Welcome to D. Lieber w/ #Fantasy #Romance ‘The Exiled Otherkin’ @GoddessFish

Today we have author D. Lieber visiting. Welcome!

What would you like to tell readers about yourself?

* D. writes stories she wants to read. Her love of the worlds of fiction led her to earn a Bachelor’s in English from Wright State University.
* When she isn’t reading or writing, she’s probably hiking, crafting, watching anime, Korean television, Bollywood, or old movies. She may also be getting her geek on while planning her next steampunk cosplay with friends.
* She lives in Wisconsin with her husband (John), retired guide dog (Samwise), and cat (Yin).

Today D. Lieber will be talking about the best writing advice she’s ever received.
* The best writing advice I’ve ever received was actually directed to an entire audience at a convention (C2E2 2014 to be exact). One of the authors on the All Things Fantastic panel made an off-handed comment that she writes stories she wants to read that haven’t been written yet. This statement made a huge impact on me in a few ways. On one hand, it encouraged me to take the leap into novel writing; I had previously stuck to poetry and short stories. On the other hand, it emphasized that authors should write for themselves before anyone else. This advice has gotten me through all of the stages of self-doubt, which accompany any form of artistic pursuit.

A look into…

~ Blurb ~

* Exiled from Faerie when her father dies, half-Fae Ember is surprised by how much the human realm has changed since she was there last. She takes a dangerous job on a merchant airship, hoping a life on the move will keep her well-hidden. Sure, she misses her brother, but years of apathy have numbed her emotions.
* When the optimistic and naïve Reilley follows her, it’s annoying to say the least. But when she starts feeling responsible for him, long-stifled emotions crack the ice around her heart.
* Faeries, pirates, and traveling players meet in this steampunk fantasy adventure as Ember tries to cope with feelings long forgotten and a past that pursues her.

~ Excerpt ~

* Clutching my new tambourine, I walked to a clearing to have more room to dance. Reilley grabbed the drum and started a beat. Like before, I moved to the rhythm. This time, my red skirt danced with me, and I shook my tambourine appropriately. We discovered that as long as I let Reilley choose the pace, we could improvise an entertaining performance.
* We fed on each other’s energy and ended at a natural breaking point, exchanging smiles as the last beat echoed off the trees.
* “You’re enchanting,” Reilley complimented smoothly.
* “I’m only expressing your music and following your lead.”
* He flushed with pleasure at the high praise.
* “Could you do me a favor?” I asked him.
* He nodded.
* “Would you unplait my hair? It should be dry by now.”
* His eyes gleamed like I’d given him a gift, and I turned my back to him. With long, deft fingers, he gently unbraided my hair. Undone, he ran his hands through the soft waves to separate them. I shivered.
* “Thank you,” I whispered.
* As his hands gently stroked the dark locks, I became aware that we were very alone. We’d been alone before, but this time was different. An air of anticipation settled between us. His hands stilled. Neither of us knew what should happen next, and the pressure quickly became uncomfortable.

Buy The Exiled Otherkin here…
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | black rose writing

Find D. Lieber here…
Facebook | Goodreads | Google+ | Website | Book Video on YouTube

Thank you for joining us here today, D. Lieber! It was a pleasure getting to know you and your story.

ANNOUNCEMENT! D. Lieber will be awarding a fancy homemade bookmark (US ONLY) to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour! So be sure to leave a comment AND use this RAFFLECOPTER LINK to enter the drawing. Also, visit the other tour stops for a greater chance of winning!

Welcome to Rachel Brimble w/ #RomanticSuspense ‘If I Want You’ @RachelBrimble @GoddessFish

Today we have author Rachel Brimble visiting. Welcome!

What would you like to tell readers about yourself?

