Showing posts with label Contemporary Paranormal Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contemporary Paranormal Romance. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2015

#NewRelease Afterlife or Bust by June Mayes



June Mayes is a Cape Cod born and bred writer who lived in London for 10 years before returning home. She’s a hopeless romantic with a passion for writing all sorts of genre. Her days are spent juggling family life, walking the dog, writing and reading books, more books and even more books!

Amazon author page: http://www.amazon.com/June-Mayes/e/B00KPJ7NCO/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_pop_1

Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7113171.June_Mayes

Blurb:

Lizzie is making the best of her life, er afterlife. She's working hard being a doctor to all things supernatural and for the most part has managed to behave. With her daytime watcher in tow and a very enticing Master Vampire turning up the heat of their romance, things couldn’t be better.

Of course things could get worse and do. Being killed again was not part of Lizzie’s agenda and having to navigate the politics of all things that go bump in the night is just icing on the afterlife cake. But Lizzie has plans. She's going to make her death worth living and she is going to drag everyone else along kicking and screaming.

Where to Buy:

Amazon
http://www.amazon.com/Afterlife-Bust-Book-2-ebook/dp/B00RM9XRIO/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
Excerpt:

“Sure, I’ll ask them to make an appointment for you, and Bob’s your uncle. All I need is your name.“ I smiled and was surprised that my canines were down and in full view. Either there was a threat here I was less than aware of or I was a little hungry. Hmm yup, no bleeding patients yet today. I would need to go in search of an unwary patient or two.

“Cuthbert.” The gargoyle brought me back to what I was doing with that simple pronouncement. “But I don’t have an Uncle Bob.”

“Forget Bob. Your name is Cuthbert?” I repeated, stunned.

“Yes,” he continued to smile at me. Well, it was more a tiny upturn of one side of his lips, which could have been a grimace or gas come to think of it. No, I was going with smile. He did genuinely look a little happier, which was a good sign. I did have to look down and try to school my expression into a calm understanding doctor face before I looked back up at him.

“A gargoyle named Cuthbert.”

“Correct.” Okay, now I know he was smiling. There was a dimple in one cheek and everything. Course it came and went so fast you would have needed vampire vision to see the dimple. But hey, that’s why I was the vampire doctor.

“OK,” I said calmly before leaving the room, closing the door behind me. Godzilla came up as if to discuss something, and I just shook my head at her. Cuthbert the gargoyle. Great.

June will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Monday, March 9, 2015

#NewRelease The Second Lie (The Immortal Vikings #2) by Anna Richland



Anna lives with her quietly funny Canadian husband and two less quiet children in a century-old house in Seattle. The perpetual drizzle is a good excuse to drink more coffee. She’s a former US Army officer who now writes The Immortal Vikings series from Carina Press and also the author of His Road Home, a novella which Publishers Weekly called “Tantalizing … a raw, emotional story” and the website SmartB*tchesTrashyBooks gave an A rating.

She donates a portion of her book proceeds to two charities: the Fisher House Foundation, which provides housing for families of wounded soldiers in the US and Great Britain, and Doctors Without Borders, which delivers emergency medical care in more than sixty crisis zones world-wide.

To sign up for Anna's newsletter, find out more about her books, and read longer excerpts, please visit her website, her Facebook page, or her Goodreads page.

Blurb:
A woman desperate to achieve her dreams.

To reassure wealthy clients, Christina Alvarez Mancini invented a jet-setting British owner for her Napa Valley wine collection service. Success has brought her close to buying her own winery, when irregularities at a London wine auction threaten her business.

A man in love with a good plan.

Stig, an immortal Viking thief, knows he’s found the perfect role. The California woman who created his character won’t discover what he’s up to in England until after he’s pocketed the money he needs. Then Christina walks into the auction preview, ready to ruin his plans, and he knows his boredom has ended.

Secrets that turn deadly.

By the end of the night, these two rivals must cooperate to escape kidnappers, British authorities, media and a pair of mysterious watchers. That’s when a game Stig’s played for a thousand years puts Christina’s life at risk.

Can two people whose identities are based on lies trust each other enough to survive?

Where to Buy:
Kobo

Excerpt:
“The lady is with me.” Geoffrey—or Stig, as these men called him—slid through the narrow opening to insert himself between her and the gray-haired man. He held one hand behind his back and curled his fingers into his palm as if he wanted her to get to her feet. “I hope you gentlemen have finished interrupting my private party.”

Her legs barely functioned. She had to brace on the back of the bar to heave herself to her feet, thighs screaming as muscles unfolded. Cramp or no cramp, she wouldn’t let go of the familiar heft of the wine in her other hand. She prayed her legs didn’t collapse and send her sprawling, prayed none of them could see her shake.

