Friday, March 22, 2013

What I Read This Week

This week I read One Amazing Thing by Chitra Banerjee  Divakaruni. I love this author with a fiery burning passion of a 1000 suns, but this one wasn't my favorite ever. It was a tad too derivative for my tastes.

I also finished beta reading stories from Kari Dell and Sean Michael.  :D

I'm fixin' to go out of town, and my ereader is full and loaded. I have Maya Bank's newest novel queued up. :D


What are y'all reading?

Much love,

BA

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Getting Ready to Travel

O.o

Why is the week before vacation the worst?

I mean appointment after appointment, all this stuff to get finished and accomplished and I'm never going to make it.  Not in a million years.  Don't get me wrong, I love to travel. It feeds the muse, it lets me relax and focus and remember why I love what I do, but still...

Getting prepared to travel sucks hairy monkey balls.

That said, my daddy has a new foal this morning and I'm pondering making biscuits.

*smooches*

Much love, y'all,

BA

Monday, March 18, 2013

Guest Blog: Kari Dell

 

Oh, y'all. You know when you meet someone and you just go, oh, oh. I like you. Even though you live across the country -- her where it's cold, me where it's hotter than the hinges of hell and just pass each other on Twitter. I love her voice, I love her stories, and, I swear to God, one day I'm going to get up there and visit with her.

Connections are the best part of social media and every time I see Kari on my tweet deck, I grin.

I'm lucky enough to be beta-reading her novel -- y'all. Yum. I'm having an absolute ball and y'all should envy me deeply.

Deeply, for lo, I am one lucky broad.

She offered me a short story to share. I hope y'all love it like I did. I'm lucky as all get out to know this lady. :D

Much love, y'all.

BA

***

Meadowlark

As had become my habit, I studied the passing scenery with great care and sifted each impression through the filter of the dream-memories, waiting to see what would stick. The curve of a certain hill, or the yeast and hot oil aroma of fry bread. Two wiry, brown-skinned youngsters coaxing a stubborn pony near the fence so they could climb aboard. 

Images generic to any Indian reservation in North America, too universal to be meaningful.

I steered the car north, into the heart of the Blackfeet Nation. On my left the jagged east face of Glacier National Park reared up without preamble from sloping bunch grass hills, sheer peaks clinging to the remains of their winter coats where the wind hadn’t scoured them clean. Something resonated deep in my fibers at the sight, almost painful.

There were mountains in the dream-memories—those visions that glowed so vibrant, so tangible in the darkness, only to fade like mist over a lake when exposed to daylight. Were these my mountains? Would this be the day I met a man with laughing eyes, an adult version of the boy in my picture?

The picture was a grainy snapshot, curling at the edges. Without it, I might have dismissed the dream-memories as wishful imaginings of a miserable child. But there we were—three children dressed in Sunday best, standing stiffly on concrete steps, the wind molding our clothing to slender frames. Me—the smallest—giggling with the younger of the two boys, drawing a scowl from his brother. On the back, my mother’s unsteady handwriting identified us: Squee, Laney and Book—Easter at Grandma’s. 

I couldn’t have been more than four, maybe five years old when we moved. Not yet in school. My memories of phonics were intertwined with those of a stepfather who smelled of axle grease and stale beer. That was later, after we left Book, my friend with the sweet brown eyes. 

In the dream-memories, Book played with me and Squee frowned, scolding us for being foolish. Actual moments, or just my mind's extension of what I saw in the photo? Maybe Squee didn't frown, except at the moment. Maybe Book wasn't so sweet. How did I know? 

Their images were clear because I had the picture to prompt my memory, unlike Grandma. I could never make out her face, even in the dream-memories, but her voice rang pure as spring rain. Come and sit with me, Elaine, and I’ll tell you about when I was a girl. 

She always called me Elaine. Never Laney, like everyone else. Not my biological grandmother, I knew. I had searched out those graves in southern Oregon. The chiseled dates were irrefutable proof that I could not have known them.  

Together, the dream-memories and the picture refused to let me rest. Because of them I had turned down a position as a full-time counselor, choosing instead to visit one reservation after another, spreading what I hoped was a worthwhile message. 

Mostly, though, I was searching for home. For Grandma. 

And I'd found her. Over and over again. First amongst the Hopi in Arizona. Again on the Osage Reservation in Oklahoma. Living on a bluff overlooking the Missouri River in Fort Yates, North Dakota. 

