Let’s help Laura Lee’s Indentity Theft to be published

INTERVIEW

A bored employee in a rock star’s office begins an online relationship with a fan in the guise of his boss and sets off a chain of events he cannot control.

Indentity Theft by Laura Lee

Laura Lee is the author of 15 books with such publishers as Harper Collins, Reader’s Digest, Lyons Press and Running Press. Laura Lee is an amazing writer, best known for humorous reference such as The Pocket Encyclopedia of Aggravation, which sold 85,000 copies for Black Dog and Leventhal. Her first novel was Angel published by Itineris Press. The San Francisco Chronicle has said of her work: “Lee’s dry, humorous tone makes her a charming companion… She has a penchant for wordplay that is irresistible.”

Today we have the priviledge to host her on our blog and we have a lot of questions to ask her, such as her Pubslush campaign for Indentity Theft, her upcoming contemporary, fiction novel.

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  • Well, Laura Lee who exactly are you?

 “Who am I? That is an interesting question considering the theme of the novel. (Identity and loss of identity.) Americans tend to answer this question by reciting their resumes. I am a full-time writer and the author of about 15 books. Most of them traditionally published. I was raised in suburban America but moved quite a bit. I spent my junior high school years in Bowling Green, Ohio, which is a bit of a small town when you take the university out of the equation. The essence of who I am may be an introverted person who likes to observe and reflect on human nature. I automatically reflect on things verbally. I don’t know whether that is nature, nuture, or habit.”

  • How did you decide to pursue a writing career?

“I came to it by default. I studied theater, but never had any success at that. Then I pursued a career in radio. I did that for three or four years before I burned out. I had already started doing some writing on the side when I worked in radio. It was clear I had an aptitude because whenever I would write something I would get this great feedback. After a brief period working in Borders Books and Music, I moved to New York and got a journalism job with no formal background on the strength of clips. It is a shame there are not more of these jobs around because working for a newspaper and having to produce copy every day is a great practice. It hones your skills. You can’t sit around waiting for the muse, you just have to get to work.”

  • Was getting published hard?

 “I had the great advantage that my father was a writer. He pushed me. I mentioned to him in passing that I had an idea for a book, and he would not let up on me until I had created a proposal and sent it out to publishers. My first book proposal was accepted within a month. So I had the advantage of an in-house mentor to show me how to do proposals and queries and how to research markets. Whenever I did, initially, doors opened fairly easily. I was lucky. From 1999-2001 I put out five books with increasingly large advances. The last in that run, The Pocket Encyclopedia of Aggravation sold 85,000 copies. This all set me up with unrealistic expectations, I fear. I expected things to continue at that pace and to be as easy.”

  • Are your characters based on people you know?

“No. I never write fiction that is autobiographical. My earliest attempts at fiction were fairly autobiographical. They were also terrible. I find that I need distance from my subject to make it into a story. There are things, here and there, that are drawn from my life but they are combined in ways that make them different. By the time I’ve finished a novel, even the things that are the most autobiographical stop seeming like my life story and they become part of the fiction.”

  • What genre are your books?

Identity Theft, if it is funded, will be my second novel. I have a hard time assigning a genre to either of my novels. Angel is literary fiction. Identity Theft is contemporary fiction with some humor.”

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  • Which of your books is your favorite?“I always like the one I am working on the best. Right now Identity Theft is my favorite. I would really like to share it with people so I hope your readers will look at the Pubslush page and consider ordering the book. The pre-orders will allow me to produce it to professional quality. With this crowdfunding platform, only projects that reach their goals are funded. It is hard to get people excited about a book in a short period of time and to get them to act and buy the book. It is especially hard with a book that doesn’t exist yet. I’ve put a sample chapter on the web page and a synopsis. I hope that my enthusiasm for the characters will rub off and people will take a chance on it.”
  • Do you have a specific writing routine?

“It is different depending on whether I am writing non-fiction or fiction. With the fiction, what tends to happen is that I have an idea and I work at it in fits and stabs. I will write a bit and then find that it is not working, and I’ll set it aside and work on other things. Then at some point something will bring the idea back and I will work on it again. I may finish it, or I may get stuck again. Every time I start and set it aside, I come back to it with a new perspective. So the story grows and evolves. It is a process of layering. I never write from beginning to end. I write scenes, and then when I have a certain number of them, I string them together and look at what is missing and what needs to be added or subtracted.”

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  • What are your current projects?

“The audio version of my first novel Angel should be coming out this week or next. I am pleased with it. My main focus is Identity Theft. It is a novel I have been working on for 15 years or so. I think it has the suspense, intrigue, depth and humor that I want to put out there. I have gotten excellent feedback from those who have read it so far, and it would be a shame to keep it under wraps. I need votes of confidence from readers to make it a reality. I hope you will visit the Pubslush page and consider backing it. The funding level is the cost of the book, so it is essentially an advance order.”

This is Laura Lee, an amazing young lady and a fantastic author. You can check this out yourselves, just visit https://pubslush.com/project/3991 and read excerpts from her upcoming novel, Indentity Theft.

Here is a snippet:

Spider Under Glass Ethan Penn’s desk was right under the gold record. It hung a bit crooked, no matter how many times he tried to adjust it. He had some ideas about blue tack, it worked on his posters at home, but he never got around to bringing the stuff in. More annoying was the spider. At some point it had crawled under the glass and died. It had been there, preserved in the golden grooves since Ethan had gotten his job, about four months before. He looked at the dead bug every day.

