Featured Authors

Are you an author looking for free book promotion? Send your name, book title, book cover, description of your book, author bio, Amazon link, author website and excerpt of your book to: markoneal66@gmail.com.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Erotic Fiction: Shattered by I.G. Frederick



Book Description:

Jessica shatters Zachary when she forces him to remember the sexual abuse he suffered as a child. A drunk driver destroys Alyssa when he kills her slave/lover. Zachary and Alyssa work together to help each other heal, but their recovery could shatter Jessica's world.

Author Bio:

I.G. Frederick has written professionally longer than she cares to admit. For the last eight years, she has specialized in erotic fiction and poetry and has sold more than a dozen short stories and a number of poems to various print and electronic publishers.
Her novels, Broken and Shattered, have received high praise from readers, critics, and other writers. Shattered was named one of the top ten erotica novels published in 2008 by the Preditors & Editors readers poll. Broken was number twelve in the mainstream category.
I.G.'s short stories have appeared in Hustler Fantasies, Forum, and several anthologies. She currently has four short stories available for electronic download at Ravenous Romance (http://www.ravenousromance.com/), including "If You Love Someone," named one of the top ten romance short stories published in 2008 by the Preditors & Editors readers poll.

Excerpt:

"This way, Zachary." Dr. Richards walked through the kitchen, opened a door, and led him down a flight of stairs. At the bottom, she stopped at another door. "Do you agree that conventional therapy hasn't worked for you?"
Zachary nodded.
"Do you agree that you need something drastic to break you out of this episode?"
Zachary shrugged. Not really, he'd rather just wallow in his depression until he drifted beyond her reach, but he couldn't tell her that.
"Are you willing to try an unproven, alternative therapy rather than hospitalization?"
"I guess." He didn't think she would take no for an answer.
Dr. Richards opened the door. In the unfinished basement, an X-shaped cross leaned up against one wall and a sofa with a black and red afghan draped over it sat against the other. A metal cage stood in the corner, with a padded table in the middle of the room. Some smaller tables had an assortment of nasty looking tools on them.
"Some researchers have used pain to effectively treat depression. Pain causes the release of endorphins which can reduce anxiety and stimulate your sense of well-being. They can also reduce serotonin levels, but given that you're sleeping excessively, I don't believe that will cause you any problems. Do you understand what I'm saying?"
Zachary shrugged.
"I would like to try treating you with pain to see if that brings you any relief. Do you agree to this form of treatment?"
Zachary stared at her. "Not like I've got much to lose."
"Then, take off your clothes."
He pulled the tee shirt over his head, looked around and set it on the padded table. Kicking off his shoes, he picked up one leg, then the other, and pulled off his socks. He stood with his hands jammed in his pocket while she stared at him.
"I need access to all of your skin, Zachary."
He turned his back to her, unzipped his jeans, and slid them down over his hips. He added those to the pile on the table and held his hands over his privates.
Dr. Richards took two leather cuffs from one of the small tables and buckled them around his wrists without moving his arms. She led him over to the cross, lifted one hand, and hooked the cuff to the top of the arm. He resisted when she reached for the other hand, but she dug those long fingernails into his arm until he let her bring it up and fasten it to the other side of the cross. Then she put more cuffs around his ankles and hooked them to the bottom of the arms.
He strained to see her over his shoulder, watching her pick up a four-foot long, braided, whip. What have I gotten myself into?

For more information, visit I.G. Frederick's website at: http://www.eroticawriter.net/, or Amazon.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Shadows of Trinity: A Historical Novel about the Golem of Prague by Allen Goldenthal


Book Description:

The crimes committed in Shadows of the Trinity are historical facts. The perpetrators, events, and repercussions are all true. Unfortunately, in the current legend as it’s written, the villains have all been hailed as heroes and the true saviors have been practically erased from the pages of history. This concealment of the actual events had a necessary purpose in order to prevent an outpouring of mob violence but as the city prepares to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the death of Judah Loew in September of this year, the man hailed as the hero behind the assumed legend, it overlooks the fact that there were actual crimes committed. Several people did pay with their lives, not withstanding that they many have deserved the punishment, but nonetheless, this was a case of serial murder and it deserves to have the events exposed.

Synopsis:

In the year of the Lord 1588, the city of Prague was held in the grip of terror, victim to the murderous rampage of an inhuman monster created from the seeds of hatred and sown through religious intolerance and mortal greed. If the Empire was to survive, it had to place its hopes of salvation in the hands of three men; a heretical priest, a failed prophet, and a king without a kingdom.

This is their story, exposing those intentionally proclaimed as its heroes to be nothing more than the notorious villains who were prepared to destroy their own world. While the true heroes were condemned to be victims of forgotten memories and lost souls. Three men deemed unworthy by the society that sought their protection, Giordano Bruno, Caesar de Nostradame, and Yakov Kahana, and how, when they were united one fateful day, they became “The Trinity...”

Shadows of the Trinity, for the most part, is a non-fiction historical novel, revealing the series of strange and world-shattering events that occurred during the years 1588 and 1589 in Prague, the Bohemian capital of the Austro-Hungary Empire.

Publisher's Website: www.eloquentbooks.com/ShadowsofTrinity.html

Author Bio:

Upon moving to New Zealand, Allen Goldenthal has been involved as a director of several companies, as well as a senior lecturer at Massey University. He has authored several veterinary journal articles, The Handbook of Veterinary Medicine for your Dog, and several works of historical fiction and non-fiction. He lives with his wife, Margaret, and their two children, James and Charlotte, on a small horse farm where they raise thoroughbred horses. Shadows of Trinity is his first major release as a historical novelist.

Author Website: http://www.legendsofthekahana.webs.com/

Excerpt:

