know anything of the sort. It was a whim.”

    “Really? Well, anyway. I think Dory can handle a lot more than we give him credit for. You know his greatest ambition is to live independently.”

    “As if that’s going to happen.” Penny sighed and gazed wistfully out of the window. It was so sad and so unfair. Most of the children who passed through her hands moved on to independent living, many of those turned to crime or violence. Dory, who didn’t have a violent bone in his body, when he had that body under control, was likely never going to achieve his ambition because there just weren’t the places out there for him. Assisted living facilities, such as there were, wouldn’t accept him because of the risk of violence.

    “Why not?”

    “You know why not.”

    “I think you mollycoddle him too much. You’re so afraid of him having an episode you refuse to push him, to test his limits. How can we know if he can utilize the coping techniques he’s been taught if he never has to use them? He’s overprotected.”

    “How can you say that? He…” She petered out and thought about it. “Maybe you’re right. My heart goes out to that boy. If it wasn’t for his condition he’d be such a lovely kid.”

    “He is a lovely kid, despite his condition. He shows a maturity far above anyone else his age, a deep instinctual understanding of what people need, and an open willingness to give it. The biggest danger would be making sure he wasn’t taken advantage of. On a day-to-day basis, there’s no reason at all why he can’t take care of himself.”

    “What about when he snaps?”

    “It’s not as if it happens out of the blue. He knows the triggers and how to get out of dangerous situations before they get out of control. If he has someone supporting him—”

    “He’s had someone supporting him since he was five. He still managed to put two people in hospital.”

    “That was an accident.”

    “That would have put him in prison if he’d been an adult. It would have got him a custodial sentence in a youth facility if his psychiatrist hadn’t stepped in. It’s not going to happen, Rich.”

    “Well, all right, we’ll put that aside for now. I still think he could do Shade a world of good, and I believe Shade would be good for him, too.”

    “Exactly how?”

    “If he’s fighting Shade’s battles for a while, he’ll be less focussed on his own.”

    “And that’s what I’m worried about.”

    “Give it a chance.”

    Penny sighed and searched Richard’s face for a few minutes before she spoke again. “One week. I’ll give it one week, but they’re watched every minute, and we discuss progress every day, with Dory, too.”

    “Fair enough.”

    “Then we’ll—” She broke off when an alarm sounded. A glance at the control board told her all she wanted to know. “Dory,” she said, and they ran.

    Sales Link:

    Devine Destinies:

    About The Author:

    Cheryl was born into a poor mining family in the South Wales Valleys. Until she was 16, the toilet was at the bottom of the garden and the bath hung on the wall. Her refrigerator was a stone slab in the pantry and there was a black lead fireplace in the kitchen. They look lovely in a museum but aren’t so much fun to clean.

    Cheryl has always been a storyteller. As a child, she’d make up stories for her nieces, nephews and cousin and they’d explore the imaginary worlds she created, in play.

    Later in life, Cheryl became the storyteller for a re enactment group who travelled widely, giving a taste of life in the Iron Age. As well as having an opportunity to run around hitting people with a sword, she had an opportunity to tell stories of all kinds, sometimes of her own making, to all kinds of people. The criticism was sometimes harsh, especially from the children, but the reward enormous.

    It was here she began to appreciate the power of stories and the primal need to hear them. In ancient times, the wandering bard was the only source of news, and the storyteller the heart of the village, keeping the lore and the magic alive. Although much of the magic has been lost, the stories still provide a link to the part of us that still wants to believe that it’s still there, somewhere.

    In present times, Cheryl lives in a terraced house in the valleys with her son and menagerie of three cats, a dog and a dragon. Her daughter has deserted her for the big city, but they’re still close.

    Immersed, as always, in the world of fantasy, she maintains a burning desire to share the stories and these days it’s in the form of books which all contain her spark and unique view on life, the universe and everything.

    Connect With Cheryl:

    Website

    Goodreads

    Facebook

    Twitter

     

     

  • My “Help Me Give Away 10,000 eCopies Of The Last Grand Master” Contest.

    My “Help Me Give Away 10,000 eCopies Of The Last Grand Master” Contest.

    I want to give away as many eCopies of The Last Grand Master as I can (at least 10,000). I could bore you with why 10K is important and what could/should/will happen if I hit that number, but what really matters is I need your help. So rather than beg empty handed, I’m holding a contest and giving everyone who helps a small thank you gift.

    Click HERE to enter the contest.

