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Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Pre-Release Day Blitz: Captivating Bridge By Michelle Mankin @MichelleMankin @GHBTours





Captivating Bridge
Tempest Series # 3
By- Michelle Mankin
Genre- New Adult
Expected Publication Date- May 22nd, 2014


Warren “War” Jinkins is that guy.
The bad one.
Tempest’s ex front man, an arrogant rock god.
The only thing larger than his ego is his capacity for self-destruction.
His bad attitude has cost him. His woman. His best friend. His band. Everything.
Shaina Bentley is that girl.
The good one.
Hollywood’s pink candy-coated sweetheart.
The star of Pinky Swear, television’s top rated teen show.
She’s been practically perfect since that horrible day. But she’s starting to crack under the strain of being everything to everyone.
He’s a one man island. She’s a fragile captive soul.


Is love a current too dangerous to cross or will it be the bridge that brings them together?

  

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

3 Day Book Bash: Seven Mintues By Jay Stritch @VBTCafe







Jay Stritch is a student of English Literature at Cambridge University and a lover of all modes of storytelling. She has recently published 'Seven Minutes' told in the format of memory collections which trace the interweaving, highly eventful lives of a very interesting family. In her free time she enjoys skiing and adrenaline based sports.






Author Links -








Book Genre: Fiction
Publisher: -
Release Date: March 2014




Book Description:


What are the memories that will define you when you're gone?

It is said that when you die your brain stays active for seven minutes, in which time you relive your most prominent memories.

'The Collector' of these memories has the most interesting story of all to tell. By following the intertwining lives of a group of characters we are taken on a journey through some amazing experiences: loss, love, guilt, failure, success and what defines us as human beings. The very essence of these people emerges from their memories.

But why is Will the one this collection of memories has been given to? What is he supposed to do with them? He already has enough on his plate, now that he's unemployed with a farm and family to run while his wife is away working. However, he can't seem to stop obsessing about this mysterious book or put it down and it begins to affect his life in more ways than one…



Excerpt: 


Seven minutes really isn't that long. It's often overlooked by people as an awkward amount of time in which nothing can be achieved. Indeed many groups of seven minutes are spent in people's lives simply waiting. I, however, am a collector and it is my job to make every minute count. Everything can be revealed about a human life in seven minutes. Today has been a particularly interesting collection, as amongst them is the last Mangos.

I often look at my job like a card game - perhaps similar to 'Happy Families' - and I relish collecting full sets. Today the set has been completed by the life and death of Sabina Mangos.

I sometimes revisit the rest of these preserved lives and watch them intertwine with each other seamlessly again. I turn to the best bits, like one would dog ear a favorite book. Still the people I never knew in life haunt me in their deaths.

She is bent by the side of the river, the evening sun illuminating her cheek bones and her hair is plastered to her face. The memory at first is always startlingly beautiful until the scream begins. It is primal, guttural and echoes off the rocks surrounding her. Then the boy lying limp at her feet comes into focus. But this is my own memory. To understand it better, it's only right that we delve into hers.

ANGELICA: 4.6 minutes

He died with his train ticket in his pocket and his hands clasped tightly around his necklace. I know because I was there. I start compressions frantically, unable to remember how many to do. One, two, three, four, trying to force the life back into him. Five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, my own breaths rasping, willing him to join me. Eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, I stop pressing methodically, the panic taking over and I begin to hit him wildly. Suddenly I am furious, illogically furious at him, and I begin to spit and swear as I return to compressions. What else can I do?

"Don't die! Wake up! Bastard! Talk to me! Open your eyes now!" I stop suddenly staring rigidly at his face. "No," is all I can think. This. Can't. Happen. Mouth to mouth, my mind screams, I haven't tried that yet and I know why. What if the kiss of life doesn't work; what if it is the kiss of death? What if I can't save him? I slam my hands either side of his head, pinch his nose and calmly breathe into his mouth. Once. Twice. Nothing. And that is when I rock back on to my knees and scream.




