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Sunday, September 9, 2012

Stacking The Shelves #16




Stacking The Shelves, A weekly Meme hosted by Tynga's Reviews. Blog about the books we got in the past weeh.



Stacking The Shelves is a weekly meme hosted by Tynga's Reviews. Where each week we share the books that we have added to our shelves during the past week. This includes books that we bought, borrowed from the library, received from the author for review, books that we won. They can be either physical books or ebooks.

You can find out more about Stacking The Shelves from the official launch page.




More Amazon Freebies. But hey, I love Amazon Freebies.





Prey No More (Vampire's Prey)

Title:

Prey No More (Vampire's Prey)

Author: A.R. Wise

I read Deadlocked series by A.R. Wise and loved it so I thought Prey No More would be a great read also. I like reading about vampires as well as zombies.






The Awakening (Hasea Chronicles #1)

Title:

The Awakening (HASEA CHRONICLES BOOK 1)

Author: Stuart Meczes

This one sounds evil. Alexander Eden is thrown into a world where an ancient unspeakable evil lurks and wants to consume him.






Title:

Witherheart

Author: Tiffany L. Duhart

This one is about vampires and sounds real good. Anjette thought her mother was killed by a vampire when she was a small child. But years later she sees her mother and the vampire whom she thought had killed her.






Title:

Being Inhuman

Author: Vanessa Hawkes

A demon has been released and now it has been left up to Jake Miller to capture the demon before it consumes everyone in its path. Can Jake save Cassie and her family?






The Hands of Tarot

Title:

The Hands of Tarot

Author: S.M. Blooding

Queen Nix has awakened Synn El’Asim's Mark of power. Is he too strong for her? Can she handle him? Is his power strong than her's?






The Dustman

Title:

The Dustman (Dreamland Stories)

Author: S.M. Blooding

Dreamland is empty. He is watching all of his friends disappear. There is no cure. He is next. Why are they disappearing?






Where Will You Run?

Title:

Where Will You Run? (The Dion Series Book 1)

Author: M. E. Franco

Mari Lucas' sister Kerry has been rambling about vampires. No one believes her and sticks her in a psychiatric ward. When Kerry disappears from the ward Mari goes looking for her. But what she finds will change her life for ever.






The Light Tamer

Title:

The Light Tamer (The Light Tamer Trilogy)

Author: Devyn Dawson

Jessie and Caleb must learn how to control the light...before they lose each other forever. Jessie and Amber become fast friends. Amber is a light tamer with only two years left to find the one she is bound to.






What did you add to your shelves this week?

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Blog Tour: (Interview + Review) Full Throttle




Full Throttle Banner, Full Throttle






Full Throttle Book Cover, Full Throttle

Book Title: Full Throttle

Author: T. C. Archer

Genre: Contemporary, Romance, Suspense

Publisher: Etopia Press

Ebook:

Words: 95,000













BOOK DESCRIPTION

Gail ‘Jimmy’ James is the first female NASCAR mechanic. As if competing in a man’s world isn’t tough enough, her bombshell looks belie her genius.

Rising star NASCAR driver Rex Henderson is stunned to discover his new mechanic is smokin’ hot. Rex intends to own his own crew, but he must end the season number one if he’s to save his family and his dream. No female is getting in his way—especially his gorgeous new mechanic.

Nothing Jimmy knew about Rex Henderson the driver prepared her for Rex Henderson the man. But Jimmy has no time to consider her feelings as Rex wins race after race, despite strange mechanical problems with his car. Whether sabotage or her inexperience, she must stay a step ahead of trouble if she’s to ensure future wins—and safeguard her heart against the handsome, Alabama racecar driver.









BUY LINKS

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B&N (Nook)

ARe

Kobo









EXCERPT

“When do you expect the new mechanic?” he asked, eyes fixed on the photo. “I want to start testing the new Yates engine we bought for Daytona.”

“We’ve already started.”

Rex jerked his attention back to Duff. “You know I like to be around from day one. Emerson would have called.”

“Rex, you need to know Jimmy is—”

“I haven’t even met this guy and you’ve got him working on my car. Since when?”

“Since Wednesday. Look, there’s something—”

“Four days? I want to see what he’s done.” Rex tossed the photo onto Duff’s desk and turned.

“Rex—” Duff jumped to his feet and started around the desk. The phone rang and he cursed.

“Rex,” he called as he grabbed the phone. “Winston. Yeah, I got the pictures. In fact—”

Rex took a left out the office door and strode past Emerson’s office, then past the office of the new accountant, Gary Blackeagle. The last office belonged to Brent Douglas, the guy who’d had Rex’s job for six years before he got caught with his pants down and a barely legal aged girl jammed between him and his locker.

Rex pushed open the door to the garage and stepped onto freshly waxed concrete. Despite last year’s sting, his heart raced as it always did at the start of the season when he first laid eyes on the immaculate eight thousand square-foot garage.

A dozen red, five-foot-tall toolboxes stood guard beside the uncluttered workbenches that lined the cinderblock walls. No. 14 sat in the first assembly area on the right, awaiting paint and window netting. Rex slid his gaze along the trunk and over the top of the car. The new Chevy was his ticket to owning a crew next season.

He started forward, then halted when a shapely figure in powder blue coveralls shifted into view. She bent over the engine like a real mechanic. What idiot had left his girlfriend to roam the garage alone? Rex dropped his gaze from the red ponytail to the feminine undercarriage on her fine frame and angled his head to get a better look. He couldn’t see her face, but judging by her body, her boyfriend had taste.

She pressed against the fender and in closer to the engine, straddling the front tire like Daisy Duke at her finest. Ouch! The fabric of the coveralls stretched across the lovely curves of her buttocks, complete with bikini brief panty lines. Rex shook off an unexpected need to hook a finger under those panties.

He crept to the car with panther-like stealth. She hadn’t emerged from the open hood when he leaned a hip against the fender beside her and drawled, “What fool left you alone in my garage, darlin’?” She stilled, and he ran his gaze the length of her five foot four body, then back to her taut rear end. He laughed softly. “You better come out before you get dirty.” Rex shifted his attention to the sparkplug wire she gripped. He straightened in shocked anger. “What the hell are you doing to my car?”

He seized her arm as she started to straighten and yanked her from under the hood. Her head struck the hood with a thunk. She gasped and Rex released her.

“Ouch!” Her hand flew to the top of her head and vigorously massaged the spot. “Why did you do that?”

“No one screws with my—”

She jerked her head around and Rex’s mouth went dry when his gaze met gorgeous brown eyes tinged with fury.

“That hurt!” She shoved back a lock of hair that had fallen loose from her ponytail and glared at him.

Those were the eyes a cowboy found only in a dream—and in midnight encounters in front of a wood-burning fire.

The sprinkling of pale freckles across her cheeks scrunched up when she wrinkled her nose. Her eyes narrowed. “Here, hot-shot.” She shoved the sparkplug wire into his chest. “You put the plug wires on. You know the firing order of your Chevy V-8?”

Rex raised a brow. “As a matter of fact—”

“Let me get you started,” she snapped as she gave her head another vigorous rub, “one, five, two, eight…”

“Look,” Rex retorted, “no one touches—” A hand clamped down on his shoulder and he whirled to find Duff standing behind him.

“I see you’ve met Jimmy James, our new mechanic,” Duff said.

Rex stared at the buxom figure, then faced Duff. “Mechanic? What the hell were you thinking? Even in those coveralls she doesn’t look like a mechanic. She looks like a…like a…hell, like she belongs on Sex in the City.”

“Hey!” she exclaimed.

“Her qualifications are top notch,” Duff interrupted.

