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Friday 18 July 2014

Bookvie: Life of Crime - out August 29, 2014 (USA)

  

Who's in it:
Jennifer Aniston, Mark Boone Junior, Kevin Cannon

What's it all about (book blurb from Goodreads):
Ordell Robbie and Louis Gara hit it off in prison, where they were both doing time for grand theft auto. Now that they're out, they're joining forces for one big score. The plan is to kidnap the wife of a wealthy Detroit developer and hold her for ransom. Looks good until they learn the lowlife husband doesn't want his wife back. So it's time for Plan B and the opportunity to make a real killing—with the unlikely help of a beautiful, ticked-off housewife who's hungry for a large helping of sweet revenge.

LIFE OF CRIME (2014) Official HD Trailer



Movie Stills:







Thursday 17 July 2014

Blog Tour Excerpt & Giveaway - Mindwar by Andrew Klavan




Mindwar
Release Date: 07/15/14
Thomas Nelson
352 pages

Summary from Goodreads:
Rick Dial has the potential to be a hero. He just doesn't know it yet.

Rick's high school football team couldn't be stopped when he was leading them as their quarterback. He was going to Syracuse on a scholarship. But then his dad abandoned them and a terrible accident left him crippled.

Certain his old life is completely lost, Rick spends months hiding away in his room playing video games. He achieves the highest scores on so many games that he's approached by a government agency who claims to be trying to thwart a cyber attack on America that would destroy the technological infrastructure of the entire country. The agents say that the quick-thinking of a quarterback coupled with Nick's gaming experience make him perfect for this assignment. The problem is that there are no extra lives and this isn't just a game . . . but Rick doesn't have many other options at the moment.

Entering "The Realm" gives Rick the one thing he thought he'd never have again: a body that's as fast and as strong as he ever was before the accident. But the more time he spends in The Realm, the more questions he has. What secrets are these agents keeping from him? What really happened to his father? How many others have gone into The Realm already . . . and failed? And perhaps most important, is he the hero they think he is?

Buy Links:



Excerpt from Mindwar

 Rick’s Dial streaked through the vastness of space, starlight and gunfire blazing all around him. The seat of his battlecraft shook beneath him as he pressed the button to unleash another deadly barrage from his two forward guns. He caught one glimpse of the pilot of the Orgon ship veering in toward him from starboard, then his shot struck home. There was an orange blast of flame and scrap metal. When it was over, both the Orgon ship and its pilot were gone.

That was the last of the guardians. Rick righted his battlecraft and zoomed in toward the mothership, which now hovered in the endless darkness undefended. He held the Fire button down. His forward guns bucked and spat death in a continual rattle. The black wall of the mothership frayed, chipped, and then burst apart. The landing bay was laid open to the vacuum of space.

As Rick guided his craft in toward the interior landing strip, he could see the insectile Orgon crewmen screaming in terror as they were swept from their battle stations into the infinite emptiness around them. He kept firing. The last parked crafts of his alien enemies exploded, killing whatever crewmembers were still on board.

With that, it was over. None of the giant bug-like creatures were left. The landing bay was clear.

Rick slowed his craft into a sleek glide and headed toward the centerline. He touched down effortlessly. The moment he did, words flashed on the television screen:

Starlight Warriors
New High Score! New Record Time!

Rick nodded with grim satisfaction. He laid the game controller aside on the sofa and reached for his crutches.


About the Author
Andrew Klavan is a best-selling, award-winning thriller novelist whose books have been made into major motion pictures. He broke into the YA scene with the bestselling Homelanders series, starting with The Last Thing I Remember. He is also a screenwriter and scripted the innovative movie-in-an-app Haunting Melissa.

Author Links:





***GIVEAWAY***

3 print copies of Mindwar up for grabs.
US only.


Book Blitz & Giveaway - Pieces of Olivia by Melissa West



Pieces of Olivia (Charleston Haven #1)
by Melissa West
Published by: Intermix (Penguin)
Publication Date: July 15th, 2014
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance

Synopsis:
Olivia Warren used to be a normal girl with a bright future.

But on one fated night, everything changed.

Hiding the scars of her past up her sleeves, Olivia transfers her enrollment from Columbia University to The College of Charleston, determined to pursue her own dreams for the first time in her life.