Guest Blog:


Hardest thing about character development?

This is a great topic because any writer worth their salt has to capture characters who develop, who are changed by the world they live in, their experiences and the people around them. Because this is true to life, you can never write someone off (pun intended) as simply ‘the funny one’, or as someone who is ‘evil’ and that can be a dangerous trap to fall in to.

A human being is like a diamond- multi faceted. If you met someone later on in their lives or before a key event it might feel like you are talking to a completely different person, the light has changed and the angle (to continue the diamond metaphor) and now something very different in them may be illuminated. With this in mind I think that it is very important whenever you are writing to remember the whole person, who they were and all that has happened to them so that they are never just one thing and never just who they are at the point of the story you are writing.

The hardest thing about character development is probably to stay consistent while allowing your characters to grow and change. I know, I know this is something of an oxymoron but it is essential that a character retain their identity even if their beliefs or attitudes change.

In order to do this we must ask the question-what is identity. There are many answers but I think the most useful ones are our natural inclinations. The qualities (good or bad) that we are born with, for example drive, compassion, imagination-the essentials of that person which are shaped and harnessed by their circumstances.

This is going to be oversimplified but it’s just an example: So to try and explain what I mean a little more coherently let’s take a character that is naturally and quintessentially a restless spirit with a drive to achieve. If I follow these qualities from childhood in my character, he is active, strives for more than prescribed by his system but then who he becomes depends on where I place him in the real world. Let’s place him, for example, as an explorer-these qualities thrive-he lives on the edge, he never stays in one place and his adventures quench his restlessness and he develops into a man who lives in the moment, who shares his wisdom and is most content by campfire light sharing ideas and inspiration about life. O.k. now let’s scrap that and go back to our boy imbued with just these essential qualities, bright as a button and just about to venture out into the real world. Now let’s trap him in a dead end office job. Here no one appreciates him, his ambitions and ideas are given a very low roof, his restlessness increase and he can’t be satisfied with what he has. He wants so much from life but feels as if he has nothing. This develops to bitterness, and slowly we can guide him along a darker path where he feels a sense of entitlement to what should have been his. We now could have the beginnings of the potential killer in our story.

But both of these choices (the way we choose to develop the character) are true to who he is even though the two outcomes may be very different.

I hope what I was trying to get at made sense and resonated with you as a reader/writer/human!















Book Blitz: Heart Shaped Rock By Laura Roppe @lauraroppe @NereydaG1003 #YABOUNDBOOKTOURS #giveaway





Heart Shaped Rock
Release Date: May 2014

Summary from Goodreads:
"If you liked the music collaboration of Maybe Someday, you've got to check out Heart Shaped Rock." - New York Times best-selling author of Maybe Someday, Colleen Hoover

"Laura Roppé has written a moving and emotional novel of first love, accurately capturing the voice and mind of a dramatic and emotional sixteen year old girl caught in a maelstrom of grief and loss, love and heartbreak. And then there's Dean…you'll just have to read the book, 'cause I can't do him justice in a few short sentences." -Jasinda Wilder, New York Times and USA Today best-selling author of Falling into You

Sometimes a shattered heart needs to sing to love again . . . Sixteen year old singer-songwriter Shaynee Sullivan hasn't so much as touched her guitar since her mom died six months ago. In fact, Shaynee hasn't felt like doing much of anything lately, except maybe playing Whack-a-Mole on her "emotionally intelligent" brother's head. But when she meets a gorgeous and surprising rocker named Dean, her shattered heart begins to mend . . . and then burst at the seams. Heart-wrenching, heart-warming, and sometimes even heart-racing, Heart Shaped Rock will leave you laughing through tears and rooting for love in all its forms.

Hear the original music performed in Heart Shaped Rock at www.LauraRoppe.com. All music available on iTunes.





Available from:
Amazon * B&N * Kobo * iTunes






Excerpt:


A log in the bonfire falls, and the entire fire crackles and pops and sizzles. A wave of thick smoke envelops me for just a moment with the shifting of the breeze. I begin to cough and wave the air with my hands to clear a clean patch to breathe.