“Why didn’t you just paint her on the hood hugging the damn Cozy fabric softener rabbit?” Rex shot back. “That’d get Cozy to renew their sponsorship for the next ten years.” He pictured her, sheet thrown across breasts and hips, one leg sprawled over the rabbit’s belly. “We’ll get nothing done with her around,” he added tightly.

“Winston doesn’t concur.” Duff turned Rex to face Jimmy. “Jimmy, this is your driver, Rex Henderson.”

“I know who he is.” The lock of hair had fallen across her eye again. She jammed it behind an ear. “You ought to keep him in his cage.”

Duff chuckled. Rex gave him a thin-lipped scowl, then leaned against the car and crossed his arms over his chest. Jimmy flicked him a withering glare. His groin pulsed.

He ran his gaze down her body before meeting her fiery brown eyes again. “Only if you’ll be my cage-mate.”

She drew a sharp breath and a camera flash lit the garage behind Rex. He whirled in time to catch a second flash in the eyes. Spots raced across his vision, but he made out the figure straightening from a crouch behind a workbench near the side door. The man lifted the camera to his eye and Rex jammed his eyes shut an instant before the flash penetrated his eyelids.

Rex snapped open his eyes and started for the paparazzo. “I’m going to kick your ass!”

The man pivoted toward the side door.

Rex accelerated to a sprint with Duff close behind.

The photographer bolted through the door. “Sex in the City!” He laughed, adding before the door banged shut behind him, “Cage-mates.”

Rex slammed into the door a second later and flung it open as the photographer dove into the passenger seat of a beat up blue Subaru. Rex hit the asphalt at a sprint as the car leaped into gear, passenger door ajar. Rex picked up speed. The Subaru slowed at the end of the building and Rex thought he had him, but the car rounded the corner and accelerated toward the open gate at the entrance.

Dammit. During the off-season, no guard manned the front gate. Rex cursed again and picked up speed. The paparazzo had probably followed him onto the property. He should have closed the security gate after he entered.

The car leaped over the parking lot speed bump and hit the street, tires squealing as it hung a right and zoomed away. Rex slowed and stopped at the curb. The blue compact had reached the end of the block and took a hard left toward the freeway. Damn. He didn’t get the license number.

Duff halted next to him, breathing hard.

Rex glared at him. “What do you say now, Duff?”

Duff’s gaze locked on the direction the car had taken. “I say all of Dallas will know what Howard Motors has up its sleeve by tomorrow morning, the rest of the world by supper time.”

Inside the garage, an engine starter whined. Rex turned toward the garage and stared as the engine caught, followed by the roar of exhaust when Jimmy pumped the accelerator in short, quick stabs.






INTERVIEW

  1. What inspired you to write Full Throttle?


    • Evan came up with the title Full Throttle. Must be a guy thing.



  2. When or at what age did you know you wanted to be a writer?


    • Evan: I wanted to be a writer since junior high. I wrote my first short story, compete with illustrations.


    • Shawn: I didn’t really get the bug to write until I was in my mid-thirties. I didn’t give in to the compulsion until I was nearly forty.



  3. What is the earliest age you remember reading your first book?


    • Evan: I don’t remember reading my first book. It seems like I’ve been reading forever.


    • Shawn: My mother swears I started reading at 4. I was a total bookworm/geek. She could be right. My first memory was five, and I read something that went like ‘see spot run.’



  4. What genre of books do you enjoy reading?


    • Evan: I like reading scifi and the classics, mostly.


    • Shawn: I really enjoy all genres, though a lot of what I read has suspense elements to it.



  5. What is your favorite book?


    • Evan: That’s a tough one. The Lord of the Rings, I suppose.


    • Shawn: A Tale of Two Cities



  6. You know I think we all have a favorite author. Who is your favorite author and why?


    • Evan: Philip Roth. I love the way he writes.


    • Shawn: Charles Dickens, with Stephen King as my favorite modern author. They are bother master story-tellers and really know characterization.



  7. If you could travel back in time here on earth to any place or time. Where would you go and why?


    • Evan: I’d go to 1776 and hang out with Franklin, Jefferson, Adams, and Washington.


    • Shawn: First century. The world hasn’t been the same since that time. I’d like to see how it really happened.



  8. When writing a book do you find that writing comes easy for you or is it a difficult task?


    • Evan: Writing poorly is easy. Good prose is hard.


    • Shawn: ROFL. The idea is easy. Writing isn’t.



  9. Do you have any little fuzzy friends? Like a dog or a cat? Or any pets?


    • Evan: I have two dogs: an Australian shepherd named Rex and his pug, Gus.


    • Shawn: Not currently. We lost our kitty and best friend some years ago.



  10. What is your "to die for", favorite food/foods to eat?


    • Evan: Ice cream. I wish I could only eat that.


    • Shawn: HA! I love hard boiled eggs. How weird is that? But I adore pecan pie. I just seldom eat it. All those pesky calories.



  11. Do you have any advice for anyone that would like to be an author?


    • Write, write, write, read, write, read, get critiqued, then read and write until it’s coming out your ears.





MY REVIEW

The following review is my opinion and not a paid review. I received a copy of Full Throttle from the author via Full Moon Bites Book Tours for review.

All NASCAR driver Rex Henderson wanted was to own and drive his own car. To own his own car was going to cost him a lot of money. He knew from all the mistakes that occurred last season he was going to have to win all the races and stay away from all the pretty girls. Rex never dreamed that his new head mechanic (Gail "Jimmy" James) would turn out to be a girl.

Not only does Jimmy have a hard time being accepted by Rex but her pit crew has a hard time accepting her as a mechanic. When things start happening to car #14 everyone thinks that it is all just a rookie mistake. Jimmy knows she is being blamed because she is a female. But when Jimmy gets a threatening note they begin thinking that maybe it is not a rookie mistake that it may be sabotage. Someone is trying to get Rex out of NASCAR for good or they just want Jimmy gone. NASCAR and a woman in the crew pit doesn't mix, racing is a man's game. Jimmy is determined to find out who is sabotaging car #14 to save her job and Rex.

I have to say that I have never been much of sports fan. I do on occasion watch sports on tv. But I do have a NASCAR driver though and was very excited to read Full Throttle. I honestly didn't think that I would like it very well. But guess what I loved it. I liked the suspense, the romance but what I really liked about it was the mechanical parts. I liked reading and learning about the restrictor plates and Jimmy taking the drive shaft out and putting it back in during a pit stop. I also loved finding out that they could read the temperature of the tires during the race. I don't know very much at all about working on cars but I do know a little bit. I know how and can use a ratchet.

Full Throttle was a better read than I could have ever imaged. It was extremely well written, explaining everything in detail. If you don't know much about NASCAR and want to learn then you need to read Full Throttle.






ABOUT THE AUTHOR

T. C. Archer is comprised of award winning authors Evan Trevane and Shawn M. Casey. They live in the Northeast.

Evan puts his Ph.D. to good use by writing about alternate realities, and Shawn channels the mythology and philosophy she studied during her wasted youth into writing about exotic places and times.







FIND THE AUTHOR

Website

Blog

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Be sure and check out all the other stops on the tour.

LINK TO FULL TOUR SCHEDULE


This tour was put together by FMB Blog Tours

Friday, September 7, 2012

Blog Tour: (First Chapter) Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye By Shari A. Brady




Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye banner






Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye book cover

Book Title: Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye

Author: Shari A. Brady

Published: June 11th 2012

Publisher: Shari A. Brady

Kindle Edition:

Pages: 253








SYNOPSIS
Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye




Before Carmella D’Agostino’s older sister Francesca died, she worked at the bakery and wrote songs, but now she writes lists.  Lists like ten reasons why it's her fault Francesca's dead, or five reasons why she should try and win Howie back, or one reason why she needs to stop lying to everyone, including herself. 

