Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Guest Blogger Roni Loren

Posted by Jenna McCormick for Writers Gone Wild

5 Writing Tools I Don’t Want to Live Without

by Roni Loren

First, thanks ladies for inviting me to the blog! : ) I was going to title this post “5 Writing Tools I Can’t Live Without”, but really, nothing would stop me from writing. Even if I had nothing to write my stories on, I’d probably still be weaving them in my head. But these five things are the things I hope I never have to go without.

My Laptop - Okay, I know this one seems kind of obvious, but really it’s vital. If I had to sit at a desktop all day, I’d go nuts. My laptop lets me move my work with me when I get antsy.

The Shower - Get your mind out of the gutter. ; ) I’m a mom and a wife--quiet, alone time is hard to come by. Plus during routine tasks like a shower, my mind tends to wander and that’s usually when I get my best ideas or fix problems I’ve been having with my story. My husband has learned that when I announce randomly that I’m going take a shower at like five in the afternoon that I must be having a bad writing day.

Books - My love of reading is what led me to become a writer in the first place, but sometimes reading for pleasure can get set on the back burner because I get busy. However, I’ve found when this happens, my own words dry up. If I’m dumping words on a page every day, I feel like I need to refill the well by reading fiction or my creativity will shut down.

Music - When I’m writing, I only listen to instrumental music because music with words distracts me (mainly, because I start singing.) But during non-writing times, music really has served as great story inspiration for me. The song for CRASH INTO YOU is “Outside” by Staind. I’d already started writing the story, but that song came on one day and it gave me goosebumps because it was so perfect for my characters. And more recently, I heard an old Reba McEntire song, “Somebody Should Leave”, and got the idea for my novella STILL INTO YOU (coming out in June).

Inspiration Photos - This is more fun than necessary, but I do enjoy spending some time on my tumblr. Sometimes it’s a landscape that can inspire a setting, or a sweet photo of a couple that helps me capture the mood of the scene I’m writing, and many times it’s just yummy mancandy, lol. (You can see my tumblr here--http://roniloren.tumblr.com . But be warned, some of it can be not safe for work.)

So those are mine. What are some things you wouldn’t want to live without either for your job or your hobby?

CRASH INTO YOU Blurb:

Sometimes the past can bring you to your knees…

Brynn LeBreck has dedicated herself to helping women in crisis, but she never imagined how personal her work would get, or where it would take her. Her younger sister is missing, suspected to be hiding from cops and criminals alike at a highly secretive BDSM retreat—a place where the elite escape to play out their most extreme sexual fantasies. To find her Brynn must go undercover as a sexual submissive. Unfortunately, The Ranch is invitation only. And the one Master who can get her in is from the darkest corner of Brynn’s past.

Brynn knows what attorney Reid Jamison is like once stripped of his conservative suit and tie. Years ago she left herself vulnerable only to have him crush her heart. Now she needs him again. Back on top. And he’s all too willing to engage. But as their primal desires and old wounds are exposed, the sexual games escalate—and so does the danger. Their hearts aren’t the only things at risk. Someone else is watching, playing by his own rules. And his game could be murder.

Find out more:

Website: www.roniloren.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com/roniloren

Monday, January 30, 2012

QUALITY AND THE INDIE AUTHOR


In the last year or so, self-publishing - or indie publishing, as some prefer - has taken off exponentially. Thanks to the Kindle, Nook, and digital publishing, what used to be called "vanity publishing" is now a truly viable way for writers to earn a living from their work. Established authors are republishing their out-of-print back lists. New authors whose work doesn't appeal to New York because it's somehow too far outside the traditional box are finding readers, and an income. Readers are grabbing up books that are less expensive because there are fewer middle men.

Win-win? Maybe not totally. The indie revolution has its drawbacks. Many readers and writers are learning (or being reminded) that those nasty “gatekeepers” did perform a valid function in terms of maintaining quality. Without a publisher standing between her and the reader, the author is solely responsible for editing and proofreading. Many indie authors – including Writers Gone Wild Jenn, Maree, Robin and Saranna, who’ve taken the indie plunge – accept the responsibility that comes with the freedom of indie publishing. They’re making sure their self-published works are of professional quality, including the production values. But this is a self-imposed requirement. There’s nothing to stop a writer from offering total garbage for sale, and some are doing just that.

