Blogger Book Fair Day 2: Guest blog from Jason Andrew Bond

We’re on to Day 2 of the Blogger Book Fair! Don’t forget, leave a comment on any of the book fair posts here on my blog and you’ll be in the running for the Amazon gift card. Today I’m pleased to welcome Jason Andrew Bond, who is sharing a special guest post.


King Air

I find myself troubled by many female characters in action novels.  Many land too wholly in only yin or yang, deference or aggression.  These women are either delicate, high-heeled fashion foils, serving as a mark of success for the leading man, or are stark bitches, taking on the worst aspects of the male ego and masquerading that as real strength.  While these types of women do exist, I don’t think they are typical and are definitely not well-rounded.  I want to overcome this limitation by presenting both the yin and yang in one character, broad and more true-to-life.  My goal is to show strength in women, while still allowing them to be loving and sensitive.  I’m not claiming to have succeeded in that goal, but I will continue to strive to get it right because I feel compelled to express through these characters the depth of ambition, love, and bravery the women in my life have shown me.

My understanding of women began, as with most boys, with my mother.  However, her example wasn’t typical.  In my early teens, as my friends and I stood waiting for the bus in the Oregon fog, cars would pull up to the stop-sign and accelerate away—exhaust pipes billowing in the cold, damp air—carrying men and women to typical jobs:  admin-assistants, salespeople, nurses, teachers, mechanics.  Some parents would drive by with a wave, but not my mother; she would have gone to work before dawn, leaving me to get myself ready for school.  However, I didn’t mind as I felt so much pride in what she did.

As the bus pulled up, brakes squealing and wind-blown mist streaked across the side windows, my thoughts would be on her.  I’d take one last look at the sky, hoping to see faint-blue burning through the December clouds, and climb the steps.  As I sat down on the green vinyl seat, the heat on the bus wrapping around my face and neck, I’d imagine her walking underneath the high tail of a twin-engine, turbo-prop Beechcraft King Air, inspecting the plane for damage, streaks of oil, low tires.  In the cabin, she’d greet the executives as they came aboard.  Then she’d make her way to the cockpit.  Fastening her seatbelt, she’d put on her headset, pick up her clipboard, and go through the last elements of her preflight.  I’d imagine her popping open the side window and calling out, “CLEAR PROP!”  Then she’d fire the engines, and the props would blast to life, blurring to smooth, circular sheets.

Back on the bus, the driver lurched out onto the highway, and the streaks of mist across the glass began to drain by again.  But I wasn’t there, not part of the trip to middle school with its bullies, dismissive girls, and white-faced, clicking clocks.  In my thoughts, I was in the right seat of the King Air, the mist on the widows blasting away as the acceleration of takeoff sank me into the seat.  The wheels would track the tarmac, rumbling, jolting, and then the seat, the floor, the instruments, the whole cabin, would go vague, freed from the diminishing Earth.  With the horizon below our heels, the sheet of clouds would descend on us.  We’d fly into the grim stratus, grayness folding close.  But the dimness held no power over the wicked turbines, and with each second, the mist surrounding the plane grew brighter.  Then we’d cut free into brilliant sunlight, a flawless blue sky, and glowing cloud-tops.  I’d look back down through a cloud-break to the shadowed highway and forest.  From up there a freeway bound tractor-trailer was the size of my finger tip, and more importantly, so were my troubles.  I’d look back at my mother, sunlight glinting off the dark-blue frames of her sunglasses, her hands guiding the plane.  In those moments she showed me how to overcome and thrive, and that filled the fissures that invariably run through a young heart.

Back on the bus, that lesser world surrounded me, but held no sway.  Looking out the square, split window of the bus at the thinning fog, I was seeing only the clear, blue sky.

My mother asked me once in a moment of self-doubt (which we all have as parents) “Was I a good mother?”  The question seemed ridiculous to me.  This from the woman who had shown me, not only her own strength, but the very possibilities of life.  Was she a good mother?  Whenever I see a picture of Amelia Earhart, without fail I think, “like mom.”  How many sons do that?  Was she a good mother?  There is no question in my mind that no mother has ever set a better example for her son.

