
Lisa Jackson!!!
BLURB: In her new hardcover novel, WITHOUT MERCY Jackson again unleashes killers close to home, this time in southern Oregon, specifically in the state’s beautiful—and now extremely deadly—Siskiyou Mountains.
Our Blog

BLURB: In her new hardcover novel, WITHOUT MERCY Jackson again unleashes killers close to home, this time in southern Oregon, specifically in the state’s beautiful—and now extremely deadly—Siskiyou Mountains.Whispered by Carrie at 12:08 PM 11 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Lisa Jackson, Without Mercy
Whispered by Carrie at 3:35 PM 3 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Please welcome author, Kari Thomas. Kari is the author of Under a Shifter's Moon and Her Heart His Soul, both of which were voted Best of 2009. To learn more about Kari, please visit her website. http://www.authorkari.com/
In honor of April 15th being tax day, we’re asking 15 questions this month
~~~~~
GRACEN: Speaking of taxes, are you’re taxes finished, or do you procrastinate with them? Do you do them yourself or do you have a taxman do them for you?
KARI: Before becoming a full time author, I was a CPA for 20 years. So, I do my own taxes and a few friends too.
GRACEN: As it says, “April showers bring May flowers”. What flowers do you hope to see the first thing in spring?
KARI: My favorite flower is the Gardenia. Next, the Jasmine. I live in Arizona now, so not much of those tropical flowers here. I miss being home in Florida this time of year!
GRACEN: Do you plant your own garden? Why or why not and where is it (are they) located? What type(s) will it (they) be and where is it (are they) located on your property?
KARI: Although we live in the mountains area, with lots of water and no desert, I still cant grow a garden. Ive been tagged as a “Plant and Flower Murderess”! Both parents had the “green thumb” but forgot to pass it on to me…
GRACEN: If you could have a garden, what kind of garden would it be, how big would it be and what would you plant in it?
KARI: FULL of flowers. All kinds!
GRACEN: Have you ever considered getting involved with a local community garden? Why or why not?
KARI: They wouldn’t allow a “Plant and Flower Murderess” in their midst.
GRACEN: For your produce, is the local grocery store just fine, or do you like to hit your local farmer’s market? What is your favorite fruit or vegetable that you like to get?
KARI: Absolutely LOVE the Farmers Market! Im a big strawberry fan. My grandfather used to have one of the biggest strawberry farms in Florida (before I was born and when my mom was a child).
GRACEN: Now, let’s get to your writing, Kari…What is your main genre (erotica, erotic romance, romantic suspense, etc.)? What was the draw for you?
KARI: I love the Paranormal Romance genre. I love the idea that you can let your imagination run wild with all the possibilities. And I love those sexy preternatural heroes!
GRACEN: Besides your main genre we just discussed, what elements do you prefer to use in a story and why those elements over others?
KARI: I use a lot of Romantic Suspense in my stories. I like to have a little bit of suspense along with the main paranormal plot.
GRACEN: Do you prefer red roses or black roses? If so, does that show in your writing? If so, how? If roses aren’t your style, what flowers are? Do they influence your writing? If so, how?
KARI: I LOVE, LOVE purple roses!! And yes, I usually use some type of flower scent somewhere in my stories each time. Using the sense of smell can be very intriguing in certain scenes.
GRACEN: The jury’s still out on this question, so we’re still asking it! - Who decides what you write about, you or your muse? What kind of influence do you have over your story, or is the muse always the one planting the seeds? How do you cultivate those seeds regardless of who plants them?
KARI: My Muse and I have a long “love-hate” relationship. I usually come up with an idea, then let the muse help me write it as I go along. Yep, Im one of those “seat-of-the-pants” authors who cant outline or fully plot a story before writing it.
GRACEN: In your opinion, what author had the most influence on your writing? What about their writing did you find so influential and why?
KARI: I’d have to say Christine Feehan. Although I don’t write in the vampire genre, it was her characters that intrigued me. She has a way of bringing characters to real life, making a reader feel as though you really know them. Her stories are FULL of emotions too. I devour every one of her books, knowing that after Ive finished reading it, I will be emotionally satisfied and yet wanting more. I want to write like that!
GRACEN: While authors can definitely influence us, inspiration can be everywhere for a writer, but specific people, places and events can inspire certain characters, personality traits or things that happen in our stories. In your current story that we’re promoting here today, UNDER A SHIFTER’S MOON, did any one particular person, place or event inspire you? If so who/what was it (were they), how did it/they inspire you and how is this inspiration reflected in your story?