The next blow from the staff struck him across the back of the neck and he began to swagger dizzily. The gravelly voice of the guard barked out another command but by this time his charge could barely discern what he said. It was laced with insults but that didn’t matter to him. His eyes were rotating wildly but he could ascertain from the moving shadows that another strike was about to rain down. He braced himself for the next blow, withdrawing his neck into his shoulders, shielding himself as best as he could, and waiting for the inevitable. Only when the sting of the metal didn’t come to pass, did he open his eyes to see what had gone right.
The guard’s arm remained motionless in mid flight; the supreme pontiff having interceded with a stern command.
“This man is our guest and I need him alive,” the Pope exclaimed. He leaned over the stooped figure and extended his hand upon the shoulder, more as a gesture of steadying the prisoner than any act of mercy or sympathy.
“May all your guests be so graciously entertained,” the captive responded.
“Be grateful for the mercies I extend to you. You are hardly in a position to refuse them,” the aged pontiff cautioned with the wave of a gnarled finger.
“Should I have the opportunity to extend the same hospitality to you in the future, be assured you will not find me wanting...”
With a wave of his hand, the Pope instructed his guard to finish the delivery of the restrained blow. There would be no tolerance for discourtesy.
The malicious force caused the prisoner to drop to his knees, but no sooner did he touch the marbled floor, he was scrambling to rise once again.
“You know, none of this is necessary, if you would just agree to accept the mission that I propose to you,” Sixtus advised. “Truly it would be in your best interest, Caesar, and all this can be avoided and ended agreeably.”
“You abduct me from my home in the middle of the night, transport me across the border into Italy, keep me prisoner for a crime that I never committed, and demand that I agree to a task that you refuse to tell me. I can’t see how any of this has been in my best interest,” Caesar summarized his situation sarcastically.
“Did I ever tell you that when I was a young boy, I had met your father,” Pope Sixtus reminisced. “I bet you didn’t know that. Your father had come to Italy for reasons unknown to me and I, as a young friar, was merely walking humbly along the road. When we passed, he stared musingly at me and cried out that one day I would be Pope.”
“And you resent my father for telling you your future?”
“No, I resent your father, Michel Nostradamus, for having a gift that he did not deserve. God’s gifts should be given only to those that are believers. Those that merit them, not to some carnival master who performed parlor tricks for the aristocracy and the wealthy.”
“My father had a different version of that story.”
“Pray tell.”
“He told me that he was traveling on the road when he saw the young Franciscan monk, Felice Peretti. He was so grieved to see that he would become Pope one day that he knelt before him and started to cry. And when you asked him why he was crying, it was due he said, “Because you would become Pope one day.” Trust me, those weren’t tears of joy.”
Shadows of Trinity is also available at

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Trigger Pull: A Novel by Chris Saffran


Author Bio:

Chris Saffran retired from the NYPD’s Organized Crime Control Bureau in 2002. Since then he’s written several screenplays for film and television, and consulted on creative projects as an expert in criminal law and investigations. In 2004, he founded KinderShield Agency, a private detective firm dedicated to protecting children. Trigger Pull is his first novel.

Book Description:

Washington Heights, Christmas Eve, 1989. The drug wars that have terrorized the streets for years have just claimed another innocent life. But undercover detective Robby W— isn't about to let his brother's life go cheaply. He will wage a one-man war against the most powerful, and most deadly industry in New York. After a decade of infiltrating the gritty underworld of the drug lords, Robby is the closest he’s ever been to confronting his brother’s killer. But have his years of playing by their rules stirred within him a force darker than those he hunts? Taken from the files of his career putting away drug traffickers, Saffran weaves a brutal tale of cops, killers, and street justice—written from the perspective of an undercover in the trenches.

Excerpt:

Christmas Eve on a Sunday in Washington Heights. The air was crammed with Yuletide spirit. Dyckman Street was a gaudy festival of blinking lights, melting snowball pocks, excited children, opportunistic drunks, late shoppers, Dominican Santas, and plastic Christs, reindeer, Marys, and Magi. An army of fat snowflakes drifted down like fish food in a winter aquarium.
Juanito stepped wide off the curb to avoid a slate-gray puddle of once driven snow. He darted through the scant traffic on Dyckman and cut toward Post Avenue, his Timberlands tapping crisply on the wet, salt-crusted asphalt. The cold on his face, he tasted salty mucus on his upper lip—the thin clear stuff that ran uncontrollably when the mercury limboed under the twenty-degree mark. His fingers were already numb against the box he was clutching to when he entered the cloying warmth of a bodega on the corner of Post. He shook his head to free it of snowflakes, though most had already seeped into the black of his knit hat. The cold had caused his cheeks to rosy up and contract so that his face was contorted into a dopy grin. He pointed this frozen grin at the man behind the Plexiglas-framed counter, who returned the smile and threw in a Feliz Navidad! for good measure. Juanito made his way to the cold case in the rear, weaving through a group of older men who were standing around or sitting on milk crates in the front of the store, drinking rum out of paper coffee cups.
Before sliding the cold case door open, Juanito put down the box containing the Nintendo he’d bought his brother, Pedrito. He looked at his hands. They were frozen into talons. He clenched and relaxed them a few times until they were more or less working again, and opened the case. He filled in the empty slots of a battered six-pack of El Presidente and slid it out of the case. Picking up the Nintendo, he pushed his way back through the cluster of old men. One of them ruffled his head and offered him a, “Eh, Juanito! Cómo está?” Juanito flashed his stupid smile at the man and kept moving. He slapped the frosty six-pack on the counter and fought four numb fingers into the tight front pocket of his jeans. Eventually, he came up with some crinkled bills, paid for the beer, repositioned his awkward grip on the Nintendo box, and headed toward the door. It was then, exiting the bodega, that Juanito first noticed the Acura. Heading eastbound on Dyckman Street, it was the color of maroon bleeding, sporting black—almost opaque—tinted windows. Both windows on the driver’s side slid down halfway, and Juanito could see in. There were three of them, looking right at him. This was it. It had to be.
From the corner, Juanito watched the Acura go down to the end of the block and make a left. He heard the tires peel as took off to circle the block and ap pear in front of him. He thought of running to his building—in all likelihood he could get there before the car came around the corner and down Post Avenue—but he didn’t. He had to prepare himself. He would need to see the car again. To wait until the last possible moment. To experience and embrace the point of no return, before he would be able to do what he knew he had to. He proceeded up Post Avenue, outwardly the picture of calm—fighting to keep his breath steady, and marveling at the myriad ways his body sought to defy his relaxed projection. Trembling, fatigue, breathlessness, tingling in his extremities. He had a desperate urge to throw down the Nintendo and the beer, and put his hands in his pockets to warm them and get the circulation going. But they’d seen him with these things already. It was important that he do nothing to signal he was on to them. So he kept walking at a steady pace, carrying his bulky parcels up Post Avenue; his eyes fixed on corner ahead of him, thrilling and dreading to see the Acura. He was on the verge of second-guessing his assessment of the situation when the Acura turned off Academy Street and roll down Post Avenue toward him at a pace that suggested that, like him, its occupants wanted to convey an attitude of nonchalance. But he knew them for what they were. Could feel the retrained energy coming off them in palpable waves, like a tiger coiled for the pounce. He looked at the building next to him: 17 P ost Avenue. Almost there. From the corner of his eye, he watched the Acura come even with him across the street. Heard it cut the quick U-turn. He was in front of 23 Post Avenue. Going to be close. Now it was coming up behind him at a creep. The last few paces seemed to take years.
He finally made it to the long, narrow walkway that led to the lobby vestibule of 25 Post Avenue, where he had lived all his life. Once he crested the corner of the walkway and was momentarily out of the Acura’s line of sight, Juanito sprinted to the building’s vestibule. The front door was open as always, and the inner door was locked. Nobody in the building had a key to the inner door, but it was a moot issue, as the top Plexiglas panel of the door was missing, and one had only to reach in and open the door from the inside. Not so easy to do when rushing with your hands full, so Juanito flung the Nintendo through the opening and used his free hand to fling the door open. Once inside, he tripped violently trying to scoop the goddamn thing back up again. Up and running, fumbling with the beer, he tore off up the stairs, tossing the beer and the fucking Nintendo under the staircase. Flying up by threes, he bungled a bulky DynaTac phone out of his waistband with numb fingers and dialed 911. As he hit the second floor landing, an operator answered asking where the emergency was. Juanito forced his breath under control. "Veinticinco. . . I mean, twenty-five Post Avenue!"20"What’s the nature of . . ."
"It’s a fire! Help! Fire!" he wheezed. The lobby door banged open and soon Juanito was aware of footsteps pounding up the stairs behind him. He was on the third floor; it was going to be very close."
. . . I said is this a residential or a commercial location?" The operator had an attitude now. "What? It’s a building! The fuckin’ building’s on fire . . . fifth floor!" Juanito spat, feeling sluggish and dizzy. "Please hold while I connect you to the Fire Depar. . ."
"Fifth floor!" Juanito whispered hoarsely and disconnected. He was on the fourth floor. Still hauling ass up the stairs, he ripped his keys from his pocket, almost dropped them, caught them, and lost the cell phone.
Finally he made it to the dimly lit fifth floor landing. He threw himself against a scarred metal door marked "5D" and jammed the key at the lock, but the vicious thing wouldn’t go in, it only danced around the hole without mating. Juanito could hear them passing the third floor. He petitioned God to damn the stubborn key in English and Spanish, and the first real wave of panic hit him, almost buckling his knees with its force. Could he actually not pull this off? He always knew he was playing a deadly game, but at every turn he’d been able to manipulate the players so easily, get them to do exactly as he wanted. Had it been simple vanity to think he was smarter than everyone else around him? And was death to be his penalty for the mistake? His resolve began to fray. He felt like one of those stupid little fucking kids in the cautionary tales his grandmother used to tell him when he visited her in the DR. They were rounding the fourth floor landing with relentless, black determination, and he was on the fringe of losing his composure altogether when his wrist lurched forward as the key found the lock.
There were two of them. Big, dark-skinned Dominicans in hoodies worn backward with the hoods up over their faces, sporting ragged black eyeholes devoid of symmetry or humanity. Points of light glinted of the oiled metal of the ugly Tec-9 submachine guns in their hands as they flew at the closing door. It slammed shut an instant before the first man hit it with his full weight. He seized the doorknob, pulled, pushed, twisted and turned. Locked. They began kicking at it with frenetic passion, cursing and hollering in tongues that knew no language, but the old ghetto door and frame had been built to resist such assaults, and both held. A cacophony of pounding and howling echoed up and down the stairwell, pressing all the building’s residents ever deeper into their apartments, devouring all ambient noise.
So the two assassins never heard the flick of a Zippo on the landing above them. And when one of them craned his featureless hooded face upward, drawn by the new source of wavering light from above, he knew that the target had never run into the apartment. But it was already too late.
Juanito spun around the corner leading from the roof landing with the flaming Snapple bottle of gasoline held high. Before the two men could react, he lofted the firebomb hard at their feet. It exploded with a dull roar, instantly engulfing the entire left side of one man in spectacular yellow flames that vomited up a terrible cloud of black smoke. By the time the engulfed man’s weapon clacked on the floor, the sinister black billow was pouring up to the ceiling, surging up the stairwell toward Juanito.
He dropped to an awkward kneel on the stairs and, squinting through burning eyes, leveled a Lorcin .380 semi-auto where he thought the chest of the second man would be. He felt the gunmetal frame of the .380 jolt crisply in his hands three times. The first shot was utterly deafening, he did not hear the other two.
Through a teary haze, Juanito saw the second man stagger back against another apartment door. Then, in a surrealistic scene, he saw the burning man cross in front of his partner and run wildly down the stairs. The man Juanito shot at didn’t fall, but bounced off the door and hurled himself sloppily down the stairs as well and in an instant, both were out of sight. Realizing they were getting away, Juanito climbed over the railing and dropped directly onto the turnaround below the blazing fifth floor landing, wrenching his knee and slamming into the wall. Pain spasmed though his leg, but he grit his teeth, pulled himself up, and threw himself down=2 0the stairs after the fleeing assassins, his throat and chest burning in the thick smoke trail of the one on fire. By the time he saw the second floor landing in front of him, gagging and nearly blind from the smoke, his knee threatening to give out with every pounding step, exhaustion and lethargy took him. He body felt hollow, his arms and legs distant; he could hardly feel the stairs beneath his feet. It was all he could do to fight though the floating sense of detachment and remain focused. Then, swinging himself around the railing, he glimpsed the second man.
Without making a conscious decision the weapon kicked twice, and this time he saw the muzzle flash. The man pitched headlong down to the turnaround, where he collided with the burning man and his weapon flew from his grip toward the lobby. While the two men fought to get running again, Juanito rounded the corner and charged straight at the bucking human torch. He fired into him twice, point-blank, and the man sagged against the wall, then tipped over the top step and rolled down the stairs—tumbling going some way toward putting out the flames. Just then, Juanito was pushed hard into the railing and his head cracked against the upper stairs. Not realizing it, he had been straddling the second man. The man, his hood hanging down to reveal a blood spattered grimace of black determination, was now trying to shove him over the railing with all the effort he could muster. Juanito flailed his arms for balance, feeling his center of gravity shift precariously as the man labored feverishly to bundle him over the eleven-foot drop. And then the battle was lost. Juanito felt himself slip past the point of no return and knew he would fall. But he would go down fighting. In that final instant before gravity took over, Juanito’s fingers found his assailant’s hair, pulled the man’s head toward him, shoved the .380 into his neck, and pulled the trigger. A flash of light blossomed under his victim’s jaw. Black matter splatted against the chipped gray paint of the wall behind. He felt the man stiffen and weaken at the same time.
Then he was falling sickeningly backward. The man was falling too, but on the opposite of the banister. A second later the man’s face thunked into the railing, and his hair whisked from Juanito’s fingers.
Juanito’s stomach turned over for an impossible moment while he hung in the air, his legs kicked up in front of his face. Suddenly he met the bottom staircase and the entire world jarred so terribly he thought the building would come crashing down around him. The air was expelled form his lungs with violence, and he heard the awful, sharp, unmistakable crunching of bone. He somersaulted to the lobby floor and waited for sweet unconsciousness to take him.
But it didn’t. Gasping and wheezing, he waited to be wracked by unbearable pain, but the pain was surprisingly manageable. In fact, as great as his impact had been, he now realized it had been oddly soft…and the realization filled him with horror. At that moment he knew he was paralyzed. He had broken his back when he hit the stairs, and now he would never stand again. Never walk or run again. Never climb a fence or push a shopping cart. He looked at the smoldering body of the first assassin lying a few feet away. The flames had finally died out, but smoke poured copiously from a glowing pattern of embers where scorched clothing met flaky charred patches of flesh, cracked to reveal hissing, yellow fat beneath. The acrid stench of burning flesh and gasoline filled Juanito’s nose, and the thought that he couldn’t move away from this grotesque made him want to vomit. But the idea that remaining there he would likely be made to answer for this atrocity was infinitely worse. He wanted to scream.
Then his waking nightmare became a living hell. The smoking, blackened thing began to move. It was trying to rise, no it was rising. Eddies of smoke whirled about its shoulders as it hauled itself to its feet, its skin crackling. The hood looked to have half burned away, half melted onto its face, so only one terrible eye was revealed. It was lidless and glistening and searching. It found him. Juanito’s horror was so absolute his sanity almost left him. The charred hulk rose to its full height and lurched toward him. He covered his face with both hands, and the frame of the Lorcin smacked into his forehead. The surprise that he was still holding on to the gun was followed instantly by the realization that he could move his arms. He quickly tried to point the gun at the monster but as soon as he uncovered his face a sooty steel-toe boot crashed into his jaw. The blow wasn’t nearly as mighty as it could have been, but nevertheless, a camera flash went off across Jaunito’s field of vision and his head snapped back. Everything seemed to constrict. His limbs became leaden. Distantly, his mouth filling with the taste of blood, he was aware the thing was stepping over him. As consciousness receded, Juanito considered that he must have landed on this man when he fell. That’s what broke his fall and why he wasn’t paralyzed. The thought rekindled resolve, and he struggled to clear his head. What were the odds of landing on that guy? Clearly, he was being preserved by a higher force. Call it God or destiny…Juanito knew that he was meant to get through this ordeal, kill this indestructible motherfucker and realize his plan. This battle was the price of greatness, and he would pay it.
As his enemy finished striding over him, Juanito shot out his free hand and grabbed its ankle. The beast dragged him a foot and a half, but when skin and crispy scales of scorched cloth sloughed off in Juanito’s hand, it teetered off balance and went down. It crashed into the lobby floor with a puff of smoke, and a burst of glowing embers; a trail of downy black flakes drifting in its wake like dust motes.
Juanito released the grotesque ankle, and tried to scramble drunkenly to his feet, but bright pain shot from his injured knee and the floor tiles rose to meet him. Blood spattered on the floor between his hands, and he saw that his upper lip was ripped open from the kick. Looking up, he saw the thing dragging itself toward something on the ground. The partner’s Tec-9.
Without hesitation, Juanito launched himself onto the assassin’s smoking back as shiny black fingers curled around the submachine gun’s handle—but before the weapon could be brought to bear, he got the barrel of the .380 against its charred scalp. When it was done, Juanito found himself in a strangely private place. Feeling alone and out of joint with time, he rolled off the corpse and sat up, breathing heavily, blood running freely down his chin. He heard sobbing, and was vaguely aware that it was his own. He wanted to close his eyes. . .But he couldn’t. It wasn’t over.
He checked the Lorcin. Its slide was locked back. Empty. The last shot had saved his life, and the last shot was the last shot. This was indeed God’s work. His strength began to return. He could finish this; would finish this. He struggled to his feet, ignoring the persistent complaint of his knee, and released the weapon’s magazine. The gun was bloody. He pulled a handful of .380 rounds from his coat pocket and was about to start threading them into the magazine when he saw the Tec-9 clutched in the dead20man’s hand. Grimacing, Juanito prised the weapon from dead fingers. He hobbled through the lobby, and out the vestibule. Using one hand to keep the Tec-9 hidden behind his back and the other hand to support himself against the wall, he made his way along the walkway to the street, thankful to see that the Acura had stopped short of the walkway entrance. When he got to the end of the walkway, he turned left, angling toward the street at a brisk pace.
Immediately, the Acura’s wheels screeched as it took off. But as the car made to pass Juanito, he swung the submachine gun up. A violent staccato of shots tore loose from the weapon, and the car’s front passenger window shattered while rents ripped across its roof.
Several car alarms wailed. The Acura veered hard to the left, straightened out, then suddenly cut across oncoming traffic and into the parked cars on the far side of Post Avenue. Tires screeched as an SUV swerved to avoid the wayward Acura, and more car alarms sounded after the collision. The Acura’s horn had jammed. A smattering screams. Juanito lumbered toward the howling car. As he limped around to the driver’s side from the rear, the front door swung half-open and the driver managed to get a foot out. Juanito raised the Tec-9 and let off another terrible burst. Both windows on the driver’s side of the Acura exploded, and several pocks appeared almost simultaneously on the rear door. The driver slumped back. The echo of the shots rolled down Post Avenue like a distant surf behind the shrill car alarms and the Acura’s horn. When Juanito made it to the side of the Acura, he reached the Tec-9 into the open door, and finished the clip.
The urgent wail of fire engine sirens droned distantly, but Juanito did not hear them. He limped a couple of feeble steps back from the Acura. The smoking Tec-9 was suddenly heavy. Anvil-heavy. He looked around. The blinking Christmas lights. He was alone again. Post Avenue was empty.
But now it was his.
There was a new force uptown, and fourteen-year-old Juan Gustavo Chodas was a force to be reckoned with.

