Thursday, June 6, 2013

Indie Author Spotlight: Oscar Cavazos

I've recently run across another Indie Author, Oscar Cavazos.  For those of you who enjoy Urban Fantasy, YA, PN, or just want a break from the sexy billionaires, check him out.  Hopefully, I'll have a review and an interview with Oscar later (working on that).

Category: Young Adult/Paranormal/Urban Fantasy
Demographic: 14+ year old male, it's very comic booky
Book Blurb: Great friends. A perfect girlfriend. Life is good for 17 year old Sebastian. Until tragedy shatters his blissful existence, awakening a dark power inside him. Visions of a ghostly and broken world lead to a mysterious female who tells him that he's the reincarnation of Death. With the title comes great power. Will he use it for good? Or, will he drown in the darkness of his own selfish purposes?

About the Author: Oscar Cavazos has always enjoyed telling stories. From campfire tales to childhood playground sagas, he has maintained his creativity and channeled it into entertaining others. Armed with a Starbucks iced coffee and a laptop, he is devoted to writing every day to try and better his craft. His motto is “the only way to get perfect is to practice”, and he believes he has a long way to go. Currently, he resides in a family friendly city in Texas with his wife and two daughters and their menagerie of animals that include two dogs, one cat, one frog, one lizard, and a hamster. 

Minor Detail: The first part of this story has been released as a novella of about 30,000 words. Every three months, another part will be released, all for .99 cents each. The first story arc will be completed by the end of Part 3.







Buy his book on AMAZON

Join Oscar on Goodreads and add his book to your TBR shelf!

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

I Need a Bigger Freaking Hat Rack

I'm writing this post in the Dentist's office, while my children are spending any spare cash I might have hoped to have this summer on getting their teeth fixed.  It seems an appropriate place to be writing the post about the many hats an Indie Author wears…

Here is my typical schedule on any given day during the school year:

5:15-6:30 -- update blog, answer emails and respond to facebook posts, catch up on any social media correspondence that was sent in the night.

6:30-7:30 -- get kids ready for school

7:30-8:00 -- take kids to school

8:00- 12:20 -- design graphics for book covers, images for blog, etc; edit; revisions; answer more correspondence via social media; write (hopefully I have time for that); ask/answer questions on various forums regarding continuing education, learning things about my trade; read blog posts I follow; work on book trailer; eat something

12:20-12:45 -- husband comes home for lunch and asks questions about my day, I answer and he tells me what I need to do next (sometimes this is helpful, sometimes not so much--really depends on my mood)

12:45-2:00 -- continue with whatever I was doing before my husband came home, if I can get back into the groove of it.

2:00-3:30 -- pick kids up from school, while waiting in line, I catch up on critiques for my writing group, or work on revisions/edits on my laptop.

3:30-5:00 -- veg out for an hour or so before starting dinner

5:00-8:00 -- Husband comes home, we eat, I nag everybody into bathing, pajamas, teeth brushing, etc, put kids to bed at 8:00.

8:00 -- pass out.

You see, there's not much time for housecleaning, or showering, or laundry, or other stuff like that.  I just kind of fit it in where I can-sporadically at best.

I honestly don't see how people with JOBS do the whole Indie Author thing.  I have a hard enough time fitting it all into my schedule.  When I run across people I used to teach with, they ALWAYS look down their nose at me when they ask, "What you doing to fill all your spare time these days?"  I smile sweetly and tell them I eat truffles.  Bitches.

So with this schedule, I have to figure out each morning which hat I'm going to predominantly wear that day.

Writing:  This is my favorite hat to wear.  This is why I do all the other stuff.  I make up stories in my head, and when I get to type them into my computer, I'm at my best.  Even the revising of stuff I've written already is appealing to me.  As long as I'm actively involved in the creation process of the story, I'm in heaven.  I used to just write in journals.  I have stacks of them, filled with double-sided pages of my sloppy handwriting about nonsense.  My husband is the one who actually pushed me to write a real novel.  His words, "You read all the damn time, you should actually write something.  I bet you're as good as some of that shit you read."  My Romeo.

