Thursday, January 10, 2013

'Til the World Ends'

My Review:
Ok so this one I was so excited about. I loved the Immortal Rules and I can't wait for book two. So when I saw that this had a prequel to that series I jumped at the chance to review it. Well I can 100% say that this prequel is not for teens. There is one part of this book that was way out of the teen world. The prequel takes up about 40% of this book. So the other two short stories in this book (yes there are two more from other authors) get to split the other 60%. The book was great other than that part. I just sort of think this would have been better to either add to the paperback of The Immortal rules or as an extra in book 2. Because having an anthology with three stories kind of leaves ya hanging. PS. I did love the  cover!
"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."

Book Description

January 29, 2013 Luna Books

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Harlequin Luna; Original edition (January 29, 2013)
New York Times bestselling and critically acclaimed authors Julie Kagawa, Ann Aguirre and Karen Duvall imagine what it takes to survive in a world where everything you know—and love—is about to disappear…forever.Dawn of Eden by Julie Kagawa
Before The Immortal Rules, there was Red Lung, a relentless virus determined to take out all in its path. For Kylie, the miracle of her survival is also her burden—as a doctor at one of the clinics for the infected, she is forced to witness endless suffering. What's worse, strange things are happening to the remains of the dead, and by the time she befriends Ben Archer, she's beginning to wonder if a global pandemic is the least of her problems….
Thistle & Thorne by Ann Aguirre
After a catastrophic spill turns the country into a vast chemical wasteland, those who could afford it retreated to fortresses, self-contained communities run by powerful corporations. But for Mari Thistle, life on the outside—in the Red Zone—is a constant struggle. To protect her family, Mari teams up with the mysterious Thorne Goodman. Together, they'll face an evil plot in both the underworld of the Red Zone and the society inside the fortresses that could destroy those on the outside…for good.
Sun Storm by Karen Duvall
Sarah Daggot has been chasing storms since she was a child. But after the biggest solar flares in history nearly destroy the planet, she becomes a Kinetic, endowed by her exposure to extreme radiation with the power to sense coming storms—in the cosmos and beyond. And she's not the only one. Sarah believes the Kinetics are destined to join forces and halt the final onslaught of the sun. She'll vow to keep trying to convince the one missing link in their chain of defense, the enigmatic Ian Matthews, up until the world ends.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