She intends to allow herself a bit of alone time to heal… that is, until she meets Preston.

Preston is best friends with her roommate, completely hot, and off-limits. But the chemistry between them is instantaneous—and as the pair begins to spend more time with one another, their feelings for each other build into something undeniable, something powerful enough to heal Olivia’s deepest scars.

Olivia tries to put her own past behind her and trust Preston, but she discovers that his past might be more present than she ever bargained for…

Buy Links:

Wednesday 16 July 2014

Blog Tour Interview & Giveaway - The Tuttle Twins Learn About The Law by Connor Boyack

The Tuttle Twins Learn About The Law
by Connor Boyack
Format: Paperback, 62 pages
Publication Date: April 23rd, 2014
Publisher: Libertas Press
ISBN 9780989291

Book Summary:
Children are often taught that government protects our life, liberty, and property, but could it be true that some laws actually allow people to hurt us and take our things? Join Ethan and Emily Tuttle as they learn about property, pirates, and plunder. With the help of their neighbor Fred, the twins will need to figure out what they can do to stop the bad guys in government!

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Author Interview

1. Tell a little about yourself. What you do when you’re not writing? What are your aspirations for the future?

I'm the president of Libertas Institute, a public policy organization (or "think tank" as they're commonly called) in Utah. We educate the public on issues relating to individual liberty, private property, and free enterprise, and work with legislators to promote good laws and fight the bad ones. I've landed in this role after years of involvement in different causes and organizations, and see myself doing this for a long, long time to come. As big and intrusive as the government tends to be, there's plenty of work to do!

2. When and why did you start writing?

I've been blogging for several years, and as I began to get a readership I realized there was a demand for the content I was producing. I wrote my first book, Latter-day Liberty in 2011, and since then have published several more books. All of them are politically oriented, encouraging people to support liberty and practice personal responsibility.

3. Have any particular novels or writers influenced your writing?

I think it was Emerson who said that he could no more remember the greatest book he had read than he could remember which meals he had eaten. I read—a lot. I suppose I take bits and pieces from a variety of sources. I really enjoy dystopian fiction, both from an entertainment and education standpoint. They're fun to read, but they also illustrate what society can turn into unless we stop it now. For a political guy, books like Atlas Shrugged or 1984 are instrumental in helping people contemplate what bad laws can do over time.

4. Give us some backstory behind The Tuttle Twins Learn About The Law. Where and when did you write it?

Two years ago, I was at a political conference with a friend of mine who does illustration and animation for a living. He suggested that we should consider doing a project together, and while I thought that sounded great, neither of us had anything in mind. Shortly afterward, Libertas Institute printed a pocket edition of The Law by Frédéric Bastiat which we sell at cost for a whopping $1. It was written in 1850 and is translated from the French. Bastiat was a classical liberal (not to be confused with the modern types of liberals); I often call him "the Thomas Jefferson of France." His book has been absolutely instrumental in helping people understand the proper role of government. The fact that we've now printed over 10,000 is testament to that fact. So finally I realized that while that book works great with adults, why not provide something to kids? After all, the ideas in the book are fundamentally simple: stealing is wrong, government shouldn't violate our rights, and justice can't exist where injustice has happened. So a year ago, this friend and I decided to begin working on a children's book that conveys these principles to young kids. The process itself spanned several months of writing, editing, storyboarding, illustrating, more editing, and finally printing and marketing. Having done a few books before it was good to have the experience so that this wasn't all new to me—it definitely sped up the process quite a bit. This is the first book in what will become a long series of books. Each one is going to focus on a different concept. We just announced the subject of the second one, and have plans for many more!

5. What was your favourite part of writing The Tuttle Twins Learn About The Law?

My favorite part was putting together what readers will find on "page 13." I'll leave it at that, and when you see it, you'll know why!

6. What does your writing schedule look like?

I have two young children and a very heavy work load, so my writing comes in small bits and pieces wherever I can fit it in. 20 minutes during a lunch break, half an hour at night after the kids are in bed but before my brain turns to mush, etc. Sometimes I wish I could write for a few hours straight, but that's rare for me. The upside to the incremental approach is that I'm able to give a lot of thought to each little bit that I do. The downside is that I have to work really hard to make sure it all flows well, since it can otherwise be pretty choppy.

