Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Cover Reveal: Tainted Blood

It’s cover reveal day! Whoo Hoo! 

Here is the cover for Tainted Blood, the second book in the Hell’s Belle series, which releases on October 20th. 


TAINTED BLOOD

After surviving a vampire assassin (not to mention an awkward affair with a hot FBI agent that ended worse than she could have imagined), witch/vampire hybrid Nina Martinez is reunited with the full Blood Ops team in Providence, Rhode Island. Her Aunt Babe is tutoring her in all things witchcraft, and her vampire partner Frankie is enjoying the benefits of daywalking, courtesy of a demon spell.

When a segment of the Rhode Island vampire population is marked for death by a tainted blood supply, Nina and her team race to find Patient Zero before the local vampire population is wiped out. But when a demon infestation threatens to take control of the city, Nina must join forces with newly elected mayor—and closet demon— Ami Bertrand before the city falls into ruin.

Filled with fast-paced, edge-of-your-seat action, Nina and her group of supernatural misfits battle a surprising new enemy that threatens their very existence.

No wonder she still can’t get a date.

Want to read a quickie now?

There is a free Hell’s Belle prequel short available for download. River Vamp takes you on an early  Blood Ops mission with Nina and Frankie in Gowanus, Brooklyn.

Download via:

It's also available on Apple's iBooks. 

Friday, September 12, 2014

Cover Reveal: The Soul Thief


the soul thief - front cover

The Soul Thief by Majanka Verstraete
Expected Release: November 11, 2014
Publisher: Booktrope
Genre: Young Adult, Paranormal
When Riley is injured in a car crash and sees a girl stealing a boy’s soul, she’s convinced she’s hallucinating. But when she sees the same girl at the hospital later, she knows she wasn’t dreaming. That’s when Riley learns her secret heritage and who she really is: a halfling Angel of Death. Riley must come to terms with her new reality and supernatural abilities, but before she can do this, girls her age start dying in mysterious circumstances. It’s up to Riley to figure out why, what the innocent victims have in common, and what she can do to stop them.
The Soul Thief - full cover majankaAbout the Author Majanka Verstraete begged her Mom to teach her how to read while she was still in kindergarten. By the time she finished fifth grade, she had read through the entire children’s section of her hometown library. She wrote her first story when she was seven years old, and hasn’t stopped writing since. With an imagination that never sleeps, and hundreds of possible book characters screaming for her attention, writing is more than a passion for her. She writes about all things supernatural for children of all ages. She’s tried to write contemporary novels before, but something paranormal always manages to crawl in. Majanka is currently studying for her Master of Laws degree, and hopes one day to be able to combine her passions for law and writing. When she’s not writing, reading or studying, she likes watching “The Vampire Diaries” and “Game of Thrones,” spending time with her friends, or playing “World of Warcraft.” http://majankaverstraete.com

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Stuff I Am Reading: Reapers MC series

In honor of the final season premiere of Sons of Anarchy, I figured I’d devote a few pixels to Joanne Wylde and her Reapers MC series. 

The series, right now, is three books: Reapers Property, Reapers Legacy, and Devil’s Game. For SoA fans, this series is a must-read. You don’t get too much of the down and dirty criminality. The blood and gore that makes SoA compelling television is mostly missing from the Reaper’s MC ride. But Wylde does get down and dirty with the…ahem…sex. And holy crap do these characters have amazing, mind blowing sex! Like, I want my husband to buy a motorcycle so I can be his Old Lady.

I started reading the series because, a) I like Sons of Anarchy and b) I am working on a new paranormal romance (most likely stand alone, but we’ll see) and I wanted to read more erotic romance. In Hell’s Belle, romance is definitely part of the story, but not the centerpiece, partly because I was struggling with it while writing Nina’s story. Writing a true romance/erotica is a way to challenge myself as a writer. Plus I really love the story I am conjuring!

Okay, back to the Reapers. These are not the guys you want your daughter to bring home. At the outset of the books, they are Alpha Assholes. The feminist in me is screaming, “kick him in the balls and walk, sister!” But of course, physical attraction overcomes all logic, until eventually we see that his asshole-ishness is because he is just a romantic at heart. 