What do you think? We say “Let’s help Laura Lee get this book published!”

A.J. Reid knows how it is to live in A Smaller Hell

INTERVIEW

He’s been a barman, a floor mopper, warehouse hand, a personal trainer for LFC players, high-ranking CID, gangsters, venture capitalists, security firms etc.

He’s a published musician/composer and a department store lackey, whence he drew inspiration for A Smaller Hell.

He’s 35 years old and he lives on a peninsula between the Mersey, the Dee and the Irish Sea in the Northwest of England.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you A.J. Reid…

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– How did you decide to pursue a writing career? 

Up until I left school, I received a great deal of attention from teachers – and the odd child psychologist – for my writing.  I won all sorts of prizes and even landed a spot at a posh school that no-one thought I would get into.  I struggled by with maths and science, various child prodigies knocking my confidence on a daily basis.  When I think back to how brilliant some of those guys were, it was a privilege to be at school with them, but they also served to convince me that my real strength was writing.  I became a reporter for The Early Times and the Young Independent, but found that I was a lot less enthusiastic about writing fact as opposed to fiction.  I chose both English Language and English Literature as two of my five A Levels, gaining an A grade in each, then went to interview at both St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge, and UEA in Norwich.  The second Cambridge interview didn’t go so well, but UEA offered me an unconditional place on the M.A. course, studying writing under the Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion.  I look at it now and think what an opportunity I passed up, but I was in love at the time, and decided to put Liverpool University as my first choice, as my girlfriend did.  Unfortunately, she didn’t get the grades and ended up going to Hull, while I still went on to Liverpool, but I travelled to and from Hull for three years to stay with her.  There was something of a catastrophic event during those three years which did the relationship no favours: we were both victims of a very serious violent crime which made the front page of the local papers etc.  I became somewhat manic through chronic insomnia (I still sleep with a knife and a bat under my pillow).  I didn’t want to know about victim support or criminal compensation, refusing both.  I was going out drinking and getting into fights constantly.  I left university and suddenly all of my friends stopped answering my calls.  After about 18 months, it occurred to me that instead of reclaiming masculinity by going out and getting into fights, that I might do so by returning to serious writing.  However, I found it hard to change my ways overnight, and I ended up fighting with the police on one occasion (inspiring A Smaller Hell’s opening chapter), landing me in quite serious trouble.  I was handed a suspended sentence on the condition that I attend counselling for PTSD, which I had refused thus far.  This led me to begin the outlines for The Horseman’s Dream, which will be published next year, hopefully.  I suppose that the short answer to your question would be that I didn’t have any say in being a writer: it’s just always been something that I’ve done for as long as I can remember, and that it makes me feel very peaceful and free.

– Was getting published hard? 

Being self-published, it wasn’t hard at all: this is both the glory and the horror of the digital revolution!

Are your characters based on people you know? 

They are composites, usually.  Indicators of personality traits are of great interest to me: the peculiar and idiosyncratic things, you know?  I keep a very keen eye out for these at all times.

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– What genre are your books? 

I hate the concept of genre.  Hate it.  I know that’s a massive cliché for authors, but it really is counter-productive.  I think it’s a menace to creativity, and to the imagination.  A Smaller Hell is most definitely rooted in the Gothic tradition, but I can’t market it that way.  I think that darkly-comic Gothic Modern Fantasy Thriller just about covers it.  The next project – The Horseman’s Dream – will be an Existential Science Fiction trilogy which will actually shift genre to full blown Fantasy for the final book.  That’s how I feel about genre: I want to be an eel in its grip, wriggle free and bite its fingers off.

I probably won’t be talking so tough when sales drop off, though.

– Which of your books is your favourite? 

Whichever I’m working on at the time.

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– Do you have a specific writing routine? 

Mandheling Sumatra in the cafetiere, pine in the fire if it’s winter, at least 1000 words a day.  If I’m writing away from home, I need only earphones to make it happen.  I have a music playlist for writing that includes a lot of Mozart, Ennio Morricone, Craig Armstrong, Satie, Howard Shore, Vangelis and even some video game soundtrack composers who are just as good as the composers working in film.  I got myself a tablet this year, too.  Being able to carry around all my notes and ideas without risk of losing them is like some kind of dream for me, so that has changed my routine, as now there is potential for me to sit down and write anywhere, anytime.

– What are your current projects? 

The Horseman’s Dream, as previously mentioned, is the priority.  I also have 20k words on a smuggling idea, a dark comedy about a serial killer, a book of poetry, and a survival thriller about civil war in the UK on the back burners at the moment.

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– What’s next for you?

I’m learning all the time.  Being an independent author, it has taken me a while to learn how to market a book.  A Smaller Hell has done well so far, but I would still like to see it do more.  I think that there is enough demand now for a short run of hardbacks, so that and a few book signings will happen in 2015.  A small theatre company had it shortlisted for a production, but that never transpired.  For a while there, it was a real thrill to imagine seeing it brought to life by a dramatic crew, so that’s something I am still hoping will happen one day.  I have recently had the privilege of interacting with various artists and authors whom I admire, and taking advice and learning from them, so I am planning to put all that into practise when writing The Horseman’s Dream.  My goal is really to create the best book I possibly can – the book that I have always dreamt of reading myself – and then see what happens.  I know that I am setting myself up for something of a commercial fall, but I think that to write this story any other way would be somewhat dishonest.  I don’t want to cheat my readers: I want to thrill them, move them and lift their spirits beyond the confines of whatever hell they might feel trapped within, as so many wonderful authors have done for me.  I think that you can only do that if you’re being truthful.

