Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Blog Tour: Under the Moon by Natalie J. Damschroder

Welcome to The Wormhole!
It is my great pleasure to feature:
Under The Moon: Goddess Rising Book 1 and author Natalie J. Damschroder!
Title: Under the Moon : Goddesses Rising Book 1
Author: Natalie J. Damschroder
Genre: Urban Fantasy Romance
Length: Novel
Ebook Release Date: November 1 2011
Print Book Release Date: December 6, 2011
ePub ISBN: 978-1-937044-54-1
Print ISBN: 978-1-937044-55-8

GODDESSES RISING - Book One - by Natalie J. Damschroder
Book blurb:
Their power gives them strength…and makes them targets.

Quinn Caldwell is the epitome of a modern goddess. Her power source is the moon, her abilities restricted only by physical resources and lunar phase. She runs a consulting business and her father’s bar, serves on the board of the ancient Society for Goddess Education and Defense, and yearns for Nick Jarrett, professional goddess protector and the soul mate she can never have.

But someone has developed the rare and difficult ability to drain a goddess of her powers, and Quinn is a target. With the world thinking Nick has gone rogue (whatever that means) and that Quinn is influenced by “family ties” she didn’t know she had, keeping themselves safe while working to find the enemy proves harder each day.

But not as hard as denying their hearts…
Available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble
I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to interview Natalie, I hope you enjoy it!
? How many jobs did you have before you became a writer?
*counts* I had 8 BEFORE I became a writer, and started writing during that 8th job. Then I had 4 more non-writing jobs, and I still have one of those (chiropractic assistant) as well as freelance editing. It always amuses me how eclectic writers’ job histories are. Mine includes: pizza demonstrator at a grocery store; Blockbuster Video clerk; Olan Mills sales (for one day—I sucked!); shoe store clerk (the old fashioned kind where you get measured and fitted); and proofreader/traffic manager/assistant production manager for an ad agency.

? How long does it take you to write a book?
I wish I knew! LOL I think my average is about four months for a first draft, though I’ve done it in less than a month during National Novel Writing Month, and taken over a year when I had other things going on, like revisions and editing for contracted books. Now that I’m regularly publishing, it’s a leap-frog kind of progression and very difficult to track accurately.

? How do you decide what you want to write about?
Very much like I decide what I want to read. It’s all about mood, whether I want to do a paranormal YA or romantic adventure, or even a novella or short story about some small theme. Lately, I decide what I want to write about based on what my editor demands per my contract. :)

? What books have most influenced your life?
Here’s a different answer than I normally give to questions like this. I’m going to say the books that I refused to read. They include Intruder in the Dust by William Faulkner, which I stopped reading in junior English when I counted a five-page sentence with no punctuation. After that success (the teacher gave us SO much work that flunking that test didn’t lose me my A in the class), I quit reading Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness because I didn’t like it. By the time I hit college, I hated the idea that the only worthy books were old ones written by men, and I took it to extremes when I was taking a Civil War class pass/fail and didn’t bother reading The Killer Angels because it had been *assigned* to me. I read it after the class was over and loved it, so that taught me a lesson, too. :)

But those books are why my blog is called “Indulge Yourself,” and why I believe wholeheartedly in entertainment that makes you happy.

? What is your favorite comfort food?
Real popcorn, popped in a popper (on the stove is best, but air-popped is fine), with real butter and salt. My brother and I were raised by a single mom, and we spent many Thursday nights sitting around the popcorn bowl watching the Huxtables and passing around a hand towel for our greasy hands. Many other nights, I lay in bed listening to the sound of kernels hitting the pan as she made some for herself. Now I do that to my kids. LOL I guess it’s symbolic of family, and togetherness, and security, and a reminder of the good times.

? What do you think makes a good story?
I think a synergy of character, tension, and challenge are what make a story good, and that combination isn’t limited to any particular genre or subgenre. It’s also different for different people. I don’t like characters who whine or do bad things, but there are a lot of successful TV shows with those elements, as an example. Tension comes from mystery, usually not knowing what’s going to happen or how, and challenge is the goal, whether it’s a seaside concierge doctor MacGuyvering a patient treatment or a woman striving to eradicate evil vampires from her world.

