Thursday, May 31, 2012

Review: Dangerous Ally


3.5 LIGHTNING BOLTS
Title: Dangerous Ally

Author: Jessica Lauryn

Genre: Contemporary Suspense

Heat Level: Spicy

Length: 334 pages

Reviewer: Carey

Dangerous Ally is a suspense that leaves you wondering what will happen next. In a world of diamond smuggling, deceit, and danger, who do you trust?

How many secrets can a one family really have? The Ramone family have so many skeletons in the closet they need to buy a cemetery just to hide them all.

Lilah Benson is a reporter on a mission to expose diamond smuggling kingpin Lucas Ramone. She’ll do whatever it takes to get the story and show just how evil the Ramone family truly is. Until she meets Lucas Ramone and feels the soul searing passion he invokes in her. Her plan? Get the story as fast as possible and get as far away from Lucas as she can.

Lucas Ramone gets everything he wants and after meeting, the sexy reporter Lilah Benson he knows exactly what he wants.

Add one determined reporter and a conniving diamond smuggler shake well and you end up with Dangerous Ally.

This story took me on a roller coaster ride. Nothing was as it seemed and it was a pleasant surprise. Every time I thought I knew where the story was going, I was whipped around the corner and given a little shock. I love a story that keeps you on your toes and Jessica Lauryn didn’t disappoint.

I found myself swept away by the characters and their struggles. Nothing comes easy for the characters in Dangerous Ally. They are all tortured in their own way. I found myself rooting for the Lucas and Lilah. Hoping that everything would work out for the unlikely couple.

I would recommend this story to anyone that likes a good mystery. You never see the twist and turns coming.


Where to find the book:

AMAZON

Barnes & Noble

Review: Nightwalker by Lisa Kessler

4.5 LIGHTNING BOLTS

Title: Night Walker

Author: Lisa Kessler

Genre: Paranormal Romance

Publisher: Entangled Publishing

Blurb: He gave up his soul for a second chance to love her…

Two and a half centuries ago, Calisto Terana lost everything when a zealous priest murdered the woman he loved. Now, desperate for another chance to love her, he wants redemption for the mistake that cost her life.

She’s haunted by dreams of her own death…

After catching her fiance with another woman, Kate Bradley returns to San Diego to clear her head. The last thing she needs is romance, but after meeting Calisto she’s drawn to him in ways she doesn’t understand.

They’ve waited in the shadows for centuries…

Calisto has no doubt Kate is the reincarnation of his lost love, but the Fraternidad Del Fuego Santo has a new watcher with dark ambitions of his own. As old enemies reemerge and a new threat arises, the betrayal that enslaved Calisto to the night might destroy the only woman he’s ever loved again.


Review:  A love that ended far too quickly in one time has a chance to begin in another. Night Walker is the story of revenge, redemption, second chances, and reincarnation. The characters are portrayed beautifully in Night Walker, which enables readers to connect with them.  The writing is entertaining, smooth, and Ms. Kessler's voice is just stunning. A mix of paranormal, suspense, and the romance blends together quite well to create a book that is not easy to put down. 

Calisto is intriguing and the tragedy he endures makes my heart ache for him. I rooted for his character to finally get some peace, and hoped for his happy ending.  He'd been through so much in his long life, how could any more despair be brought upon him?

Kate is at a crossroads, and she's got so much to deal with. Add on this strange character that she's drawn to despite her doubts and you've got quite a spark.  I also hoped for Kate to finally get the good she deserves as well.

Nightwalker is a fantastic book. It hooks readers in and doesn't want to let go.  



About the Author:

Lisa Kessler is an avid reader and writer of dark fiction. Her short stories have been published in print anthologies and magazines, and her vampire story, Immortal Beloved, was a finalist for a Bram Stoker award.

Lisa recently signed a 4 book deal with Entangled Publishing to release her Night Series. The first book, Night Walker, is scheduled to be released August 5th.

When she's not writing, Lisa is a professional vocalist, performing with the San Diego Opera as well as other musical theater companies in San Diego. You can learn more at http://Lisa-Kessler.com

Lisa lives in southern California with her incredibly fun husband and two amazing kids.

Zombie Night in Canada: First Period” by Jamie Friesen Spotlight and Giveaway


“Zombie Night in Canada: First Period”
By Jamie Friesen
Self-Published
Action, Horror, Post-Apocalyptic, Thriller



BLURB

Tokyo. Sydney. Beijing. Cairo. Paris. Rome. New York. Los Angeles. One by one, the world’s great cities fell to the zombie plague. What chance does a small, non-descript city in Canada like Edmonton have?

The world as we know it is finished. Civilization has collapsed and humanity is on the brink of extinction. Billions of people are dead, victims of a horrific plague.

Bi-weekly paychecks, Tim Horton’s double doubles, men’s league hockey and cheap winter vacations to Cancun. That was the life Xander Barnes had known for years until a pandemic swept the globe. Efforts to slow its spread or develop quarantine zones, in many cases were too little, too late.

Nowadays, life consisted of avoiding the plague victims, ghouls who had an insatiable appetite for human flesh and finding enough food to survive day to day. How long can one ordinary man survive in a world gone mad?

EXCERPT

“Gentlemen, it’s going to be a race to get to the cars, so I suggest you hurry. Larry and Greg, run to the Sheriff’s office and see if there is more ammo and maybe some working flashlights. We’ll meet you at the ramp by the fountain in one minute,” Darryl said. “If you’re not there in time, we’ll leave you behind. Got it?”

“Got it!” they echoed.

Just then the doors to the Bowker Building opened again and dozens of infected streamed out. The two groups raced off. John and Darryl reloaded as they ran and got to the stairs, hiding behind a planter filled with sub tropical plants, with the older men a dozen steps behind them. Sunlight poured in from a skylight and illuminated the area. Greg glanced out the windows and saw that the Legislative Grounds were filled with dozens more infected. When the old men had finally caught up to them, they raced down the stairs. John tossed a table onto its side and shoved all three of them behind it.

“Stay,” he ordered tersely.