Is it simplistic? A little, yes. Is it disempowering to women? At points, very much so. Is it an entertaining read? Hell, yeah. 

Wylde did her research. She hung out with MCs (I believe she reported on them in her job as a journalist), she had a female consultant (a legit Old Lady!) on Reapers Legacy. I assume the consultant stuck around for Devil’s Game. So, while I am no expert of MCs, the story lines ring pretty true. But story-lines be damned, it’s really the hot, hot sex that keeps you reading.

What is it about these scenes? Wylde is graphic, for sure, but there is an arc of tenderness that runs through them. These characters clearly care for each other, love each other. But since they aren’t the types to share their emotions. All the feels happen in the sack (or on the counter of the repair shop, on the kitchen table, in the woods, etc).   

Side note: Where are all the MCs with a membership full of cut hotties? Any club I’ve seen roar past me on the highway is a bunch of over-the-hill dudes sporting beer bellies and long gray beards. Not one Jax Teller among them.

Anyone else have recommendations for erotic romance? With or without MCs! I’m all ears! 


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Cover Reveal: To the Stars



It’s my first Cover Reveal! This one looks good. 

Written by Tiaan Lubbe, who is a South African teacher and theater director by day, To the Stars is a dystopian sci-fi adventure about a girl, a boy, and the end of the world. 

Here’s the description:

When the world finds out its inevitable end will come in sixty years, it seems like all hope is lost. Until a man steps from the darkness. He offers salvation, but demands total control. The world accepts.
Sixty years later, the old saviour’s son is leader and watches over the last proceedings of his father’s plans – Seven Ark ships called the Astrum Portas.
Noah is the next leader. He doesn’t want to be.
Zara is the girl he’s in love with. She doesn’t know it.
Three lives become complicatedly intertwined when a bomb on the Astrum Porta unexpectedly throws them into a whirlwind of secrets, forbidden love and violent clashes all while the looming apocalypse approaches rapidly. 


Look for it on September 23! 

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Author Interview: Chris Ward

Squeee moment right here! Tube Riders author Chris Ward is my interview today, and I am crazy excited. So let's do this!


One of the things I loved the most about Tube Riders was the world building. You created a spectacular Britain — Mega Britain— what was one of the best apocalyptic settings I’ve come across. Where did the idea for this Mega Britain come from?

I grew up in Cornwall, spent six years living in Bristol, and took frequent trips to London, so most of the basics were from personal experience. I had a background, which I then adapted for the needs of the story. Things like adjusting the size/shape of the Underground stations so that the Tube Riders wouldn’t get crushed by the tunnel walls. It’s a story after all. One thing I was very clear about was trying to give stuff “normal” names. I hate the way books give stupid names to stuff, which is why mine are very simple – things like clawboards, huntsmen, the Department of Civil Affairs, they’re all very easily understandable words. Mega Britain was the same. I wanted to give it a name that sounded kind of video-game cool, but still something recognizable, rather than Blah-blah-land, and the “Mega”, just popped into my head and stuck.

As for the general layout, I’m very interested in issues of segregation, which has been a massive theme through history in all walks of life. The most important thing is that pretty much in every case, the segregators did what they did because they thought it was the right thing to do, even if from the outside it was ridiculous. The Governor genuinely believes that putting fences around everything will actually make people work harder, and sticks by his ideal even as things start to unravel. And in any case, the idea of the walled city is an old one; it’s been around forever. My cities are just a lot bigger.


Were there any images you used as inspiration for this broken country? 

Not really. The London GUA I see in my head is just a wasted version of the real London, with this massive crooked wall around the outside (you get a close up of the wall in Revenge), while the Greater Forest Areas are just the countryside I stared at from the train on the many trips I’ve taken between Exeter, Bristol and London. With less roads, of course.


The fact that things were almost normal (emphasis on almost) in the more pastoral settings of England was fascinating.  Why were things so awful for urban London, esp in comparison to pastoral England?