7. Which fictional character would you like to take to dinner and why?

Who is John Galt?

8. Besides your lead, do you have a favourite character in the story?

The twins interview their wise neighbor, a man named Fred "who grew up in France," as the story says. He tells the kids that his parents named him after Frédéric Bastiat, the author of The Law. It was our fun way to pay homage to Bastiat and give a "nod" of sorts to his seminal work.

9. What is one of the most surprising things you've learned as a writer?

Being an author is 20% writing, 80% marketing. A few years ago when I wrote my first book, I wasn't prepared for how much work it would be. The books take a while to write, it's true, but the work doesn't end there—in fact, if you're doing things right, it's just beginning!

10. Any advice for aspiring authors?

Related to #9, the best advice I can give is to put a lot of effort into your marketing plan. Scour blogs and talk to other authors to learn from others' mistakes and improve your success that much more. Learn about targeted advertising, such as on Facebook, and make sure you really know your audience before you even begin the manuscript. If your marketing plan is strong, and you can execute it well, then your most interested readers will turn into your greatest advocates, generating a word-of-mouth marketing campaign that will continue to sell books for a long while to come!


About the Author
Connor Boyack is president of Libertas Institute, a public policy think tank in Utah. He is the author of several books on politics and religion, along with hundreds of columns and articles championing individual liberty. His work has been featured on international, national, and local TV, radio, and other forms of media. A California native and Brigham Young University graduate, Connor currently resides in Lehi, Utah, with his wife and two children.

Author Links:






***GIVEAWAY***

$100 Paypal cash or Amazon Giftcard.
Must be 18 or older. Void where prohibited by law.
Open internationally. Ends 7/26/2104

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Blog Tour Organised by Little Red Reads & Fire and Ice
  

Blog Tour Spotlight - Anvil of God, Book One of the Carolingian Chronicles by J. Boyce Gleason



Anvil of God
Book One of the Carolingian Chronicles
Author: J. Boyce Gleason
Publisher: iUniverse
Pages: 440
Genre: Historical Fiction
Format: Paperback/Kindle

Book Description:
It is 741. After subduing the pagan religions in the east, halting the march of Islam in the west, and conquering the continent for the Merovingian kings, mayor of the palace Charles the Hammer has one final ambition—the throne. Only one thing stands in his way—he is dying.

Charles cobbles together a plan to divide the kingdom among his three sons, betroth his daughter to a Lombard prince to secure his southern border, and keep the Church unified behind them through his friend Bishop Boniface. Despite his best efforts, the only thing to reign after Charles’s death is chaos. His daughter has no intention of marrying anyone, let alone a Lombard prince. His two eldest sons question the rights of their younger pagan stepbrother, and the Church demands a steep price for their support. Son battles son, Christianity battles paganism, and Charles’s daughter flees his court for an enemy’s love.


Buy Links:


Excerpt from Anvil of God

No one saw the second beast charge. It, too, followed the path of the V, although this time no shields were banged and no spears were thrown. The large animal crashed through the wood unchecked, heading directly for Odilo and Trudi. They, like everyone else, had been watching the fallen knight and remained unaware of the danger until the boar lunged at them.
Without a word, Odilo stepped to the right. Trudi spun away to her left. Then, in a fluid motion, their arms lifted and fell together, impaling the beast between them. It twisted under their spears, thrashing wildly as neither blow was a killing stroke. Odilo leaned down on the shaft of his spear, trying to drive its point further into the animal’s shoulder. As he pushed into the animal, it surged forward in an attempt to gore his leg. Trudi, having lost hold of her spear, drew her sword. The blade flashed above her head. She brought it down on the beast’s neck with both hands, severing its head in one stroke.
The hunters were stunned into silence. Blood spewed over Trudi’s legs and pooled at her feet. With a visceral shout Odilo swept Trudi into his arms and raised her hand high above their heads. The knights cheered and banged their spears against their shields. Odilo bowed theatrically to Trudi and the cheers grew louder.
He had never seen a woman wield a sword like that. Her strength and speed surprised him. She laughed, embarrassed at the applause, and he found it oddly compelling that she could be both strong and vulnerable. He studied the lines of her face and the curl of her hair. He took in the fullness of her lips and the light in her eyes. She was powerful, he realized unexpectedly, and quite beautiful.