* Rachel lives with her husband and two teenage daughters in a small town near Bath in the UK. After having several novels published by small US presses, she secured agent representation in 2011. Since 2013, she has had seven books published by Harlequin Superromance (Templeton Cove Stories) and an eighth coming in Feb 2018. She also has four Victorian romances with eKensington/Lyrical Press.
* Rachel is a member of the Romantic Novelists Association and Romance Writers of America, and was selected to mentor the Superromance finalist of So You Think You Can Write 2014 contest. When she isn’t writing, you’ll find Rachel with her head in a book or walking the beautiful English countryside with her family. Her dream place to live is Bourton-on-the-Water in South West England.
* She likes nothing more than connecting and chatting with her readers and fellow romance writers. Rachel would love to hear from you!

Today Rachel Brimble will be talking about the best writing advice she ever received and how it helped her.
“Give yourself permission to write a ‘crappy’ first draft…” Julie Cohen
* This was it! This single line of advice changed my career and output in one glorious blow. I was at a resident writing course and the tutor (and fabulous women’s fiction author!), Julie Cohen said this to her avid students and the lightbulb didn’t just go off in my head, it darn near exploded!
* By nature, I am a worrier of ridiculous proportions – added to the often introvert nature of most writers, and I was struggling to move forward with my work. Instead, I was constantly battling the continuing self-doubt that the writing was good enough…that I was good enough.
* I think I received this advice in 2010 and since then I’ve heard it been given many times in one form or another. So, what does it really mean and how did it help me?
* Well, it’s not exactly encouraging you to write a ‘crappy’ first draft – what it is encouraging is freedom. Liberty to write how you want, what you want, and go with the characters action/reactions/wants/desires. Once I started writing this way and finally destroyed that pesky internal editor once and for all, not only did I fall in love with writing again, but my output quadrupled overnight.
* That first draft is still my favourite place to be – I am a plotter, I make character sketches, chapter plans and even write a synopsis before I start the actual writing. However, once I start, I really start. Bells, whistles, foghorns, you name it, everything pours out of me in that first draft and if things turn away from my plan, I run with it. After all, my characters know themselves better than I do!
* So, several weeks later I’m done. The first draft is in the bag. THE END is written.
* What next?
* The hard part, of course! Did I say writing was easy? Did I say the ‘crappy’ first draft means you’ll never sweat, cry or bleed again? Nope. Writing is hard, will always be hard and there’s no shortcut to getting it right, BUT this is a great way to produce a finished book, to get to that all-important end so you have pages and pages of good (and not so good) material to edit, tweak and change.
* It’s a process – one that I absolutely love and, God willing, I won’t have to do anything for a living ever again.
* Happy writing!
* Rachel x

A look into…

~ Blurb ~

* When local journalist, Tori Peterson, fails to prevent a child abduction outside her niece’s school, her horror and guilt sparks a vow to do whatever it takes to get little Abby Brady home to her parents.
* While Tori battles the vile memories of her own kidnapping as a child, she accepts the help of widowed father, Mark Bolton. As he and Tori join forces with the local police, their attraction and intimacy grows…along with their fears for Abby.
* Links are uncovered between Abby’s disappearance and Tori’s kidnapping, and Tori is forced to accept the monster who held her captive is back. But this time, Tori is all grown up, and there is no way she will let him hurt another little girl.

~ Excerpt ~

* Sensing her discomfort, he stopped and leaned against the bureau. God, did he frighten her? Surely not, or she wouldn’t be here. Or did she sense his attraction toward her and would do all she could to deflect it? He didn’t doubt for one minute his eyes gave away his appreciation whenever he looked at her.
* He lifted the can to his lips. “So, what have you been thinking about?”
* She tapped a peach-painted nail on the bureau. “This.”
* “The bureau?”
* “Principal White’s bureau.”
* He frowned. “How did you know it was hers?”
* “She mentioned you were working on a bureau for her when I was in the school office. I assumed this is it.”
* “It is.”
* “Good, because that makes it all the easier for me to give you your first assignment.”
* “You want me to talk to her.”
* She smiled, took a few tentative steps closer to him. “Got it in one, Watson.”
* He smiled, pleased to see genuine mischief shining in her eyes. “I’m Watson?”
* “Yep.”
* “So that makes you Holmes. Not sure I like being anyone’s sidekick.”
* Another couple of steps closer until no more than a couple of feet separated them. She met his eyes and his heart kicked. Her V-neck shirt was just the right side of professional. Yet, the way it revealed her collarbones and hugged her full breasts made him want to reach out and pull her into his arms, kiss her, taste her…
* “You’re staring, Watson.”
* He blinked and snapped his gaze from her breasts, rare heat hitting his face. “Sorry. You look nice.”
* “Thanks.” She raised her eyebrows and nodded toward his chest. “So do you.”
* He smiled. “Why don’t we go inside? It’s way too hot out here.”