    (The details are on the sign up page.)

    Or keep reading for more details.

    Prizes: 1 (One) $50.00 Amazon gift card and 2 (Two) $25.00 DSP Publications gift cards.

    Small Gift to everyone: A coupon good for 35% off your entire purchase from the DSP Publications Store.

    Contest ends September 30, 2017.

    How The Contest Works:

    The Short and Simple Version:

    You share my sign up page using a unique link I’ll give you. For everyone who signs up using your link, you get three entries into the contest. The more people who sign up using your link, the greater your odds of winning.

    The Detailed Version:

    • Sign up for my monthly updates and get one (1) entry. Already signed up? Thank you, but fill in the form anyway. You won’t be signed up again, but you will get an entry in the contest (This way those who already get my updates get credit for having signing up in the past.) Here is the sign up link:

    Sign Up Here To Spread The Word

    • Once you confirm your email (check your spam folder if you don’t get a confirmation email) you’ll get four things: 1)  A free eCopy of The Last Grand Master if you don’t already have one, 2) your 35% off coupon, 3) One (1) entry to the contest, 4) a unique link to share with your friends and on social media.  (Be sure to use your link so you get credit for everyone who signs up because they heard about my offer from you.);
    • Earn entries for each social media platform you use to share your link – (and you can share with a click of a button from the Thank You page);
    • Since you get three entries every time someone you referred signs up, share it a lot. To entice your friends to sign up and earn you entries, tell them they can also earn extra entries by sharing a unique link of their own once they join;
    • UpViral (the service hosting the contest) keeps track of all entries, who get credit for each new sign up, and picks the winners when the contest is over.

    The really, really detailed details (for those who want it.)

    • Everyone has to confirm their email to prevent cheating. Sorry to that one person who planned to pump up their entries by signing up everyone in their address books;
    • To that one person mentioned above – you can’t share the link with your 17 different email accounts and try to sign up with each to get extra entries. UpViral is really good at detecting fraud and they’ll tell me so I can remove that person and all their entries.
    • Since I have some competitive friends who’ll want to know how many people they enticed to sign up, everyone can track how many entires you have on the UpViral account. (If you can’t find the tracker, email me and I’ll help you find it.)
    • The DSP Publications Coupon is good all month. You can use it every day or more if you like. It’s good on your entire purchase. So indulge.
    • And just to see if anyone reads these ‘fine print’ stuff, leave a comment with a color and a favorite animal. If I get enough comments or they are funny enough, I might hold a mini giveaway just to commenters.

    What if I hit my 10K sign ups?

    I’ll be singing this:

     

    And then I’ll have some cake.  My 5 year old told me you have to have cake at a party.

    So take a moment, join the event and help me get to 10K.  I might even stream the party 😉

    One Last Annoying Sign Up Button:

    Thank you again for being a loyal fan.

    Enjoy The Journey!

    —AQG

  • Fear In The Marketing Of A Sale i.e. The Sale on Books 1-3 Ends Soon!

    In the world of sales, unless a company is going out of business or the item is discontinued, everyone knows there is no such thing as a sale that will never, ever be seen again.  We know things will go on sale again, we just don’t know when.

    And yet, we see headlines that scream: Hurry! or Last Days! or Don’t Miss This! Why? Because fear sells. Marketing 101 says create a sense of urgency to get impulse buys.  No one wants to miss out on a great deal so let them know the great deal is only for a limited time. (I might be drummed out of the mythical book marketers secret club for sharing their ‘proprietary’ information.)

    With that as a backdrop, let me gently remind everyone that The Last Grand Master, The Eye and the Arm & Kings of Lore and Legend are Kindle August Deals, and will only be on sale for $1.99 until August 31, 2017. DSPP has matched the sale price in their store if you prefer to buy your books there.

    (Click any of the links above to be taken to the respective sales page.)

    If you’re missing any (or all) of these three books, now would be a great time to buy them. Because, while sales do come again, I can say with a great deal of confidence – and very little hype – the first three books in the series won’t be a Kindle Deal of the Month again any time soon – if ever.

     

     

    The Last Grand Master:

     

    In a war that shook the earth, the six gods of Nendor defeated their brother Neldin, god of evil. For three thousand years, Nendor and the Seven Kingdoms have known peace and prosperity and Neldin’s evil was nearly forgotten.

