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Guest Blogs and Giveaways

  • Dec. 14th, 2009 at 11:13 AM

I don't know how much blogging I'll get done myself this week, as I try to tackle a mountain of work before the holidays. (I know me, and if there's any work to do, I'll do it, even if I'm supposed to be "on vacation." The only way to actually relax is to make sure there's nothing to obsess about <g>.) However, The Knight Agency has exciting things going on all this week, including our virtual party on Thursday, December 17th, so I hope you'll check in frequently. Here's the intro from the TKA blog for today's guest post and giveaway by the ever-awesome Carol Berg:

Christmas Week Guest Blog and Giveaway: Magic on a Winter's Night by Carol Berg

First a little bit of introduction, and then onto Carol Berg's awesome post! This week we're celebrating the holidays with a line-up of guest bloggers, including Carol, Michele Lang, Michelle Celmer, Twila Belk and a very special mega-blog on Friday featuring New York TImes bestselling authors Marjorie M. Liu, Rachel Caine, Christie Golden and Nalini Singh! As part of the celebration ALL of the authors are giving away signed copies of their books and TKA is hosting a special scavenger hunt!
There are TWO ways to win. Each day this week (Dec. 14 - Dec. 18) a guest blogger will give away a signed book to one person randomly chosen from the comment section. Also, at the bottom of the post there will be a scavenger hunt question. The answer can be located somewhere on the author's website. Send in all 5 correct answers* to the scavenger hunt questions, and you will be entered in a drawing to win the TKA Suprise Christmas Stocking overflowing with books and holiday treats!!!

S.L. Wright at Star-Crossed Romance
In other guest-blogging and giveaway news, S.L. Wright has a free copy of her new urban fantasy CONFESSIONS OF A DEMON for one lucky commenter over at Star-Crossed Romance. Check out her killer cover!

Giveaways

  • Dec. 8th, 2009 at 10:46 AM

Comment here to be entered to win CHRISTMAS MIRACLES by Cecil Murphey and Marley Gibson on The Knight Agency blog.

Or here for the Ace/Roc holiday giveaway on Dear Author!

Ms. Bookish has a whole list of other giveaways on her site here.

Happy Holidays!

Giveaway

  • Oct. 22nd, 2009 at 7:21 AM

By the Book Reviews is running a contest with a giveaway of Vamped!  Just click here to leave a comment with your scariest Halloween experience for a chance to win.



Marvelous and multi-talented Janet Mullany is here today with a word about naughty heroines and her new novel A MOST LAMENTABLE COMEDY, blurb:

A MOST LAMENTABLE COMEDY
Headline Publishing Group
ISBN 13: 9780755347797 ISBN 10: 075534779X

1822, England. Young, beautiful Lady Caroline Elmhurst is down on her luck. Twice-widowed (once is unfortunate, twice just looks like carelessness...), pursued by creditors, she needs to get back on track before the world realizes just how desperate she's become.

 But she's optimistic about finding a new husband and when she meets handsome, mysterious Nicholas Congrevance at a houseparty in the country, she sets out to entice him. For his part, Nicholas simply sees Lady Caroline as just the sort of woman he's used to exploiting--rich, available, and gullible. Neither realizes the other is penniless--and neither has any intention of falling in love...

________________

Do Bad Girls Deserve a HEA?

Thanks, Lucienne, for having me visit today!

I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like.

That’s what Jane Austen said about Emma, the heroine of her novel by the same name and it’s something I was very conscious of all the time I wrote A Most Lamentable Comedy. I knew I was taking a risk with Lady Caroline Elmhurst (and with the hero, too, Nicholas Congrevance) but I had to do it.

I wrote Comedy partly to demonstrate that my first Regency chicklit The Rules of Gentility wasn’t a one-off book, but as much as I enjoyed Philomena (the heroine of Rules), I had this rule of not writing about virgins prancing around in drawing rooms (oops), and I really didn’t think I could break it again. Editors might expect me to always write about naïve babbling fashionistas and then what would I do?