Now I have to get back to work.  I’ve got character development to do…

Bio:

Bestselling author Jason Andrew Bond grew up in Oregon and currently lives in Washington State with his wife and son.  He holds a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature from the University of Oregon and an MBA from the University of Colorado.   When his first novel Hammerhead unexpectedly reached bestseller status, he dedicated twenty-five percent of his profits to disabled U.S. veterans.   Jason’s second novel, Mortal Remains is now available and will be followed by Hammerhead Resurrection.  Jason takes a hands-on approach to writing.  When SCUBA research couldn’t wait for summer, he found himself certifying in Puget Sound’s frigid January waters.   Outside of writing and his family, martial arts are an important part of his life. At eighteen years of age he entered an Aikido dojo for the first time, and has since trained in Jeet Kune Do, Tae Kwon Do, Shudokan Karate, Goshin Jutsu, Judo, and Brazillian Jiu-Jitsu.

Website: www.JasonAndrewBond.com

Hammerhead Tilted CoverHammerhead:
Jeffrey Holt tears apart decommissioned ships that have been crash-landed in the Nevada desert. He’s a shipbreaker, no one of consequence—just as he wants it. However, decades after his role in the world mattered, someone is trying to kill him. Searching for a reason, he tears into the bridge of a derelict Kappa-Class freighter and finds corpses. As he stands on the bridge considering how to stay alive, a hand grips his leg…
http://www.amazon.com/Hammerhead-ebook/dp/B005IR0N70/ref=tmm_kin_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1315073519&sr=8-4

http://www.dreamstime.com/-image14867128Mortal Remains:
Erica Morgan has yet to fully realize what she’s capable of, but when her abusive husband holds a knife to her throat and threatens to kill her, she knows right away she’s not above hiring a hitman. Seeking one out, she discovers that—in fear of his employer—the underworld won’t touch him. She’ll have to bloody her own knuckles to survive, but her loss of innocence will cost her dearly. Out of death will arise a covetous evil. If she can harness its wrath, she might achieve something more valuable than freedom. If she fails, the price will be her soul.
http://www.amazon.com/Mortal-Remains-ebook/dp/B009D18U86/ref=sr_1_13?ie=UTF8&qid=1348079423&sr=8-13&keywords=mortal+remains

Blogger Book Fair Day 1: Interview with Lissa Bryan

The End of All Things

Pre-order from TWCS
Release date January 24, 2013

Read the first chapter here: http://end-of-all-things.blogspot.com/p/first-chapter-of-end-of-all-things.html

After a terrible virus ravages the planet, Carly Daniels, one of the few survivors, hides in her apartment in Juneau trying to survive the best she can with only occasional forays to gather food. With her is Sam, a wolf puppy she found starving on the streets. He becomes her companion and a reason to continue when giving up sometimes seems like the more attractive option. Still dazed with shock and grief, she hopes for the world to go back to normal soon.

She is discovered by Justin, an ex-soldier who is intent on making his way to Florida before the winter sets in. Justin coaxes her out of her hiding place and convinces her to join him on his journey, because a warmer climate will be their best chance against the extremes of Mother Nature.

Together, they begin a perilous journey through a nation laid to waste by the disaster. Challenges abound along the way. The weather, injury, and shortage of supplies all help to slow them down. In time, they discover that they aren’t the only survivors. Some are friendly but some have had their minds destroyed by the high fever. Then there are those who simply take what they want, leaving Carly and Justin with no choice but to defend what is theirs.

But their journey is not without joy and love. Together, they face every struggle, including an unplanned pregnancy. Despite the perils of bringing a child into a world of chaos, their baby is a new beginning for themselves and a symbol of hope for the other survivors they find along the way.

This is the story of their journey to find a place to begin a new life, and a home in each other.