Blogging:  This is something that I'm struggling with at the moment.  I see where it will benefit my bottom line, and I'm making new friends and networking and stuff, gaining exposure for my work.  But it's overwhelming at times, especially when I'm struggling to find content.  Or when I've promised another author I will post something, but I can't remember when or what I was supposed to post it.  Hence my new calendar…

Graphic Design:  Hands down, this is my least favorite hat to wear.  I'm not very good at it, the classes I took in college in the dark ages did nothing for me then, and the knowledge does even less for me now.  The free software I use doesn't read my mind, and create what I want, and nothing ever comes out looking like I envisioned.  This will be the next thing I pay for, when I start making money from my writing. I will pay a graphic designer to design everything.  I would love for my husband to do it, but he doesn't have the time…

Marketing/Publicising:  The marketing hat is actually lots of hats.  There's a facebook/twitter hat, a goodreads hat, and a word of mouth hat.  There's also the blogger hat.  They all look similar, but since the platforms are different, I like to think of them as all different colored fedoras…I'm learning a little bit about the marketing aspect every day, and with each new contact I make, I'm getting my name out to more people.  More people knowing my name=better visibility.  Hopefully better visibility=higher sales.  Higher sales mean I can afford these dental visits.  The marketing part is actually fun for me.  I've always been a bit of a people person, and making new friends is what it's all about.

There are more hats I wear, but since the office manager just came in with the "treatment plan" and an estimate of what I'm going to have to pay out of pocket this summer, I'm pretty much overwhelmed.

The whole Labor of Love idea for my writing was that I wanted to make a contribution to my household income with my writing.  I want to pay for fun stuff for my kids to do.  I want them to wear decent clothes, instead of thrift store specials.  I would like to have more than one pedicure a year.  I want my husband to have the freedom to take a day off from work every now and then to do something fun.

I just need a bigger hat rack.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Cover Reveal: My very own Hot Mess

I've been working on Hot Mess for a while, and now that it's almost finished, I can honestly say it's not the book I started out to write.  It's better.

Initially, it was just a contemporary romance, inspired by this fire fighter guy who picked up his kid at my son's school.  It ended up being so much more...

I used to laugh at authors who said they cried while they wrote.  Now I'm laughing at myself.

Here's the blurb:

Sam is a single dad, trying to get over the death of his ex-wife and help his daughter move on from the loss of her mother.

Rachel is a single mom with a secret of her own that has kept her out of the dating scene for years.

What happens when this drop-dead gorgeous firefighter moves in across the street from the reticent woman with a past?

Sparks fly as the heat level rises in this new novel of Serendipity.




And here's a teaser for you...

Rachel was mopping her floors the next morning, trying to forget last night while Sophia was stripping the beds to wash sheets when a knock at the door sent Sophie running to see who it was.  A squeal of delight, met with a matching squeal took Rachel to see what the hubbub was all about.  Her hands immediately moved to straighten her hair, when she saw Sam's massive frame leaning nonchalantly in her living room doorway, his enormous frame crowding the small space.
"Hey there," she squeaked, suddenly breathless in his presence.  Memories of last night flashed, unbidden to her consciousness.  The way his arms felt around her, leading Rachel around the dance floor with the grace and ease of an old married couple.  She had filed the memory away, to revisit on rainy days when she was feeling sorry for herself, but seeing Sam in her doorway made it jump to the forefront of her mind like a toddler craving attention, saying, "Look at me!"
He didn't move, his arctic blue eyes on her, intense, just like they were last night.  Electricity sizzled in the cozy room, causing sweat to break out in Rachel's armpits.
"Hey," he said, as nonchalantly as he looked.  As if the attraction that nearly brought Rachel to her knees didn't affect him at all.  He pushed himself off the door frame, and took the two steps across the room that his long legs needed to reach Rachel.  "Why did you run away last night?"
"I was just fixing to leave anyways.  You know, babysitters and all..."  She was trying to match his nonchalance, but it came out a stammering mess.
His eyes narrowed on her, making a flush steal across her cheeks.  "You had just gotten there.  I saw you walk in the door."
"Oh…"  Damn.  He kept staring at her.  "Um…I don't know, Sam."  She sighed, unable to come up with a suitable excuse.
"Were you running?"
"Maybe."
"Why?"  His gaze was still on her, intense, boring for the truth that she wasn't willing to give him.
"You were so mad the last time we spoke.  I can't read you."
Sam's mouth opened to say something, then shut with a snap.  His eyes traveled her face, from her eyes to her lips, and back again.  Seeming to reach a conclusion, he said, "Read this, Rachel."  Before she could react, his hands were on her face, keeping her from escaping his mouth, tongue against her lips searching for access.
Her hands reflexively went to his chest to push him away, but then his scent invaded her senses, and she was lost to his masculinity, his very presence overwhelming her.  She opened up to him, grudgingly granting his tongue entry with a weak whimper.
A triumphant growl rumbled from the back of his throat, and his kiss deepened in intensity, causing emotions to well up that Rachel had never felt before.  His tongue swept into her mouth, and she tasted him, his hunger and his desire, and she suddenly wanted more.
As her tongue tentatively met his, she realized that this was good.  This was something that she had denied herself for so long, and now that she allowed herself to feel this, she didn't ever want to stop.  She had never been kissed this way before, it was a kiss that made her ache at the thought it would have to end.
Her fingers spread against his chest, moving upward, to feel the hard planes of his pecs, his shoulder muscles, as she wrapped her arms around his neck, pulling him closer, kissing him deeper.  His arms went around her waist, squeezing her against him gently, his massive hands spanning her back.
Abruptly, he ended the kiss that was rapidly changing Rachel's life, and took a step back, still holding her waist.
Rachel couldn't catch her breath, her knees were weak, and her pulse was racing.  Reality crashed down on her, and she remembered that there were two ten year olds in her house, and she was standing here in her living room, breaking every promise she'd ever made to herself.
Sam squeezed her waist again, gently, before releasing her and walking over to settle in a chair in the corner of the room.  Rachel inhaled deeply, then exhaled a deep shuddering breath and looked at the face of the man who was causing her so much turmoil.
He was smirking.
Rachel couldn't find her voice.  It had obviously fled to the place where all of her resolutions had gone.
"Can you read me now?"



