Category: Uncategorized

  • Champion of the Gods – Box Set

    Champion of the Gods – Box Set

    Box Sets. The final stage of a series. These are the five books in the Champion of the Gods series. Joined together for the first time ever for just $9.99.

    Series Blurb:

    It took the Seven to create the world, each to rule their own. Until one wanted to control it all.

    In the Great War of ancient times the God of Death sought to rule the world. He almost succeeded, but the Champion of the Six, destroyed the bridge into the world and closed the Eight Gates of Neblor. Some thought forever.

    But he returned. 

    His servant, Meglar, surprised his enemies and all the great wizards who opposed him. The Six chose a new Champion to save the world. Young and untested, Farrell struggles to unite those who oppose the God of Death. With each confrontation, however, his task seems ever more impossible.

    Buy Links:

    Universal Link: https://www.bklnk.com/B08D3LQLR7

    Amazon.UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08D3LQLR7

    Amazon.com: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D3LQLR7

  • Power Inversion by Sara Codair ~ Blog Tour and Excerpt

    Power Inversion - Sara Codair

    Sara Codair has a new queer supernatural/urban fantasy book out, Evanstar Chronicles book two: ‘Power Inversion.” And there’s a giveaway!

    But first, an…

    Introduction

    The main character, Erin, dreams potential futures. Their cousin, Mel, is a telepath. Sometimes, when they sleep in the same house, their minds synch up and Mel dreams the same thing as Erin. In this scene, Erin has just dreamed a future in which Mel’s body is destroyed, but their soul survives shattered into hundreds of pieces and scattered across the multiverse.

    The dream sequences were getting a little too long and since this potential future never came to pass, I decided to remove it from the sequence. As a result, I also had to delete Mel’s reaction to it. However, the scene in which Erin helps Mel get through the panic attack the dream triggered showed how Mel and Erin’s relationship had flipped from Power Surge to Power Inversion. In Power Surge, Mel was usually the one helping Erin. Now Erin is returning the favor for Mel.

    Deleted Scene:

    I woke to a soft knock on the door between my room and Mel’s. When I didn’t immediately reply, the knocking grew louder. The bed shook as Bessie leapt off it, plopped over to the door, and woofed.

    “Mel? It’s not locked unless you locked it,” I half-yawned, half-shouted.

    “Erin?” Mike slowly opened the door and peeked in the room. His glasses were crooked, and his hair stood up even more than usual. I was pretty sure the Hulk pajamas he was wearing were actually mine.

    “Is Mel okay?” I sat up too quickly, and the room spun. My head throbbed. 

    “Panic attack. I think. I can’t reach her.” Mike took a few more steps into the room. “Are you well enough to help?”

    I stood up slowly. My brain felt like it was swollen and pulsating against my skull. The room tilted with every step I took. Mike met me about half way and caught me as I tripped over a pile of the shredded, dirty, pajamas I’d worn during last night’s fight.

    I swallowed my pride and awkwardness and let him support me while we walked through the round door, into Mel’s room.

    “You really think I can reach her when you can’t? I think she likes you better.”

    Mike smiled as he helped me over the threshold between. “You and her have a special connection. You spend a lot of time in each other’s heads.”

    “I think you and her do that too. Maybe more so. You live together. And you…” I decided it would be less awkward if I didn’t finish that sentence.

    Mike sighed. “It’s not about which one of us is closer to her. Your brain is different from mine. Mel says mentally chatting you is like talking with another telepath.”

    “Mel never told me that.” I had to stop walking a minute and let my head stop spinning.

    Mike guided forward towards Mel. “Sometimes when you get used to lying, to hiding things, it gets very hard to be open and honest, especially when you come across things you don’t understand.”

    Mel sat with her back against the headboard, arms wrapped around her knees, pressing them up to her chest. She was shaking, choking on tears. Her eyes were open, swirling, and not blinking.

    I let go of Mike and carefully lowered myself so I was sitting next to Mel.

    “I’ve never seen her this bad. It’s like she can’t hear anything I say or think and doesn’t even realize when I touch her,” said Mike. He sank down on the foot of the bed, turned, and made eye contact with me. “You’ve made her hear you from almost a mile away. Make her hear you now.”

    You’re breathing like a honking goose is stuck in your throat, I thought as loudly as I could.

    Mel made a sound somewhere between a snort and bark, an almost laugh that got crushed by panic on the way out, which meant she could hear my thoughts.

     My instinct was to back away. If she were me and someone got too close, I’d lash out without even knowing who it was.

    But Mel wasn’t me.

    I inched closer, moving Mike’s pillow and leaned so my back was against the headboard and my shoulders were a hair away from Mel’s. I looked at the room, at her obnoxious yellow curtains, the survivors of an old stuffed animal collection Bessie was gradually decimating, the dresser with the heart shaped mirror, and Mike, sitting at the foot of her bed, in my pajamas, way too confident in my ability to help his fiancé through the worst panic attack I’d ever seen. I held all that in my head and put my hand over hers. Just like the other times, I imagined our veins were HDMI cables transmitting image and sound. I’m here. So are you.

    I leaned my aching head against hers and replayed the present moment over and over.

    Eventually, her muscles relaxed a little. What you…saw…happen to…me. It’s….worse than…dying.

    It’s not going to happen, I thought right back at her.  I’ll make sure it doesn’t. Trust me.

    “I’m trying,” said Mel, her breathing regulating enough to form words. “But I’m afraid.”

    Do you have to be a monster to fight one?

    Erin Evanstar is a demon hunter, a protector of humanity from nightmarish predators that feed on people’s fears and flesh. They are settling into their dual life of being a teen and hunting demons.

    When a tentacled horror abducts Erin’s partner, José, Erin and their family go on the hunt to get him back. But Erin gets an ultimatum: help the Fallen Angels bring on the apocalypse or watch José die. Erin will do anything to save José, but fighting monsters comes with a grim price–becoming one themselves.

    Warnings: Violence, Death, Death of a Minor Character, Temporary Death of a Main Character, Mention of Past Abuse, Mention of Miscarriage, Pregnancy of Side Character, Self-harm, Suicidal Ideation, Guns, Grief, Kidnapping/abduction, alcohol use, brief depiction of humans enslaved by a supernatural creature 


    Where to Find Power Inversion

    NineStar Press | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads

    Giveaway

    Sara is giving away a $10 Amazon gift card with this blog tour. Enter via Rafflecopter:

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Direct Link: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/b60e8d47130/?