KARI: Both the hero (Lyon) and the heroine (Kitlene) came from a combination of all my past heroes and heroines. I wanted to have a couple that evoked all the emotions a reader looks for. I cant say that any particular place influenced their creation, but I did put a bit of myself into Kitlene. (uh oh, TOO telling!)
GRACEN: Without giving away anything pertinent to the story, tell us about the hero and heroine (s) of your story. What do they look like? How do they meet (or “did” if this is a second book with these same characters)? What are their personalities – Are they comical cut-ups, are they serious or are they a mix of the two? Please give us a little bit of dialogue from the story that can illustrate this. (Not much, but just a few lines and from a different section than the main excerpt – Thanks!)
KARI: Lyon is a twin Alpha Jaguar shapeshifter. Serious, sexy, controlling. Kitlene is human though she does carry rare jaguars genes that allow her to have jaguar children. She is vulnerable yet strong. Stubborn. She is one of a few human women left that are like that. The Jaguar Pride has a Degree handed down that says only one Alpha can rule, so Lyon is in competition with his twin brother Bryce. Kitlene also has a rare defect that will cause her to die if she gives birth. So, Lyon is left with the choice of having to marry another woman in order to have a Destined Alpha son, or choose the love of his life: Kitlene. If he chooses her, then her life is forfeit. And there’s nothing that can be done to save her. (Or is there?) And meanwhile, someone Evil is trying to destroy the entire Jaguar Pride. When “they” discover that Kitlene is Lyon’s Truemate, they target her for death.
Dialogue:
Better to plunge in now while she could still think straight. “I’m here because we need to talk, Mr. Savage.” There, at least her voice sounded firm enough.
His tawny brows lifted in question. Then that hovering, sexy smile disappeared and his lips thinned into a slight grimace. She had the odd thought that he could be a very hard man when pushed. Great. She was about to do just that.
“There’s a lot to –talk –about, Ms. Skye,” he stated in a low voice edged with anger, but nonetheless ultra-sexy in its tone, “The first, being your explanation on why you purposely ditched your watchers and came all the way here without protection.” His turquoise gaze roamed over her face again. “What was going on in that pretty head of yours? Don’t you realize how foolish and dangerous that was?”
Kitlene blinked in surprise. She couldn’t believe he had the nerve to lecture her before she even had the chance to explain. She straightened her shoulders, a habit she did whenever she was about to get angry. “Those watchers would have stopped us from coming this soon,” she told him, “And this is too important. I couldn’t reach Zachary, and you were the only one I could think of to try and –“
“And what?” he drawled low, “Try to change the Decree?”
“Yes.” There was no sense in denying it. He was already one step ahead of her. How was she going to convince him of her plan?
Lyon slowly shook his head, a nerve in his jaw muscle jumping as he stared at her. She watched in fascination as his eyes raked slowly over her, once again, from head to toes. Usually, she was able to figure out what someone was thinking just by facial expressions or the look in their eyes. It was a small talent that came in handy a lot of times. But now, this enigmatic man was a complete mystery to her –and she really wasn’t sure she wanted to know what he was thinking at that very moment. That look was too –too –sexual.
Or maybe… She had a moment to hope that if his very intense appraisal were any indication, maybe it wouldn’t be so hard to convince him to consent to her as a replacement for Ariel after all.
“You’re right. We really should talk.” He rubbed a hand over his eyes, and that possessive look was back on his face again. It made her heart race alarmingly. “There’s a lot to be discussed. But, you might as well accept the fact that the Decree can’t be changed. There’s too much at stake. Not just yours, or my, future, but the entire Pride’s. I know Zachary explained all that to you.”
“He did.” She had to look away from his piercing gaze for a moment. His expression was keeping her off balanced. “But he didn’t allow for freedom of choice. That’s not right.”
Lyon stared so long at her that she was starting to get that shivery feeling again. This strange attraction to him didn’t bode well. If he didn’t accept her…
“Right or wrong, it’s going to happen.”
GRACEN: The main characters are usually great, but sometimes, secondary and tertiary characters are known to steal the scenes. Who are the secondary/tertiary characters in your story and what do they look like? What’s unique about them? What is their relationship to the hero/heroine? Have any of these gone on to become scene-stealers? If so, who and how did they do it? (Again, please give us a small bit of dialogue to illustrate this – thanks!)
KARI: Ive been told by readers and reviewers that the secondary characters are really great and blend perfectly into the story. There is Mason who is Lyon’s Beta and right hand man. Jade who is Kitlene’s best friend and a physician. There’s Caleb who is Mason’s nephew and the best Jaguar tracker ever, and Ariel who is Kitlene’s niece. Jade and Mason clash a lot –they both have that “I’m-not-giving-an-inch” attitude. Caleb is very protective of Ariel but cant declare his feelings …..because SHE is destined to marry Lyon.