In the summer of my twenty-third year, the Red Lung virus began its spread across the eastern United States. Flulike symptoms evolved to raging fever, necrosis of the lungs and finally asphyxiation, as victims choked and drowned in their own blood. By the time government officials knew anything was wrong, the virus had already made its way overseas and was rapidly decimating Europe and parts of Asia, with no signs of slowing down. A worldwide emergency was called; towns had been emptied, cities lay in ruins and the virus continued its deadly march toward human extinction.We thought Red Lung was as bad as it could get.
We were wrong.
"Kylie! It's Mr. Johnson!"
I spun from Ms. Sawyer's cot, nearly beaning Maggie in the nose as I whirled around. The intern looked frantic, her eyes wide over her mask, her face pale as she pointed to a cot along the far wall. Two masked interns were struggling with the body of a middle-aged man who was spasming and coughing violently, trying to throw them off. Blood flecked his lips, spattered in vivid patterns across his sheets and hospital robes. His mouth gaped, trying to suck in air, and his breathing tube lay on the ground in a pool of blood and saliva.
I rushed over, snatching a syringe from my lab coat and dodging the intern, who stumbled back as the man flailed. Grabbing the patient's arm, I threw my weight against him, which didn't do much as Mr. Johnson was a big guy and frantic, and I weighed about one hundred ten sopping wet.
"Hold him down!" I called to Eric, the intern who'd been flung back, and he pounced on the man again. Blood streamed from the man's nose and flew in arcing ribbons across the bed as he coughed and flailed. I uncapped the syringe and plunged it into his arm, injecting eight mms of morphine into his veins.
Gradually, his struggles ceased. His eyes rolled back, and his head lolled to the side as he passed into unconsciousness.
At this stage of the infection, he would probably never wake up.
I sighed and brushed away a strand of ash-blond hair that had come loose from my clip during my struggles with Mr. Johnson. My hand came away sticky with blood, but I was so used to that now, I barely noticed. "Keep an eye on him," I told Eric and the other intern, Jenna, who looked on with weary, hooded eyes. "Let me know if there's any change, or if he wakes up."
Jen nodded, but Eric made a disgusted sound and shook his head, his dark curls bouncing.
"He's not going to wake up," he said, voicing the fact that everyone knew but was too numb to think about. "We've seen this a thousand times, now." He turned accusing eyes on me, gesturing at the unconscious patient. Though he slept now, we could hear the gurgling in his throat and lungs, the rasp of air through a rapidly flooding windpipe. "Why did you even waste a shot of morphine on him? We're almost out, and it could've been used on someone who has a chance. Why not put the poor bastard out of his misery?"
"Keep your voice down," I said in a cool, even tone, giving him a hard glare. Around us, our patients coughed or slept fitfully, too drug-addled to really understand what we said, but they weren't deaf. And the other interns were watching.
They were just as discouraged and frightened and exhausted, but I could not show weakness, especially now.
"It's not our place to say who lives or dies," I said quietly, looking at Eric but speaking to all of them. "We have a responsibility to these people, to fight for them. To not give up. That's why we set up this clinic, even though all the hospitals in the city have probably shut down by now. We can still help, and we will not abandon them."
"You're crazy." Eric finally looked up at me, his face bleak. "This is crazy, Kylie. Everyone is gone, even Doc Adams, and he set this whole place up. You might not want to accept it, but it's time to face facts." He nodded at Maggie and Jen on the other side of the bed. "This is futile. We're the only ones left, and we can't save anyone. We lost. It's time to throw in the towel."
"No." My voice came out flat, cold. "This isn't a stupid boxing match. These are people's lives. I'm not going to abandon them. Even if I can only give them a peaceful last few days, that's better than doing nothing." Eric snorted, and I stared him down. "But I'm not keeping you here." I pointed past him at the entrance to the makeshift clinic, the opening covered with plastic strips. "You can walk out anytime. If you want to leave, there's the door."
He glared at me before he reached up and tugged down his mask. I could see the grim line of his mouth and jaw, and my heart sank, but I kept my expression calm.
"You expect miracles," he said, taking a step back. Glancing around the small, cloth-walled room, the patients huddled beneath the bloodstained sheets, he shook his head. "You can stay here until the city crumbles around you, and the stink of dead bodies makes your insides rot. You might not have a family, but I haven't seen mine in weeks, and I don't even know if they're still alive." His face crumpled with worry and fear, and I felt a stab of guilt before he curled a lip and sneered at me. "So you stay here with your cadavers and the virus until one of them kills you. I'm done."
He spun on his heel and walked across the room, pushed through the door in a swoosh of plastic, and was gone.
I wanted, badly, to sink into a chair, to rub my tired eyes and even get a little sleep, but that wasn't an option. Glancing at the two remaining interns, I gave them what I hoped was an encouraging smile.
"Maggie, go check on Ms. Sawyer," I said, and she nodded, looking relieved to do something that didn't involve large, violent patients. "Jen, why don't you check the supplies, see what we have and what we're running out of. I'll keep an eye on Mr. Johnson."
They hurried off, and I hoped I'd managed to hide the worry and constant strain of keeping this clinic alive, the despair that another had gone, given up, and the secret fear that he was right. I noted the hopeless slump of their shoulders, the exhausted way they carried themselves, and knew they wouldn't last much longer, either.
Walking to our tiny operating room, I turned on the sink and ran my arms beneath the cold water, letting the dried blood swirl into the basin. I glanced up, and a thin, pale girl stared back at me from the mirror, blood speckling her face and streaked through her fine blond hair, which hadn't been washed for days. Dark circles crouched beneath green eyes, the telltale marks of exhaustion, her cheeks gaunt and wasted.
"You look hideous," I told my reflection, which nodded in agreement. "You're going to have to sleep sometime or you'll be fainting on the patients."
But there was no time for rest, no time to take a break, especially now that Eric was gone. This small clinic, hastily set up on the edge of urban D.C., was the last hope for those infected with Red Lung, the virus that had decimated the city and turned the downtown area into a war zone. Makeshift clinics had been constructed around the city to help with the overwhelming number of sick, but it was never enough. As more people died and civilization broke down, chaos and riots had spread rapidly with nothing to stop them, the worst of mankind coming to the surface. All the other hospitals had closed down, the dead left to rot in their rooms, or laid out in rows in the parking lot. As the city had emptied, even the other clinics had begun to vanish, the doctors and staff either dying or giving up in despair. As far as I knew, this was one of the last, but there were still infected people out there, and they deserved some kind of hope. Even if it was very slim.
Splashing water on my face, I rubbed my tired eyes. Now, if I could just cling to a bit of that hope myself.
"Hello?" A deep voice cut through the beeping machinery and coughing of patients. "Anyone here?"
I jerked up. Hastily I dried my hands, scrubbed the towel over my face and hurried out to the main room.
Two strangers stood just inside the entrance flaps, both young men, one leaning on the other with an arm around his shoulders. I blinked in shock; the second man had on a stained white lab coat much like mine. He had light brown hair and glasses, and even across the room, I could see he was badly hurt; his shirt was torn, especially his sleeve, and his arm looked as if he'd stuck it in a meat grinder. The other was tall and broad-shouldered, holding his friend's weight easily. His shirt and jeans were stained with blood, though I suspected it wasn't his own. His gaze met mine, dark eyes appraising beneath a mess of short, mahogany-colored hair.
"Can you help us?" he asked, his voice rough with worry. "We saw this place from the road. Is there a doctor around?"
"I'm in charge," I said, stepping forward. "But this is a quarantined zone. You can't be here—you'll both be exposed to the virus."
"Please." His brown eyes grew pleading, and he glanced down at his friend, who seemed barely conscious, hanging from his shoulders. "There's nowhere else to go—the other hospitals are empty. He'll die."
I sighed and gave a brisk nod. "In here," I ordered, and he followed me into the operating room, hefting his friend onto the table as gently as he could. The other moaned, delirious, and his arm flopped to the counter. His skin was flushed, feverish, his face tight with pain.
I cut away his shirt and coat, revealing an upper torso that was pale and slightly overweight, but he didn't seem to be wounded anywhere else. I would examine him thoroughly later, but the arm was the most pressing concern. Gently, I lifted the mangled limb from the table to study it. Several torn, bloody holes ran up the l...