I'm working on getting stuff ready for a blog tour late June/early July, so if anybody wants to participate, let me know.  I plan on having a playlist, character interviews, etc. and maybe something a little unique to add to the mix as well.

Without further ado, here's the cover....




Monday, June 3, 2013

Cover Reveal: Dead Run by Vanessa Booke

I love Vanessa.  She's one of my favorite people in the world.  That's why I jumped at the chance to participate in her cover reveal today.

But first, let me say, Vanessa's one of my critique group members, and I've read part of this book.  It's amazing.  It's the best zombie book out there, hands down.  She hits on so many emotional levels that it's more than a zombie book, more than a romance.  It's so good.

It's funny, in my own exuberance, and disorganized way, I agreed to do the cover reveal on the same day that my own cover reveal for Hot Mess is taking place.  So while other blogs out there are revealing my cover, I'm revealing Vanessa's.  It works for me.  I'll reveal mine later in the week, and hopefully you will have already seen it, because the other bloggers have a bigger audience.  And I still get to support my friend.  Cuz that's how I roll...

Book Description:


Carly

Carly Rios was supposed to go to college, forget about her first love, and live a normal life. That was the plan until the whole world went to hell and the dead started becoming…not so dead.

Forced to live in the same quarantine as her abusive stepfather, Carly is hanging on to life by a thread, as she dreams of a normal world outside of the community. But when tragedy strikes home, Carly has no choice but to try and escape with her brother Michael. On the night that Carly plans to leave the community, chaos erupts, causing her plans to backfire, unleashing the undead inside.

Now, Carly must reach out to Joshua Tremell, a man from her past, and the one who left her heart in pieces. Trusting Joshua is one of the hardest things she’ll ever have to do, but without his help it’s only a matter of time until Carly loses her brother Michael to the undead.

Joshua

Two months after returning from fighting over seas and coming home to face a world overtaken by the undead, Joshua Tremell is accustomed to death and losing the ones he loves. But when fate brings him back to his childhood sweetheart Carly Rios, Joshua realizes there are some things still worth fighting for.

Carly is the last person Joshua thought he'd ever see again, let alone in the same quarantine. Facing off shufflers isn’t easy, but the thought of losing the only girl he’s ever loved again, is even worse.

With a second chance at redemption, Joshua would give anything to save Carly and help her get her little brother back, but Joshua has more secrets than he can tell, and his past mistakes are bound to collide with the future he's dying to earn.

For Carly and Joshua, crossing the wasteland is just the beginning…

*Mature Content Warning: 17+ for language, intense violence against the undead and adult situations.