Dialogue:
He (Lyon) heard the raised voices before he opened his office door. Mason was angry. He recognized Jade’s voice and knew his Beta wasn’t too happy with what ever she was saying. He shook his head and opened the door.
“Keep your voices down,” he ordered, his own low and deep. “If you wake Kitlene up before she needs to awaken, I’ll have your hides.”
Jade smirked at him, and put her hands on her hips. “You can’t have my hide,” she stated, “I’m not one of your crazy shifters.”
“We’re the crazy ones?” Mason shook his head and snarled at her. “The three of you ditch your watchers and then get yourselves kidnapped and nearly killed, and you think that wasn’t crazy? Woman, you need a reality check. What the hell were you thinking?”
AND
Kitlene held her breath. She had the feeling she knew what Ariel was about to say. She just didn’t know how she felt about it. And that bothered her more than anything.
“When Caleb found me I panicked,” Ariel said. “I knew my running was over. I had hoped to stay hidden until after the Shifters Moon then none of this would be necessary anyway. I figured that even if Lyon accepted your proposal, Jade would step in and stop it before the –uh –mating ceremony.”
“My plan, exactly,” Jade muttered.
Ariel ran a shaky hand through her long hair. “If you think Lyon is tough, you haven’t experienced a lecture from Caleb. He threw everything at me. Short of turning me over his knees and giving me the spanking he said I deserved. The short of it is that he made me realize the truth. I was chosen for this. I’m the one destined to unite the Pride by marrying Lyon and giving him the Alpha son. He explained what Grandfather had neglected to tell us. If I give birth to a son bearing the ‘moon and jaguar’ mark, that child is destined to be a great leader in the future. He will turn out to be their very salvation.”
BLURB:
He was fated for another, but created to love her.
Decreed by the Elders, Jaguar Shifters Lyon Savage and his brother must decide Pride rule in a way not seen for centuries. UNDER A SHIFTER’S MOON, a mating can take place with a chosen human to produce a child, and the father of that child will become the one ruling Alpha. Now Lyon must choose the love of his Truemate --- or accept the Decree to save his Pride and secure his future.
Strong and selfless, Kitlene is a rare woman whose blood, like her niece’s, carries something of the Shifter within its DNA. Willing to sacrifice herself for the sake of family, she offers herself to the Alpha Cat whose very presence pulls at her soul --- and whose love brings with it a deadly complication.
EXCERPT:
“Are you going to stay silent, or are you going to talk to me about this,” Mason spoke up, interrupting his thoughts.
Lyon knew what Mason was referring to. It had been more than obvious when he’d turned all primal and possessive over Kitlene after she’d been wounded. He’d given her his Alpha blood. That alone was tell-all. And now, he had her safely tucked in his bedroom.
“Nothing to say,” Lyon shrugged his shoulders. He and Mason had grown up close as brothers. They’d shared a lot of things over the years. Lyon just wasn’t sure how much of his thoughts and feelings he wanted to share right now. Especially when he hadn’t made a decision yet. “She’s my Truemate.” He didn’t have to say her name, Mason already knew. “But I’m destined to marry Ariel. What am I supposed to say to that?”
Mason rubbed his neck. “I’m sorry, brother. This is one crazy, helluva mess.”
That was an understatement. He had a looming marriage in less than twenty six days, a brother who might or might not be plotting to stop the Ceremonial mating any way he could, a possible war on the horizon, and enemies he didn’t even know where to begin to look for.
And a Truemate, sleeping in his bed.
“You should have put Jade in your room. I can protect Kitlene just as easy.”
“No.” She was staying with him, within seeing distance and reach, at all times. He’d kill anyone who tried to hurt her again.
“It isn’t your smartest decision,” Mason muttered.
Maybe not. But he wasn’t going to let her go. Not until there was no other choice…
“You’re just disgruntled because you have to watch over Jade.”
“Smart ass. That woman is a walking bomb just waiting for an excuse to explode. Don’t blame me if I end up killing her before all this is over with.”
Lyon grinned. “I was going to give you Ariel, but I have a feeling your nephew might have challenged that order.”
Mason frowned darkly at that. “Yeah, I noticed how he was hovering over her so protectively. He said it was because she was so fragile. And he always feels protective of little women. This isn’t good, Lyon. Someone is going to get hurt before this situation is over.”
