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Thanks for stopping by, Please be sure to comment on a post or two while you're here. If you're in Empire Ave. My ticker Number is STSEA comment on my blog and leave yours, I'll be sure to do the same. You might also want to check out a few of my other blogs.
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Showing posts with label GIVE AWAYS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GIVE AWAYS. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2011

Giveaway – HEART OF STEEL Advance Copies (and more)

Giveaway – HEART OF STEEL Advance Copies (and more):
Please note: If you are reading this somewhere other than Meljean's official blog, please go there to enter. Comments at other sites will not be counted as entries.

heart of steel coverIt's that time again! I have four (4) ARCs of HEART OF STEEL to give away on this blog. No hoops to jump through — you just have to comment before midnight on Sunday, September 25th to enter. But! there is a small catch.

These are advance review copies, and I'd really love it if they were used as such. So if you win one, please review it somewhere by the week of November 1st: on your blog, on an online bookseller's site, Goodreads or Library Thing, wherever. I'm not asking for positive reviews, or even detailed reviews — just reviews. If you don't think you can read it by November, please pass on these advance copies; I intend to give away several final copies when the book is released, so you can try again, then. (If you want to be reminded of the release, you can sign up for the Postcard Mailing List or the Email Newsletter.)

heart of steel

About the ARCs: these are the yellow-covered bound copies, and are copy-edited, but they haven't gone through that final proofreading pass. That means that there are more errors than in a final version, and that some dialogue, sentences, and descriptions are different than will be in the final version. There are no substantial differences in plot, characters, or any of the scenes. If you have any questions while reading, I'll be more than happy to answer and/or send you the corrected passage, if applicable.

About HEART OF STEEL: This is the second full-length novel in my steampunk romance series, The Iron Seas. To read a description and an excerpt, go here. To learn more about steampunk, click here, and you can read about the alternate history of the Iron Seas world here.

After you enter here, don't forget that there is also a five-copy ARC giveaway at Goodreads (currently still pending — it should be up later today!), and if you are a member of the author-editor chat group at Goodreads, you can also enter to win one of two Heart of Steel ARCs, one of two Angels of Darkness copies, or one of five sets of the complete Guardian novel backlist.
So, the rules: Comment by 11:59:59 PM Pacific time on 9/25/2011 for your chance to win. Four winners will be selected randomly using random.org, and their names posted on this blog 9/26/2011. Winners must provide Meljean with their mailing address by October 5, 2011 or the winner will be re-drawn! Only one entry per ISP address. The contest is open to international readers. No purchase necessary to enter, but a good faith effort to review the book by the release date is deeply appreciated. Odds of winning depend on number of entries received. Void where prohibited.




posted by Meljean Brook on September, 26

Rae Carson and Girl of Fire and Thorns Giveaway

Rae Carson and Girl of Fire and Thorns Giveaway:

Rae graciously agreed to an interview, so here it is.   I’ve also got a snippet for you – Ilona.


Interview


Please tell us a little about yourself, Rae. Kids, pets, husbands?

I met my husband at the Online Writing Workshop for Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror (OWW). Come to think of it, Ilona, you may have known him longer than I have! He’s the smartest and therefore sexiest man I know and the first reader for all my work. I have two awesomely smart-aleck stepsons, one of whom just went off to college. And I have a pair of naughty cats I rescued from Kitty Death Row many years ago.


 


In the life of every writer, there is that magic point when you start a play project, then things turn serious.  Before you know it, you have finished your first novel, and a surprising thought hits you, “I wonder if I could get this published?”  When was that magic point for you? What compelled you to finish your first novel?  What was it about? 

The Girl of Fire and Thorns is the first novel I ever completed—though by no means the first one I tried to write. I kept starting projects and outgrowing them. I would get 30K words or so in and realize I had improved as a writer, that my first words weren’t worthy of my recent words, and I ought to scrap the whole thing and rewrite from the ground up–so, might as well start a new project, right? But this book was different. The first chapter got an “editor’s choice” nod from the OWW. And then I workshopped it at a conference, and the editor requested the whole book! So those two events gave me the push I needed to finish the damn thing.


 


Please tell us about The Girl of Fire and Thorns?

Elisa is the “chosen one” of her generation, selected by God for an act of heroic service. Alas, she is unmotivated, coddled, overweight—nothing you’d expect from a hero. But when at sixteen years old she is married off to the king of a country in turmoil, she must find the greatness within herself to save the people she grows to love. Mostly, you should know that there are deserts, wild rebels, political machinations, and tons of food.


 


Why YA?

I love teens. They surprise me all the time. And all of my best work seems to have a coming-of-age theme.