 Author Bio:

Caveman, heavy build, big beard, 35 years old with GSOH seeks open-minded readers for symbiotic relationship. Must have own transport and be willing to travel long distances through their Imagination. Interests include boxing, heavy/psychedelic blues/soul/rock (Curtis Mayfield, Pink Floyd etc.), Absurdism, Surrealism, fishing, kissing, cigar-smoking, laughing, fires on the beach, animals, teaching, debating, films (David Lynch, Terry Gilliam, Peter Mullan, Mike Leigh etc.) and cooking. Seeking readers with a healthy disdain for and distrust of the daily doo-doo banquet served up by the mainstream.
Big fan of all imaginative writing, but JG Ballard, Franz Kafka, TS Eliot, Martin Amis, Will Self, Aldous Huxley, HG Wells and William S Burroughs are some of my favourites.

Buy Links:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Smaller-Hell-J-Reid-ebook/dp/B00A4HPX5Q/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1412960038&sr=8-1&keywords=dark+romance

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22838294-a-smaller-hell

Meet the author:

https://twitter.com/A_J_Reid

https://www.facebook.com/asmallerhell

http://uk.pinterest.com/asmallerhell/

Case File 13: Curse of the Mummy’s Uncle by J. Scott Savage

COVER REVEAL

The cover that the Whitney award finalist, Author J. Scott Savage revealed to us on Tuesday was amazing, right? (Click here if you didn’t get to see it!) Well, today we have cover to share with you from his other amazing YA series, Case File 13.

First, for those of you who didn’t get to see his author bio on Tuesday, lets help you guys get to know the man behind the amazing books real quick!

Author Bio:

J. Scott Savage has returned after being lost in a Mexican rain forest.

His office is now filled with Mayan scrolls, hieroglyphics, artifacts,

and star charts. His children and children-in-law, Big Nick, Erica,

Scott, Natalie, Jake, and Little Nick, look pale, and claim to be

cursed. His grandchildren, Gray, Lizzie, and Jack, are heavily wrapped

in mummy-like bandages. And his wife, Jennifer, has reportedly been seen

glowing green and hexing the neighbors.

You can visit him on his blog jscottsavage.blogspot.com or on Twitter @jscottsavage.

Praise for Case File 13 Zombie Kid (Book 1 in the series):

An Amazon Best Book of the Month

A Whitney Award Finalist

“Sure to please young readers looking for a thrill. It’s

hard to imagine that readers (particularly boys) won’t enjoy every minute of

hair-raising fun.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review.

“With its mix of creepy chills and laugh-out-loud humor,

Zombie Kid is the perfect book. Nick and his friends are my new favorite

people.” —James Dashner, New York Times bestselling author of The Maze.

Now about the book that this absolutely AMAZING cover is for! Here is the back cover blurb:

BEWARE! This is not your ordinary back-cover blurb!

(It may cause uncontrollable giggles and/or out right laughter.)

You hold in your hands a very sinister story.

I have searched every nook and cranny to compile the

evidence in Case File 13. Now, in this book, you will find the next eerie

installment in the adventures of Nick, Carter, and Angelo, three

monster-obsessed boys whose harmless trip to Mexico turned into something so

horrendous, so revolting—

Wait a second, Mr. B! You’re making this whole thing sound

way scarier than it really was. Maybe dial it back a notch?

But Nick, it is that scary. In this volume alone there are

haunted pyramids, alien artifacts, and even a mummy with a terrible curse.

True, but there’s also the part with the hidden treasure,

and the time when Carter used his knitting needles to—

Yes, all right, you win. Now if you’ll excuse me…

You hold in your hands a very sinister, VERY SILLY story,

following the WACKY adventures of three boys whose expedition to Mexico turned

into something OUT OF THIS WORLD. This is the fourth volume. Read on if you

dare…

Totally hilarious right?!?!?

You should be totally eager to take a peak at this cover now.

Are you READY?????

BAM!

Amazing cover, right? Leave your comments for the author below!!!

 

Veronica McDonald knows how to Find Love After Loss

INTERVIEW

Veronica McDonald is a Registered Nurse Executive Leader by trade, and author of Left to Love: Finding Love After Loss.

She is a Certified Life & Business coach and is the owner of PowherUP Coaching.

She is the proud owner of Imagine Me Girls Club which is a mentoring program for youth girls ages 8 to 18.

Veronica is also a dynamic motivational speaker and understands clearly that there are no limits to what we can do in this life.

She’s an amazing woman and we are very glad we had the chance to chat with her about her great achievements.

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– Veronica, how did you decide to pursue a writing career?

“I had a very strong urge to tell my story. I wanted to use my pain to heal someone else’s and show them that they too can make it through.”

– Was getting published hard?

“Trying to use traditional publishing was quite challenging, costly and cumbersome. I connected with an individual who had similar experiences and decided to self-publish to get his story out and gave me the knowledge to do the same.”

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– Are your characters based on people you know?

“Yes, they are. Left to Love: Finding Love After Loss describes my personal journey.

– What genre is your books?

“My book is a Self-Help / Personal Growth / Self-Esteem. This is my first published book.”

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– Do you have a specific writing routine?