    But then Meglar, wizard king of Zargon, unleashes the dark magic of the underworld and creates an army of creatures to carry out his master’s will. One by one, the sovereign realms fall as a new war between the gods threatens to engulf Nendor.

    Leading the opposition to Meglar is Grand Master Farrell. Young and untried, Farrell carries a secret that could hold the key to defeating Meglar—or it could destroy the world.

    Farrell is joined by Nerti, queen of the unicorns and Miceral, an immortal muchari warrior the Six have chosen as Farrell’s mate. As Farrell and his new allies make plans to counter Neldin’s evil, Meglar forces their hand when he invades a neighboring kingdom. Rushing to help their ally, Farrell and Miceral find themselves in the middle of the battle. Cut off from help, Farrell attempts an untried spell that will either turn the tide or cost he and Miceral their lives.

     

    The Eye and the Arm:

     

    After defeating Meglar at Belsport, Farrell returns to Haven to recover from his injuries, but Khron, the god of war, has other ideas. He gives Farrell a new mission: free the survivors of the ancient dwarf realm of Trellham from their three-thousand-year banishment. To fulfill Khron’s near impossible task, Farrell will need the help of his distance ancestor, the legendary wizard Kel. But Kel has been dead for a thousand years.

    Farrell finds information hinting that Kel is alive, so he moves his search to Dumbarten, Kel’s birthplace. To reach Dumbarten unannounced, Farrell and Miceral disguise themselves as mercenaries on board a merchant vessel. Their journey is disrupted when pirates attack their ship. While attempting to subdue the attack, Farrell is struck down by one of Meglar’s minions.

    Unconscious and trapped in his own mind, Farrell’s only chance for survival rests with Miceral and the peregrine king Rothdin entering his thoughts and helping him sort fact from illusion. To reach Farrell, they will need to rely on an untested spell from one of Kel’s spellbooks. If they succeed, Miceral can guide Farrell home safely. If not, Farrell will destroy not only himself, but Miceral, Rothdin, and everyone around him.

     

    Kings of Lore and Legend:

     

    Dumbarten should have been the end of Farrell’s efforts to find his distant ancestor Kel, but the Six have other plans. Farrell is told to continue his search for answers in Agloth, the temple city to Seritia. Forced by the Goddess to ride across the vast continent of Lourdria, Farrell and his companion learn that Meglar’s reach extends well beyond the borders of Ardus. And Agloth, despite being dedicated to the Goddess of Love, is also home to a millennia-old curse that Farrell must end if he wants to complete his task.

    Answers don’t come easily, and Farrell determines he must travel to the Dwarf Kingdom of Colograd to continue his quest. When an ally of Meglar’s threatens Agloth, Farrell cuts short his time in Colograd and rushes back to defend Seritia’s home. The attack seems doomed to fail, but the death of one of his companions distracts Farrell at a critical moment. Battling against his crushing grief, Farrell struggles to save Agloth, his friends, and himself. And even if he survives, he still hasn’t found Kel or his answers.

     

     

     

     

  • Friday Musings

    Friday Musings

    The last seven days have been unsettling to say the least. Starting with the events in Charlottesville, the response by that guy in the White House (all three contradictory and confusing ones), Barcelona and now Finland. I was listening to this song to get in a more positive mood:

     

    Change will only come if enough of us want it and are willing to stand up for it.  What I was willing to ride out when I wasn’t a parent, I need to change now that I’m a parent. I look at my daughter and the carefree way she sees the world and I worry. What will be left when she’s my age? Will there be anything left? There is nothing good about culture or society that is built upon hate. Nothing. The future must be better for our children. It’s our obligation to work for that reality.  It’s my obligation to ‘lil q. (And now for the gratuitous cute kid picture.)

    In writing news – Book Five in the Champion of the Gods series – When Heroes Fall – is almost done.  This week I passed the 150K word mark. I have another 18K written that needs fixing and I figure I have another 15-20K to finish it write.  End of August?  Fingers crossed. But since I don’t think I shared this before, here is a trailer for Child of Night and Day:

     

    Did you know Books 1-3 in the series are Amazon August Kindle deals and on sale? Yep, all three are $1.99, and not just at Amazon. DSP Publications is matching the price everywhere, so if you’re missing a volume, now is a good time to buy them. (Click the picture and you will be taken to The Last Grand Master on Amazon)

    And with that, I’ll stop.  Have a great weekend!