For example... in early December, I discovered that a multi-published author whose work I enjoy had self-published an old novella, and it was available for free (reduced from 99 cents). So I grabbed it up for my new Kindle. The results, from my posted review:

“This book is funny and sexy and exactly what readers of [the author’s trad published books] would expect from her. It's a quick, light, enjoyable read.

"However... this is also the kind of book that gives indie publishing a bad name! OMG, the typos, typos, and yet more typos! And this is the "second edition" - why didn't [the author] clean up the mistakes from the first edition? If I'd had to pay for this book, I'd be seriously annoyed.”

I kid you not, there was a typo on almost every page! Clearly the manuscript hadn’t been proofread, or even run through spellcheck. And two months later, I’m still pissed off. I can’t understand why the author, whose career I used to think of as one to copy, would allow her name to go on such a totally shoddy product. It feels like she disrespected her readers; like she believes we'll accept, and deserve, any old crap. And even though I know her traditionally published books will be edited, I feel more wary about buying them. She’s lost some of my trust.

Indie writers, what, if anything, do you do to make sure editing, proofreading, and formatting problems don’t diminish the quality of the reading experience? And readers, have you experienced quality problems with indie books?



Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Lust and Other Drugs

I have been out of the game for some time. I've missed you! *smooch*

But I'm back with something to show for my confinement, as it were:



****ta da****

Lust and Other Drugs goes on sale January 27th.

Blurb:

For months, Anne’s been indulging in a porn site that caters to women. She’s even got a favorite model; a hottie who gets her juices flowing every time. Until she finally sees his face—and discovers she’s been jilling off to videos of her lifelong best friend, Chase.

Now Anne can’t even look at him without imagining his big, hard…everything. Worse, she’s just become Chase’s new roommate. How can she possibly keep her hands off all that Grade-A beefcake when it’s within arm’s reach? Does she even have to? A friends-with-benefits arrangement is looking more appealing by the second…

Starting with the world’s dirtiest dance, Anne and Chase’s physical relationship builds to the point of combustion. However, no-strings is harder than Anne ever imagined. Her lust for Chase is like a drug…but she’ll soon realize other, more complicated emotions are far more potent.

This is actually one of my favorite tropes to read and write. I love it when best friends fall in love. From the initial taboo of wanting that person to the accidental touches that lead to that delicious tension to when everything explodes in a rush of sensation and desire. YUM.

Do you have any favorite books in that theme? What are they? Or what's your favorite trope?

Thursday, January 19, 2012

One-Stop Shops for Readers and Authors

One-Stop Shops for Readers and Authors by Maree Anderson (for Writers Gone Wild)

Hi ya'll,

I was intending to write a featured post for my website/blog about the evolution of an eBook cover, and cross-post it here. But I'm kinda all mushy-brained from an intense round of edits and the shock of kitting out my kids with new school uniforms, bags, stationery, shoes.... KACHING!

So the serious article I'd planned for my post this week didn't happen. Sorry guys.

And rather than whip something up and have it be total rubbish, I figured I'd share some info with y'all that might hopefully be of benefit to both eBook readers and authors. (Especially those authors who've dipped their toes into the self-publishing arena.)

So without further ado, here's a bunch of sites that promote eBooks.

Readers: you may find some of these sites make your browsing and trying to decide what to buy experiences a whole heap easier! Nothing like a one-stop shop *g*

Authors: you may find some of these sites useful to promote your book. Some are free, some will cost you. I don't endorse them all by any means, but for your information, I'll put ** by those I've personally used and include a link to my "page" so you can see a sample of what each site offers if you're considering submitting your book.