“Anytime is a good time to write. I typically write when I’m happy and sad alike. It’s a form of release for me. I had no idea that I would be a writer or publish a book.”

-What are your current projects?

“I have completed a companion journal that has been sent for editing/proofing. I have an e-book titled Power 2 Manifest: 7 Steps to Manifest the Life You Shout About and Your Dream Life Now-How to Unlock Your Potential and Live a Life of Passion.”

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– What’s next for you?

“There are no limits for me. I am looking forward to new speaking opportunities, Hosting a Life Changing Women’s Conference, Helping others Unleash their full Potential and writing more books.”

Veronica McDonald

http://www.power2manifest.com/

Wade O’Tàilliùir holds the key of financial freedom and he shares it with you

INTERVIEW

Wade O’Tàilliùir had a day job and he was working away nicely. It was until financial crisis affected global economy and he found himself “in between jobs”. All of sudden, in September 2013, he embarked on a new career. Now, 12 months later, he is a successful author and online entrepreneur, living the dotcom lifestyle, sailing in Australia, Thailand, France, UK, and Ireland and diving the Red Sea in Egypt.

We asked him to reveal the secret to his success and he gladly accepted. We found out he doesn’t want to keep the key to success for himself and that’s why all his eBooks are completely FREE to download.

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“My life story is similar to many subscribers on the www.6cima.com emailing list” he says.

And he continues: “Perhaps you may also resonate with this. Working away nicely, no hassle, then the global financial crisis (GFC) suddenly and unexpectedly raises its ugly head. Like many other countries, Ireland suffered an economic downturn, with the construction industry and related services being severely hit. I managed to survive until October 2012 then wham! … I was officially “in between jobs” (I don’t like to use the term “unemployed” – that’s just me, always positive in my “glass-is-half-full” approach to life).

All of a sudden it is September 2013 and I am verging on an entire year “in between jobs”. I had constantly been searching for new opportunities … new positions, return to study, undertake internships, start my own business, purchase a franchise, etc. Eventually, after extensive research I embarked on my new career as an Author and Online Entrepreneur in the internet marketing niche.

I was a complete newbie at the coal face of internet marketing, with no previous experience whatsoever and very, no … make that extremely, limited IT skills (Hey, I wasn’t even on Facebook … never mind Twitter!).

Now, barely 12 months later, my business is expanding at break-neck speed and I am finally looking to trade-up and purchase my dream yacht.

My LinkedIn profile states:

“Author & Online Entrepreneur @ http://www.6cima.com – helping others to make money online & obtain financial freedom!”

I live the dotcom lifestyle, sailing in Australia, Thailand, France, UK, Ireland and diving the Red Sea in Egypt. Being able to work from anywhere in the world (well, anywhere that has reliable internet access) is a huge perk of the industry.

Soon I will have my new Mercedes Benz car (for more about the Merc program and how you also can get one, just click on the banner ad on the 6CIMA website homepage). Now, a lot of people here in Ireland have nice cars but the difference is I won’t paying for mine. It will be given to me for FREE and in my new eBook (it is absolutely FREE for you to subscribe and receive a copy) I will show you how you can get your own FREE Merc.

Available now at: http://www.6cima.com/ebook-2/

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  • Was getting published hard?

“I deliberately make all my eBooks completely FREE to download. My first eBook, “4 Ways to Make Money Online” has been downloaded in various countries and has helped numerous people to make money online. My new eBook is even better, so please take the time to read it, digest all the info, and most importantly → take action.”

Download now at: http://www.6cima.com/ebook-2/

  • What genre is your book?

“My niche is Internet Marketing. So, if you are unemployed and looking for a job, in a job but seeking a new job, wanting a career change, want to start you own business, dreaming of being your own boss, want to start living the dotcom lifestyle … then read my new eBook and connect with me (details inside eBook).

My first eBook, “4 Ways to Make Money Online” was hugely popular. Now, my new eBook titled “How to Use the Internet to Obtain Financial Freedom”

(+ bonus offer inside eBook) contains the exact techniques that yours truly, unemployed for almost a year, with no experience, used to start an online business, working from home and went from nothing to more than $10,000 per month in less than 12 months!

The eBook can be downloaded or FREE here: http://www.6cima.com/ebook-2/

This eBook contains:

  • The secret to making a 5-figure monthly income on the internet.
  • The 3 online business models that can make you wealthy & how you can use them today.
  • The secrets to obtaining financial freedom & living the dotcom
  • How you can work from almost anywhere in the world.

Below are some reviews of “How to Use the Internet to Obtain Financial Freedom” eBook:

This is not your typical “get-rich-quick” book. Wade O’Táilliúir really gives you three practical models to make money on the Internet which in my mind are completely doable and realistic. Everything is spelled out in plain & simple to understand context so there are no excuses other than failing to apply yourself. If you are looking for extra income or alternative ways to make money, then I highly recommend you read this book! – Anna.

A very clearly written and concise guide to making money using the Internet as your marketing tool. If you are looking to start an online business, this is a great place to start, Check it out! – Kevin Lintner.

A nice straight to the point guide for anyone looking into making Internet his primary source of income. If you have no idea where to get all the info you need, you’ll find everything in this little concise book. The writing is very direct and the graphics are awesome. Highly recommended. – Christopher Silvestri.

Thank you! This is just the book I’ve been looking for. It’s nice to see that someone has taken the time to clearly explain internet marketing principles in a clear and concise manner. It’s also the perfect book for anyone, like myself, who is thinking of starting their own online business and/or working from home! – Mary Jane.