Websites:

Trigger Pull: A Novel is also available at Amazon.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Children's Book: Who is Pee Dee? by Kay Mixson Jenkins


Reviews:

Author Kay Mixson Jenkins has given PD families an enormous gift. Matched with colorful illustrations and a wealth of resources, Who Is Pee Dee? Explaining Parkinson s Disease to a Child is not just for kids. --James Trussell, President NWGA Parkinson's Association Kays book provides a loving and gentle explanation for the youngest kids in PD families. She lays the groundwork for the hard road ahead. --Eugenia Kaye Founder PDHOPE This book would have been great to have when my son was growing up, to help him understand what was happening to his grandmother. --Bill Bell, President Northwest Parkinson's Foundation Who is Pee Dee? gets right to the heart of what a young child can understand about PD. You must have really listened to Colt and thought long and hard about what was difficult for him to underatand. You are going to help so many people with this book. I am very proud of you and I plan to read this book to many young school aged children. Thank you for opening your heart to the world in order to help small children understand what has happened and how they can help. -Kristin Paulson Former Teacher --Northwest GA Parkinson's I read Who is PEE DEE? to my god son and his sister just before my DBS surgery; it made things so much clearer to them that they bought me my very own PEE DEE bear to have at the hospital with me and they now can relate on their own level the different emotions and troubles parkisnon's presents over the course of a typical day. I personally reccomend this book for anyone with Parkinson's that have children close to them it is a must have for your library. Ken Glowienke, diagnosed at age 38; president Focus on a Cure Foundation for Parkinson's Arbor Books picks the best of the holiday season: 2. Who Is Pee Dee? Explaining Parkinson s Disease to a Child by Kay Mixson Jenkins seeks to help children understand a disease that affects one in every 100 people over the age of sixty in the United States. With colorful illustrations, the book follows a boy named Colt and his toy panda bear named Pee Dee as they learn about this chronic disease --Arbor BooksFor years I have witnessed Mrs. Jenkins' caring spirit and passion to find a cure for Parkinson's. She has been an advocate and inspiration to our patients and to this community. Who is Pee Dee ? continues her mission to promote awareness, instill empathy and provide advice for family members of ALL ages touched by this disease. --Barbara Gatens, M.A. CCC-A,FAAAKay Jenkins has created a wonderful vehicle to introduce young boys and girls to the effects that Parkinson s disease can have on their parents or grandparents, changes that can be disturbing and even frightening to young children, if misunderstood. In a gentle, yet informative narrative, she not only illustrates for children how Parkinson s disease can affect their loved ones, but also provides them ideas that children can employ in order to give them a sense of being a helper. This book is a perfect gift for parents with young onset Parkinsons disease to give to and read with their children. It is equally perfect for older persons with Parkinsons disease, whose grandchildren might be even more prone to misunderstand the changes that are taking place in their beloved grandmother or grandfather, to give to their grandchildren. --Ronald F. Pfeiffer, M.D. University of TN Neuroscience