And for my own entertainment, I needed a change. So I picked a minor character from Rules who was quite obviously rude, unprincipled, and dishonest—oh, how I loved writing Caroline. Mrs. Giggles defined her as a gloriously flirtatious hussy with a PhD in gold digging which pleased me no end. She proved to be even more outrageous as the book progressed. Occasionally I would utter a mild protest and then I just let her rip.

Here’s an excerpt, Caroline closing in on her next mark. She and the hero have just met and are on their way to take part in amateur theatricals at a house party in the country:

How very fortunate that he has been abroad, and how relieved I am to find that my reputation has not crossed the Channel. If he had been in London, it would be an entirely different story. Indeed, it is a miraculous stroke of luck that he is a blank slate upon which I can rewrite myself, provided he does not listen to vulgar gossip from his fellow guests.

“You enjoy the theater, Lady Elmhurst?”

“Oh, I adore it.” I clasp my hands to my bosom (he watches) and sigh deeply (he blinks). “It is tremendously diverting. It is one of the great pleasures of town.” I do not mention that cards and flirting and activities well beyond flirting behind closed doors are what I really prefer. “And of course I enjoy music; I play a little upon the pianoforte--my friends say I am not totally devoid of taste--and I have a very small skill with watercolors.”

“Otterwell has some very pleasing prospects on his estate. I expect you will wish to sketch them. Perhaps I might be permitted to accompany you, Lady Elmhurst.”

“That would be delightful, Mr. Congrevance.”

The question, of course, is whether I should take him as protector or husband. As enamored as he seems to be of the countryside, there is a good chance he will want to settle on some tedious estate and commune with his cows. He might expect a wife to slop around there with straw in her hair and breed!

But I was worried. What if readers agreed with Miss Prism in The Importance of Being Earnest that The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means. Do Caroline and Nicholas, a pair of well-matched rogues, deserve a HEA? And isn’t it a rule of fiction that characters should undergo transformation?

The last thing I wanted my hero and heroine to do was reform. I was having too good a time. Nor did I want them to reveal hearts of gold. Instead, I brought out what they had always possessed—self-awareness, humor, loyalty—and let them find what they really needed. At the beginning of the book they both want money. At the end, they have both found a sense of community and purpose as well as true love.

You can buy A Most Lamentable Comedy at bookdepository.com which offers free shipping worldwide, or if you comment or ask me a question Lucienne will enter your name into a drawing for a signed copy.


Winner!

  • Jun. 30th, 2009 at 7:53 PM

The winner of yesterday's Patti O'Shea giveaway is EdgyAuthor!  I've left instructions in the response to your comment for contacting me so we can get IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR right off to you.  Congrats!

I'm pleased to have a guest blog today by Patti O'Shea in honor of her latest paranormal romance, EDGE OF DAWN! Patti has won all kinds of awards, including the Booksellers Best, the Barclay Gold, the Laurel Leaf, the PEARL and the Golden Quill, among others. Some quotes for her Light Warriors series:

"Patti O'Shea is a voice and talent to be reckoned with. In the
Midnight Hour is gripping and wonderful, everything a paranormal should be."
—Sherrilyn Kenyon

"Non-stop action, magic-laced suspense and some sizzling sexual chemistry fuel "In Twilight's Shadow," Patti O'Shea's latest inventive paranormal romance." —Chicago Tribune

Comment below to win a copy of the first book in the series, IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR! Also, tomorrow is the last day to enter to win the VAMPED prize pack by commenting here.

____________________

EDGE OF DAWN COVER Before I get started, I wanted to announce that to celebrate the June 30th   release of EDGE OF DAWN, I'm giving away a copy of IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR, the first book in my Light Warriors series. To be eligible, leave a comment and one random winner will be chosen.

Authors get ideas everywhere. In fact, most of us have more ideas than we'll ever be able to write in our lifetimes. At least that's my take on it from my own experience and from what I've heard other writers say. So what makes an author choose one story idea over another?

For me, I usually end up writing the characters who are talking the loudest and most insistently. Yep, I hear voices. But even with this, I usually have a chorus in my head and have options. I had a few reasons for choosing EDGE OF DAWN over the others.