 

Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye is an extraordinary novel about one family’s struggle to make sense of their world after losing a family member to addiction. Through sixteen-year-old Carmella’s eyes, we witness the courage and strength it takes to overcome the consequences of grief, guilt and co-dependency. With conviction and determination, Carmella shows us what can happen when we’re open to love, feel the pain of our loss, and have the courage to accept the truth of our lives.








FIRST CHAPTER
Wish I Could Have Said Goodbye




Chapter 1

October

I hug Francesca’s purse tight against my chest and rest my head against the corner of my closet. This is me since my big sister died four weeks ago. Francesca was six years older than me, and at twenty-three she became one of those people you read about in the tabloids, only she wasn’t an actor in Hollywood. She was my big sister who accidentally overdosed at her own party and now she’s not here to help me get over the fact I let her down, or to give me one reason why I should keep on living since my universe exploded and turned to dust.

I close my eyes and make a list, the kind Francesca and I would make when the lights were out and we were supposed to be sleeping.

Why I should live the rest of my life in my closet

1. I don’t have to talk to anyone.

2. I don’t have to listen to Mom and Dad fight.

3. I don’t have to face the rest of my life without my big sister.

Francesca and I had a pact to keep the lists just between us and we swore each other to secrecy before we made our first one. When Francesca went to college and was home for a break or a visit, we didn’t make many lists. And then when she graduated, the lists stopped. I forgot all about the lists until I found one in her purse the night she died. It was her Monday to do list.

“Carmella?” My mother taps on the door. “Could you—?”

I slide the closet door open and squint up at my mother.

“We need you to come out. Your father’s got his coat on. He’s waiting.”

“I’m not going.”

“Carmella, don’t do this.” She pushes up the sleeves of her burnt orange pullover and folds her arms in front of her. “We need you.”

I want to tell Mom I can’t reduce my big sister’s life to twelve boxes and stuff them underneath the steps of my parents’ basement. But I won’t say what I’m thinking. I don’t want to make things worse for her and Dad.

My mother’s eyes are a million miles away. They’ve been like that ever since we got the news. “I know this is hard, Carmella, but Father Carlucci says packing up her things and moving her out of the apartment will help us start to heal.”

“What if I don’t want to move her things out of there? I want everything to stay the same.”

“Please, I don’t have the energy to fight.” Mom’s hair is tucked behind her ears, all messy, and her make up is rubbed off of her puffy eyes.

“Fine.” I set Francesca’s purse down on top of my red Converse shoes and drag myself towards the steps.

When I get into the kitchen, Mom hands me my coat.

My father’s pacing in front of the sink, crunching on corn chips. The veins in the side of his head pop out while he chews.

Mom grabs her purse from the scratched up wooden kitchen table they’ve been talking about replacing since Francesca started middle school.

“The owners from Lincoln Distributors sent flowers to the office Friday. How did they find out?” Mom asks.

My father stops in front of the door and rubs his forehead with his left hand. “I don’t know. Obviously, someone at the office told them. We never should have let the truth get past the family.”

“What are you talking about?” Mom squeezes the strap of her black leather purse tight.

“Yesterday, Mary at Davenport Motor Works asked what happened to Francesca. I told her she died of a fatal arrhythmia. From here on in, if anyone asks, that’s the story. And when you go back to school, you tell everyone the same thing.” He points to me.

“But most of them know what happened.” I zip my jacket.

“Not all of them. Tell Anna and your other friends to keep quiet too.”

Dad doesn’t know I haven’t spoken to anyone but Anna in the last year. My only friends lately were Francesca and Donny. Mom and Dad don’t know much about me at all now. When Francesca started having problems in middle school, I disappeared.

“You lied? You told a customer our daughter died from a fatal heart condition?” Mom swipes her hair behind her ear.

“Gina, our daughter died at a party where kids were doing drugs. People see that as a reflection on us. Since my father passed away and I took over the business two years ago, I’ve been working my ass off. I don’t want anything to jeopardize our reputation and I don’t want all my hard work to go to hell.”

My mother’s eyes glass over, her face drops like all her muscles turned into water and poured out. “Joe, this is our daughter. How can you talk like this? People will understand. It was an accident.”

“This type of shit only happens to kids who are on drugs. Francesca was in the wrong place at the wrong time, that’s all. If she didn’t move in with that asshole Donny, she’d be alive right now.” My father stabs his finger in the air.

“I don’t believe this. So when I talk to people at work, I’m supposed to lie about how my daughter died?” My mother’s eyes glass over.

“Say it was a heart thing and you don’t want to talk about it. People won’t push. And that goes for you too.” My dad plucks his keys out of his coat pocket. “Let’s go.”

***

The three of us head up the creaky steps to Donny and Francesca’s third floor apartment. We had to walk two blocks struggling to hold onto the flattened boxes and packing tape. Parking on city streets is always a pain, especially on Saturdays when everyone is home from work. Most people work Monday through Friday in this neighborhood, except for Francesca and Donny.

Donny works weekends at the bar down the street. That’s how they got this apartment. A year ago, Donny met a guy who was transferred to China for a four-year assignment and needed to rent out his top floor condo in a cool brownstone building. Francesca was so excited; she thought they got lucky. The place was only a few blocks from the famous Second City Theatre in Chicago. Francesca thought she was going to move in here and get her life back on track.

Francesca worked at different restaurants for a while, but last summer she didn’t work at all. Around middle of August, she stopped returning my calls. When she finally called me back it was the first week in September to ask me to go to an AA meeting with her. It was a week before she died and the last time I ever heard her voice.

Dad sets his stack of boxes down and knocks. Mom starts to cry. She pulls a tissue out of her purse. She hands one to me, but I’m not gonna cry. I’m gonna be strong for Mom and Dad because that’s what families do for each other.

Donny opens the door and we get a whiff of rotten food like moldy cheese. We haven’t seen him since the funeral.

“Hi,” Donny says. He combs his messy dishwater blond hair with his fingers, like he just woke up. His green T-shirt is all wrinkled.

“C’mon in.” He steps back and holds out his hand. “Hey, sis.” He smiles.

“Hi.” I almost walk towards the kitchen, but I stop myself. Francesca loved to cook. I kept her company in the kitchen while she made stuff. They were always broke, so she cooked a lot of pasta.

Everywhere I look I see Francesca. Like her favorite fake painting of a sunrise on the beach she bought from a guy on the street for ten bucks when she first moved in with Donny. Francesca and I dreamed of living near the ocean, where the air is always warm and people are more relaxed. She was sure the painting meant good luck for her. I run my finger along the tacky gold frame.

“We were supposed to be awesome career women, get married, have kids and live next door to each other, two blocks from the beach,” I whisper. “That was our plan.”

I remember thinking how much I liked Donny and was so happy for Francesca. We were both sure her life was going to finally get better.

Donny leads us into the bedroom.

He points to the closet. “I boxed up her shoes, just the hanging stuff needs to be done.”

I think I might puke. I push past my parents, who are stiff like statues. I run straight to the bathroom where Francesca and I hung out when we wanted to talk in secret. I close and lock the door, taking my usual seat on the side of the tub, staring at the toilet where Francesca parked her foot as she blew cigarette smoke out the tiny frosted paned window. I rock back and forth and howl into my sleeve.