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"Thanks to the publisher or author for sending me this copy!"

Wednesday, January 09, 2013

Author Thursday: Rochelle Maya Callen Author of: Ashes and Ice






This week we get to go inside the mind of author Rochelle Maya Callen Author of Ashes and Ice coming out soon!














I grew up with a book under my arm. I frequently read until dawn by flashlight so that no one could see I was up by the light under my door. I scribbled stories in the corners of notebooks and was convinced I would be a novelist one day. And then *BAM* twelve years later it happened!

Hmmm, what happened in those twelve years? I entered high school at thirteen and promptly abandoned my stories and dreams of being a novelist for a path of study that I hoped would make me suitable for political office and would eventually land me in a big white house on Pennsylvania Avenue in D.C. My fervent passion for social & political justice fueled my studies and I did not read a single fiction book (unless my study required) until two years after I graduated college. I worked up to four jobs at a time. Only one stuck: behavioral therapy. I have been a behavioral therapist for the past 8 years and have focused on cases of severe mental illness and autism.

​So, how did story telling creep back into my life? I owe it all to my daughter—then in my ever growing pregnant belly—and the fabulous nausea that she insisted on blessing me with. For a period of time, I was so sick that I could barely get out of bed. It was then that I decided to pick up a novel. I fell in love again. I tore through books and read them late into the night. I think my husband worried about me. He would wake up to see me sniffling or laughing or taut with anxiety all because of the book in my hand.

​During this time, I found a chapter and character sketch about an extraordinary girl named Jade that I had written at 12 or 13. Those few pages were the catalyst to writing Ashes and Ice. It took years to write. I was so intimidated by the process! It wasn’t until my sister said she would not speak to me if the rough draft wasn’t finished by her birthday (April 2012). That got me writing!

​Now, I am writing every spare moment and have not only the rest of the Ashes and Ice trilogy mapped out, but also three other projects in the works.

I feel incredibly blessed to have found my love of books and writing again. It truly was and is my dream—I had just forgotten about it for a time. And finally, I am living it.

