FROST BURN is a fun read. There's a little Bon Temps action with the cozy neighborhood bar Quinn waitresses at. She has a past, and a particular power, that could make anyone scream for mercy. Turned into a vampire six years ago, Quinn muddles by. She lives frugally and kills anything preternatural that threatens her.
However, a prophesy has been making its rounds in the vampire community quicker than family gossip. Quinn might be their future, their salvation...whether she likes it or not.
Julian and his friends walk into Quinn's life one night, and getting rid of them proves to be a major pain in her ass. They must protect her to ensure that the haphazard vampire race does not rise with a twisted purpose, using her power for their personal gain.
Quinn is tough, sassy, and fun. Her slowly evolving relationship with Julian felt refreshing and realistic. Jumping in the sack right away might sound nice on paper, but it can become scripted. The slow burn is always worth the wait.
I have already started reading book two in this series, Arctic Fire.
Thank you for stopping in. Your interest in my writing means the world. If you have not read my work, please visit my book pages for more details. If you have read SOULED OUT, FRAYED, SKINNED, or TIN MOON, please leave a review online and be sure to tell a friend. Your voice matters more than anything. Word-of-mouth and reviews are the most important ways for authors to be discovered by new readers.
Thank you for taking time to stop in and learn more about me. You are wonderful!
Thursday, July 18, 2019
Review - Frost Burn, by Erica Stevens
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Review - Blood Vow, by Mina Carter
The set-up is great. The idea for BLOOD VOW is great. I only wish Maria had held onto her ambitions to kill rogues. Her need for revenge kind of peters out when she realizes how much she likes Marak, who lies about who he is by giving her a different name. His friend's name. Why his friend's name?
Also, Maria is fighting against the patriarchy of the vampire kind. The males always protect the females, who are supposed to stay locked away, safe and bored. She doesn't want this in the least, to be someone's "little woman".
(SPOILER ALERT) So..she loses sight of her mission to avenge her sister. It's more important to be Marak's soulmate. Marak's nickname for her is "Little One", which I find degrading and a little creepy. Is she a child or a fully grown equal? And the difference between their heights is constantly referenced, which constantly gave me images of a tiny person with a giant. As a short woman who has dated taller men in the past, believe me, it never turned me into the size of a yard gnome. In the end, she gets married, so she really becomes Marak's little woman. (END SPOILER ALERT)
The writing is wonderful. The storyline has such potential! I'm just not sure I can overlook Maria's lackluster attitude for being a modern woman avenging her sister. Would I give the second book in the series a try? Maybe. I'm always up for redemption.
IMPORTANT NOTE: I think any paranormal vampire romance reader would enjoy BLOOD VOW. These are just my personal hangups that I have expressed in my review.
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Thursday, June 27, 2019
Review - Marked By a Bite, by K. J. Padgett
MARKED BY A BITE has earned a place on my bookshelf, right next to Lynsay Sands. Hands down, Ryn and Luke are one of my favorite couples in a long time!
I came across MARKED BY A BITE in a Goodreads group by chance.
Ryn is a believable character. She is a modern college student with relationship fears because of a recent breakup. But it is her easy attitude and smarts that won me over. Usually, I find myself yelling at a character not to fall head over heels for the guy. Not to lose herself and everything she has worked at being. Not to run downhill into a cheese grater. Ryn is a girl after my own heart. She has major feelings for Luke, but her reasons for not rushing into that good night are valid. Sane. And she isn't allowing her feelings to cloud her judgment when danger is close by.
Luke is harder to pinpoint. I tried to find a box and label, but couldn't. That was refreshing. He isn't pompous or pushy. And yet, he isn't a pushover. He is sexy and vulnerable in all the right ways (the broken glass scene, ah-hem), and Padgett leaves a lot to be explored in the series. There is much the reader is left wanting to know about Luke, like why he is allowing two ass hats to run a clave that obviously belongs to him in some way.
I will definitely read every future book in this new series, and anything else that Padgett has to offer.
If this sounds like a book for you, show K. J. Padgett some love. Find her on Goodreads, Amazon, or her Author Page.
I came across MARKED BY A BITE in a Goodreads group by chance.
Ryn is a believable character. She is a modern college student with relationship fears because of a recent breakup. But it is her easy attitude and smarts that won me over. Usually, I find myself yelling at a character not to fall head over heels for the guy. Not to lose herself and everything she has worked at being. Not to run downhill into a cheese grater. Ryn is a girl after my own heart. She has major feelings for Luke, but her reasons for not rushing into that good night are valid. Sane. And she isn't allowing her feelings to cloud her judgment when danger is close by.
Luke is harder to pinpoint. I tried to find a box and label, but couldn't. That was refreshing. He isn't pompous or pushy. And yet, he isn't a pushover. He is sexy and vulnerable in all the right ways (the broken glass scene, ah-hem), and Padgett leaves a lot to be explored in the series. There is much the reader is left wanting to know about Luke, like why he is allowing two ass hats to run a clave that obviously belongs to him in some way.
I will definitely read every future book in this new series, and anything else that Padgett has to offer.
If this sounds like a book for you, show K. J. Padgett some love. Find her on Goodreads, Amazon, or her Author Page.
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Thursday, June 20, 2019
Frayed Sequel Coming July 26, 2019
A MADISON LARK ADVENTURE TWO: SKINNED
is coming July 26th!
SKINNED is available for pre-order through Amazon next week. A huge thanks to my friend, Nhys Glover, for the extraordinary cover art for both FRAYED and SKINNED. I never thought it was possible to find a cover model who could capture Fray's beauty so perfectly. She has the magic touch. Nhys is also a wonderfully accomplished author. Be sure to check out all of her novels. There is a perfect moment and a book boyfriend for everyone.
It has been exciting to reconnect with Fray, as well as many memorable characters from FRAYED. While you will surely remember Blaire, the ex with a body worth driving through Hell for, and Darien, Fray's ever-protective brother, some new characters will keep you glued to the pages. Some may even work their way into your nightmares.
A race of snake shapeshifters -the serpentes- are ready to crown their first king in over one thousand years. Fray and her group, the Collective, must protect the potential kings from an outlier group of serpentes hell bent on terminating the prophecy in the most gruesome way imaginable.
Months have passed since Fray and her allies battled the Dissenters. As all involved have struggled to move forward, Fray finds herself at an emotional impasse. Deep in the forgotten woods of North Carolina, she accidentally awakens an ancient gorgon magic that has more moves than a double-edged sword.