Book Description:

What better way to explain how Parkinson s affects a loved one than through the eyes of a child? Who Is Pee Dee? does just that with easy-to-understand wording and colorful graphics. This book gives parents a tool they can sit down with their kids to talk about Parkinson s. This richly illustrated book is intended to console and inform children about the chronic disease. As they follow the adventures of a boy named Colt and his toy panda bear, Pee Dee, they will come to understand Parkinson s Disease and learn how they can help their loved ones who have been diagnosed with it.

Buy now at Amazon.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Urban Fiction: Ex-Boyfriend by Teresa D. Patterson


Book Description:

Terrence James is Vicki Holiday’s ex-boyfriend. Rejected for the majority of his life, he refuses to accept rejection again. He is determined not to let Vicki go no matter what it takes. He continues to behave as though they never broke up, when it was his doggish ways that caused the split.

Vicki tries to ignore Terrence when he begins following her around. No matter where she goes, Terrence is guaranteed to show up and cause a scene. Not only does he stalk her, his actions show a side of him she’s never seen. He’s vandalizing her property, harassing her friends, and threatening any man he thinks she might be involved with. The last straw is when he breaks into her apartment and is confronted by her new love interest. Will someone end up in a body bag?

Author Bio:

Teresa D. Patterson, who also writes under the pseudonym, Diane Diamond, is the author of It’s Your World, Black Girl! Project Queen, and Uncrossing Her legs. She lives in Florida with her two sons.

Websites:


“Tasha, where have you been?” Frank asked in a harsh tone. He looked his sister up and down.
“I’ve been around, you know, doing me. You’ll let me in, Frank? I just want to take a shower and get something to eat.” She was shaking and ticking nervously, as drug addicts are accustomed to doing.
“You know Mama don’t want you in her house.”
“Please,” the bedraggled woman begged. “I’m so hungry. Can I please take a hot shower?”
Frank exhaled loudly. He never could say no to Tasha. “Where have you been?” he repeated.
“Same place I always be.” Tasha shuffled into the living room. Her eyes darted around. “Where’s Mama?”
“She’s at bible study and it’s a good thing too. Hurry up so you can be gone before she gets back.”
“I’m not gonna steal nothing, Frank. You ain’t got to be rude. I just wanted to check on Mama and see how she’s doing.”
“She’s fine. At least she was until that no good son of yours ran her blood pressure up.”
Tasha’s eyes continued to dart around. She couldn’t look Frank in the eye. “Terrence? How’s my baby doing?”
“I don’t know and I really don’t give a shit. He got arrested for something and it stressed Mama out. Her blood pressure went up sky high. I told Terrence he had to go.”
“Why you do that Frank? Why you put him in the streets? He’s blood.”
“He ain’t my responsibility. He’s a grown ass man.”
“Well, I hope he’s doing okay. I want to see him, but I don’t think he wants nothing to do with me.” Her shoulders slumped dejectedly.
“Why would he Tasha? It’s not like you’ve been the world’s best mother.”
“I tried Frank.”
“No you didn’t. All you tried to do was find another piece of crack. You’ve been a junkie for as long as I can remember.”
She glared at him. “Who made me the junkie, Frank? Huh? Can you remember that?”
Frank scowled at her. “Go take a shower. You smell like rotten fish,” he insulted.
She hesitated. “I need some money, Frank - Just a few dollars.” She licked her lips and stared at him.
Frank smirked. He knew she’d get around to that. It happened every time she showed up.
“Why do you keep coming back here, Tasha? Why do you have to tempt me?”
“For the same reason you keep punishing me.”
They glared at each other in silence.
“You punish yourself,” Frank said, breaking the tense silence. “Your love for crack outweighs your love for anything else. You’ll do anything to get it. When are you gonna give that shit up?”
“Why you always got to preach at me Frank?” she asked, irritated. “Just give me the money.”
“You already know that I’m not going to give you anything, Tasha.” His eyes traveled over her. Suddenly, the way he looked at her changed. Even though she was clearly strung out, she wasn’t a bad looking woman. At one point in time, she’d been beautiful. He wanted her to be that woman again, but he had to take what he could get. “Go take your shower and meet me in your old bedroom. Hurry up,” he commanded. She obediently went to do what he’d instructed. After she’d finished bathing, she joined Frank who sat on the edge of the bed. She wore only a towel.
“You know what you have to do, Tasha.” Like a robot, she sank to her knees between his legs.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Action and Adventure: Asleep by Wendy Raven McNair


Book Description:

Adisa Summers doesn't know her boyfriend, Micah Alexander, can fly. Micah's odd emotionless behavior, rigid posture, and vacant eyes are a mystery sending mixed messages to Adisa. When a flash of lightning sends a tree crashing down on her, Adisa is shocked to see Micah actually flying to her rescue! In an instant, Adisa is in his arms, looking up at the sky over his shoulder as they fly parallel to the ground. Micah shifts, shielding her completely with his body. As the tree explodes against Micah's back, Adisa feels him shudder with the impact and the air fills with wood chips and sawdust. Miraculously, they aren't smashed into the ground. They safely continue flying. Micah finally begins to open up to Adisa about his secret life as a superbeing and she discovers another shocking secret. Micah burns for her--literally as well as figuratively. ASLEEP is a superhero teen love story set in modern day Atlanta that's filled with thrills, romance, and suspense.