Ghostwriter

Read the first chapter here: http://lissabryanghostwriter.blogspot.com/p/ghostwriter-chapter-one-by-lissa-bryan.html

After being laid off from the newspaper where she worked as a journalist, and losing her boyfriend in rapid succession, Sara Howell is looking to downsize before her dwindling savings run out. Things are finally starting to look up when she lands a job ghostwriting the biography of a popular politician and rents an isolated island house which turns out to have once been the home of her favorite author, Seth Fortner, who mysteriously disappeared in 1925.

But when strange things start happening, as objects break, or go missing, and terrifying visions appear, Sara begins to wonder if Seth ever left, or if she is losing her mind.

What happened to Seth is a secret closely guarded by the family to this day, a family that seems to exist under a terrible curse. Through an old trunk of letters she discovers in the attic, Sara unravels the mystery and becomes caught up in a tale of greed, lost love and the horrors of WWI.

When Sara realizes she is not going crazy and that Seth Fortner’s spirit still haunts her new home on the isolated island, she begins to draw him out of his shell bit by bit. She will discover what happened to the idealistic young writer who went to the battlefields of France to save lives, and to his beautiful bride to destroy the love between them, and what led Seth to make a terrible choice which would have consequences that would echo for generations.

They gradually fall in love in their world of dreams, dreams which swiftly become more attractive than reality, as Sara learns from a ghost how to truly live. Will she be the one to break the “Fortner Curse” by helping Seth conquer his demons, and heal both of their hearts in the process?

And now let’s get to know Lissa!

1. Which books/authors have most influenced you as an author and why?

Emily Brontë: Her Wuthering Heights taught me how important word choice is to setting a mood, and that every line could be a poem. I don’t have anything approaching her talent, but I’ve tried to learn from her work.

Stephen King: In his early works, he could create a character just in a few lines, and write believably from any viewpoint, even that of an animal.

Ernest Hemmingway: He taught me to write cleanly and simply, to be economical and concise with my words.

2. If you could meet one of your favorite fictional characters, who would you choose and why?

Carly Daniels from The End of All Things. She has some qualities I admire: strong optimism, and an unflinching determination to build a better world from the ashes of the old.

3. What fictional world would you most like to visit?

If you mean a fictional world I’ve created, I would have to say the island from Ghostwriter. Though it exists only in my mind, I have a deep and abiding love for that place.

If you meant anyone’s fictional world, it would be J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter universe, but only if I could be a witch.

4. What advice would you give your pre-published self, knowing what you know now?

Go ahead, give it a try.” It was the longest time before I could convince myself to write a story where others could read it, instead of writing them solely in the confines of my own head.

5. We apparently dodged a bullet and avoided the Mayan apocalypse in 2012. But as they say, “winter is coming.” What three things do you want to have on hand when the Others come down from beyond the Wall?

A flame-thrower, a pack of dire wolves, and a Starbucks.  We’ll need a lot of lattes to keep the Night’s Watch alert and warm.

Bio:

Lissa BryanLissa Bryan is an astronaut, renowned Kabuki actress, Olympic pole vault gold medalist, Iron Chef champion, and scientist who recently discovered the cure for athlete’s foot…. though only in her head. Real life isn’t so interesting, which is why she spends most of her time writing.

Her first novel, Ghostwriter, is now available through The Writer’s Coffee Shop (which is the least expensive option), Amazon, iTunes, and Kobo. Her second novel, The End of All Things, will be released on January 24, 2013, and is now available for pre-order. Her third novel, tentatively titled Daughter of the Wind and Waves is in-progress.

 Links:

http://lissabryan.blogspot.com/

http://www.facebook.com/lissa.bryan

http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5442345.Lissa_Bryan

http://lissabryan.tumblr.com/

http://pinterest.com/lissabryan/

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/lissa-bryan/52/561/40b

https://plus.google.com/u/0/100312526835761488805/posts

Blogger Book Fair Day 1: Interview with Sandra Perez Gluschankoff

Fernandez front cover final

Little Angelina always dreamt about adventures in a faraway land. What she never imagined was that those dreams would take her to the past… her past.