Surrounded by temptation and bloodshed, Fray learns that bones never lie. Some even speak.
SKINNED EXCERPT
CHAPTER ONE
I had always relished that sacred time alone when everyone was so busy I could slink about in my own world while the house was empty. But now that empty space was nothing but a spiteful bitch making me look over my shoulder and check the locks on the doors twice as often.
That pissed me off.
Lobbing the keys at the bowl on the side table in the foyer and narrowly missing, I nervously kicked off my sneakers, leaving them in the middle of the rug, and headed upstairs for a shower. A quick one. The way the water drowned everything out was more like a straightjacket than a seductive embrace these days.
I passed my suitcase on the bed, right where I had left it earlier. Everything that I’d need was packed, except for my toothbrush. A sense of exhilaration tingled through me, though it was chased soon after by a weight I understood all too well.
Shifters had always abided by strict rules. While men were free to travel between lepes -the multiple leopard clans that formed our society- women were forbidden to cross boundaries without express approval by their leaders. Which usually meant never. However, since forming whatever the fuck you wanted to call it, our little "good neighbor" group, compiled of every type of shapeshifter in the area, could travel across any boundary unharmed. It was the only reason I agreed to join the Collective. Because I needed freedom. Absolute, borderless freedom for my revenge on the sick group that had ruined so many lives, ending one. And if that revenge came in the guise of goodwill, well then, love and blood never sounded so virtuous.
"Damn," I muttered under my breath. "When did everything become so fucking complicated?"
After a hot shower, I threw on a pair of loose black sweats and crept downstairs to check the empty house for signs of life. A chill foraged my soul when I noticed the empty spot on the rug where my sneakers should have been. Where I damn well knew I left them.
Coercing my feet into movement with silent threats, I immediately regretted telling my roommates so many times that it didn’t bother me to be home alone. It didn’t bother me that a bitter madman was still out there, waiting for my inevitable downfall, probably stalking my mental degeneration with popcorn and a creepy fucking smile.
Standing in the doorway to the foyer, I eyed my keys, now sitting patiently in the bowl on the table.
What the hell?
Feeling my body tense in anticipation of my fight or flight response, I knew I was about to run. And something about that made my heart sick. There was a time when I never would have considered running. It wasn’t even an option. Fight. It had always been fight.
So where was my fight?
Taking an incredibly deep breath, I heard a sudden lurching noise and spun to find my brother standing in the doorway between the living room and kitchen, propping the door open with his palm. His tidy white shirt and wrinkle-free slacks were a welcome sight.
Darien's facial expressions always mirrored that of our father. Of course, I hadn't seen Dad in so long I was amazed I could remember shit all about him to even compare. It had come as a blow to discover that he had deserted his lepe long ago in favor of a nest. A repugnant, cold snake pit. They had been hiding it from me for years, all of them. Cowards. Not knowing how to handle the lies and deceit, I simply ignored the whole damn mess. Including Dad's calls.
My big brother's expression conjured that of trepidation as I eyed him.
"What are you doing?" Darien asked, especially concerned once he realized my heart was ready to burst from my chest like an elephant running from a mouse. A juiced up, rabies-infested, 'I eat killer clowns for breakfast' bastard of a mouse.
"I…" I shook my head, willing my eyes to blink. "I thought I lost my keys." I pointed to the glass dish. "But they’re right there."
Inspecting everything about my performance, he wasn’t yet convinced.
"I set them where they should be." Carefully, he asked, "Is there something you want to talk about?"
"Yeah," I said, "I'd like to know when you turned into Lydia." Our roommate, Lydia, had no concept of boundaries and lived for sharing feelings. Faking a laugh, I crossed the living room, stopping at the bottom of the stairs, and grabbed the rail. Pausing, I forced the right side of my mouth to curve into a smirk. "I’m fine, Darien. I'm always fine. You should know that by now."
"Well, I’m just grabbing a late dinner before I head out again. Are you sure-"
"I’m fine," I lied a second time, voice flat.
"Okay. I’m sure it won’t be long before the real Lydia gets home."
Lydia was studying for her third degree in God only knew, writing research paper after research paper, and never came home without a stack of books tucked under her dainty chin.
"Whatever. I’m going to bed."
Softly, Darien said, "The nightmares won't last forever."
"I'm not worr-"
"They won't."
Ignoring his tender expression, I barked, "Use the fucking lock when you leave."
"I’ll lock up." It was a solid promise. My heightened paranoia hadn’t gone unnoticed. Hell, it sunbathed like a cat in a picture window.
Trying to sound upbeat rather than desperate, as if I were watching the last raft float away into the darkness of an alien sea, I blurted, "I love you."
"Don’t be nervous, little sister. The trip will go well. I’ll meet you there in two days."
His assumption was misplaced, but I let him believe he was right, that he had discovered the root of my angst, because he wasn’t all wrong. Although I was elated at the prospect of traveling, I had yet to be convinced that our purpose was necessary. The serpentes -snake shifters- required an impartial eye to oversee an ancient ritual to crown their next king. Were we supposed to polish his crown or signal for the audience to clap? It sounded like a bullshit attempt to waste our time.
Nodding to my brother, I managed a smile and headed to bed. After all, Darien had straightened up behind me: the keys, the shoes. There was no one else in the house. No lurking psychopath, other than myself. And my brother was right, the trip would go as planned no matter how I felt about it. I only wished he had been right about the nightmares disappearing.
They cracked my head open like a tossed salad and paralyzed my memories in a fossilized state of hyperawareness. The damned things also sent me running straight into the solid arms I had fought so hard against.
CHAPTER TWO
Knocking on my ex’s door at two in the morning to cuddle when I couldn't sleep wasn’t a copout, it was a goddamn necessity. And not for the typical horny reasons. My massive case of bed-head was a testament to the urgency.
Ever since the Dissenters had kidnapped and mutilated shifter children -our children- the memories were reluctant to fade, and the dreams trailed closer than the children who stacked reality too high and heavy on my heart that horrendous night. But I only drove across town when the nightmares made night terrors look like kittens in drag.
The mammoth mahogany door opened briskly. I hugged my black leather jacket close and hopped from foot to foot in the early morning chill. Until I looked up. Blaire was barefoot, wearing nothing but boxers. Holy shit! His bronzed chest begged to be teased by my fingertips and his powerful shoulders could outperform anyone I knew. Forcing my gaze upward, past the sensual lines of his neck, I stared into perfect ocean eyes that haunted my very best memories.