Teaser:



“The only good human being is a dead one.”
-George Orwell


CARLY

I knew his gun was in the top drawer. I’ve watched him place it there. Tonight is the last night I’ll ever let him touch me. I watch his breath rise and fall rhythmically as he sleeps. From where I stand he doesn’t look so threatening, anymore at least, not how he looked earlier that night. My cheek still burns when I touch it. A bruise is starting to form underneath my swollen skin. I step into the darkened bedroom cautious, as the wooden floors squeak beneath me. He can wake at any moment. My hands tremble as I make my way toward his nightstand. It has to be here unless…as I pull the top drawer open, I’m relieved to see the gun is still there. It sits shining in the moonlight that cascades down through the cracks of the boarded-up bedroom window.

I pull the gun from the drawer but pause midway. My stepfather’s snoring has stopped. Fear paralyzes me, and I freeze, still. Is he awake? Is he watching me? I hold my breath, my eyes squeezed closed, waiting. Several seconds pass, and then like clockwork, I can hear the sound of his snoring again. I look down at the handgun and then back at my sleeping stepfather. I shiver in disgust at the memory of his hands on me; no amount of soap could ever wash away how dirty he makes me feel. My stomach rolls at the memory of the way he whispered how I would always be his.

Not anymore. I step into the hallway shutting the bedroom door quietly behind me. A small sense of relief washes over me. I did it. Before I know it I’m all the way down the hallway of our one story home. Tonight, is our last night behind the safety of the community fences. It frightens me to think about what’s waiting for us outside, but staying isn’t an option anymore. I stare down at the gun in my hands. I’ve never held one until tonight. The sound of a soft voice catches my attention.

It echoes down the hall. Michael must be awake. I slip the gun behind me. There’s no reason for him to see it; it will only scare and confuse him. He’s been pretty quiet these past few hours. He keeps asking for our mother. I don’t have the heart to tell him that she’s gone. The only thing left is a shell of the woman she used to be. It’s been seven days since she became infected.

I made her a promise when it happened. I promised her that no matter what, I wouldn’t let her become one. I know what I have to do, and despite what my stepfather Tom tells me, I know my mother is sick and she isn’t getting better.

Our home is made up of three rooms. Tom sleeps in the master bedroom. I share a bedroom with Michael, and my mother is in the guest room. We live in a town sectioned off from the outside world. It’s better than what most survivors have, but it’s temporary. Our emergency supplies were never meant to last past six months. We’re going on our seventh month and our food and water is nearly gone.

Tom keeps my mother isolated from everyone here. A cold draft hits me as I enter her bedroom. I can hear her heavy breathing, her lungs crackling as she inhales. Small white clouds of air escape her mouth. It’s freezing in here. I switch on the emergency lantern near her nightstand. The fluorescent light reminds me of a hospital room, as it chases away the darkness. I gasp at the sight of her; she’s gotten worse. Her eyes are blood shot and her pupils are dilated. I touch her skin to check for a fever, but she feels ice cold. I grab her hand and place it in mine. Her skin is pale yellow and she’s starting to bloat like the others. She has a day at most, maybe less. The bloated skin on her finger engulfs her wedding band. It’s the one my father gave her before he died.

It wasn’t the infection that took him away from us. He was in a motorcycle accident when I was fifteen. He suffered an injury to the head and went into a coma.

I twist the ring off her finger.

My mother sold our old house to pay for his medical bills. She didn’t have the heart to pull the plug. Not too long after his accident, they flew him to a fancy medical hospital in Colorado. I thought he died. She told Michael and me that he did, but a few days ago I found some old hospital bills stashed in a shoebox. She lied. For the past three years she’s been paying to keep him alive. At least, she was until the outbreak happened.

“Mom.”

She stares at me blankly, making it clear she no longer recognizes her own daughter’s face. I’m sure in her eyes I’m only a stranger, someone she’s never seen before. I reach down for the wash pan at the foot of her bed, and I cringe at the sight of the brown, murky water inside it. Tom refuses to clean her with any of our clean water and instead subjects her to the dirty-brown, rusted water from the faucets. As far I know it isn’t hurting her but she deserves more than that. Tom wants to keep her around because of the food rations. Each person in the community is given a certain portion of food, no more, no less. He takes hers for himself. I hate seeing her like this.

A moan escapes her lips. I pull the gun out from behind me fearful that she’s turning. I have to do what she couldn’t for my dad. I have to let her go. I have to.