About the Author:

Wendy Raven McNair, a native of Houston, Texas, now resides in Atlanta, Georgia. Her inspiration to write ASLEEP was a very personal one. "My teenage daughter enjoys this type of story but I couldn't find any that were age appropriate with characters who reflect what she looks like in the starring roles. There aren't very many fantasy books with African American teen female leads and I saw this as an opportunity to create characters that resembled her and other girls like her." McNair is currently working on two more novels to complete this trilogy and she has one other novel, GIANT SLAYERS, already in print. Visit the author's web site at http://wendyravenmcnair.com/.
Excerpt:
(Adisa slips and falls as she tries to get out of the path of a falling tree when she sees Micah coming to her rescue.) My eyes were showing me the impossible. Micah was flying straight at me. But my mind kept rejecting the image. It froze me in place while it struggled to make sense of the information hurtling toward me.
My inability to accept this reality short circuited my brain and locked on the single impractical vision; Micah was in fact, incredibly, incomprehensibly, impossibly flying to save me. In an instant, I was in his arms.
My body registered the impact, jarring but protectively tucked beneath him, my face looking up at the sky over his shoulder as we flew parallel to the ground. I saw the tree descending fast now, bearing down on us. A fraction of a scream escaped me before he shifted, positioning me completely beneath his body, blocking my view just as the tree exploded against his back in a deafening crescendo of sound.
I felt him shudder with the impact and the air filled with wood chips and sawdust but miraculously, we weren’t smashed into the ground. We kept right on flying, the wind rushing around us. His arms were wrapped around me, pinning mine to my sides. He held me tight to his chest and I could feel his sledge hammer heart beating impossibly fast.
I couldn’t see where we were going but I sensed we were low in the trees. I turned my head to the side and saw tree trunks blur by at a dizzying speed. He shifted me again as he slowed and now cradled me in his arms while he still flew parallel to the ground.
We landed with hardly any disturbance, smoothly transitioning from air to land and he was running with me in his arms but only for a few strides into an enclosure. It was a sheltered outcrop that mimicked a wide shallow cave. He set me inside on my feet and released me. I nearly fell over and he reached out to steady me but I scrambled away, managing to stay up on my shaky legs without assistance.
I backed away from him and he didn’t try to stop me. I could hear my breathing echoing off the rock wall along with his. I felt solid stone press against my back and knew I couldn’t go any further in that direction.
“Did I hurt you?” he asked from where he stood.
I could see the rain slanting between the trees just beyond him and hear the storm still raging. I couldn’t speak. I just stared at him. He was so beautiful. Small silver droplets shimmered on his dark smooth skin and his wet shirt sculpted his chest and shoulders so solid he appeared to be a statue. Superman transformed into Adonis.
I saw woodchips in the tight black spirals of his close cropped hair. I remembered the air exploding around us and the dizzying rush of wind. The trembling started and I couldn’t stop it.
“You can fly?” my voice shook, barely a whisper. Then I felt the familiar comfort of my rage and with more strength, “You can fly!?”
My words loudly filled the small space.
“Adisa, I wanted to tell you but there’re confidentiality concerns and the need to maintain anonymity, not to mention…,” he exclaimed stepping toward me.
“Don’t touch me,” I spat out and he immediately halted. I was livid. “You knew I spent years immersed in superhero fantasy and suffered for it. How could you, of all people, question my commitment to safeguarding your true identity?”
I couldn’t believe he doubted my ability to keep a secret. The nerve! That hurt almost as much as his abandonment. And how could he fly instead of me? All this time, he had the power of flight and never even told me. Finally his secret was out.
I could feel my heart painfully squeezing in on itself. He didn’t trust me. After all my efforts, even declaring my love, and he refused to let me in. In spite of all I had revealed to him, he couldn’t bring himself to confide in me.
“You could’ve trusted me with your secret. You didn’t have to run away and leave me,” I said.
“I didn’t run away. There’s so much more going on here and I… Adisa, wait. Where are you going?”
“Home!”
I had stepped out from under the shelter at the far end away from him. I started running, dodging the trees. I was out of control, a hot mess inside and out. Fear, anger, relief, shame, jealousy, simultaneously coursed through my short circuited irrational mind.
I wasn’t up to confronting Micah. All I could think about was getting back home. I wanted something familiar and comforting and I instinctively ran for it.
The stinging rain punished the exposed skin on my face and I squinted to protect my eyes. I looked back and saw him coming for me, weaving in and out between the trunks. He was doing it again! Flying!

Asleep by Wendy Raven McNair is available at Amazon.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Romance Fiction: Uncovered Passion by Christopher and Melissa Golliday



Book Description:

Sasha Verochka is an FSB agent assigned to her first mission. Her mission? Uncovering the motives for why a handsome, former Marine is in Moscow. Being telepathic, she never thought it would be so hard to reveal the truth about Garrick Caldwell. But then again, she'd never experienced desire like this. Now time is running out as her superiors want answers she can't make herself find. For in doing so, she just might lose her one chance at passion.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Erotic Fiction: My Lovher, My Confidant by Asante' Ramone Barnett


About the Book:

As a high profile prostitute, Tamala is destined to keep her lover and pimp Jason by her side, doing whatever it takes to keep their money tight. One midnight rendezvous gone wrong leaves her badly beaten, as Jason leaves her near death to be rescued by her best friend and Confidant Alisha. In Alisha’s arms, Tamala finds comfort, compassion and a sense of true love for the first time in her life. Never mind the different men she lets between her legs each night, her new Lovher Alisha is between her thighs and working her way into her heart. But can Tamala forget her past and embrace the kind of good love she’s been shown or will she run back to the heartless love of her pimp Jason, in fear of losing the life she’s always known?

Excerpt:
“I was in love with his cocky attitude. It turned me on fast and I was ready to get busy. When he called me on the phone to roll through, I knew what he wanted and had no hesitation. I was glad to be here with him. It also helped me calm my racing thoughts from what had happened with Alisha. I sat on the edge of the circle shaped bed with my legs daintily crossed. I tried keeping my composure solid, but I knew he could tell I was ready to pounce all over him with my facial expressions changing every few seconds. I couldn’t keep a straight face. I needed a man inside of me to re-establish my straightness. I needed this. I had to re-confirm my vagina and within myself that I wasn’t a dyke.”

Author Bio:

Asante’s first novel, My Lovher, My Confidant is catching all audiences by surprise! From paper to paperback, Asante’ has clearly outlined his talents as a writer in his new book. Born and raised in Detroit, Asante’ has had the “itch to scribe” since he was a tyke. As a graduate from the School of Journalism of Michigan State University, he has now cultivated a full-edged book experience that will leave you tied for your words and shaken by the twists and turns in this provocative, luring, sexually erotic and heart-racing novel. And now, as a successful author, Asante’ continues to wow his readers by every line, with every novel to come.
Buy now at Amazon.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Erotic Fiction: Seduce Me by Tracy Ames


Book Description:

Has the absence of his touch ever left you breathless?

Alyanna Donaldson, the exceptionally talented daughter of an influential publishing mogul is about to find out. As an independently wealthy architectural engineer her life was set in stone until Nick Joseph came along. From their very first meeting, his touch sent chills down her spine and she loved every second of it. Initially unaware that their relationship would send her racing into unfamiliar territory, Alyanna quickly surrenders her inhibitions and eventually her heart.