"Looks like you've picked a dangerous spot," a voice says. I turn, expecting Jared. But it's not Jared. It's some guy I don't know.

Wow, yet another Casanova. Do I have "please talk to me" stamped on my forehead? What's going on tonight?
I don't reply to his pick-up line. I mean it's pretty lame.
"Is this seat taken?" he asks, motioning to the sand next to me.
I shrug.
His voice seems really familiar to me. But I can't place it.
He looks to the fire for a moment, and the flames dance across his face. Wow, he has the most alluring collection of features I've ever seen. Well, in person, anyway. I've seen movie stars and rock stars rival this guy, but I've never seen such perfection up close. He truly is a work of art. His hair is dark. His cheekbones are high. His nose is sculpted. His lips are . . . wow.
"I'm Dean," he says, extending his hand.
I put my hand in his and immediately feel a current of electricity jolt through my body. I jerk my hand away.
"I'm Shaynee," I say, sounding more confident than I feel. "I recently learned I'm supposed to say my name when someone says theirs. So, there, I did it. I said my name. It's Shaynee." Oh God, I'm rambling.
He laughs a masculine, guttural laugh.
I freeze. I know that laugh. Oh my God. I look down at his clothes. Jeans. Combat boots. He's not wearing the leather jacket, but . . .
Another plume of smoke from the bonfire hits and envelops us. Again, I cough ferociously. But he isn't coughing at all.
When the smoke clears, he lets out his breath. "You're a bonfire rookie, Shaynee." When he says my name, my stomach flips over and that electricity from our handshake bounces throughout my body.
He turns to look at me, flashing a wicked grin, and I finally see those startling blue eyes in the flickering light confirming what I already know. Motorcycle Boy.
"When you see smoke coming," he says, "you gotta hold your breath 'til it passes."
"Or, hey," I say, "here's an idea-we could just move back a bit."
"What, and sacrifice warmth?" He grins.
"It is a bit of a Sophie's Choice, isn't it?"
Dean laughs like he actually understands my movie reference.
Gah, is it super-duper hot out here tonight? Am I sitting way too close to the fire? Is my hair burning? "Actually, holding my breath is my superpower," I blurt. "I can hold my breath all day long." God, I sound like such a dork.
"Well, that's a handy superpower. You could totally team up with Aquaman and fight underwater crime and stuff." He shoots me a crooked smile. "And make some really beautiful tadpoles."
I can't take it anymore. I have to call a spade a spade. "You're the guy on the motorcycle." It's a statement, not a question. "Motorcycle Boy."
"Yes, I am. And you're the girl with the walkie-talkie. Walkie-Talkie Girl." He laughs.


About the Author
Laura Roppé is an award-winning singer/songwriter, author, audio book narrator, speaker, and former attorney from San Diego, California. In 2011, Billboard Magazine ranked her as Number Three on its chart of the Top 50 "uncharted" artists in the world. In May 2013, Laura began hosting Amazon's weekly podcast, "Kindle Love Stories," for people who love hearing about love stories, romance, and happily ever afters.

Her first book is the non-fiction memoir, Rocking the Pink. Her latest is a YA-teen romance novel entitled Heart Shaped Rock, featuring a soundtrack.


Author Links:
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GIVEAWAY:
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Monday, May 19, 2014

Book Blitz: Love and Leftovers By Sarah Tregay @sarahtregay @harperteen @NereydaG1003 #YABOUNDBOOKTOURS #Giveaway





Love and Leftovers
Paperback Re-Release: 05/13/14
Katherine Tegen Books

Summary from Goodreads:
My wish?is to fall ?
cranium over Converse
in dizzy, daydream-worthy ?love.
(If only it were that easy.)