Get a samble for free:

Internet_Financial_Freedom

  • What’s next for you?

“Keep enjoying what I am doing … and to help as many people as possible to get out of the “rat race” and escape their “dead-end” jobs. Take action today!

Download eBook now at: http://www.6cima.com/ebook-2/
Best wishes for a successful future. “

Fire Keep by J. Scott Savage

COVER REVEAL

Today we are super excited to feature the amazing Author J. Scott Savage. BEFORE we show you his AMAZING new cover, let’s get to know the man behind the book a little!

 

Author Bio:

J. Scott Savage has returned after being lost in a Mexican rain forest. His office is now filled with Mayan scrolls, hieroglyphics, artefacts, and star charts. His children and children-in-law, Big Nick, Erica, Scott, Natalie, Jake, and Little Nick, look pale, and claim to be cursed. His grandchildren, Gray, Lizzie, and Jack, are heavily wrapped in mummy-like bandages. And his wife, Jennifer, has reportedly been seen glowing green and hexing the neighbours.

You can visit him on his blog jscottsavage.blogspot.com or on Twitter @jscottsavage.

Now for a little bit about this, the 4th book in the Far World Series.

Back cover blurb for Fire Keep:

With no word from Kyja, the people of Farworld are

beginning to face the possibility that she is truly dead, and the quest

to save Farworld and Earth has failed. In an effort to find a way to

bring Kyja back, Marcus goes on a quest that lands him in the most

dangerous place possible–the realm of shadows.

Meanwhile,

Kyja wakes up in a world of lost souls and memories. With no idea who

she is, she wanders Fire Keep, home to the most quick tempered of the

elementals. the other spirits around her have given up hope. But Kyja is

driven by a strong sense that something is wrong and getting worse.

To

recover her memories, she must face a literal trial by fire. Can Marcus

survive the realm of shadows to reach Kyja? Can Kyja survive Fire Keep

in time to regain her memory? Time is running out for Kyja, Marcus, and

their worlds–and the Dark Circle’s real plan is only now beginning to

be revealed.

So, do you think you are ready for the awesomeness that is this cover?

 

I’m not sure you are ready…

 

Are you sure you can handle this?

TA-DA!!!!

 

Here it is!!!!! Leave your comments below for the author!

But WAIT! There is more! This isn’t the only cover reveal Author J. Scott Savage is sharing with us this week! On Thursday, the cover for The Curse of the Mummy’s Uncle, Book 4 of the Case File 13 series is going to be revealed!!!!

Here is the FB event page so you can stay tuned: https://www.facebook.com/events/291102321088972/

We aren’t done YET!!!!! In honor of the double reveals for this week, J. Scott Savage has been generous enough to giveaway some prizes too! So be sure to get your name into the Rafflecopter, too!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

This is a list of all the blogs that will be helping us to promote this super AMAZING cover! Show your support for J. Scott Savage by check them out too!

 

The Unknown Elf by Karlie Lucas

COVER REVEAL
Today we are pleased to welcome Author Karlie Lucas to our blog!!!

She is revealing the cover of her soon to be released book The Unknown Elf!

Author Bio:

Karlie Lucas is a preschool teacher

by day and a writer/artist by night. A graduate of Southern Utah      University,

Karlie received a B.A. in Creative Writing, with a minor in art. She is a

member of Sigma Tau Delta, The International English Honor Society, as well as

ANWA, the American Night Writers Association.

Karlie is interested in all things

magical and mysterious, especially elves and dragons. She is an avid fan of

J.R.R. Tolkien and J.K. Rowling.

When not writing, Karlie can often

be found drawing, baking, watching her favorite old school shows, or just

spending time with her family. She currently resides in Dallas, Texas with her

husband and a cat named Kally.

Get in touch with Karlie by visiting:

 Twitter: @karliemlucas

Link to Pre-order your copy:

Amazon:

Back Cover Blurb:

Marie never expected to wake up in

North Pole City, let alone become Santa’s Emergency Replacement. It was a job

she never wanted but couldn’t turn down, thanks to Clarence, Santa’s right hand

man.

Now, Marie has to work with

Clarence, who believes she is some kind of criminal who will cause the

destruction of everything he holds dear. Trying to prove that he’s wrong, Marie

keeps making mistakes that push them even further apart. It doesn’t help that

she has a past she’d rather keep hidden. However, trying to keep her past where

it should belong isn’t easy.

Just when Marie starts to feel like

things are coming together, a madman with a bone to pick, and Christmas to

ruin, threatens the whole of the North Pole Organization.

Marie must rely on Clarence and her

new friends to help her face her past before Christmas is gone forever. But

does she have the courage to truly be herself when it could mean losing

everything?

Do you think you are ready to see the cover?

Are you sure?

Here you go!!!!

So what do you think?

Show your support for Karlie Lucas by commenting below!

Cover Reveal Blog List:

Truth is relative by JJ Lyon

REVIEW

Truth is Relative flat

Unfortunately I wasn’t thrilled about this book. I didn’t find it interesting enough and I didn’t like the writing style. In my humble opinion the author had the ambition to give us a cross-genre novel with several stories within the main story but the final result is not successfully balanced. Descriptions are better written than dialogues, which I didn’t find witty enough. I wish the author better luck next time.