But the truth is that my first agent did not feel this book was a young adult novel, and some of my foreign publishers will be marketing it as adult/teen crossover. I just keep writing stuff that I care about and letting my agent/publishers decide where it belongs.


 


Why did you choose monotheism for your fantasy religion?  Does religion play a significant role in the life of your protagonists?

I live in a country where 83% of citizens claim affiliation with some religious denomination (thank you, Wikipedia), and the vast majority of those are monotheists. How do teens decide what to believe when they are surrounded by so many contradictory views and messages? I wanted to do justice to this struggle without condemning or condoning any particular faith.


So, yes, Elisa is very devout and prays a lot. Part of her growing-up process is realizing that not everyone believes the same thing, and it will be up to her to decide for herself. I’ll be honest, though, and say it was a tough balance, and I’m not sure I got it right. I may never be sure. I’m not religious myself, so I definitely didn’t want to preach at anyone. At the same time, I didn’t want to vilify or marginalize a people group.


 


Why did you choose to write about an overweight protagonist?

I was dating this guy. He was an “encourager” who said he wanted the best for me, but his encouragements tended to be things like, “Are you sure you want to eat that?” And, “Wow, Rae, if you lost another five pounds, you’d be reeeally hot.” And, “Did you get your run in today?” I was a size 6 at the time.


After a year, I came to my senses and broke up with his sorry ass. I spent the next day eating cookie dough ice cream and thinking about all the amazing women I knew and the qualities I admired in them. “Skinny” wasn’t on that list of admirable qualities.


So I jotted down the fictitious diary entry of an overweight princess named Elisa who was destined to save the world using smarts, courage, and determination—traits my real-life girlfriends have in abundance. The diary didn’t make it into the final book, but it was the seed of the idea that became  The Girl of Fire and Thorns.


 


In the course of the novel Elisa loses weight.  Apparently there is some controversy about it.  Could you give us your take on this situation?

Elisa starts out with lousy self-esteem and an unhealthy relationship with food. When an arduous journey forces her to be active for the first time, she loses some weight. But she never becomes model-thin. She’s not a swan.


I think most of the controversy stems from the notion that Elisa must lose the weight to feel good about herself. That’s certainly not my intent, and I don’t think it’s a fair reflection of the book. Many important turning points happen before her weight loss, and Elisa comes to see her own value by accomplishing things, not by losing weight. That said, weight is a very sensitive issue, and I’m glad readers are talking about it.


 


So what did you hope to accomplish with this book?  Is it simply an escape or did you hope to convey a specific message?

More than anything I wanted to play fast and loose with high fantasy tropes like The Chosen One, the Amulet of Power, the Epic Journey, the Beautiful Princess in Peril. What if the Chosen One kinda sucks? What if the Amulet of Power is totally ridiculous?


As for messages, I’m not a big fan. Teens have highly developed bullshit meters, and they’re busy figuring things out for themselves. But I do realize that my own worldview is going to leak out in my writing. On reflection, the thing that leaks out the most in this book is my belief that you don’t have to be perfect to be extraordinary.



 Snippet


The drums beat faster now, louder. My shoulder crashes into a bench as the carriage heaves. I don’t dare lift myself to peer out the window, but I hope we’ve reached the clearing. I hear running footsteps and Lord Hector’s muffled orders, then the metal-scraping-metal sound of drawn steel.


Something thunks against the carriage. And again. Soon it’s like a rain of stones cracking against wooden walls. The shining black point of an arrowhead pokes through the wall, a mere handsbreadth from my nose. My skin burns. The air is too hot, too stifling to breathe. The Godstone in my navel flashes ice cold, and I gasp, astonished. It has never gone cold before.


The paneling beneath my palms feels sunwarmed. Too warm. The acrid scent of burning wood tingles in my nose as the Godstone continues to throb its icy warning.


Aneaxi whimpers, “Fire!” as our carriage fills with smoky haze and the shouting outside becomes frenzied.


“The princess!” someone yells. “To the princess!” But the voice is far off.


I search across the paneling for the latch to the trapdoor. It opens downward, and we tumble through into the cooler, cleaner air beneath the carriage. I land on something that cracks beneath my weight. Aneaxi screams.


I don’t have time to worry about how badly I’ve hurt her. The horses catch the scent of smoke and dance in their harnesses. We could be pinned beneath the wheels at any moment. I yearn for a knife to cut the horses free, to feel some kind of power in my hand. The carriage lurches forward. Behind me and to my left, I see Aneaxi’s leg, cricked unnaturally, lying in the path of the wheel.


I feel sick. “Aneaxi, you must pull your leg in.”