When her parents split, Marcie is dragged from Idaho to a family summerhouse in New Hampshire. She leaves behind her friends, a group of freaks and geeks called the Leftovers, including her emo-rocker boyfriend, and her father. By the time Labor Day rolls around, Marcie suspects this "vacation" has become permanent. She starts at a new school where a cute boy brings her breakfast and a new romance heats up.

But understanding love, especially when you've watched your parents' affections end, is elusive. What does it feel like, really? Can you even know it until you've lost it?




Available from:
Amazon * Barnes & Noble * Kobo * Book Depository


Excerpt:

When My Mother Takes an Ambien

I have eight hours to devote to whatever I choose.

Some nights, I take her laptop down to the end of the lane
to pick up a Wi-Fi signal from the neighbors,
IM Katie, and watch Linus's music videos,
while I perch on the rock wall.


Other nights, I sit facing the glowing coals
and read steamy romance novels that Aunt Greta has left behind.


Without Mom to tell me
to get off the computer,
or to come inside unless I want West Nile
I can hang out with my friends (online).


Without Mom to tell me
that weak female characters
are the result of an unimaginative author,
I can read about women who go weak in the knees
at the sight of a cowboy in Levis
and nothing else.


But most of the time
I write poems in this blue notebook
because
I feel free
when Mom is out cold.




About the Author
Raised without television, Sarah Tregay started writing her own middle grade novels after she had read all of the ones in the library. She later discovered YA books, but never did make it to the adult section. When she's not jotting down poems at stoplights, she can be found hanging out with her "little sister" from Big Brothers Big Sisters. Sarah lives in Eagle, Idaho with her husband, two Boston Terriers, and an appaloosa named Mr. Pots. Her next book, Fan Art, will be released in June.
Author Links:


   


GIVEAWAY:
Win a signed paperback copy of Love and Leftovers and a guitar-pick necklace. (USA and Canada)
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Sunday, May 18, 2014

Blog Tour: The Luthier’s Apprentice

by Mayra Calvani

@mcalvani @ParanormalCravi

#LuthiersApprentice #Giveaway






The Luthier’s Apprentice

Blog Tour



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Title: The Luthier's Apprentice

Author: Mayra Calvani

Publisher: Twilight Times Books

Genre: YA Paranormal Fantasy

Distributors: Amazon Kindle; Apple iBookstore; BN.com Nook; Kobo Books; OmniLit, etc

Release date: May 15, 2014 ebook; August 15, 2014 print

Pages: 184



Promo blurb:

Niccolò Paganini (1782-1840), one of the greatest violinists who ever lived and rumored to have made a pact with the devil, has somehow transferred unique powers to another…

When violinists around the world mysteriously vanish, 16-year-old Emma Braun takes notice. But when her beloved violin teacher disappears… Emma takes charge. With Sherlock Holmes fanatic, not to mention gorgeous Corey Fletcher, Emma discovers a parallel world ruled by an ex-violinist turned evil sorceress who wants to rule the music world on her own terms.

But why are only men violinists captured and not women? What is the connection between Emma's family, the sorceress, and the infamous Niccolò Paganini?

Emma must unravel the mystery in order to save her teacher from the fatal destiny that awaits him. And undo the curse that torments her family-before evil wins and she becomes the next luthier's apprentice…



The Luthier's Apprentice

Chapter One

Brussels, Belgium
Present day

Sixteen-year old Emma Braun got off the school bus and strode down Stockel Square toward her home. She glanced up at the October sky and wrapped her wool scarf tighter around her neck. Heavy dark clouds threatened a downpour.

As she passed a newspaper stand, the headlines on The Brussels Gazette caught her attention:

ANOTHER VIOLINIST VANISHES!

Emma stopped. For a moment she could only stare. She dug into her jacket pocket for coins and bought a copy.

The newspaper article left her stunned. Not only because three well-known violinists had gone missing in the last several months, but because the latest one was her teacher, Monsieur Dupriez.

The news story seemed so hard to believe, she stopped at the next street corner to read it one more time.