  • Blog Tour—Comes A Horseman; by Anne Barwell

    Blog Tour—Comes A Horseman; by Anne Barwell

    Today’s guest, Anne Barwell, hails from New Zealand. She is wonderful story teller and an even better person. Anne’s giving nature comes through in the passion she brings to her writing and the way she works to give the readers all that she can. The Echoes Rising is a terrific historical fiction series and I hope everyone reads on to learn more (and of course get the books!)

    Working With History – Anne Barwell

    Thanks for hosting me today as part of my blog tour for Comes a Horseman, the 3rd and final book in my WWII Echoes Rising series from DSP Publications.

    I have a Rafflecopter running as part of the tour so be sure to enter. DSP Publications also have the ebooks for Shadowboxing (book 1), and Winter Duet (book 2) on sale from 17th July-August 4th.

    One of the daunting things about writing an historical is the research involved. But, on the flip side, often real events can inspire plot, and even get the characters out of a corner. In Shadowboxing, the first book in my WWII Echoes Rising series, I needed to get my characters out of a heavily guarded building, and couldn’t figure out how. History came to my rescue! I adjusted the dates in the story by a few weeks, and the Allied bombing of that area at the time gave my characters the break they needed. Sadly one of their own lost his life as well.

    Historical events play a big part in Comes a Horseman. When I started writing the series, I knew I wanted it to finish with D-Day—the Allied invasion of Normandy on June 6th 1944. The lead up to that event is well documented too, so my timing had to be just right. I needed to have my Allied team in Normandy so they’d be there to hear the original coded broadcast to the resistance on 1st June so they knew the invasion was coming. I also had to get the weather right, as that impacted the date which originally was going to be a couple of days earlier. Not only that, but I needed to find out when the area was bombed and the specific times—as well as dates—of the crucial events leading up to, and of, the invasion.

    When I started reading up on D-Day I discovered a rather cool coincidence. The Paul Verlaine poem which was broadcast over the radio as the coded signal to the French Resistance contained a line about the “heavy sobs of autumn’s violins”, and one my characters—Kit Lehrer—is a violinist. It was as though everything fell into place and not only that, had meant to be this way all along. I’d love to say I planned it that way, but I didn’t.

    The attitude of Standartenführer Holm towards the imminent invasion is taken from historical accounts too. The Germans weren’t expecting an invasion in Normandy, so their attention was elsewhere. And the idea that the Allies would broadcast to the resistance on the B.B.C.? Ridiculous.

    The timing of the action of the last few chapters of the book was crucial. I needed to have the bombs drop on my characters at ground zero so the timing was historically accurate. I wrote those last few chapters with an historical timeline written in my notebook for the series, and adjusted the timeline of previous chapters so that everything meshed. It also solved several problems the characters needed to figure out in order to complete their mission the way they’d decided it needed to play out.

    I’ve learnt a lot more about WWII while writing this series than I ever thought I would, and despite the work involved, I’ve really enjoyed it. I still have a notebook, a folder, and bookcase full of information about the period, and although this team’s story is told, I wouldn’t be surprised if that information proves useful in another story sometime.

    There’s always newsletter free stories and the ilk too. I’ve spent so many years writing these guys, I doubt they’ll disappear altogether. I kind of hope they don’t.

    Blurb:

    Comes a Horseman – Echoes Rising Book 3, sequel to Winter Duet

    France, 1944

    Sometimes the most desperate struggles take place far from the battlefield, and what happens in secret can change the course of history.

    Victory is close at hand, but freedom remains frustratingly just beyond the grasp of German physicist Dr. Kristopher Lehrer, Resistance fighter Michel, and the remaining members of the team sent by the Allies—Captain Matt Bryant, Sergeant Ken Lowe, and Dr. Zhou Liang—as they fight to keep the atomic plans from the Nazis. The team reaches France and connects with members of Michel’s French Resistance cell in Normandy. Allied troops are poised to liberate France, and rescue is supposedly at hand. However, Kristopher is no longer sure the information he carries in his memory is safe with either side.

    When Standartenführer Holm and his men finally catch up with their prey, the team is left with few options as they fight to keep atomic plans from the Nazis. With a traitor in their midst, who can they trust? Kristopher realizes he must become something he is not in order to save the man he loves. Death is biding his time, and sacrifices must be made for any of them to have the futures they want.

    Buy Links:

    DSP Publications: 

    Amazon: 

    Excerpt:

    Matt nodded, his lips moving although he did not speak. He was counting, Michel realized, as they pulled away from shore, and using the rhythm of his movement to distract himself from the darkness.

