SEE NO EVIL gets a new cover!

I had a new cover created for my short story, See No Evil. Thank you, Deborah, of Tugboat Design! Even though it’s a short story, I still wanted it to coordinate with The Protector cover. As much as I enjoy creating covers, I just didn’t have time to do it myself. Deborah did a great job. 🙂See-No-Evil---web_250x401
A baby is abducted from her crib in broad daylight. The baby is the child of Detective Sydney Valentine’s friends. Who took her? And why?

This short story is 3546 words. The first two chapters of The Protector: A Sydney Valentine Mystery are included.

 

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Guest Post: Top Productivity Tools All Writers Should Know About

Shannon posted about top productivity tools for writers. Take a look!

Shannon A. Thompson

Shannon, here, for a quick introduction. A few weeks ago, I was contacted by Robert Morris from Ninja Essays. He wanted me to see the info graph Top Writing Tools of Famous Authors, and I am beyond grateful that he showed it to me. It is amazing. Seriously. Check it out by clicking here. But – onto the next part – I asked him to write a post for you all, and he agreed, so I hope you enjoy his post, Top Productivity Tools All Writers Should Know About.




Top Productivity Tools All Writers Should Know About

For writers, the usage of the Internet can go in two directions: it can either be a great resource for the work they are producing, or it can turn into a black hole that consumes their productivity by luring them with endless distractions. An average writer spends more than 50% of


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‘Reunion of the Heart’ is here!!!!

Reunion of the Heart is here! Go check it out! Go on. You know you want to. 🙂

Elaine Jeremiah

RotH-Cover

My second novel Reunion of the Heart is here! For those of you who don’t know, it’s a contemporary romance and so you know a little bit more about it, here’s the blurb:

After a messy breakup with her boyfriend, Anna is feeling fragile. So when her best friend Melissa suggests the two of them go to their school reunion, she’s reluctant as Anna’s school days weren’t her happiest. The evening is going well until she meets the boy who made her school life hell.
But the grown up Will is different and Anna is surprised by the direction her life takes. The reunion sets in motion a series of events that lead Anna to realise things will never be the same again.
‘Reunion of the Heart’ is a romance that will lead you to ponder whether love can atone for past mistakes.

It’s available to buy on Amazon and


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Release blog hop & giveaway— The Tenant by Sotia Lazu

Check out The Tenant! That cover says it all!

Barb Taub

Does your summer need a little steaming up? Well grab your fan and get ready for The Tenant, Sotia Lazu’s new release from Taliesin Publishing.  But before you take a look, please join me in congratulating Danielle Lenee Davis and Alison Williams, winners of last week’s Lie-Dar. Yes, winners plural, because author Janet Simpson has kindly offered an additional copy of her hilarious new book, Lost Cause. Both Alison and Danielle guessed correctly that Janet won a contest for stand-up comedy.


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  • Book Title: The Tenant
  • Author: Sotia Lazu
  • Genre: Contemporary Romance
    Length: 55K
    Release Date: 08.07.2014
    ISBN:
    Purchase Links: Amazon, Barnes & Noble 

The_Tenant-Sotia_Lazu-200x320Blurb

In hopes of getting her fiancé to consummate their relationship before the wedding, Amanda convinces him they should check out the apartment her father gave her as a gift for their upcoming nuptials. Darkness and privacy are supposed to work in her favor, but there is one parameter she


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Murder at the Maples is now FREE on Kindle

Hey, cozy mystery lovers! Joanne Phillips is offering her book, MURDER at the MAPLES, FREE from today until Monday on Amazon. It’s a cozy romance-mystery. This is the first book in the Flora Lively series. Go get it! I did. 🙂

Joanne Phillips

You’d better not be getting fed up with Flora Lively news because I’ve got one more great bit of news today – to celebrate the release of the audiobook, the Kindle edition of  Murder at the Maples is now FREE! From today until Monday you can download the first in the series for absolutely nothing, giving you plenty of time to read it before Book 2 – A Date With Death – comes out in November.