As long as Kitlene stayed safe, one way or another, it didn’t matter to him who else got hurt. She mattered.
Hell if he knew what he was going to do to keep her completely safe. Even from him.
*****
Please visit Kari's website to learn more about her and her writing... www.authorkari.com
Whispered by Gracen Miller at 8:32 AM 9 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Her Heart His Soul, Kari Thomas, Under a Shifter's Moon

Whispered by Carrie at 6:23 PM 1 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Glen Quarry, Thyme in a Flask
This has been one of those weeks where I’m unsure what day of the week it is, just a long week of one up and one down and lots of physical therapy appointments. So, if you want something exciting to read, scroll down to Cherie De Sues's interview...that's much more entertaining than anything I have to say today.
My husband had shoulder surgery last Thursday and he’s been out of work all this week, so instead of being a chauffeur for our two boys, I was also his chauffer as well. And boy, oh boy, is he distracting! I’ve gotten little writing completed, no books read, no reviews written, my interviews have fallen by the wayside, absolutely no housework accomplished and very little laundry done. In other words, I’m a week behind on everything! *whimpers*
I DVR’d Supernatural tonight and was sitting and watching it when I realized, hey, it’s Thursday and I have to come up with something to post for tomorrow. Yikes! I still haven’t come up with a witty topic. I think my brain is too fried to think too coherently. LOL
The heroine name contest ends today, so if you haven’t voted, make sure you vote today! I’ll announce the winner tomorrow at Wicked, Thorn & Roses. Genevieve has a strong lead, so unless a bunch of folks vote within the next 24 hours, it looks as if Genevieve will become the winning heroine name. So, if you have an opinion, locate the poll in the upper right-hand corner and vote for your favorite name!
I’d love to hear what everyone did for Easter…if you celebrated. If not, what did you do on Sunday? At my house, we hid Easter eggs and hunted them. And we took a long walk around the neighborhood while the boys rode their bicycles. Basically, it was a lazy day of family time, which is always an awesome day to me!
Have an awesome weekend and next Friday, I’ll make sure I have something planned!
Whispered by Gracen Miller at 12:00 AM 4 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Elfin Blood, Gracen Miller, Noble Romance Publishing

Whispered by Gracen Miller at 12:00 AM 4 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Cherie De Sues, Lacy: A Bad Girl's Revenge, Noble Romance Publishing, Tales of the Red Moon Clan, To Love A Thief
Whispered by Margay Roberge at 8:05 AM 3 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: car issues, Margay Leah Justice, medical issues, saga, writing
Whispered by Carrie at 4:24 PM 3 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: characters, Details, Dialogue, Emotions, Setting, Surroundings, writing
Please welcome author, Charisma Knight. Charisma's newewst release is Just an Average Vampire, which was recently released by Amira Press. Other books written by Charisma are Soul Seduction and Her Dark Desires.
In honor of April 15th being tax day, we’re asking 15 questions this month...so, let's get started:
GRACEN: Speaking of taxes, are you’re taxes finished, or do you procrastinate with them? Do you do them yourself or do you have a taxman do them for you?
CHARISMA: My taxes are completed. My uncle does them for me, I don’t play around with Uncle Sam. I’m eager to receive money. ; )
GRACEN: As it says, “April showers bring May flowers”. What flowers do you hope to see the first thing in spring?
CHARISMA: Oh, it doesn’t matter. Anything in bloom makes me happy.
GRACEN: Do you plant your own garden? Why or why not and where is it (are they) located? What type(s) will it (they) be and where is it (are they) located on your property?
CHARISMA: No, I don’t have a green thumb.
GRACEN: If you could have a garden, what kind of garden would it be, how big would it be and what would you plant in it?
CHARISMA: I would have a beautiful large rose garden. I’m partial to roses of all colors.
GRACEN: Have you ever considered getting involved with a local community garden? Why or why not?
CHARISMA: No, I haven’t. I’m not a natural at gardening. I don’t have a green thumb.
GRACEN: For your produce, is the local grocery store just fine, or do you like to hit your local farmer’s market? What is your favorite fruit or vegetable that you like to get?
CHARISMA: There is a local stand around the Hanover area where my grandmother lives. It is next to the Peach Orchard. They grow beautiful plants, vegetables, and fruit. My favorite fruit is watermelon, and I love fresh green beans and corn.
GRACEN: Now, let’s get to your writing, Charisma…What is your main genre (erotica, erotic romance, romantic suspense, etc.)? What was the draw for you?
CHARISMA: Main genre is erotic romance. There are no drawbacks.