Lady Reader’s Blog Tours presents another exciting week long tour! Just in time to read in front of the fire with a cup of cocoa or your favorite hot beverage, J. J. Lyon’s fun private investigator mystery, with a twist, TRUTH is REALTIVE; the first in the A Truth Inducer Mystery series is here. A giveaway, great posts, reviews and best of all? Fun!

 

TRUTH IS RELATIVE 
By
: J.J. Lyon 
Pages
: 275 
Publisher
: Gem Cache Publishing 
Genre
: Who Dunit-Mystery PI – (Fiction/Mystery)

Anthony Blackwell’s “gift” compels people to confess their deepest secrets.
It corrupts his relationships, derails his career and drives him toward eviction—until he becomes Anthony Bishop, private investigator.
His first case drops him into a deadly family drama that will save him financially, if it doesn’t kill him first.


Who can resist a great first line: “The Monday before Thanksgiving, my car disappeared…

 
From
the readers:
“I love the premise of
this book, it’s like PI Morrow meets Liar Liar.”
“This book reminded me of the stone movies Tom Selleck was in. It
has the rough feeling of the west but is written smoothly so that it’s hard to
stop reading. I’m hoping there is/will be more.
 Stefanie Andersen  Logan, UT 
“A very interesting and innovative
plot.” Billie H – Lamesa, TX



From
the author:

The world didn’t have enough
mysteries with a sense of humor, so I wrote one. 
From
other authors:
“What a fun, great read! I
loved the characters and the concept was one I’d never heard of. Reading was an
absolute pleasure.”
–Rebecca Belliston, author of Sadie and
Augustina 

“Even though Anthony’s
“gift” makes him an effective detective, it is almost impossible for
him to establish meaningful relationships. Anthony finds himself in situations
fraught with danger, but tinged with humor. His charm and good looks draw
people to him, but they quickly regret revealing their darkest secrets. I found
myself laughing out loud and reading to find out what happens next. It’s easy
to get caught up in the fresh and intriguing story. Lyon has so much
imagination and skillful writing, I look forward to reading whatever she comes
up with next.” 
 
–Carole Warburton, author of A Question
of Trust and Poaching Daisies 
 

Amazon | Goodreads 

Chapter One – Truth is Relativeby J. J. Lyon
The Monday before Thanksgiving, my car disappeared. Or it might have been
late
 Sunday night. The day was half over before I even looked outside.
Instead I focused on an ugly painting until I realized I was hungry. I was out
of bread and low on groceries in general. I cleaned my brushes, grabbed my
keys, opened the front door, and stared at gray asphalt where my Mazda used to
be. A few dead cottonwood leaves swirled there before the wind swept them off.
 
I didn’t bother calling the police. My car hadn’t been stolen,
it had been repossessed. 
 
My cell phone buzzed. It was my brother, Bart. “Hey,” I said.
“Hey, Bro. How’s life in the Big City?” Bart wasn’t being
ironic. Compared to our hometown of Jersey, Cheyenne was enormous.
“It’s good!” I stepped back into Sam’s Café and tried to think
of something else to say. Something that would back up my lie.
“Great. When are you coming for Thanksgiving?” Bart asked.
 
My brain scrambled, too busy to pay attention. I didn’t need a
car. The abandoned café was a great studio, with north-facing windows and
indirect natural light. My work happened right at home.
 
My work was also stacked against the walls, waiting for a
gallery to accept it. The art that was already in a gallery had hung there for
months. I needed a day job. A car would help.
“Tony? Hello?”
“Huh?”
“What about Thanksgiving?”
“I don’t know yet.”
“Whaddaya mean? I thought you were your own boss.”
“Yeah, but I’m pretty …” I glanced out at the empty parking
place. “It’s hard to get away right now.”
Bart was quiet, and when he spoke again he sounded unusually
hesitant. “So how are you really?”
“Fine. I’m doing great.”
“Yeah, okay. You know what you need? A night out.”
“No, I don’t.”
“Yes, you do. I can tell you’re depressed.”
“I’m not depressed.”
“C’mon, Tony. Think of everything we could learn about the
beautiful women of Cheyenne.” Bart could afford to be fascinated by my new
ability. He didn’t have to live with it.
“I’ve got to go get some groceries,” I said.
“Fine.” Bart sounded annoyed, but he didn’t argue. “Fine, I’ll
talk to you later.”
 
I turned away from the café window and walked to my bedroom,
which was actually a converted storage area in the back of the café. A walk-in
cooler had once taken up most of the space, but it had been ripped out and sold
the last time the place went out of business. There was room for a twin bed and
a battered dresser from Goodwill Industries. I pulled my wallet from the top
drawer and retrieved my old bike from the back of the building.
 
It was a cold ride to the store. Cheyenne’s legendary wind
pushed against my side and cut across my hands. I’d forgotten my gloves. I
zipped my jacket all the way up, stuffed my hands in my pockets, and kept
pedaling, glad I had at least one useful talent. God gave me excellent balance.
 
My mind whirled as fast as my bike wheels, tallying my other
useful abilities. I was decent at hanging Sheetrock, and I could tape and
texture as long as the customer didn’t mind it a little antique and heavy. As
for roofs, I’d done it all—patch, replace, steel, asphalt. If I had a truck I
could rent myself out as a handyman. I could work in blissful isolation most of
the time.
A gust of wind broadsided me. I went down in slow motion,
shifted my weight, scuffed on the pavement with my feet. In the end my shoulder
hit the road before I could pull my hands out of my pockets. The car behind me
screeched to a stop and a woman got out. “Are you all right?” she asked.
 