I bend down and run my fingers across the tiny tiles on the floor. I imagine her lying here, taking her last breaths, all alone. I grab my chest. I wish she hadn’t died in here alone. I wish I could have been with her, to hold her hand or to hug her. I wish I could have said goodbye.

“Carmella.” My mother knocks on the door. “Are you okay?”

I stand up and turn the cold water on full blast. “I’m fine,” my voice cracks. I clear my throat. “I’ll be right out.”

I open the door, and I hear Dad shout. “How can you live with yourself? This is all your fault.”

“Don’t go blaming me. All I did was try and love her,” Donny stomps out of the apartment, the door slamming behind him.

I walk into the bedroom. My father is mumbling over the high-pitched scream of the packing tape as he seals the top of a box.

Mom sniffles as she takes Francesca’s clothes off the hangers, folds them and puts them carefully in the box on the floor next to her.

Dad stands in the middle of the room, staring at the dresser, the tape dispenser dangling from his right hand.

“Where’s Donny?” I ask.

Mom turns towards me. “He left. He shouldn’t be here.” She folds Francesca’s blue and white plaid shirt.

“Wait,” I say. “Can I have that one?”

Mom clutches the shirt. “This old thing? Why would you want this?”

“Because. It was her favorite.”

Mom passes me the shirt. “Okay.” She shakes her head.

Holding it up to my nose, I smell Francesca and for a tiny fraction of a second, I get her back.

I put the shirt down next to my purse on the bed. “What should I do?”

Dad hands me a small box. “Donny says there’s a few things out there.”

I take the box from him and walk into the kitchen, pretending she’ll be standing at the sink, excited to see me as usual, throwing her arms around me in one of her over-the-top hugs.

I turn my head. There’s a small magnet on the side of the fridge in the shape of an old potbelly stove with red letters that say “Francesca’s Kitchen” across the belly. Donny bought it for her and she loved the stupid thing. I shove the magnet into my pocket.

***

I stretch my red and white tiny-flowered comforter over my crossed legs and try not to look over at Francesca’s empty bed, still made up with the matching bedspread. My guitar sits in the stand and stares at me like an abandoned dog. I haven’t been able to go near it since we got the call. Francesca talked my parents into giving me the guitar for my eighth grade graduation, a gift from all three of them. It’s the same style of acoustic guitar John Lennon had. She knew I’d go ballistic over it. I used a black Sharpie marker to copy his famous character sketch, just like the one he had on the guitar he used during the Bed-In for Peace. My parents had a fit when they saw the drawing. They thought I’d ruined the guitar.

I tried to explain how much I admired John Lennon, how I want to be an artist who changes the world like he did. In the middle of my explanation, the phone rang. The office called with an emergency. We were supposed to finish talking later, but never did.

I was playing “Imagine” when my mother stormed through the door screaming that Francesca was dead. Then she fainted.

I glance over at Francesca’s empty bed and turn out the light. Staring at the moon outside my window, missing Francesca so bad I want to curl up and die, I wonder how Donny’s surviving.

I close my eyes. A replay of the day flashes through my head. I start to drift into the still black waters of the night.

Then I smell cigarette smoke.

I see Francesca in her bathroom, standing with her foot on the toilet, blowing smoke out the window, making fun of all our goofy distant relatives that were at her wake and funeral.

I’m sitting on the side of the tub, laughing.

Francesca smiles at me, taking a long drag from her cigarette. Then she tells me she’s okay.

My eyes fly open.

I sit up.

My heart jumps into my throat. I grab for the lamp and miss. My water glass falls onto the carpet. I reach for the lamp again and turn it on. I stare at the end of my bed. No Francesca. I fly out of bed. I blink, rub my sweaty forehead and look around the room. My legs shake as I crawl back into bed.

The cigarette smoke chokes me.

I scream but nothing comes out.




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ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Author Pic

Shari A. Brady is a native Chicagoan and previously had so many careers she’s lost count.  A graduate of Loyola University’s Business School and University of Chicago’s Creative Writing program, she’s finally a full-time writer, a dream she’s carried with her since she was twelve.  She lives in suburban Chicago with her awesome husband, two of the best kids ever, and their shelter dog, Betty Queen Elizabeth.  This is her first novel and her last career.













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Thursday, September 6, 2012

Review: (Guest Post) Edge of Mercy By C.C. Marks




Edge of Mercy cover

Title: Edge of Mercy

Series: Mercy

Author: C. C. Marks

Published: July 31st 2012

Publisher: Timbercreek Press

Ebook

Pages: 159







BLUB

EDGE OF MERCY



Charlie hides her true identity, but her very presence places everyone around her in danger. With no other choice but to remain where she is, she stays with a community that might not be as benevolent as it appears. In this new and dangerous version of the world, where a friend might be an enemy and an enemy might be a friend, seventeen-year-old Charlie protects her baby sister and herself from grotesque monsters outside the community as well as human ones inside. Will the truth she discovers about her protectors save her or ultimately doom her to a fate worse than death?




EXCERPT

EDGE OF MERCY



My life wasn’t a freaking animated fairy tale like the ones in movies or on television long ago. I knew that very well, thank you very much. Movies and television were gone now. No more radio, no more Internet, no more tests of the emergency broadcast system. All gone, and we were back to basics, back to primal earth in a never-ending game of predator versus prey, and we were no longer the predators. Trust me, it was no fun being the prey.

In the community, I’d had bad days. I’d had days where I questioned if I really had an advantage inside the protected walls. But tonight took it to an extreme level. Night in the compound terrified me, what with sure death constantly clawing to get inside.  Yet, this night eclipsed them all.

I covered my ears, gritted my teeth, a bubbled scream trapped in my chest. A tight hold on my emotions kept my fear from popping free in a loud, long wail. But just barely.

Others around me didn’t possess my level of control, especially Zeke, who sat beside me. His breaths came labored and loud to my ears. Part of me itched to reach a hand out, to reassure him that this night would pass like the ones before with all still safe inside, the sun rising on a new day. But I didn’t currently do girly, and I was no longer Charlotte Baker. Here, I was Charlie Little, the boy the community took in, along with a baby sister and a dying mother, a little over six months ago. If they ever thought differently, I wouldn’t last the night.

Screeches and clangs bombarded the combination wood and chain link metal fence surrounding the brick structure. We cowered in windowless cells inside. My hands firmly planted over the sides of my head, I couldn’t make myself pull them free. Sure, our security protected us well. The fence was electric and the building reinforced from the inside, but tonight, something was different. The creatures never attacked with this much intensity, and a wish to crawl into the deepest, darkest hole and hide there until it all ended crept over me.

It would end. It always ended.

Zeke’s muffled voice penetrated my flimsy hand armor, and I shifted my gaze to meet his. His dark-brown eyes were wide and expectant.

“Right, Charlie?”

Right? I hadn’t heard a question, wasn’t sure I could focus on anything he wanted to know now. My response--a shake of my head.

He pulled one of my hands free from my ear and asked, “It’s worse than before, right?”

Before? Before what? Before tonight? Before I stumbled through the community gate? Before the world turned to blood, survival, and hiding at night, always hiding at night?

“I don’t know, Zeke. Is it?” The panic in my voice remained buried by the jarring crashes outside.

“Yeah. It’s worse. Something’s changed.”

I looked at my lap. The truth would show in my eyes, so I didn’t dare look at Zeke. “They’re becoming more aggressive.”

Like last winter. Last winter, I came face-to-face with a draghoul. Then I fought through a horde of them to get here. My fear wasn’t from ignorance. I’d seen them up close, and they were beyond frightening. Their exteriors weren’t that much different from when they were once human. And they were once human, as unbelievable as it was. But the transformation into a monster was permanent and dreadful. The pale sallow skin, the glazed, souless eyes, the malicious teeth were a vision I would never forget. The fact they used to be people we knew, some we loved, made the sight of them all the more devastating.