First was the characters. Shona Blackwood and Logan Andrews. Shona is completely in the dark about the existence of magic and Logan is a troubleshooter for the Gineal, a people who have magical abilities. And when he's assigned to protect her, his council tells him Shona must remain ignorant that those with power exist. Talk about conflict!

Logan is sworn to obey the council, but once his feelings grow for Shona how can he keep this secret? I nearly rubbed my hands together in glee at the thought of torturing Logan. Hey, he deserved it! My characters always torment me. Always. Does he defy his leaders, committing treason? Does he betray Shona's trust in him? Either way, there's guilt. Insert evil author laugh here.

Another facet of the story that drew me was that Shona was dealing with an artistic block. I'd just come through my own case of writer's block and hadn't worked for several months because of it.

Shona's struggles allowed me to explore my own issues. Her numbness about the loss of her work was the same numbness I'd experienced. Her distantly wondering why she isn't feeling grief or terror or some strong emotion about losing something so important to her are the same questions and distance that I dealt with. It didn't give me any answers, and Shona's block was caused by something drastically different from my own, but I think it was cathartic anyway.

The most intriguing thing for me in EDGE OF DAWN, though, was all the secrets. I didn't realize at the beginning of the story just how many there were going to be, but the few I did know about drew me in. Logan being ordered to keep secrets from Shona. Shona having a secret of her own, but not realizing it's a key piece of information that Logan needs. Then there were all the other secrets I discovered as I went along. Sometimes it amazed me that I was able to remember who knew what and when.

There are probably other intangibles involved with why I decided to write this story over the others, but these are the reasons I was conscious of when I started the book. If you're interested in finding out more about me or my books, please visit my website at: www.pattioshea.com. There's information on all my books and excerpts.

If you're a writer, what makes you choose to write a particular story over another? And if you're a reader, what draws you to a particular book over another?

Chloe Neill (author of SOME GIRLS BITE and the forthcoming FRIDAY NIGHT BITES) is blogging today over at Grasping for the Wind on "The Significant Other's Guide to Dating a Science Fiction/Fantasy Writer."  She's also doing a giveaway.  Both are worth stopping by for!

Blog party

  • Jun. 10th, 2009 at 12:39 PM

When I was a kid we had block parties, but they were never as wild as this!  Gena Showalter and Deidre Knight are partying and giving out prizes this week over on Gina's blog.  Check it out!

Post-release party

  • Jun. 5th, 2009 at 12:27 PM

Okay, so it's the month after the release of VAMPED.  Does that mean the party's over?  Heck no!  To keep up with the fun and games, I'm running a new contest all through the month of June.  Here it is:

How do you like your vamps?  Sunny-side up?  Dark and deadly?  Emo and brooding?  Should they shine in the sunlight or burn up like a crispy critter (like Twilight's Edward or Buffy's Spike).  Comment below with everything there is to love about vamps or, if you're more visual or musically oriented, link to your own original song or photo montage for a chance to win a "VAMPED...eternity needs an entourage" hat, a signed copy of the book, crosses and calendars and other goodies.  The more comments I get, the better the prizes will be, so help me get the word out!  Tell all your friends!  Tweet and retweet.  Most of all, have fun!

Dear Author giveaway!

  • Jun. 4th, 2009 at 11:28 AM

Dear Author is running an Ace and Roc giveaway right now.  Majorly awesome books on offering, including CARPE CORPUS by Rachel Caine, DARKNESS CALLS by Marjorie M. Liu, SKINWALKER by Faith Hunter....

Speaking of Rachel Caine, she's guest blogging over at the Penguin site if you want to swing by and say "hello."

Winners!

  • May. 29th, 2009 at 7:46 PM

I'm pleased to announce the following winners:

edwards_heroin for the signed copy of Mari Mancusi's first Blood Coven novel
lotuseyes for Team Zombie in Stacey Jay's giveaway
jasoncrawford for Team Vampire in Stacey Jay's giveaway

Thank you all for playing!

For anyone who missed out (and even those who didn't!) you still have until May 31st to Test Your Vampire IQ and enter to win a whole bunch of prizes over at Shooting Stars Mag.