Discuss this book in our PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads by clicking HERE.


About the Author
With an AB degree in history from Dartmouth College, J. Boyce Gleason brings a strong understanding of what events shaped the past and when, but writes historical-fiction to discover why. Gleason lives in Virginia with his wife Mary Margaret. They have three sons.

His latest book is the historical fiction, Anvil of God, Book One of the Carolingian Chronicles.

Visit his website at www.jboycegleason.com.

Author Links:


Blog Tour Organised by:

Tuesday 15 July 2014

Blog Tour Author Interview - Secrets of Hallstead House by Amy M. Reade



Secrets of Hallstead House
by Amy M. Reade
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corp.
Date of Publication: July 17, 2014
Number of pages:  appr. 273
Word Count: appr. 82,000
Formats available: ebook, print-on-demand

Book Description:
Macy Stoddard had hoped to ease the grief of losing her parents in a fiery car crash by accepting a job as a private nurse to the wealthy and widowed Alexandria Hallstead.

But her first sight of Summerplace is of a dark and forbidding home. She quickly finds its winding halls and shadowy rooms filled with secrets and suspicions. Alex seems happy to have Macy’s help, but others on the island, including Alex’s sinister servants and hostile relatives, are far less welcoming.

Watching eyes, veiled threats…slowly, surely, the menacing spirit of Hallstead Island closes in around Macy. And she can only wonder if her story will become just one of the many secrets of Hallstead House…

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Blog Tour Spotlight - The Hunting by Kerry Paresta



The Hunting
Author: Kerry Peresta
Publisher: Pen-L Publishing
Pages: 247
Genre: Contemporary Women’s Fiction/Inspirational
Format: Paperback/Kindle

Synopsis:
Isabelle Lewis, top advertising salesperson at the Chatbrook Springs Sentinel newspaper, has a habit of falling in and out of marriage. After her last divorce, she shoved the emotional pain into a compartment in her brain to deal with later. With three teenagers to raise, bills to pay, and sales quotas to meet, introspection was a luxury she could not afford. Her mind needed a happy place.

When Isabelle (Izzy) discovered online dating, it immediately became her favorite stress reliever and best friend. Often, she'd steal into the night after her kids were asleep to meet someone new. One fateful evening, the hunt for the perfect guy took a sinister turn when the mystery man she met turned out to be her worst nightmare! Reluctantly pulled into a web of lies, Izzy is forced to confront her demons.

Snarky, suspense-filled, and real, The Hunting is an exquisite entwining of the crippling emotional fallout of divorce with the quest for a healthy, fulfilling relationship.This inspirational story rivets!

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Book Blitz & Giveaway - All's Well That Ends Well (Shakespeare for Everyone Else #3) by C.E. Wilson



All's Well That Ends Well (Shakespeare for Everyone Else #3)
Release Date: 07/15/14

Summary from Goodreads:
When Hannah’s world falls apart after graduation, she finds that there are only two things from her old life that she can trust: her best friend Constance, and her fascination with Constance’s cousin Benjamin. But when Benjamin snubs her advances for superficial reasons, Hannah decides that she will have him no matter what the cost. Hannah gathers a diverse group of allies to help her finally get what she’s always wanted.

In this YA retelling of William Shakespeare’s All’s Well that Ends Well, follow Hannah as she goes to the ends of the earth in her pursuit of the ungrateful Benjamin. Are there limits to love and devotion, and is all truly well that ends well?






Excerpt from All's Well That Ends Well

“You’re just lucky you’re not ugly, otherwise you’d never get away with acting the way you do.”
Patrick arched a brow and looked at her again.  She was only a fraction of the girl who had been putting him in his place since the day he moved to this town.  He wondered what he had ever found so intimidating about her.  What a waste of a decent body.
“I don’t really know how to answer that,” he said, smiling.  “All I’m saying is that you should consider going to the party.  Everyone knows you loved a good party before what happened with your father.  You shouldn’t live in the past, Hannah-Banana, but focus on the present and remain hopeful about the future.  If you don’t start to open up again you’re going to find yourself very lonely.  Why don’t you go out and make out with some guys if you’re not comfortable having sex yet?  There’s no harm in kissing.”  His phone buzzed again.  “Agh!  Dammit, I do have to go, Hannah-Banana,” he said, setting the can of pop on the kitchen counter and darting towards the door.  “I hope I see you tonight.  Think about what I said.”
Hannah shook her head as Patrick hastily shut the door behind him.  Would it really be so terrible to go to the party?  Patrick would be there, and though he was arrogant, he could occasionally be fun in small doses.  He was also a link to Benjamin.  She tugged on a strand of her light brown hair, the ends frizzing up as usual.  What would be the harm?  She was a college freshman and college freshman went to parties.  Hell, Benjamin was still a high school senior and even he was going to parties.
“Screw it,” she said to no one in particular.  “I’m going.”


