Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2013

STONE CHAMELEON, Urban Fantasy at its best...


Today we feature STONE CHAMELEON 
by Jocelyn Adams...
For a FREE copy to review just answer the question at the end of the post.

STONE CHAMELEON, 
Nothing urbane about this URBAN Fantasy...





When a series of unusual murders point to Lou Hudson, Ironhill’s equal rights advocate, as the primary suspect, she has but one choice: find the real perpetrator before her trial begins or face execution.

Lou, the last of the jinn, survives by hiding her abilities after the rest of the elementals fell victim to genocide. As a preternatural pest exterminator and self-proclaimed guardian of the innocent, she’s accustomed to trudging through the dregs of society. Hunting down a pesky murderer should be easy, especially with help from the dashing and mischievous local media darling.


For Lou, though, nothing is ever simple. When she discovers the killer’s identity, to reveal it would unearth her secret and go against her strict moral code, resulting in a deadly catch twenty-two.

*******
Now to meet the author... It is great to introduce the amazing  Jocelyn Adams...
Your novel Stone Chameleon has recently been released through Museitup Publishing. Can you tell us a little about what inspired you to write this dark fantasy?  The blurb makes Lou sounds like an interesting character in a desperate situation.

Hi, Rosalie.  Thanks for inviting me.    

Normally I have a clear moment of conception for a story, but this one is kind of a blur.  

I knew I wanted to try out a different voice and reinvent a supernatural creature that wasn’t often written about, and somewhere out of those thoughts, Lou Hudson was born with her mixture of British and Canadian English.

She’s determined to smooth out the relations between human beings and all of the preternatural creatures that live in her city, all while keeping her jinn heritage a secret as her species was condemned and all but wiped out.  

Her lot in life has created an interesting blade she balances on, and because of it, she has become someone incredibly strong and determined to change the prejudices of the world.

She already sounds like an exceptional character.

Did Lou and her henchmen follow your plot path or did they take on a life of their own? Do you keep paranormal characters in check?

Oh, goodness, no.  My characters rarely turn out how I initially envision them.  I don’t plot anything, just have a name and a general description, then let my fingers fly.  

I struggled with Amun’s character (Lou’s potential love interest) and had to reinvent him a couple of times.  

Another main character in the book began as a straight-out villain who was only supposed to play a bit part, but has now become an integral part of the series.

  Sometimes I feel like I’m trying to walk a bunch of giant dog on leash, and sometimes all I can do is try to keep my feet under me while they drag me where they want to go.  J

Or two small dogs. LOL. I have two Cavalier King Charles Spaniels that create the same effect!

You spend time with a compound bow? What an interesting hobby. What is the most unusual experience you have had while shooting?

It’s a great hobby that gets me outdoors a lot in the summer.  When my hubby and I were in high school and shooting at our local club, we very nearly stepped on not one, but two skunks hidden in the grass.  By some miracle we weren’t sprayed.  Needless to say, we took a little more care while wandering the course after that.
Goodness that's a great incentive to watch where you put your feet. hehe. Thankfully we don't have skunks here! We still need to watch where we walk. :)

How much of your life is reflected in Lou’s adventure?
There was a lot of me in my first main character, Lila Gray, but only a little of me in Lou.  

We both have a love affair with toast and we’re attracted to hulking Scotsmen in kilts, but beyond that, we’re not very similar.  

It was a challenge writing her because her voice is so different from my own.

An interesting concept, Jocelyn, writing a character so different from yourself and to do it successfully. I think that is a skill in itself.

Have you always been a writer?
I’ve only been writing since late 2009, actually.  It wasn’t something I even considered trying even though I loved writing poetry and short stories in high school.

  It was one of those door closing, window opening kind of things that launched me into authordom.  J

What drew you to the Dark Fantasy genre?
Back in 2009, my career took a left turn, leaving me with copious quantities of time on my hands.  A friend of mine suggested I read the Anita Blake series by Laurell K. Hamilton.  

That series totally ensnared me from page one.  It was the one that made me want to write.  I love dark and gritty stuff, so naturally that’s what I ended up writing, too.

Thanks for sharing a little about Stone Chameleon.
Thanks so much for having me.  It’s been a pleasure.

Now for a glimpse into STONE CHAMELEON.