YA Week continues with Mari Mancusi

  • May. 27th, 2009 at 9:40 AM

Keep commenting on Stacey Jay's zombie defense blog to win free T-shirts.  I'll announce the winners on Friday!

If you're looking for me, I'm guest blogging today over at Risky Regencies.  Stop by and say "hello!"

It seems I just can't get enough of those vamps. 
Talking about them today is fang girl Mari Mancusi.  Comment to win a signed copy of the first novel in her Blood Coven series!

I love her bio, so I'm going to let that be her introduction to you:
Mari Mancusi used to wish she could become a vampire back in high school. But she ended up in another blood sucking profession --journalism -- instead. Today she works as a television producer for a women's lifestyle show in Manhattan and has won two Emmys. As if writing and TV producing weren't enough to keep her busy, Mari also enjoys snowboarding, clubbing, shopping, 80s music, and her favorite guilty pleasure--video games. She lives in New York City with her very sweet dog, Molly.

 

Talking Vampires with Mari Mancusi


The great thing about writing about vampires is you can make them into anything you want them to be. From tuxedo-clad Dracula to mega rock star Lestat. Brooding, neutered Spike to punk rock biker boy David in the Lost Boys. Goth vampires, fashionista vampires, vampires with a soul – the possibilities are endless.

When I started writing my Blood Coven Vampire series I had a blast creating my own vampire world. Taking from myths, legends and a whole lot of pop culture, I mixed and matched and made it my own. My vampires don’t kill humans to drink their blood – they are assigned donors who are contracted and paid well for their services. They don’t just randomly turn other people into vampires –there’s a three month certification test, DNA analysis and blood screen. All very high tech and organized.

Vampires are not one-size-fits-all, which, I think, adds to their appeal. Nor are the books about them. You have everything from dark, brooding tales like Twilight to laugh-out-loud comedies like Undead and Unwed. So no matter what kind of story you’re looking for, you can probably find one featuring a vampire.

I, myself, was a huge Buffy fan back in the day, which definitely influenced my own vampire stories. There was just something brilliant about that show which took everyday, real-life problems and gave them a supernatural twist. My friends and I would have Buffy night parties every Tuesday. Wine, pizza, and some very strict rules. Like no talking, except during a commercial. (Appreciative noises were given special dispensation when a shirtless Spike appeared on-screen.) And speaking of Spike, I’m going to go see him in concert as part of Fangoria’s Weekend of Horrors in June. Can’t wait!

Right now everyone’s wondering what the next “vampire” will be. The mythological creature that will take the vampire’s place in the hearts of America. Will it be the werewolf? Not for me – all I can think of is the bestiality overtones. And even though I write zombie stories, I can’t imagine many hero zombies making it big. I mean, hello?, they’re reanimated corpses—often with decaying skin and missing appendages. Better to keep them the villains. Fairies? Well, maybe, but in my opinion they’re too pretty and feminine to really stand up to the alpha male hotness that is a vampire.

I was interviewing the executive editor of Harper Children’s a couple weeks back and she told me that there were actual studies showing that vampires were more popular during times of economic crisis. Why is that you might wonder? Well, maybe it’s because when you’re feeling poor and powerless in your own real life it’s fun to imagine an all-powerful, super rich, super gorgeous creature who’s been lost, searching centuries for a soulmate and finding it in little old you. What other creature could make you feel so special?

And that is why, I believe, vampires are here to stay.

So who’s your favorite vampire? Comment and win an autographed copy of the first book in my Blood Coven Vampire series, BOYS THAT BITE.



You've been hearing a lot here about vampires, but there's been a suspicious rumor floating around that zombies are the new vamps.  Well, I'm not so sure the fanged and fabulous are ready to cede the field just yet, but I think we can all play nice.  After all, the vamps are just in it for the blood.  What happens to the bodies after that....

So here's author
Stacey Jay taking the pro-zombie stance and offering up some fun freebies for two lucky commentors, once from each side of the debate!

IN DEFENSE OF THE ZOMBIE by Stacey Jay


Hi Lucienne readers!