If I have any advice for readers and authors alike, it is this:
You were meant to have a remarkable life. Accept nothing less. If there is a dream in your heart, it isn’t meant to stay there and get dusty like some box left in an attic. A dream is meant to be chased after, reached for… the road may be a long one—twists and turns may drag you off track, but in the end, if you keep reaching,  you may in fact find yourself among the stars.

Find Her

Tuesday, January 08, 2013

TMI Tuesday! Kids


For this week I thought I would do something simple and show you my kids.  I have two girls whom are 8 years old and 2 years old.  If you have the time please subscribe to my YouTube Channel

HOP: YA Faeries and Fantasy

CLICK PIC TO GET FULL HOP LIST!

So I love faeries and fantasy.  It is is my choice when it comes to what to read next.  So I thought someone out there would love this book!  Have fun!



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Monday, January 07, 2013

Princess of the Silver Woods

Title: Princess of the Silver Woods
Author: Jessica Day George
Pages: 336


My Review: 5 Stars
When I requested this on Netgalley I didnt relaize that it was a book three.  So after reading the first two books. Which now that I think about I haven't done the reviews for that one.  lol. Bad reviewer. This one was great. I love the cover! So spooky and pretty!  I do state that you should read book one and two before you read this one. 
"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."

Thanks to Netgalley and Bloomsbury for the review copy! 

Book Description

December 11, 2012 Twelve Dancing Princesses
When Petunia, the youngest of King Gregor's twelve dancing daughters, is invited to visit an elderly friend in the neighboring country of Westfalin, she welcomes the change of scenery. But in order to reach Westfalin, Petunia must pass through a forest where strange two-legged wolves are rumored to exist. Wolves intent on redistributing the wealth of the noble citizens who have entered their territory. But the bandit-wolves prove more rakishly handsome than truly dangerous, and it's not until Petunia reaches her destination that she realizes the kindly grandmother she has been summoned to visit is really an enemy bent on restoring an age-old curse. The stories of Red Riding Hood and Robin Hood get a twist as Petunia and her many sisters take on bandits, grannies, and the new King Under Stone to end their family curse once and for all.


About the Author

JESSICA DAY GEORGE is the author of Princess of Glass and Princess of the Midnight Ball as well as three novels in the Dragon Slippers series, andTuesdays at the Castle. Originally from Idaho, she studied at Brigham Young University and was a movie store clerk, a bookseller, and a school office lady before becoming a writer. www.jessicadaygeorge.com



More About the Author

Biography

It's all about the books. Friends, family, school, "real jobs", they were just obstacles to be tackled so that I could return to my true love: books. All I have ever wanted in this world is to read and write books. My criteria for choosing a purse is that it must be able to fit a paperback book inside. I took books on my honeymoon, and bought more while we were there. I picked my major because it looked like I would get to read a lot of books, and also I thought it would provide me with interesting background information for my own books (which it did). From the time I was twelve on up, I told people that I wanted to be a writer. When they said, "So, you'll teach and then maybe try to write a book?" I would just shake my head. No, I was a writer, and that was all I wanted to do. So over the years until I got published, I lived in Idaho, in New Jersey and Delaware, and in Utah, because it didn't matter. I could read and write anywhere. I've worked at a wedding invitation factory (Bet you didn't know they made them in big scary factories, did you?), at a video store (back at the birth of DVD), at libraries and bookstores, and even been an office lady at a school while I waited to get published. I knew that I would be published eventually, because . . . well, I just had to be.

Now, don't get me wrong, I have other interests. I took eight years of German, four of Norwegian, and even studied Old Norse so that I could read the great Viking sagas in the original language. I knit like a maniac: hats, scarves, sweaters, dog sweaters, socks, felted purses, you name it. I play the piano and viola, love to travel and to watch movies.

But mostly, it's about the books.

Visit Jessica at http://www.JessicaDayGeorge.com

Monday Note


  • Finished:
    • The Critter Club
    • Demon's Cure
    • My Invented Life
    • The Rebels of New Sun
    • This is How I Save My Life
    • Forbidden Sister
    • Darker Still
    • Twisted Tragedy
    • Pure
    • Fuse
    • Hysteria
    • The Goddess Inheritance
  • Stating
    • Pivot Point
    • Dance of Shadows
    • Dualed
    • Jack Templar
    • Daynight
    • Warm Bodies
  • TBR
    • Beautiful Creatures
    • Snow White and the Queen of Mayhem
    • The Girl's Guide the Love and Supper Clubs
    • Winger
    • The Murmuring
    • Poison
    • The Duff Series
      • Elixir
      • Devoted
      • Ture
    • Doll Bones
    • The Host
    • And the list goes on, and on, and on, and on...........................................................