Us. Hawaii.
Our leopards frolicked by a lagoon, catching fish and sunbathing from the time the sun rose until it set behind a panoramic view inspiring countless postcards. Blaire’s fur receded, his golden flesh compelled by heat and nefarious instincts as he drew closer. Shifting as well, I matched his advances, meeting flesh with flesh. We never spoke, never argued, as my legs hugged his hips.
There was a perfection in that love yet to be matched by any other moment or person. And I was never without it, especially in my darkest hour, which is what gave me the strength to come here, even as I fought to remember one reigning fact: The blue flame is the hottest part of the fire. I was well aware this arrangement, accompanied by the eagerness in those blue lagoon eyes, would char every last part of me if we broke our abstinence policy.
"Aren’t we past calling first?" Blaire’s voice washed over my spine, tickling all the way down. "I sent the orgy home hours ago," he mused, swiftly ruining the effect.
I shrugged. "You know me, Blaire. I hate to bust up a party."
Inhaling a deep breath, he shook his head. "Still Blaire, I see."
He wanted me to call him Cale. Only, that was impossible due to our non-exclusive, anti-relationship, relationship agreement. Blaire was an oversexed body pillow. That’s all. Calling him Cale implied so much more, and that was very specifically off limits.
Trying to ignore the solemn undertone, I teased, "What should I call you, Pussycat?"
"If that’s my only choice."
"I can be more inventive, but past experience reminds me that people don’t care much for my creativity."
Blaire was a little too sober when he accused, "You’ve turned my name into a stain."
"No," I protested, "You did. I’m just a reminder. A very tired reminder." Looking at my watch, I shook my head. "Maybe you'd prefer I left? This was a mistake."
His dark curls swooshed as his unbelievably toned body sighed into mine. "You know what I prefer." The heat of his breath graced a delicate region of my neck.
"But dreams only come true for good little cats," I tisked.
After swatting temptation in the ass, I tossed my keys next to his on the delicate armchair, which cradled far too much crap. It wasn’t as easy to ignore Blaire’s advances as I made it seem, but it was enough to make him keep trying. I hated that part of me that liked the effort and attention. Although, the thought of him never trying again would shut down something inside me.
A yellow halo pierced through the crack of Old Abram’s bedroom door off to the right of the entry.
"How’s your father?"
He helped me out of my coat and hung it on the rack next to his.
"Dedicated to consistency."
Whether out of frustration or rebellion, Blaire rarely entertained conversations concerning his father. It had been months since the leader of our lepe, Abram Blaire, sat up, let alone spoke. He was comatose. The Western Lepe—the group of leopards I grew up with and considered family—was baffled. Other than a pre-existing heart murmur, there was no medically validated reason for his current state.
I peeked inside the quiet room. Old Man Abram’s hair looked grayer, but he hadn’t moved. My nostrils flared at the light presence of incense. Amita had prayed with her husband recently. The old man wasn’t a practicing Hindu but she was.
"Come." Blaire wrapped his arm around my shoulders. Squeezing me close, we retired to his bedroom.
Sleeping used to be so instinctual. I trained and fought all day, so it was easy to fall asleep before the sheet ever had time to cascade around me. But now sleep was a dragon-tailed whip with enough bite to split fear from common sense and enough power to make me not see the difference.
"Do you want me to rub your back?" Blaire’s voice was heavy as we slid between the sheets. So the Sandman was listening to my pleas. Only, he doused the wrong shifter.
I let out a long-held breath. "No."
He rolled over, his head on the satin pillow. In my ear, he whispered, "There are so many things to fight. Why fight sleep?"
"I don’t know," I whispered back. "Because I can, I suppose. Maybe because I don’t know how else to be right now. I’m sorry it involves you."
"Don't apologize." Blaire rose onto his elbow, casting his drowsy eyes down upon me. "Don’t ever be sorry for coming here."
He laid back down. Creeping under the leg of my ratty sweats, Blaire leisurely ran the bottom of his foot up and down my skin. It was a relaxing sensation. So much that I didn’t even remember falling asleep.
The wave of nightmares, however, didn’t stop just because I was in a different bed. Equally so, the monsters would never stop because they were real and had found their target. Blaire’s comfort was simple. My leopard knew his. After a startlingly realistic dream, I could allow my kitty senses to bathe in Blaire’s dominance with the satisfaction that together we would rip the glorious fuck out of anything coming for me, imagined or otherwise.
So we slept, we dreamed, and the night almost drew to a close before I woke Blaire with the shrill pleas of, "Help me! Help me!"
He undoubtedly presumed I was screaming for someone to actually help me. Help me from being caught. Help me from being tortured. It couldn’t have been further from the truth, though I never made an effort to correct him. I knew who I screamed for.
Jack. Always for Jack. For the boy whose name I no longer spoke out loud. For the pride boy who died for Marisa, one of our own. For the mangled corpse I would never free from the web in my head. The weight of him in my arms was always there. My mind refused to process the sudden loss of someone I had never cared to know before that cruel day.
Barely awake, I rose on all fours. A metallic hint saturated the air. Malevolence abounded, sucking away any shred of comfort. And the screams, they filled the night with such devastation. I had never heard children scream like that, as if every god in every heart had been murdered. Snarling, I prepared to shift and fight for Jack, the pride boy. Feeling my fingernails thicken to points, I sliced through flesh until the assaulting figures blurred together. My ferocious leopard half was angling for the kill, fur roiling under my skin, but a force knocked me off balance. Once it turned into a persistent, familiar voice, I settled long enough for my eyelids to flutter open.
Blaire’s weight pinned me to the bed.
"My hands," I mumbled.
"What’s wrong with them?"
"The blood won’t come off."
"Let me see."
I held them up between us, my eyelids heavy. Blaire’s warm fingers traced my palms from wrists to fingertips and washed over my knuckles. When I didn’t respond, he insisted I sit up and open my eyes. "There is no blood. See? None."
Working to break the bond between dream and consciousness, I finally shook my head like a goddamn animal. Voice lazy from sleep, I smiled, but it was twisted and out of sorts. "The blood’s never gone, Blaire. That’s what no one understands. Half the shifters want me to be some type of Messiah. The other half demand more blood, but they ignore the blood that’s already been spilled."
"They can’t turn you into someone you don’t want to be. You're too strong for that." His hand hovered close, like he wanted to touch me but couldn’t afford my wrath if I lashed out.