    Excerpt

    Power Inversion meme

    White graduation caps fell from the sky like flakes of vaporized Demon. High school was a beast, and I’d vanquished it like every monster I’d fought, with one exception—myself.

    This moment deserved savoring.

    Breathing deliberately, I slowed my perception of time until the caps seemed as if they were falling through cold honey on their way to the ground.

    The late-spring sun beat down on me, but a breeze kept the temperature bearable. Some tassels lilted southeast—away from the towering clouds bruising the northwest sky. The weather wasn’t going to hold much longer, but I was okay with that. Thunderstorms awoke something wild in me—a pulse-racing, dance-around-like-no-one-can-see-you kind of wild—a rush of adrenaline almost as good as what I’d get from battling a Troll or sparring with Mel.

    With my sense of time slowed down, the distant thunder sounded like a lion purring. The clouds glowed purple as lightning forked through them like an X-ray, temporarily revealing a mass of tentacles undulating in the clouds.

    Mel, did you see that? I thought as loudly as I could, hoping my telepathic cousin would hear me.

    I’d seen a lot of different Demons in the three months I’d been hunting them, but based on the stories and the Lexicon, the massive tentacled ones only materialized in oceans, and they certainly could not fly. Yet, every time lightning flashed, there they were, waving as if violent updrafts were a gentle breeze.

    My heart sped up. My hands closed into fists. Mel didn’t reply.

    I shut my eyes, opening my mind so I could feel all the energy around me. Most humans were blobs of buzzing heat, but Mel, a hybrid of human, Angel, and Elf, had a hotter, more intense aura with a spritz of simultaneously depressed and optimistically peppy texture. I found her near my Elven grandmother, who felt like a condensed thunderstorm.

    Mel? Niben? Can you hear me? Did you see that?

    Of course, there was a good chance they were both shielding. What telepath would have their mind open to other people’s thoughts when there were so many other people around?

    One who hasn’t been able to properly shield in months. Mel’s melodic yet squeaky voice was a welcome presence in my mind. Shut down the hyper drive. You’re giving me a headache.

    I exhaled over the course of ten seconds, willing my sense of time back to normal.

    A garbled din of stretched-out voices morphed to something more akin to a clattering avalanche of pots and pans. A shoulder jostled mine. The corner of a graduation cap crashed into my head.

    Erin? What had you wanted to tell me?

    There were tentacles in the clouds, I thought at Mel, turning in the general direction I sensed her in.

    I crashed into José, who, of course, stood right next to me.

    “You okay?” he asked. Tears glistened in his midnight eyes and trickled down his sun-kissed cheeks. One snagged on the crooked tip of his nose. He clutched two graduation caps, his and mine, so tight that the scars on his knuckles were visibly stretched.

    “Yeah. Are you?” I wondered if I should tell him what I’d seen. He’d been hunting Demons longer than me, but he also thrived on keeping school and the supernatural as two separate entities. And what if they hadn’t been tentacles? What if the storm had just appeared that way with the lightning in slow motion? I didn’t want to ruin his day if there wasn’t an actual threat.

    “I’ll miss everyone.” He stuffed the caps under his arms and hugged me. While I wanted to celebrate because I’d made it out alive, he mourned the loss of a place that had been a haven to him for four years.

    I leaned my head on his shoulder, listening to his heartbeat, trying to let his steady warmth calm the worry growing in my mind. José’s body was a rock in the sense that it was hard and athletic, but also because it anchored me when I felt as if my mind was running away.

    Have you ever watched a storm with time slowed that much? asked Mel.

    I shook my head before I remembered there were dozens of people between her and me. No. Do storm clouds in slow motion look like tentacles?

    José kissed my hair and whispered, “Are you talking to Mel?”

    I nodded.

    “Is she okay?”

    “She’s having trouble shielding. We should go meet up with her and the others anyway.” I stepped away from him and walked uphill.

    Students, who wore white graduation robes, and their parents, who were dressed mostly in summer dresses, slacks, and collared shirts, were clumped all over Saint Patrick’s sprawling lawn.

    José draped his arm over my shoulder as I wove around groups of people. The pressure was calming, lulling panic monsters back to sleep with its warm weight. I glanced up at the clouds. They were closer and darker. The wind sped up, stealing programs from a dozen people’s hands. The clouds lit up with lightning, but I didn’t see any tentacles.

    Mel’s voice popped back into my head. I don’t sense anything in the clouds, and neither does Niben. I guess she’s been restraining the storm for half the ceremony. Perhaps you were seeing her power mingled with it?

    Maybe. Some tension unraveled from my chest. I’d heard stories about my grandmother, Niben, controlling storms, but I’d never seen her do it. In fact, I’d never witnessed her do any magic unless she was modeling something she wanted me to try. She’d come on a few hunts, but she’d just watched with her unblinking feline eyes and later quizzed me on what I did right and wrong. For all I knew, her fabled storm magic could resemble tentacles.

    About the Author

    Sara Codair

    Sara Codair is an author of short stories and novels, which are packed with action, adventure, magic, and the bizarre. They partially owe their success to their faithful feline writing partner, Goose the Meowditor-In-Chief, who likes to “edit” their work by deleting entire pages.

    If Sara isn’t writing, they’re probably teaching, swimming in the lake, reading fantasy, or walking their dog.

    Where to Find the Author

    | Website| Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads | Amazon

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  • The Stark Divide: by J. Scott Coatsworth ~ Blog Tour and Excerpt

    The Stark Divide - J. Scott Coatsworth

    [Andrew’s note: I read this when it first came out. If you haven’t had read it yourself, now is a good time to pick it up]

    J. Scott Coatsworth has a new queer sci fi book out book one in the Ariadne Cycle: “The Stark Divide.” This is a re-release.

    Some stories are epic.

    The Earth is in a state of collapse, with wars breaking out over resources and an environment pushed to the edge by human greed.

    Three living generation ships have been built with a combination of genetic mastery, artificial intelligence, technology, and raw materials harvested from the asteroid belt. This is the story of one of them—43 Ariadne, or Forever, as her inhabitants call her—a living world that carries the remaining hopes of humanity, and the three generations of scientists, engineers, and explorers working to colonize her.

    From her humble beginnings as a seedling saved from disaster to the start of her journey across the void of space toward a new home for the human race, The Stark Divide tells the tales of the world, the people who made her, and the few who will become something altogether beyond human.

    Humankind has just taken its first step toward the stars.