Sunday, January 06, 2013

Followers Giveaway!




600followers_zps178da8aa







Ok so it seems that I will be at 700 followers soon.  And ill be at 800 in no time.  So instead of having just one big giveaway!  I decided why not have one every time I reach a new milestone.   

600 Followers (2 winners)
Sarah C.
Caitlin

700 Followers (2 Winners)
Cate W.
Carey M.

800 Followers (2 Winners)
Steph S. 
Rachel D. 

900 Followers (2 Winners)

1000 Followers (5 Winners)















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Friday, January 04, 2013

If You Have A Craving, I Have A Cure

My Review:
I grabbed this one because of the recipes. I love to cook and now that we're living on our own (instead of with family) we have full range over the kitchen. So this month I will be trying a lot of the recipes from the book.  So don't just cure your craving for food! Have fun and cure your craving for life, health, and spirituality!   
I wanted to make a side note.  That although this book is made to be Christian it can work for any religion.  Just switch the deities to your own and your good to go! 
"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."

Book Description

December 20, 2012
  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Tyndale Momentum (December 20, 2012)
Life can be hard . . . but food, faith, and fun are three amazing gifts from God to satisfy and refresh us every day. Yet all too often, we focus primarily on what we can not do, and what we should not eat—which leaves us feeling deprived and depressed. Instead of being energized by following Christ, we waste our days feeling bored and burnt-out on our faith, while battling the guilt that comes from craving the food that we love. In If You Have a Craving, I Have a Cure, best-selling author and speaker Sheri Rose Shepherd encourages you to embark on a new adventure with faith and food. She reveals the food coaching tips that enabled her to lose over 50 pounds and keep it off, and shares fun recipes in celebration of the healthy, delicious food our God created for us to enjoy. It’s time to let go of guilt, grab hold of grace, and recapture the life God craves for us to live! “Taste and see that the Lord is good. Oh, the joys of those who take refuge in him!” (Psalm 34:8)


"Thanks to the publisher or author for sending me this copy!"

HOP: Clean Your Shelf

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL HOP LINK LIST 

Ok so this one is something that I have an extra copy of laying around.  This book was so cute and it is now out.  This ARC is a SIGNED COPY!! And has never been read so it looks very nice. 
Something is wrong with the linkey for this hop.  It was freezing up my site.  So please go here to view the list thanks for stoping by!  

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Thursday, January 03, 2013

Thursday Thoughts: Reviews?



Every time I do a review I wonder what I should put with it.  Currently I add the following:


  1. Book Cover:  via HTML from Amazon
  2. About the book
  3. About the Author
  4. Links to buy book via: Amazon, BAM, BN
  5. My Review
  6. My Rating
  7. Note thanking the publisher/author for sending me the book
  8. Note that the review is 100% my honest opinion.  
  9. Links to the author stuff if given
I always wonder if I should ad something else.  But in the end doing the following takes me around 2-5 minutes. So not long at all.  Do any of you add anything else to your post?  



I am on the look out for Bloggers to Blog on my Blog (say that three times fast) If you would like to submit a topic for discussion please fill out the form below.  With the discussion I will also post a link to your site.  So you get more traffic yay!!!  



Another Look At Under The Never Sky





Updated Review:  1/3/13


Reading this book for the second time was a joy!  I remembered things I had forgotten and loved the story even more. I think in this series I love Roar he is the witty comedian in this book and he brings a light to a serious story. Aria found herself in a place where she thought she would die and became the woman that she always was. I so love this series. Come back tomorrow for my review of book 2 out this month. Through The Ever Night. 
 My Review from 1/16/12

Ok first off I thought this book was WAY SLOW!  It was good but all the really good stuff started around 200 pages in.  So the last 100 pages was all the REALLY GOOD STORY!

Ok so Aria is a great character and so is Perry!  I fell in love with Roar he is such a great friend and more.

This book takes us on a wild ride under a never sky that can kill you in a heat beat.