Larry and Greg followed Darryl’s orders and raced into the office. Greg ran into the back room and fired his pistol twice into a locked cabinet. The lock shattered and he ripped it open, pulling out a pair of pump action shotguns. He loaded shells into each and stuffed more in his vest pockets. He stuffed several pistol magazines in as well and scrambled back out to the front office, where Larry was tearing a desk apart looking for batteries.

“I can’t find any!” Larry hollered.

“Forget the batteries, let’s get going!” Greg yelled, grabbing a jacket off a nearby chair and threw it on.

Greg tossed a shotgun to Larry and jammed the half empty box of shells into his hands. Then he tore out the door without another word. Larry pulled one last drawer open and yelled, “Jackpot!” He stuffed a couple packs of batteries into his over-sized pockets and followed Greg out the door, tossing on a heavy jacket as well. A second later, Larry heard a shotgun blast. As he ran out into the hallway, he saw Greg standing there, firing his shotgun into a huge group of infected, blood and flesh exploding from the lifeless victims.

“This way,” Larry shouted and raced for the ramp that spiraled down to the lower level. Greg followed, and they took turns, running and firing, covering each other’s back whenever possible. They made it to the bottom of the ramp and saw John and Darryl firing into a group of infected, coming down the stairs that were located at the south edge of the ramp. The premier and cabinet ministers huddled in abject fear only a few feet away.

The infected from the Bowker Building were coming down the ramp and Larry turned and fired at them. In the narrow confines of the ramp, every shot finished off several infected, but their numbers suddenly seemed limitless. Dozens, if not hundreds, poured down the ramp from the ground floor.

Darryl’s pistol’s slide jacked back as the magazine emptied. “Did you find us any ammo?” he screamed at Greg.

Greg tossed over all four of the magazines he had found. Darryl shoved one in and resumed firing. Suddenly the way was clear.

“Let’s go!” Darryl hollered.

He grabbed the premier and then both he and John raced down the tunnel towards the parking lot. The two cabinet ministers followed in their steps, with the two young sheriffs firing into the ever expanding pack of infected. A door to the Legislative Annex on their left from opened, and more infected flooded into the hallway as they ran past it.

“Sir, run for the end of the hallway!” John yelled. Charchuk and two cabinet ministers continued down the darkened tunnel.

John and Darryl stopped and fired point blank into the infected.

“Last magazine, make ‘em count!” Darryl said over the gunfire to John, as he passed him a magazine. John nodded.

“Greg, Larry, come on!” Darryl shouted, as the sheriffs were on the verge of being cut off by the host of infected flowing from the Annex. They ran backwards and stood shoulder to shoulder with Darryl and John. Natural light from three periscopes flooded the hallway with an eerie light, adding to the emergency lights mounted on high on the walls.

John and Darryl fired again and again until both were out of ammunition. Darryl’s gun clicked on an empty chamber. He glanced around, looking for something, anything to hold off the infected. He ran to several nearby display cases, marked ‘Alberta Legislature’, which had a display about the provincial government. One cabinet was stuffed with replicas of both the Legislature’s mace and several medieval-era battle maces, and he smashed the glass with butt of his pistol. He jammed the pistol back into its holster and reached into the case, pulling out a pair of wicked looking maces and leaving the gaudy, gold-painted Legislative replica behind.

He ran back to John and gave him one, then attacked the infected reaching for him with an over-handed swing. The mace came down and crushed the infected teenager’s skull, sending blood and brain matter in every direction. John emulated him and they cut a bloody swath through the infected. The young sheriffs, also out of ammunition, were now using the butt end of their shotguns like clubs to fend off the infected.

They fell back slowly, responding to any attempt by the infected to get around
them. Bit by bit, they were moving closer and closer to the parkade.



Q: How long have you been writing? How many published books do you have, and what genres?

I've been writing for just over a decade. Zombie Night in Canada: First Period is my first novel, but I have written short stories and screenplays during my foray into writing. 


Q: Do you write in multiple genres or just one? If just one, do you ever consider straying outside your genre?

I write in a variety of genres - sci-fi, horror, techno-thriller. Frankly, even though Zombie Night in Canada: First Period has zombies, I don't really consider it horror, but post-apocalyptic fiction where the instrument of mayhem is undead instead of an asteroid, solar flare or peak oil. 


Q: Are you a plotter or do you write from the seat of your pants?

I typically write from the seat of my pants after I create a basic three act structure (beginning, middle, end). Once that's done, I tend to let the story take me where it will, even though I might have some ideas about what might happen. 


Q: What is a typical writing day like for you?

I get up early (5 a.m. or so) and try to write for an hour, I also like to write on my lunch break at work and if (a very big if), I get a chance to do some more before bedtime, I write then too. I don't set daily word goals for myself, but I do try and set general goals (Story X needs to be done in a month, Novel Y needs to be done by year-end). 


Q: Who do you love to read? Favorite authors, favorite books?

It all depends on what I’m in the mood to read. If it’s fantasy, I’ll go with Raymond Feist or Terry Brooks. For sci-fi, I’d probably go with David Drake, David Weber, or Jerry Pournelle. Alternate history sci-fi would be wither S.M. Stirling or Harry Turtledove.

 
For non-fiction, I really enjoy Malcolm Gladwell and Chris Anderson 

Q: What is something you'd like to accomplish in your writing career next year?

To finish all three projects I'm currently working on. 

Q: If you could have one paranormal ability, what would it be?

The ability to fly. 

Q: If you could keep a mythical/ paranormal creature as a pet, what would you have?

I think a griffon would be a pretty cool pet. 


Q: Tell us a little about your latest release.

I wrote this novel simply because a friend came up with a great title. Zombie Night in Canada is a word play on Hockey Night in Canada – which for many of us is as important as Monday Night Football. Having read a number of books in the genre, I noticed that most took place in New York City, Texas or London, and could not find something that took place in Canada, so that’s why I wrote it. I also wanted to write a story in which the police and military weren’t portrayed as a bunch of sociopaths. 

The plot is basically this; the zombie apocalypse occurs and it details how several characters deal with it – each from a different perspective. The everyman fortifies his place and hopes to ride out the storm, the police officer is tasked with dealing with the zombies once their numbers escalate, and the soldier does his level best to control the situation once it grows beyond the capabilities of the police to deal with. 