“I can’t!” she sobs.


I hook her armpit and pull. Ximena does the same on the other side, but Aneaxi is large and I have never been strong. A horse rears. The carriage jerks. Panicked, Ximena and I wrench Aneaxi toward us, but we are at such an awkward angle, pressed against the ground, and oh, it is not enough.


Steel rings, and the carriage shudders. Someone has sliced through the harnesses, and tears of relief prick my eyes.


I’m not sure what to do next. The carriage provides cover, but it burns. Even now, smoke licks the floor above, curling around the panels like white snakes. Feet patter by at eye level. Our enemies are barefooted demons, nearly naked and painted in black-and-white swirls. Anklets of tiny bones clatter as one darts in and out of the jungle. Lunge, sidestep, disappear; then another takes his place. Their attack has no pattern. It is random, constant, indefensible.


A few paces away from our burning carriage gapes the opening of an enormous buttress, a cavern formed by the roots of a silk-cotton tree. I could reach it quickly, and Ximena, but I worry for Aneaxi and her broken leg.


I flip over to face my ladies. “We must get away before the carriage collapses.”


They nod; Aneaxi’s round cheeks are smeared with dirt made muddy by tears. My heart swells for a moment, for I’m not willing to lose either of them.


“Ximena and I will go first,” I say to Aneaxi. “Then we will pull you out by the arms.” I hope that by standing, we’ll have the leverage to do what could not be done beneath the carriage. “Aneaxi, you must not scream, no matter how much it hurts.”


She takes a few ragged breaths. Then she rips a strip of fabric from the hem of her traveling gown. My chest burns with pride when she wads it up and shoves it in her mouth. I’m ready, her eyes tell me.


Still we wait. The fighting is too close. From where we lie we see pairings of naked, painted calves with boots and stiff hide. A man tumbles to the ground before me, and I scramble backward. His eyes are open and blinding white against the black paint of his face. His hair is as long as mine but twisted into thick clumps. He lies unmoving. Gingerly, heart pounding, I pry a stone knife from his still-warm hand and stuff it into my bodice.


At last I see a break in the fighting, and I gesture frantically to Ximena. We scramble from beneath the carriage on all fours. My foot tangles in my slip as I rise, but I rip right through it. Once clear, we turn and grasp Aneaxi’s arms. She groans around the wad in her mouth as we pull. Her eyes clench tight; her face is bright red. Then she goes limp as unconsciousness takes her. As we pull her toward the dark cavity of the buttress, I expect to see an arrow impale her chest at any moment. Sweat slides down my back and across my stomach. Beside me, Ximena’s gray bun has come loose and her hair swings below her shoulders. Little by little, we reach the line of the jungle. The ground slopes downward as we step beneath the roots. It’s cooler here, and comfortingly dark. There is just enough room for the three of us in the little cavern. I catch my breath, holding tight to Aneaxi’s shoulders, so relieved to have made it this far.


I have a better view of the battle now. My husband’s guard seems to have found its footing against these strange savages. They fight back to back against the random attacks, shield arms at ready for incoming arrows. Bodies from both sides litter the ground, and my stomach roils at the scent of burning flesh. Our carriage is an inferno. Next to me, Ximena flinches when the flaming structure collapses to the ground, sending sparks in all directions. A few moments more, and we would have burned.


Beyond the ruined carriage, two savages have trapped one of our own against a tree. I cannot see his face, but his body is frozen in panic.


One of the savages leaps forward with a shriek, plunges a stone knife toward the man’s chest. He lurches away just in time, and the knife jams into his forearm instead.


He fights weakly then, with left-handed strokes. When he hesitates yet again, I know he cannot last. The painted bodies sense the kill. They begin an odd movement, like a dance. Squat, pivot, creep. They are like jungle cats, all wild grace and hunting fury. Then I catch a glimpse of the doomed man’s face.


Alejandro.


“No!” I clamber from our shelter. Ximena yells something indecipherable. She grasps my arm, but I wrench away. I feel so slow as I run toward my husband, my belly and breasts bouncing painfully with each step. As I pass the collapsed carriage, I pull the knife from my bodice…


Read the first 80 pages…


Giveaway


Rae is giving away a signed hardcover.


To enter, leave a comment on this post.  You must enter on the blog. Comments made by email or through Goodreads will not be eligible.  Winner, as always, will be chosen randomly.


Contest ends: Monday, October 3rd.


US and Canada residents only.