This book is told in two pov  that of Aria and Perry and it works out great!  I was kinda mad on where it ended it left at a somewhat big cliffhanger but thats fine.  I hope that the next book is out soon.




Book Description

January 3, 2012
Since she’d been on the outside, she’d survived an Aether storm, she’d had a knife held to her throat, and she’d seen men murdered. This was worse.
Exiled from her home, the enclosed city of Reverie, Aria knows her chances of surviving in the outer wasteland—known as The Death Shop—are slim. If the cannibals don’t get her, the violent, electrified energy storms will. She’s been taught that the very air she breathes can kill her. Then Aria meets an Outsider named Perry. He’s wild—a savage—and her only hope of staying alive.
A hunter for his tribe in a merciless landscape, Perry views Aria as sheltered and fragile—everything he would expect from a Dweller. But he needs Aria’s help too; she alone holds the key to his redemption. Opposites in nearly every way, Aria and Perry must accept each other to survive. Their unlikely alliance forges a bond that will determine the fate of all who live under the never sky.
In her enthralling debut, Veronica Rossi sends readers on an unforgettable adventure set in a world brimming with harshness and beauty.

BUY THE BOOK
Amazon | BAM  |  BN

     About the Author

Veronica Rossi graduated from UCLA and studied fine art at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. She began writing fiction for teens and received first-place awards in the Pacific Northwest Writers Association and SouthWest Writers annual contests before completing Under the Never Sky. It’s since captivated publishers in more than twenty countries worldwide and been optioned for film by Warner Bros. Veronica lives in northern California with her husband and two sons.

Wednesday, January 02, 2013

Release Day Party! The Exemeus



We’re celebrating the release day party of YA fantasy novel The Exemeus. Come celebrate with us and get your chance to win a paperback copy of The Exemeus!
Purchase your copy in paperback or Kindle format. Watch The Trailer





About The Exemeus

Title: The Exemeus 
Authors: Folami and Abeni Morris 
Genre: YA Fantasy Romance


 
Hyalee Smith is dead, she just doesn’t know it yet.
Her short life was devoted to love and to hate. Love of the man who stole her heart, hate for the man who stole the world. Murdered by the government she swore to destroy, fate has given her another chance to make it right. But to save the planet, she needs the help of the most powerful mystic the world has ever seen—unfortunately he hasn’t been born yet.
In a world where fear is the only currency, Dephon has committed the ultimate crime: inspiring hope.
His only goal is to make it safely through ninth grade, but on a post-apocalyptic Earth run by the Treptonian government, it isn’t that simple. Heir to a legendary power, Dephon Johnson is the only threat to the government’s rule. And on Trepton, all threats must be eliminated. When hundreds of assassins are dispatched to neutralize him, Dephon is forced to fight back. His only chance of survival is to enlist the aid of the greatest warrior the world has ever known. The only problem is, she's been dead for 13 years.

Author Bio

Folami and Abeni Morris are a sister-sister writing team. Together they wrote (and rewrote) The Exemeus series, somehow managing to accomplish it without murdering one another. Despite their tendency to finish each others thoughts and stick up for each other constantly, no, they’re not twins and thus deserve their own individual bio. 

  Folami Morris
Folami grew up in the tiny city of San Mateo Ca, where nothing ever happens and no one ever leaves. She went to Xavier University for undergraduate, getting her B.A in physics and her B.S in Biology. After graduation she returned to California, to live in an even smaller city, where even less happens, Antioch Ca. During this time she escaped the monotony by hanging out with her imaginary friends Hyalee and Dephon, and by writing the Exemeus. She finally escaped to Queens NY and now realizes that quiet and tiny aren’t so bad. 

  Abeni Morris
As luck (and logic) would have it, Abeni grew up in the same tiny little town as her sister, then she too escaped to the tinier town of Antioch. She has yet to leave. She received her bachelor’s degree in early childhood development from Cal State East Bay. She is the mom of two amazing kids, who swear that they deserve a percentage of the book proceeds and a ton of the credit. At least she raised dreamers.

Watch The Trailer

Watch the Trailer!









Author Thursdays




Are you an author and you want some free pr?  Well all you need to do is fill out this form. 
This form is for Interviews and Guest Posts.  So please just copy and paste your post into the area. 

If you would like your book reviewed please go here  Reviews 





Author Wednesday!



Thank you for stopping by on our first ever! Author Wednesdays!  
These days we will be hosting authors! 
 They will get to choose their own questions and share with us their thoughts on any subject!  



daynight


This week we have non other than Megan Thomason author of Daynight!  



Book Description

 November 12, 2012
Print Length: 320 pages

BlueInk Review * (starred review): "gripping young adult dystopian novel; compelling conflicts; high stakes; powerful narrative; surprises keep coming; strong writing; page-turner; engaging characters; Readers will be hungry for the sequels.”

“Sure to win over YA readers looking for a dangerous, dystopian adventure story... A sci-fi adventure with a sweet YA love story at its center… richly imagined alternate world… distinctive voices and conflicting motivations” —Kirkus Reviews

Meet The Second Chance Institute (SCI): Earth’s benevolent non-profit by day, Thera’s totalitarian regime by night. Their motto: Because Everyone Deserves a Second Chance at Life(TM). Reality: the SCI subjects Second Chancers to strict controls and politically motivated science experiments like Cleaving—forced lifetime union between two people who have sex.

Meet Kira Donovan. Fiercely loyal, overly optimistic, and ensnared by the promise of a full-ride college scholarship, Kira signs the SCI Recruit contract to escape memories of a tragedy that left her boyfriend and friends dead.

Meet Blake Sundry. Bitter about being raised in Exile and his mother’s death, Blake’s been trained to infiltrate and destroy the SCI. Current barrier to success? His Recruit partner—Miss Goody Two Shoes Kira Donovan.

Meet Ethan Darcton. Born with a defective heart and resulting inferiority complex, Ethan’s forced to do his SCI elite family’s bidding. Cleave-worthy Kira Donovan catches his eye, but the presiding powers give defect-free Blake Sundry first dibs.

Full of competing agendas, romantic entanglements, twists and turns, daynight is Megan Thomason’s debut young adult dystopian novel and first in the daynight series.




   

About The Author

Biography

Megan Thomason lives in paradise aka San Diego, CA with her husband and five children. A former software manager, Megan vastly prefers writing twisted tales to business, product, and marketing plans. When she isn't typing away on her laptop, she's reading books on her phone--over 600 in the last year--or attending to the needs of her family. Megan's fluent in sarcasm, could potentially benefit from a 12-step program for road rage, struggles with a Hot Tamales addiction, loves world travel & fast cars and hates paperwork & being an insomniac. Daynight is Megan's first published novel, but fourth written one.

Why should we read daynight?
Highly rated by professional, Amazon and Goodreads reviewers, daynight will grip you from the first page and take you on a wild ride: “a dangerous, dystopian adventure story”-Kirkus Reviews. “A must read for Hunger Games and Divergent lovers”-Amazon reviewer. “Delicious humor, intelligence, and sparkling dialogue”-Amazon reviewer. Full of competing agendas, romantic entanglements, twists and turns, daynight transpires in a modern-day society that fully intends on extending its dominion to Earth.

Where did you get the inspiration for daynight?
As I was hiking in one of the many canyons during San Diego on a particularly hot day, I pondered what it would be like if things were so hot that there would be no choice but to switch days and nights. This was the impetus for Thera, the setting for most of daynight. I had fun researching all the various ways this would impact the Theran people--from differing lingo 'daymares,' 'daygowns,' 'Monnight, Tuesnight, etc.', to environmental (landscape, weather shifts).
The Second Chance Institute, benevolent non-profit on Earth by day, and totalitarian ruler on Thera by night, and their messed up agendas and methods, are purely a figment of my twisted imagination.

Tell us about the characters in daynight. Who is your favorite character in daynight? Least favorite?
daynight rotates between three main characters’ point of views—Kira, Ethan and Blake. I assigned physical and character attributes much like I’d do a job description:
Kira-pretty; athletic; willing to put up with a whole lot of crap; naïve; loyal; great poker face; always asking questions; internal strength and resiliency
Blake-rebellious; loyal to the Exilers he grew up with, yet resentful for having to take on their cause; doesn’t trust anyone or want to have to depend on anyone; judgmental; rough around the edges
Ethan-gorgeous; self-esteem damaged from having been born with a heart defect and continually told he isn’t worthy of his birthright; protects those he cares about; funny; listens well; very close-lipped about his past
Physically, I started with pictures to inspire me for each character. You can see some of these pictures here
Favorite character: Jax. Ethan’s best friend, excellent comic relief in a dark story, communicates in double speak, and more important to the story than many may realize.
Least favorite character: Blake’s father, Hank. Terrible dad. Not only does he steal Blake’s childhood to further his own agenda, he’s too bull-headed to see his own stupidity.