In every hardscrabble reservation town, where hope and pride and family were worn threadbare, I found these women I came to call the Grandmothers, even when they were aunts, cousins, sisters, childless widows. Grandmothers came in all shapes and ages. They shared a generosity of spirit that drew in stray children from all sides. 

A Grandmother’s door was always unlocked; her spare bedroom or couch always available for the night—or more. What alcohol and poverty sought to tear apart the Grandmothers fought to preserve with the strength of their love. 

Yes, I had found many Grandmothers. But not mine. Not yet.

I wheeled the car into a parking slot in front of the high school and checked my reflection in the rearview mirror. God, how I had once despised that face. Not only for what it lacked in beauty, but for how it defined me, separated me from the others. While my peers flocked to the tanning beds, I longed for pale, creamy skin. I wanted a nose that tipped up at the end instead of flattening, for cheeks that weren’t so full. My skin and my face marked me as different. No amount of make-up or hair bleach could make me one of them. 

Now my hair fell to my waist, black as night, adorned only with a turquoise and silver barrette. The wind lifted and tangled the strands as I stepped out of the car. It had an edge, this wind, honed to crystalline sharpness on the mountain glaciers, raising goose bumps on my flesh even as the bright spring sun warmed me. 

Fingers of recognition tickled my spine. I remembered the wind—how it growled around the corners of the house and roared through the trees. And how Grandma tugged the snarls from my hair. 

I deliberately squashed the blossoming excitement. Easy, Elaine. Don’t get your hopes too high again. 

I had been so sure in the Wind River country of Wyoming. The mountains, the wind, it was all there. But not Grandma, and not Book. No one recognized the picture or the names. Each disappointment pushed the dreams farther into the distance. Was it possible I might never find them?

As I climbed the chipped concrete steps of the high school, the melodic trill of a meadowlark pierced the air. I spied him across the street, perched on a wooden climbing gym at the elementary school. I smiled, fingering the medallion at my throat. The door swung open behind me and the bird took to the air.  

“Miss Martin! I’m glad you made it.” The principal greeted me with a warm smile, shook my hand and gestured me inside. I followed him down the long hallway, past rows of scarred lockers and a glass case full of gleaming trophies, mostly for basketball.  “You have a few minutes before the teachers get back from lunch,” he said. “The projector is already set up in the auditorium.”

An irritated male voice cut off my reply, echoing in the silent building. “I have things to do, lesson plans to write for my substitute while I’m gone to the district track meet. I don’t need to listen to another bleeding heart tell me how to save our kids. These people have no clue…”

The tirade ended abruptly as he rounded the corner and we all came face-to-face. The second teacher melted into the nearest doorway, looking more embarrassed than the man who stood before me. He only looked annoyed. Intimidating. 

He had the body of a runner, long-legged and sinewy in a red and black jogging suit. He frowned and my stomach lurched, as if I had reason to fear his displeasure. 

“Elaine Martin,” I said, extending a hand.

“John Running Bear.” He accepted my handshake, but showed no pleasure in making my acquaintance. His face was as angular and unyielding as the mountain peaks, his eyes chips of black ice. He dropped my hand and continued on his way without apology or explanation.

The principal shook his head and sighed. “Don’t take it personally, Elaine. This is a tough time of year for John.” He guided me into the auditorium and glanced at his watch. “If you don’t need me, I’ll grab a sandwich.”

When he had gone, I set up my laptop and connected it to the projector with trembling hands. I told myself it was nerves, nothing to do with John Running Bear. I knew better. Something about him had rattled me. Something more unsettling than rudeness. 

He was the last to arrive, slipping into a seat near the door as the lights went down. I had hoped he would play hooky. Although I had come to see it as a necessary evil, I didn’t enjoy baring my soul to strangers. John Running Bear was a very critical, unsympathetic stranger.  

Suck it up, Elaine. I hit a button on the projector remote and a scanned copy of the grainy snapshot flashed onto the screen. I pointed to my smiling face.

“This is Elaine Martin, age four, in her Easter dress and looking adorable, if I may say so.” 

The audience chuckled. The next slide silenced them. 

“This is Elaine Martin, age seventeen." 

It was a police mug shot—greasy tangled hair, glazed eyes, bloated face, one cheek scraped and bruised. I let them stare at it for several moments before I said, “I want to help you understand how a child goes from here…” I flipped back to the unsullied innocence of the first picture. “To here.” I clicked on the second. “And how you, as educators, can intervene.”

