Tag Archives: Reading

FMB Blog Tour: The Haunting at Blackwood Hall

Title: The Haunting at Blackwood Hall

Author: Barrymore Tebbs

Genre: Historical fiction, Paranormal, Thriller, Romance, Suspense, Mystery

Publisher: self-published

Words: approx. 63,000

Purchase: Amazon.com | Barnes and Noble

Book Description

Blackwood Hall is a house shrouded in silence. Nine-year-old Alice Fenn communicates only through her music. Jonathan Fenn and his sister Judith guard a terrifying family secret. The servants refuse to discuss the mysterious disappearance of a former governess. A drawing room séance attempts to make contact with the spirit of Elizabeth Blackwood. And when a diabolic madman holds the residents of Blackwood Hall hostage to an insidious reign of terror, governess Claire Ashby finds herself in a living nightmare of drug addiction, pagan rituals, and murder.

In the tradition of the great Gothic Romances, The Haunting at Blackwood Hall is a thrilling ghost story brimming with bold new twists on the beloved conventions of a bygone era. Continue reading FMB Blog Tour: The Haunting at Blackwood Hall

Guest Post: Kevin Anthony

Today I have with me author Kevin Anthony talking about why he didn’t include vampires or werewolves in his Urban Fantasy series. Mad Moral is the first book and it’s currently free on Smashwords (link below). I admit, I grabbed a copy – the characters look interesting. So, for all you thriller/horror/urban fantasy lovers out there, check this one out!

No Vampires or Werewolves Allowed

The moment I started writing my Urban Fantasy novel Mad Moral I made the decision not to include any vampires or werewolves. I know vampires and werewolves play huge roles in many Urban Fantasy novels and many other genres and that’s the main reason I didn’t want to include them in Mad Moral.

I’m a big fan of vampires and werewolves, but I didn’t want to travel down a road that had been explored so many times. I decided to give a new set of beings time to shine in more humanizing roles, horror movie characters.

I’m aware the word “horror” instantly causes many to lose interest. My novel isn’t a horror, just inspired by the many elements and characters of horror movies. Continue reading Guest Post: Kevin Anthony

FMB Blog Tour: The Mort des Hommes Files

 Link to full tour schedule

 

Book Title: The Mort des Hommes Files

Series: Detecting Magic with Dick Hunter

Author: A. Jarrell Hayes

Genre: Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Paranormal, Humor and Comedy

Publisher: Createspace

Paperback

Pages: 162

Book Description:

“What begins as a routine missing person case for Seattle’s best private investigator, Dick Hunter, turns into a personal vendetta against a cruel murderer. The murderer, Mort des Hommes, happens to be a hell spawn possessing powerful magic. To solve the case, Dick Hunter must join forces with a wacky cast of magic creatures in this wild and fun romp.” Continue reading FMB Blog Tour: The Mort des Hommes Files

New Release: Life Before Death

Check out this new release from author Matt Frend, Life Before Death. Matt is the newest author in the Great Minds Think Aloud community and this is his first book release. Congrats!

Blurb:

There’s something you need to know – there’s more to life than living. A road trip across the wilds of the Northern Territory, Australia, is a spirited ride through late-twentieth century Australian counter culture. Then an event occurs which gives an insight into the other side of life itself, and provides a message. A message which resolves the ultimate unknown – why are we here?

A few words from Matt:

Why write?

Why not play music, make a film or be a game developer. The key for me is imagination. Although music, film and gaming have their own magic, giving people the recipes to make their own imaginary banquets is something special again.

In a sense, characters belong to the reader as well as the writer, much like having acquaintances whose actions of course we have little control over. I like to think I write with respect for the reader in mind. I don’t feel this is in conflict with an artistic commitment to be free of popular or commercial influences; it’s more of a guideline to assist with staying within the bounds of reason or good taste. I sometimes have to rein the fast gallop back to a working trot, listening instead to the reader looking over my shoulder.

When I start reading a novel I feel there’s a bond of trust I’m entering into – an expectation that I’ll be going on a journey with the writer at the helm. So now in return I aspire to meet that expectation when I write.

As a side note to this, Life Before Death had its own motivation for being written. It was more out of loyalty than fulfilling any personal dream. It is a heavily fictionalized memoir, the purpose of which is to deliver the primary message contained in the book.