Oh Geez! Design: Sponsor Feature & Giveaway

Oh Geez! Design: Sponsor Feature & Giveaway:

Oh Geez Design, stationery design, handmade greeting cards


Today Becky of Oh Geez! Design is visiting us to let us in on the story of her business and creativity plus offer a fun giveaway to OMHG readers. Becky is as cheerful and sweet as her designs and I hope you enjoy getting to know her and her work!


Hi Becky! Thank you for visiting us and sharing your business-please tell us a bit about yourself and Oh Geez! Design. 


Hey Jessika! Thanks so much for having Oh Geez! on Oh My!


Oh Geez! Design is a small design studio located in the Black Hills of South Dakota. My main “creation” is a line of fun and whimsical greeting cards, and I also do freelance design work for other small local businesses. I love the creative freedom that comes with working on my own line of cards, and it provides a good contrast to the design work I do for other clients. I share my studio, which is the corner of the laundry room, and the rest of our home with my boyfriend Rob. We spend most of our free time hiking, gardening, and soaking up as much sun as we can.


How did you get your start creatively? Did you always want to be a designer or did you find your passion somewhere along the way? 


I would credit my creativity to my parents, who raised my three sisters and I, on a farm and ranch about 30 miles from the nearest town. We grew up building playhouses, painting barns, working on 4-H crafts, and making handmade cards and Christmas gifts. I think it took a lot of creativity on their part to keep us all busy and entertained! After high school I had originally wanted to be an advertising copywriter, but while taking classes in college I realized a large advertising firm wasn’t ever going to be the right fit for me and I became more interested in graphic design and illustration.


We love seeing where or how makers make-can you give us a peek of your studio or process? 


My design process is always changing, sometimes it starts with a line of text that I know I want to use on a greeting card and other times it starts with a simple illustration and it expands from there. Some days I don’t even pick up a pencil but other times I sketch out every detail of a card, it just depends on my mood. I think that cards should be just as fun to give, as they are to receive, so I try to remember that when I am working on a new card design. Listening to some vinyl is also an important part of my design process!


oh geeze! design, stationery giveaway, designer interview


This month we are getting back to business for our theme on OMHG, do you have any tips and tricks for keeping motivated as a small business owner? 


One of the most important motivators for me is watching the reactions and expressions when people pick up one of my cards and read it. I love to see them laugh and tell their friend to come over and read it. Many times that same person doesn’t even buy the card, but I know they will remember it and that I made them smile. That keeps me going on the “not-so-good” sales days. That and the neighbors’ llamas and donkeys roaming outside my studio window!


Oh Geez Design, stationery design, handmade greeting cards


Becky is also offering a giveaway  of a $50 gift certificate to the Oh Geez! Design shop on Etsy!


Enter this giveaway:



  • To enter leave a comment about what you would buy with your $50 and/or your favorite items in the Oh Geez! shop.


Get extra entries by leaving a separate comment (1 comment=1 entry) if you: 



This giveaway closes Wednesday, September 28th at midnight EST with the winner announced at the bottom of this post the following day. By entering this giveaway you are agreeing to the Oh My! Handmade giveaway policies.

Giveaway: Dreamland by Alyson Noël

Giveaway: Dreamland by Alyson Noël:

Giveaway provided by Zeitghost Media

One copy of DREAMLAND by Alyson Noël

Dreamland

 

Riley’s finding that the afterlife can be a lonely place when all you do is focus on work. So she goes to the place where dreams happen, hoping to find a way to contact her sister, Ever. She meets the director, who tells her about the two ways to send dreams. As a Dream Jumper, a person can jump into a dreamer’s dream, share a message, and participate. As a Dreamweaver, an entire dream can be created in a studio and sent to the dreamer. But Dreamweaving was outlawed decades ago, and the studio was boarded up. Thinking it’s her only way to reach out to her sister, Riley goes in search of the old studio. There she finds a ghost boy, who’s been creating and sending nightmares to people for years. In order to stop him and reach out to Ever, Riley is going to have to confront and overcome her own fears.

 

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Spooky Legends 2011 is coming in October!

Spooky Legends 2011 is coming in October!:

2 supernatural blogs + 31 spine-tingling days + 62 frighteningly talented authors & characters, creepy cool urban legends, and the most chilling new releases of the season =

Spooky Legends (October 1st – October 31st)

Spooky Legends 2 Large
Presented by All Things Urban Fantasy & Dark Faerie Tales

Are you ready for another supernatural, spine-chilling, and sexy event?  Are you ready for twice the talent, twice the scares, & twice the giveaways?  This year’s Spooky Legends is bigger and better than ever and will take place during the entire month of October!