I had their full attention. I told my story by rote, distancing myself from the emotion, just the facts. I told it to overcome their resistance, to make them see that I did have a clue; I had been one of their kids. I didn't want their pity, just their attention. These people didn’t need me to tell them how it was. They knew a hundred like me. Like my mother, who wandered from man to man, bottle to bottle. 

I didn’t want their tears for the night neighbors dragged me from my bed in a rattletrap mobile home as it was consumed by fire. My mother was beyond saving, passed out with a lit cigarette in her hand, poisoned by oily black smoke. The only thing I rescued was a cedar box that held the picture and a few pieces of costume jewelry. 

Then came foster homes, the double stigma of looking different and moving often. In junior high, rebellion, then a steady downward spiral. From hanging around the drug addicts to becoming one; from dressing like a whore to trading my body for a fix. 

I hit bottom, literally, the night I drove a stolen car off an embankment while high on meth. Woke up in a juvenile detention center, sober for the first time in weeks, faced with a decision. I could participate in a rehabilitation program, or I could go to prison. 

It still frightened me that I took a full day to think it over.

The lights came up on a somber crowd. As always, eyes shied away from mine, as if I had stripped naked on stage. The awkwardness would pass with the activities to come. I stole a glance at the back of the room and found an empty seat. John Running Bear had slipped out under the cover of darkness. Probably writing those lesson plans. I tried not to be relieved that he was gone. 

The rest of the group worked through the exercises with growing enthusiasm. As the session wound down, I took a seat on the edge of the stage for questions and answers.  

A voice called out from the back row, “What made you stay clean?” 

I searched out the speaker. John Running Bear.

“Excuse me?” I asked, my thoughts frozen by his cold stare.

“You say an addict needs a reason to be sober,” he said. “You had no family, no job, no future. What was your reason?” 

“I, uh…” My fingers went to the medallion at my throat, caressing it for reassurance. “I don’t usually tell this story,” I began, and bent my head, unable to look into curious eyes as I spoke. “I call them dream-memories because I’m not sure what parts I remember and what are dreams. I had the first in the detention center; while I was coming down hard and thinking I’d rather die."

I took a breath, fighting to steady my voice. "In the dream--in all the dreams--I'm a little girl, playing with my best friend at Grandma’s house. We found a can of paint and decided to spruce up the swing set. Man, did we make a mess—of ourselves and the swing set.” Laughter fluttered through the crowd. I smiled. “Most people would have been furious, but Grandma hugged us and told us how proud she was that we were helping her.” 

I swallowed hard, forcing down the lump so I could get words out. “That afternoon, out in the exercise yard, a meadowlark landed on the fence and started to sing. So beautiful, so full of hope.” 

I paused again. No one made a sound until I went on. “Every day the meadowlark came back, and every night I had more dreams. Through them, I began to see there was still hope. It wasn’t too late for me to become the kind of person a Grandmother could be proud of. A person my friend Book would want to know again.” 

I shook my head to clear the fog of emotion, reaching for my professional persona like a shield “The subconscious mind can be a powerful ally. I believe the dreams were a message from that little girl I’d buried so far beneath the anger and the drugs.” I held up the medallion, displaying the golden meadowlark embossed on the front. “I had this engraved with the date of the first dream, the day I first considered finding a better way. May 23, eleven years next week.”

For a moment, there was absolute, frozen silence. Then I jumped at the slam of a door. John Running Bear had left again. Strange man. Strange moment. The others gathered their belongings, heads down, shuffling quickly toward the doors without waiting to be excused. Not even the principal stopped to chat. In all the presentations I'd done, all the naysayers I'd confronted, I'd never had a response quite like that, and I was rattled all over again as I packed my laptop and extra handouts.  

When I stepped into the hallway, John was leaning by the pop machine. His face was still grim, but somehow less hostile. “Can I show you something?”

I nodded. I had to hustle to keep pace with his long strides as he led me out the front door and across the street to the wooden climbing gym. He pointed to a brass plate on one upright. I caught up the fluttering strands of my hair and stepped close to read the inscription. 

In memory of Robert Running Bear.

“My brother." John's face softened, the angles blurred by sorrow. “Even after he was in high school, the big basketball stud, he came over here to play with the kids. They loved him. Everyone loved him. He made them smile.” John ran his hand along a railing worn smooth and shiny from use, pausing to trace a knothole with his finger. “Meadowlarks were his favorite. He could whistle just like them.”

I could only nod. My story had obviously triggered his memories, but an apology seemed inappropriate so I waited for him to go on. 