It comes down to issues of population and control. It proved far easier for the Governor to keep people productive and happy in the less densely populated Greater Forest Areas than in the cities, where the population size created a growing unrest. I think early on the cities would have been policed a lot better with a lot more brutality, but as resources got stretched it began to break down. We enter the story at a point where the chaos has reached fever pitch. However, one of the things worth remembering is that the people aren’t united against the government but are mostly fighting each other. This ingrained distrust is something that scarily mirrors what I’ve read about the work camps in North Korea, where people are apparently taught from an early age to distrust everyone, including their own families. It makes uniting for a common cause very difficult.


Tube Riding is a form of surfing on the side of moving subway cars. Such a fantastic idea, and you created wonderful imagery around it, not to mention a fantastic group of teens/young adults who found camaraderie doing it. What inspired that idea?

I don’t remember now to be honest, but I wrote the original short story in 2002, although that ends with the Tube Riders disappearing into the unknown of the tunnel (it’s available in the Trilogy Boxed Set or my shorts collection, Ms Ito’s Bird & Other Stories). I’m pretty sure I was in a train station and was drinking a beer and wondered what it would be like to hang off the side of a moving train and then jump off at the end of the platform. It all built up from there. In early drafts I had some trouble differentiating the characters – for example Paul and Simon and Jess and Marta were really similar. I don’t like to use the same character twice. I call it Steve Syndrome, after the first character I had who was a featureless cardboard cutout. I do my best to avoid it now, cutting any characters who don’t have a decent role to play.

One of the main antagonists in this Tube Riders was unlike any that I have read. It wasn’t so clear cut/black and white with her. She was carrying out orders, but she was also questioning them, and her evolution as a character was really compelling (and continues to be in Exile). Was there anything in particular you were exploring with her character? Did you set out to write her this way, or did she evolve?

My characters are always various shades of grey (let me know what you think about Switch at the end of Exile, haha), which is one reason I’ve got a prequel on the backburner where the Governor is essentially the good guy (at the start, at least), and Dreggo is an example of that. She’s bad, then good, then bad, then good, to the point where she doesn’t really know what’s going on. As a writer I consider myself a puppet master, and with Dreggo (as with many of the other characters) I set out to see just what she could handle. I wanted to basically destroy her and then bring her back, but I was never quite sure how. For the whole series I pretty much only knew about four or five chapters ahead what would happen, so it wasn’t really plotted. I had an idea of where I wanted it to go, but it evolved as well as it went. I did feel that the eventual conclusion of Dreggo’s storyline was perfect though. I’m pretty proud of that.


While I loved all of the characters, Dreggo and Marta are my favorites. They were wonderfully drawn, strong women. Was it your intent to write two extraordinary female characters?

I didn’t really set out with any plans for how to portray either of them. They certainly weren’t damsels in distress (Jess was the closest to that, and she wasn’t really very close), but I didn’t want to make them asexual hardasses either. Tube Riders is supposed to go almost beyond fiction into alternative reality, and in reality you’re hardly likely to care which boy has the cutest smile when you’ve got some killing machine on your tail, but you still might get urges from time to time, which is the part I played up to. They’re also very influenced by real British women – who are in general pretty much zero-BS in my experience – than airy fairy comic book heroines. The closeness to realism is what has actually turned some readers off, but for me that’s the most important thing about the series. I wanted people to read it and think, “I’ve met a girl like that.”


What are you working on now? Any target release date for it?

Tons of stuff. Seriously, it’s insane how much I have queued. I have four novels done or almost done. One is a trunk novel comedy which may come out sometime when I’ve figured out how to stop it offending people, haha. Another is a love story that I knocked out in a little over a month earlier this year. That should be ready to go soon. The other two are the first two parts in a new series called Tales of Crow. Part One, They Came OutAfter Dark, was released on August 20th. The central character is this deformed madman who has insane skills with biotechnology. What began as a kind of horror/thriller with a dash of black humour is morphing into something quite different. I’m even considering tying it loosely in with the Tube Riders series, kind of like the origin story of a character who ended up doing something important in the Tube Riders world (I won’t say what). Because I’m an indie I can do what I want, but it’s the kind of thing that a publisher would hate. The tone of the books is very different, but I’ve always been one to push the boundaries. The second book is finished and will be out around October. I’ll probably drop one of the other two in between, but I don’t expect there to be much fuss about those. They’re more for me that for readers.