About the Author
C.E. Wilson is currently living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania with her husband and her two dogs and two cats. They are all the loves of her life. When she’s not writing young adult fantasy novels, she enjoys writing short stories on her Deviant Art page. She loves to write stories involving giants and little people (also known as GT) and nothing helps her to write more than Coca-Cola and glazed doughnut holes.

Author Links:
 photo iconwebsite-32x32_zps1f477f69.png  photo icongoodreads32_zps60f83491.png  



***GIVEAWAY***

5 ecopies of Othello (previous book in the series) up for grabs.


Book Blitz Organised by:

Monday 14 July 2014

Book Blitz & Giveaway - Trapped by Beverley Kendall



Trapped (Trapped #1)
by Beverley Kendall
Publication Date: July 7th, 2014
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance

Synopsis:
My life has turned out to be such a cliché. And not in a good way.

It’s not exactly Sixteen and Pregnant, but at eighteen my only advantage is a high school diploma. And if that’s not enough, the father—and I use that term loosely—couldn’t have hightailed it out of my life fast enough.

I thought I really knew him. Unfortunately, my boyfriend of three years transformed from Dr. Jekyll to Mr. Hyde once he realized his carefree, childless days would be coming to an end.

I’m over him now though. The real love of my life is chubby, has more gum than teeth, and stands a little over two feet tall. She may not have been planned, but I’ve never regretted having her. She is the center of my world.

A world that’s turned upside down when my ex returns ready to earn the love and trust of the child he abandoned before birth.

Letting him into my daughter’s life is one thing but letting him back into mine isn’t going to happen. Because the biggest mistake of my life has a name, and that name is Mitchell Aaron Kingsley.

And he’s one mistake I don’t ever intend to make again.

Buy Links:

Book Of The Week: Stained Glass Souls by Ashlyn M.


Stained Glass Souls
Genre: Teen Romance / Mystery

Book Summary:
Ariel Fontansia has categorized her life into calories, pounds, and inches; a measure of her worth and an estimate of her disillusionment. Redemption, Maine, has nothing to offer but memories of a suicidal cousin and a mysterious black-eyed boy named Price Olsen.

When a public scandal shatters Price's peaceful life, his anger at the shocking betrayal leads to violence. Ariel is the distraction who quickly becomes the center of his younger sister’s universe. Their lives become intertwined -- but is she willing to sacrifice her disorder for his secrets?

Charliegh McGowan, his victim, is left scarred and grieving. She then trusts the wrong person – someone who is willing to die for reconciliation. She begins to alienate everyone around her, and her sanity is placed in jeopardy.

As their lives begin to cross, they discover that Redemption is harboring secrets with dangerous consequences. If exposed, each will have to face their past.

But how far are they willing to go for redemption?

Click here to read the book.

Sunday 13 July 2014

Blog Tour Guest Post & Giveaway - A Season Without Rain by Joe Schwartz




A Season Without Rain
Author: Joe Schwartz
Genre: General Fiction
Length: 348 pages
Release Date: November 2013
ISBN-13: 978-1493513390
Imprint: Enigma Press

Synopsis:
Jacob Miller is angry with himself, the world, and God. Life seems so unfair, so cruel, that he can’t imagine why anyone even tries. After having a nervous breakdown, selling his business, filing for bankruptcy, having a baby, and finding out he owes over twenty grand in taxes, he is hardly happy to be alive.

In the span of a year, Jacob will discover three very important things about life. Things can always be worse. There really is a God. And if you wait long enough anything can change.

A Season Without Rain explores that gray area between poverty and middle class life, the struggling underclass for whom there are no advocates. A powerful story told in a modern, everyday voice that will entrench readers in Jacob Miller’s black world of anger, hate, resentment, lies, and violence.