It was the last week of October, and the shops and homes were lightly adorned with Halloween decorations. Pumpkins and Jack-o-lanterns sat on doorsteps. Witches, broomsticks, and black cats hunkered down in windows and shops. Just last evening, Emma had sauntered along this street with her best friend Annika, unconcerned and looking forward to Halloween. Now, everything had turned dark and ominous.

The strange incidents she had experienced for the past two weeks added to her stress.

At first she had thought they were a string of coincidences, but not anymore. While scowling at obnoxious Billie Lynam during school recess, for instance, she wished he would fall flat on his face… and half a minute later, her wish was granted. On various occasions she guessed people's thoughts before they spoke. And yesterday, on her way home from school, she accurately guessed the meal her mom had left on the table for her.

Was she some kind of a psychic? If so, why now? People didn't develop powers like these overnight. Did they?

She hadn't told her mom about her new abilities yet; only Annika knew. Maybe she would tell her mom today, after she shared the news about Monsieur Dupriez.

As Emma approached her home, she quickened her step. By the time she reached the door she was almost running. She raced into the hallway and dropped her book bag on the floor.

"Mom!" she called, looking in the kitchen, then in the living room. The house was silent. "Mom!" she called again, racing up the stairs to the bedrooms. Entering her mother's room, Emma found her sitting very still on the bed with a crumpled letter in her hand.

When her mom saw her, she hastily put the crumpled piece of paper into her pocket and rose from the bed. Her arched brows were furrowed with anxiety.

Emma momentarily forgot the newspaper article. "Are you okay, Mom?"

"I've just received some unsettling news," her mom said. "I must make a trip to see your Aunt Lili. She's ill. She…I don't know how long I'll be gone."

Aunt Lili? Emma frowned. More surprises. Emma had never met her mom's eccentric only sister, who lived alone in the Hungarian mountains secluded in an old chateau surrounded by dark woods-or so her mom said. Though again, her mom hardly ever mentioned her.

"What's wrong with Aunt Lili?" Emma asked. "Can't I come with you?" She had always been intrigued by her mysterious aunt.

"No. You'll stay with Grandpa. You enjoy working with him, don't you?" Her brown eyes met Emma's before turning away, and though her voice sounded matter-of-fact, Emma detected a trace of ambivalence.

Emma sighed. She loved violin making with a passion, but Grandpa was a bitter taskmaster. No matter how much she tried to please him, she never could. Maybe that's why her mom often seemed so reluctant about her apprenticeship.

"I'd rather go with you," Emma said. "Plus, next week is holiday." All Saints holiday week-or Toussaint, as they called it here-almost always coincided with Halloween.

"That's out of the question. I don't know how long I'll be gone. Besides, you can't miss your violin lessons, not with the Christmas competition at the academy coming up soon."

"I'm not so sure about that," Emma said gravely, extending the newspaper.

Her mom took it. "What's this?"

"This is why I came running up the stairs."

Her mom read the headlines. She gasped and looked at Emma. When she finished reading, she sat on the edge of the mattress and stared into space. "Oh, my God..." she whispered.

Emma sat next to her mom. "It says Monsieur Dupriez disappeared in his study. The doors and windows were locked from the inside. The police don't have any explanation. How can this happen? It's not logical. It's not humanly possible."

"No, not humanly possible…"

"Just like the other three-that German violinist, the French one, the American. Nobody has explained their disappearances. Who would want to kidnap violinists?" When her mom didn't answer, she began to gnaw at her fingernail.

As if by reflex, her mom pulled Emma's hand away from her mouth.

"Sorry," Emma mumbled. "I'm just worried about him."

"Poor Madame Dupriez. We must visit her. She must be in quite a state."

"Can you call her now?"

Her mom sighed. "I will. In a moment." She looked at Emma, her features softening. Gently, she smoothed Emma's glossy chestnut locks and side fringe away from her face. "Don't worry, everything will be fine. You mustn't be afraid."

"Afraid? Why would I be afraid?"