I make no excuses for the controversial nature of its content. It’s life as it happened. Much like that saying, life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.

One benefit writing a novel has given me is a goal to keep on writing after finding I enjoy it so much. Unlocking the imagination and finding an outlet for it has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my altogether too short life. The bouncy puppy of inspiration must be played with or it will burst.

I highly recommend writing in all its forms to anyone – keeping a diary; jotting down a simple rhyme – even scribbling away with your personal history as I have done. Apart from being a lot of fun it can have a therapeutic effect.

I am very thankful for it.

Bio:

Matt Frend has lived in the cities of Adelaide and Darwin, and assorted country towns in Australia. In addition to extended periods conducting social research while unemployed, he has worked in a variety of areas including racing stables, factories, construction sites and farms, before most recently attending university and becoming a computer programmer.
He regards himself not as a horse lover, but a horse lifer. He has a particular affinity for thoroughbreds, and has been involved with dressage and eventing at the grass roots level.

Other interests have included surfing, cycling, and he is an avid music fan.

Links:

Amazon

Matt Frend’s Blog:  http://bookblogs.ning.com/profile/MattFrend

Matt Frend’s Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/matt.frend

Guest Post: Terry Persun

Today I have a wonderful post about the integrity of writing by Terry Persun, author Cathedral of Dreams. Terry’s most recent book, Cathedral of Dreams was recently named a finalist for ForeWord Magazine‘s Book of the Year Award in the Science Fiction category at the American Library Association Conference. Before I give him the floor, I’ll give you the blurb, but don’t miss out on this guest post – you may learn something!

Blurb:

In Newcity, everyone is content. Bad feelings are not allowed, because your monitoring chip will alert the police to bring you in for treatment. Getting better is mandatory. Unchecked emotions made the world outside Newcity dangerous, unruly, and violent. At least that’s the official story in Newcity.

Keith knows something is wrong. Strange visions lead him to become one of the few who escapes Newcity. He fi nds freedom and companionship outside, but pressure building to revolt against the city’s insidious regime of social control. Leadership is thrust upon him, with only his visions for guidance, only a small band of friends for support—and the fates of both Newcity and the outside world at stake.

Cathedral of Dreams is a compelling tale of a dystopian future and personal heroism

 

Now, here’s Terry with some good words of advice to all you writers out there.

Writing with Integrity

If you’re reading this, you probably know a lot of my story. For instance, I write for a living; have been writing for over thirty years; and hope never to stop. And so when I talk about writing with integrity, I have specific ideas in mind. A fair amount of the writing I do includes the novels I write – at least a thousand words a day when I’m working on a project. My income arrives primarily through my technical and science writing.

Integrity first arrives on the scene while writing technical pieces. Research is important, asking the right questions of the right people is also important. I never believe everything I read on the Internet, for example. I always over-source my pieces through interviews and outside reading. I know to ask an engineer an engineering question, and not believe what a marketing official tells me. I know to ask a competitor what the differences are between products, as well as the employees. Integrity along these lines means that I do everything in my power to find the truth, and when it’s a bit fuzzy, I say so.

When writing fiction or poetry, integrity means something a little different. There are still those facts that can be researched, like what kinds of fish traveled up and down the Susquahanna River in the 1860s, and what types of trees grow in New Mexico. But with fiction, there’s another type of integrity that has to do with the story itself. When you’re writing about a character and they run into a challenge, the author has to know the truth of the character in order to write with integrity. Overly plotted stories can go awry at this point. If the character is supposed to do one thing to feed the plot arc, but the character of the character – as he or she has been written to this point – would do something completely different, then there is a problem.

Stepping into the life of another person, as authors must do in order to write a novel, means following that character wherever they might go, whether you agree with them or not. Too many authors allow their own moral compass to interfere with their characters. Or they “stick to the plot of the story.” Neither of these methods have the right amount of integrity behind them. These turning points are important to the book and the author. Everyone, I believe, knows what integrity feels like. We all have a sense for it. We know when we’re slacking, or adjusting, or giving in. We also know when we’re doing the right thing. I’ve been there. I know. And when I choose to ignore my integrity, my book suffers and I have to do larger rewrites to put it back on track.

My suggestion to people just starting out with their writing careers is to beware of adjusting your integrity just to get to the end of the book. Look at following your character as a way to be surprised by the book. Do what your character tells you to do. You won’t go wrong, and you may learn something new about how you view the world.