Note: I've re-coded the html links, meaning that *hopefully!* all the main links will open in a new browser page so you don't have to keep clicking back one page to return here. (I hate that I have to manually code this, BTW. Wordpress gives me a box to tick when I insert the link, and codes it automatically. Just sayin'...)

~~~


This website is full of great info for self-published authors but the very savvy Joel Friedlander also runs a monthly cover art contest, where you can submit your eBook cover(s) and Joel will offer sage advice about whether it works or not. There are two categories: fiction and non-fiction. The winner in each category gets a coveted badge for their website.

I submitted two covers: Freaks of Greenfield High and The Crystal Warrior, and Joel was complimentary about both--much to my husband's delight, since he was the designer :) And it was Joel's suggestion I write an article about the evolution of one of my covers.





Note: my author spotlight is scheduled for 25th Feb, so can't give you a link yet.














There are heaps more, of course, and I'm still compiling a master list. But I hope this helps!

Cheers,

Maree


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Trish McCallan: Forged In Fire

Please welcome author Trish McCallan, who's going to talk about her phenomenally best-selling indie romantic suspense, Forged In Fire. Despite this being her first release, she's got a legion of voracious fans and a ton of outstanding reviews behind her already.

Blurb: Beth Brown doesn’t believe in premonitions until she dreams a sexy stranger is gunned down during the brutal hijacking of a commercial airliner. When events in her dream start coming true, she heads to the flight’s departure gate. To her shock, she recognizes the man she’d watched die the night before.
Lieutenant Commander Zane Winters comes from a bloodline of elite warriors with psychic abilities. When Zane and two of his platoon buddies arrive at Sea-Tac Airport, he has a vision of his teammates’ corpses. Then she arrives—a leggy blonde who sets off a different kind of alarm.
As Beth teams up with Zane, they discover the hijacking is the first step in a secret cartel’s deadly global agenda and that key personnel within the FBI are compromised. To survive the forces mobilizing against them, Beth will need to open herself to a psychic connection with the sexy SEAL who claims to be her soul mate. 

Forged in Fire is your first published book. How many manuscripts did you complete before Forged? How long did it take you to write Forged?
I completed three manuscripts before writing Forged. The first manuscript (titled A Matter of Trust) I wrote twenty years ago—more or less—and it was Bad. With a capital B. I had no crit partners back then, no beta readers. Nor did I belong to any writing organizations. After I finished A Matter of Trust, life got complicated, and I quit writing for a very long time. About ten years later, I wrote Yesterday’s Child. I came very close to snagging an agent with that book, and it finaled in a ton of RWA’s first chapter contests. 

My third book, The Cat’s Meow, is the first book in a light-hearted paranormal mystery series. The series has this romance that’s going to play out across the entire series, with the hero and heroine going from detesting each other, to trusting each other, to friendship and eventually love. I’d finished the first two drafts on this book and was halfway through the first round of revisions when Forged in Fire took over my brain and I couldn’t focus on anything else. So I dropped TCM to work on FIF. It took me a year to write Forged. I’ve never been a fast writer, and I was limited to writing two hours a day and Saturdays. My plan was to go back and finish TCM after I got Forged out to agents, but then I decided to self-published and all my earlier plans went whack-a-doodle. 

You mentioned to me that you had a lot of agent interest in the book but then decided to pull the book from consideration and self-publish. Tell us about that and why you made the decision.
I finished Forged in Fire and started querying agents a week before SEAL Team 6 hit the news. Within a few months I had the full out with four agents and the partial out with even more. And then a friend sent me a link to an essay about why an unpublished author should not hire an agent—the essay was by Kris Rusch, of the The Business Rusch. 

The Business Rusch was a wakeup call for me. Kris Rusch covered everything that was happening in our industry, and for the first time I questioned whether selling to New York was the smart choice. I spent days reading through all the essays Rusch had written on the industry, read through all the comments, followed links to other industry blogs and became convinced that selling to New York would be a death sentence to my career goals. If the traditional houses were already reeling, and we hadn’t even hit the tipping point yet, what would the climate be like in two-three years when my book debuted? (Assuming it sold quickly) Once the tipping point hit, and the majority of the book sales were digital, how would a debut author stand out? Print outlets were declining at an alarming rate, eventually everyone but the bestsellers would be selling mostly digitally through the huge online bookstores like Amazon and B&N. So how in the world would a new author find a reader base? I’m on a lot of readers’ loops, so I know there’s tremendous anger at the traditional houses for the prices they charge for eBooks. A lot of readers won’t even buy digital copies of debut authors’ books because of the price.    