He continued, “But why? They’ve always lurked just outside. They’ve never tried to get inside before. It’s like…they’d claw through the metal and concrete to get inside, I mean more than before.”

An explosive bang vibrated the walls and I jumped. God, I hated the night. It was too real, a reminder that humans no longer ruled the planet, a reminder that we were no longer the dominant species. My hands shook, and I lowered and squeezed them between my thighs to keep them out of sight.

Zeke’s whispered words carried across the room to the opposite wall. “What do you think, Thomas? You’re the smart one. Is it worse?”

I chanced a look in Thomas’s direction and felt more than saw his intense dark-eyed gaze burn into me. So often, he just stared, and questions lingered behind his intelligent eyes. Sometimes I wondered if he knew or at least suspected the truth. Life could always get worse for Star and me if he worked out my real identity. We wouldn’t survive in the forest again, and we had nowhere else to go.

His gaze turned to his cousin Zeke’s. “No doubt, it’s worse. It was only this bad once before, last year, in September and October.”

Zeke pressed, “What’s bringing them so close?”

“I don’t know, but the Council will figure it out and fix it.”

“You’re right. The Council will fix it.” The Council! My mouth tightened to a thin line as they mentioned the Council.






GUEST POST

BLOG I WRITE DARK AND DREAMY



Kelly Clarkson says it best with her new song, “Darkside.” Everybody has a dark side.

I’m an optimistic, humor-loving, and humor-full person. Yet, my writing might make you wonder about the truth in that. You see, I write dark and dreamy. I always have. My early poetry and stories always had a shadowy, sinister bent to them, much like my latest book Edge of Mercy. Often people worried about my state of mind (*snort* not much has changed there), but in the end, they realized writing about the darker side of life was an outlet for me. It’s a way to get out my own anxieties and fears, without actually having to experience what I worry about. That, by far, is where my dark side comes from.

Yet, I also have that dreamy side, and maybe that’s what keeps me sane. The truth is, I want a happy ending. I want things to work out by the close of the story. So, in my writing, though it is dark, there’s an element of hope. You can trust that my main characters, like Charlie, will eventually make it through the darkness. I don’t think I’m giving anything away there. I put my characters in some pretty bad situations, and I’m not saying how they’ll make it out, but there will always be a glimmer of a satisfactory resolution, where their dreams, their hope, leads them out of the darkness.




MY REVIEW

EDGE OF MERCY



The following review is my opinion and not a paid review. I received a copy of Edge of Mercy from the author for review.

Charlie lives behind the walls of the community that protect them from the monsters on the outside. Only males are allowed to live inside the community. The monsters are drawn to a certain hormone that only females have. Charlie has to hide who she truly is from everyone or face being thrown outside with the monsters.

The community is run by a group of old men called the council. Charlie knows that everyone is hiding something and is determined to find out what it is. There is a reason that there is no females in the community. She finally learns their secret as to why there is no females living in the community. With this knowledge she knows that she is going to have to take her little sister and leave before they find out her true identity.

I loved how C.C. Marks made the monsters (zombies as we would call them) different from all the other stories with zombies. Although it did make the story extremely interesting I didn't like how the council ran the community. Edge of Mercy was a page turner that kept you always wondering if they were going to find out that Charlie was a female.





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AUTHOR BIO



It all started with an old fashioned typewriter. When my family brought it home, all those stories and characters rolling around in my head could finally get out. The press and click of the keys satisfied in their own right, but when I pulled out a finished page, I knew this was for me. Since then, I’ve graduated to a laptop, but the stories still find a way out.

I’m a breast cancer survivor, a teacher, a wife, a mother, and from the very beginning—a storyteller. Always a hint humorous and honest to a fault, I love to make people laugh, smile, and have “a-ha” moments. My goal in life is to achieve tact and stop procrastinating. The battle wages on.







CONNECT WITH THE AUTHOR


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Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Wishlist Wednesday #23




Wishlist Wednesday is a book blog hop where we will post about one book per week that has been on our wishlist for some time, or just added (it's entirely up to you), that we can't wait to get off the wishlist and onto our wonderful shelves.







  • Follow Pen to Paper as host of the meme.
  • Please consider adding the blog hop button to your blog somewhere, so others can find it easily and join in too! Help spread the word! The code will be at the bottom of the post under the linky.
  • Pick a book from your wishlist that you are dying to get to put on your shelves.
  • Do a post telling your readers about the book and why it's on your wishlist.
  • Add your blog to the linky at the bottom of the post on Pen to Paper.
  • Put a link back to pen to paper somewhere in your post.
  • Visit the other blogs and enjoy!






On My Wishlist:


Apocalypse Z (A Zombie Novel)
Title: Apocalypse Z (A Zombie Novel)
Author: G.E. Swanson
Kindle Edition:
Pages: 225
Published: June 24, 2012
Publisher: G. E. Swanson









Goodreads synopsis:


A deadly virus is ravaging the world. Zombies roam the streets and mankind is nearing extinction. In an attempt to escape the virus and zombie's grasp, the Jacobs family and some friends must travel 1,300 miles up the West Coast to a cabin located high in the mountains of Washington. Things don’t go as planned and their trip quickly turns into a life or death struggle. Along the way they fight zombies, psychos, freaks, and sometimes amongst themselves.

This book contains adult content: graphic violence, sex, and language.

This is the first book in the Apocalypse Z series.





Why did I choose Apocalypse Z (A Zombie Novel) for this weeks Wishlist Wednesday?



I love reading about zombies and have read some great reviews for Apocalypse Z (A Zombie Novel). There is a deadly virus ravaging the world and zombies are roaming the streets. The Jacobs family has to travel 1,300 miles while fighting zombies.





Look for G.E. Swanson on the web:


Goodreads - G.E. Swanson

Goodreads - Apocalypse Z (A Zombie Novel)

Blog - G.E. Swanson

Twitter - G.E. Swanson

Facebook - G.E. Swanson





What is on your Wishlist Wednesday?

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Blog Tour: Bone Wires By Michael Shean




Bone Wires banner






Bone Wires cover

Book Title: Bone Wires

Author: Michael Shean

Publisher: Curiosity Quills/Whampa, LLC

Genre: Dark, Mystery, Science Fiction

Paperback/Ebook:

Pages: 380 (paperback)









Purchase

Amazon (Kindle)

Amazon (Print)

B&N (Nook & Print)

Books-A-Million








Book Description


In the wasteland of commercial culture that is future America, police are operated not by government but by private companies.

In Seattle, that role is filled by Civil Protection, and Daniel Gray is a detective in Homicide Solutions. What used to be considered an important - even glamorous - department for public police is very different for the corporate species, and Gray finds himself stuck in a dead end job. That is, until the Spine Thief arrives.

When a serial killer begins harvesting the spinal tissue of corporate employees all over the city, Detective Gray finds himself plunged into the first truly major case of his career. Caught in a dangerous mix of murder, betrayal and conflicting corporate interest, Gray will find himself not only matching wits with a diabolical murderer but grapple with his growing doubt toward his employers in the dawning months of the American tricentennial.

A thrilling mystery set in the same world as the Wonderland Cycle, Bone Wires is a grim trip into the streets of the empty future.