Once again, Dark Faerie Tales and All Things Urban Fantasy are teaming up for this wickedly wonderful event that will feature some of the biggest names in paranormal fiction writing Brand New accounts of the most infamous urban legends from the perspective of the characters we love.  Beginning on October 1st and running every day through Halloween, Angela and I will each be featuring different authors, legends, characters, and BIG giveaways for all these author’s new releases coming out this fall:

This year’s Spooky Legends authors include:

Tessa Adams
Zoe Archer
Jennifer L. Armentrout 
Sabrina Benulis
Kendare Blake
Amanda Bonilla
Allison Brennan
Monica Burns
Christine Cody
Nancy A. Collins
Ellen Connor
Juliet Dark
Melissa Darnell
MaryJanice Davidson
Sylvia Day
Virna DePaul
Kimberly Derting
Jaclyn Dolamore
Karen Duvall
Cynthia Eden
Jennifer Estep
Nancy Gideon
Clay and Susan Griffith
Jess Haines
Kersten Hamilton
Mette Ivie Harrison
Thea Harrison
Regan Hastings
Leanna Renee Hieber
Nancy Holzner
Sara Humphreys
C.C. Hunter
Shona Husk
Trent Jamieson
Hannah Jayne
Julie Kagawa
Alma Katsu
Erin Kellison
Heather Killough-Walden
Laurie London
Katie MacAlister 
K.D. McEntire
Kelly Meding
Melinda Metz & Laura J. Burns
Theresa Meyers
Joseph Nassise
Chloe Neill
Stefan Petrucha
Linda Poitevin 
Inara Scott
M.J. Scott
Sharon Shinn
Jessica Sims
Jeri Smith-Ready
Amanda Stevens
Marie Treanor
Joan Francis Turner
Eileen Wilks
Sandy Williams
Veronica Wolff
Brenna Yovanoff

The books we’ll be featuring and giving away:

Angel of Darkness (The Fallen, #1)Angels of DarknessAnna Dressed in BloodArchon: The Books of RazielAvenger's Angel (The Lost Angel, #1)Awake at Dawn (Shadow Falls, #2)Beauty Dates the Beast (Midnight Liasons, #1)Between the Sea and SkyThe Bite Before Christmas (Argeneau, #15.5; Night Huntress, #6.5)Blood Eternal (Awakened by Blood, #3)Bloodstone (Deadtown, #3)The Business of Death (Death Works, #3)Chosen by Fate (Para-Ops, #2)CraveDarker Still (Magic Most Foul, #1)Dead Mann Walking (Hessius Mann #1)Dearly, DepartedDeath Magic (World of the Lupi #8)Death Watch (The Undertaken, #1)The Demon LoverDevil's Kiss (The Hellraisers, #1)Drink Deep (Chicagoland Vampires, #5)EntangledEnthralled: Paranormal DiversionsEyes to See (Jeremiah Hunt, #1)Forbidden Embers (Dragon's Heat, #3)Frail (Dust, #2)The Goblin KingHalf-Blood (Covenant, #1)Hunter of Shadows (Moonlight, #5)The HunterIn Blood We Trust (Bloodlands, #3)Inferno's Kiss (Order of the Sicari, #3)In the Forests of the Night (Goblin Wars, #2)The Iron Knight (Iron Fey, #4)Isle of Night (The Watchers, #1)Knight's CurseLeft Hand Magic (Golgotham #2)LightbringerMidnight (A Dark Age Dawning Novel)Much Ado About Vampires (Dark Ones, #9)Radiant DesireThe Real Werewives of Vampire CountyThe Restorer (Graveyard Queen #1)The Rift Walker (Vampire Empire, #2)Sacrifice (Crave, #2)Serpent's Kiss (Elder Races, #3)Shadow Kin (The Half-Light City, #1)The Shadow Reader (McKenzie Lewis #1)Shadow Touch (Shadow Series, #2.5)Shaedes of Gray (Shaede Assassin #1)Shatter Me (Shatter Me, #1)Sins of the Angels (Grigori Legacy, #1)The Space BetweenSpider’s Revenge (Elemental Assassin, #5)The TakerThe Pledge (The Pledge, #1)A Touch of Crimson (Renegade Angels, #1)Trance (MetaWars, #1)Tris & IzzieUnder Attack (Underworld Detection Agency, #2)Unforsaken (Banished, #2)Unleashed (The Amoveo Legend, #1)A Vampire for Christmas (Includes: Sweetblood, #2.5)Visions of Skyfire (Awakening, #2)Wolf at the Door

Please help us spread the word:

Tweet: I can't wait for #SpookyLegends 2 supernatural blogs + 31 spine-tingling days + 62 authors & #giveaways Oct 1st-31st http://bit.ly/n6j88Q

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