At this point I started researching epublishers and self-publishing. One of the things I did was track the books on Amazon’s bestselling romantic suspense list in the Kindle Store.  This list ranks the books by how well they are selling. The higher up the list they are, the better they’re selling. And I made a startling discovery. The books that were selling the most copies and were at the very top of the bestsellers’ list, (the top twenty bestselling romantic suspense) were all self-published. They were either traditional authors’ backlists or unknown authors’ original titles. And they were mostly 2.99 or below. I started tracking traditional authors’ new releases. And discovered that while some of the bestselling authors in my genre might hit the top twenty with their new release, the book only lasted a couple of days at the top before it plummeted. Yet all those cheaper, self-published titles that had been there when the new release hit, were still there when it tanked. It was obvious that readers were buying on price in my genre, not name recognition. At that point I decided to self-publish. I could control the price if I published the book myself. I couldn’t control the price if I went with a traditional house or an epublisher.

Your book is a military romantic suspense with paranormal elements. Did you find it hard to balance the two genres (ie keep one from overshadowing the other)?
The paranormal elements in my books tend to be light. They aren’t as strong as the romance or the suspense. In fact, my stuff tends to be more suspense focused than anything, the romance often takes a backseat to the plot. I want the paranormal to weave through the plot, the plot can’t exist without the paranormal element, but it generally stays in the background. Yet somehow, the paranormal and suspense twine together at the end. This has happened with every book I’ve written. At the end of the book the paranormal element is critical to saving the day. 

What is your writing process like? (Plotter/pantser, how long it takes you to outline/draft/polish, etc.)
I’m an odd combination of a plotter and pantser. What works best for me is a combination of both approaches.

I find that it’s freeing to fast draft the first draft. I sit down and write the first draft as fast as I can, without thinking, without plotting, just letting the character and events unfold. This goes quickly. I wrote Forged’s fast draft in four weeks while working full time. Once it’s done, I print the book off, read it and then delete the file. Then I plot out the book from opening to ending. This is a detailed, chapter by chapter outline that encompasses both plot and character growth. There is always a lot of plot to fill in, elements that weren’t in the original draft, so I added them to beef up the conflict.

After the first draft I have a good sense of characters and events, but the growth is uneven, and plot points are missing. The second draft is basically framing the manuscript. Before each scene I list a set of goals I need to accomplish, things I want to work into that scene. But once again I write the second draft as fast as possible. (But keeping my outline in mind) I print that draft off, read it in one sitting while making notes in the margins and then once again delete the file. From that point on the work becomes intensive and much slower. I start from the beginning. I read the first scene, take a moment to visualize the scene clearly in my mind and start rewriting it. The stuff I liked in the original version, are reworked in the new scene. But there is always new stuff that mixes with the old. I’d say I keep 20% of the previous draft and the rest is all new.  

I can’t revise off an existing draft early in the process. When I’ve tried, the scene has never gelled, there was always something missing. When I’ve compared scenes that I’ve tried to revise, verses scenes I’ve completely rewritten- I realized that the new scenes have major elements that are missing in the old scenes. It’s like my subconscious can’t fix an existing scene, but if I rewrite the scene completely, I can craft it the way it needs to be done. This holds true even later in the process. If a scene doesn’t work and I can’t figure out why, if I delete the scene and rewrite it, my subconscious will “fix” it.

During this draft, (the third one) I take my time. I labour over everything. I keep revising the scene over and over until it matches what I envision in my mind. Once it’s perfect to me, I send it to my CPs and move onto the next scene. When I get my CP’s feedback, I go back and revise the scene again. Once the entire draft is done, I print the book off and read it, make notes, and then do another revision based off things I noticed in the read through. At this point I also go through every character’s scenes in one long run. For example, I will go through all of the heroine’s scenes and all of her dialogue to make sure her growth and character is consistent. Then I will go through all the hero’s scenes and dialogue, then any secondary characters, then the villain.  Once I have gone through the whole book this way, I send the book to beta readers. Another revision off beta feedback and then it’s time for my last revision. This last one is all about language, combing through for repetition, for unnecessary words, for too much detail, and I sharpen the language as I go. I also do a ton of cutting. I tend to overwrite, so there is always lots of cutting. I cut 19K words out of Forged and 20K words out of Yesterday’s Child. Once this draft is done, it’s ready to go to the line/copy editor.     

Your sales have been astounding, especially considering this is your first book. For other authors looking for promo tips, what steps have you taken to get the book “out there”?