I raise the gun toward the front of her face. My hands tremble, the gun is heavier than I expected. Through her confused and sickened state, she looks up at me as if she has a moment of clarity. I close my eyes and turn my face. I picture her as she was before the outbreak. In my mind she stands radiant and beautiful as she smiles down at me. I can almost hear her saying everything will be all right. They say goodbye is the hardest thing you’ll ever have to say. So I don’t say it. I breathe in and pull the trigger.





So...are you ready?  Really ready?  Okay,  here you go...










I really need to get the information for her cover designer.  It's beautiful.  Absolutely gorgeous.  Anyway, contact Vanessa Booke at the links below...

Add Dead Run to your Goodreads TBR list HERE

Join the Dead Run facebook fan page HERE


Her facebook fanpage

Twitter: @V_bogie

About Vanessa:  

My name is Vanessa Booke and I live with my husband Ryan and our three dachshunds Zer0, Zoey, and Zelda just outside of Los Angeles, California. I love poetry and all things Jane Austen. I've been writing since Jr. High, it started with poetry and eventually in high school I began writing Fiction. My favorite genre to write in would have to be young adult, or new adult. I currently work as a communications coordinator for a charity, but I've also worked as a journalist. I have my Bachelor’s degree in English Literature from Cal State University San Bernardino. In my free time, I like blogging about books, thrift shopping and taking grand adventures with my partner in crime.





Friday, May 31, 2013

Guest Blog Post: Virginia Voelker

To continue in my series of Mommy Authors, a post from Virginia Voelker, author or The Color of Ordinary Time.  Stay tuned next week for a reveal of the cover to my newest book, Hot Mess.



Battle Cry 


Hi.  My name is Virginia, and I’m a writer.  I’m also a mom, a wife, a knitter, a failed would be rock goddess, a blogger, a reader, a reviewer, an amateur historian, and the most deadly gardener I know.  I would like to tell you that I have a set time for writing everyday.  I would like to claim that I sit down from the hours of nine to noon and diligently craft my stories over a soothing cup of fragrant tea.  I would like to say that my life is harmoniously organized and transcendent.  I would like to assert all of that.  But I would be such a liar.

I love being a mom not just because I love my boys.  Although I do.  I love that moment when they’ve learned something and are so excited they want to go out and use their knowledge now.  I love the energy and confidence they bring to the proceedings of their lives.  I enjoy the fun.  I enjoy the honesty.  I enjoy the little traditions that are just ours.

I write because I love that moment in a well crafted story where you can hardly turn the page because you know what is coming next could be too awful for words.  I also love that moment when the story takes a turn that is so right, or good, or true, that reading the passage brings tears to your eyes.  I aspire to writing those moments.  Sometimes I’m almost successful.

These two things — being a mom, and being a writer — are the only things I’ve always wanted to do.  I’m not going to pretend it’s always easy, or well organized.  For the moment my boys are young enough that I do far more mom-ing than I do writing.  Over time I know that will change.  Until the change comes, I write on the back of shopping receipts while I wait for the bus, or in a notebook next to my dying garden while the boys play tag.  I keep great ideas on brightly colored sticky notes that migrate around the house with me.  Sometimes a sticky note turns out to hold a grocery list instead of a great novel.  Such is life.

At night, after the boys have had their stories and are tucked in, I sit down at my computer.  As I sort through my sticky notes and receipts I work at creating those written moments I aspire to.  I don’t mind that it’s hard work.  Hard work makes you strong.  I don’t even mind that I fail more than I succeed, for I have been granted a battle cry by my sons.

My battle cry is made up of the words my oldest used to repeat to himself when he was a preschooler and concentrating hard on something.  To me they are the embodiment of energy and confidence in the face of struggle.

“Strawberry Jam!  I’m a genius!”

How could I possibly fail with a battle cry like that?

Virginia's blog can be found HERE

Her book, The Color of Ordinary Time, can be purchased from the following:  You guys may have to copy/paste the links in the browser window.  My links aren't working for some reason.(Anne's note)

At Amazon:  HERE  or http://www.amazon.com/The-Color-Ordinary-Time-ebook/dp/B00CIC91WQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1366931649&sr=8-1&keywords=The+Color+of+ordinary+time

At Barnes and Noble:  HERE

At lulu:  HERE or http://www.lulu.com/shop/virginia-voelker/the-color-of-ordinary-time/paperback/product-20990567.html
The Romance Reviews