I’m Stacey Jay author of the Megan Berry, Zombie Settler series (You are so Undead to Me and Undead Much? from Penguin Razorbill.) Megan is a zombie shrink who does her share of zombie butt kicking, and lives in a world where the Undead are decidedly Unappealing.

But in my book for Flux, My So Called Death (Spring 2010), zombies are caused by a mutation in the human gene and aren’t so one dimensional. They still have to eat brains and worry about flesh degeneration, but they also go to school (Dead High), stress about getting the perfect foundation to mask the blue-ish tint of dead skin, and believe being pulse-challenged is no excuse for a lack of school spirit. They’re proud to be genetically Undead and they refuse to let anyone put zombies in the corner.

Chloe Neill had her say last week,
http://varkat.livejournal.com/92341.html. Now it’s time for Team Zombie to have a go. Chloe concluded that vampires will always keep the top spot in the hearts of readers, but I think it’s time someone pointed out the dysfunction in the fangs:

1.    Vampires are not the common man or woman. (Vampires are elitist suckers who don’t care if you’re pretty on the inside.): You might have noticed that the average vamp is frozen in time somewhere between the ages of 16-30, is always beautiful and gorgeous (albeit unusually pale), and smart, and talented, and Perfect with Smoldering Eyes that Lure You to them Inexorably, and blah blah blah.

Not so with zombies! The shambling Undead are all about equal opportunity. Anyone of any age or hotness level can become a brain and flesh eater. Jocks, nerds, mean girls, dorks, emos—you name it, the zombies will welcome them with open arms (and mouths).

2.   
Zombies stick together. (Go Horde!!): Zombies are not loners who hang out in old castles soaking in their own angst. They like to get out and socialize and are always eager to add another friend to the hunt. Team Work + Zombie Awesomeness= Feeding Frenzy of Supreme Coolness Wrapped in Win.

3.    Zombies keep it real. (I only want you for your brain.): Zombies don’t pretend to be anything but predators when it comes to the common human. They date other zombies, they eat live flesh—end of story. They won’t send you conflicting messages about the temptation of your yummy blood vs. the draw of your fabulous personality. Personality cannot compete with hunger, and they don’t believe in toying with their food.

4.    Zombies will always be just a little scary, and scary is cool. Vampires have slowly allowed themselves to be de-fanged and turned into boyfriends suitable for taking to prom. Not so with zombies. They will always be scary and, if taken to prom, will Carrie-fy the joint within a few minutes.

I think this list speaks for itself, so I will simply conclude with a GTZYRMW*!

Thanks so much for having me Lucienne! FEFTW**

Oh, and remember, ZRVD***

And MKAATLTVT****

(*Go Team Zombie, You Rock My World.)

(**Flesh Eaters For the Win.)

(***Zombies Rule, Vamps Drool.)

(****Mostly Kidding About All This Love The Vamps Too.)

Weigh in below on the vampire/zombie debate and the awesomely cool Stacey Jay will give away one free T-shirt for Team Vampire (a vampire with the slogan "I'm your biggest Fang") and one for Team Zombie ("You are so Undead to Me," image behind the cut).

See pic )



So much to cover today!  First, don't forget the deadline for my Vamped Photo Contest is tomorrow with the winner or potential run-off on Monday. 
Contest details )

I've had so much fun with the YA guest blogs, that I'm extending things into next week, when I'll have, among others, tres awesome authors Mari Mancusi and Melissa Francis.  I'll even have a counterpoint blog to vampires vs. zombies from fellow Flux author Stacey Jay.


Today, I'm very pleased to present to you the amazingly talented Chloe Neill.  Her debut novel, SOME GIRLS BITE, a Chicagoland Vampire book, was released in April by NAL.  The sequel, FRIDAY NIGHT BITES, will be out in October.  She's here today giving away a copy of
The Zombie Survival Guide and an "I heart Cadogan" bumper sticker  to one lucky commenter below.  For those not in the know, Cadogan House is the clan that reluctant new vampire Merit is recruited into when she's bitten by the sexy master vampire who saves her from a rogue attack.  2010 brings the release of FIRESPELL, the first book in Chloe's Dark Elite YA series. Okay, enough of my blather.  Here's:

Lions* and vampires and zombies, oh my! by Chloe Neill
 
(* - This guest blog has nothing to do with lions. Sorry, lion afficionados.)
 