“Fine,” I said. The front bike wheel spun uselessly. My arm
hurt. I scrambled out from under the bike, trying to place the woman’s voice.
“Anthony?”
Recognition registered in my gut as much as my ears. I knew that
voice. The last time I had heard it, its tone had been much angrier. “Hi,
Heather,” I said.
“What are you doing out here in the cold on a bike? I heard you
drove a hot Mazda.”
“Not today,” I said.
“I heard you got fired, too. Twice.”
Technically I only got fired once. The other time I quit before
the ax fell.
 
Heather wasn’t in my fan club, but she wasn’t being rude,
either. She was just under my influence. After thirty seconds in close
proximity, people began confessing to me. I didn’t know why this began
happening. For the first year or so, I didn’t realize it was happening at all.
But as soon as my “gift” began manifesting itself, my life started rolling down
a rocky slope.
 
“I almost drove by when you fell.” She brushed dirt from my
sleeve. “I knew it was you and I don’t want to talk to you, but it looked bad.”
“It’s all right.” I stepped away from her brushing hand.
She didn’t leave. “Can I give you a ride? Please say no. I don’t
want to be in a car alone with you, pretending I don’t remember how you—”
“No thanks.” I gripped the handlebars and pressed my weight on
them a little. 
She nodded. “You wouldn’t accept help from me anyway. Bart,
maybe, but not me.”
“I don’t need it. I’ll see you later, okay?”
“Okay.”
 
I rode the rest of the way to Safeway with my hands on the
handlebars. My fingers numbed in the wind. The pain in my arm faded to a dull
ache, and I shook off the encounter with my ex. In the store parking lot, the
lights shone in the murky daylight. It was early afternoon, but the thick
clouds fooled the light sensors into thinking it was dusk. I went inside the
store and found some sandwich meat on sale and a package of rubbery cheese
slices. I picked up some day-old wheat bread and waited in line behind a thin,
fortyish man with a few days’ beard. He wore dirty jeans and a sweatshirt
stained with what looked like motor oil. After thirty seconds, he turned to me.
 
“My wife left me this morning,” he said.
I nodded. If I didn’t acknowledge him, he would only repeat
himself. Louder.
“She put her ring in my hand and said, ‘I’ve got to go to work.’
I said, ‘Can we talk about this?’ and she said, ‘It’s too late.’”
I nodded again.
“How can it be too late? Twelve years, and she can’t even talk
about it? Isn’t twelve years worth a little discussion before you throw your
husband in the garbage?”
“Yeah,” I said.
“I know I didn’t pay attention before. I mean, when she was
going around all mopey and resentful. I just figured she’d work it out. And
sometimes she tried to tell me something and I’d change the subject, ’cause I
could only hear that her life sucked so many times—”
“They’re ready to ring you up,” I said, nodding to the sales
clerk.
 
The man stepped forward. I stepped back. So far, ten feet looked
like the magic distance. More than that, and most people were out of the range
of my gift. Less than that and I was in the confessor’s bubble.
 
“Are you in line?” a young mother asked behind me.
“Yeah. I’m just, uh …” I glanced at the man, who was now deep
into an emotional conversation with the salesclerk. Apparently I wasn’t far
enough away yet. I took another step back. “That guy needs a little space.”
 
The mother peered at him. “Is he crying?”
“I think so.”
She shrugged. “It figures. I get it all day from these two.” She
nodded to her cart. A baby in the front clung to the push bar and gummed it
with a slobbery mouth. A curly-haired toddler sat in the main basket, his fist
buried in a box of cereal. “Maybe they never get over it. ‘I need this,’ ‘I
want that.’”
I nodded.
 
“And then their dad comes home and he needs dinner and he wants
sex. Everybody’s gotta have something.”
I took a step forward.
“Can’t anybody see that I’m tired? Look at me. I haven’t had a
shower in three days, and I’m supposed to be a sex goddess?”
I glanced at her. She was frumpy. “Looks like it’s my turn.” I
stepped up to the counter the crying man had just left.
She followed me, closing the space I had opened between us. “I
mean, I’m doing good to be conscious at the end of the day.”
“Maybe you should tell this to your mom.” I hoped to deflect her.
I didn’t want to hear any more—not today.
 
“She’s in Alabama,” the young mother said. “Everybody I know has
a mom who acts like a built-in babysitter, but I’m stuck here alone in the
cold.”
“Ten fifty-four,” the salesclerk said in front of me. I dug my
wallet out of my jacket pocket and handed some bills to her.
“You have the most amazing blue eyes.” The clerk leaned forward.
This might have been interesting, if she were not sixtyish, wrinkled, and
stinking of cigarettes.
I held out my hand. “Can I have my change?” 

 J.J. Lyon is a wife, mom, public relations professional and recovering journalist.
Her passion for prose and love of the American West are so intertwined; she doesn’t think she can separate them. When J.J. runs out of words, she reaches for her camera, takes off on a back road and returns home with a bucketful of inspiration.
She lives in a mountain valley with her husband, three children, some cats, two goats, a bird and a basset hound. 