After being inexplicably removed from her family in a small fishing town in Argentina, six year-old Angelina is sent to a Catholic convent, where she spends her next twelve years. During her lonely days at the convent, she finds solace in the company of a mysterious presence, by the name of Sara Fernandez, which gradually reels her into the life of a Marrano family living at the end of the Fifteenth Century in Cordoba, Spain. As Angelina embeds herself in the life of the Fernandez family, she understands that the presence is not a product of her imagination. Rather, Sara is the link to her secret past and her only hope for survival.

Set amid the notorious Spanish Inquisition and the murderous Dirty War in Argentina of the late 1970s, two women, more than four centuries apart, transcend the barriers of time and fight political and religious persecution to ensure the survival of their lineage.

The Last Fernandez, a historical fiction novel, is a story about courage, passionate love, unspeakable betrayal, and hope.

Get your copy on Amazon

Sandra was kind enough to answer a few interview questions so you can get to know her.

1. Which books/authors have most influenced you as an author and why?

I can’t single out a specific author or authors that had influenced me the most. I read a lot and have eclectic tastes in books. For me it is about stories. They could be either written or told. I do have a handful of authors I admire. Among them: Carlos Ruiz Zafon, Marcos Aguinis, Isabel Allende, Elizabeth Chadwick, Marian Keyes, Anya Seton.

2. If you could meet one of your favorite fictional characters, who would you choose and why?

Definitely Leon Fernandez, but please don’t tell my husband. Besides being drop dead gorgeous, he is an all around passionate man, true to his beliefs until his last breath.

3. What fictional world would you most like to visit?

I don’t know about a fictional world, but as a lover of history and historical fiction author it would certainly be anywhere between the biblical times and the eighteenth century. I would spare myself of any of the earlier eras, especially the Mesozoic era; I don’t do well with dinosaurs.

4. What advice would you give your pre-published self, knowing what you know now?

I don’t think I would change a thing of what I’ve done before. Being English my second language(I was born and raised in Argentina) and the language that I write in, it takes a lot of chutzpah and determination to do what I do, especially in the genre I love to write. So, I stick to my mantra : Just Write!

5. We apparently dodged a bullet and avoided the Mayan apocalypse in 2012. But as they say, “winter is coming.” What three things do you want to have on hand when the Others come down from beyond the Wall?

Chocolate, picture album of my family,  a box of matches.

Bio:

109I was born and raised in Argentina. My mother, born in a refugee camp in Italy, my grandparents Romanians Jews, and World War Two survivors. From my father’s side the flavor of the Middle East. A mixture of the legendary traditions and art of Safed, Israel and Lebanon.

Different languages, colors and food were my everyday. So, was silence and fear. My childhood happened during the years of the dirty war, the military regime. I was extremely fortunate to have the best teachers, who would risk their lives by closing the classrooms doors and hush to us the truth of what was happening out there.
While my academic background is in psychoanalysis (a Freudian girl, gotta love the divan!), anthropology, Judaic studies, and Hebrew teaching, my interest turned to writing. I have written six feature screenplays, one original T.V pilot, and a couple of reality show concepts. My thriller “Voices From The Tomato Fields,” placed as a semifinalist in the Write Movies International Screenplay Contest in 2004, and placed in the top one hundred in Project Greenlight the same year.

For three consecutive years, I served as a Judge for the Brass Brad Screenwriting Mentorship Award and in 2012 I was honored to be part of the judging panel for the U.C.S.B. Student Screenwriting Competition.

A couple of years before writing my first novel The Last Fernandez, I kept busy as a freelance writer and script consultant.

Website: www.palabrasandstories.com

Winter 2013 Blogger Book Fair preview

Blogger Book Fair ButtonTomorrow is the first day of the Winter 2013 Blogger Book Fair! It’s going to be an exciting four days of guest posts, book excerpts, and author interviews here on my blog. Please check out the main Blogger Book Fair site for a directory of participating authors and blogs. There are going to be lots of great books to discover and plenty of freebies and giveaways. Speaking of giveaways, I’m going to be offering a $10 Amazon gift card. All you have to do is comment on any of the BBF blog posts here during the fair (Feb. 7-10) and I’ll pick one winner at random.