Q: What is something that you absolutely can't live without? (Other than family members)

I think I would die if I couldn't eat cheese - and I don't mean processed (American) cheese, but real, honest to goodness extra-old cheddar! 

Q: Could you ever co author a book with someone? If so, who would you choose, and what would you write?

I've co-written screenplays with another author, so no, I'd be willing to co-author a book with someone else. 

Q: If you could spend a day with anyone from history, dead or alive, who would it be, and what would you do? What would you ask them?

I think Ernest Hemingway would be a fascinating interview - I'd love to talk about his experiences in both World Wars and the Spanish Civil War. 

Q: What are some of your other hobbies outside of writing?

I love bicycling, reading, movies, sports and PC gaming.

Q: If you were on the staff to have a book adapted to movie, what would you pick?

I'd love to see Red Storm Rising (Tom Clancy) made into a movie. 

Of course, with the collapse of the USSR 20 years ago, WW3 seems farther away than ever, but the battle scenes in the book are gripping. 


Q: What is a talent you wish you had, but don't?

A better long term memory


Q: Favorite color?

Purple 

Q: Weather: Hot or cold?

Preferably somewhere in between - but if I have to choose - cold. 

Q: Favorite place to read?

My recliner

Q: Favorite meal

A medium rare steak, fried mushrooms, perogies (Ukrainian dumplings filled with potato and cheese), a salad with Ranch dressing and for dessert, something with chocolate and raspberry. 

Q: Favorite non-alcoholic drink.

Without a doubt - Cherry Coke. It's too bad Coca-Cola Canada doesn't make it up here any longer. 

Q: If you could travel anywhere and do anything, no limits or money holding you back, where would you go?


Tikal and Copan - Mayan ruins that are in semi-remote areas of Guatemala and Honduras.



Amazon
http://www.amazon.com/Zombie-Night-Canada-Period-ebook/dp/B007KR4OYY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1331903528&sr=8-1

Smashwords
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/137708

REVIEWS

From Smashwords:

“...Zombie Night in Canada is a fresh breath of rotting zombie corpses and gunsmoke. It has great action, a uniquely Canadian outlook (but not too Canadian as to alienate reads who don’t hail from the great white north) and great detail and an all-round exciting story. Best zombie novel I’ve read in some time.”

“Like Zombies? Like Guns? Like Canada? This book has them all. Infected Zombies are once again on the march. The plot revolves around the events surrounding an exponential zombie outbreak as it happens to the main protagonists rather then a story where they "wake up" to a world already overrun. The book is set mostly in Canada, especially Alberta with real world locations & references and contains good specific military weapon usage to help draw you into the story. Fans of the genre will appreciate the many references to other contemporary zombie stories including what I saw as a direct homage to the Dawn of the Dead 2004 remake.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jamie Friesen was born in Lahr, West Germany while his father was serving with the Royal Canadian Air Force. He attended the University of Alberta where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in History, and followed it later with a Masters of Arts in Communications & Technology. After obtaining his Bachelor's degree, Jamie went abroad and taught English in Japan and Taiwan.

He now lives in Edmonton, Canada with his wife and daughter, working in the Public Relations field and writes in his spare time, which usually translates to early mornings and lunch time.

Blog: http://www.jamiefriesen.com/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/#!/jamiefriesen
ZNIC Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Zombie-Night-in-Canada/262078575266




One lucky commenter will win an electronic copy of the featured book. Good luck!

To see the other stops for this tour, go here: http://cblspromotions.blogspot.com/2012/05/vbt-zombie-night-in-canada-first-period.html




Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Interview with Mayra Calvani





Wednesday already?  Wow, didn't the week just start? Well, in any case, today's post is part of a virtual tour with Mayra Calvani. I'm interviewing Mayra, so I hope that you'll come along and learn about a new author. 





First off, tell me about yourself, and your writing.

I write fiction and nonfiction for children and adults. I’m also a reviewer, freelance book publicist, and writing instructor (on book reviewing and writing picture books). Needless to say, my days are mostly spent in front of the computer. I live in Belgium with my husband, two wonderful teenagers and our adorable golden retriever.

How long have you been writing? How many published books do you have, and what genres?

I have been writing since I was about 12. I wrote short stories and school plays. In high school, I completed my first novel. My first published material were stories and poems in small literary magazines when I was about 20. Since then, I’ve had two nonfiction books, one story collection, three novels and 12 children’s picture books published, with several more already contracted on the way.


Do you write in multiple genres or just one? If just one, do you ever consider straying outside your genre?

I do write in multiple genres, from children’s picture books to YA, to nonfiction (for both kids and adults), to adult paranormal and satire. I have a separate website and blog for my children’s books: www.MayrasSecretBookcase.com and www.MayrasSecretBookcase.blogspot.com.

I’m inspired by many different things and like to follow my muse where she takes me.

Are you a plotter or do you write from the seat of your pants?

I’ve tried both methods. I think both ways have their advantages and disadvantages. There’s no ‘better’ way. It depends on who you are as a writer, how you work and how your creativity unleashes on the page.

I used to be a panster, but the result was often a weak plot and saggy middle. However, I once wrote a book during Nanowrimo in a strictly stream-of-consciousness manner and the result was a well structured book with an intricate plot that got agent representation. So you never know.

Nowadays, I prefer to plot in advance while at the same time leaving room for flexibility. I like to have a solid idea of the premise, plot and characters before I start writing. This process has made the actual writing stage easier for me. While plotting, I may write a short summary or a logline for each chapter. What I like about this method is that I always have a basic idea of what I need to write next, so I hardly ever have the dreadful writer’s block. But, as I said, I usually come up with new ideas while writing, so I keep myself flexible and open to them. And if I must suddenly change the course of the plot, then so be it. A good story should develop organically, and as Alan Watt, author of The 90-Day Novel advises, you must remain curious and not try to solve the problem at the same level of consciousness that created the problem.

What is a typical writing day like for you?