Fun random questions: 
  • dogs or cats? I used to think both, but I’ve learned it’s definitely more cats. :)
  • Coffee or tea? Tea, but also cafĂ© mocha (far too many mornings) but never straight coffee
  • Dark or milk chocolate? Dark, preferably with toffee or nuts or nougat or something in it
  • Rocks or flowers? Oh, tough one. Flowers unless it’s my yard, then rocks.
  • Night or day? I admit, I have a hard time going to bed at night, and an equally difficult one getting up in the morning.
  • Favorite color? White
  • Crayons or markers? Crayons, because they’re more versatile
  • Pens or pencils? Pens, but only if they glide very smoothly. Keyboard trumps both.
 Thank you so much for having me today! This has been a very fun interview!


Natalie J. Damschroder came to writing the hard way—by avoiding it. Though she wrote her first book at age six (My Very Own Reading Book) and received accolades for her academic writing (Ruth Davies Award for Excellence in Writing for a paper on deforestation her senior year in college), she hated doing it. Colonial food and the habits of the European Starling just weren’t her thing.
She found her niche—romantic fiction—shortly after college graduation. After an internship with the National Geographic Society, customer service for a phone company just wasn’t that exciting. So she began learning how to write the books she’d loved to read all her life. Now she struggles to balance her frenetic writing life with her family, the most supportive husband in the world and two beautiful, intelligent, stubborn, independent daughters (the oldest of whom has become a writer). She somehow also fits in a day job and various volunteer positions in and out of the writing industry.
Learn more about her at her website, www.nataliedamschroder.com, follow her on Twitter @NJDamschroder, or friend her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/nataliedamschroder

Monday, December 12, 2011

Review: Scary School by Derek the Ghost

Scary School by Derek the Ghost
Amazon Book Description:
You think your school's scary?

Get a load of these teachers:
Ms. Fang, an 850-year-old vampire
Dr. Dragonbreath, who just might eat you before recess
Mr. Snakeskin—science class is so much more fun when it's taught by someone who's half zombie
Mrs. T—break the rules and spend your detention with a hungry Tyrannosaurus rex!
Plus
Gargoyles, goblins, and Frankenstein's monster on the loose
The world's most frighteningly delicious school lunch
And
The narrator's an eleven-year-old ghost!
My thoughts:
Original, witty, clever, creative, silly, and a little twisted - all wrapped up in a great little story about what it means to be friends. 
It's filled with scary monsters, crazy humans, terrifying teachers, a bunch of dead kids and a load of life lessons.  The kids will be laughing from the very start.
I enjoyed the story.  It's a bit silly for the adult in me, a bit twisted for the parent in me, and wonderful for the kid in me.  I am sure that this book will be a huge hit with middle schoolers all over!  The illustrations are fantastic.  The characters are wonderful.  The writing is vividly descriptive and oh so clever.  If you enjoy a play on words - this is for you.  
I think it would make for a fun read-aloud and you could use it for a number of different lessons from character building to history and science (never math - you'll understand when you read it).  I love that you can read a secret chapter if you pass Ms. Fang's on-line quiz.  
This is the first in what will be a series by Derek the Ghost.  Don't miss it!

Sunday, December 11, 2011

New Book Info!!! Untraceable by S.R. Johannes

I must begin this post with an apology - I was planning to have this book birthday post published on the actual book birthday, but I dropped the ball and didn't get it done.  Shelli, I am so sorry to have let you down.
So.... now......
It's new ~ it's exciting ~ you have to check this out!!!
Untraceable: The Nature of Grace - Book 1 by S.R. Johannes