Nick soon discovers that Alyanna is stronger than he'd given her credit. She proved to be just as determined as he to secure their relationship.

Nick Joseph, a devastatingly handsome European God walked into Alyanna life and instantly attracted to Ali's grace and sensual nature. Hopelessly shielding her from his life altering secret, his true identity, Nick finds himself caught between his sense of duty and his unwavering commitment to her. Together they battle for what neither is willing to relinquish and what their bodies cry out for each other.

Void of meaningless bickering and ego-driven power struggles, their saga exemplifies how adults should conduct themselves in a relationship. Their love story is a tale of unquenchable desire, genuine affection and absolute devotion where race goes unnoticed.

You are guaranteed to laugh, cry and beg for more.

Author Bio:

Tracy Ames is an up and coming author in the interracial erotic fiction genre. Ms. Ames first novel combines hot sexual energy with a proper storyline. Ms. Ames began writing short stories for monthly newsletters and as she tells it, her own friends. Now, after much encouragement from a growing fan base over the past couple of years, Ms. Ames is ready to offer the reader a taste of what only a few have previously savored.

After graduating from college with a degree in Computer Science, Ms. Ames dove into corporate America as a software engineer. Leaving that corporate environment, Ms. Ames is now a full-time writer. In addition to writing, Ms. Ames enjoys listening to live music (support local artist regardless of the genre!), guitar, competitive ballroom and salsa dancing, traveling the world (last trip was to China), and photography. A native of the San Francisco Bay area, Ms. Ames currently resides in New York City with her husband, 10 year old daughter and a goldfish named Jaws.

Seduce Me by Tracy Ames is available at Amazon.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Memoir for Women: How I Became A Fearless Woman by Pamela Jansen


Book Description:

This is my story about overcoming the effects of a traumatic brain injury, caused by a car accident. I'm just the average woman, in other words, I am not placing myself above anyone. I realized that I had been given a choice between, existing or living a full life. I chose the latter.

I wanted to share this with the person who has lost any hope to see that change is possible. I am referring to the change in our outlook on ourselves. We must love ourselves. I believe, that is where inner peace and healing begins.

I knew for a fact that God allowed me to remain here on earth, but there were times when the reasons seemed very cloudy. I also knew that every one of us had struggles of some sort or another, but life had become very challenging for this one. For instance, say that you've been striving very hard for something and you are just beginning to see the fruits. Out of the blue, there's this feeling of insignificance trying to tell you to just give up, that you will never achieve. Don't listen. All of us have that weak inner self that is so much against our succeeding because it is scared, and until we learn to recognize that voice, it has won. There finally came a time, after 25 years and over 30 surgeries, that I came to realize this is it, and it's OK to be different. I am enough. My goals in writing this book are not only to share my story with accident victims, but also for the person who has not experienced a physical loss, yet emotionally they are overcome.Ever since the day I began sharing my story with people, it was as if I had been buttered up and frosted like an angel food cake. It seemed as if no one wanted to see me hurt any more than I had been already.

To them, Pam was such an over comer. What had yet to be witnessed though, was the anger inside, pushed down so deep that even I was not about to confront it. I was furious that this happened. Why me? Why not me was the question that I had to accept. I didn't come to a resolution for years.

About the Author:

I grew up figure skating, until I eventually trained to enter Ice Capades. I remember performing on the ice at the Los Angeles Forum, while auditioning. It was so smooth I felt as if I was gliding on glass.

The reactions of the panel were that my skating was good, but my thighs were too big. They went on to say that, with constant travel between shows, there'd be no time to repair costumes if the seams were split.

Years later I was an instructor for Jack La Lannes Health Spa. Guess what? No more heavy thighs! It was not the kind of job with a future though. Later on, I was hired as a prop maker for Warner Bros. Studios. I worked on such shows as Wonder Woman, Fantasy Island, Eight Is Enough... I also took jobs on my own, designing and constructing stain glass windows.

On the night of December 6th, 1978, while driving home I was broad sided by a truck. I fell into a coma and did not awaken for five weeks. Even though I did show slight signs of life, it still took me an additional five weeks to arrive at a state of awareness. Now that I'm awake, I have not stopped. Hurdle after hurdle might have slowed me down temporarily, but I knew there was a reason that I was still here. I even attempted to return to my old job at the studios, but was unable to keep up. Another hurdle...

I graduated from LIFE BIBLE College in 1989. The complete story is in my book, HOW I BECAME A FEARLESS WOMAN by Pamela Jansen, which will be available as of January 2009. Featured in the book, Fearless Women: Midlife Portraits by Nancy Alspaugh and Marilyn Kentz, photography by Mary Ann Halpin.

I speak to different groups about my story and how to never lose hope, or they will give in to that fear of defeat. Acting became a love of mine that I am not about to shake. I began studying in 2001 because, I realized... If I can't get there behind the camera, I'll get there in front!

Buy now at Amazon.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Spiritual Reading: The Ministry of Motherhood by Cheryl Lacey Donovan


Book Description:

In a time when teen pregnancy is on the rise once more and single mothers are being blamed for all of societies problems, Cheryl Lacey Donovan presents a view of single motherhood that tears down all the excuses for why single mother's can't succeed. Cheryl Donovan shares her valuable insight into the spiritual and biblical principles associated with being a good mother. A former single mother herself, Cheryl shows readers that through the abundance of God's grace and love along with determination and perseverance, children don't have to become statistics. Cheryl identifies key biblical principles and displays practical life lessons that can help to establish solid foundations upon which to rear happy, well rounded, productive children. Cheryl provides insight the will assist the reader to look inside themselves for change. It will help them identify the strongholds of poverty, lack of education, and abusive relationships and help them tear them down with the help of the creator. Cheryl's powerful testimony about her journey from teen pregnancy, domestic violence, and single parenting, to award winning author, educator, and inspirational speaker is sure to empower, enlighten, and inspire mothers everywhere.

Author Bio:

Cheryl Donovan is a native Houstonian who is walking in her destiny as she ministers the word of God all over the country. Her captivating messages are delivered in a no nonsense transparent dialogue with her audiences. Cheryl believes in the Psalms 11:25 which says, She who refreshes others will herself be refreshed; therefore, she tries to be transparent as she speaks and writes about her valley to mountain experiences. Cheryl resides in Houston with her husband of 16 years. She has two grown sons and a step-daughter who has a son of her own. To learn more about Cheryl or to have her speak at your next event visit http://www.cheryllaceydonovan.com/

Excerpt:

Mother is a verb. It’s something you do, not just who you are. I learned the hard way. Who would have imagined it would happen to me -- a mother at sixteen! Why didn’t I listen? Why had I engaged in premarital sex? These questions have reverberated in my mind many times over the years. I was smart enough to know the potential outcome. But, I did it anyway. It just felt so right. How did Tina Turner put it -- what’s love got to do with it? Let me answer that for you. Nothing when your emotions collide with immaturity and stupidity. What a disastrous mix, to say the least. Dwelling on the obvious became a lesson in futility for me each time I looked into my children’s eyes. I understood the monumental task that stood before me as I tried to make ends meet as a single mother. I lived and learned as God prepared me for a manifested destiny. It’s called motherhood with a mission...a ministry. Every word I spoke, every move I made, affected two other innocent souls who didn’t ask to be here. Without a choice, I had to pull myself together and prepare a sermon based on my life. I had to formulate meaningful text, outline life’s lessons, and deliver the message loud and clear so that my children and others could be saved with God using me as a vessel.