I work best in the mornings, when I’m rested and my mind feels fresh. After the kids are off to school and my hubby to work, I get a cup of coffee and sit at the computer with my golden retriever, Amigo, at my feet. Often, I do a short meditation. Next, I write my goals and objectives for that day. This is extremely important for me. Writing down my goals and objectives keeps me focused and productive—most importantly, it keeps me away from ‘bright shiny objects’ that can stir me away from my major goals. Then I start writing. I’ll usually write for 2-3 hours from Monday to Friday (I take weekends off to be with my family). After my writing session I have lunch and take a short walk with Amigo. Afternoons and evenings are for other work-related stuff such as promotion and publicity, networking, reviewing, blogging, etc.

I started adopting this system this January and it has worked wonders for me. The key points here are to write down my goals and objectives, then work on my work-in-progress before I do anything else.

What is something you'd like to accomplish in your writing career next year?

I’d like to sell my YA 4-book urban fantasy series to a large traditional publisher.

If you could have one paranormal ability, what would it be?

I’m torn between reading minds and flying.

If you could keep a mythical/ paranormal creature as a pet, what would you have?

Bastet, the ancient Egyptian cat goddess!

Tell us a little about your latest release, DARK LULLABY.

During my early to mid twenties, I lived in Turkey. It was an incredible experience. Not only did I learn to speak Turkish, but I also made wonderful friends and learned a ton about their customs and folklore.
Many people there believe in the cin (pronounced ‘jiin’). Not the jinn as westerners know it. You know, the genie that comes out of magic lamps. The cin is a much darker creature that could better be compared to the fairy. In Turkish myth, it is a being that lives in the forests. It can be good or evil. It is of spirit form but can shapeshift into an animal or human. Like the western fairy, it is often volatile, mischievous and prone to pranks, some of which can be deadly. It loves milk products.
Want me to get creepier? It has a bizarre taste for live human liver and, when in human form, its feet are set backwards!
Oh, and those little lights that you often see in the woods on warm summer nights, otherwise known as fireflies? They aren’t fireflies. They’re cin.
I was fascinated with the accounts I heard, fascinated enough to write a novel. Thus, Dark Lullaby was born.
What is something that you absolutely can't live without?

Books.

Could you ever co author a book with someone? If so, who would you choose, and what would you write?

Actually, I did. With my friend, fellow author and reviewer Anne K. Edwards, I co-authored the award-winning nonfiction book, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing. It was an immensely positive, fun experience.

What is a talent you wish you had, but don't?

Public speaking.

Favorite color?

Royal blue.

Favorite place to read?

Everywhere! LOL.

Favorite meal.

Anything that I can hold in one hand so I can hold a book with the other.

If you could travel anywhere and do anything, no limits or money holding you back, where would you go?

I’d go on a two-month trip around the world in a luxurious cruise ship.

Book description:
At a trendy Turkish tavern one Friday night, astrophysicist Gabriel Diaz meets a mysterious young woman. Captivated out of his senses by her physical perfection as well as her views on good and evil, he spends the next several days with her. After a while, however, he begins to notice a strangeness in her—her skin’s abnormally high temperature, her obsession with milk products, her child-like and bizarre behavior as she seems to take pleasure in toying with his conscience. 
The young woman, Kamilah, invites him to Rize, Turkey, where she claims her family owns a cottage in the woods. In spite of his heavy workload and the disturbing visions and nightmares about his sister’s baby that is due to be born soon, Gabriel agrees to go with her. 
But nothing, not even the stunning beauty of the Black Sea, can disguise the horror of her nature. In a place where death dwells and illusion and reality seem as one, Gabriel must now come to terms with his own demons in order to save his sister’s unborn child, and ultimately, his own soul.
Dream Realm Awards Finalist!

Bio:
Mayra Calvani writes fiction and nonfiction for children and adults and has authored over a dozen books, some of which have won awards. Her stories, reviews, interviews and articles have appeared on numerous publications such as The Writer, Writer’s Journal, Multicultural Review, and Bloomsbury Review, among many others. A reviewer for over a decade, she now offers online reviewing workshops. When she’s not writing, reading, editing or reviewing, she enjoys walking her dog, traveling, and spending time with her family.
Visit her website at www.MayraCalvani.com, join her mailing list, and automatically receive the free ebooks, Reviewers Talk about Their Craft and the first lesson from my Slippery Art of Book Reviewing Workshop.


Dark Lullaby
By Mayra Calvani


Blurb:

At a trendy Turkish tavern one Friday night, astrophysicist Gabriel Diaz meets a mysterious young woman. Captivated by her beauty as well as her views on good and evil, he spends the next several days with her. Soon, however, he begins to notice a strangeness in her–her skin’s abnormally high temperature, her obsession with milk products, her child-like and bizarre behavior as she seems to take pleasure in toying with his conscience.
The young woman, Kamilah, invites him to Rize, Turkey, where she claims her family owns a cottage in the woods. In spite of his heavy workload and the disturbing visions and nightmares about his sister’s baby that is due to be born soon, Gabriel agrees to go with her.
But nothing, not even the stunning splendor of the Black Sea, can disguise the horror of her nature. In a place where death dwells and illusion and reality seem as one, Gabriel must now come to terms with his own demons in order to save his sister’s unborn child, and ultimately, his own soul…




Notes From the author...
 
"Dark Lullaby is about a young astrophysicist who is lured into the Turkish countryside by a mysterious young woman, of course, she ends up being something totally unexpected. In the end, he has to face his own demons in order to save his twin sisters unborn child.
Ive always been very interested in moral dilemmas and in the concept of a higher good. For instance, is it okay for a man to steal in order to have money to save his little girl, who is dying? In the case of Dark Lullaby, I went a step further: is it okay for a man to kill for the higher good? More than horror, it is a bizarre, suspenseful tale. It is based on Turkish lore. I lived in Turkey for five years and the culture, the people, the stories I heard there had a big influence on my writing."
*****
Why I decided to use Turkey as my setting...
"The first part of Dark Lullaby takes place in Baltimore, but it was inevitable for the setting to move to Turkey. This has to do with the nature of the anti-heroine which I will not reveal here, of course. J I also wanted to add a primitive, exotic flavor to the story, and what could be more primitive and exotic than a small village in the Black Sea coast, a place surrounded by woods and influenced by strange lore? I don’t think there are many scary stories out there connected to Turkish lore, so I thought: hey, this is something different, something readers may find unusual and original. So for this novel, I felt the setting was very important for the plot."
 