A Season Without Rain is Joe Schwartz’s first novel. His previous short story collections Joe’s Black T-Shirt, The Games Men Play, and The Veiled Prophet of St. Louis have been acclaimed vulgar as Bukowski and visceral as Carver. Joe lives and works in St. Louis happily writing stories exclusively about the Gateway City.

Buy Links:
Amazon US ¦ UK ¦ DE ¦ FR ¦ ES
IT ¦ IN ¦ JP ¦ AU ¦ BR ¦ CA ¦ MX



GUEST POST

Quit thinking & start writing
By
Joe Schwartz

I have known several writers who suffer from the imaginary disease ‘writers block.’ This crippling condition is caused by a lack of experience. So many new writers have been writing one story for so long that when they finally finish it they have a hell of a time writing anything new. It’s no wonder that each book sounds like any other they have written and that their audience eventually stalls out at a certain point as readers will not tolerate a boring, repetitive storyteller. Or they have written so few stories that they have no idea what to do when the story falls apart. Then again, some people are so terrified of failure that they are doomed before they finish their first sentence. This is not to say I haven’t had my share of frustrated days and nights wrestling with a story. The thing is I’ve been there enough, had my faith shattered and restored more times than I can count, any fear I may have once harbored has been utterly shattered. Just as the marathon runner must train continually learning to run longer and longer distances, the seasoned writer must put inhibitions aside and write until the good stuff comes.
Of course, to get from here to there, I know of only two ways. The first, most important, absolutely mandate path is education. What I’m talking about, though, doesn’t necessarily happen in a classroom. The best place to learn anything yet require serious motivation is a public library. Although the shelves are flooded with information, it is truly a seek and ye shall find environment. The good news is if you want to write then you should surely be a good reader already. That helps.
My two best recommendations to help the serious writer both feature Christopher Vogler. He and Michael Hauge made a terrific video called The Hero’s 2 Journeys that is an excellent starting point for anyone. In twelve plain steps they explain exactly how to tell a story and couldn’t be more right. Alone, Vogler has written the bible for masters and novices alike, The Writer’s Journey. But it’s not like he invented these ideas. Joseph Campbell said all these things and more in The Hero with a Thousand Faces from which Vogler readily acknowledges learning all he knows. The thing he did that Campbell could not was make extraordinary, complex ideas easy to understand. Make no mistake; it still takes a massive effort to get good at it and that brings me to my second point. There are no short cuts. Even if you are the reincarnated spirit of Hemingway come back to Earth, you need to write often if you expect to get any good at this. The biggest shock to anybody gets when they first sit down to write is that it’s hard. People often ask me, how long does it take to write a book? I usually answer about a year, but what I rather tell them is that it is somewhere around three-four hundred hours of writing, re-writing, re-reading , re-writing, and not to mention thinking about writing. Still I am not dissuaded by this fact that no matter how good I think my work is it can always be better.
Eventually, inevitably you must let it go. Publish and let the chips fall where they may or shove it in a drawer, forget about it and write something new. Either choice is damn hard to accept. On the one hand you have worked your guts out on a project and now it is up to the world to find it or you have come to the conclusion what you have written isn’t fit for the light of day. That’s okay, though, because the next great idea for an incredible, epic story just appeared in your mind and now all you have to do now is quit thinking and start writing. Who knows, you may write the next Great Gatsby or Catcher in the Rye. There’s only one way to find out.


About the Author
A St. Louis native, I write exclusively about the Gateway City. I prefer the style of fiction deemed transgressive fiction. That is my stories protagonists generally find a solution to their problems through either illicit or illegal means. I personally prefer stories told through a criminal's point-of-view. It is never the crime that fascinates me so much as the motivation to do it and the terrible, almost predictable outcomes to such actions. Just as I have an expectation of writing to be read I believe that it is as important, if not more so, that you as a reader should have the expectation of being entertained as you read. Anything less is such a disappointment.
Life is short. Stories are forever. -Joe

Author Links:



***GIVEAWAY***

5 Kindle or ePub copies of A Season Without Rain up for grabs.

Ends July 31st (midnight GMT).

International giveaway.

Contest is void where prohibited. Entrants must be 13 or else have parent or guardian’s permission to enter.


Blog Tour Organised by: