Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Blog Tour: A Dragon Rider's Gift by KH LeMoyne

This virtual book tour is presented by Enchanted Book Promotions.
Welcome to The Wormhole and my day on the tour.
It is my pleasure to feature one of my favorite authors, 
KH LeMoyne and her book Dragon Rider's Gift.

K.H. LeMoyne has been writing romance ever since someone told her that she had to grow up and get a real job. Then she switched to writing romantic fantasy to keep real life from getting in the way of a good story. The love of things mystical and magical keeps her writing, with characters who fight for never-ending love against insurmountable odds. Well, that and occasionally she gets to write about elves and dragons … but that’s a different story.

Title: Dragon Rider’s Gift
Author: KH LeMoyne
Genre: Adult Fantasy Romance
Roark of Nedres spent his life absorbing lore, legend, and rumor to claim his dragon beast in order to save his people. Nothing has prepared him for the ultimate bond fate will demand.
Princess Nira Meriel Estar was born with the power of prophecy. Her most recent vision forecasts a dire fate for her people, promises few answers, and will deliver the country of Fyrhall a victorious future or crushing defeat.
Kraz, an ancient dragon of mythical power and knowledge, has eluded capture for a thousand years. However, only a dragon of great wisdom would consider an eternal bond to his warrior rider to save his dragon race.
Three souls. Two hearts. One courageous calling.

Author Bio and Links

A former technology specialist, KH LeMoyne writes sensual romance: urban and high fantasy, and scifi/futuristic. She lives in Maryland with her wonderful husband and corgi. Much to her dismay, she rarely encounters supernatural beings other than on paper. Visit her website or blog.
My thoughts:
I am a huge KH LeMoyne fan!  I am also a die-hard dragon fanatic.  Because I AM such a fan, I started this book with high hopes and I am not disappointed.  LeMoyne builds great characters that the reader can emotionally invest in and sets them in a world that is believable.  The story is intriguing and entertaining.  

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Review: Demonically Tempted by Stacey Kennedy

Demonically Tempted by Stacey Kennedy

* I received this book in exchange for an honest review.

Amazon Product Description:
Tess Jennings, now a member of the Memphis Police Department, is on her first cold case. The suspected suicide of Lizbeth Knapp ten years ago isn’t a theory her family accepts—they believe she was murdered. But the case is only one of Tess’s worries. Ghosts are talking, and word of her abilities rapidly spreads. A dark ghost is terrifying the spirits of Memphis, and she must force the entity to cross over. Tess doesn’t have to do this alone. Not only does she have her ghost-lover, Kipp McGowen, but the department has brought in a medium. Dane Wolfe might answer all her questions, but he also brings a world of trouble. Will Tess finally have all she’s ever wanted, or will everything she’s vowed to protect be ripped away?


My thoughts:
     Demonically Tempted takes up right where Supernaturally Kissed leaves off.  You can see my review of Supernaturally Kissed HERE and will see that I loved it.  This sequel is also amazing.  
     Stacey Kennedy has brought back all the characters that I loved from the first book and added some new faces.  The new characters are as well created as I expected and I loved and hated them as if they were real people in the lives (so to speak with Kipp being a ghost and all) of Tess and Kipp.  Dane Wolfe is a new face and the man has some issues!  I won't go into detail - spoilers and all - but I truly wanted to kick him in the shoe!
     Tess is now part of the police department and so her role is a bit different.  In this book she really comes into her own with her gift.  
     The story is intriguing and very different from the first book, although of course we are still dealing with spirits.  It is well paced and well written.  I couldn't put it down, reading faster and faster on the edge of my seat wondering what would happen next.  I got to the end of the book and was feeling like I knew exactly where the story was going when BAM! I was twisted and turned.  The rollercoaster that is the last part of the book took me flying around a corner and then.....cliffhanger!  Cannot wait for the next book!  DO NOT MISS THIS ONE!

Monday, July 23, 2012

Blog Tour: The Mother Daughter Show by Natalie Wexler

This virtual book tour is presented by Tribute Books.
The official tour site is HERE.
Welcome to The Wormhole and my day on the tour.
It is my pleasure to feature:
Natalie Wexler and The Mother Daughter Show.
Natalie Wexler's Bio:
Natalie Wexler is the author of The Mother Daughter Show (Fuze Publishing 2011) and an award-winning historical novel, A More Obedient Wife. She is a journalist and essayist whose work has appeared in the Washington Post Magazine, the American Scholar, the Gettysburg Review, and other publications, and she is a reviewer for the Washington Independent Review of Books. She has also worked as a temporary secretary, a newspaper reporter, a Supreme Court law clerk, a legal historian, and (briefly) an actual lawyer. She lives in Washington, D.C., with her husband.
Natalie has joined us for an interview:

? When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
I don’t think there was a specific moment of realization. Starting in high school and continuing through college I wanted to be a journalist, and I did pursue that for a while. But, being a fundamentally shy person, I always preferred the writing to the reporting. I started writing personal essays, but eventually I sort of ran out of material. I think throughout that entire period I would have aspired to writing fiction if I’d thought I could do it, but I assumed I couldn’t.  About ten years ago someone encouraged me to try turning an idea I had into what became my first novel, A More Obedient Wife. I was amazed to discover that I could do it.

? How many jobs did you have before you became a writer?
My first real job was as a reporter, so I suppose you could say I started out as a writer of sorts. But then I went to law school, clerked for judges for two years, and worked as a lawyer for all of eight months. After that I got a job as a legal historian and later freelanced for magazines. When I got tired of freelancing I thought back to some intriguing 18th-century letters I’d come across while working as a legal historian and ended up using the letters as the basis for my first novel.

? How long does it take you to write a book?
It depends. My first novel took me about eight years, but I wasn’t working on it full-time, and—since it was a historical novel—much of that time was spent doing research. The first draft of The Mother Daughter Show took me only about six weeks, but then I spent another year and a half rewriting it again and again. Right now I’m about 350 pages into the first draft of another historical novel. It probably took me about six months to write those pages, but I started thinking about and researching the idea years ago, before I wrote The Mother Daughter Show. And I also had a couple of false starts—drafts I abandoned after realizing they weren’t working, including one that had a different main character.

? Where do you get your ideas or inspiration for your characters?
For the historical novels, I’ve gotten my inspiration from real but minor historical figures who left behind some evidence of their existence, but not enough information for anyone to write a biographical account of their lives. For the first novel I had letters to and from my characters, and for the one I’m working on now, I have the magazine that one of my characters edited (and wrote much of) in the early 19th century. I don’t actually want to know too much about the real people my characters are based on, because then there wouldn’t be enough room for my imagination to play around with them. I wouldn’t want to try to write a historical novel about Abraham Lincoln, for example.

The Mother Daughter Show, which is set in 2009, was obviously different. It was inspired by a real event, but it was never my intention to have my characters be fictional versions of real people. I suppose the characters were originally inspired by things I observed about some real people (including myself), but they definitely took on a life of their own. Basically I started with traits that served the purposes of my plot (for instance, I needed one character who was a frustrated writer, one who was a control freak, and one who was desperate to keep the peace at any cost) and then worked from there to create what I hope are believable three-dimensional beings whose existence is completely independent of any real individual.

? How do you decide what you want to write about?
Again, it varies. The idea for The Mother Daughter Show kind of dropped into my lap, in that I found myself in a situation that—to me, at least—suggested the outlines of a comic novel. And writing about the situation was a way to maintain my perspective on something that was actually rather difficult and painful to live through.

The idea for my first novel, A More Obedient Wife, arose from my job as a historian: I knew a little about the two women who became my main characters from reading their letters, but I was frustrated that I couldn’t know more. Filling in the gaps with my imagination was the only way I could think of to get at their stories.

I’ve taken a circuitous route to the novel I’m working on now. Originally I was inspired by a portrait I saw of a beautiful woman from the early 19th century. Something about her made me curious, so I did some research and discovered that she’d been quite a celebrity in her time, basically because she married one of Napoleon Bonaparte’s brothers. Then, as I read through her voluminous correspondence, I realized that she was an extremely unpleasant person, and I decided I didn’t want to spend that much time in her company. But in reading her letters I came across a friend of hers who I thought was a terrific writer, so I started researching her instead. It turns out that the friend had a pretty dramatic life herself, and the novel is now basically about her.

? What are you reading right now?
I’ve just started How It All Began by Penelope Lively, a wonderful writer I discovered about a year ago. She manages to write books that are both funny and meaningful, a feat to which I aspire.

? What do you like to do when you are not writing?
Writing is a very solitary activity, and while it’s just about my favorite thing to do, I find I need to balance it with activities that bring me into contact with other people. One of those activities is teaching English as a Second Language to adults, which is one of the most rewarding things I’ve ever done.

? What do you think makes a good story?
All sorts of things can make a good story. If you’re terrific with language and description, you may not need as much of a plot. If you’ve got a great plot, maybe you can skimp a little on character development. The main thing is to keep the reader engaged enough that he or she wants to keep turning the pages.

? Who would you consider your favorite author and why?
I don’t really have a favorite author, but there are many I admire. Of the classic writers, I keep coming back to Dickens for his humor, the sheer power of his storytelling, and the quirky details he lavished on even his minor characters. Some of them may verge on cartoonish, but you’ll never forget them. Of contemporary writers, I’ve long been a fan of Alice McDermott and Margaret Atwood, and more recently I’ve been delighted to discover Sarah Waters and Penelope Lively. Aside from the fact that they’re all women, they’re pretty different, but each of them has managed to lift me out of my own world and plop me happily into a universe of her own creation.

The Mother Daughter Show Summary
At Barton Friends a D.C. prep school so elite its parent body includes the President and First Lady - three mothers have thrown themselves into organizing the annual musical revue. Will its Machiavellian intrigue somehow enable them to reconnect with their graduating daughters, who are fast spinning out of control? By turns hilarious and poignant, The Mother Daughter Show will appeal to anyone who's ever had a daughter - and anyone who's ever been one.


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The Mother Daughter Show Blog Tour Site - Tribute Books Blog Tours Facebook

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Saturday, July 21, 2012

Winner!

Congratulations Paige!
Winner of Moonlight Mayhem by Sherry Soule.



Friday, July 20, 2012

Cover Reveal ~ Hereafter by Terri Bruce (Giveaway too!)

This cover reveal promo is presented by Bewitching Book Tours.
HEREAFTER
By
Terri Bruce
Why let a little thing like death get in the way of a good time?
Thirty-six year old Irene Dunphy didn't plan on dying any time soon, but that’s exactly what happens when she makes the mistake of getting behind the wheel after a night bar-hopping with friends. She finds herself stranded on Earth as a ghost, where the food has no taste, the alcohol doesn’t get you drunk, and the sex...well, let’s just say “don’t bother.” To make matters worse, the only person who can see her—courtesy of a book he found in his school library—is a fourteen-year-old boy genius obsessed with the afterlife.
This sounds suspiciously like hell to Irene, so she prepares to strike out for the Great Beyond. The only problem is that, while this side has exorcism, ghost repellents, and soul devouring demons, the other side has three-headed hell hounds, final judgment, and eternal torment. If only there was a third option…
Book Details
Publication Date: August 1, 2012
Publisher: Eternal Press
Number of Pages: 356
Genre: Contemporary Fantasy

About the Author
Terri Bruce has been making up adventure stories for as long as she can remember and won her first writing award when she was twelve. Like Anne Shirley, she prefers to make people cry rather than laugh, but is happy if she can do either. She produces fantasy and adventure stories from a haunted house in New England where she lives with her husband and three cats.
Contact Details
Website/Blog: www.terribruce.net
Twitter: @_TerriBruce

An Excerpt:

A boy appeared in her path. She veered around him and then skidded to a halt. Something about him made her stop. She turned around to look at him and realized he was staring at her, his face a mask of astonishment, his mouth hanging open.
“Hey kid, watch where you’re going!” she said, more surprised than annoyed.
He was maybe fourteen and nearly as tall as her, at that “beanpole” stage, as her grandmother had called it—the tall and scrawny look of one growing too fast. What little of his face visible under a curtain of straw-colored hair was pointed and sharp—cheekbones, chin, and nose. His hair, cut in an asymmetrical bob that left it longer in the front than the back, was parted on the side and hung in his face, concealing his left eye. Somehow, the way one washed-out hazel eye was visible and the other hidden reminded her of Pete, the dog from the Little Rascals.
She realized he hadn’t moved a muscle and was still staring at her gape-mouthed.
“Did you hear me?” she asked.
He gave a little shake of his head, as if he was doing a double take. The motion caused the curtain of hair hanging over his eyes to sway. “Yeeesss,” he said in a slow, cautious, drawn-out way.
“Why are you staring at me?”
“Well, it’s just, because…you know. You’re…” He trailed off.
Irene narrowed her eyes. “I’m what?”
The boy turned beet red and took a step back, giving a hard gulp that made Irene fear he had swallowed his tongue. “Well…dead,” he stuttered.


...and now for the giveaway!



Thursday, July 19, 2012

Review: Supernaturally Kissed by Stacey Kennedy

Supernaturally Kissed by Stacey Kennedy

Ghosts harass and annoy Tess to save their souls. Sometimes she helps them. Other times she ignores them. But one ghost will give her no choice.

Kipp, a former cop with the Memphis Police Department, will stop at nothing to gain her help, including using his ghostly charms to seduce her.

Tess must help solve the five-year-old cold case of Hannah Reid's disappearance, because solving the case will save Kipp. But a bigger problem presents itself. Tess is falling in love with a ghost. Now she must decide. Keep Kipp forever, or find the killer.

Blush sensuality level: This is a sensual romance (may have explicit love scenes, but not erotic in frequency or type).



My thoughts:
     I am a Stacey Kennedy fan so I was excited to read this story.  I found the idea of falling in love with a ghost unique.  
     Stacey Kennedy is a storyteller.  She creates characters that are easily invested in, sets them in a world that is believable and carefully put together.  She has the ability to pace the story is such a way that it just unfolds before you from the pages you don't realize you are turning.  I enjoy her writing style.
     With that said, this book did not disappoint.  I fell for the characters right away.  Kipp is a fantastically created character - although he is a ghost - he has a clever and playful personality.  Tess is a wonderfully put together character.  Actually, all the characters have been painstakingly personalized in their creation.  I felt like I knew each one.
     The story is unique in the ghost/human love portion, but also a well-rounded murder mystery.  Fast paced, edge of the seat drama, mystery, and a shell shocking ending.


Wonderfully written, steamy love story - don't start it unless you can finish not only this one, but the next one - Demonically Tempted.  (Book three comes in the fall of 2012).