“It was hardest on our grandmother,” he said. “They were very close. Especially after her little girl was taken away.” He looked up then, straight into my eyes. When I gasped, he nodded. “Your mother lived with my uncle for two years. Grandma was heartbroken when you left. That picture of the three of us was always on her dresser."

His eyes dropped back to the worn wood under his hand. "My brother promised to find you. He wrote letters to government agencies and other tribes, but we didn’t know your mother had married. He kept trying, though. He didn't believe in breaking promises.”

I stared at him. Squinting in the sun, he was the boy in my picture. “You’re Squee,” I whispered. He nodded. I touched the brass plate with trembling fingers. “Book?” 

He nodded again. “Grandma doesn’t like nicknames. She insisted it say Robert.” He lifted my medallion, turning it to show the date. “He died in a car accident on May 23, eleven years ago next week.”

I grabbed the railing as the sky spun. I barely noticed when he helped me over to the low concrete wall, or how long we sat there. Long enough to get thoroughly chilled. The shivering finally roused me. I stood, uncertain what to do next. He followed suit.

“Do you have your suitcase in the car?” he asked.

I nodded. 

“Good. You can follow me home.”

“Home?” 

“Home,” he repeated. Then he smiled. “To Grandma’s.”

"She's still alive?" I whispered, afraid to believe. 

"And kicking." 

His eyes warmed with humor, and in them I saw my friend Book, smiling at me again. He took my hand, helping me up the big step to the sidewalk. As we crossed the street, the meadowlark returned, pouring a song of bittersweet joy onto the evening breeze.

Copyright  Kari Dell

 

Montana for Real 

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Six Sentence Sunday -- Tag Team: Fais Do Do (m/m Western, Roughstock)

“Love.”

“Yeah.” Adam didn’t say it, but he could feel it in the way Adam touched him.

He nuzzled in, sleep like a fog, heavy and fuzzy around him. Adam kissed his mouth before easing to one side, arm across his belly. He could sleep now, he thought.


***

Much love, y'all.

BA

Saturday, March 16, 2013

What I Worked on last Week


Been an emotional writing week, I tell you what...

Active writing (this week the same as last):
 
Tag Team: Fais Do Do -- m/m novel. The boys are avoiding the angst. :P
 
The Terms of Release -- m/m novel. This one is still eating my brain. It's going to be long. 
 
Hammer and Tongs -- m/m Western. Peace pipe, anyone?
 
m/m/f novel (co-write with Julia) -- fun, sexy menage. This one's still on hold until J and I hit some deadlines. Still. :P
 
Catnipped (working title) -- m/m/f shifters, bdsm. These three? They just keep talking! 25K in and I haven't hit the mid-point!
 
 
In edits/rewrites:
 
The Four Horsemen: Ace and Kitty -- still waiting, but I intend to work on it Wednesday.
Mating Call is getting its final polishes.
 
 
Next up:
 
Going to hit it hard this week as I'm out of town the week after. O.o
 
 
Much love, y'all.
 
BA

Friday, March 15, 2013

Reading this Week

Let's see...

I read Mind Fucked by Mia Watts, loved it. It made me laugh so hard that Julia made me put it down so she could sleep.

I read Graywalker by Kat Richardson, which I found really difficult to connect with the heroine. There wasn't anything wrong with the writing, but I just didn't love it. I also read Creative Thursday by Marisa Anne Haedike, which was a charming little boost read about living a creative life. I didn't learn anything, but it made me smile.

Finally, I finished Here on Earth by Alice Hoffman, which I have to tell you, made me sad. I was a huge Hoffman fan back in the mid-to-late 90s and I would just swallow the books whole and wallow in them. This one? Eh. Maybe I'm just not miserable anymore, but I didn't like the main character, I didn't care about the antagonist, and I kept waiting for the princess to save herself and it didn't happen. *shrugs*

This week I'm working on Carrion Comfort by Dan Simmons, One Amazing Thing by Chitra Banerjee  Divakaruni (who, I have to tell y'all, is one of my very favorite authors ever), and I am finishing two beta reads before I go out of town. :D

What are y'all reading?

Much love,

BA

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Super Juicy! (m/m, paranormal, short)

Masksofftoo superjuicy510

Me.

Julia.

Paranormal boogilies.

Biting.

Smut. 

:D

***

It's Halloween and vampire Stryker is on the prowl for a good, fun meal when he meets Buck, a waiter with a t-shirt that reads "Super Juicy". Stry can't wait to find out if there’s truth in advertising, but will the vibrant stud turn out to be too much for Stry to handle?