Amazon Product Description:
Grace has lived in the Smokies all her life, patrolling with her forest ranger father who taught her about wildlife, tracking, and wilderness survival. When her dad goes missing on a routine patrol, Grace refuses to believe he’s dead and fights the town authorities, tribal officials, and nature to find him. One day, while out tracking clues, Grace is rescued from danger by Mo, a hot guy with an intoxicating accent and a secret. As her feelings between him and her ex-boyfriend get muddled, Grace travels deep into the wilderness to escape and find her father. Along the way, Grace learns terrible secrets that sever relationships and lives. Soon she’s enmeshed in a web of conspiracy, deception, and murder. And it’s going to take a lot more than a compass and a motorcycle (named Lucifer) for this kick-butting heroine to save everything she loves.
Here is what Kimberly Derting (author of The Body Finder) has to say about it:
"Grace is a spunky, independent, nature girl who doesn't need a boy to save her. With wilderness survival, a juicy love triangle, and more twists and turns than a roller coaster, this fast-paced novel had me holding my breath until the very last page - and still begging for more!"
Kirkus Reviews says:
This thrilling story is a dramatic entanglement of mystery, deception and teen romance, The action flows like a brisk mountain stream interspersed with rapids, holding suspense to the last page."
This is what S.R. Johannes tells us:
The book is a contemporary wilderness thriller with a strong girl main character.
16 year old Grace was reared in the wilderness. Her first pet was a bear named Simon. Her first potty, an Oak tree. And, her first swing, a forest vine. Grace has lived in the Smokies her whole life, patrolling with her forest ranger father who taught her everything he knew about wildlife, tracking, and wilderness survival. But when Grace's dad goes missing on a routine patrol, unlike everyone in her sleepy mountain town, she refuses to believe he's dead. When a Cheetos bag and stolen government file materialize, Grace is convinced she's one step closer to proving all the non-believers wrong.
Then one day while out tracking clues, Grace is rescued from imminent danger by Mo, a hot guy with an intoxicating accent, that's definitely not from her neck of the woods, and a secret. Grace has never felt a connection like this before, certainly not with her ex-boyfriend, the adoring, but decidedly unrugged Wyn.
Now with renewed confidence, Grace travels deeper into the wilderness that has always been her refuge only to learn that her father's disappearance is not a mere coincidence. Soon she's enmeshed in a web of conspiracy, deception, and murder. And it's going to take a lot more than a compass and a motorcycle (named Lucifer) for this kickass heroine to emerge from an epidemic that's spreading like wild fire, threatening everything and everyone she's ever loved.
You can buy a copy of this great book by clicking HERE.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Blog Tour: The Next Thing I Knew by John Corwin (Giveaway too!)

This virtual book tour is presented by Bewitching Book Tours!
You can see the entire tour schedule by clicking HERE.
Welcome to The Wormhole and my day on the tour!
Please welcome John Corwin!
John Corwin has been making stuff up all his life. As a child he would tell his sisters he was an alien clone of himself and would eat tree bark to prove it.


In middle school, John started writing for realz. He wrote short stories about Fargo McGronsky, a young boy with anger management issues whose dog, Noodles, had been hit by a car. The violent stories were met with loud acclaim from classmates and a great gnashing of teeth by his English teacher.


Years later, after college and successful stints as a plastic food wrap repairman and a toe model for GQ, John once again decided to put his overactive imagination to paper for the world to share and became an author.
Guest post from John himself:
The Writing Process

I established in another article that the reason I write is to fulfill my need for world domination and control the fate of the universe, even if it's a pretend one.  But I'm pretty sure that my millions of loyal fans also want to know how I write.  Unfortunately, my spam filter weeds out the vast majority of fan emails so I tend to extrapolate from one or two emails what the rest of my massive loyal fan base wants to know about dear old moi.

Everywhere I read about writing methods it's always the Planners versus the Pantsers.

Planners, obviously, are those anally-retentive types who write an outline, sketch out the details of the book, and then flesh in the skeleton from there.

Pantsers are the ones who think, "It would be so totally sweet to write a book about a girl who can walk on her hands and clap her feet together at the same time!"  And then they write the book without planning it much more than that.

I've written using both methods.  One thing I discovered from both is that while planning does have the advantage of giving you some direction, by the time you've hit a hundred pages, you'll find the characters have decided to take things another direction.

"Which is why I'm totally gonna pants my story about Sally, the hand-walking, foot-clapping wonder girl!" you may shout in glee as you prematurely celebrate your victory over the evil planners.