"I mean, about Monsieur Dupriez." Her mom appeared flustered.

"I'm not afraid. I'm worried, and angry. I want to find out what happened to him. Without him, I don't even want to take part in the competition."

Monsieur Dupriez had been Emma's teacher since she was four years old. But more than teacher, he was her mentor.

"You will do your best at the competition-with or without Monsieur Dupriez. Do you hear me?" her mom said. Then her voice softened. "Listen, darling, I know how close you are to Monsieur Dupriez, but you cannot allow his disappearance to destroy your chances at the competition. I'm not asking you to win, only to do your best. You have great talent, a gift, and your duty is to use it to the best of your ability. Never forget this. Monsieur Dupriez would never want you to forget this."

"You still haven't told me what's wrong with Aunt Lili," Emma said, changing the conversation. "Why must you go to her now, after all these years?"

Looking into Emma's face, her mom hesitated, as if unable to decide what-or how much-to say. "You know she's always been ill, a recluse. She…" She rose from the bed and walked to the window, then opened the curtain. It had started raining, the drops pelted against the glass. "This time it's serious. She may die."

Emma couldn't help feeling a twinge of suspicion. She hated distrusting her mom, whom she loved more than anything in the world, but this time her mom was lying. Emma trusted that feeling, another of her freaky new abilities. She felt an overwhelming urge to chew her fingernails, but tried to control herself. For her mom, a violinist's hands were a work of art.

"But what's wrong with her? What kind of disease does she have?" Emma insisted.

"Her heart is very weak." Her mom turned away from the window to face Emma. Her voice was laced with impatience.

And again Emma thought: She's lying.

"Please don't worry about it," her mom went on in a lighter tone. "I'll try to come back soon."

"How soon?"

"As soon as I can manage."

"Grandpa is always in such a nasty mood," Emma complained.

"Well, that isn't news, is it?" Her mom stared down at the floor, as if absorbed by her own thoughts. After a pause, she added, "He's old and his back always hurts. You know that."

"I love Grandpa, but he's so freaking…" She tried to come up with the right word. Bizarre. Instead she said, "Mysterious. You know, with his violins."

Her mom looked at Emma and frowned, as if waiting for her to say more.

"You know what I mean, Mom. With that room at the top of the stairs. The one that's always locked."

Her mom's features hardened. "He keeps his most valuable pieces in there. You must never disobey him. He would be very disappointed."

"Who said I would go in there?" Emma asked, trying to sound innocent. If there was something she intended to do, it was going inside that room. Once she'd almost been successful. For some crazy reason, Grandpa had forgotten to lock it one day. But the instant she touched the doorknob, he had called her from the bottom of the stairs, his wrinkled features twisted into a mask that had left her frozen. He had appeared enraged and afraid at the same time.

"When are you leaving?" Emma asked, shaking off the past to focus on the present issue.

"As soon as possible. Tomorrow, probably. I'll get the plane tickets today."

"Mom..."

"Emma, please. If you're going to complain or say anything negative, I don't want to hear it."

Fine. Obviously, this wasn't the best time to bring up her new psychic powers. She headed to the door.

"Where are you going?" her mom asked.

"To my room."

"I'll call Madame Dupriez to see if we may visit her after dinner. In the meantime, I want you to pack. You're moving to Grandpa's tomorrow."

In her room, Emma dragged her suitcase from the top shelf in the closet and set it on the floor.

"Hi, Sweetie," she said to Blackie, her rabbit. "Want to get some exercise?" She opened the cage door so Blackie could hop out and roam about her room. Blackie was housebroken, and smart as a cat-or close to it.

She stared at the elegant taffeta gown hanging from her wardrobe door, a strapless design a la Anne Sophie Mutter she'd already bought for the upcoming violin competition.

She sighed.

Slumped on the bed, Emma wondered for the umpteenth time about Monsieur Dupriez's strange disappearance.

Where could he be?