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September
29th – October 3rd

September 29th ~ Cabin Goddess ~
Comfort Foods & Reads (Top Ten)
September 29th ~ Jess resides here ~ Advice for Aspiring Writers (Guest Post)
September 29th ~ Laura’s Online Interests ~ Promo & Excerpt
September 30th ~ Pinky’s Favorite Reads ~ Review & an Interview
September 30th ~ The Road to Nowhere ~ Promo & Excerpt
October 1stRebecca Belliston ~ Review & Interview
October 1st ~ Bookish ~ Review
October 1st ~ Journeys & Life by Oregonmike ~ Top Ten
October 1st ~ Mohadoha ~ Writer’s
Wednesday
October 2nd ~ A Book and a Cup of Coffee ~ Review
October 2nd ~ Library Girl Reads ~ Promo & Excerpt
October 3rd ~ Room With Books ~
Promo & Excerpt
October 3rd ~ Njkinny’s World of Books & Stuff ~ Review
Hosted by:

Nightmare Witch by Mary Theriot

COVER REVEAL
Today we’re featuring Author Mary Reason Theriot!

Author Bio:

A Louisiana native and have had the wonderful

opportunity of living in various states during my husband’s 20-year career in

the United States Coast Guard.

I have been happily married for over twenty

years and am the proud mother of two wonderful children. My youngest encouraged

me to begin writing this year.

Until my diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis in

2001, I worked in the Legal Field. Writing is great therapy for my own personal

fight against MS.

I truly hope you enjoy reading my books as

much as I have enjoyed writing them.

http://maryreasontheriot.com/

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/mary-theriot/53/a96/a32

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6435569.Mary_Reason_Theriot

 

Book Blurb:

 

A surprise inheritance brings Lizzy

Bradford and her father to Blackwater Bayou, Louisiana. But the house is the smallest of the

surprises in store for young Lizzy. Growls and snarls, teasing and pranked,

Lizzy’s life seems to be going…. Wait… Growls and snarls? That can’t be normal! Lizzy starts to learn more about her past,

and the secrets that her mother had hidden from her father as the past comes

back to haunt the future. With the help of her new friend, Marie, Lizzy must

look deep within herself to find the strength to not only believe in, but also

battle The Nightmare Witch.

Are you ready to see the cover?

Maybe?

All right here it is!

Cover Reveal Tour List

Readinginsarahscorner.wordpress.com

Fire Your Boss, Sell Your Car, Travel the World as Graham Brown did!

INTERVIEW

Graham Brown is an author and entrepreneur. In 2012, he and his family took the Location Independent plunge, sold everything and traveled the world.

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“When I mean everything, I mean everything – cars, furniture, clothes – the lot” he says.

Since then the Browns traveled New Zealand, Japan, Fiji, Hawaii, California, Florida, London, Cyprus, Fuerteventura and Lanzarote.

In 2001 Graham Brown published his first book The Mobile Youth: Voices of the Mobile Generation. His latest book is called Fire Your Boss, Sell Your Car, Travel the World. He hopes that with his books he’ll help people achieve their travel dreams too.

Today Graham Brown is making a stop at our blog and what we’re dying to know is how he turned his hobby into a business.

– So, how did you decide to pursue a writing career?

“They say writing teaches the writer most. I was traveling the world a lot in business and visiting exciting places like Japan and India so I encountered many stories on the road. Writing was one way of collecting and sharing those stories with others.

I am a non-fiction writer and I write about technology, culture and travel. As you can imagine, a lot of people are interested in these frontier markets so there was a space for someone to packages those stories as books, and that’s how I became a writer. I published my first book “The Mobile Youth: Voices of the Mobile Generation” back in 2011.

I really enjoyed the writing process, I learned a lot. So, it’s turned from a hobby into a business.”

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– Was getting published hard?

“I chose the self-publishing route. Unless you are J.K.Rowling or Malcolm Gladwell, self-publishing is the future. It’s a lot hard than using a publisher but it forces you to become a better writer and learn writing as a business (rather than as a hobby).”

– Are your characters based on people you know?

“The stories I write are all based on real people. In my book “The Mobile Youth” I share the lives of 10 young people in different countries – from the favela slums of Rio in Brazil, to the hectic urban sprawl of Tokyo. I changed all their names for privacy reasons but everything in their stories – from the gang violence to complex family realtionships – is based on real lives.”

As for my latest book Fire Your Boss, Sell Your Car, Travel the World it’s a personal journey, a life experiment with living and working anywhere in the world. Everyone in that book is real, sometimes too real!”

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– What genre is your books?

“Travel, culture, psychology, anthropology.”

– Which of your books is your most favourite?

Fire Your Boss, Sell Your Car, Travel the World has to be my favorite because I put the most into it. I spent 2 years writing the book and thinking about what experience I could share from my world travels that would help others follow their dream too.”

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– Do you have a specific writing routine?

“I’m getting better, learning from the masters like Stephen King. I find that a set time to write doesn’t work for me, rather I now try to write in short bursts of 20 minutes. That keeps the motivation and creativity high.

I believe everyone has a story inside them, they just need to find the write tools and environment to release that story. Travel is a great way to do that. There is nothing more conducive to writing than staring out of the airplane window down on the world below or nursing a coffee in a cafe in a foreign city.”

– What are your current projects?

“A lot of people ask me “how do I do that?” when I sold everything and traveled the world back in 2012, so my projects are based on helping people answer that question. As I’m now living out on a remote island in the East China Sea, I’m focusing on travel and culture. I expect future books to be inspired by my surroundings here.”

“Fire Your Boss, Sell Your Car, Travel the World”
BUY LINK

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00N0B4WSW

Author’s Website

http://www.BarefootJournal.com