Excerpt:
A flare shot over the rooftops to our left. I dove at Blake and slammed him to the pavement as another column of fire streaked toward us. The flames seared my back. The dragon bat was not a happy camper. Someone landed on my backside, crushing a grunt out of me and pounding my shoulder blade while Blake gasped beneath me.

“Bloody hell, Amun,” I said, before I realized he did it to put out the flames eating up my shirt. “Oh, I see. Thanks.”

He pulled me up, and the three of us ducked behind a car in the parking lot beside the Whip and Tickle, a vampire fetish-wear shop. The owl-sized bat swooped over us again, blasting an inferno that exploded the front window of the shop, sending studded leather and melted mannequins onto the sidewalk.

Three of the other creatures we’d hunted lay dead on other streets, the scorpion included, all by my sword when I’d been left with two options: kill or die. Twelve more were contained in three trucks. The bat remained the only unwelcome visitor in Fangtown. Other than us, of course.

“This is madness, Lou.” Amun panted beside me, his arms rising to shield his head as the bat exhaled on a Mini Cooper two cars over, the crackling and popping suggesting we should find a new hiding place.

“I agree with Mr. Bassili,” Blake said, his drawl worsening with his fright. “What the hell in a hand grenade do we do now?”

Rudy poked his almost translucent head out from behind the newspaper boxes he dove behind during the first fiery blast. The poor guy shook so badly I’d have been surprised if he could see anything. I gestured to him to stay put. “We’ve scared it, not something you want to do to a dragon bat.” A deep exhalation centered me enough to think. “I seem to recall the pecking order in a colony of bats. If we want protection from the dominants, we must present an offering of food.”

“And that helps us how?” Amun, his face blackened with soot and smeared with dirt, tilted to rest against the tire of the car, appearing as frazzled as I’d ever seen him. The sight induced a belly laugh that wouldn’t be contained.

He took on a strange expression of one eyebrow cocked and a half-grin, as if he wasn’t sure whether to be amused or offended. “What?”

I waved him off. “Nothing, I think I’m just losing my marbles.” Rising up enough to see around the car to Rudy, I shouted, “Rudy, do you have any rodents in your truck? Rats or mice?”

“No,” he hollered back, “but I can call some for you.”

I nodded. “As fast as you can.”

Flapping came from our rears. Crackling. A blast tossed the front of a car up until it crashed down on its hood, crushing a Mazda behind it.

“Move!” I shoved at Amun and tugged Blake toward the back of the fetish shop, since it was much closer than the front where flames still poured out of the broken window. Amun kicked out with a startling force against the wooden door. It took three tries, but it finally gave. My, but he was strong. We rushed inside and crouched behind a cement wall beside a set of stairs leading down.

“What do you want the rats for?” Amun asked with obvious suspicion. “Tell me you don’t want one of us to go out there and dangle something for that thing to come and snatch, probably toasting us to a golden brown in the process? Because I think I’ve grown a healthy dose of sympathy for marshmallows right about now.”

“Don’t worry, Amun. I’m going, not you. We just need to listen for Rudy to come back, if he hasn’t chickened out and run for the hills. Hopefully rats like to hang out here and aren’t snapped up for evening snacks.” There was a reason the umikan stuck to small, normal pests, other than his ability to talk to them. Although he’d deal with the scarier stuff when the need called for it, he usually didn’t have enough courage to fill a thimble.

“What?” Amun palmed his forehead. “You can’t be serious.” He gestured toward the door. “Have you been oblivious to the destruction that thing caused just in the last ten minutes? It’s pissed, and I don’t think it’s going to care about some little morsel you offer it.” His frown tugged at his features. “Why are you smiling like that?”

I shrugged, hopped up on adrenaline and enjoying the sight of the great Amun Bassili squirming. “This is what I do for a living.”

“You’re enjoying this?” Both of his eyebrows jacked up.

“Yup,” Blake said, rolling his eyes and chuckling from deep in his belly. “Weirdest broad I ever knew. Takes a bit of starch outta the ole manhood, don’t it?”

I wiped the char from my hands onto my jeans. “To do a job one takes no pride in is a travesty, in my opinion.”

At Rudy’s shout from beyond the wall, I said, “Stay here. Don’t come out until I call or you could send the bat into fits again.”