Author Bio:

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Award-winning author Mayra Calvani has penned over ten books for children and adults in genres ranging from picture books to nonfiction to paranormal fantasy novels. She's had over 300 articles, short stories, interviews and reviews published in magazines such as The Writer, Writer's Journal and Bloomsbury Review, among others. A native of San Juan, Puerto Rico, she now resides in Brussels, Belgium.



Connect with the author on the Web:

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Giveaway:

$25 Amazon GC



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Book Blitz: Kissed By Kimberly Loth @Kimberlyloth @NereydaG1003 #YABOUNDBOOKTOURS #Giveaway





Kissed (The Thorn Chronicles #1)
Release Date: 05/01/14

Summary from Goodreads:
Trapped in a dark cult, sixteen-year-old Naomi Aren has lived a quiet, albeit unhappy, life nestled deep in the hills of the Ozarks. With uncut hair, denim skirts, and only roses for friends, Naomi seldom questions why her life is different from other kids at school. Until the day her abusive father, who is also the cult's leader, announces her wedding. Naomi must marry Dwayne Yerdin, a bully who reeks of sweat and manure and is the only one person who scares her worse than her father.

Then she meets Kai, the mysterious boy who brings her exotic new roses and stolen midnight kisses. Kisses that bring her a supernatural strength she never knew she had. As the big day approaches, Naomi unearths more secrets of about her father's cult. She learns she has power of her own and while Kai may have awakened that power, Naomi must find a way to use it to escape Dwayne and her father-without destroying herself.


On sale right now for only $.99:


Excerpt:
Most roses run the color wheel from yellow to red. Occasionally a white one pops up. Some of my favorite roses are flowers that have an unusual color. Like purple. The American Rose Society doesn't even consider purple to be a rose color. They call it mauve. But purple roses do exist. And the most beautiful purple rose is the Vol de Nuit, or the Night Flight.

Andrea didn't hang out long. She didn't even come inside the house. When her car disappeared down the road, I fought back tears. I was as good as dead. At least to the outside world.

I followed Mr. Yerdin inside, tugging my suitcase behind me. The stench reached me before I crossed the threshold. A mixture of rotting garbage and feces. I gagged but moved inside anyway.

Boxes piled upon boxes filled the main room. A path through them was visible, but the floor was covered with papers and food. A cockroach scurried across my toe.

"Your room is this way. Don't knock anything over with your suitcase." I squeezed down the path, careful not to touch the towers on either side of me. The hallway contained no boxes, but the floor was still not visible. In places, I literally had to climb over trash bags filled with who knows what.

He opened the door to a small room. "We cleared the bed off for you. It will only be for tonight. Tomorrow you'll be married so you'll share a room with Dwayne."

"Will that be after we go to Fayetteville?"

He snorted. "Honey, you've seen the last of those social workers. In fact the only people you'll see from now on are Dwayne and me. He won't be home until late. His buddies took him out for a bachelor party. If he comes to you though, don't upset him, he's a mean drunk and I don't want that pretty face ruined for the wedding."

I nodded and waited for him to leave. Then I shoved the door closed and sat on the bed. No way would I stay here. I crawled across the bed to the wide window. I tried to open it. It budged only a little bit. Silently, I pulled up on it. Eventually, it slid open with a loud screech. I froze, but no one came to check on me. In the dark it would be much easier to escape. If Dwayne wasn't to come home until late, I figured I had four or five hours after it turned dark to make my break. I wanted to wait until Mr. Yerdin went to bed.

I checked out my suitcase. It would only hinder me. I'd have to run with nothing. The only things in my suitcase were clothes. I'd do with what I had. If only my parents had allowed me to wear pants. All of my clothes were impractical for running. They would not be missed.

If my mind served me right, I could take Oak Valley down to Martinville where I could find the Wal-Mart and a bus stop. With any luck I'd be on my way to Vegas by midday.

Darkness fell, but Mr. Yerdin still tromped around the house. I watched under my door for the lights to go out. Just as I decided that perhaps I'd better make a run for it anyway before Dwayne got home, all the lights in the house went out.