    Get It On Amazon

    Giveaway

    Scott is giving away a $25 Amazon gift card with this tour, and a signed paperback trilogy of the Oberon Cycle (Skythane, Lander and Ithani) – two winners! Enter via Rafflecopter for a chance to win.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Direct Link: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/b60e8d47131/?

    Excerpt

    “Dressler, schematic,” Colin McAvery, ship’s captain and a third of the crew, called out to the ship-mind.

    A three-dimensional image of the ship appeared above the smooth console. Her five living arms, reaching out from her central core, were lit with a golden glow, and the mechanical bits of instrumentation shone in red. In real life, she was almost two hundred meters from tip to tip.

    Between those arms stretched her solar wings, a ghostly green film like the sails of the Flying Dutchman.

    “You’re a pretty thing,” he said softly. He loved these ships, their delicate beauty as they floated through the starry void.

    “Thank you, Captain.” The ship-mind sounded happy with the compliment—his imagination running wild. Minds didn’t have real emotions, though they sometimes approximated them.

    He cross-checked the heading to be sure they remained on course to deliver their payload, the man-sized seed that was being dragged on a tether behind the ship. Humanity’s ticket to the stars at a time when life on Earth was getting rapidly worse.

    All of space was spread out before him, seen through the clear expanse of plasform set into the ship’s living walls. His own face, trimmed blond hair, and deep brown eyes, stared back at him, superimposed over the vivid starscape.

    At thirty, Colin was in the prime of his career. He was a starship captain, and yet sometimes he felt like little more than a bus driver. After this run… well, he’d have to see what other opportunities might be awaiting him. Maybe the doc was right, and this was the start of a whole new chapter for mankind. They might need a guy like him.

    The walls of the bridge emitted a faint but healthy golden glow, providing light for his work at the curved mechanical console that filled half the room. He traced out the T-Line to their destination. “Dressler, we’re looking a little wobbly.” Colin frowned. Some irregularity in the course was common—the ship was constantly adjusting its trajectory—but she usually corrected it before he noticed.

    “Affirmative, Captain.” The ship-mind’s miniature chosen likeness appeared above the touch board. She was all professional today, dressed in a standard AmSplor uniform, dark hair pulled back in a bun, and about a third life-sized.

    The image was nothing more than a projection of the ship-mind, a fairy tale, but Colin appreciated the effort she took to humanize her appearance. Artificial mind or not, he always treated minds with respect.

    “There’s a blockage in arm four. I’ve sent out a scout to correct it.”

    The Dressler was well into slowdown now, her pre-arrival phase as she bled off her speed, and they expected to reach 43 Ariadne in another fifteen hours.

    Pity no one had yet cracked the whole hyperspace thing. Colin chuckled. Asimov would be disappointed. “Dressler, show me Earth, please.”

    A small blue dot appeared in the middle of his screen.

    Dressler, three dimensions, a bit larger, please.” The beautiful blue-green world spun before him in all its glory.

    Appearances could be deceiving. Even with scrubbers working tirelessly night and day to clean the excess carbon dioxide from the air, the home world was still running dangerously warm.

    He watched the image in front of him as the East Coast of the North American Union spun slowly into view. Florida was a sliver of its former self, and where New York City’s lights had once shone, there was now only blue. If it had been night, Fargo, the capital of the Northern States, would have outshone most of the other cities below. The floods that had wiped out many of the world’s coastal cities had also knocked down Earth’s population, which was only now reaching the levels it had seen in the early twenty-first century.

    All those new souls had been born into a warm, arid world.

    We did it to ourselves. Colin, who had known nothing besides the hot planet he called home, wondered what it had been like those many years before the Heat.

    ###

    Anastasia Anatov leafed through her father, Dimitri’s, old paper journal. She liked to look through it once a day, to see his spidery handwriting and remember what he had been like. It was a bit old and dusty now, but it was one of her most cherished possessions.

    She sighed and put it away in a storage nook in her lab.

    She left the room and pulled herself gracefully along the runway, the central corridor of the ship, using the metal rungs embedded in the walls. She was much more comfortable in low or zero g than she was in Earth normal, where her tall, lanky form made her feel awkward around others. She was a loner at heart, and the emptiness of space appealed to her.

    Her father had designed the Mission-class ships. It was something she rarely spoke of, but she was intensely proud of him. These ships were still imperfect, the combination of a hellishly complicated genetic code and after-the-fact fittings of mechanical parts, like the rungs she used now to move through the weightless environment.

    Ana wondered if it hurt when someone drilled into the living tissue to install the mechanics, living quarters, and observation blisters that made the ship habitable. Her father had always maintained that the ship-minds felt no pain.

    She wasn’t so sure. Men were often dismissive of the things they didn’t understand.

    Either way, she was stuck on the small ship for the duration with two men, neither of whom were interested in her. The captain was gay, and Jackson was married.

    Too bad the ship roster hadn’t included another woman or two.

    She placed her hand on a hardened sensor callus next to the door valve and the ship obliged, recognizing her. The door spiraled open to show the viewport beyond.

    She pulled herself into the room and floated before the wide expanse of transparent plasform, staring out at the seed being hauled behind them.

    Nothing else mattered. Whatever she had to do to get this project launched, she would do it. She’d already made some morally questionable choices along the way—including looking the other way when a bundle of cash had changed hands at the Institute.

    She was so close now, and she couldn’t let anything get in the way.

    Earth was a lost cause. It was only a matter of time before the world imploded. Only the seeds could give mankind a fighting chance to go on.

    From the viewport, there was little to see. The seed was a two-meter-long brown ovoid, made of a hard, dark organic material, scarred and pitted by the continual abrasion of the dust that escaped the great sails. So cold out there, but the seed was dormant, unfeeling.

    The cold would keep it that way until the time came for its seedling stage.

    She’d created three of the seeds with her funding. This one, bound for the asteroid 43 Ariadne, was the first. It was the next step in evolution beyond the Dressler and carried with it the hopes of all humankind.

    It also represented ten years of her life and work.

    Maybe, just maybe, we’re ready for the next step.

    ###

    The crew’s third and final member, Jackson Hammond, hung upside down in the ship’s hold, grunting as he refit one of the feed pipes that carried the ship’s electronics through the bowels of this weird animal-mechanical hybrid. Although “up” and “down” were slight on a ship where the centrifugal force created a “gravity” only a fraction of what it was on Earth.

    As the ship’s engineer, Jackson was responsible for keeping the mechanics functioning—a challenge in a living organism like the Dressler.