*****
 
What appeals to me about the supernatural...
 
"I detest gore. What appeals to me are the unknown, the unexplainable, and a good story with good characterization and a lot of dark atmosphere. Paranormal is probably my favorite of all genres, but I hesitate to say I like horror because horror has turned to trash these days. I like the classic, traditional ‘horror’ ala Edgar Allan Poe, very different from the average horror being written these days. I can think of a novel I read a couple of years ago, a ghost story with stunning writing: The Ghost Writer, by John Hartwood. I guess what I like falls more under paranormal or supernatural suspense, but the lines are so thin between genres and subgenres these days, sometimes it’s hard to categorize a book."
 






Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Meet Katie and Ryan from Hot For Fireman!



 It's a hot day, but the inside is nice and cool. I walk into the interview room and wait. Today we have two very special people coming by, and I get to interview them. You don't know this couple yet, but you will soon! I had the chance of meeting Katie and Ryan and reading their story. Today, that very same story is being released into the wild. I just want to say- *stops in mid sentence as the sound of voices come from behind me. Looking up, I spot Katie and Ryan walking in, laughing about something. They look so happy and in love, it's a beautiful sight.

Clearing my throat, I stand to greet them. 

“I'm really glad you both were able to come today. It's so wonderful to meet you. I must say, your story was magnificent! How do you feel about your story going public? Oh, my. Excuse me. There I go with the questions already. Please, sit down. Get comfortable. Would you like something to drink, eat? I hope you don't mind if I sip on some raspberry iced tea. It's my addiction."

After shaking hands, the three of us sink into quite comfortable leather recliners.

“How are you doing, Katie? And you, Ryan? I'd love to catch up on your lives, see how things are going today.”

Katie: "Hi Nikki. Great place you've got. Check it out, Ryan, this recliner is just like yours! Remember that night when we …"
Ryan interrupts, clearing his throat. "We're good, Nikki. Real good. Happy to be here." He winks.

*Stifles a laugh* "So tell me, how did you approach your author about your story? I'm well aware of how those like you just pop up out of nowhere " *grins*

Ryan: "It was my idea. If Jennifer was going to put me in a bachelor auction in Captain Brody's story, the least she could do is give me my own book and my own sweetie. Though sometimes I wonder if she didn't get revenge by picking a feisty little firebug like Katie Dane …"
Katie pokes him in the ribs. "Hey. I'm right here, you know. And I'm not a firebug. I just got a little desperate for a while there. Although why Jennifer had to show my most embarrassing moments … thanks a lot, Ms. Smartass Author."

“Care to share a juicy detail about yourselves that we may not otherwise know about you? Oh, come. Let's call it a little game of truth.” *Winks*

Katie: "In high school I was named "Most Secretly Sexy. Okay, so it's not exactly Miss Congeniality, but it kind of surprised me."
Ryan: "No surprise to me. I knew it the second I laid eyes on you. The way you reached for that bottle of tequila behind the bar … mmm-hmmm."
Katie: "Oh stop. You're trying to distract us. Juicy detail, Ryan. Come on, let's hear it."
Ryan: "My life is one long juicy detail. That's all I'm going to say." He winks.

“ You're a bit vague there, Ryan! 
Is there a talent you wish you had, but currently don't have?"

Ryan: "You know those balloon animals? Always wanted to know how to make those. Kids love 'em. There's nothing like watching a kid's face light up at the sight of a balloon zebra or something."

Katie: "For my father's sake, I wish I could play miniature golf with him. My whole family's athletic, and I can't even master a game that features gnomes on the course."

“Without getting you in to trouble, either of you....what is your biggest turn off?"

Ryan: "Firebugs." He gives Katie a teasing look.
Katie makes a face at him. "People who keep lecturing you about something you already know and stopped doing about a million years ago and did only because you were at the end of your rope and … yeah, okay, I'll go with firebugs too. Especially the professional kind."

“Biggest turn on?"

Katie: "Have you ever seen five sexy firemen doing a striptease on a bar?"
Ryan: "I knew that turned you on!"
Katie: "Yes, but not for the reason you think. I was so touched that you guys wanted to help me out like that." Turns to Nikki. "They even practiced a whole routine. It was the cutest thing! You should have been there, you would have fallen in love just like I did. Hey, are you single? Maybe you'd like Vader. Or Freddy the Stud. Let's talk more when we're done here, okay?"

"I'm actually married, Katie....but I'd love to have been there. Next time you have a fun little shindig like that, i expect an invitation!" *Flashes a smile*
“Pet peeve?”

Katie: "People. Except the little ones. And the old ones. And Ryan. Make that all firemen. And my family. And …"
Ryan: "You don't fool me, Ms. Heart-the-Size-of-California. You like people all right. You'd do anything for them. My pet peeve? Bullies. Can't abide a bully."


"I so agree, Ryan. Bullies are terrible.
“Other than loved ones and the absolutely necessities, what is one thing you can't live without?”

Ryan: "My sense of humor."
Katie: "My books."

"Both great answers. I can't live without my books either....If you could only see my library...my friend cringes every time she comes in there because she's such a slow reader and feels bad if she keeps buying books. I remind her that's nothing compared to mine and we enter the room." *Laughs*
“Favorite way to relax and wind down?”

Ryan: "Fishing."
Katie: "Reading. I hang out under a tree while he fishes. Works out great. Sometimes I read aloud to him. But the best part is when he takes a break and cuddles with me on the picnic blanket. That's pretty much my idea of heaven."
Ryan: "No argument there." They hold hands, looking ridiculously happy.

“Where is a place you'd love to travel to?”

Katie: "France. The closest I ever got was the Paris Casino in Las Vegas. My sister Bridget dragged me there in case she needed a translator."
Ryan, after a snort: "I'd tag along on a trip to France. You can fish there, right?"

“Biggest fear?”