Excerpt
Bone Wires


The scene of the crime was an alleyway behind an abandoned Roziara Deli. Crowding the street outside the deli were a pair of patrol cars, white wedges of steel with ribbon lights that stained the nearby buildings red and blue. Street officers clustered around the mouth, black body armor over blue uniform fatigues; unlike the sidearms that Gray and Carter carried, the streeties carried the blunt, brutal shapes of submachine guns close to their plated chests. A cordon had been set up; the narrow yellow band of holographic tape that stretched across the alley mouth glowed as it cycled through baleful warning messages.

“They used to have good subs here,” said Carter as they pulled up in front of the moldering delicatessen. “Slabs of capicola as thick as Annie Cruz’s ass. Just incredible.”

“Don’t know that name,” said Gray.

“Porn star,” said Carter, who produced his badge and flashed it at a streeter who was approaching them. “Way before your time. Put on your war face, here comes the Pacifier.”

Carter’s Amber Shield glowed like the very words of God Almighty in the low light. “Carter and Gray,” said Carter, keeping his identification held up so that the streeter could see it. “Homicide Solutions.”

“Lem Martin,” replied the streeter. “Pacification Officer, patrol region 927.”

“This is your beat then,” said Gray, who produced from the inside pocket of his suit coat a slim Sony microcomp and engaged its holographic display. Data from the Nexus sprang to life above the palm-sized slab. “What do you have for us, Martin?”

Martin winced a bit at the lack of ‘Officer’ before his surname – you got a lot of that with Pacification Services, of which street patrol was the biggest group. They didn’t like being talked down to. Gray outranked him, however, and didn’t give a shit besides. “Nasty stuff,” Martin said, jerking his head toward the alley mouth. “Victim’s name is Anderson, Ronald P.. Administration. His panic implant was set off about an hour ago and flatlined soon after; me and my partner were in the area, and when we found him…well. Real horror show back there, is all I can say. I called for backup. Dunno what they used, but…well. You’ll see.”

Carter and Gray looked at each other – streeters saw all sorts of things. If they said it was a nasty scene, they’d probably do well to get smocks and rain boots. “All right, Officer,” Carter said, at which Martin seemed to relax a bit. “Were there any witnesses, security footage, anything like that?”

“Nothing we could find,” said Martin. “This area’s been abandoned for years. Anyone who lives here cleared out as soon as they heard us coming. You know how it is.”

“Yeah,” said Gray. Don’t want to get arrested for just being around. “All right, thanks, Officer. If you and…”

“Conklin and Peavey,” Martin replied. “In the other car. Patel’s with me.”

“…Right,” Carter replied with a nod. “If you fellas can keep up the cordon on either side of the alley, we’ll have a look. Call the coroner while you’re at it.”

“On it,” barked Martin, who stepped away from the alley mouth while touching the side of his throat where a subvocal mic, standard issue for street patrol, had been implanted. Carter waited until Martin had backed up a few steps and was well into conversation before he gestured for Gray to follow him. The two men passed through the holographic cordon, the barrier no more solid than the air around it, and took a few steps into the feebly-lit alleyway. The space behind the deli was dark and thick with shadows, lit only by the dying bulb of a lamp set over the shop’s sealed back door. A figure slumped or lay in the cone of dim light that spilled across the building’s crumbling facade. The air was faintly tinged with the smell of ozone and cooked meat. The two men approached; Gray held his computer in one hand while Carter fished the flat, card-sized shape of a palm lamp from a coat pocket. Cupping the lamp in his hand, Carter threw a beam of bright blue- white light across the alleyway and clearly illuminated the corpse.

Lean and muscular in life, that which had been Ronald Anderson half-crouched, half-sprawled across the alleyway, his handsome face pointing down toward the filthy concrete. The corpse’s posture reminded Gray of an old girlfriend; she was a yoga fanatic and used to do something similar called the Child’s Pose. Anderson’s formerly clean white dress shirt had been cut open, straight down the back from collar to waist, and his belted slacks had also been cut down to the base of the pelvis. His back had been tattooed with a medieval Japanese wave scene.

Anderson’s flesh had been laid open. Arching upward and away in a v-shaped furrow, a deep channel now butterflied the man’s back half from the base of his skull to the top of his pelvis. Where his spine should have been there was only a bloodless, grayish-red channel. The red and ivory of cleanly clipped bone and cooked organs were clearly visible in its absence, his heart a gray and veined lump. It was as if the tattooed sea had somehow come alive, restless and roaring, and attempted to rise away from its host who could never have survived its rebellion.

Without the slightest drop of blood, Ronald Anderson had been boned like a fish.

“Damn,” muttered Carter, stepping forward so he could track with his light the awful wound. “Never seen that before. What do you make of it, Dan?” For Gray, who had only experienced the more pedestrian horrors of stranglings, stabbings and gunshot wounds in his brief career, there was no clean reply. “That’s the strangest thing I’ve ever seen,” he breathed instead, staring down at the carved gutter. Gray had said ‘strangest’ – however, what he had truly wanted to say was ‘most horrible’. Looking down at the murdered man, Gray knew that his ‘sexy’ case had arrived, just as he had wished for it, but the only thing he could wish for now was to be anywhere else.

As if sensing the truth behind Gray’s words, Carter snorted softly. “Lucky you, kid,” he replied in a wry and vaguely weary tone. “Lucky you.”






About the Author


Bone Wires author

Michael Shean was born amongst the sleepy hills and coal mines of southern West Virginia in 1978. Taught to read by his parents at a very early age, he has had a great love of the written word since the very beginning of his life. Growing up, he was often plagued with feelings of isolation and loneliness; he began writing off and on to help deflect this, though these themes are often explored in his work as a consequence. At the age of 16, Michael began to experience a chain of vivid nightmares that has continued to this day; it is from these aberrant dreams that he draws inspiration.

In 2001 Michael left West Virginia to pursue a career in the tech industry, and he settled in the Washington, DC area as a web designer and graphic artist. As a result his writing was put aside and not revisited until five years later. In 2006 he met his current fiancee, who urged him to pick up his writing once more. Several years of work and experimentation yielded the core of what would become his first novel, Shadow of a Dead Star (2011). Michael is currently signed with Curiosity Quills Press, who has overtaken publication of Shadow of a Dead Star and the other books of his Wonderland Cycle.






Find the Author


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Tour Schedule


Sept. 1st- A Dream Within A Dream (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 2nd- Laurie's Non-Paranormal Thoughts and Reviews (Interview/Excerpt)

Sept. 3rd- Books & Beauty (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 4th- The Avid Reader (Excerpt)

Sept. 5th- Tricia Kristufek (Guest Post)

Sept. 6th- Turning The Pages (Promo Post)

Sept. 7th- Reading with Holly (Excerpt)

Sept. 8th- A Few Words (Guest Post)

Sept. 9th- The Bunny's Review (Interview/Giveaway)

Sept. 10th- The eBook Reviewers (Excerpt)

Sept. 11th- The Other Shelf (Promo Post/Giveaway)

Sept. 12th- Lizzy's Dark Fiction (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 13th- Holly Adair (Promo Post)

Sept. 14th- Persephone's Winged Reviews (Review)

Sept. 15th- TBA

Sept. 16th- I am, Indeed (Review)

Sept. 17th- Red Headed Book Worm (Interview)

Sept. 18th- A Bit of Dash (Excerpt)

Sept. 19th- Books & Beauty (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 20th- Words I Write Crazy (Review)

Sept. 21st- FireStarBooks (Excerpt)

Sept. 22nd- Day Dreaming Book Reviews (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 23rd- DVonThaer (Interview/Giveaway)

Sept. 24th- Book Lovin' Mamas (Promo Post)

Sept. 25th- Proserpine Craving Books (Excerpt)

Sept. 26th- Sweeping Me (Guest Post/Giveaway)