GRACEN: Besides your main genre we just discussed, what elements do you prefer to use in a story and why those elements over others?
CHARISMA: I enjoy writing interracial erotica; erotic romance. I enjoy writing about vampires, ghosts, and werewolves. As you can see, vampires are my first love. I don’t think I’ll ever grow tired with writing them.
I write about interracial romances because I’m an African American woman who has always been involved in an interracial relationship, so that is what appeals to me. I use these elements from my point of view.
GRACEN: Do you prefer red roses or black roses? If so, does that show in your writing? If so, how? If roses aren’t your style, what flowers are? Do they influence your writing? If so, how?
CHARISMA: I love them both. Actually, I don’t include flowers in my writing, but I should start. Actually, in one of my stories, the hero gives my heroine a bouquet of blood red roses. Does that count? Honestly, flowers don’t influence my writing.
GRACEN: The jury’s still out on this question, so we’re still asking it! - Who decides what you write about, you or your muse? What kind of influence do you have over your story, or is the muse always the one planting the seeds? How do you cultivate those seeds regardless of who plants them?
CHARISMA: I must say, it is 50/50 sometimes. Other times, I follow my muse wherever she leads me. There are times when my muse plants the seeds and leaves. I cultivate the seeds by sitting down and creating a rough outline of this story. I do this with the characters, because it sometimes helps me set the stage for everything. It is rare when I do this. Other stories have just flowed to me thanks to my muse, and I didn’t have to do anything, just write.
GRACEN: In your opinion, what author had the most influence on your writing? What about their writing did you find so influential and why?
CHARISMA: I have to say, Celeste Anwar, and Dahlia Rose inspired me to launch my writing career in March, 2009. Other authors such as J. Hali Steele and Eve Vaughn are my most recent influences.
Their writings are so influential because they stay with you long after you’ve completed the book. These ladies have written memorable stories that tingles the senses and warms the heart. There is a melancholy feeling when the story has ended. I strive to invoke those feelings within readers.
GRACEN: While authors can definitely influence us, inspiration can be everywhere for a writer, but specific people, places and events can inspire certain characters, personality traits or things that happen in our stories. In your current story that we’re promoting here today, Just An Average Vampire, did any one particular person, place or event inspire you? If so who/what was it (were they), how did it/they inspire you and how is this inspiration reflected in your story?
CHARISMA: A very good friend who suffered emotional and physical abuse at the hands of her ex inspired me to write this story. I dedicated this story to her because she was strong enough to gain her freedom. When a woman is trapped within an abusive relationship, her mind and body are sadly no longer her own. Horribly enough, she feels there is no way out of the relationship.
GRACEN: Without giving away anything pertinent to the story, tell us about the hero and heroine (s) of your story. What do they look like? How do they meet (or “did” if this is a second book with these same characters)? What are their personalities – Are they comical cut-ups, are they serious or are they a mix of the two? Please give us a little bit of dialogue from the story that can illustrate this. (Not much, but just a few lines and from a different section than the main excerpt – Thanks!)
CHARISMA: There is no dialogue of how Trina and Cecil met, just Cecil’s thoughts while watching her sleep.
Cecil remembered the first day they met. It had been October 2008 when their paths crossed at Burt’s CafĂ©, a coffee lounge. He’d stood in line behind her, waiting for her to place her order. When it came time to pay, Trina searched for the money she thought she’d had in a small pocketbook. Cecil stepped in, paying for her purchase.
In awe of his kindness, Trina had given him a huge hug, and the two bonded. A lone, silver tear slid down Cecil’s cheek while recalling the moment she’d told him how Rick treated her. She’d had money in her wallet, but Rick used to steal from her. With these thoughts, Cecil lay down beside Trina, remaining awake until dawn approached.
Vampire, Cecil McKagan is English, tall handsome, and good looking. He is six feet tall, has shoulder length black hair, charming, and quite the gentleman. He lives in Edison, New Jersey, lives in an average apartment, and holds an average job in a pub. He’s friends with my heroine, Trina Jones. Well, Cecil wishes to be more than just friends, however, he fears he may be a little overbearing for Trina, especially since she is the victim of an abusive relationship. Cecil fears as a vampire he may harm her emotionally, perhaps even physically.
Trina Jones is a beautiful African American woman who discovered the courage to escape an abusive husband. Unfortunately, after her divorce she suffers a few financial struggles. Once learning she is being evicted from her apartment, she relies upon Cecil for a place to stay. Trina has shoulder length black hair, smooth dark brown skin, a voluptuous build. She is funny, witty, and a handful. She’s very independent and stubborn.