This story is also available in the Masks Off Too! anthology.

***

Halloween was simply the best time to be a vampire, especially in Las Vegas. Oh, like most Vegas natives, Stry avoided the Strip most of the time. Too much flash, too many cameras. But on Halloween, when there were so many people, so much hot blood running through miles and miles of veins, he wanted to be where the action was.

Following a tight, round male ass, he'd wandered into a club somewhere in the newer casinos, a hipster bar serving overpriced Cosmos and lovely-smelling burgers. What had kept Stry there, however, was one of the waiters.

Spiky blond hair, eyes the color of grass, and a muscled body that didn't quit, the fine little son of a bitch worked the room, smiling and flirting, taking orders and bringing plates. The man had on a pair of skintight jeans, artfully frayed at the pockets, a black apron, and a diamond solitaire in one ear. The best part was the T-shirt with the restaurant logo on the front, and the words "Super Juicy" on the back.

He'd made sure to sit in the beautiful one's section, and now he was just waiting for those pretty eyes to land on him. Trick or treat!

"Good evening, sir. Welcome to Hearts. I'm Buck and I'll be your server this evening."

Oh, yummy. Stry leaned forward, hands under his chin. "Hello, Buck. What cocktail do you recommend?"

"You a whiskey man or a vodka man?"

"Mmm. Vodka." Whiskey burned too much. He could eat and drink, but it did little for him.

"Next question." He got a wink. "Sweet or sour?"

"Oh, I like both. I'm equal opportunity." Edible. This one was fucking edible.

"Then maybe you should try an adult root beer -- vodka, sweet, a little bit of a bite?"

"That sounds lovely." He watched the hot little man nod and scurry off. What, he wondered, would Super Juicy Buck suggest for supper?

Even better, would Buck agree to be dessert?

***

Buy it here: http://www.torquerebooks.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=79_93&products_id=3839

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Guest Blog by Julia Talbot!

Morning, y'all! The best part about having another writer as your partner? Well, really it's being able to talk to the voices in your head without her thinking you're insane, but the other good part is knowing you can nudge them for a guest blog. :D

Here's my girl. Be good to her.

Much love, y'all.

BA

 

JT MixedBreeds2 BearFacts Renee

 

Hey y’all!

I’m hijacking BA Tortuga’s blog today to talk about: 

The Bear Facts

I always wanted to name a story that. Seriously.

I was never sure if I should, though, as it seemed too lighthearted for a shifter story. 

Then Jeanette, Neale and Zane came along.

Jeanette is a werewolf newly without a pack. She doesn’t need those guys deciding her life for her. Of course, when she gets injured on a lone jog, she wishes she had some help. Along comes snow-bunny and were-kitty Neale, who knows just what to do with such a pretty damsel in distress. Take her to his werebear lover, Zane, who also happens to be a medic.

I had the best time with this book matching personalities to the animals involved. Jeanette is like a wolf, ready to throw down and defend herself. Neale is like a kitty on catnip, chasing everyone’s tail. And Zane is a big, cuddly teddy bear. 

Man, I didn’t think I could write werebears, but Zane changed my mind! He’s a simple kind of guy, and ready to sleep all winter, but I love how kind he is. 

Jeanette might be my favorite heroine yet. She has spunk, and she’s funny. I love humor in a story, and she gives it!

Here’s a bit of story just to get you going!

 

***

 

She turned a hairpin curve in the path and cried out when the earth slid out from under her feet, gravel sliding, sending her slipping down the slope a ways. One of her feet smacked into a rock and turned, rolling hard with a snap that she actually heard a split second before the jolt of pain shot up her leg. “Fuck!”

When she came to a stop, her head pointed downhill, her broken whatever pointed up, and she lay like a turtle on her back, the world slowing from a sickening spin. She sucked in a sobbing breath, telling herself she was not going to cry. Not. She had her phone, she had a bottle of water. The trail wasn’t busy, but it wasn’t deserted, either. Help wasn’t beyond reach.

“Holy shit, are you okay?” 

Oh. Unless she was hallucinating the pretty blond guy appearing over the ridge, help was right here.

“No. God, no. I need help.” She nodded, reaching out instinctively.

“I saw you disappear right off the trail.” The man came pelting over, his trail runners slamming on the dirt. “Crap. I think you broke your ankle.” He helped her right herself, her leg screaming the whole time.

“Uh-huh.” She was covered in a cold sweat, just shaking, nausea in her throat.

“Your phone getting any signal? Mine is dead, and I can get you back to my Bronco, but we might want to call 911.”