I’m only touching on Amazon, because I have never found any promo that targets any of the smaller retailers. My Amazon sales made up 99.9% of my sales back before I opted into the Select program.  There are some people who sell extremely well to B&N and Apple, but they don’t know why. Nor did any specific promo I tried affect my B&N, Apple, Sony or Kobo sales, not like the promo impacted Amazon sales.
The key to successful sales on Amazon is knowing what promo opportunities work well with Amazon’s algorithms, and using logic instead of emotion when considering your choices. For a book to sell well, it needs to hit its genre’s bestsellers’ list. 

When it comes to Amazon’s bestsellers’ lists, there are three things to take into account: price, (the books that climb the highest are almost all $2.99 or below) how long the book’s been for sale, and slow but steady sales to trigger the algorithms. If an author can get movement on their book within the first month of release, those sales will trigger Amazon’s algos. Once you trigger the algos, Amazon will start sticking the book in other book’s also boughts and recommends. The more the book sells, the more also boughts and recommends it get stuck into. The goal is to get the book onto the first page of your genre’s bestsellers’ list, because thousands of readers buy off that list. Once you reach the top page of the bestsellers’ list, people will find you and buy just because of the book’s location and visibility. With each sale, your book will find its way into more also boughts and recommends, which leads to even more sales. It’s a self-feeding cycle and can last for weeks, even months. 

The two promos I’ve found to be the most effective to get on the bestsellers’ list is a virtual blog tour with reviews—or, letting the book go free for a short space of time. What got my book on the first page of the bestsellers’ list was a month long blog tour. The tour needs to start as soon as the book’s released. Most books are only given a one to two month window by Amazon to prove themselves. In that first month or two, it takes fewer sales to get a book into some also boughts and recommends. Amazon basically gives promising new books a break. But after two months it’s much, much harder to get a book on the bestsellers’ lists because it takes a lot more sales to trigger the algos. So your best bet is to promote the book as soon as it goes up.  The sales generated by a blog tour seem to stimulate Amazon’s algos and can often launch a book onto the bestsellers’ list. From there, the book’s price becomes key, because books priced over 2.99 usually don’t climb as high, or stay on the list as long. The higher a book climbs, and the longer it rides the top of the list, the more sales it brings in.      

What got you interested in military heroes?
Up until Forged, all my heroes were homicide detectives. And I still have a soft spot for them. I dreamed the opening sequence of Forged in Fire, and the men in my dream were SEALs, so that’s how I ended up with military heroes. But there is something inherently courageous and yet slightly dangerous about military heroes. These are men who have been trained to kill. Yet they use this skill for protection. They use it to protect their nation, their brother-in-arms, their families, and the people they love. They’re willing to sacrifice themselves, with no hesitation if the need arises. There’s something incredibly sexy and courageous about that. About a man willing to die for what he believes in, or willing to die to protect the people he loves. It’s the essence of a true hero. 

What sort of research do you do for your books? Do you hire a freelance/copyeditor to go over the book before you publish it?
I did a ton of internet research. Thank God for my crime scene loop. But I also lurked on a SEAL board for months and picked up a lot of slang, although some of the terms are so crude they never made it into my book. I also connected with an EOD diver who’d actually been assigned to ST7, and he was a huge help in keeping my facts straight. I did hire a cover artist, a copy/line editor, a proofing editor and a professional formatter when I produced the book. I wanted to mimic New York standards as closely as possible. For the next book I’m adding a developmental editor and a second proofing editor. 

Do you tend to identify more easily with your heroes or heroines?
The heroes come very easily to me. The heroines are much harder. I’ve been told my heroes read/sound like real men, which probably comes from working in a male dominated world for 13 years. I was the only woman on a crew of 250 men, and my co-workers forgot I was female. I spent years ease dropping on their conversations. LoL . 

What else do you have coming up for us in the future?
Right now I’m finishing the last round of revisions on Yesterday’s Child. I’m planning to publish it the middle of March. Then it’s back to work on Forged in Ice, the second book in the Forged series. I’m planning to publish Forged in Ice on July 15th.  

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Guest Blogger Sandra Sookoo

Jenn Hart for Writers Gone Wild

Stick a fork in me people because I am so done! The No Limits Blog Tour was fabulous and absolutely exhausting! I knew from the get go that I couldn't muster one more interesting thing to say this month so I invited the uber talented and always delightful Sandra Sookoo to visit and talk about her new release! Welcome Sandra!

Thanks for having me on back on the blog. I’m so excited to talk about my new book!

In case you don’t know who I am, my name is Sandra Sookoo and I write romantic fiction. Gah, it sounds like I’m intro-ing myself for a 12-step program! Let’s try that again. Hi, I’m Sandi and I’m a big ole softy when it comes to writing romance.