GRACEN: The main characters are usually great, but sometimes, secondary and tertiary characters are known to steal the scenes. Who are the secondary/tertiary characters in your story and what do they look like? What’s unique about them? What is their relationship to the hero/heroine? Have any of these gone on to become scene-stealers? If so, who and how did they do it? (Again, please give us a small bit of dialogue to illustrate this – thanks!)
CHARISMA: My other characters, Izzy and Ivanna may steal the scenes a little. Izzy is my Spanish vampire, a long time friend of Cecil’s. Izzy is a show off, down to earth, wise cracking and very charming. His mate, Ivanna is a petite blond who chastises Izzy every so often because of his child-like nature. They are close friends to Cecil and Trina. In one of the scenes, Izzy shows off his vampire speed while they help Trina move her belongings out of her apartment.
Blurb:
After discovering the courage to divorce her abusive husband, Trina Jones rises from her ashes like the legendary Phoenix. Strong-willed and determined, she rebuilds her independence. After her divorce, a string of bad luck sets her back tremendously. Faced with eviction and repossession, Trina becomes frustrated. To make matters worse, she is laid off from her job.
Vampire Cecil McKagan graciously accepts Trina into his home once he discovers her hardship. The bond between them ultimately strengthens, and the pair become lovers. However, past negativities threaten to tear the couple apart...
EXCERPT:
Across the alley, on top of the abandoned building, an ancient being peered through Cecil's bedroom window. Witnessing the affection between Trina and Cecil, venomous curses escaped its lips. Consumed by hatred, and unaffected by the bitter wind whipping it's long raven locks against flawless ebony skin, the creature dug it's talons into the brick ledge on which it perched. Another opportunity would arise to drive a wedge between them, it decided as it expanded black wings and leapt off the top of the building. Enraged, it released a blood-curdling scream and soared high into the starlit sky.
* * * *
The screech jarred Cecil and Trina from their embrace. Cecil sat up and dashed to the window. His keen senses had alerted him to something seconds before hearing the blood-curdling scream. Now, he sensed nothing.
"Was that a cat, or something?"
"It was a vampire."
"Maybe it was Izzy or Ivanna."
"No, the presence I felt was over there. And the scream, well, we vampires make those noises when enraged. This presence seemed familiar, but I can't bloody place it." Cecil was puzzled, and then an eerie thought crept into his head.
What if…?
"Cecil, you're scaring me. Stop looking like that. Are you sure everything is all right?"
"Yes." He returned to the bed and slipped beneath the bedcovers.
"Liar."
"Oh, Trina." Cecil shook his head. He looked at her, sighed, and fell against the large, goose down pillow. Trina turned on her side to face him, running her fingers through the silky soft hair dusking his broad chest.
"Do we have more secrets, Cecil? That sound, whatever it was, caused my damn skin to crawl. I would bet my life you know what, or who, it was, and this time I would appreciate an honest answer."
"Along with living many lifetimes comes the threat of many enemies. I was a knight in England. This scar came from a werewolf attack, as I was returning from the Crusades. I fought with honor for King Richard, no questions asked."
"When were you made a vampire?"
"Almost a week after my attack. Once I returned, I learned my wife and child had been murdered by the hands of someone I thought to be a comrade. After a day of mourning, my sire introduced herself to me, taking my life as though I'd accept the monster I'd become afterward. I wished for death, but not like this. Nydia was my sire. She was a cold, ruthless vampire who hunted for the thrill of the chase. She is an enemy."
"Why would she be an enemy?"
"Oh, I'm getting to that. Trust me."
"I'm sorry for the loss of your family. Do you regret becoming a vampire?"
"For centuries, yes. Then I met you. Fate has a way of making things happen. If I weren't a vampire, I would never have met you," he said and kissed Trina on the head as she snuggled close, allowing him to continue his story.
Whispered by Gracen Miller at 12:00 AM 4 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Amira Press, Charisma Knight, Just An Average Vampire, Soul Seduction

Whispered by Gracen Miller at 3:54 PM 1 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Jessica Coulter Smith, Slave to Her Passions, Wild Horse Press
Today we have a special guest author with us, Linda Nightingale. I had the pleasure of reviewing her book, Black Swan, and posted it here last Saturday.

After 15 years of writing and submitting, I contracted a short story with The Wild Rose Press, so writers hang in there. I have since been asked for rewrites on two erotic pieces. My latest effort I, Lucifer took third in the Launch a Star Contest and finalled in the SARA Merritt Contest, and since it is rather controversial, I’m delighted!