    The moon’s light highlighted the waves lapping around the boat—the water seemed to reach toward them before diving back again. Ken and Matt quickly settled into a unified motion, both focused on what they were doing, although Ken glanced at Matt a couple of times.

    Frej signaled for Matt and Ken to change direction slightly and rest the oars. They did that for a few moments, letting the boat drift with the current. If Michel squinted, he could see the outline of the bridge in the distance and several shapes moving at either end of it. The guards on duty would hopefully stay focused on the bridge itself and not notice a small rowboat sneaking over the border. The area was well guarded, but as it had been secured for quite some time, they would not be expecting trouble.

    On the other side of the boat, Liang quickly turned and leaned over the side. As soon as he started to make a gagging noise he shoved his hand over his mouth to silence it. If his seasickness got any worse, it would be difficult to mask the noise of him vomiting over the side of the boat. He was doing his best to silence his dry heaving, but his hunched posture suggested he felt miserable and unwell.

    Frej leaned toward Ken and gestured. Ken nodded, rested the oars again, and then he and Matt changed direction. Matt was still counting under his breath, and he gripped the oar tightly.

    “Who’s there?” The shouted question shattered the silence.

    Kristopher glanced around, an expression of panic on his face.

    Michel put a hand on his arm to calm him but didn’t dare whisper the reassurance he wanted to. He turned around and strained his eyes, trying to find the source of the disruption. Matt and Ken stopped rowing, the boat drifting back the way they’d come, caught by the current.

    He heard boots against wood in the distance—the unmistakable sound of men running, probably over the bridge crossing the Rhine south of their position. “No farther or I’ll shoot,” one of them yelled.

    Frej got down on the floor of the boat. Michel and Kristopher followed, then Liang. Matt kept hold of his oar, trying to keep it as still as he could. He leaned down into a crouch, as did Ken.

    Gunfire sounded from the bridge. A couple of shots in succession before stopping. Michel heard an engine, a vehicle approaching. A door slammed, and then everything went quiet again. Logically he knew the bridge was a good few kilometers away, but Frej was right about noise carrying on the water. If felt too close for comfort.

    Frej waited a few minutes. “Row,” he whispered urgently. “While they are distracted.”

    Rafflecopter giveaway:

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Other Tour Stops:

    July 25 – MM Good Book Reviews

    July 31 – Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words

    August 1 – Two Men Are Better Than One

    August 1 – Top to Bottom Reviews

    August 1 – Genre Talk at The Novel Approach Reviews

    August 2 – Love Bytes Reviews

    August 3 – Andrew Q. Gordon

    August 3 – DSP Publications Blog

    August 4 – Nic Starr

    August 4 – Alpha Book Club

    August 7 – My Fiction Nook

    August 8 – Divine Magazine

    August 9 – Aisling Mancy

    August 10 – Lucy Marker

    About the Author:

    Anne Barwell lives in Wellington, New Zealand. She shares her home with two cats who are convinced that the house is run to suit them; this is an ongoing “discussion,” and to date it appears as though the cats may be winning.

    In 2008 she completed her conjoint BA in English Literature and Music/Bachelor of Teaching. She has worked as a music teacher, a primary school teacher, and now works in a library. She is a member of the Upper Hutt Science Fiction Club and plays violin for Hutt Valley Orchestra.

    She is an avid reader across a wide range of genres and a watcher of far too many TV series and movies, although it can be argued that there is no such thing as “too many.” These, of course, are best enjoyed with a decent cup of tea and further the continuing argument that the concept of “spare time” is really just a myth. She also hosts other authors, reviews for the GLBTQ Historical Site “Our Story” and Top2Bottom Reviews, and writes monthly blog posts for Authors Speak and Love Bytes.

    Anne’s books have received honorable mentions four times and reached the finals three times in the Rainbow Awards.  She has also been nominated twice in the Goodreads M/M Romance Reader’s Choice Awards—once for Best Fantasy and once for Best Historical.

    Where To Find Anne:

    Website & Blog: 

    Facebook:

    Facebook page: 

    Google+: 

    Instagram: 

    Twitter: 

    Goodreads: 

    Dreamspinner Press Author Page:

    DSP Publications Author Page:

    Queeromance Ink Author Page:

    New Zealand Rainbow Romance Writers:

     

     

  • Running the Bases with Tali Spencer

    Running the Bases with Tali Spencer

    Today is a special Running the Bases for me because it has my friend Tali Spencer as the guest. Tali has been so generous with her time whenever I ask for help and she even hosted me and my daughter for an afternoon a while back. Oh yeah, did I mention I love her writing? Her Pride of Uttor series is probably one of my all time favorites. If you get a chance, read it and find out why.