Also, be sure to check out the Blogger Book Fair Reader’s Choice Awards to vote for your favorite book: http://shutupandreadgroup.blogspot.com/2013/02/blogger-book-fair-readers-choice-awards.html (You do want to vote for Thief of Hope, right?)

Here’s the list of authors and books I’ll be hosting:

Day 1:
Ghostwriter by Lissa Bryan
The End of All Things by Lissa Bryan
The Last Fernandez by Sandra Perez Gluschankoff

Day 2:
OLLY by Isabella Sinclair
My Butterfly by S.J. Byrne
Mortal Remains by Jason Andrew Bond
Hammerhead by Jason Andrew Bond

Day 3:
The Forever Girl by Rebecca Hamilton
Her Sweetest Downfall by Rebecca Hamilton
Underneath by Michael Cargill
The Jealousy Glass: The Artifacts of Empire Series by Gwen Perkins
The Universal Mirror: The Artifacts of Empire Series by Gwen Perkins

Day 4:
Lichgates (Grimoire Trilogy #1) by S.M. Boyce
Treason (Grimoire Trilogy #2) by S.M. Boyce
Keeping Secrets by Tammie Clark Gibbs
Island of Secrets by Tammie Clark Gibbs
Sworn to Secrecy by by Tammie Clark Gibbs

Enjoy the fair and happy reading!

All’s Fair in Blogs and More: 2012 Blogger Book Fair: Day 4

Welcome to the last day of the All’s Fair in Blogs and More 2012 Blogger Book Fair! Today I have a special treat, interviews with some of the authors I’ve featured on my blog these past few days. And to be a good sport, I’ve answered the interview questions also. So let’s find out some more about these talented authors!

And be sure to check out all of the participating authors and bloggers on this last day of the fair and vote for your favorite book in the Reader’s Choice Awards.


Sam Bennet, author of Memoirs of a Trumpet Teacher

1. Which books/authors have most influenced you as an author and why?
James Herriot: “All Creatures Great and Small” series; Jean Shepherd: “A Christmas Story”

I enjoy their use of humor without being negative towards their characters!

2. What is your favorite part of the publishing experience so far?
MSP has been super helpful!

3. What is your least favorite?
It’s been frustrating trying to generate publicity with local outlets.

4. What advice would you give your pre-published self, knowing what you know now?
Just keep trying, don’t get discouraged!

5. And for the bonus fluff question, what three things do you want on hand when the zombie apocalypse hits? Remember, the power grid will likely fail so that laptop and iPhone won’t be very useful.
My book!
The sports section of a newspaper.
My trumpet.

Memoirs of a Trumpet Teacher links: Amazon | Barnes and Noble


Alan Zendell, author of The Portal, Wednesday’s Child, and Critical Focus

The Portal

1. Which books/authors have most influenced you as an author and why?
I’ve been most influenced by two authors and their books.  One group are Orson Scott Card’s books, especially those dealing with children (not necessarily the Ender series).  There’s something very special in the way Card portrays a father’s love and commitment to his children. There are certain things we’re all a bit self-conscious about when we write, but reading his books made it easier for me to express similar feelings in my characters.  No matter what I write about, that is always at least a significant sub-theme.

The other author is Neal Stephenson, whose amazing intellectual scope and talent enable me to turn off all those critics and advisors who would have us believe that there’s no market today for creative epic novels that force readers to think.  Stephenson is the antithesis of our sound-bite, commercial best seller oriented culture.  In particular, books like Anathem and Cryptonomicon are the kind of creative, intellectual fiction that a reader can become thoroughly absorbed in, and come away from feeling that he or she has grown from the experience.

2. What is your favorite part of the publishing experience so far?Wednesday's Child
The best part is the feeling of completion, of tying off an important loose end that comes from seeing a finished work in print or loaded on my Kindle.  There are other rewards, of course – positive reviews, accolades from friends and family, even the occasional royalty check.  Most important of those, for me, was developing a great professional relationship with the CEO of the company I worked with to get my books out there. We helped each other accomplish our goals in a totally unselfish manner, I learned a lot, and I’ve made a great friend in the bargain.