    With cold, hard metal, one dealt with the occasional metal fatigue, poor workmanship, and at times just ass-backward reality. But the parts didn’t regularly grow or shrink, and it wasn’t always necessary to rejigger the ones that had fit perfectly just the day before. Even after ten years in these things, he still found it a little creepy to be riding inside the belly of the beast. It was too Jonah and the Whale for his taste.

    Jackson rubbed the sweat away from his eyes with the back of his arm. As he shaved down the end of a pipe to make it fit more snugly against the small orifice in the ship’s wall, he touched the little silver cross that hung around his neck. It had been a present from his priest, Father Vincenzo, at his son Aaron’s First Communion in the Reformed Catholic Evangelical Church.

    The boy was seven years old now, with a shock of red hair and green eyes like his dad, and his mother’s beautiful skin. He’d spent months preparing for his Communion Day, and Jackson remembered fondly the moment when his son had taken the Body and Blood of Christ for the first time, surprise registering on his little face at the strange taste of the wine.

    Aaron’s Communion Day had been a high point for Jackson, just a week before his current mission. He was so proud of his two boys. Miss you guys. I’ll be home soon.

    Lately he hadn’t been sleeping well, his dreams filled with a dark-haired, blue-eyed vixen. He was happily married. He shouldn’t be having such dreams.

    Jackson shook his head. Being locked up in a tin can in space did strange things to a person sometimes. I should be home with Glory and the boys.

    One way or another, this mission would be his last.

    He’d been recruited as a teen.

    ###

    At thirteen, Jackson had learned the basics of engineering doing black-tech work for the gangs that ran what was left of the Big Apple after the Rise—a warren of interconnected skyrises, linked mostly by boats and ropes and makeshift bridges.

    Everything north of Twenty-Third was controlled by the Hex, a black-tech co-op that specialized in bootlegged dreamcasts, including modified versions that catered to some of the more questionable tastes of the North American States. South of Twenty-Third belonged to the Red Badge, a lawless group of technophiles involved in domestic espionage and wetware arts.

    Jackson had grown up in the drowned city, abandoned by his mother and forced to rely on his own intelligence and instincts to survive in a rapidly changing world.

    He’d found his way to the Red Badge and discovered a talent for ecosystem work, taking over and soon expanding one of the rooftop farms that supplied the drowned city with a subsistence diet. An illegal wetware upgrade let him tap directly into the systems he worked on, seeing the circuits and pathways in his head.

    He increased the Badge’s food production fivefold and branched out beyond the nearly tasteless molds and edible fungi that thrived in the warm, humid environment.

    It was on one of his rooftop “gardens” that his life had changed one warm summer evening.

    He was underneath one of the condenser units that pulled water from the air for irrigation. All of eighteen years old, he was responsible for the food production for the entire Red Badge.

    He’d run through the unit’s diagnostics app to no avail. Damned piece of shit couldn’t find a thing wrong.

    In the end, it had come down to something purely physical—tightening down a pipe bolt where the condenser interfaced with the irrigation system.

    Satisfied with the work, he stood, wiping the sweat off his bare chest, and glared into the setting sun out over the East River. It was more an inland sea now, but the old names still stuck.

    There was a faint whirring behind him, and he spun around. A bug drone hovered about a foot away, glistening in the sun. He stared at it for a moment, then reached out to swat it down. Probably from the Hex.

    It evaded his grasp, and he felt a sharp pain in his neck.

    He went limp, and everything turned black as he tumbled into one of his garden beds.

    He awoke in Fargo, recruited by AmSplor to serve in the space agency’s Frontier Station, his life changed irrevocably.

    ###

    A strange sensation brought him back to the present.

    His right hand was wet. Startled, he looked down. It was covered with blood.

    Dressler, we have a problem, he said through his private affinity-link with the ship-mind.”

    About the Author

    J. Scott Coatsworth

    Scott lives with his husband Mark in a yellow bungalow in Sacramento. He was indoctrinated into fantasy and sci fi by his mother at the tender age of nine. He devoured her library, but as he grew up, he wondered where all the people like him were.

    He decided that if there weren’t queer characters in his favorite genres, he would remake them to his own ends.

    A Rainbow Award winning and runs Queer Sci Fi, QueeRomance Ink, Liminal Fiction, and Other Worlds Ink with Mark, sites that celebrate fiction reflecting queer reality, and is a full member member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA).

    Where to Find the Author

    | Website | Personal Facebook | Author Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads |
    QueeRomance Ink: Liminal Fiction | Amazon |

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  • New Release Blog Tour — “Mating the Enemy” by Shea Balik

    Mating the Enemy

    Shea Balik has a new MM paranormal dystopian romance out in eBook and audio formats: “Mating the Enemy.”

    Siberian Tiger shifter, Aleksi Rykov, is amused to watch the enemy chasing one of their own, psy, Seth Tilton, until he realizes it’s his mate. Rescuing his mate isn’t difficult for the powerful Alpha but keeping his mate safe from the war raging between their races may be more difficult.

    Seth is taking a chance running to the one man he knows can keep him safe, Aleksi. Seth knows the psy’s secrets and the psy will do anything to get him back but with Aleksi’s help Seth can help turn the tide of the war and uncover the horrible truth. The question is will Aleksi be willing to help the enemy?

    Both sides are against their mating and doing their best to tear the two apart but Aleksi and Seth are determined to stay together against all odds. Can Aleksi and Seth manage to find happiness by mating the enemy?

    Mating the Enemy Links

    Amazon eBook | Audible Audio | Amazon UK | QueeRomance Ink

    Giveaway

    Shea is giving away a $20 Amazon gift card with this tour – enter via Rafflecopter:

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Direct Link: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/b60e8d47118/?

    Excerpt

    Mating the Enemy audio meme

    December 21, 2012, 4:00 a.m., Sydney, Australia.

    Aahhhh!”

    “That’s it. You’re doing a great job.” Even with his body begging for just a few hours of sleep, the adrenaline was keeping Eli alert as he was only two hours shy of finishing a forty-eight-hour rotation on the maternity ward. His only chance at a nap had been interrupted when Abbey and her husband, Frank, came in. Eli would swear there was a conspiracy to keep him awake. How he was even functioning he wasn’t sure anymore.

    “Okay, it’s time to push again,” he gently told Abbey, who was about to be a mom for the first time. Frank held her hand, or to be more precise she gripped his hand like a vise. It looked like the circulation had been cut off from the man’s hand for some time but Frank never once complained, just encouraged his wife and kept her as calm as possible.