Buy If I Want You here…
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Wild Rose Press

Find Rachel Brimble here…
Amazon Author Page | Blog | Facebook | Facebook Street Team | Goodreads | Twitter | Website

Thank you for joining us here today, Rachel Brimble! It was a pleasure getting to know you and your story.

ANNOUNCEMENT! Rachel Brimble will be awarding a $20 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour! So be sure to leave a comment AND use this RAFFLECOPTER LINK to enter the drawing. Also, visit the other tour stops for a greater chance of winning!

Welcome to Edward Ashton w/ #SciFi #book ‘The End of Ordinary’ @edashtonwriting @GoddessFish

Today we have author Edward Ashton visiting. Welcome!

What would you like to tell readers about yourself?

* Edward Ashton lives with his adorably mopey dog, his inordinately patient wife, and a steadily diminishing number of daughters in Rochester, New York, where he studies new cancer therapies by day, and writes about the awful things his research may lead to by night. He is the author of Three Days in April, as well as several dozen short stories which have appeared in venues ranging from the newsletter of an Italian sausage company to Louisiana Literature and Escape Pod.

Today Edward Ashton will be talking about Advice to the Writer: Don’t Quit Your Day Job

* One sunny afternoon in April of my junior year in college, my favorite professor called me into her office. She was a poet of some note, and had spent the past two semesters trying to cram the concepts of rhyme, rhythm and meter into my prose-centric skull. I thought she might be planning on tearing apart my latest sad effort at blank verse, but no. She was in a mellow mood. She invited me to sit.
* “So,” she said. “How are you progressing these days?”
* “Um,” I said. “What?”
* She rolled her eyes.
* “Your academics, Ed. How are you progressing? You’ve been working toward a double major, no?”
* I nodded. I’d been keeping one foot in writing and the other in engineering for the past three years. This wasn’t an easy balance. There were surprisingly few classes that fulfilled requirements for both degrees.
* “Good,” she said. “That’s very good. You know my next book is coming out soon?”
* I nodded again. She’d been pretty clear on that point. She leaned back in her chair, and looked up at the ceiling.
* “I just got my advance check,” she said. “Do you know what I did with it?”
* I shook my head.
* “I bought an air conditioner.”
* I opened my mouth to say something positive, but she went on before I could.
* “Not a central air unit, Ed. The kind that goes in your window.” She sighed. “Study hard in your engineering classes. You don’t look like the sort who can live on bologna.”
* As a writer—or as any kind of artist, really—there’s always a delicate balance to be struck between following your dreams, and making some kind of reasonable accommodation with the world. The economics are pretty similar for almost anyone whose primary job is to entertain. A very small number of people make obscene amounts of money (Taylor Swift, or Lebron James, or J.K. Rowling) while a great many people work extremely hard for something close to nothing (your local bar band, or some anonymous power forward playing for the Rapid City Twisters, or my poet-mentor.) Writing a novel is much more akin to buying a lottery ticket than it is to landing a plum job at Google.
* This is not to say, of course, that you should set aside your dreams of artistic glory, and resign yourself life as an office drone. However, if you run down a list of famous speculative fiction writers, you’ll find an awful lot of folks who didn’t quit their day jobs. Isaac Asimov was a tenured professor, as is David Brin. Robert L. Forward was an aerospace engineer. John Scalzi… well John Scalzi got a multimillion dollar book deal with Tor. If you manage to pull that off, yes, you can resign your position at GloboMax Corp post-haste.
* As for me? I’m still keeping one foot in both worlds. I’ve published dozens of short stories over the last couple of decades, as well as two novels (Three Days in April and The End of Ordinary, both from HarperCollins) with a third on the way. I’ve also built a career as a cancer researcher, and published a thick stack of journal papers and medical texts along the way. Time management is an issue at times (take a look at my previous post on writing in the interstices for more on that) but I don’t actually feel like my scientific career detracts from my writing. To the contrary, some of my best plot twists have come from things I learned during the course of my research. There might not be quite as much synergy if my day job were in accounts receivable at Target, but I’m sure I could find something to work with even there.
* The important thing to remember at the end of the day is that to be a writer, you don’t have to be only a writer. You just have to write. Also, it’s tough to live on bologna cooked over a garbage fire. Can’t forget about that.