I'll admit it: Although my urban fantasy series is entitled "Chicagoland Vampires" and features (as you might imagine) a cast and crew of sunlight-fearing, blood-drinking vamps, my favorite scifi/fantasy movie isn't about vampires.
 
It's about zombies.
 
If Shaun of the Dead is floating around on a cable channel, there's a good chance it's on my television, with ink-stained Shaun leading his motley crew of troops into battle against the brainless. Or, more accurately, brain eaters. 
 
While vampires will probably always have a place in the hearts and minds (and carotid arteries) of readers, zombies seem to be making pop culture headway (pun intended) in the theaters and on shelves.  Don't believe me?  Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, a reimagined, zombified take on Jane Austen's classic HEA tale, is topping the bestseller charts (and my TBR list). 
 
With all the fuss about braineating kind, I began to wonder (insert Carrie Bradshaw voiceover): Could zombies take a bite out of vampirekind, or will vamps keep their fangs in the minds of readers?
 
In the interest of science (fiction), I put together some analysis:
 
1. Daylight Daze
 
Vampires = Allergic to sunlight.  That knocks off 12 hours, give or take, of vampire fighting time.  I think zombies, which can traverse the streets at any time of day, win this one.
 
2. Eating brains v. drinking blood
 
Let's face it--the dietary habits of vamps and zombies leave something to be desired.  Vamps drink blood (blech), zombies eat brains (blech).  Although strange food-eater Andrew Zimmern would have a lovely time at either buffett, neither diet is the stuff of daytime fantasy.  But, I think vampires have a slight edge here.  While there's at least arguably something seductive about the fangs and the blood-letting, there's not much about gnawing mindlessly on someone's head-innards that turns me on. Maybe I'm in the minority there, but I think it's safe to say that vamps--by a slim, slim margin--win this one.
 
3. Lost and Found
 
If we're thinking zombies of the "Thriller" variety, they've got a bit of a rotting flesh problem--fetid arms and legs and various other digits and appendages dropping off here and there.  I'm not aware of any similar droppage issues among vamps, so let's give this one to the fanged.
 
4. Heart and Mind
 
Zombies and vamps are tied in the "manner of killing" category, at least traditionally.  Zombies require a clunker to the head, while vamps require a stake through the heart.  Either way, you've got some pretty specific aiming to do. Verdict = Tie.
 
5. Sex Appeal
 
Zombies?  Really?  Come on, people.  We're talking reanimated, rotting dead things.  (And I refuse to believe that vamps,  "walking dead" or not, fall into that category).  Vamps (Ethan, Jean Claude, Edward, Zsadist, etc., etc.) by a landslide.
 
6. The Final Verdict
 
Sure, I'm biased. My heroine, Merit is a vampire.  It's the Chicagoland VAMPIRES series.  Lucienne's new release, VAMPED, is about vampires. And no one could argue that Selene didn't look sweeeet in all that latex. (You know you wished you could wear that stuff and look that hot in it.)  All that notwithstanding, I just can't get excited about that other kind of undead.  Too much rot.  Too much corpsiness.
 
America (or, at least, Chloe) has voted . . .
 
. . . (dramatic tension) . . .
 
Vampires FTW!**
 
Thanks, everyone, for reading, and thanks to Lucienne for having me this week!
 
(**- For The Win.  I had to look it up, too.)


Contest and a good cause

  • May. 14th, 2009 at 9:26 AM

Two things I want to talk about today:

-The Guys Lit Wire Book Drive for Boys to help the teens incarcerated in the LA County Juvenile Justice System. They have no library there for the boys, no books at all.  What kind of rehabilitation is that? 
Details of the drive are here.  It's a great cause and one I'm planning to support.  If anyone knows of other great book drives you'd like me to mention, pass the information my way.  You can contact me through my website: www.luciennediver.com or via the e-mail address below.  (Please note, as always, that queries should be sent via our submission guidelines on The Knight Agency site and not to my personal e-mail address!)