I stared at him. "Who am I now? I’m not a fighter. I quit. If something attacked me, I used to eat it alive. Now I hide, because I remember what it’s like to escape death. I used to be strong."
"You are strong."
"Look at me. I run here in the middle of the night and cower in your bed how many nights a week? And I keep trying to make it, to make what happened to all of us, make sense in my head, but my heart" -I beat against my chest- "cannot rationalize it."
"No!" Blaire raised his voice as he sat up, shifting his weight to sit on his shins. "I should have known earlier of the Dissenters and their plans. I should have been leading rather than embracing prejudices passed down from outdated moralities. You fought that. You brought them back."
I sat up. "To what?"
We were essentially screaming in each other’s faces.
"To a new way of thinking."
"Well, it’s not enough to erase what happened to them. I let them get broken. I watched one break." Tears rimmed my bloodshot eyes.
A piece of me never left the shed with Jack. Something important was permanently missing. It was claimed by the freak trolling my nightmares and savoring the moment we met again. I vowed to myself, Jack, and the other kids to gut the bastard. He was the very devil.
Blaire interrupted my devious thoughts.
"Do not reject the one way I can help." His voice dropped off, exhausted from more than Dissenters and a father with a mystery illness. "Don’t invent a new way to reject me."
At that moment, I realized that our arrangement hadn’t been a Dutch meal. Blaire needed some cuddles of his own, a respite from the unknowns in our lepe’s near future.
"I’m not. I’m just not me anymore."
"Really? Because hiding behind your anger is nothing new."
"That’s bullshit." I leapt from the bed, slipping my sneakers on.
"What are you doing?"
I pointed to the alarm on his side of the bed. "It’s almost six."
"Come back to bed."
"I’ve got to finish packing, jog, and leave, so what’s the point?"
"Yeah," he collapsed onto the bed, muttering, "What’s the point?" before rolling over.
Left staring at his back, I was speechless. And royally fuming.
Of course, it didn’t take long to find my voice.
"I leave town in less than three hours, Blaire. So you’re just going to roll over?"
"No." He flung the sheets back and crossed the room, closing the distance between us. "I want to give you something to think about while you’re away."
Swooping me into his arms, Blaire didn’t just kiss me, he ransacked my flesh with his lips and threatened to boil my blood with his aura. Burning inside out would have been a perfect demise if I hadn't already planned out my day. Also, excavating our lust was dangerous. Reckless.
Cruel.
When my lips were mine again, I mumbled, "I'll take that into consideration," and practically ran home. Had I known the rest of my day would turn into a shit fest, I would have stayed in bed with Blaire.
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Tuesday, April 16, 2019
A Writer Who Writes Is So Novel

I have been extremely busy writing this year. It feels good. One, because I want my fantastic readers to get the sequels you have been asking for and deserve. And two, because it's always an exhilarating feeling to hit goals I've been trying to reach for quite a while.
If you cannot wait for the sequels to Frayed (working on this one right now) and Souled Out, you can log onto Wattpad -a free reading/writing platform- to read UPON US, my new post-apocalyptic romance novel. Keep in mind that it is in the form of a draft. Changes will still be made and grammar corrected before final publication. Stop by and check it out. If you do, you will also get a taste of the soundtrack I put together while writing UPON US, as well as some "fun facts" at the end of each chapter.
UPON US touches on that fear that corrodes our insides like saltwater while we're too busy telling ourselves that this is what it's like to feel alright. The main character fears death. Not her own, but rather the death of the world and the people around her. Her love interest, Ren, fears letting her go in an unforgiving world, only to never see her again.
Synopsis:
The world manufactured an apocalypse to save mankind. Those of us living in the New Beginning are faced with mass extinction from the sickness, a zombie-like plague of dying flesh and fractured minds. Without modern medicine or technology, humans are disappearing faster than the monuments we built to worship us.
But hope lives anywhere darkness blooms, and each day we grow closer to the truth, as hideous as it may be.
Thank you for stopping by!
Happy Spring!
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Monday, January 14, 2019
Something Loosed
In the last handful of years, I've said farewell to many dear, close friends. Some have chosen to go their own way, still breathing and kicking, towards goals and glory. Some had no choice and are no longer here. Well...maybe in spirit, but I might need some sage and candles for our next conversation.
You can relate, I'm sure. We have these lifetimes of wonderful in short bursts that are gone faster than the last firecracker. And we're left sitting in the wet grass, galoshes rubbing the hem of our party dress ragged, smoking a cigar, thinking, 'What the hell just happened? That was beautiful."
And maybe that's it.
Don't overthink it. Don't wish for more. Don't wish for 'different'.
You get what you get.
It was beautiful. And we all know what Robert Frost thinks about beauty. (If you really don't, and you never read The Outsiders, look up 'Nothing Gold Can Stay'. The part in the movie where Ralph Macchio recites this on his death bed ripped everyone apart in the eighties.)
But seriously, nothing gold can stay.
And when words like "loss" and "death" and "grief" manifest into that restrictive pain in your chest, or that catch in your breath, until you are eating them for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, a finality is born. You see the world for what it is: a sham. Because you're taught that the world keeps going, no matter what. But it has an end. It has many.
So where does it start again?
We used to be so busy, making plans, making memories, making mistakes, making excuses. And then there's one. When did I become the keeper of the memories? Honestly, I'm not great -I'm not even sub-par- at remembering dates and places. I thought someone would be there to correct me, to remind me, to be like, "What the bloody hell are you good for?" But, as I skimmed through countless photos last night, it dawned on me that this was my job now. I am the keeper of the dates, the places, the moments.
I am the keeper of our memories.
I was never ready for this job. Who is? I'm not complaining, I'm dumbstruck. Someone snatched the cigar from my mouth and burned my soul with it.
And that pain can find you anywhere, twisting your heart again and again, until it twists something loose inside. Well, something loosened today. As I fluttered through town, copying photos and letters, capturing times, dates, and moments on sticky notes, speaking a million miles an hour like a caffeine addict, something came loose. Sitting in my car, placing these sacred time capsules into bubble envelopes in the hopes of bringing one smile or one clear breath to someone in pain, I realized that I can do this. I accept this job.
I am the keeper of our memories. I will remember dates and places and moments for us both. Sometimes I will get it wrong. Bear with me. I'm only one person.
Hugging my dear friend to my chest in bubble wrap form, I smiled.
A day will be, when a flower blooms, and it's not a Starburst wrapper.