Sept. 27th- Abbey Ann's Bookland (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 28th- Books Down My Pillow (Review/Giveaway)

Sept. 29th- For The Love Of Film And Novels (Promo Post/Giveaway)

Sept. 30th- Community Bookstop (Excerpt)

Oct. 1st- Grasping for the Wind (Excerpt)

Oct. 2nd- Off the Page (Author Interview)

Oct. 3rd- Bookluvrs Haven (Review)

Oct. 4th- Darlene's Book Nook (Guest Post/Giveaway)

Oct. 5th- Writing to be Read (Review)

Oct. 6th- The Insane Ramblings of a Crazed Writer (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Oct. 7th- Kristy Centeno (Promo Post)

Oct. 8th- Beauty in Ruins (Review)

Oct. 9th- My Seryniti (Author Interview/Review)

Oct. 10th- TBA

Oct. 11th- White Sky Project (Review)

Oct. 12th- Mallory Heart Reviews (Review)

Oct. 13th- The Book Diva's Reads (Review/Excerpt)

Oct. 14th- Book Briefs (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Oct. 15th- TBA

Oct. 16th- Fighting Monkey Press (Excerpt)

Oct. 17th- Juniper Grove (Interview)

Oct. 18th- Cabin Goddess (Excerpt)

Oct. 19th- TBA

Oct. 20th- Laurie's Non-Paranormal Thoughts and Reviews (Promo Post)

Oct. 21st- Simply Infatuated (Interview)

Oct. 22nd- Bookishly Me (Review)

Oct. 23rd- TBA

Oct. 24th- Starry Night Book Reviews (Promo Post)

Oct. 25th- Cabin Goddess (Review)

Oct. 26th- Juniper Grove (Excerpt)

Oct. 27th- Full Moon Bites (Review/Giveaway)

Oct. 28th- Beach Bum Reads (Review)

Oct. 29th- whoopeeyoo :D (Excerpt)

Oct. 30th- The Self-Taught Cook (Review)







This tour was put together by FMB Blog Tours

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Review: Hell Comes for the Hurried By Steve Wands




Hell Comes for the Hurried

Title: Hell Comes for the Hurried

Author: Steve Wands

Published: June 28th 2010

Kindle Edition

Pages: 14








Goodreads Synopsis:



Set many years after the zombie apocalypse, Hell Comes for the Hurried follows a group of weary survivors in their trek north and quickly takes a turn for the worse. Some things are worse than death; guilt and cowardice chief among them.




My Review:



The following review is my opinion and not a paid review. I got this book as a free download from Amazon.

Hell Comes for the Hurried is about a man who wants stay drunk all the time so that he doesn't have to feel anything. He has thought of suicide on more than one occasion. He watched his wife and son get eaten by zombies. He is filled with so much grief that he blames himself because he ran away.

All he wants to do is die and be with his family again but he believes himself to be to much of a coward to kill his own self. His life is filled with him waiting for his chance at death. He travels with a small group of people but he never talks to them. He doesn't know anything about like who they are, where they lived before the zombie apocalypse. Even their names are fuzzy to him.

Hell Comes for the Hurried is good story I just wished it had been longer. I wished we could have know more about the people he was traveling with. I also would like to known more of who he was and his wife and son. What kind of person was this guy before the zombie apocalypse? How or why did they rise from the dead?







Look for Steve Wands on the web:


Web Site - Steve Wands

Goodreads - Steve Wands

Goodreads - Hell Comes for the Hurried

Twitter - Steve Wands





Buy The Book:

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Review: What Zombies Fear By Kirk Allmond




What Zombies Fear: A Father's Quest

Title: What Zombies Fear: A Father's Quest

Author: Kirk Allmond

Published: September 8th 2011

Kindle Edition

Pages: 159










Goodreads Synopsis:


When Victor Tookes went to work that beautiful spring day he never expected to see a man eaten in the street in front of his office. After convincing himself that they really were zombies, he makes a trip from his house in Pennsylvania to his family home in Virginia, battling zombies all the way. His three and a half year old son was bitten on the leg, but doesn't turn into a zombie. Instead, he turns into something more than human.

Victor and his friends discover that not all zombies are created equal, some of them are smarter than others. Some of them are even able to pass for human.





My Review:


The following review is my opinion and not a paid review. I picked up What Zombies Fear as a free download from Amazon.

Victor Tookes (Tookes as he is called) woke up on a beautiful spring day and headed off to work. On his way there he dropped his three year old son Max off at day care. Upon his arrival at work he saw a man being eaten alive. At first he had no clue as to what was going on. Then he convinced himself that what he was thinking was true he was seeing zombies.

After he realized what was going on he knew he had to get his family and get out of there real quick. So he takes his wife and son and heads to his mother's farm in Virginia. He knew that they would be safer there than anywhere else. The farm was almost completely fenced in so that the zombies could not get to them easily.

On his way to the farm they were attacked by hordes of zombies. Some of the zombies were very strong and had special abilities. You couldn't even tell some of the zombies from humans. They could walk around and talk as if they were still alive but were not.

Tookes' son Max is bitten by a zombie but he doesn't turn into a zombie but afterwards he has very special abilities. The smart zombies know this and want Max. Tookes his family and his friends will all do what is necessary to keep Max safe and a way from the zombies.

I thought What Zombies Fear was one of the very best books on zombies that I have read thus far. I loved that the zombies were faster and smarter. Not all the zombies wanted to eat humans like in most zombie books. If you love reading books about zombies then you have to read this one. Trust me you will not regret picking it up. It was the bomb.







Look for Kirk Allmond on the web:


Web Site - Kirk Allmond

Goodreads - Kirk Allmond

Goodreads - What Zombies Fear

Twitter - Kirk Allmond

Facebook - Kirk Allmond





Buy The Book:

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Wishlist Wednesday #22



Wishlist Wednesday is a book blog hop where we will post about one book per week that has been on our wishlist for some time, or just added (it's entirely up to you), that we can't wait to get off the wishlist and onto our wonderful shelves.







  • Follow Pen to Paper as host of the meme.
  • Please consider adding the blog hop button to your blog somewhere, so others can find it easily and join in too! Help spread the word! The code will be at the bottom of the post under the linky.
  • Pick a book from your wishlist that you are dying to get to put on your shelves.
  • Do a post telling your readers about the book and why it's on your wishlist.
  • Add your blog to the linky at the bottom of the post on Pen to Paper.
  • Put a link back to pen to paper somewhere in your post.
  • Visit the other blogs and enjoy!






On My Wishlist:




Getting Out of Jersey (Undead-Earth, #1)
Title: Getting Out of Jersey (Undead-Earth #1)
Author: Matthew Paul Esham
Kindle Edition:
Pages: 174
Published: May 28, 2010
Publisher: echolearner.com LLC







Goodreads synopsis:




It always starts small.

A single action, followed by another, and another... By the time most people realize the scrabbling noise in the dark is coming from something with teeth, it’s too late. In a small town in South Jersey, the darkness has taken root, spreading fast.

Only a few people have survived. The ones who are left, are Getting Out of Jersey.





Why did I choose Getting Out of Jersey for this weeks Wishlist Wednesday?



I love reading about zombies and have read some great reviews for Getting Out of Jersey. I like the cover with the bloody hand on it. The summary makes it sound very interesting.





Look for Matthew Paul Esham on the web:


Goodreads - Matthew Paul Esham

Goodreads - Getting Out of Jersey (Undead-Earth #1)





What is on your Wishlist Wednesday?

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Blog Tour: (Guest Post) The Road to Hell By Christopher C. Starr




I would like to welcome Christopher C. Starr to The Avid Reader today. Thanks for stopping by Christopher. Christopher will be telling us about Making Heaven UnHeavenly.