    This was the type of delivery Eli preferred, the parents not screaming at each other, just happy to bring their child into the world. Yeah, he knew it was painful, but still, he really hated it when the women got hysterical.

    The head pushed through and he went to work cleaning out the baby’s airway. One more push and he held the infant as it took a stuttering breath before letting out a cry at being shoved out into the cold, unforgiving world.

    The parents were smiling, beaming as Eli brought the child up to lie on his mother’s stomach. “It’s a boy—” was barely out his mouth before the infant changed into a dog. No, more like a dingo.

    There was no way he was seeing this. Scrunching his eyes closed and shaking his head, Eli quickly reopened his eyes and, yep, it was a dingo he was holding instead of a baby. Suddenly the baby was back and screaming at the top of his little lungs.

    Without missing a beat he laid the child on his mother’s stomach, cut the umbilical cord, and let one of the nurses quickly take the baby away to be cleaned. It just couldn’t have happened and he hoped if he ignored it so would everyone else.

    “What…” Frank’s mouth kept moving but no sound came out as his eyes stayed on his son. Suddenly his gaze found the doctor’s and he demanded, “What happened?”

    Damn. Somehow Eli didn’t think he’d be leaving when his shift was over.

    #

    Same day, 5:00 a.m., small village in India.

    Murali ran as fast as his legs would carry him from his family’s home, a small hut set in the middle of the land they farmed. It took him just a few minutes to reach Nanda, the woman who would help his mother deliver his next brother or sister. “Come, come. She is ready,” he told Nanda when she came to the doorway.

    When she nodded her understanding, Murali rushed back home to let his parents know Nanda was on her way. Once he told his parents, he quickly went out to start his chores along with his brothers and sisters.

    He’d just turned eight and with each birthday his list of chores grew. Each morning he had to help feed the animals and shovel the manure. He loved the animals and enjoyed the time he spent feeding and watering them but today he rushed through his chores so he could get back and see the new baby. Was it even born yet?

    The urgency to get back to the hut to find out had him finishing quickly. A loud scream from his mother as he neared told him the baby hadn’t been born yet. Without making any noise he quickly darted into the hut so he could watch.

    Just as he got into position, his mom let out an exhausted shout and the next thing he knew Nanda was holding a baby. Wanting to get closer, he stepped over to the mat his mom was lying on, his gaze completely focused on his little sister.

    Suddenly, his sister was completely surrounded by flames that licked over her body, consuming her. Nanda screamed and dropped her. Fortunately, she was only inches off the ground. Nanda started spewing horrible names at his sister and mom.

    The blankets around his mother caught fire and before Murali knew what was happening the entire hut was engulfed in flames. Nanda ran, leaving his mom and sister to die.

    Murali jumped into action by running to his mom but by then the blankets had done their damage and he knew there was no way he could save her. Turning to his sister, Murali could see the flames around her were no longer there. In fact, it looked like the flames were avoiding her.

    Picking her up, he ran from the hut just before the roof collapsed.

    #

    Same day, 12:00 p.m., Nashville, TN

    “You no good redneck. How dare ya do this to me? I swear ya ain’t touching me again, do ya hear me, Billy Joe?”

    It had been like this for the last three or four hours, and as much as Betty enjoyed seeing the stupidity of first-time parents, she was over it.

    Her shift ended an hour ago but her replacement was late, again. So here she stood, trying to encourage the woman to push as Betty waited for the doctor to get in. Seeing the head crown, she hoped the doctor got in quickly or she’d be delivering this baby.

    Not that she was surprised. The doctors tended to waltz in at the last second to basically sit down, catch the baby, and walk back out, while she had to sit with the parents the whole time, listening to them bitching.

    The door swished open and in strode the biggest jerk on the planet. “Good afternoon, folks.” Betty quickly hopped out of his way as the doctor sat. “Looks like it will be just another couple of pushes and your new son will be born.”

    Just as predicated, two more pushes and the baby boy was in his hands. Holding the newborn up, the doctor announced, “I’d like you to meet your son.” A round of shocked gasps were heard as the baby suddenly changed into a bear cub.

    The mother of the bouncing baby bear passed out. The father just stood there, his mouth agape and his eyes opening and shutting repeatedly as if hoping that would change things. The doctor screamed like a girl and dropped the bear onto its passed-out mother’s stomach.

    Betty was just glad the doctor had come in before this happened.

    #

    Same day, 6:00 p.m., Oahu, Hawaii.

    The storm was bad, trees were down, the electricity was out, and Tia knew there was no way she was going to get to the hospital before she delivered. She tried 9-1-1 and they told her it would be miracle if they could get out there, but they would try.

    Her lover of ten years, Trent, was online trying to find information about delivering a baby from home. She knew she should be panicking about now, but she wasn’t. What was the point really? There was nothing she could do about it.

    It had been that way through much of her pregnancy and she often wondered about it. She was normally a nervous person, prone to anxiety attacks. When she first learned she was pregnant, she had to be hospitalized. But sometime around the third month a sense of peace and calm fell over her like a veil, shielding her from all those chaotic feelings she normally had.

    So now she lay in the guest bedroom, because she refused to ruin her own mattress, and waited patiently for her baby to be born. There was no doubt in her mind her son would come with or without a doctor.

    It wasn’t until the need to push came that she finally called for Trent, who looked about ready to pass out as all the color bled from his body. She honestly didn’t think a guy who spent so much time in the sun surfing could be that white.

    He’d only just made it into the room when she started pushing, her body not willing to wait any longer. Trent’s eyes filled with panic, but he still came over to help. Grabbing one of the towels he’d set next to the bed as he got into position to deliver their son.

    A new life came into the world, one that looked like every other healthy child. A baby boy who had the gift of empathy, one who not only could feel the emotions of others but could change their feelings also. He would quickly learn to hide his abilities, which would save his kind from the torture of the scientific community.

    Author Bio

    Shea Balik logo

    Bestselling author of the Cedar Falls Series, Miracle Series, and Paranormal Wars Series, Shea Balik has always had a vivid imagination with stories running around in her head. Often her stories are taken from observations of other people with her own spin. Traveling is one of her favorite ways of fulfilling her passion of people watching. You never know, one day you may spark her imagination for her next book.

    Whether at home or traveling she is usually in front of her computer writing or curled up with a good book. Find Shea at any of the links below!