“I don’t… I’m not interested in hospitals, man.” Doctors didn’t love people like her. Well, half-people, half wolf people like her.

He tilted his head, nose working hard. “Oh, man. I was running hard and so freaked I didn’t notice ’til now… How fast do you heal?”

“Fast enough to only have to take the rest of the week off work.” She tilted her head, sniffing. Oh, not one of her kind, but pretty, and not wholly human himself.

“Well, that’s cool, I guess. I have to lick things a lot more…” His cheeks went red-hot, and he grinned at her. “Didn’t mean that quite like it sounded. Here, grab my neck.”

Jeanette couldn’t help her chuckle, but she did reach up, arms wrapping around his neck. “There’s something to be said for licking.” He lifted her with an ease that belied his relatively short, lean frame, and he was gentle about it, which she appreciated. Her ankle throbbed in time with every step he took. “I can’t believe I was so stupid. I’m so lucky you saw me.”

“Hey, I’m the lucky one. A pretty lady I get to play hero with, and one I don’t have to lie about what I am, to boot? How awesome is that?” His Bronco appeared in her line of sight, and he held her up with one arm while he opened the back.

“Thank you.” She eased her shoe off, sucking in a soft, pained breath. Oh, man. That hurt. Like really.

“No problem. That’s pretty swollen. Let me see if there’s any ice in my cooler.”

“Thanks. I’m sorry. This whole thing sucks.”

“Hey, shit happens.” He rummaged around in the back seat before coming back with ice, his pretty gold eyes full of concern. “I know someone who could look at this for you. He’s medic certified. Does search and rescue.”

“You sure? Does he know… our kind?”

“Oh, yeah. No worries.” He reached for her, then blinked. “I’m Neale, by the way.”

“Jeanette.” She touched his hand, the connection between them sudden, sharp. Electric.

His eyes widened, going dark bronze. “Wow. That was cool.”

“Fucking amazing.”

He cleared his throat. “Well. Medic. Here we go.” He picked her up again and hauled her to the front seat.

***

You can buy it here! http://changelingpress.com/product.php?&upt=book&ubid=1824

 

Thanks for stopping by, y’all. Hope you check out the Bear Facts

XXOO

Julia.  

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

What I Saw This Weekend

IMG 1216

That is all. 

 

*sparkles*

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Six Sentence Sunday -- Catnip Crazy m/m/f

“I’m not playing with you two.”

Bowie chuckled softly at her, handing Channing some soap. “I promise to be good.”

Oh. Catnip.

Catnip soap.

 

***

 

;-)

Much love, 

BA

What I Did Last Week

Went to Houston to see the rodeo and Tim McGraw, hence the lateness. :D

Active writing (this week the same as last):
 
Tag Team: Fais Do Do -- m/m novel. We're heading into the angst. :P
 
The Terms of Release -- m/m novel. This one is still eating my brain.
 
Hammer and Tongs -- m/m Western. 
 
m/m/f novel (co-write with Julia) -- fun, sexy menage. This one's still on hold until J and I hit some deadlines.
 
Catnipped (working title) -- m/m/f shifters, bdsm.

 
 
In edits/rewrites:
 
The Four Horsemen: Ace and Kitty -- still waiting, but I intend to work on it Wednesday.
 
 
Next up:
 
Man, I have tons of new ideas. I need someone to finish...
 
 
Much love, y'all.
 
BA

Reading this Week

Last week I read Yes, Chef by Marcus Samuelsson, and a fabulous anthology of Latina friendships titled, Count on Me, which I loved with a hysterical passion.

I've started Carrion Comfort by Dan Simmons, Here on Earth by Alice Hoffman, and Mind Fucked by Mia Watts. :D

So, biography and women's studies shorts replaced by contemporary lit, horror, and paranormal m/m romance.

Woo!

Much love, y'all!

BA

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Guest Blog: Elise Hepner

Howdy, y'all!

 I'm tickled to share my blog today with the amazing Elise Hepner. :D I had the good fortune to meet Elise at Authors After Dark in Philly and, y'all, talk about a dear, charming lady that can make you smile with just a word. Lord have mercy.

 She was a perfect fit for a guest blog, I swear. :D

Much love, y'all.

BA

***




NewImage

Before I started this book I’d heard about world building extensively from all my author friends who kept World Bibles, OneNote files, and any other digital/notebook compendium way of keeping information in one place that you can think of because writing a paranormal series can be tricky. Does that mean I knew what I was getting into? Yeah, that would be a negative.