A day will be, when I see the world for what it is: beautiful.
When that day arrives, my dress will be dry, the hem mended, and my galoshes ready by the door, waiting for those fireworks...and maybe some rain.
And that is where it starts again.
You can relate, I'm sure. We have these lifetimes of wonderful in short bursts that are gone faster than the last firecracker. And we're left sitting in the wet grass, galoshes rubbing the hem of our party dress ragged, smoking a cigar, thinking, 'What the hell just happened? That was beautiful."
And maybe that's it.
Don't overthink it. Don't wish for more. Don't wish for 'different'.
You get what you get.
It was beautiful. And we all know what Robert Frost thinks about beauty. (If you really don't, and you never read The Outsiders, look up 'Nothing Gold Can Stay'. The part in the movie where Ralph Macchio recites this on his death bed ripped everyone apart in the eighties.)
But seriously, nothing gold can stay.
And when words like "loss" and "death" and "grief" manifest into that restrictive pain in your chest, or that catch in your breath, until you are eating them for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, a finality is born. You see the world for what it is: a sham. Because you're taught that the world keeps going, no matter what. But it has an end. It has many.
So where does it start again?
We used to be so busy, making plans, making memories, making mistakes, making excuses. And then there's one. When did I become the keeper of the memories? Honestly, I'm not great -I'm not even sub-par- at remembering dates and places. I thought someone would be there to correct me, to remind me, to be like, "What the bloody hell are you good for?" But, as I skimmed through countless photos last night, it dawned on me that this was my job now. I am the keeper of the dates, the places, the moments.
I am the keeper of our memories.
I was never ready for this job. Who is? I'm not complaining, I'm dumbstruck. Someone snatched the cigar from my mouth and burned my soul with it.
And that pain can find you anywhere, twisting your heart again and again, until it twists something loose inside. Well, something loosened today. As I fluttered through town, copying photos and letters, capturing times, dates, and moments on sticky notes, speaking a million miles an hour like a caffeine addict, something came loose. Sitting in my car, placing these sacred time capsules into bubble envelopes in the hopes of bringing one smile or one clear breath to someone in pain, I realized that I can do this. I accept this job.
I am the keeper of our memories. I will remember dates and places and moments for us both. Sometimes I will get it wrong. Bear with me. I'm only one person.
Hugging my dear friend to my chest in bubble wrap form, I smiled.
A day will be, when a flower blooms, and it's not a Starburst wrapper.
A day will be, when I see the world for what it is: beautiful.
When that day arrives, my dress will be dry, the hem mended, and my galoshes ready by the door, waiting for those fireworks...and maybe some rain.
And that is where it starts again.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Monday, November 05, 2018
Brace Yourselves
This is not a post to guilt you into voting, or to push you into voting for someone specific or a certain party.
This IS a post about acknowledging free thought.
Please respect your family members, your friends, and even those weirdos next door that you only make eye contact with when they peek at you through their window blinds.
Stay friendly, folks! We've got a few months to go of Holiday crafting, sales, and anxiety.
We can do it!
Tuesday, October 02, 2018
Book Review: 'E' by Kate Wrath
I downloaded a few free books this summer and 'E' by Kate Wrath was one of them. At first, I was captured by the ominous cover. And what does the title mean? What could 'E' possibly mean?
'I must find out!' I whispered into the darkness of two am.
And I am SOOOO happy that I did!
Wrath's character, Eden, really resonated with me. She wakes up with no memory of her life. All she knows is that life is hard. And not like Internet's down, Starbucks is out of Pumpkin Spice hard. There is a large portion of the book where everyone is literally starving, fighting to make ends meet for just one more day, not knowing if that day really exists.
Hard choices are made.
I grew to love Eden as I love my own characters, and that is saying something. She's tough, especially when all she wants to do is curl up into a little ball and give up. She gambles to make money, playing cards with the toughest crowds. And though she is not particularly cunning or spry, Eden proves that she will go the distance for the ones she loves.
The relationships formed between the main characters sets a tone for Eden's journey, and the war ahead. Because, while Eden never fully rediscovers her lost identity -but savors clues along the way- the bond she forms with her fellow 'Erased' is unforgettable. Together, they challenge the police sentinels that loom over their very existence, confront the reason for their dwindling food source, and battle those who want to take everything that they have and are.
But together can only last so long.
"We can't go on like this, scraping life from the ground with our broken fingernails. That leaves very little in the way of choices." -Eden
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Kate Wrath
Sunday, September 02, 2018
Indie Author Life: Promotion
This post is for all you fellow indie authors, as well as for writers thinking about self-publishing. We've gotta stick together.
We invest so much time writing our manuscripts. But our excitement at writing 'The End' is short lived once we realize THAT was the easiest part. What?!?
This becomes your writing life for the next few months:
-Editing
-Proofreading
-Purchasing an ISBN for e-book and another one for paperback
-Formatting for e-book
-Formatting for paperback
-Making/purchasing a book cover
-Purchasing a bar code (optional)
-Choosing which online publishers to use
-Uploading both formats to chosen publishers
-Reviewing final proofs of e-book and paperback formats
-Pressing 'Publish'
-And other miscellany that I don't want to overload you with
Wait! Add PROMOTION to that list, too.
Remember to find bloggers and book reviewers to offer honest reviews, preferably BEFORE the release of your book to build hype. This will prove to be one of the hardest jobs you have. Almost anyone will accept a free book, but like us, all of these people have lives. They have intentions to read and review your book, but they also have families and jobs and hobbies (so don't hound them). When you do get a review, however -good or bad- it feels pretty damned great. Congratulations!
Don't get scared at the idea of tackling the above list. You will actually enjoy some, if not all, of these tasksbecause you are a crazy writer because you are in control of your work every step of the way. BEWARE, however, the many options awaiting you as an indie. Options that nickle and dime the crap out of you. People will ask for money every time you turn around. Seriously. I even ran across a brick-and-mortar mom-and-pop bookshop near me that wanted ME to pay THEM to stock my books. And then give them a percentage of my sales (this part is normal, minus the other $ asked for). And if I am available for an in store meet-and-great with customers? I can also pay the owner for the honor. More $. More $. More $. For them.
No, no, no.
Spend wisely.
It is just as important to have a plan for your money as it is to have a promotional plan in place. The bulk of your money may need to be spent on essentials before doling it out to different promotional tactics. First, outline items in your list that you absolutely need to hire someone else to do. Mine always include editing, formatting, and book covers. These things matter greatly. Your book needs to look professional, read with as few grammatical errors as possible, and download correctly onto a number of platforms. This is where the bulk of my money goes.