-CONTEST!  Send in pictures of you, your pets, stuffed animals, Aunt Gertie, whatever, holding or reading a copy of VAMPED (above photo demonstration is my adorable son and biggest fan).  Feel free to get creative!  Go artsy!  (Go in good taste!)  Prize is a pack of goodies: T-shirt, magnet, signed bookplates and other swag.  Winner will be chosen on the completely subjective basis of artistry, cuteness or commitment.  In the event of a tie or something too close to call, I may have a run off on the blog, allowing votes if I can figure out how to do such a thing. 
Rules:
-one entry per person
-entrant should state in the e-mail whether he/she has the right to distribute the photo and whether or not he/she is willing to have said photo posted on this site (I'll need parental permission if you're under 18)
-photo must include a copy of VAMPED and must be appropriate for a YA audience
-the words "photo contest" should appear in the e-mail subject line and be sent to me at luciennediver @ gmail.com (without the spaces)
-deadline is May 22nd with a possible run-off date of Monday, May 25th
-and above all, HAVE FUN!

Happy Release Day to Me!

  • May. 1st, 2009 at 7:10 AM

So many exciting things happening today!

First, the X-Men Origins: Wolverine movie comes out.  You can probably hear me crowing from wherever you are!

Second, it’s the official release date for VAMPED!  (And there was much rejoicing!)  In case you're not tempted to just run out and buy it, you can also order from Barnes & Noble, Borders, Amazon.com, Powells....  I'm very excited about my newest review on the Want My YA blog!

To celebrate, I can be found…well, first, at the theatre, and second:

Today:

-VAMPED is a May feature over at the B&N Book Club Board!  Hope you’ll drop by and share your thoughts.

-Guest blogging at Magical Words

-Giving away a signed copy of VAMPED at Linda Gerber’s Freebie Friday event

-Talking about publicity and my awesome street team on my agent Kristin Nelson's blog

-MyFavoriteAuthor.blogspot.com is doing a VAMPED giveaway as well!  All you have to do to enter is comment on their blog today with your own personal fashion disaster.

-Doing a “Test Your Vampire IQ” contest with
Shooting Stars Mag all throughout the month of May.  Take the text to win signed copies of books by Rosemary Clement-Moore, Rachel Caine and me, as well as a copy of Goth: The Game of Horror Trivia.  (Note: Shooting Stars is currently hosting a contest that runs through May 8th involving a haiku about your favorite caffeinated beverage.  Not to be missed!)

Another note: because of my extreme excitement, my post may be up before some of those I mention above, so if you don't see them yet, check back!

Tomorrow (Saturday, May 2nd)

-in person at the Local Author Fair at the Hudson Library from 1:00 – 3:00 p.m.


In other news:
Laura Anne Gilman shares my release day for her final Retrievers novel, BLOOD FROM A STONE!  For anyone at last night's chat, LAG/[info]suricattus  was the member of my critique group who might or might not have whapped me over the head a few times with a rolled up manuscript.  So excited to see all the success of her Retrievers series and looking forward to the spin-off series starting next year.

-In honor of other exciting May releases, like Laurie Brown's WHAT WOULD JANE AUSTEN DO?, Debra Mullins' TO RUIN THE DUKE and Diana Pharaoh Francis' THE TURNING TIDE, I'm hosting historical romance week on my blog beginning on Monday.  YA week will start on Tuesday, May 19th, and there'll be lots of good stuff in between.  Stay tuned!

Happy Birthday to Harlequin!

  • Apr. 1st, 2009 at 2:46 PM

Harlequin Books hits 60 this year and celebrates with an upswing in earnings (yes in the midst of all the gloom and doom) and free e-books.  Check out the PW article or click here for your free download!

In the category of awesome award news, Rosemary Clement-Moore's excellent novel HELL WEEK won the YA category of the Galye Wilson Award of Excellence from Southern Magic RWA!