Click on the cover to get your copy now 


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Need more convincing to give it a try? Okay, here’s the blurb from Amazon:

Contemporary mystery with a touch of romance 


“A gripping tale filled with humanity and humor. Don’t miss this one!” Found Between The Covers

When twenty-nine-year-old Flora Lively loses both of her parents and inherits the family business, Shakers Removals, she tries hard to make a success of her


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Cover reveal for ‘Reunion of the Heart’!!!

Elaine Jeremiah’s cover for her latest novel, REUNION of the HEART is ready! This will be released August 15th. Check out her site for more information.

Elaine Jeremiah

RotH-Cover

It’s finally here! Today’s the day I share with you my fabulous cover for Reunion of the Heart.

I also have ten lovely volunteers who will be helping with the cover reveal today!

This novel has been part of my life for well over a year now and it’s gone through various changes along the way.

Much of that is down to my eight wonderful beta readers who were good enough to read it for me and make so many helpful comments.

Now it’s pretty much ready for publication and I’ll be publishing it next Friday 15th August!  I’m going to follow its publication with some promo work, so watch this space.

Here’s  a brief blurb of the book:

After a messy breakup with her boyfriend, Anna is feeling fragile.  So when her best friend Melissa suggests the two of them go to their school reunion, she’s reluctant as Anna’s


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Are they speaking and acting like children?

As my daughter was reading a chapter book featuring a young elementary school girl as the main character, I began thinking about how the dialogue was worse than how a child of that age actually spoke. For example, instead of ‘I ran.’ the child said ‘I runned.’ This occurred throughout the book. I understand that it was written for children and any child reading it would get a kick out of it. In fact, my daughter loved reading it

In my novel, The Protector, I have a preschooler (Josh), who is Sydney Valentine’s nephew. I chose to have Josh speak with proper grammar, rather than in the manner I mentioned above. I showed, via behavior, that this was a child.

Below, I’ve included a few lines from a scene between Sydney, who was injured, and Josh. Sydney’s sister was there as well.

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I bent to pick him up and a sharp pain ripped through my back. “Crap!” I shot back up, rubbing the sore point.

“Aunt Syd said a potty word!” Josh pointed accusingly at me.

I gazed at him. He reminded me of Mac when we were kids. She was such a tattletale. “What did I say?”

“I’m not allowed to say it.” He looked up at Mac. “Right?” Mac’s eyebrows had risen high on her forehead, but her eyes smiled.  “Mommy!” Josh tugged on Mac’s jeans. “Aunt Syd said a potty word!”

“You’re right. I did.” I eased down on one knee beside him. “What should be my punishment?”

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Here’s another one where Sydney visited Mac after Mac’s injury. Josh showed Sydney a drawing he’d made on his mom’s cast. How many times have you incorrectly guessed what a child drew? I’ve blown it a few times! In fact, I was shown a drawing of the characters in The Little Mermaid last weekend and I only recognized a mermaid in the drawing, but I didn’t realize she was THE mermaid. I got the pouty mouth in response. Oh, well. My excuse was that the mermaid’s hair was green—not the same color as Ariel’s. My daughter told me she didn’t have the correct color crayon. I should’ve pointed out that she would have had the correct color if she hadn’t removed the paper labels, then soaked the crayons in water to make paint. But, I let it go. How kind of me, right? Okay, back to Josh…  Continue reading

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Review: The Protector – Danielle Lenee Davis

An amazing review of The Protector! Daniela said it’s the best murder mystery novel she’s ever read. Yes, she did!

Please stop by her blog and check it out. She’s written quite a few reviews on other books, too. Check those out as well.

Thank you, Dani!

Danielle Lenee Davis

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Is your book’s main character YOU?

“Is Sydney Valentine you?” I’ve been asked that question several times. I imagine that if the main character is of the same gender as the writer, that might be the assumption with some readers.
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I think most writers would say that a few (or all) of their characters share some of their traits. It could be something minor. Perhaps the character and writer share a dislike of Brussels sprouts. I don’t like them. I ate them as a child because—well, because I wanted dessert.