Paperback formatting can be as little as $60 or $70 for a novel, e-books as little as $30, depending on word count. Remember, e-book and paperback formatting are different, so you have two costs to account for. And I spend anywhere from $150-$250 on an original book cover. There are many premade covers available for as little as $45, maybe less. But remember, the artwork used on them are not original, so you run the risk of having the same or very similar cover as other books. Editing may be the most expensive. Years ago, I paid $600 for a well established editor for my NA paranormal book, Souled Out. However, now I have found others who are just as thorough with more competitive rates.
So you must have an idea (based on your wants and your budget) if you plan to have your book available in both e-book and paperback form, if you want an original cover vs. a premade cover, and how much you are able to spend on editing.
What do you have left in your budget after these costs? That is what you have to spend on promotion.
You can cut corners when it comes to promotional tools, however, depending on your plan. There are many to choose from. Sometimes it takes a bit of time to see what works for your individual needs and what doesn't.
A few examples of online promotions that cost money:
-Purchasing ads on blogs or websites, such as Facebook and Goodreads. ($-$$)
-Spending money on a Goodreads giveaway. ($$)
-Hiring a company to promote your book for you. ($$-$$$)
-Adding your title to a review website, like Netgalley. ($-$$)
A lot of book promotion companies can cost upwards of $700-$1500 (sometimes more). I personally would not pay for these services unless you absolutely do not have the time to self promote, and they have a solid track record. There are some really good ones out there, but there are also some bad ones. Choose carefully.
A few examples of FREE online promotions:
-Hosting giveaways through blog hops.
-Guest posting on someone else's book blog. (*Contact me if you want to guest post or share your book/excerpt on my blog. I will be restarting free indie book promotions again this fall.*)
-Word of mouth. (The best but HARDEST promotional tool.)
-Connecting with authors and readers online/in person in groups or chats.
-Using social media to your advantage, such as Twitter, FB, Pinterest, and Instagram.
-Free Amazon e-book giveaways through KDP Select.
There are so many ways to promote yourself and your book. If you are an author with "tried-and-trues", please share them in the comments. I know I am forgetting to name so many things, but I honestly shy away from most paid advertisement.
Below are a few things that I have tried:
-Ads on Goodreads. I spent roughly $45 in total a year and a half ago for three ads (one ad for each title). I set the ad price low for each click, meaning that my ads will not show up thousands of times a day, but they do show up 20-30 times a day, and I spend less than thirty-five cents on each ad clicked on. Have they worked? I have no idea. You could very well spend money on ads and not know if they have helped with sales. That is part of the leap when you pay for ads.
-While IngramSpark is a publishing platform, you do have to pay to use it (unlike Createspace, Smashwords, or Amazon's KDP). My historical fiction book, Tin Moon, has been enrolled with IngramSpark for over a year. I paid $50 to upload this one title. I believe it would cost (at the time I have written this) $50 for each uploaded title, and then another $50 or $25 each year to renew it. You also must pay $25 each time you need to update a file. (Always check with the company in question. Prices can always change.) While my only gripe is that you must go through Ingram's customer service to remove a title or cancel your account, I cannot say that spending this extra money on IngramSpark rather than a free platform furthered my exposure. I am in the midst of canceling with Ingram (According to their customer service, it will take six months). Maybe I will have more use for them in the future. For now, I will stick with Createspace and KDP.
I'm sure there have been random nickle and dime things in the past that I am not remembering right now. If I do, I will be sure to add them.
I have been a real slacker the last few years when it comes to self-promotion. But I have recently been honing in on a handful of things that work for me, as an author that is not on social media very much. This sucks. If you are great at social media, you will undoubtedly build a steady following and have a great relationship with your readers. I would love to be this author, but it is not my strong point. So I find other niches. If you are like me, you will, too.
If I can impart some wisdom, I guess it would be to pace yourself, research, educate yourself on your options, and think before you leap. And talk to other authors and writers. Choose authors that have a successful brand or platform and see how they are promoting themselves. Research their media and how they interact with their readers.
I am not the most organized author, but I am a happy one. I love the process of writing, of publishing, and being part of a wonderful community of writers and readers, sharing stories, laughter, and tears.
This post is only meant to offer insight into my personal author path. And if I can help anyone along the way, that's awesome, because so many of you have helped me.
We invest so much time writing our manuscripts. But our excitement at writing 'The End' is short lived once we realize THAT was the easiest part. What?!?
This becomes your writing life for the next few months:
-Editing
-Proofreading
-Purchasing an ISBN for e-book and another one for paperback
-Formatting for e-book
-Formatting for paperback
-Making/purchasing a book cover
-Purchasing a bar code (optional)
-Choosing which online publishers to use
-Uploading both formats to chosen publishers
-Reviewing final proofs of e-book and paperback formats
-Pressing 'Publish'
-And other miscellany that I don't want to overload you with
Wait! Add PROMOTION to that list, too.
Remember to find bloggers and book reviewers to offer honest reviews, preferably BEFORE the release of your book to build hype. This will prove to be one of the hardest jobs you have. Almost anyone will accept a free book, but like us, all of these people have lives. They have intentions to read and review your book, but they also have families and jobs and hobbies (so don't hound them). When you do get a review, however -good or bad- it feels pretty damned great. Congratulations!
Don't get scared at the idea of tackling the above list. You will actually enjoy some, if not all, of these tasks
No, no, no.
Spend wisely.
It is just as important to have a plan for your money as it is to have a promotional plan in place. The bulk of your money may need to be spent on essentials before doling it out to different promotional tactics. First, outline items in your list that you absolutely need to hire someone else to do. Mine always include editing, formatting, and book covers. These things matter greatly. Your book needs to look professional, read with as few grammatical errors as possible, and download correctly onto a number of platforms. This is where the bulk of my money goes.
Paperback formatting can be as little as $60 or $70 for a novel, e-books as little as $30, depending on word count. Remember, e-book and paperback formatting are different, so you have two costs to account for. And I spend anywhere from $150-$250 on an original book cover. There are many premade covers available for as little as $45, maybe less. But remember, the artwork used on them are not original, so you run the risk of having the same or very similar cover as other books. Editing may be the most expensive. Years ago, I paid $600 for a well established editor for my NA paranormal book, Souled Out. However, now I have found others who are just as thorough with more competitive rates.