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Terry Persun writes in many genres, including historical fiction, mainstream, literary, and science fiction/fantasy. His latest novel, Cathedral of Dreams is a ForeWord magazine Book of the Year finalist in the Science Fiction category. His novel Sweet Song just won a Silver IPPY Award, too. Terry’s website is: www.TerryPersun.com or you can find him on Amazon at: http://amzn.to/gpWf3L

Guest Post: Oleg Medvedkov – Migraine Research Foundation

I know this is the LAST day, but this is a worthy cause, so PLEASE check it out and pass it along.

Funding Research for Migraine Cures through Laughter!

 

Charity Drive for the Migraine Research Foundation.

On the last week of Migraine Awareness Month, I am running a fundraising event for the Migraine Research Foundation.

Dates of the event: Wednesday, June 27th to Sunday, July 1st, 2012.

The Migraine Research Foundation is a nonprofit organization dedicated to funding migraine research in the United States. To quote Stephen Semlitz, co-founder and Chairman of the Board – “The Migraine Research Foundation hopes that everyone who suffers from migraine will eventually have an effective treatment that they can count on to allow them to live a healthy, happy and productive life.” In other words – a Very Worthy Cause. Continue reading Guest Post: Oleg Medvedkov – Migraine Research Foundation

Review: Shield

Shield
Shield by J.C. Andrijeski
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The world is insane in a way. All of us are insane.

Coming to terms with being the Bridge isn’t easy, especially when your husband won’t tell you all the rules – and keeps getting separated from you. As Allie tries to come to terms with both her new role as the Bridge and her feelings for Revik, she also must stop a war – if she can. Amidst all of this tension, the boy appears, claiming Allie belongs to him.

Continuing where Rook left off, the tension between Allie and Revik is hyped up in this book, a factor of how the Seer marriage works. And just as they get together to figure their feelings out, they are ripped apart once again. Allie does manage to learn more about being a Seer and a Bridge – both the “easy” way and the “hard” way. Along the way, Allie discovers the boy, and her world is shaken with her understanding of who he is.

Fast-paced, action-filled, and full of emotional rides, Shield is a worthy sequel to the Allie’s War series. Once again Andrijeski pulls you into the Seer’s world, twists your emotions on edge, and holds you there until the very end, leaving you with a shock strong enough to have you picking up the next book.

View all my reviews

New Release: Knight (Allie’s War #5)

Yeah! It’s here! Release day for the next book in JC Andrijeski’s Allie’s War series! Here’s the scoop:

Blurb:

“I thought the two of you were scary individually. Together, you’re worse. You know that…right? A lot worse, man…”

With several groups of hostile seers hot on their trail, Allie and Revik set up camp in New York, dragging the remnants of their seer alliance with them. Not long after they arrive, Allie coaxes Revik into helping her rob a bank to acquire a mysterious list of names…even as a human-killing virus strikes in San Francisco, and a lot of the people Allie cares about start to disappear. Fielding off attacks by the Lao Hu and the mysterious Shadow out of Argentina, Allie and Revik have to make impossible choices as they learn how to work together again. Before they can decide what to do, tragedy strikes their group, and they are forced to admit they might be outmatched.

Meanwhile, Allie’s brother, Jon, seems to be going through some pretty strange changes of his own, including being stuck in an odd partnering with Wreg, the ex-captain of the rebels, as he tries to find the humans on the list who are believed to be important in the coming Displacement. When Allie finds out she’s being stalked by the lead infiltrator of the Lao Hu, she has to decide whether to risk everything to save the people she loves in San Francisco, or go to war with  the enigmatic Shadow, who seems to want to bring the end of the world on his own terms, and doesn’t care how many humans he has to kill to do it…

Links:

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Knight-Allies-Book-Five-ebook/dp/B008FKV59M/
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/176844
Omnilit: http://www.omnilit.com/product-knightallie039swarbookfive-851709-140.html
Drivethru Fiction:
http://www.drivethrufiction.com/product/103479/Knight%3A-Allie%27s-War%2C-Book-Five

If you haven’t started this series yet, check out my review of Rook (Book 1). I’ll have the other books read and reviewed soon so I can find out what happens to Allie and Revik in this book!

Related:

Guest Post: JC Andrijeski