First thing I did was go to my local bookstore and pick out a copy of Writing the Paranormal Novel by Steven Harper. The second thing I did was fall to my knees with the naive idea that world building would be hard. No, building an entire way of life from inside my head isn’t hard—it’s epic, cue soundtrack music reminiscent of anything ever played in the background of World of Warcraft. I felt like I was waging war with my brain every time I sat down to think about anything. But, oh, how the slim little volume helped me out big time. It covered things that didn’t even cross my mind about the what’s, why’s, and who’s of making a paranormal world completely concrete and in short, it was my special little savoir.

But once I got over the extreme task of tucking in details I began to reap the enjoyment of sticking in one extra known fact that no one would probably ever see in the light of the book, but that I knew existed. Those little details were so much fun! I’m a very structured person, so the fact that I could endlessly add onto my world and create anything blew my mind. But once I let go I asked “why” a lot and it was as if I was following a small trail of breadcrumbs from one thought to the next, which was a certain kind of organization too.

From start to finish writing Furious Lust was an experience I’ll never forget because it pushed me so much mentally and emotionally, but as I’m writing the sequel, Furious Temptation I’m finding even more little tidbits to build my world. The fun surprises never stop. I guess that’s the perk of writing a paranormal series, the world is never shut down, the work never stops and it grows with you. With that much work, this world better be my best friend for life.

***

Blurb:

One mistake can change a life—let alone an eternity.

Tisiphone’s a revenge demon working for Hades in the Underworld torturing damned souls. When she escapes for three days under the sun with a human male, her leash is pulled tight. Tisiphone’s banished from the Underworld to Earth and stripped of her demonic powers. But that’s not what drives her horrendous nightmares.

Cithaeron’s human life was dedicated to revenge, until a demon walked into it. The wickedly intense, sensually destructive Tisiphone takes over his life with probing questions and haunting caresses. It’s over in a blink. After centuries of torture in Limbo, Hades brings him back for a judgment call that could change their intertwined lives—dead or alive.

Their future is in their past. Their lust can burn each other to the ground. But they’ve got to learn to work together or they’ll both go to Hell for good.

***

Excerpt:

He moved me with confidence, our hips rolling from side to side while his breath eased across my neck. His clean cheek lightly brushed mine. Before I’d found any composure goose bumps dotted my arms and I sensed the curve of his lips against my ear. We worked as one to the techno rhythm that replicated the beat of my heart—my pulse plunged into a rather embarrassing quickness.

Through my leather skirt his warmth soaked into my flesh radiating body heat upward through my breasts. My nipples pebbled with sexual awareness, my belly twisting into a labyrinth of knots. His body was tightly pressed against my lower back so there was no question as to whether or not he was enjoying our dance. As his fingers guided the swing of my hips, for once, I’ll admit, I was captivated. While I wasted no time reaching behind me tracing up his arms, shoulders, and chest with my hands.
 There was a certain seductive slowness that set him apart from my usual partners. He didn’t lack confidence. Much could be gathered from the way a man danced with a woman and my body wasn’t lying to me. I’d learned to trust my instincts. My partner was special.

His fingers slipped beneath my clingy, vinyl tank top playing along my ribs. When his hands tightened along my naked flesh our flirtation deepened into a more serious encounter. Despite his hold, I couldn’t avoid savoring his warmth. My first touch of cleansing fire, a comfort, and the key to my arousal. My fingers eased through his soft hair tangling in the strands at the nape of his neck. For the briefest of moments, I entertained the fact that he might go further, cupping my breasts and brushing his calloused thumbs across my tingling nipples.

But his hands squeezed tighter along my waist, though we moved as if nothing had changed between us. Would it be wrong to admit I enjoyed this edge? Whatever the game was between us. Even the subtle brush of my stockings against my inner thighs left me wide-eyed and wet between my legs. We were playing with fire.

His possessive, too hard touch promised an outcome I couldn’t fathom. A jolt of fear prickled beneath my skin. Though I faltered in my steps, the stranger only pressed harder against my hips with his chin casually resting on the top of my head. He never missed a beat, while I was shivering in his embrace.
 My throat was constricted to a knot while my instincts shot off sparks inside my body. Yet, I was drawn to him. I moaned when his rough, long fingers slipped down beneath the top of my skirt idly following an outline of the waistband across my stomach—and lower. There was no going back now. Beneath the scent of sweat and alcohol that permeated the club, a familiar charred wood-smoke scent lingered on my clothing.