So you must have an idea (based on your wants and your budget) if you plan to have your book available in both e-book and paperback form, if you want an original cover vs. a premade cover, and how much you are able to spend on editing.
What do you have left in your budget after these costs? That is what you have to spend on promotion.
You can cut corners when it comes to promotional tools, however, depending on your plan. There are many to choose from. Sometimes it takes a bit of time to see what works for your individual needs and what doesn't.
A few examples of online promotions that cost money:
-Purchasing ads on blogs or websites, such as Facebook and Goodreads. ($-$$)
-Spending money on a Goodreads giveaway. ($$)
-Hiring a company to promote your book for you. ($$-$$$)
-Adding your title to a review website, like Netgalley. ($-$$)
A lot of book promotion companies can cost upwards of $700-$1500 (sometimes more). I personally would not pay for these services unless you absolutely do not have the time to self promote, and they have a solid track record. There are some really good ones out there, but there are also some bad ones. Choose carefully.
A few examples of FREE online promotions:
-Hosting giveaways through blog hops.
-Guest posting on someone else's book blog. (*Contact me if you want to guest post or share your book/excerpt on my blog. I will be restarting free indie book promotions again this fall.*)
-Word of mouth. (The best but HARDEST promotional tool.)
-Connecting with authors and readers online/in person in groups or chats.
-Using social media to your advantage, such as Twitter, FB, Pinterest, and Instagram.
-Free Amazon e-book giveaways through KDP Select.
There are so many ways to promote yourself and your book. If you are an author with "tried-and-trues", please share them in the comments. I know I am forgetting to name so many things, but I honestly shy away from most paid advertisement.
Below are a few things that I have tried:
-Ads on Goodreads. I spent roughly $45 in total a year and a half ago for three ads (one ad for each title). I set the ad price low for each click, meaning that my ads will not show up thousands of times a day, but they do show up 20-30 times a day, and I spend less than thirty-five cents on each ad clicked on. Have they worked? I have no idea. You could very well spend money on ads and not know if they have helped with sales. That is part of the leap when you pay for ads.
-While IngramSpark is a publishing platform, you do have to pay to use it (unlike Createspace, Smashwords, or Amazon's KDP). My historical fiction book, Tin Moon, has been enrolled with IngramSpark for over a year. I paid $50 to upload this one title. I believe it would cost (at the time I have written this) $50 for each uploaded title, and then another $50 or $25 each year to renew it. You also must pay $25 each time you need to update a file. (Always check with the company in question. Prices can always change.) While my only gripe is that you must go through Ingram's customer service to remove a title or cancel your account, I cannot say that spending this extra money on IngramSpark rather than a free platform furthered my exposure. I am in the midst of canceling with Ingram (According to their customer service, it will take six months). Maybe I will have more use for them in the future. For now, I will stick with Createspace and KDP.
I'm sure there have been random nickle and dime things in the past that I am not remembering right now. If I do, I will be sure to add them.
If I can impart some wisdom, I guess it would be to pace yourself, research, educate yourself on your options, and think before you leap. And talk to other authors and writers. Choose authors that have a successful brand or platform and see how they are promoting themselves. Research their media and how they interact with their readers.
I am not the most organized author, but I am a happy one. I love the process of writing, of publishing, and being part of a wonderful community of writers and readers, sharing stories, laughter, and tears.
This post is only meant to offer insight into my personal author path. And if I can help anyone along the way, that's awesome, because so many of you have helped me.
Thank you!
Labels:
Amazon,
book promotion,
Createspace,
Indie author life,
Indie authors,
IngramSpark,
kdp,
self-publishing,
writers
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Audio A-Go-Go: Struck
I have not had a lot of time to read lately, but I have found a way around that: Audio books!
Luckily, I'm able to listen to audio books occasionally at work. Because I highly believe that reviews are invaluable, I absolutely want to share them with you. Maybe you will discover a new favorite.
So here is the latest:
Struck by Jennifer Bosworth
Struck is about Mia, a seventeen-year-old who is addicted to being struck by lightning. That is what hooked me. Lightning is crazy. Being addicted to it is crazier. Add to that a post-apocalyptic LA that has been ravaged by natural disasters. Of course, no disaster is complete without a cult and a secret society of sorts.
Bosworth described Mia's world very well. The "displaced", those who lost their homes during the disasters, and their almost feral demeanor at times born from fear and desperation, felt authentic. Everywhere Mia looked, loss upon loss. Her own world, consisting of her mother and brother, was not without its own type of loss. Her mother is suffering from a sort of PTSD from being trapped under the rubble, almost killed. Mia and her brother return to school only for the daily food rations promised to every attending student. And prices are so inflated that a few dollars won't even buy a loaf of bread. Mia even has to take her chances with a drug dealer for her mother's medication rather than buying them legally.
So what is going on in this horrible wasteland of a town? Well, the end of the world is coming. Some are aligning themselves with Prophet, the blind bible-thumper, eager to ring in the end of the world. Others are part of a group hoping to stop Prophet and his people from creating a storm that could do just that, end all. You see, there are others who have been hit by lightning, not just Mia. And it has left its mark on them in more ways than the visible red scars. They have power. And the more power Prophet collects, the more likely his plan will work. He only needs one more: Mia.
While Mia's world is well thought out and the storyline pretty solid, it began to waffle toward the end. Jeremy is the wild card of the story. He pops out of nowhere, a foe turned love interest. And though I appreciate his complicated backstory, he turned into a distraction for Mia. Almost as if this broken world only needed love to save it rather than a crusader with the capability to harness the power of lightning. With such a hefty world view set up, I can only feel that Bosworth missed her chance to impart some wisdom to Mia's plight, to relay a deeper message to the reader.
Unless that, in fact, was the deeper message: A broken world only needs love to save it.
If anyone has read or listened to Struck, I would love to hear your theories.
I'm sure you can find it in many places in many forms, but I feel that two links is acceptable. ;D
Luckily, I'm able to listen to audio books occasionally at work. Because I highly believe that reviews are invaluable, I absolutely want to share them with you. Maybe you will discover a new favorite.
So here is the latest:
Struck by Jennifer Bosworth
Struck is about Mia, a seventeen-year-old who is addicted to being struck by lightning. That is what hooked me. Lightning is crazy. Being addicted to it is crazier. Add to that a post-apocalyptic LA that has been ravaged by natural disasters. Of course, no disaster is complete without a cult and a secret society of sorts.