By the time I starting writing The Next Thing I Knew, I decided it was time for a new action plan.  So I did something that I'm pretty sure nobody has ever done:  I combined methods.  Before you collapse from the sheer genius I've just displayed, let me explain.  And then you may collapse.

First, I write out a premise.  Second, I sketch out an entire synopsis that tells the story from beginning to end.  Third, I write a one-sentence description for each of the first few chapters.  For example:

Chapter 1 – Jimmy finds a rock, glues beady eyes on it, and names it Gunther T. Higgins but discovers that Billy's pet rock already has the same name.
Chapter 2 – Billy wants to fight Jimmy to determine who gets to keep the name Gunther T. Higgins for their rock.
Chapter 3 – The rocks come to life, reveal themselves as aliens from Easter Island, and judge the human species as terrible pet rock owners.
Chapter 4 – The world is taken over by alien space rocks.

After that, I write the chapters without planning out every single detail.  For the most part it seems to work although the editing phase brings new challenges.  By the way, I've already patented my new method under the name Plantsing.  If anyone tries to steal this idea, alien space rocks will pay you a visit!

Now that I've revealed the genius behind my madness…or something like that, how would you write a book?

Thanks for having me!
The Next Thing I Knew
                      By John Corwin

Humanity is extinct

When Lucy Morgan drops dead along with everyone else on Earth she refuses to take death lying down even if, technically, her corpse is.

She drags her ghostly social life back from the grave and enlists her friends to figure out the rules of the afterlife. More importantly, they want to discover who or what killed everyone and why the heck anyone would do such a mean thing.

But what they discover changes everything. And if they can't figure out how to put their newfound ghostly powers to work, humanity will be extinct for good.


purchase links:
 BN: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-next-thing-i-knew-john-corwin/1104808377

Thanks for stopping by The Wormhole!
Good luck in the drawing ~ Happy Reading!

Review: Christmas with a Vampire

Christmas with a Vampire: 

A Christmas Kiss\The Vampire Who Stole Christmas\Sundown\Nothing Says Christmas Like a Vampire\Unwrapped


Amazon Product Description:
Prepare for an exhilarating journey across the boundary of death into a shadowy, daring new world. As darkness falls on another year, five fanged rebels are ready to celebrate like never before.
It's a time for bloodlust and stolen kisses, for clandestine bites and forming new bonds beneath the mistletoe. Succumb to the forbidden as these powerful vampires give you a Christmas you'll never forget….
My thoughts: 
This was a great read!  I enjoyed each story very much.  I found myself falling in love with the characters from the start of each new story.  I kept thinking, "Oooh, this one is my favorite!" and then I would turn to the next one, fall in love with those characters and think that about that again.  
I love vampire stories but had never read anything by any of these authors so I was excited to read "new to me" authors.  (I am still trying to decide who I think is on the cover).  Each short story is an original, fairly powerful love story and are all well written.

A Christmas Kiss by Merline Lovelace: Great characters, twisty plot.
The Vampire Who Stole Christmas by Lori Devoti: Super great characters! Multifaceted theme - revenge, need, desire, self worth and the meaning of love.  
Sundown by Linda Winstead Jones: Great characters.  Connected with Abby (I've worked in the bar industry for over 20 years!) and fell in love with Leo.  New spin on vampire powers that was refreshing.  
Nothing Says Christmas Like a Vampire by Lisa Childs: Super story.  This one had me from the go.  Intriguing family ties, great characters and the invincibility of true love.  Don't miss it.
Unwrapped by Bonnie Vanak: Wonderful characters, new look at the vampire/werewolf battle.  Long lost love, opposing families, treachery, hope...it's all here.  (and I LOVE the ugly doll bit!)
A must read for vampire fans!

Once again I have been MIA for a few days - Sorry!

Winners!!!

Book Lover's Holiday Giveaway Hop Winner:  morganlafey86!

The Chosen by Sheenah Freitas: sammykeyes1!

Laura Kaye Giveaway: marypres!

Immortalis Giveaway: paige

I will be emailing all of you shortly!  Congratulations and thanks to everyone who entered all these giveaways!