And, hey, it's been rather quiet here in the comments section of late, so if you're a lurker, give a shout out so I know you're there.  I have to reinstate my hit counter now that I've changed my skin.  So much time, so little to do.  Wait...switch that, reverse it.





Karen Whiddon writes the very successful Pack series for Silhouette Nocturne.  Besides hot, her heroes and heroines are, for the most part, werewolves, though she's been throwing some other things that go bump in the night into the recent books as well.  If you want to see what the Pack series is all about or just want a signed copy of a book you've already loved, just comment below for a chance to win DANCE OF THE WOLF, signed by the author.

Karen Whiddon:
 
The other day, someone asked my how writing my Silhouette Nocturnes was different than writing my Sihouette Romantic Suspense books.  After all, they both have suspense, right?  And love.  True. 
 
But writing shape-shifters and recently, vampires is different in many ways.  First of all, though all my characters are people to me, these two species are not completely human.  The shape-shifters, though they live alongside humans and pretend to be just like them, have a highly developed sense of smell, four-hundred times more powerful than that of a human.  Not only that, but they must periodically change into their wolf self, and throughout my books, the shape-shifter is conscious of their wolf inside of them, waiting.  Oftentimes, the wolf inside will react to outside stimuli in a very non-human way and must be controlled. 
 
One of the most important issues my shifters have to deal with (these are love stories after all) is finding their mate.  Wolves mate for life and my shifters often have no control over who they will choose as their mate.  As sometimes happens, they fall in love with a human.  How that human will react upon learning of the shifter's true nature often makes an interesting story. 
 
Vampires on the other hand, are newcomers to my shape-shifter world.  So far, I've included vamps in two pack books - both Nocturne Bites - ebooks, although one of these stories MATE OF THE WOLF, is included in the book MIDNIGHT CRAVINGS, out in April from Silhouette books.  The other, RETURN OF THE WOLF, will be out as a Nocturne Bite in June. 
 
Now though, I am working on a full length Nocturne and the heroine is actually a vampire.  The hero is a shape-shifter.  This has been challenging to me, the merging of the two paranormal cultures and making them able to co-exist in a completely human world.  It's a lot of fun, actually. 
 

The Perfect Soldier - Silhouette Romantic Suspense - April 2009
Midnight Cravings - Mate of the Wolf (Anthology) - April 2009
Return of the Wolf - Sihouette Nocturne Bites - June 2009
Wild Wolf
- Silhouette Nocturne - July 2009

Calling all teens!

  • Feb. 24th, 2009 at 8:02 AM



I’m calling for the few, the proud, the READERS!  Did you devour TWILIGHT?  Are you looking for some laughter?  Have I got the book for you!


I'm recruiting
right now for my VAMPED street team.  All you have to do is sign up here.  The first nine people (the fabulous Allie has already signed up to be my first victim…er, team player, making for a nice, round ten) get a free T-shirt and signed copy of VAMPED when it’s released in May.  The next twenty-five get a signed bookplate.  There will be extras here and there as time goes on.

What's the catch? 
All you have to do for the book is love it and squeeze it and call it VAMPED.  Unsure?  I don’t want to bribe anyone for their votes of confidence (did I mention the possibility of chocolate?), so here’s a link to a sample from VAMPED to see if it'll be up your alley.  If it is, if you love it, I'm hoping you won't be shy about saying so.  Shout it from the rafters, spread the love.  Blog, tell your friends, post reviews on Amazon.com or BarnesandNoble.com or Shelfari or....

Respond below with your age or school year and the name or location of your school.

What others have said so far:

"VAMPED is a total delight!  Diver delivers a delightful cast of undead characters and a fresh, fast take on the vampire mythos.  Next installment, please!"   — Rachel Caine, New York Times bestselling author of the Morganville Vampires series

Read more... )

[If you’re not a teen, but know one who might be interested, please send ’em over!]

Contest with giveaway

  • Jan. 17th, 2009 at 7:08 AM

Steven Piziks [info]spiziks </lj>is running a contest with a giveaway over on his blog.  Check it out!

And I'm a day late on this, but The Knight Agency's own Jia Gayles is over at Magical Word with a blog on her specialty - promotion!

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