Ryan: "Screwing up in a fire. I don't mind if I get hurt, but I don't want anyone else to."
Katie: "I mind if you get hurt! I don't even like hearing about that." She cuddles close to Ryan. "That's my worst fear, I think. Something bad happening to someone I love. My dad already had a heart attack and …" She breaks off, getting upset. Ryan kisses the top of her head.
Ryan, tenderly: "And she claims she doesn't like people."

“Do you have ANY idea what your author is working on next? *sly smile*

Ryan: "I heard it's Two's turn in the hot seat. Sabina Jones, one of our female firefighters. The one all the guys have a crush on. She's got some secrets up her sleeve, I hear. I'll read that book, for sure. We've all been wondering about her for years."
Katie: "I'm kind of curious about that new guy coming from New York. Everyone says he's the toughest captain on the East Coast. Plus he's a single father."
Ryan: "Now that'll be fun to watch. With a title like SEX AND THE SINGLE FIREMAN, maybe we can sell tickets."

“What good quality do you think you bring out in one another?”

Ryan: "I bring out Katie's sparkliness. She likes to pretend she's not a "people-person." But she just needs someone to bring out her sparkly side and I'm just the guy to do it."

Katie: "I bring out Ryan's grownup side. He was doing pretty well on his own, but once he met me, he started taking his life more seriously. He kept thinking he had to keep me out of trouble."
Ryan: "I did. Still do."
Katie, smiling: "And I love you for it, hot stuff."

“Well, I know you both are busy, so I don't want to keep you all day, but is there anything you'd like to share?”

Ryan: I hope people like getting to know the Bachelor Firemen of San Gabriel. It's tough working in a firehouse under a curse. You've got a bunch of single--"
Katie: "And very, very sexy."
Ryan: "--guys who just want to find true love and save a few lives along the way. Makes for some good stories."
Katie: "And some great bachelorette parties!"

*Stands* I had a blast talking to you, Katie, Ryan. Congratulations on this release day! I can't wait for the world to be able to enjoy Hot For Fireman as much as I did!  
We make our way outside, where I notice a fire truck waiting nearby 




Ryan: "Thank you, Nikki. Now I have to do one more thing, by special request from Jennifer's Facebook readers." He stands up and strips off his shirt. He looks magnificent. "This one's for you, with love from Jennifer," he says with a wink.




Where did that crowd come from? I stand there, mouth agape, shocked, but the now crowded area is applauding and cheering at Ryan 
















Hot For Fireman BLURB:
Katie Dane knows better than to mix business and pleasure, but her new bartender, Ryan Blake, is simply irresistible... and besides, she doesn't plan on working there much longer. That's if things go according to plan. But they never do, do they?
Ryan, the sexy heartbreaker of Station 1, is determined to rejoin the force. Tending bar in the meantime seems like the perfect idea, especially when it means he can spend his nights working next to his sultry new boss... if only the bar didn't keep catching fire.
Throw in a grizzled career criminal, a luscious-bodied barfly, a Bachelor Fireman bachelorette party, a flash-fire romance, and a million-dollar money pot, and suddenly playing with fire never seemed so much like falling in love. 