3. What is your least favorite?
That’s an easy one.  I thought the hard part was going to be writing a good book.  Wrong!

No one warned me that in today’s world you have to be author, agent, publisher, advertiser, and marketer all in one.  I’ve found learning to adapt to the social media culture extremely difficult and unpleasant.  For me, it’s like trying to function in a fog of static and background noise.  I feel disoriented in that world,never sure of my place or my footing.  For someone who spent his life in a quantitative world of science and logic, the soft fuzziness of social media is simply appalling.

If I wanted to be a car salesman, I’d have lived my life quite differently.  Who knew?

4. What advice would you give your pre-published self, knowing what you know now?
Start earlier, for one thing, and begin cultivating contacts at the same time you begin writing.  Those contacts should be other writers, professional organizations, agents, and editors.  I think the worst mistake new writers make is thinking they have all the time in the world to finish what they start, which makes it far too easy to put off starting in the first place.

I would lecture my novice self about how writing is no different from any other significant activity we invest ourselves in.  Know what you’re getting into, make sure you have the tools and resources to see a project through to completion, and above all, don’t allow yourself to have blinders on about those aspects you’d rather not deal with.  They won’t go away.

And don’t use your family and friends for feedback.  Find people who will tell you your work sucks to your face.

5. And for the bonus fluff question, what three things do you want on hand when the zombie apocalypse hits? Remember, the power grid will likely fail so that laptop and iPhone won’t be very useful.
The power grid may fail, but I’ll want my own generator with a lifetime supply of fuel and rechargeable batteries.  I refuse to live in a world without light and air-conditioning.  The air-conditioning would be at the top of the list if I’d expect my wife to live there with me.

I will also ensure that the same fuel that powers my generator works in my flamethrower and my laser-ray gun (this will hopefully occur in a future in which those exist).  My second-greatest source of joy in that future will be burning zombies to a crisp.The third thing I’d want is an unlimited supply of the zombie antidote and some zombie-effective cholorform, so I can subdue and cure them one at a time as I see fit, and populate my new empire with people of my own choosing.  Even a zombie apocalypse can lead to a brighter future if I’m in charge, which would be my first-greatest joy.

The Portal links: Amazon | Barnes and Noble | Kobobooks | Google Books | Bookbrewer

Wendesday’s Child links: Amazon | Barnes and Noble | Kobobooks | Google Books | Bookbrewer

Critical Focus links: Amazon | Barnes and Noble


Cindy Young-Turner, author of Thief of Hope

Thief of Hope

1. Which books/authors have most influenced you as an author and why?
This is a hard one because I have so many favorites. I’ll pick a couple. Ray Bradbury, because I think he’s a brilliant writer and I love the way he uses language. I adore his short stories, especially those collected in The October Country. Sir Thomas Malory, whose tales of King Arthur have always enchanted me and and introduced me to a world of knights, wizards, magic, chivalry, and love. And Charles Dickens, because Oliver Twist inspired me to write about a pickpocket.

2. What is your favorite part of the publishing experience so far?
Holding a copy of my book. It’s really amazing to see your words on the printed page after working so hard to get to that point.

3. What is your least favorite?
The marketing. I want to be writing, not trying to sell myself and my book. But that’s how it works these days. The ultimate dream is to do this full time and be able to hire a publicist so I can concentrate on writing.

4. What advice would you give your pre-published self, knowing what you know now?
Don’t take so long to write, just do it! And start working on marketing before the book comes out so you’re ahead of the game next time.

5. And for the bonus fluff question, what three things do you want on hand when the zombie apocalypse hits? Remember, the power grid will likely fail so that laptop and iPhone won’t be very useful.
A great zombie-killing knife from my friend Jim who makes knives, which I probably wouldn’t be able to use because I’m too squeamish.

Pen and paper so I can keep writing.

Matches, since who knows how long it will be before Overlord Alan shares his generator with us peons.

Thief of Hope links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Kobo