I had been published in on-line magazines and, once when I bred and showed Andalusian horses, the national magazine Equus bought an article on my stallion Bonito.
A snippet about me: I’m a Legal Assistant at a world-famous cancer hospital. I love sports cars, pianos (I own a self-player baby grand but can’t play a note myself), travel and reading. I have two wonderful sons, one of whom lives in Jolly Old England. I tend to be a pantster when it comes to writing, letting my characters introduce themselves and tell me the story. I admit I do sometimes throw away a lot of pages spent in getting to know the characters.
Since the erotic stories are just that—erotic—I’d like to introduce you to the hero in Black Swan.
Black Swan is a story about mortals who willingly submit to the vampire in order to experience the euphoria and sexual ecstasy of the Kiss.
EXCERPT:
The fact that the man she loved was in bed with another woman ceased to be important when Holly saw the blood.
Her heart, which had been running on empty until she met Tristan, stuttered and stalled. Horror freeze-framed time—the shutter snaps of images flooding her brain almost audible. She couldn’t breathe or move, knew she hadn’t made a sound, but Tristan's head snapped up. Wild red eyes honed in on her. Blood smeared his mouth, drizzled from two wounds on his partner's throat. The woman he'd been screwing was deathly pale and deadly still.
She should run before he shouted, "What the hell are you doing here?" but fear had turned her to ice. Holly hadn't blinked but Tristan stood on his feet. Her heart tripped over a beat. No one could move that fast. He shook back his mane of black hair and, holding her prisoner in his gaze, and glided toward her. The last rays of the dying sun bronzed his body. How incredibly beautiful he was. How she loved him. How dare he do this to her?
She wanted to scream, “You SOB! Saturday you said you loved me. Monday you're banging another woman!"
Humiliation, jealousy and grief burned like fire beneath her skin. She tried, but failed to tear her gaze from his. Tristan's eyes were luminous azure not scarlet. The blood on his mouth had somehow disappeared, or, please, God maybe she’d imagined it.. His naked body blocked Holly's view of the bed but she knew the woman still lay there. Why hadn't she said something, jumped up or grabbed her clothes and slammed the door? Blood.
Her heard gave a dizzy spin. Maybe the woman was dead. Fear broke Holly’s paralysis.
Black Swan is available from The Wild Rose Press. http://thewildrosepress.com/
Please visit my web site for a continuing story, Vampire Hunt. http://www.lindanightingale.com/
Leave a comment to be entered in a drawing for a Black Swan coffee mug!
Whispered by Gracen Miller at 11:26 AM 8 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Black Swan, Linda Nightingale
My Self-Publishing Journey
I was thrilled when Gracen Miller said she’d let me do a guest post on Moonlight, Lace and Mayhem. After all, I love the blog, and I love the comments, so I’m sure I’ll enjoy “virtually” conversing with the readers. But I hadn’t reckoned with my major failings in that interesting area of deadlines. So here I am, almost up to April 1st, suddenly realizing I’ve ignored five calendar reminders to send something in. I’m really sorry Gracen.
Still, a quick search through emails answers the most important question: What on earth did I say I’d write about? And the fact that I’m frantically trying to meet a self-publishing deadline makes self-publishing seem a suitably timely topic.
I guess I should mention, though I’m “only” self-published, I’d dearly like to be professionally published one day. I started self-publishing because I went to a Willamette Writers’ Conference (my one and only) and learned
1) If you want to get an agent or publisher you need to have a platform—i.e. internet presence.
2) If you want to be published you have to prove you can sell. And
3) It’s a really bad idea to try to get published in more than one genre.
Putting 1) 2) and 3) together, I decided to self-publish in one genre (my “Bible stuff”) and keep sending my novels and short stories out to publishers and agents. That was around Christmas 2008. I’ve still had no luck with the publishers and agents, but I do have six books and four free downloads on my Lulu website, and three new books coming soon. And it is kind of fun…
So, in case anyone out there is interested in learning how I got from there to here, I’ll offer a brief description of my self-publishing journey, and hope it’s not too long or too boring for a lacily moonlit slice of mayhem.
Preparation
Every journey starts with preparation, in this case writing, which I’ve been doing since I learned to hold a pen.
Motivation
Motivation is what was missing from age 7 to… well, never mind. (Seven’s when I learned to hold that pen.) Creating an internet presence and proving I can sell were my biggest motivating factors in getting self-published. Plus there was a local Christmas Fair coming up, which gave me a deadline to work to. Did I mention—I’m deadline-challenged?