And of course there’s the prequel series, Rise of the Governor. I’m currently taking a “break” from it because I needed some time away from that world, but I’ll be back on it soon. Some books write themselves on the screen, others in my mind, and this one is definitely the latter. Once I’ve ironed out the details in my mind, I’ll get it down, but to be honest, after writing Exile and Revenge over the space of 18 months, I was pretty burned out.


What inspires you to write?

No idea. I just need to tell stories, and once I’ve started to tell one I need to get to the end as quickly as possible. It was never about money, although if I make some it’s nice. That’s one reason why I tend to genre hop – I’m not focused on what I should be doing to maximize my business potential, which is basically write the same book over and over again. To be honest, though, I don’t care.


What 5 books are on your bookshelf right now?

The five most recent books I’ve read/am currently reading are The Winter of Frankie Machine by Don Winslow, The Long Walk by Slavomir Rawicz, Jamaica Inn by Daphne Du Maurier, Cycling Home from Siberia by Rob Lilwall, and Slash: The Autobiography. None are anything like what I write about, and that’s the way I like it. I only read about a book per month, so I’m very picky about what I read, and I have zero patience for generic genre fiction, particularly anything aimed at young adults or where the relationship/love triangle is more important than the story. I read almost as much non-fiction as I do fiction, but I read as much to learn these days as I do for entertainment. In my teens I devoured all the fantasy, horror, and sci-fi I could get my hands on, but I just don’t have a lot of time these days, so I want to read stuff that I find really, really interesting. I do read a lot of samples though – the beauty of the Kindle – but probably only go on to buy about one in twenty.


What do you recommend to see/read/hear?


The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. It’s the only film I’ve watched in the last two months and it was awesome. As someone with a constant travel bug (I live in Japan, having lived in the UK, Spain, and Italy), it really made me want to get on the road. It also tells you a lot about how to live your life.


Thursday, August 21, 2014

Clearing out the headspace



Chepachet, RI is a real place, and the farm that Nina owns in Hell’s Belle is based on a real one -- it belonged to my grandfather’s family.  

Although that farm was long gone, I spent many weekends in Chepachet as a kid. We’d visit the cemetery that holds the family remains or his oldest friend Henry (nothing like an old Yankee farmer). Then we’d get penny candy at Brown & Hopkins (America’s oldest country store in continuous operation). 

I love to take my daughter to Chepachet so she can see where part of the family is from and soak up that country air. Over the weekend, I had my first trip to Pulaski Park in about 30 years. Pulaski Park is a "day use" recreation facility (i.e. no camping) that is part of the larger (4000 acres) George Washington Management area. The park boasts are hiking trails, picnic areas and swimming in Peck Pond.

My kid and I had a terrific hike (and saw a beaver dam). Then we splashed around in the ice cold swimming hole. We had lunch at the Tavern on Main (i.e. Stage Coach Tavern, built in the early 1700s), and did a little antiquing. 

It was an awesome day. And I walked away with some ideas for book three, which I really need to get cracking on.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Lookit what I just bought

One of my favorite indie writers, Chris Ward, has a new series! He’s the genius behind the wonderful Tube Riders trilogy. Today he released They Came Out After Dark, book one in the series Tales of Crow

Here’s the Amazon blurb:

For Jun Matsumoto, a school trip to the remote study camp of British Heights is hardly his idea of a good time. Akane, the love of his life, hates him, and he’s rooming with Ogiwara, the school bully. 

Things get even worse when a dose of bad Christmas turkey makes most of the students sick, and suddenly Jun and a handful of others are left cut off from civilization as the snow closes in. Pretty soon the power has gone off, and a strange, birdlike creature begins terrorizing the guests. 

If Jun thought the school trip could get no worse, he’d be wrong. As the students group together with the other remaining guests, suddenly their understanding of danger turns on its head. 

There are creatures out in the woods, and they’re hungry for human flesh… 

If you like edge-of-your-seat paranormal adventures with some wonderfully drawn characters and terrific world building, I highly recommend Chris' books! 

I just snagged my Kindle copy for .99! Not sure how long this pricing will last, so grab it now.