************



About the Author:
Jocelyn Adams grew up on a cattle farm in Lakefield and has remained a resident of Southern Ontario her entire life, most recently in Muskoka. She has worked as a computer geek, a stable hand, a secretary, and spent most of her childhood buried up to the waist in an old car or tractor engine with her mechanically inclined dad. But mostly, she's a dreamer with a vivid imagination and a love for dark fantasy (and a closet romantic — shhh!). When she isn't shooting her compound bow in competition or writing, she hangs out with her husband and young daughter at their little house in the woods.

Links:

Website  |  Blog |  Facebook  |  Twitter  |  Goodreads


Purchase Links:
MuseItUp Bookstore
Amazon.com  |  Barnes & Noble  |  MuseItUp Publishing

To get a FREE copy of STONE CHAMELEON to review, just answer the question
What sort of creature is mentioned in the excerpt?
Email your answer to Caleathsquest @ gmail.com (no spaces) and I will contact the author.

Thank you for sharing a little about STONE CHAMELEON today Jocelyn. I love the idea of dragon bats. 

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Daughters of the Sea... addresses the topic of adoption.


Daughters of the Sea
A Novel by Julie Eberhart Painter
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Pages 244
If you’d like a FREE copy of 
Daughter of the Sea, 
to review, 
answer a simple question 
  at the end of this post.




Daughters of the Sea is about a love that transcends time. Before 1769, the Tahitians had sacrificed a warrior. But two women, native girl, Kura, and contemporary heroine, Laura, are destined to become the brides of Maui, the shark god, 243 years apart.

The year Captain Cook arrived was the first recorded sighting of the transit of Venus. Cook was sent from Plymouth, England to find new lands and document the astrological event by triangulating from three of the largest islands in Tahiti.

At the transit of Venus in 2012, Laura, a contemporary French teacher travels to Tahiti to search for her biological father, the last navigator to read the waves. The girls’ parallel lives clash in an aura of mysticism. Laura is haunted; Kura is doomed. Laura’s romance could end in a tragedy similar to her ancestor’s.

Author Bio:

Julie Eberhart Painter, a native of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, has seven novels in print. Previously, she worked with nursing homes as a volunteer coordinator and later as a community ombudsman. In 1988, she joined Hospice of Volusia Flagler in Daytona Beach and remained with them for 17 years. Julie’s volunteer jobs were the beginning of her surrogate family that she expands upon in her WIP memoir. Daughters of the Sea addresses the question of how adoption affects Laura who has lived with the lie for 25 years, as told by someone who’s been there.

Time permitting (Laughter here) Julie’s hobbies include duplicate bridge, music, dance, reading and world travel. She reviews books for a prestigious online romance review site, and is a regular columnist for Cocktails, Fiction and Gossip Magazine, an online slick. Bewildering Stories has published nine of her flash fictions tales.

PS: The readers who would enjoy this book are adventurers and romantics. I was inspired by Nomads of the Sea, a TV program about the Polynesians leaving Tahiti because of overcrowding and tribal warfare to settle other lands, such as New Zealand, Hawaii, Easter Island and the Cook Islands, all of which we have visited.


www.facebook.com/
Museituppublishing.com
Amazon.com and other online e-tailers
Or, for paperbacks lulu.com
thewritersvineyard.com http://www.linkedin.com/groups/Published-Authors-Network-84480?homeNewMember=&gid=84480&trk=EML_downshift_home&ut=2V-Y8nkUGC9lg1



If you’d like a free copy of Daughter of the Sea, to review, answer this simple question.
Where is Daughter of the Sea set?
email your answer to Caleaths Quest@gmail.com (no spaces) 
and I will contact the author.

Thanks for being here today Julie... 




Sunday, March 3, 2013

Do you like yours MEDIUM RARE?


 Medium Rare
Publication Date: December 2012
ISBN: 9781927454787
Genre: Humor/cozy mystery
Time Period: contemporary
Location: A beach town in Central Florida
Season: One Florida year
Author’s Name: Julie Eberhart Painter


If you would like a 
FREE copy of 
Medium Rare, 
to review, answer the question at the bottom of this post.