Home.

It was only a moment before I completely understood my situation, with a jolt that sent my mind reeling. My weak-kneed acceptance was replaced with ironclad knowledge of the man at my back. His almost unbearable heat lingered inside me. The scent of the Underworld clung to the strands of hair across my face. His unwavering grip. But perhaps, for a second—if I could take some more time to think—

Unable to fully process, automatically my arms dropped from around his neck and my hands clenched into fists. Realization left me cold and aching. Without knowing who I was facing, without my powers, it would be foolish to spin on him and attack. But my need to vent my rage left me seething. One of the most sexual moments of my existence in recent history had been dashed.

Whoever he was, he was working for them—the Underworld.

He’d stopped dancing against me and his breath against the nape of my neck spun me deeper into a confusing hole. It cannot be so. But when I broke our contact from hips to head glancing down the smooth line of my body—Apollo’s balls, I knew those fingers as if they were my own. Could I bring myself to turn around? To look him in the eye?

“Tisiphone,” he murmured low and cool against the lip of my ear.

I saw his face as if it wasn’t dark in the nightclub—as if my past was yesterday. His low, pleased voice triggered a darkness inside me that I was afraid to acknowledge. His fingers pinched into mine as I tried to pry his hands off me, until I softly cried out. But he let me go, letting me know with his continued presence at my back that he would have kept me there if he wanted to.

There would never be enough space between us—this wasn’t real.

I turned until I’d locked eyes with his pale gray irises—but they weren’t gray anymore—and not because of the harsh dancehall lighting. While I searched inside his shining coal black eyes, I sensed the trace of brimstone magic within him. His tongue casually flicked across his lips. An unreadable expression, even with neon lights spinning and whirling across him.

If he were truly of my old world, his skin would be shiny as an oil slick—black with dappled rainbows beneath the chaotic light play. In the night he’d be purely human in appearance until any ray of light caught his flesh. But there was nothing. Nothing that was recognizable but tan, human flesh like mine.

What have they made him? What have they done? Brimstone. Black eyes. No pulse. But looked human. His heat—the undeniable heat of those from the Underworld because though creatures there have no need to breathe or bleed, the temperature at the Earth’s core isn’t anything to trifle with on a whim. He carried the depth of heat that my kind engineered as a defense mechanism to live in the Underworld.

That was my answer. I couldn’t deny it any longer. I knew—gods, I wished I didn’t. I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy. Not even a man who had unknowingly condemned me to live a life far from my sister’s for hundreds of years.

Demon.

***

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Guest Blogging Today at Sean Michael's Livejournal

:D

I love when Sean pokes me to play (there's a contest, too).

http://sean-michael.livejournal.com/

Much love, y'all

BA

Monday, March 4, 2013

Guest Blogs Coming!

I have decided to make Tuesdays guest blog day, because the 'net is for playing with each other, right? ;-)

If you have something you'd like to share, drop me a line and I'll schedule you in. 

Much love, y'all.

BA

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Six Sentence Sunday: Hammer and Tongs (m/m, western historical)

That tow head bobbed and Asa made a note to find an old hat to cover the man’s scalp up before that new skin blistered again.

He walked on out past the lean-to, stretching, his head falling back so the sun could fall on his face. Asa willed Loco and Tak to come on, not to lose their courage. He needed what they could give him.

Soon the horses were singing to him, telling him that they were coming, and he smelled them, the spice and heat familiar as breathing.

His warriors.

***

*smooches*

Happy Sunday, beauties!

BA

Saturday, March 2, 2013

What I Read and Worked on this Week

So, I finished Haunted. It was vastly more interesting at the beginning than at the end. Honestly, by mid-way through I was bored. :P

I am currently reading Yes, Chef by Marcus Samuelsson. OMG, y'all. It's just lovely. Honestly. I didn't have high hopes and I'm loving it. :D

I also got to beta read a new book from Sean Michael (OMG, the hot -- bdsm werebeasts) and I'm 1/2 through a beta read (which I'm adoring and I can't wait until it's out so I can squeal). I also started Chicken and Egg: A Memoir of Urban Homesteading by Janice Cole. It's got a bunch of yummy looking recipes and I can't wait to try them.

Now, I spent the week writing and doing edits on Super Juicy. Tomorrow, I'm back to the normal books, which is yay, because I miss them (except that I'm getting to the sad part in both Tag Team and Terms of Release, which I hate, so I bet lots of words in my m/m/f erotic paranormal happens this week.)

;-)

Much love, y'all,

BA