Excerpt:
Ryan Blake needed a drink. Preferably somewhere no one would recognize him. Finding such a spot in the sun-blasted town of San Gabriel on a July afternoon didn’t come easy. The town had quaint little crafts shops up the whazoo, but so far he hadn’t spotted a single gritty, anonymous hellhole where he could prepare himself for his meeting with Captain Harry Brody.
Right on cue, he passed Fire Station 1, home of the famous Bachelor Firemen of San Gabriel and legendary for the heroics of its captain and crew. Time was, he’d been on the frontlines of those life-saving, death-defying heroics.
He slowed his pickup truck and willed himself to turn into the parking lot, drink or no drink. Lord knew, his Chevy had made the turn so many times it could probably do it without him. But this time, it drove straight past the squat brick building with the cheerful red geraniums planted out front.
Face it, Ryan wasn’t ready for his appointment with Captain Brody yet. Wasn’t ready to beg for his job back. He needed a goddamn drink first.
A green and white Starbucks sign caught his eye. Several cuties in sundresses gathered around the outdoor tables like hummingbirds around a feeder. In olden days he would have strolled right in and spent the rest of the afternoon flirting with one--or all--of them.
But unless Starbucks had started adding tequila to their iced mocha lattes, the girls would have to get along with him.
He scanned the street ahead with its Spanish-style stucco office buildings and parched palm trees. Too bad he’d never been much of a drinker. He had no idea where to find the kind of drink-yourself-stupid-on-a-Wednesday-afternoon, out-of-the-way, loserville place he needed right now.
And then, as if the phrase “loserville” had conjured it out of his imagination, the sign for the Hair of the Dog appeared on the left side of the street. Towns in the sunny California suburban desert didn’t have dark back alleys. But the Hair of the Dog did its best to inhabit one. Located on a corner, it seemed to cringe away from its only neighbor, a dry cleaner’s called Milt and Myrna’s Laundry, whose name was spelled out on a marquee along with an inspirational saying, “The bigger the dream, the bigger the reward.”
If the Hair of the Dog had a dream, it would probably be to wake up as a medieval tavern. Faced with weathered wood, it had black planks nailed at random angles across its front. Either someone had done a clever job making the Hair of the Dog look decrepit or it was about to collapse. It looked like the kind of place old geezers spent their Social Security checks, the kind of place frat boys invaded when they felt like slumming and pretty girls avoided like poison because merely walking in gave them wrinkles. The kind of place guaranteed to be serving alcohol at two in the afternoon.
Perfect.
Ryan pulled over and parked his Chevy as close as legal to a fire hydrant. Silly habit left over from his firefighting days, when he’d always wanted to be close to any potential action.
Time to get blotto.
When he pushed open the door, the dim light stopped him in his tracks. As did the hostile voice addressing him with an unfriendly, “What do you want?”
Tequila,” answered Ryan. “The cheap stuff.”
I’m not the bartender, moron. I’m the bouncer.”
Ryan’s eyes adjusted enough to make out a slouchy, dark-haired guy about his age who looked too skinny to be a bouncer.
This place needs a bouncer?” He surveyed the interior of the Hair of the Dog. Just as crappy as the outside promised. Everything was painted in shades of black ranging from soot to shoe-polish, except for the booths, which seemed to be a formerly hunter-green color. Just as he’d expected, a motley collection of oldsters slumped on the bar stools. He squinted. Was that an oxygen tank? The old man attached to it gave him a snaggle-toothed grin. He nodded back.
Yep, this place was perfect.
My so-called job is to weed out the jerkwads,” said the bouncer.
Yeah? What’s your name?”
The friendly question seemed to throw the dude off. “Doug.” He added a menacing frown.
Hey, Doug, nice to meet you. I’m Ryan.” He shook the bouncer’s hand before the guy knew what was coming. “You’re doing a great job, keep up the good work. How ‘bout I buy you a shot when you get off?” He breezed past Doug with the confidence of someone who’d been in too many fights to seek one out with someone who wouldn’t even provide a satisfying brawling experience. If Ryan wanted a fight, he knew how to find one. Right now, he just wanted a drink.
The bouncer seemed to get the message. Ryan heard no more out of him as he made his way into the darkness up ahead.
Was this a bar or a haunted house? Maybe the men on the barstools were ghosts still hanging around for a last call that never came. A couple of them certainly looked ghoulish enough, although the intensely unflattering light provided by the overhead fluorescents might be misleading. Maybe they were captains of industry enjoying the tail end of a three-martini lunch. Maybe the atmosphere added thirty years and several age-related illnesses.
A dark-haired girl rose from behind the scuffed-wood bar, her head clearing it by barely a foot. She fixed snapping black eyes on him, nearly making him take a step back. What had he done? Why did everyone seem irritated that a customer had walked into their bar? The girl had big dark eyes, straight eyebrows like two ink marks and tumbled hair pushed behind her ears. She would have been pretty if not for that frown. No, scratch that. She was plenty pretty just as she was.
He gave her the smile that had made so many women his eager laundry-doers, tax-preparers, and back-massagers. Not to mention other parts of his anatomy.
She scowled even harder at him. And geez, was that a snarl? Maybe she was some kind of creature of the night, hanging out with the ghosts.
Well? Are you going to order or just smile for the security camera we don’t have?” Her throaty voice, though grouchy, set off a pleasant shiver at the base of his spine.
Is that why you need a bouncer?”
What?”
Because you tell everyone off the street that you don’t have a security camera?”
Would you order? I don’t have all day.”
Yes, I can tell this place keeps you busy.”
Could her scowl get any deeper? Ryan cocked his head and scanned her face, amazed that he still wanted to look at her anyway. Why, he couldn’t say. Stubborn-looking mouth, a nose that turned up at the tip, long eyelashes, flashing dark eyes that took up half her face. Small, too, like those kittens who have no idea they’re half the size of the dogs they try to beat up. Probably a few years younger than him, maybe mid-twenties.
She shrugged and turned away.
Shot of tequila,” he said quickly. Something told him this girl wouldn’t mind blowing him off and refusing to take his order.
With a sidelong look that told him how close he’d cut it, she folded her arms and surveyed the bottles lined up on the wall behind the bar. “We have Patron Silver and Patron Gold. The Gold’s a little dusty.”
All of the bottles looked dusty to Ryan.
What’s inside’s still good, right?”
Got me. Any of you guys tried the Patron?” She flung her question to the geezers at the end of the bar.
Tried a glass back in Ninety-Two, Saint Patrick’s Day. Thought it said Patrick, not Patron. Hit the spot.”
The first hint of a smile brightened the girl’s face. “You’re the man, Sid.”
Any time, Katie, my love,” crooned Sid.
He has the memory of an elephant when it comes to his liquor,” she told Ryan.
So that was her name. Katie. He liked it. A lot. It made her seem more human. He stared at her, fascinated by the change a whisper of a smile brought to her face. Good thing he caught it, because it disappeared in the next second.
So? Silver or Gold?”
Cheap,” he said.
Excellent choice.” She gave him a sarcastic look and reached for the bottle of Patron Silver. Up she stretched, high on her tiptoes, higher and higher. Ryan held his breath as her black top inched its way up, up, until it pulled away from the waistband of her jeans, revealing a sliver of gracefully curving, ghostly white flesh. It bugged him that his mouth watered at the sight, that he wanted to run his tongue from the soft tip of her lower rib along the delicious slope that led to her hipbone. This girl had serious friendliness issues.
But she was kind of hot, in her own particular way.
The view slammed shut as her heels hit the floor and she yanked down her top. She plopped a shot glass onto the bar and sloshed golden liquid into it. “That’ll be four dollars.”
Can’t I run a tab?”