Research
The next step was to find an internet publisher, since I wanted an internet presence. I Googled “self-publishing” and picked Lulu because:
1) There’s no set-up fee: Lots of publishers charge an up-front fee then help with editing, formatting etc. and probably give you some “free” copies. If you time it right and your requirements are fairly basic you can get a great deal. I wanted pretty gift books in time for Christmas, which didn’t fit either requirement.
2) They have lots of options: Some publishers only do black-and-white printing, or only certain shapes and sizes of books. Lulu has tons of options—great for self-publishing picture-books, story-books, books of paintings, poetry, photographs, whatever you can think of.
3) You get a free web-site: Lulu gives you an internet “store-front” which became my first ever blog—you can personalize it, advertise your books, post pictures etc. I migrated the blog part to blogger after a while, and got a “real” website with a much more memorable address, but it’s still nice to have my Lulu storefront tied in to my site. I’ve even tried to make the banner-heads match.
4) International sales: Lulu sells abroad. That felt important to me since most of my family’s in England.
5) Free distribution: This one was really a distraction rather than a plus. I thought it would be nice to get my books onto Amazon and into bookstores, but I’d have to price them out of the market because of Lulu’s wholesale pricing calculation (‘retail price’ must be at least 2 x ‘wholesale,’ and ‘wholesale’ is something like ‘print cost’ minus three dollars). I might get distribution for my storybooks (lower ‘print cost’) one day, but seriously, Amazon’s a pretty huge haystack and my books are very small needles; I’m not convinced anyone would find them even if I put them there.
Upload
Next I had to format and upload my books. There are lots of places where you can download Word document templates for different sizes of paper, including pre-designed measurements for margins and gutters. I just had to cut and paste from my original doc to get the right shape. But my books had pictures, and nothing ever converts as precisely as you’d like, so I had to go through the upload, convert, download, edit and re-upload cycle a few times before my PDF files looked right. Once I found the lists of approved fonts, and got used to the idea that “PDF conversion failed” might just mean “timed out, please try again,” it all went okay.
Cover
Then I had to design a cover. If formatting and uploading took lots of time, this took even longer, drawing pictures with precisely the right number of pixels in Microsoft Paint, adding text, removing text, trying to match text in shades of blue to write on the spine and back… Lulu’s new cover creator’s pretty good though, and even adds barcodes for you.
Proofs
Proofs were another of this month’s deadlines—Lulu offered free proofs for a few weeks (plus postage and packing—their mail charges aren’t cheap but they do a good job with prompt and well-wrapped shipping). Lulu strongly recommends you buy proofs before making orders, so you can see how those glorious colors in the PDF file work on paper, but I’ve never had any problems. And that smooth printed cover in your hands does wonders for your self-esteem, until your best friend points out you mis-spelled “man” on page fifteen. It’s amazing how much easier it is to spot paper mistakes than ones you read on the screen.
Copyright
Lulu helpfully lets you fill in copyright dates on your work, but there’s a nice bit of small-print on the government copyright site that says as soon as something’s published (i.e. offered for sale or rent) you have to send two copies to the Library of Congress. I’m still trying to work out what that would mean if you self-publish short stories on Kindle—I can’t imagine they really want tons of identical CDs of Kindle miniatures. But the thought of having a real copyright for just $35 more (after paying for the books I had to mail) was pretty tempting. I wish I’d known how long it can take though; I’m still waiting for the copyright on one of those first three books.
Sales
Luckily you don’t have to wait for the copyright to sell books. Lulu gives deals on bulk purchases (5 or more black and white, 25 or more if your book’s in color), so I invested slightly more than I could afford and set out eagerly to the Christmas Bazaar, where lots of people said lots of nice things and left “to get their purses.” Yes, and never returned.
At this point I had to remind myself of my motivation: get an internet presence and prove I can sell books; nothing to do with making money. If I price the books to make a profit, I’ll price them out of the market. If I put them on Amazon, I’ll price them out of the market. But if I take a minimal online profit, and accept a loss off-line, I’ll gain experience and maybe (maybe, maybe) look like a good risk to an editor or agent.
Conclusion
So now I now have one publisher telling me I’m just the author he wants “if only you’d write a mystery.” Another says he hopes to publish me “soon” but I’ll believe it when it happens. And the internet’s addictive. I have three blogs, one website, several squidoo lenses and numerous ning pages in addition to my Lulu storefront. You can visit me, virtually, at http://www.sheiladeeth.com but I’ll probably try to sell you a book.
Whispered by Gracen Miller at 6:30 AM 8 Moonbeams (comments) Links to this post
Craters: Sheila Deeth