Why did you decide to self publish?
I had originally planned to go the traditional publishing route with daynight. But without any contacts in the publishing industry, I didn’t like the odds of sending a one paragraph description in a one page letter to the dozen young adult agents in the country… who each get up to 20,000 letters a year and can only take on a couple new authors. And even if an agent did pick me up, it would take a couple years to get published. The process seemed rather antiquated and slow and I wanted to begin writing the next book. So, I decided to self publish and focus on getting a) great professional reviews (so far, so good here) and b) success as an indie author (working on it… it’s only been 6 weeks). Making it as an indie author takes a ton of work. But I don’t shy away from hard work. In my last career, I often worked 80-100 hour weeks. I can live on very little sleep for long periods of time and am extremely productive.

How do you go about the writing and editing process?
I plot, plain and simple. Given daynight has 3 main characters who tell their story in the present and by flashback; a dystopian entity with a presence on both Earth and Earth’s sister planet, Thera; multiple ‘bad guys’; a band of Exilers split into two factions; and several other more minor, but highly important characters, each with a rich backstory… I had to plot it. That said, to me a book is like a living entity that continually evolves. I revise said plot as often as I have better ideas—which is all the time!

Tell us your most rewarding experience since being published.
Having thousands download daynight during two days of ‘free’ promotion and positive reviews start to pour in!

Any other books in the works? 
Book two of the daynight series, arbitrate is fully plotted and well under way. I’m targeting to have it out the summer of 2013.
I also have another book, B*Lies, in the works, the story of a girl who makes the decision to run from her abusive father.

Any advice for other authors?
1) Read! If every author read every book in their genre (or at least the highly rated ones), there would be a lot less rehashed stories, better writing, and fresh concepts. I read 600 books in the last year. You can find my top 50+ favorites here
2) Plot! Certainly, there have been some successful books written off the cuff, but to have good pacing, story development, character development, building of tension, etc. it typically takes good plotting.
3) Flexibility! Revise, revise, revise. Rewrite, rewrite, rewrite. Don’t get so stuck on your initial concept that you reject an even better idea.
4) Edit! Editing is hard. I typically go through my book over a hundred times, looking for something different each pass.
5) Proofread! Yes, I list this separately from editing. Have someone (or even better, many someones)—other than you—someone with a sharp eye and very keen grasp of the English language, proofread your book. The brain compensates for missing words, extra words, etc. and they are very hard to find. If problems are found after publishing, fix and update.
6) Work hard! If you thought the writing was time-consuming and hard, promoting your book takes as much, if not more time. Put in the hours.
7) Thicken your skin! It is unlikely you like every book you read, so you can’t expect everyone to like your book. I’ve adopted the saying: "If you're trying to please everyone, then you're not going to make anything that is honestly yours, I don't think, in the long run."--Viggo Mortensen.
8) Start writing the next book. Your chances increase exponentially of having a ‘hit’, the more offerings you have.

     What experiences have you had that inspire your writing?
My oldest daughter told me not to elaborate; that my back-story is “too dark”. Suffice it to say that I have a wide array of emotions and experiences to draw from—from humorous, to heart-breaking. Not everyone can say their (violent) dad left their family to go to Peru to get picked up by a spaceship, had to watch their 9 year-old daughter go through cancer treatments with less than a 25% chance of making it (thankfully, she defied the odds), or has a teenage son who has gone off the rails in a spectacular way.

What’s the weirdest book you have ever read?
I got put on bed rest with child #4, and a friend brought me the strangest trilogy of books—one was about a conjoined set of twins and the issues they had having relationships (disturbing); one was about bondage (even more disturbing); and the last was about an elephant tribe and their 'relations' (intriguing, but again, disturbing). I don’t remember the names, but the themes have stuck with (haunted?) me to this day.
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