A look into…

~ Blurb ~

* Drew Bergen is an Engineer. He builds living things, one gene at a time. He’s also kind of a doofus. Six years after the Stupid War — a bloody, inconclusive clash between the Engineered and the UnAltered — that’s a dangerous combination. Hannah is Drew’s greatest project, modified in utero to be just a bit better at running than most humans. She’s also his daughter. Her plan for high school is simple: lay low and run fast. Unfortunately for Hannah, her cross-country team has other plans.
* Jordan is just an ordinary Homo-Sap. But don’t let that fool you — he’s also one of the richest kids at Briarwood, and even though there isn’t a single part of him that’s been engineered, someone has it out for him.
* Drew thinks he’s working to develop a spiffy new strain of corn, but Hannah and her classmates disagree. They think he’s cooking up the end of the world. When one of Drew’s team members disappears, he begins to suspect that they might be right. Soon they’re all in far over their heads, with corporate goons and government operatives hunting them, and millions of lives in the balance.

~ Excerpt ~

* “Okay,” he said. “Let’s take this one step at a time. Why do you need accomplices?”
* “I already told you,” Micah said. “We are like ninety percent fully opposed to your plans to murder Jordan. Ninety-five percent, even.”
* “Quiet,” Bob said. “Grownups are talking now.”
* “Micah’s an idiot,” Marta said, “but believe it or not, he’s mostly right. We know about Project Snitch, Daddy.”
* Bob’s eyebrows came together at the bridge of his nose.
* “Project what?”
* Marta rolled her eyes.
* “Give it up, Dad. I don’t have anything else to do around here, so I snoop. I’ve heard you and Marco talking about Project Snitch more than once.”
* “Actually,” I said, “I think Hannah said that the real name for it was Project Dragon-Corn.”
* Bob’s face went blank.
* “Oh,” he said, after a long, silent pause. “Oh. Oh, honey. You mean project Sneetch.”
* I looked at Marta. Marta looked at me. Micah finished his smoothie, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and smiled.
* “Uh,” Marta said. “What?”
* Bob sighed.
* “Sneetch, honey. Not Snitch. Sneetch.”
* “Oh,” Marta said. “I thought you were just making fun of Marco’s accent when you said it that way.”
* We all turned to stare at her.
* “Anyway,” I said. “Confusion-wise, I’m not sure that’s…”
* I slapped my palm to my forehead and let out a long, low groan.
* “What?” Micah asked. “Are you having a stroke?”
* “Sneetch,” I said. “Project Sneetch. Holy shit, dude. You think you’re Sylvester McMonkey McBean.”
* “Right,” Bob said. He leaned back, and crossed his arms over his chest. “See, honey? Your gay boyfriend gets me.”

Buy The End of Ordinary here…
Amazon

Find Edward Ashton here…
Amazon Author Page | Facebook | Goodreads | Twitter | Website

Thank you for joining us here today, Edward Ashton! It was a pleasure getting to know you and your story.

ANNOUNCEMENT! Edward Ashton will be awarding a 14 Ounce Nalgene—filled with candy corn! & 1 VeryFit Smart Band (US only) to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour! So be sure to leave a comment AND use this RAFFLECOPTER LINK to enter the drawing. Also, visit the other tour stops for a greater chance of winning!