Now he wiggled his fingers as if he wanted her to move closer. She had the feeling he wasn’t the worst man in the room, and she couldn’t stay in the corner, so she slipped underneath his arm. His warmth was welcome after so long on the tile floor.

Her right hand with the bottle was trapped low behind his back, but he urged her closer and nudged her left elbow until her empty hand threaded itself under his tux jacket and across the starched white shirt. It was warm that close to his skin.

She understood what charade he had in mind.

“Geoffrey.” She drew out the final e sound and tucked her head against his shoulder as if she was tired. That part at least was true. “Can we go to the hotel? I picked a wine and waited like you told me to.”

The hand cupping her shoulder squeezed in what she suspected was approval. “As soon as I finish with this business, my dear.” He nuzzled into her hair, and she expected him to whisper instructions, but he just breathed.

Improvising was not her forte. She looked into his eyes and saw a spark of encouragement. The con man was daring her, but to do what?

She looked at the other two. “I didn’t know you invited—” she tilted her head and slowly licked her lips, an attempt to seem more intrigued than worried, before she smiled, “—friends.”

“They’re leaving.” Then he swiveled his chest enough that her hand brushed against something hard under his jacket, in the space over his rib cage.

She’d watched enough television to know it was a gun. In a holster.

This wasn’t her fight, so she reminded herself to exhale normally. There was no chance in hell she would pull that out. Using a gun wasn’t in her plan. “I think I’ll go now.” Too squeaky, she tried again. “I’ll get a cab.” That sounded better. She let her hand slip out from his jacket, away from the gun, away from the man who would carry one. “See you later, okay?”

“I’ll be right behind you.”

He meant something by that, but she didn’t know what, so she turned to walk past the man with the eye patch. This was the test.

“You’re not leaving.” He looked from Stig to her, one side of his mouth drawn up while he stared at her legs. “We can use her.”

That phrase put another layer on whatever she’d tumbled into.

“You’re becoming annoying, Skafe. Obviously, I have plans for what’s left of the evening. They don’t include a ménage.”

“I’m not sure about your luck.” The third man studied a paper in his hand. He had dark hair and his pronounced cheekbones combined with slightly elongated eyes to give him a Slavic look. “Since she appears to be an investigator.”

Her list. He raised it to shoulder level so they could see the two tidy columns comparing her original records of sale with total bottles listed for auction. His other hand held her phone.

She couldn’t have spoken even if she’d known what to say. Her throat was scalded raw by the acid of fear.

Then Stig sighed. “I chased that biddy away. Black dress, nose like a beak, pearls good enough that they nearly fooled me into missing her affiliation with the insurance industry. Surely you saw her stomp out from your lobby purgatory?”

She almost believed him, and it was her list, so she wasn’t surprised that both men looked confused. He was that good.

This was it.

“I’m really tired. And cold.” She didn’t have to act as she grabbed her purse and looped the gold chain around her wrist. “I hope the coat check isn’t locked.” One step separated her from the scowling older man. He’d have to turn slightly to let her pass, or she’d have to flatten her butt against the bar and slide sideways. She smiled with everything in her, the smile she’d used the first time her mother had brought Frank Mancini home for dinner at their tiny apartment, the smile she used when renewing her driver’s license, the expression she called her I’m so nice and tiny and cute that you need to be nice right back face.

He didn’t move.

Midstep, she shifted to slide to her left. Kept her sweet smile in place despite its failure. Kept going even when her dress snagged on a hinge that protruded from the raised counter panel. Screw her good black dress. If she got out of here, she’d buy a replacement.

She made it around the bar.

The dark one stepped to his left as she went right, and she forced herself to giggle like a high schooler in the hall as she darted to the other side.

He was too fast. Didn’t let her pass.

A commotion behind her. She didn’t have time to look. The door was open in front of her, and she had only one not-very-big guy between her and freedom.

She brought up her purse on its shortened chain and swung it fast and bingo, his eyes followed it for a second. Her other hand, gripping three pounds of thick glass and wine, came hard from her side, as hard as she could swing. Her brother had made sure she knew to aim for the temple and ear, but her grip was upside-down. She couldn’t put her whole weight behind her swing.

Fuck. The bottle didn’t break.

He stumbled to the side but didn’t fall. She barreled past, but he must’ve stuck out a leg, because suddenly she was on the floor and she knew she hadn’t made it.

Then a hand grabbed her hair and yanked.


Anna will be awarding a set of En Route notecards, gorgeously illustrated by Kate Pocrass (because falling in love with an Immortal Viking is a wild journey!) to a randomly drawn winner (INTERNATIONAL) via rafflecopter during the tour!
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Goddess Fish Blog Tour Partner

Goddess Fish Blog Tour Partner
Goddess Fish Blog Tour Partner