I shimmied out the window and landed hard on the ground, jarring my teeth and nearly twisting my ankle. The moonless night made it hard to see anything. I started for the road, figuring that would be the safest route. Before I walked more than a few feet, a car roared down the driveway, its headlights lighting the whole yard. I froze.

Dwayne tumbled out of the passenger door, howling. Then he saw me.

"Naomi, you waited outside for me like a good little bitch." He lurched toward me.

He grabbed me around the waist and pulled me close to him. The alcohol had improved his breath. His buddies hooted from the car then spun in a tight circle and disappeared down the driveway. Dwayne swayed next to me and leaned heavily on my shoulder.

"Come on," he slurred. "Let's go have a honeymoon."

"We won't be married until tomorrow."

"Techni--" He paused, appearing to think. "Technimal...."

I took advantage of his lapse in thought and moved away from him. He stumbled and fell over, landing hard on his butt. "Come here," he commanded.

I stayed where I was and then edged further away. Hopefully from his position he wouldn't be able to tell. He propped himself up on all fours and made it back to his feet. He took a winding path toward me and grabbed me by the arm. The flies buzzed in my ears again and I felt like I needed to vomit.

His nostrils flared, his face contorting with anger. My arm began to ache. His eyes closed and he shook his head. After a moment he fell over, unconscious. Without thinking I ran. Down the driveway and out onto the dirt road. Onto the main road I continued to run, for once grateful for the ugly tennis shoes.

Once I hit the highway I had to slow down. I didn't feel comfortable running on the pavement. It felt too exposed so I kept to the ditch and made slow progress. Every once in a while a car would come through and I would duck to avoid friendly strangers. Eventually, the road leveled out where there was no shelter. On either side of the road hay fields stretched on for miles. My feet ached, but I kept moving.

A slow moving car came up behind me. It stopped, illuminating me with its lights. I didn't hesitate, I ran.

"Naomi, wait," a voice called. It wasn't Dwayne or Mr. Yerdin, but I wasn't waiting around to see who it was. There was no place to hide. Freshly mowed, the fields left no protection. Sharp stalks of hay scratched at my legs. I ran, even though I knew I probably wouldn't be able to outrun the stranger.

It didn't take long before footsteps overcame me. Strong arms wrapped around me and pinned my arms to my side. I thrashed, trying to get away. "Naomi, stop." My nose twitched. A familiar smell, like clove. He spun me around. "Look at me."

I looked.

And then kissed Kai full on the lips.



About the Author:
Kimberly Loth can't decide where she wants to settle down. She's lived in Michigan, Illinois, Missouri, Utah, California, Oregon, and South Carolina. She finally decided to make the leap and leave the U.S. behind for a few years. Currently, she lives in Cairo, Egypt with her husband and two kids.
She is a high school math teacher by day (please don't hold that against her) and YA author by night. She loves romantic movies, chocolate, roses, and crazy adventures. Kissed is her first novel.


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Saturday, May 17, 2014

Book Release Blast: Possess My Soul By J.A. Howell @JenniferHowlz @GHBTours





Possess My Soul
Possess Saga # 5
By- J.A. Howell
Publication Date- May 15th, 2014

"Being half-fae I had the ability to sense others' impending deaths. Anomalies. Deaths that didn't have to happen. Sometimes, if I had enough time to get to them, I could stop their deaths. But I never imagined I'd see my own."

With only a week to go before she gives birth to her daughter Emma, Harley Faye Finley chooses to make the ultimate sacrifice. Trade her life for that of her daughter's. When the time comes, she's ready for the inevitable.

But something goes wrong.
Harley survives.
But someone…or something else is in there with her.

As this unknown, malevolent force fights for control, Harley finds herself a prisoner in her own body, and those she loves are now in mortal danger. Will she, Nolan, or anybody else be able to stop it before it's too late?

Or will the Harley they know and love be lost to them forever?