About Medium Rare:

Penny, sequential character from Julie Eberhart Painter’s award-winning Kill Fee cozy, volunteers as a bereavement caller at a local hospice. She runs into a whole new set of nutty buddies. Hospice workers, subject to burnout, romp through the offices chased by a psychic medium, who uncovers their life secrets with eerie accuracy. The hapless humans become entangled in her predictions made in the mysterious Cassadaga, FL

Excerpt: 

Barney Allison, the preacher with a secret travels to Cassadaga, FL to meet Celeste the psych.

He parked in the old hotel parking lot so no one he knew would recognize his car. Holding Celeste’s address, he walked the three uneven blocks to her house. 

It occurred to him if she were really psychic he wouldn’t have needed to make an appointment; she’d have been expecting him. He’d given a false name, both to test her and to protect himself. She’d told him to enter by the porch. 

He looked at her shingle, an obtrusive piece of wood that made the street look like part of a gypsy camp. He walked to her porch door and knocked. A cardboard sign on the screen read, “If you do not have an appointment, please take a seat on the porch.”

Barney pulled open the screen door, stepped onto the porch and knocked on the inside door.

An older woman, not in the least scary looking, came to open it. “Come in, Henry.

The name he had given her unsettled him.

“Come this way, we’ll talk in the back.”

Her voice was soothing even though it cracked with age. He followed her through the house to a glassed-in porch with a view of myrtle trees. Spanish moss dipped toward the windows swinging in the breeze. He could smell the tinny odor of vegetable soup coming from the kitchen, unmistakably Campbell’s. The whole house reeked of canned tomatoes and decay.

She turned to face him, her clear blue eyes so much younger than her face. She smiled and took his hands in her seventy-year-old-palms. Their eyes locked as she reverently intoned: “God the Father, guide us and bless us as we seek the truth.”

“Amen.” Barney whispered, automatically.The sound of his voice made him wince. He hoped he wasn’t giving anything away with that amen.


Author Bio:

Julie Eberhart Painter, a Pennsylvania transplant now living in Central Florida, is the Champagne Books author of Mortal Coil, Tangled Web, and the 2011 Book of the Year, Kill Fee, and Medium Rare.
Julie reviews books for a prestigious online romance review site, and is a regular contributor to Cocktails, Fiction and Gossip Magazine, an online slick. Bewildering Stories has published nine of her flash fictions tales
Julie swims, plays duplicate bridge, and reads—a lot. It was a duplicate bridge game in Central Florida that prompted the first book in this Three Penny (amateur sleuth) Mystery series.

Medium Rare is a peek inside a “wild and crazy” character-driven hospice office. Think of The Office on gallows humor. Bilgewater, the foul mouthed fowl from Kill Fee, has competition from a new mascot, Croakette, a Kermit like frog doll. Croakette dresses in appropriate attire for Florida’s climate, such as a wet T-shirt and biker babe leathers complete with a makeshift helmet for Bike Week in Daytona. When “working” she might show up in a nurse’s uniform. When left in the potted palm overnight, her golf balls drop off. She undergoes a breast reduction. Hersey’s kisses replace the originals. One never knows what she’ll be wearing, but it keeps the office laughing while the staff goes about their bizarre lives. Medical people: doctors, social workers, and nurses love this book.

Find Julie on

www.facebook.com/
www.champagnebooks.com
Amazon.com and other online e-tailers
Or, for paperbacks lulu.com
thewritersvineyard.com
http://www.linkedin.com/groups/Published-Authors-Network-84480?homeNewMember=&gid=84480&trk=EML_downshift_home&ut=2V-Y8nkUGC9lg1

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com (Search) Julie Eberhart Painter

Linked-In: http://www.linkedin.com/search/fpsearch?type=people&keywords=Julie+Eberhart+Painter&pplSearchOrigin=GLHD&pageKey=member-home&search=Search

As Maggie, Julie reviews books for Coffee Time Romance and More, and is a regular blogger on http://thewritersvineyard.com/ , and a feature writer for http://cocktailsmagazine.wix.com/fictionandgossip#!issue-14  an online slick. Her flash fiction appears under http://bewilderingstories.com/bios/painter_bio.htm



If you would like a FREE copy of
MEDIUM RARE 
to review,
Answer this question...
"What medical discipline does Penny contribute to?" 
Send your answer to the author.