No tabs at the Dog.” The old man with the oxygen tank cackled. “Case you croak before you finish your drink.”
Katie smirked, even though Ryan could tell she was trying hard not to smile. “It’s the policy of the Hair of the Dog to request payment with each drink. If you have a problem with that, you’re free to go down the street to T.G.I. Friday’s. They have that super-fun trivia game there.”
She wasn’t going to get rid of him that easily. “It’s Wednesday,” he said, pulling out a fiver along with his smile. “Wouldn’t be right.”
She snickered. Then looked so annoyed with herself that she turned away and headed for the cluster of men at the other end of the bar. He watched her every step of the way. Each line of her body radiated energy. She didn’t walk in the flirty way he was used to. He’d watched many a girl sway her hips back and forth on her way to the ladies’ room during a date. He always looked forward to the moment a girl would excuse herself and give him a show, a tempting promise of what was to come later on.
Not this girl. She had a direct and to-the-point stride, and was either unaware of her sexiness or in deliberate denial. Her odd choice of clothing—long-sleeved black top on a hot day—could go either way.
He tossed back his tequila. As the liquor entered his system, the dingy room acquired a lovely, blurry sheen. Just what the doctor ordered. And the doctor would definitely recommend another dose. He tapped the glass on the scuffed wood of the counter. Katie glanced down the length of the bar at him, pinning him with a look of disgust. “You aren’t planning to get drunk, are you?”
Do you interrogate all your customers about their future plans?”
Only the troublemakers.” She graced the geezer brigade with a glowing smile and headed back his way. For one moment, Ryan wished he’d brought his grandfather. Maybe this girl had a thing for older men.
What makes you think I’m a troublemaker?” He motioned for her to refill his glass. “I’m all about peace and harmony. Kumbaya, my friend, kumbaya.”
She looked revolted.
We have more in common than what keeps us apart,” he added wisely, after downing the second shot. He’d always loved a good affirmation, especially with a buzz on.
You can stop now.”
Ah ha. He’d found a sore spot.
A hand offered in friendship opens more doors than a fist raised in anger. You catch more flies with sugar than vinegar.” Okay, that last one wasn’t an affirmation, but he threw it in for free.
Do you want me to kick you out of here?”
Make friends with your anger.”
Doug!” She called to the bouncer.
Ryan laughed. “You’re cute as a button when you’re mad.”
I’m not cute. And I’m not a damn button. Doug!”
But Doug didn’t answer. Scuffling sounds came from the front door. Ryan turned on his barstool, which wobbled a bit. Doug must be outside, because his bouncer stool was empty. Something or someone banged against the front door.
Uh oh.” Katie didn’t sound irritated anymore. A quick look in her direction gave him a glimpse of dark eyes round with alarm.
Sounds like your bouncer’s getting a chance to earn his pay.”
Bouncer.” She snorted. “Doug doesn’t even know how to throw a punch. I gave him the job because he can’t tend bar. He’s no good with people.”
Maybe it was the tequila talking, but Ryan found so many aspects of that statement hilarious that he laughed out loud.
What’s so funny?”
Oh, I don’t know. A bouncer who can’t fight? Or the fact that apparently you’re the one who’s good with people?”
The Glare reappeared. This time Ryan was prepared. It even felt warm and fuzzy to him. Must be the tequila.
Never fear.” He took the bottle, poured himself a shot, downed it, then stood up. “Sir Ryan to the rescue.”
What? No, that’s ridiculous. Sit back down. Seriously.”
But Ryan was three Patron shots past listening. Whether she wanted it or not, she was getting a goddamn act of derring-do. Or should that be derring doo-doo, considering where they were?
He chuckled. Yep, definitely the tequila. Not to mention the anticipation of a good knuckle-buster. He’d sworn off fighting as part of his effort to rehabilitate himself and get back on the force, but when circumstances demanded it…
He flexed his fists and opened the door. Doug fell into him. Ryan caught him and ducked the hard punch that came next. While the man with the flying fists regained his balance, Ryan propped Doug against the wall, out of the line of fire. When he stood up, two men faced him. Two tough-looking dudes in black leather and black beard stubble.
Man, am I glad to see you guys,” Ryan told them with a big smile.
True, so true. Tequila was nice, but a throwdown was even nicer.
He braced himself. The second man, who also happened to be the larger of the two, came after him first. Ryan lowered his head and caught him under the left arm. He lifted him up in the air and spun him around so his legs mowed down man number one, who stumbled to his knees. Ryan dumped the larger man on top of him. Painful groans ensued.
Ryan went into his fighting stance. It wouldn’t be fair to kick the men while they were down. He wasn’t fighting for survival here. This was strictly recreation. The two men scrambled to their feet. The larger one, who had so recently been twirling through the air, roared and charged him. The next few minutes passed in a blur of vicious punches and ducks and parries and all the tricks Ryan knew from his years as an impulsive hothead.
God, it felt good. Even the punches he took hit the spot. He knew from experience he’d suffer the consequences later. But that’s what ice was for. He’d recovered from plenty of brawls, with nothing worse than a slightly off kilter nose. And, frankly, he was grateful for that one flaw in his looks. Without that, someone might think him nothing but a pretty-boy.
Hey, pretty-boy,” growled the large man.
That did it. No one called him that without paying the price. Time to stop playing with these guys. Ryan kicked into turbo drive.
A jab to the kidney. An uppercut to the jaw.
When he got serious in a fight, whether against a man or a fire, he saw things in quick flashes moments before they happened. As if he existed in a time warp a few seconds earlier than the rest of the world.
A head jerked backward. Bloody slobber slung through the air. A man fell to his knees. The other man slumped on top of him. A hand lifted in submission, then dropped limp to the floor.
When Ryan stopped moving and things returned to their regular pace, he stood panting over the two fallen bodies of the intruders. By their movements and the whimpers filling the air, he knew they were fine. Pissed as hell, but fine. He wouldn’t want to meet them in a dark alley, but then again, San Gabriel didn’t have any dark alleys.
He shook out his shoulders and arms. He had a cut on the middle knuckle of his right hand, and what felt like a massive bruise on the left side of his ribcage. Nothing too serious.
He glanced over at the bouncer, Doug. His eyes were half-closed in pain and his arm seemed to be hanging kind of strange. Someone better get the guy some help.
Call 911,” he called to the bar. “I think his arm is broken.”
Already did,” said Katie, so close he jumped. Christ, she was right behind him. She must have been with Doug. Then he saw the baseball bat in her hand and took an alarmed step back.
What was that you were saying?” She stepped toward him with blazing eyes. “Right before you got my bar all bloody?” Another step forward. Was she really going to whack him with a bat? After all he’d done for her?
Um, Kumbaya?” he ventured, hands in the air. “My friend. Kumbaya?”
Yes! That was it.” She drew back the bat.
Now, now, Katie,” came a wheezing voice. “Put down the bat.”
Never had Ryan been so glad to see an old man with an oxygen tank, especially one who moved that quickly across the floor. He took advantage of Katie’s moment of inattention to pluck the bat from her hands.
She stomped her foot with a furious look. “I wasn’t going to bonk you, but if I did, you’d deserve it.”
He shook a finger at her. “Peace and harmony, my friend. Peace and harmony.”
Too late, he realized he should have taken away her left foot along with the bat.
Ow.”


Links: 





Amazon Author Page amazon.com/author/jenniferbernard


There are details to a contest Jennifer is holding on her Facebook and website! I do hope you'll check it out!  I was able to obtain an early copy of Hot For Fireman, and I must say, I absolutely enjoyed it!  So get your copy ASAP, and don't forget to check out Jennifer's other book, The Fireman Who Loved Me, which was the first book released, and does feature Ryan in it a little bit. Hot For Fireman is Ryan's story.