Photobucket






The Road to Hell

Book Title: The Road to Hell: The Book of Lucifer

Author: Christopher C. Starr

Published: August 9th 2011

Publisher: Sanford House Press

Pages: 286








SYNOPSIS FROM THE ROAD TO HELL: THE BOOK OF LUCIFER



You already know my name and, yes, I am that Lucifer. Fall from Heaven, Garden of Eden, ruler of Hell, Satan, the Devil, the Adversary, blah blah blah. I am the one you condemned without, what do you call it? A fair trial. Forget what you think you know: I want to tell my side of the story. The Road to Hell is all about how a pathetic group of short-sighted angels kicked me out of Heaven.

Humans are naturally curious and I suspect you’re asking ‘why now?’ Well, He has a book and it’s been pretty successful, so I figured what the hell? Found a ghostwriter and gave it a go. After all, the story is fantastic! It has everything you clods of dirt crave: a love story, a little sex, intrigue. Murder. War. Lots of blood. And a cast of characters you already know and love—Michael, Gabriel, Raphael—along with a host of others. Even has a special guest appearance by the Father and that damned boy.

So, let’s get down to business or brass tacks or whatever colloquialism works for you. I have plenty to say and plenty of time: The Road to Hell is just the first in a series of novels about my experience with Him, with my brothers and sisters, with you. If you’re interested in featuring me, reach out to the pile of dust below; if not, well, I’ll see you soon.





BUY THE BOOK


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EXCERPT FROM THE ROAD TO HELL: THE BOOK OF LUCIFER


Lucifer heard me: as soon as my feet touched the glass surface of his platform, he laughed aloud and doused all the light in Heaven.

.

“I know why you’re here, Raphael,” Lucifer said in the darkness. “You’re afraid.”

I was afraid but I wasn’t willing to admit it. Instead I said, “Why should I be afraid? The Father is with me.”

“You sure about that?” And I could see Lucifer’s teeth glinting in the light wafting from my body. He was smiling. “You think he’ll still back you up now that you’re failing him?”

His face was the color of fire, deep and red, and a haze made him seem like a mirage. Even in the darkness, in the heat of his rage, Lucifer was still beautiful. His thin face, the angular cheekbones, his wide, open eyes, his halo of shimmering hair—all presented a portrait of absolute perfection. Even in this dark hour, I envied the crude formation of my own round face, my pudgy nose, the softness of my jawline.

I tried to sound as sure of myself, as certain as he was but my voice cracked, “I’m not failing—”

He pounced on me, laid long, thin fingers on my shoulders, pushed that gleaming grin into my face. “Sure you are! Why else would you be here, Peace Keeper? Angels are dead, Raphael. It’s slipping through your fingers. Sounds like failure to me.”

“This is your doing!” I pressed him back.

“Raphael, you insult me; finger pointing seems so…beneath you. Besides, I’m bound, remember?” He fondled the chains streaming from his wrists and ankles, smiled at me again. “You chained me up so I couldn’t cause any problems for the others. Weren’t those your words?”

He was right. And I hated him for it. “Yes,” was all I said.

“So you failed them or you failed him. Either way, you’re a failure, kiddo.”

“I want to talk about what we do next.”

He was walking around me now. I could hear the chains scraping the surface of the glass.

“And I want to talk about your fears,” he said and his voice sounded like velvet in my ears.

“This doesn’t help us, Lucifer. It doesn’t help us end this nonsense. ”

“Maybe I don’t want to end it. Maybe this is exactly what we need.” He got louder, bolder. Closer. “Does that scare you, Raphael, that you won’t be able to keep it together? Is that why you tremble in the darkness? Because when it’s just you and the Father and all the light and noise is gone, you know you’re going to have to tell him you failed?”

He had me. I understood in that moment how Lucifer could enflame the deepest of emotions. His words touched the very root of me; spoke directly to the futility flexing in my palms. It was out of my hands—I knew that much. Lucifer knew it too. By virtue of the fact that I was there, standing before him while he taunted me, it was out of my hands.

I tried to turn it back on him, “What about your fears? What about what you’re afraid of?”

“I’m scared,” he whispered, “that the Father won’t want me back once I’m finished.” The smile was gone.







GUEST POST
MAKING HEAVEN UNHEAVENLY


Heaven’s not what you think. At least not in my book. And you’re either gonna love it or you’re gonna hate it.

I generally get questions about the world, about the version of Heaven, I built for The Road to Hell. It’s not a world of fluffy clouds and fat babies with harps. It’s not even a grass-covered meadow with wondrous waterfalls and hordes of wildflowers (well, not in the beginning), and there are absolutely, positively no diamonds or golden streets, rainbows or unicorns. My version of Heaven is kind of minimalist, kind of bleak. Kind of blah.

But there’s a reason for it.

This story is Lucifer’s story, it’s told from the very beginning and, as Lucifer says, he was first. There’s nothing in the beginning except him and Father (God) so there’s no reason for a Heaven. Lucifer simply is. It isn’t until he makes some poor choices that we have Heaven at all. His poor choices compound, building on one another and Heaven changes as a result: it grows, it is destroyed, it is remade and expanded. Heaven changes to meet the needs of the angels, whether that is positive or negative. It is a world created and manipulated by their choices.

You have to remember, when Lucifer fell, about a third of the angels fell with him. To me, this is significant. I have always been fascinated by the power of his argument: what can you say that will compel 30% of the population that you are right and God is wrong? How unpalatable can Heaven be that a third of its inhabitants are willing to stage a coup? There has to be something there, just beneath the surface. Heaven can’t be heavenly then, it can’t be this bosom of peace and bliss and worship; it has to be something more raw, more angst-ridden. More disconcerting. It has to be a place where doubt can live, where faith can be challenged, where rebellions can foment.

And it has to make sense.

That’s the other piece. Everything that happens in Heaven happens for a reason. So much so, the Father makes it a point to say, “Everything serves a purpose.” There is a reason behind everything, choices that propel both the story and Heaven forward and ultimately break it apart. Heaven fractures as the angels fracture. There are seven cities named for seven virtues: Truth, Wisdom, Peace, Hope, Faith, Righteousness and Light. These cities experience varying degrees of destruction as the angels destroy those virtues within themselves. Their world actually crumbles as their society crumbles. And It physically breaks apart when angels are cast out.

This is in sharp contrast to our own world. Earth is not shaped by choice; it is given to us as a promise. The Father forges this world then places humanity in it; He built Heaven around the angels and let them shape it.

You know, as an author, there are some magnificent moments where you realize something about your own story you never meant to write. I never saw Heaven itself as a character or even indicative of what was happening in it—it wasn’t until someone asked me about it, about why I made the choices I made, that I really realized its significance.

Thank you so much for having me! I really appreciate it!







AUTHOR BIO



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Christopher C. Starr is the author of The Road to Hell: The Book of Lucifer, the first novel in the Heaven Falls series. These stories examine the God’s relationship with Heaven and Earth, told through the eyes of the angels. The next book in the series, Come Hell or Highwater, is scheduled for late 2012/early 2013.

Chris makes it a point to look at the dark side of his characters, both heroes and villains, and his work explores the “grey”—that place where good and evil come together in all of us.

When he’s not being chased out of churches, Chris enjoys comic books and movies, staying away from cemeteries, and poorly participating in P90X. He lives in Seattle with his wife, two kids (The Boy and the Honey Badger), and his huskies, Rocky the Wonder Dog and his colorful sidekick, Leylah Redd. You can check out his blog at christophercstarr.net.







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