Bosworth described Mia's world very well. The "displaced", those who lost their homes during the disasters, and their almost feral demeanor at times born from fear and desperation, felt authentic. Everywhere Mia looked, loss upon loss. Her own world, consisting of her mother and brother, was not without its own type of loss. Her mother is suffering from a sort of PTSD from being trapped under the rubble, almost killed. Mia and her brother return to school only for the daily food rations promised to every attending student. And prices are so inflated that a few dollars won't even buy a loaf of bread. Mia even has to take her chances with a drug dealer for her mother's medication rather than buying them legally.
So what is going on in this horrible wasteland of a town? Well, the end of the world is coming. Some are aligning themselves with Prophet, the blind bible-thumper, eager to ring in the end of the world. Others are part of a group hoping to stop Prophet and his people from creating a storm that could do just that, end all. You see, there are others who have been hit by lightning, not just Mia. And it has left its mark on them in more ways than the visible red scars. They have power. And the more power Prophet collects, the more likely his plan will work. He only needs one more: Mia.
While Mia's world is well thought out and the storyline pretty solid, it began to waffle toward the end. Jeremy is the wild card of the story. He pops out of nowhere, a foe turned love interest. And though I appreciate his complicated backstory, he turned into a distraction for Mia. Almost as if this broken world only needed love to save it rather than a crusader with the capability to harness the power of lightning. With such a hefty world view set up, I can only feel that Bosworth missed her chance to impart some wisdom to Mia's plight, to relay a deeper message to the reader.
Unless that, in fact, was the deeper message: A broken world only needs love to save it.
If anyone has read or listened to Struck, I would love to hear your theories.
If you haven't been Struck, you can:
or
I'm sure you can find it in many places in many forms, but I feel that two links is acceptable. ;D
As a reminder: I write honest reviews based solely on my own dorky opinions.
Labels:
audio books,
book review,
books,
post apocalyptic fiction
Monday, November 13, 2017
Sunday, November 12, 2017
Forgetfulness Has a Season
Sometimes I forget how to write. Or so I think. That's how it feels, anyway. I get lost in the world, in my head. I live and love, and experience so much away from my computer and paper. It's wonderful to be "here" in the moment rather than "there". To not be accountable on social media. To not worry about updates or word counts.
I take pleasure in the little things. I take time to grieve the big things. With everything, I take my time.
But then my brain wants to make sense of it all. It wants to piece it all together, string it to my heart and back. Only, in order to do that I have to remember how to write again because it is how I process the world. And it feels just as wonderful to write as it does, during those times of forgetfulness, not to.
Forgetfulness has a season, but every season has an end. And ends are just as important as beginnings because sometimes they are the same thing.
So maybe I'm back for a time. To write and chat and piece the world together.
I take pleasure in the little things. I take time to grieve the big things. With everything, I take my time.
But then my brain wants to make sense of it all. It wants to piece it all together, string it to my heart and back. Only, in order to do that I have to remember how to write again because it is how I process the world. And it feels just as wonderful to write as it does, during those times of forgetfulness, not to.
Forgetfulness has a season, but every season has an end. And ends are just as important as beginnings because sometimes they are the same thing.
So maybe I'm back for a time. To write and chat and piece the world together.
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Review - 'The System' by Teshelle Combs
1 + 1 = Dead.
That’s the only math that adds up when you’re in the System.
Everywhere Nick turns, he’s surrounded by the inevitability of his own demise at the hands of the people who stole his life from him. That is, until those hands deliver the bleeding, feisty, eye-rolling Nessa Parker. Tasked with keeping his new partner alive, Nick must face all the ways he’s died and all the things he’s forgotten.
Nessa might as well give up. The moment she gets into that car, the moment she lays her hazel eyes on her new partner, her end begins. It doesn’t matter that Nick Masters can slip through time by computing mathematical algorithms in his mind. It doesn’t matter how dark and handsome and irresistibly cold he is. Nessa has to defeat her own shadows.
Together and alone, Nick and Nessa make sense of their senseless fates and fight for the courage to change it all. Even if it means the System wins and they end up…well…dead.
That’s the only math that adds up when you’re in the System.
Everywhere Nick turns, he’s surrounded by the inevitability of his own demise at the hands of the people who stole his life from him. That is, until those hands deliver the bleeding, feisty, eye-rolling Nessa Parker. Tasked with keeping his new partner alive, Nick must face all the ways he’s died and all the things he’s forgotten.
Nessa might as well give up. The moment she gets into that car, the moment she lays her hazel eyes on her new partner, her end begins. It doesn’t matter that Nick Masters can slip through time by computing mathematical algorithms in his mind. It doesn’t matter how dark and handsome and irresistibly cold he is. Nessa has to defeat her own shadows.
Together and alone, Nick and Nessa make sense of their senseless fates and fight for the courage to change it all. Even if it means the System wins and they end up…well…dead.
Readers become a part of 'The System' from the first page. However, unlike Nessa Parker, who unwillingly becomes immersed in an underground world of assassins, readers can't get enough.
Nessa's world no longer centers around boy-crazy friends and familiar hugs. Rather, she is surrounded by "recruits" - trained killers - and a captor that prefers extreme corporal punishment, such as cane beating, to address unwanted behavior...like asking questions. However, Nessa's character growth drives the plot, with all its heartache and tough lessons. She is smart, spry, and, most importantly, armed with humor.
"If I succumb to my wounds in the night, will you cremate me? Spread my ashes on the beach to the theme song from Pocahontas?" -Nessa Parker
Of course, it's easy to keep a sense of humor in the face of death when your new partner is as hot and feisty as Nick Masters. Handy with an automatic weapon, Nick can also move faster than it takes Nessa to blink...because of his algorithm. You see, everyone in the System has a personal mathematical algorithm that allows the use of a special gift, whether it be reading minds, healing others, or controlling electronics. Everyone has their own algorithm...except Nessa. So why is she there? The answer surprises Nessa more than anyone.
'The System' will definitely appeal to
fans of the 'Divergent' series.
'The System' embraces the tough and gritty moments of Nessa and Nick's lives in a poignant manner. Nothing is ever clean or easy. People die. People kill. And people learn to survive. But what does this mean for Nessa and Nick?
Is this the end?
Or simply a new beginning?
Purchase 'The System' here.
Also check out Teshelle's first novel, 'Core', if you like kickass female leads and dragons. Yeah, I said dragons. :D
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