Vivid characters are formed from our own life experiences, whether it was experienced personally or observed and happening to someone else. Have you ever read a book and found yourself nodding or laughing out loud at something the character said or did?  Did you react that way because you could relate to it?

You don’t have to be the one with a broken leg to see how it affects the injured person when they try to get around. You can feel. You can empathize. Well, unless you’re a sociopath—then all bets are off.

Imagine a child falling off of her bike when the training wheels come off.  I’m using ‘she’ and ‘her’ to be consistent. I’m not implying that girls are clumsier than boys. We all know that’s not true. 🙂

The girl might scrape her knee (if she’s not wearing knee pads).  little_girl_Crying_iStock_000021008407Small_webAt some point in your life you’ve probably experienced falling off of a bike or  you saw someone else fall. Could you imagine how a child would feel when she looked down and saw the blood? Fear. Pain. If others were around she’d probably try not to cry. The chin would quiver. She might limp away pushing the bike or she’d get back on and try again. Good for her!

Paying attention to one’s surroundings, including the people, and how they interact and react in various situations, are how characters are formed. It’s how my characters are formed. Of course, there are some writers who ARE writing themselves into their stories. I’m just not one of them.

Here’s a conversation from The Protector between Sydney, Bernie, and Charles Tenley. Tenley knew a homicide victim and the detectives are interviewing him. He has allowed them to enter his apartment.

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“Have a sit down.” Tenley plopped his scrawny butt down in the corner of the sofa and set his Corona on the end table. An overflowing ashtray sat next to it. I observed no drug paraphernalia out in the open. “I’d offer y’all a brew, but y’all be working.” He gulped his beer, then burped.

I leaned in. “Mr. Tenley–”

“That’s Chuck to you, pretty lady.”

“Mr. Tenley, I’m sure you’ve heard about your girlfriend’s murder by now?” I asked.

He shook his head. “Ain’t got no girlfriend.”

“Your former girlfriend, then,” Bernie said.

“I’m married to my former girlfriend. She ain’t dead.” He grinned. “Well, sometime she just lay there when she had a long day at work.” He winked. “Know what I mean?”

“Mr. Tenley, we’re referring to Beatrice Menifee,” I said.

“Hey.” He pointed a grubby finger my way. “I told you to call me Chuck.” He leered.

“I’m going to call you arrested for possession if you don’t start cooperating,” I said, although I had no probable cause to arrest him.

“Okay. Okay. A man can’t have no fun no more.” He picked up his beer, turned it upside down and a few drops dribbled out onto his Levi’s, which were already in need of multiple heavy-duty washings.

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

I don’t know anyone like Charles Tenley, but I sure enjoyed writing the character! He’s a conglomeration of people I’ve observed throughout my life. But, isn’t that what all of our characters are? They’re just our observations that have been fictionalized to suit our needs.

Sydney Valentine is not me. She is the type of character I wanted to read about and I wrote the book that I, as a reader, wanted to read. Sydney Valentine was born from that desire. My hope is that others would want to read about her, too.

How much of your main character is you? Do the characters you create share personality or physical traits with you?

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Pursuing The Reader’s Standard

Laekan Kemp has written an excellent post about readers. As a reader, I think this post says it all! I, too, am looking for a good story, and an authentic and strong voice. Yes, I agree! This is exactly why I continue to read the series books that I do.

Check out her post!

Earlier this month I completed the final line edit for my fourth novel and this week I’m working my way through the final line edit for my fifth. It’s slow-going and I find myself mulling over the same paragraph for almost an hour or tweaking sentences until they don’t even read like English anymore. The fact is, my brain is exhausted but I still have two hundred pages left to go before it will truly, finally, once and for all be finished. Editing and revisions are always difficult but there is something about that FINAL line edit that is so painstakingly sluggish, I practically feel like I’m moving backwards. Probably, because in many ways, I am.

The library I work at hosted an author event this past Saturday and I got the chance to catch part of the Q&A session. Someone in the audience asked the author when she knows a


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