From the earliest age, I’ve always been fascinated with fairy tales. The dashing hero, the heroine with a problem, the bravery that’s needed to beat the monster, save the day then everyone rides off into the sunset for that all-inclusive happy ending. Yeah, I’m a sucker for them, so much so that I’ve read fairy tales from all over the world and in many different versions.

When Liquid Silver Books announced their Silver Slipper call for reworked fairy tales, my brain went into overdrive thinking about what I could do with that. I was in heaven. Because I always put my own spin on everything I write, I knew doing retold fairy tales wouldn’t be any different. I’d already had a reimagined fairy tale (which came out last December) but I needed more—more of the HEAs, more of the “old world” drama that’s indicative of a fairy tale, more stakes, more romance!

And here’s a little tidbit for you: I came to the sci-fi genre late in my life. When all the kids of my neighborhood were reenacting scenes from Star Wars, I was tucked away reading Anne of Green Gables. When my dad spent every Sunday watching episodes of the original Star Trek on TV, I was doodling away on notepads creating my own worlds. It wasn’t until I married my complete geek husband that I got onboard with sci-fi. Now, it’s almost like a craving, and that’s why I decided to set FRACTURED in a futuristic setting. Seemed like a great idea for me and it made my brain happy.

Here’s the blurb: What happens when beauty is the beast?

Major Rick Keenan has a near-impossible mission: repair his broken shuttle, rescue a missing crew member and get off an almost-dead planet. Angry that the U.S. is discontinuing the space program, he wants to find a discovery that will revise the government's position. Unfortunately, that discovery might just kill him.

Marin is one of the last of her people. Forced to flee to the planet in her childhood, she's kept herself hidden away in darkness, safe in a castle-like fortress, only coming out when she needs to feed--from human blood. Convinced she'll never fit in, she shuns all contact, yet taking Rick hostage as a food source chips away at her perceptions.

Though their differences threaten to tear them apart, their humanity binds them together. In a world where only the strong and determined survive, does a happily ever after stand a chance?

Book video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3hiQHxMW2w&feature=youtu.be

Now for a short excerpt. In this snippet, the hero Rick and his teammate have just encountered a welcoming party from the planet they’ve landed on.

"I am Sharn. This is my daughter, Elisa. Welcome to Oolita, the village of the damned." The man rubbed a shaking hand along his forehead.

"Damned?" Rick narrowed his eyes. "How do you figure?" He made another sweep of the medieval-style village and assessed his hosts' period clothing. This planet's not as advanced as Earth. Fantastic. Won't be able to grab some guys from the village to help with repairs.

Elisa took a step forward. "There are beings who hunt these woods. If we do not bring them offerings or they are not interested in what we give, they come to kill. The victim is drained of blood and left as a soulless shell."

What could you say to that? He glanced at Reigen. "Well, that doesn't sound good."

Sharn laid a hand on his daughter's shoulder. "Forgive Elisa. The stories still fascinate her. The monsters have not come to the village for months."

"Maybe they found a new hunting ground." Reigen shifted his weight from foot to foot.

"No. It is said after they feed, they are satisfied for days before the need arises again and there are many villages scattered in the jungle."

Rick shook his head. "Be that as it may, we're here for a couple of things. First, do you have any idea where we can find one of these?" He reached into a pocket on his utility vest and pulled out a flat, square crystal, holding it up for Sharn to see. "We're also missing a crew member. He'd be wearing clothes like us. Have you seen him?"

Sharn shook his head. "Anything we find of value we take to the ackarn orcha."

"And that means?"

"Place of death or place of infinite sorrow. Both are interchangeable." Sharn crossed his arms over his chest, hiding his hands in the robe’s wide sleeves. "We have not seen a man such as you. If he is lost, the monsters may have taken him."

"Thanks." Rick tapped his thumb on his weapon. "Any idea how long it takes to get to this place of death?"

Elisa gasped. "Two hours on foot, but no one goes there without an offering."

“I never did believe in monsters.” Rick shrugged and nodded to his teammate. "We'll just have to wing it and pray the ‘monster’ will go for my boyish charm." He chuckled at the joke, but when the villagers merely stared at him, he sighed. "Okay, obviously stand-up comedy is before your time."

ARe

Amazon:

Liquid Silver Books:

I hope you’ll pick up a copy of this book. I had the greatest fun writing it, and besides, the ending is sigh-worthy!

Want to connect with Sandra? Find her here:

Website: http://www.sandrasookoo.com

Believing is Seeing blog: http://sandrasookoo.wordpress.com/

Twitter: http://twitter.com/sandrasookoo

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sandra.sookoo

Giveaway: One random commenter will receive book swag (bookmarks, postcards, etc) plus a cute little fairy tale themed necklace. This giveaway is open to US residents and Canada only. Please leave your contact information. Winner will be drawn January 19th.

 

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