    Where to Find Shea Balik

    Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | QueeRomance Ink | Amazon

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  • Purpose – The Re-Release

    Purpose – The Re-Release

    Purpose available for sale or for free on Kindle Unlimited.

    Get your copy of Purpose here:

    With the return of my rights, Purpose is the first of my books to be re-released. I’ve decided that until I get a better hold on self-publishing, I’m going to be re-release all my titles only on Amazon. Once I get the infrastructure in place on my site to be able to sell directly, I’ll make it available in other formats.

    Purpose is a difficult story to shelve. It’s urban fantasy, but it’s not shifters nor super heroes, not mutants, magic nor people with mental abilities. But it has a bit of all those (well maybe not magic).

    Cover art by AngstyG.

    William Morgan is host to the Spirit of Vengeance. He hears the innocent dead calling out for retribution. In order to quiet the spirit, he is forced to exact vengeance on the killers.

    In exchange for his ‘help,’ Will gains increased strength and speed, he barely ages, is impervious to most injuries and his mental abilities are well beyond a normal person. For some it might be a fair exchange, but not for Will. He wasn’t prepared for what was required.

    To keep from going mad, Will hid behind Gar, an alter ego he created for himself. He suppressed his emotions and walled himself off from not only interpersonal relationships, but his humanity as well. His coping mechanism served him well until he met someone who forced him to examine what he’d become and who challenged him to care again.

    When something threatens the person he cares about, Will is reminded why he chose to hide behind Gar. Purpose is the story of Will’s struggle to rediscover his humanity, and once found, his fight to keep from losing it again. Forever.

    If you’re looking for something a bit different, this is your book. Give it a try and let me know what you think.

    The book trailer below, but it was made for the original release, but I really liked how it turned out so I’m keeping it. Just ignore the ‘available from DSP Publications’ at the end.

    Get your copy of Purpose here:

  • Series Starter eBook Giveaway

    Series Starter eBook Giveaway

    The year – and decade – is rushing to an end, but here’s a way to start the new year and decade off right. Find a new series to engage you in the fantastic.

    All the month, I’m joining with other Sci-Fi/Fantasy authors to give away the first book in a series. There are over 180 different books to choose from so there have to be a few you’ve never tried, but should. Click the link below to be taken to the giveaway page.

    Series Starter eBook Giveaway

    If you find something particularly interesting, let me know. I’m always interested in new good stuff and I might not have read it yet,

    As we leave this year, (and decade) I want to thank everyone for their continued support. I wish you all peace, joy, happiness, and lots of awesome reading.

    ~Enjoy the Journey

  • New Release Blog Tour — “T.A.D. – The Angel of Death” by M.D. Neu

    Have you gotten your copy of M.D. Neu’s T.A.D – The Angel of Death yet? Print and eBook copies are available now andyou can pick up a copy from one of your favorite vendors at this link! If you missed our cover-reveal post a few weeks back, you can check out the blurb and and excerpt from the first chapter of T.A.D. here. Congrats on the new release, M.D.!

    The Angel of Death

    Giveaway

    There’s still time to enter this giveaway! M.D. Neu is giving away a $20 Amazon gift card with this reveal and tour. Enter via Rafflecopter:

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Direct Link: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/b60e8d4781/?

    The Angel of Death by M.D. Neu

    If you’ve already snagged yourself a copy, share your thoughts in a comment here, and be sure to spread the love by leaving reviews!

    Author Bio

    M.D. Neu

    Where to Find M.D. Neu

    Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads | QueeRomance Ink | Amazon

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  • Autumn Reading

    Autumn Reading

    Summer (at least in the Northern Hemisphere) doesn’t officially end until the autumnal equinox on September 23rd, but most parents mark the end of summer when the kids go back to school. As the days get shorter, that means we spend more time inside. And what better way to spend that extra inside time than discovering new authors who you can fanperson. To help you find new reading material, I joined a fantasy eBook giveaway this month. There are 50+ different books to choose from, which I have to think is more than enough to get you through the fading light of autumn.

    Click here to check out the books available.

    Now, being realistic, I can’t read all of the ones I find interesting, but if you get a chance, please leave a comment with any that you read that you enjoy, or have read and enjoyed in the past.

    ~Enjoy the Journey!

  • New Release Blog Tour — The Demon of Hagermarsh; by Beryll & Osiris Brackhaus

    Beryll and Osiris Brackhaus have a new MM fantasy book out: The Demon of Hagermarsh.

    “The Emperor cares for each and every one of his subjects.”

    Many consider the catchphrase of the imperial Lotus Knights to be nothing more but well-polished propaganda, but for Yaden, it is a way of life.

    A young Lotus Knight himself, his first mission in service of the Emperor sends him to the remote village of Hagermarsh, a suspiciously friendly place on a planet known for its inhospitable people. But how to uncover a demonist coven when nothing bad ever happens?
    Getting to know the villagers only makes things more difficult – the motherly fishmonger surely isn’t a demonist. Nor the gruff leader of the local militia. And definitely not the cute baker from across the street.

    Or are they?

    Come discover a dazzling, hopeful universe of knights and monsters, of psions, aliens and ancient deities! The Demon of Hagermarsh is the first book of ‘Sir Yaden’, an epic SF saga of grand adventure, romance, bromance and family, set in the multi-faceted Virasana Empire. It is a romantic adventure and can be read as a standalone. 

    Excerpt

    “How did you come to work for Master Darios?” Colin asked after a while.

    “My parents paid him to take me on as an apprentice,” Yaden told the story MissionPrep had set up for him. “After learning the trade, I was supposed to have my own shop at some point. But it turned out I can’t seem to learn to read and write. The letters keep jumping around in front of my eyes.” Colin looked like he was going to say something pitying, so Yaden quickly continued. “Master Darios doesn’t mind me, though, so he kept me as his shop assistant, even when he moved out here. Means he doesn’t have to talk to the customers much. He doesn’t like people.”

    “Well, you could always go into a career as crab picker,” Colin said, clearly aiming to cheer him up. “One of these cages is worth five chicks.”

    Yaden chuckled. “Actually I prefer working with a roof over my head most of time. And I like my job.”

    “So if Master Darios doesn’t like people I’m guessing he isn’t interested in getting married?”

    “Say what?” Yaden wasn’t sure how Colin had jumped from one subject to the next and Colin looked slightly embarrassed.

    “Sorry, bad habit.” He chuckled at his own silliness. “The elderly ladies of the village always try to match everyone up, and it’s infectious. At first, I got the usual suspicious treatment, but now that they have decided I’m alright, they keep trying to get me together with one of the girls. I bet they’ll do the same with Master Darios.”

    Yaden wondered how that would go over with Darios. In all the years that Darios had been his guardian, he had never shown any romantic interest in anyone. Was that because he didn’t fancy anyone or because he had been too busy taking care of Yaden? 

    At least, Yaden was sure it wasn’t some strange notion that, as a slave, he would need Yaden’s permission. Their relationship had never been one of master and slave. More like child and single parent.

    If it had been up to him, he would have freed Darios in a heartbeat, but there was no way of legally doing so apart from Darios marrying a commoner or being adopted by one, neither of which was an option in this case. Yaden could have bypassed the law by simply setting up Darios with enough funds to comfortably live on some other backwater planet where nobody would be aware he had ever been a slave, but Darios had refused that offer. 

    “I think they will find Master Darios rather reluctant,” Yaden tried to deflect Colin’s suggestion politely. “What about you? Are you with any of the suggested girls?”

    “Naw. They are all too eager to call themselves ‘the baker’s wife’ and not interested in me at all. I had a few boyfriends back in Schimmelbach. But those were short flings. You know, guys picking me up as the cute trophy to brag about.”

    No, Yaden didn’t know. Was that a thing that people did? Whatever it was, he very much thought that Colin deserved better.

    “And you?” Colin asked. “Did you have a special someone before you moved here?”

    “Still looking for the right one.”

    That sounded cheesy, but it didn’t make it any less true. Between his job of keeping Erys safe and his training on Lagoona, he had never felt the urge to go and search for someone. If there was someone out there for someone like him, they would meet eventually. He cast a shy glance over to Colin. The way the baker flirted with him it sounded very much like Colin thought Yaden could be his special someone. Or at least, the shop assistant Yaden was currently pretending to be. 

    With a sinking heart, Yaden realised this was a lot more complicated than it had looked in the beginning. And it hadn’t looked simple at all. 

    Colin didn’t say anything, either, and they walked the rest of the way in silence, but again it was a comfortable silence. If Yaden weren’t pretending to be someone else, and if he were planning to stay here for real, he would be looking forward to spending more time like this. But he wasn’t, and it made his heart sink. He had a job to do, yes, but was it so wrong to want something for himself for once? If only that something weren’t so complicated and probably unattainable. Surely Colin would run the other way if he learned who Yaden truly was.

    He still hadn’t sorted out his feelings when they reached the side entrance of the bakery. 

    Yaden handed over his basket of crabs with a shy smile. “So when can we eat them?”

    Complicated feelings aside, Yaden wanted to eat those crabs. And he wanted to spend more time with Colin. Maybe going through this step by step was better than worrying about the problems of tomorrow. 

    “I need to boil them and they’ll marinade for a day before frying them up. So if you are free tomorrow evening…?”

    “As it happens, I am.” Unless a demon went rampaging through the village, that was, but Yaden doubted this mission would wrap itself up that easily.

    “Great. I’ll start preparing dinner after I lock up the shop, so you come over about an hour after that?”

    “I’ll be there.”

    For a moment longer, they stood in the soft drizzle. Yaden almost thought he should say something more, but he had no clue how to phrase his feelings. So when Colin turned away with a “see you tomorrow” thrown over his shoulder, he was almost grateful.

    We hope you enjoyed your time in the Virasana Empire. 

    Yaden’s adventures continue in

    Book #2 The Windmines of Bora Bora

    You can find more information about the Virasana Empire at

    www.virasanapedia.fandom.com

    For more information about our books, visit us at 

    www.Brackhaus.com

    Author Bio

    We are Beryll and Osiris Brackhaus, a couple currently living our happily ever after in the very heart of Germany, under the stern but loving surveillance of our cat.

    Both of us are voracious but picky readers, we love telling stories and drinking tea, good food and the occasional violent movie. Together, we write novels of adventure and romance, hoping to share a little of our happiness with our readers.

    Beryll: An artist by heart, Beryll was writing stories even before she knew what letters were. As easily inspired as she is frustrated, her own work is never good enough (in her eyes). A perfectionist in the best and worst sense of the word at the same time and the driving creative force of our duo.

    Osiris: An entertainer and craftsman in his approach to writing, Osiris is the down-to-earth, practical part of our duo. Broadly interested in almost every subject and skill, with a sunny mood and caring personality, he strives to bring the human nature into focus of each of his stories.

    Amazon | Amazon UK | Amazon CAN | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | QueeRomance Ink | Smashwords | Goodreads

    Where to Find Beryll & Osiris

    Website | Facebook (Personal) | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads | Amazon

  • Guest Author: Warren Rochelle

    Warren Rochelle stopped by the blog today for some good ole Q&A on world building, favorite works, and his writing process. Thanks for stopping by, Professor!

    AQG: So, tell us three things about your worlds that your readers love!

    WR: The first thing that comes to mind would be what I call the intersection of the magical and mundane. By mundane, I mean stories in which the characters exist in worlds the readers know. For example, my novel, Harvest of Changelings, is set in the Triangle region of central North Carolina. Characters walk (or run, if the bad guys are after them) down real streets, drive real cars. Yes, there is some fictionalizing, a few name changes, but not very much. By magical, I mean that in this mundane world the characters encounter witches and dragons and spells and charms. Reality is not as it seems. This intersection fascinates me.

    The second thing, which could be an extension of the first, is that as the characters deal with magical bad guys, they also deal with issues of the mundane world, such as learning disabilities, and abusive parents.  To me, this makes the world richer and the characters far more human.

    The third thing that comes to mind is an attention to detail on multiple levels. A few examples: if there are two moons, then there needs to be two tides, the correct spelling of 7-Eleven, and so on.

    AQG: What are your biggest challenges when it comes to world building?

    WR:

    1. Getting the details right!
    2. Finding the answers to get those details right.
    3. Remembering the details.  By that I mean once something is established as part of the world, I have to make sure that this is maintained throughout the story and not forgotten or let slide.
    4. Telling the truth.

    AQG: What are some lessons you’ve learned in your writing journey?

    WR:

    1. To take my time. Yes, deadlines must be met, but stories tend to have their own time and I try to plan ahead if I am on a deadline, so that the story can do the gestating it needs. Alas, this doesn’t always work.
    2. Stories and novels need many, many, many drafts. The stories that come completely formed, like Athena from the head of Zeus, are rare indeed.
    3. To remember what one of my first writing teachers told me: to get out of the way of the story and let the dream tell itself to me.
    4. And to not give up.  The publishers of my four novels have all, sadly, gone out of business. But I keep writing and sending things out. Besides, I would be a lousy plumber.

    AQG: What are your three favorite sci-fi/fantasy book books, movies, or TV shows?

    WR: Just three?

    1. The first book that I think of is A Wrinkle in Time. I reread it every so often.
    2. Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman.  I am quite fond of Richard Mayhew.
    3. The Dispossessed, by Ursula K. Le Guin.  I love Shevek.
    4. And …. Okay, just one more, Battlestar Galactica (2004-2009).

    AQG: What would be your top three examples of stellar character development?

    WR:

    1. Shevek is a character whose growth and development I find fascinating and believable.  He has core truths to which he remains faithful, but he is forced to grow and change as his life demands, and he chooses to grow and change and mature as well. His growth is complicated, contradictory, and sometimes ambiguous and confusing—as it is for most of us.
    2. I hope it is okay to use my own characters here. (AQG: Yes, please!) Given that, I would mention my character, Russell White, in Harvest of Changelings and The Called.  When readers first meet Russell in Harvest, he is around 12 years, and in the fifth grade (he had to repeat kindergarten and first grade). He has a learning disability and an abusive father. Russell’s stepmother hates him. His mother abandoned him when he was little, choosing to taking his younger brother with her and not Russell. Russell is angry. But, when he comes into his magical powers and makes friends, especially Jeff, he begins to slowly grow out of the desert of his early childhood. The reader gets to experience Russell’s development, which is sometimes ragged and uneven, with lapses, as it would be for almost all of us. Russell makes peace with, and learns to live with, his past. However, he still has to deal with its shadows.
    3. I had thought, briefly, to discuss the development of Jeff Gates, who becomes Russell’s best friend in Harvest. Like Russell, he almost must grow out of the desert of his childhood—in his case, sexual abuse by his father. But I am thinking maybe this question is meant to be about characters more familiar to the general reader. In that case, I think J.K. Rowling did a fine job developing Harry’s character through the seven novels in the series. We get to experience Harry’s growing up and coming of age. We see Harry as “tween” who sees the world as more black and white than it can be, as a snarky teenager, as a young man accepting his destiny, as an adult, with a family.

    AQG: What would be a few fun facts readers would discover in your own work?

    WR:

    1. Depending on which novel you read, the reader gets to learn odds and ends and fun facts about North Carolina and Virginia. Some of the haunted places, or those associated with magic, are where important scenes take place, such as the Devil’s Tramping Ground in NC.
    2. Many of [my characters]—maybe most, if not all—are Outsiders.
    3. Being gay is often associated with being magical.

    AQG: How are your worlds similar, or conversely, dissimiliar to the real world?

    WR:

    The Wild Boy, my first novel, is set mostly in the ruins of 22nd-century Greensboro, NC. Readers will find familiar names and places and the same time, find themselves in a future world that is very different from the real world.

    Harvest of Changelings and The Called, my second and third novels, are set primarily in the Research Triangle area of central North Carolina. The Werewolf and His Boy is set primarily in central Virginia. Like The Wild Boy, readers will find familiar names and places, and they will find these familiar names and places are also magical—they are different in a fundamental way.

    The histories of each of these worlds are parallel to the real world. For example, in our world, the US Civil War is fought between the North and the South, the US and the CSA. In the world of The Golden Boy,one of my current works-in-progress, there is no US, rather there is the Columbian Empire, whose history often parallels that of the US. The Columbian Civil War is fought between the Emperor and Parliament.

    AQG: What helps you write what you do?

    WR: In no particular order: reading a lot of speculative fiction, particularly fantasy, reading and studying the building blocks of fantasy, including mythology, magic, and religion. I also find it helps, if I can, to go where the stories are set.

    AQG: What do you look for in cover design?

    WR: What do I look for in cover design? So far, my control over how the cover looks has been limited. Given that, what I look for, and what I have suggested for inclusion, is an iconic image of some kind: of the characters, who they are, how they are together—something that says these are the people I created, or a particular place that, in somehow, typifies where the novel is set. I want to look at a drawing of a particular character and say, yes that is how they could look.

    AQG: Describe your writing process! Do you set goals for yourself? Where do you write? Is there a time of day that works best for you?

    I have as an ongoing goal, to write every day. Sometimes I stretch that to include reviewing and rereading and revising the previous day’s work. But, alas, given how busy things get during the school year (I teach creative writing at the University of Mary Washington), sometimes this goal—more often than I like—is not met.  But it is always there and I can tell when I have neglected my daily time at the keyboard or at the desk for revisions. I feel somewhat out of sorts, as I am not quite connected to the universe. Something is missing.

    I write in my study, although when I travel, I take a notebook for inspiration or sudden ideas.  I often take a work-in-progress.  I keep note paper on the night table by my bed. When I am in the middle of a project, I find myself living, at least partially, in this other world. Thoughts, connections, aha! moments, will arise out of the story cauldron unbidden.

    Mornings are best, but I find it more productive to just write, regardless of time of day, and to be satisfied with just one paragraph.

    About Warren Rochelle

    Warren Rochelle has taught English at the University of Mary Washington since 2000. Rochelle’s short fiction and poetry have appeared in various journals, including the North Carolina Literary Review, Forbidden Lines, Aboriginal Science Fiction, Colonnades, Graffiti, Collective Fallout, Queer Fish 2, and Icarus, as well as the Asheville Poetry Review, GW Magazine, Crucible, The Charlotte Poetry Review, Second Hand Stories, and Romance and Beyond. His short story, “The Golden Boy (published in The Silver Gryphon) was a Finalist for the 2004 Gaylactic Spectrum Award for Best Short Story. His most recent publication, “Luck,” came out in Fae Wings and Hidden Things in July 2017. His short story, “Mirrors,” a gay-themed retelling of Beauty and the Beast, is forthcoming in the Cuil Press anthology, So You Think You Know Love.

    Rochelle is the author of four novels. The first three, The Wild Boy (2001), Harvest of Changelings (2007), and The Called (2010), all published by Golden Gryphon Press. His fourth novel, The Werewolf and His Boy, was published in September 2016 by Samhain Publishing.

    Titles by Warren Rochelle:

    Where to Find Warren Rochelle

    Website | Amazon | Goodreads