    1. You write stories in different genres, does one speak to you more?

    Fantasy is my first love, and high fantasy especially. I feel most at home when creating my own worlds and using those worlds to explore the human condition, whether it be class differences, gender roles, or how people create their own problems and solutions. I also love to write science fiction stories, which allow me to twist humans and societies to reflect what might happen when humanity meets the “other,” whether that be aliens… or itself.

    Because humans, I think, can pretty darn alien.

    2. Which author(s) inspired you to write?

    I’m definitely old-school. I first published in 1985, so the authors who most inspired me were those I read as a young writer. Tolkien, of course, because he towered over the fantasy field, inspired me to write large, sweeping stories. Frank Herbert with his Dune series inspired me with his female characters. Another big influence was Tanith Lee, whose luminous, beautiful prose still leaves me in awe. She and Marion Zimmer Bradley, whose Darkover books I adore, were the big reasons I submitted to my first publisher, DAW.

    3. Pride of Uttor is hard to slot. It’s clearly another world, but it has a steampunk feel to it and lacks the magic needed for typical fantasy. How do you classify your series?

    I see Uttor as an alternate world, so would call the stories alternate world fantasies. The lack of magic is intentional, because I was aiming for a more historical vibe, rather than a fantasy vibe. And yet it is a fantasy, because the world in which the stories take place is a created one. The evolution of technology in this world very much mirrors that of Earth. The Greeks and Romans were much more advanced than we—influenced by the Dark Ages and philosophies that downplayed the sophistication of pagan societies—long believed. We still haven’t surpassed Roman advances in hydraulic cement. The Greeks invented calculators and even simple computers.

    Uttor is a descendent of these advances. The characters inhabit a world where guns are an emerging, powerful technology, pantheism is a philosophical religion confronting ideological monotheism, and understanding of astronomy is shaping navigation of seagoing ships. It’s a world of conflicts: romantic, social, economic, and religious.

    4. The main pairings in Pride of Uttor shift between M/F and M/M was this the plan when you started the series or did it evolve into that over time?

    I didn’t start out with a plan; I started out with a story. It always starts that way. A character speaks to me, and next thing I know a world takes shape around that character. More characters pop up. Conflicts emerge. That’s exactly how the Uttor books were born.

    The first character was Darius Arrento, the brilliant general whose story is told in Victory Portrait along with that of the captive royal slave, Peta Kordeun. I wrote it as a short story, an erotic short story, about these two men: one powerful and the other powerless, and how the powerful man could be threatened by the other’s origins. In Uttor, a royal is always royal, even if a slave, and Darius cannot accept this. I found this situation intriguing enough I built a world around it. How did this royal end up a slave? To facilitate this, I created an intelligent, perceptive emperor, Gaspar Leonnte, and Peta’s innocent princess of a sister, Julissa. Before long, the emperor had a sister and the captive royals acquired more siblings.

    In a real world, it’s rare that all couples in a world would be gay, or straight, or asexual. I decided to explore each relationship on its own terms, as the characters spoke to me. Because the Uttor books form a family saga, the gay and straight characters appear throughout the series. Though the main focus of each book is on the romantic couple, their story plays out in a world that also includes strong pairings of other types. Kind of like the world we already live in. Complicated and inclusive.

    About Tali Spencer

    Tali Spencer delights in fantasy and adventure, creating worlds where she can explore the heights and shadows of what it means to be human. A hopeful romantic and lover of all things exotic, she also writes romance and science fiction. If you would like to see inspiration pictures for her characters, or glimpse how she envisions her worlds, check out her Pinterest boards.

    Tali’s books include the Pride of Uttor series: Captive Heart, Dangerous Beauty, Adored, and Victory Portrait, all with Resplendence. Her gay male high fantasy stories, Thick as Thieves, Sorcerer’s Knot, and The Prince of Winds, are published by Dreamspinner Press, as is her ice-fishing contemporary romance, Breaking the Ice. She often publishes in anthologies, and puts up free stories and excerpts on her blog.

    Visit Tali’s blog at http://talismania-brilliantdisguise.blogspot.com
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/tali.spencer
    Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/talispencer/