I had every reason not to be a good mother. All the cards were stacked against me. Life’s hurdles stood tall at every turn. I was a teenager and the victim of an abusive marriage. From being unable to get public assistance to my ex-husband refusing to pay child support, I was placed behind the eight ball every time. But, to be a mother is one of the most important tasks God has entrusted to women. God chose women as the vessels through which He would bring into being His most valuable creation: mankind.

Mothers are assigned with the task of developing, encouraging, nurturing, and cultivating the lives that are placed in their care. Our most important role is to teach our children about God, His principles, and His plans for their lives. True mothers don’t throw in the towel when the going gets tough. Instead, they look for avenues that lead to destinations that can enhance their lives as well as the lives of their children. Mothers are charged with loving their children unconditionally. The bond that exists between a mother and child is a special one. Faithful and dedicated mothers are the ones that are not afraid to dig down deep into the dirt and pull their children up from sure destruction. This type of love can only be compared to the Love of God for His children.

Children are a blessed heritage from God. Mothers should always remember the value that God has placed on children. When He told His disciples, 'suffer the little children to come unto Me for such is the kingdom of heaven', He made it clear that children are important to Him. Mothers should view their role with importance.

This is my journey on the path we call motherhood; the ups, the downs, the good, the bad, and the ugly. I’d like to share with you my labor of love and dedication to make sure that others don’t follow my path. Initially, I will share with you my angst upon finding out I was pregnant. Telling my mother was the hardest thing I’ve ever done. In Chapter three, you will discover the parallels between modern day single mothers and those in the Bible.

As the book progresses, the latter chapters deal with my adaptation to motherhood and the implied tenets of ministry-- chapters with such meaningful titles as Open Door Policy; The Abyss; Mama’s Sermon; Innocence Lost; Happily Ever After; and The Cycle Begins, et al. Each one of these episodes give you a look inside my heart, my soul, my very being...sharing and digging deeper in myself for those nuggets of wisdom. I use biblical scriptures and ‘thus sayeth the Lord’ dictates to guide me. It’s the ministry fundamentality that propels the outreach gesture so that you may be mindful of doing the right thing. This is what this book is all about.

Author Links:

http://www.cheryllaceydonovan.com/

The Ministry of Motherhood is also available at Amazon.

Friday, June 5, 2009

African-American Fiction: The Life of a Playa Playa by Crisalyn B. Sachi




Book Description:

This is a fiction book inspired by a true story. This book is about a man that was a player in his younger days that ended up being alone. He became remorseful about his past and regreted living the life that he lived. Six women commented suicide because they could not have him. This book is to encourage the women to seek God in the time of heartbreaks instead of death and letting themselves go. The book also tries to convince players not to play women any more because this could be their mother, sister or even daughter. God can help and change anyone on either side of the coin.
Buy now at Amazon.com.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Urban Fiction: The People Vs. Cashmere by Karen Williams



Book Description:

Growing up, thirteen-year-old Cashmere Pierce was the light of her father Desmond’s life. But when tragedy strikes, and Desmond is no longer able to take care of himself, the family falls apart. Soon orphaned, Cashmere and her self-destructive, promiscuous older sister, Desiree, are sent to live with a hateful aunt. And that’s when the real trouble begins. Desiree turns to stripping and selling drugs to survive and soon drags Cashmere down with her. When Desiree suspects her lover and pimp is falling for Cashmere, her jealously rages out of control, sparking a chain of events that culminates in death. Now Cashmere’s in jail, charged with murder. But will she ever be able to fix her life and finally move on?

Author Bio:

Karen Williams is a native of Long Beach California. She attended Long Beach Poly High School and received her Bachelors of Arts Degree from California State University Dominguez Hills. She has an 12 year old daughter named Adara.
The People vs Cashmere is available at Amazon.

Horror Fiction: Lucifer and Lacious by Sean Vincent Lehosit


Book Description:

The underworld is a place where few men intend to arrive. When a man pictures death, he pictures blue clouds and golden gates…the underworld does not have blue clouds but fog of ash that rises from the misery of men. There are no golden gates, only rusty fences circling pools of human waste. You do not hear children’s laughter but the screams of guilty souls. Yes, this is the underworld.”

This is the reality that faces our nameless protagonist, soon to be known as Slave, as he wakes to find himself face to face with grotesque demons and unimaginable abuse at their hands. Still, while he is unable to recall his name or how he came to be there, the numbers that Lucifer carves into his forehead seem to clue everyone else – demons and damned alike – that he is somehow special.

Lucifer and Lacious weaves an imaginative journey through the pits of hell as Slave strives to elude the others’ evil intentions for him while trying to regain his memory and achieve his true purpose.

Author Bio:

Sean Vincent Lehosit is a journalist, poet, playwright, blogger, ghost writer and novelist living in Columbus, Ohio. He's got a two year degree, smokes everyday, and never sleeps thanks to Monsters and Red Bulls.

Lehosit graduated with Associates of Arts in 2007 and is now a writer for Institutional Advancement at Columbus State Community College.

As a student at Columbus State he served as the president of Campus Journalists, editor-in-chief of Cougar News, public relations chairman of the Student Government Association, and was a Student Ambassador for the Student Activities Department.

In August, 2007 Theatre Columbus State produced his one-act comedy “Dysfunct,” which was viewed by an audience of over five-hundred people.

Later that same year his novella “Lucifer and Lacious” was released; a captivating book about a man who awakens to find himself in hell.

Website: http://www.lucifer-and-lacious.official.ws
Other Links: Amazon

Excerpt:

I had awoken as saliva ran down my chin and spilled onto my air mattress, which formed a small puddle beneath my cheek. The room felt so cold against my skin; the thin blanket spread across my naked body did very little to keep me warm. Frozen vapors expelled from my cracked dry lips, so with each heaving breath I stumbled to the beat of my shaking bones.
I had no idea where I was or why I was there. What was most disturbing to me though was that I could not remember my name. Not for the life of me. Scanning the room I managed to find myself an old pair of gray Ohio State sweatpants, a wrinkled old tank top smelling of baked ham, and a damp pair of boots tucked away in the corner of the small dimly lit room.
Peering down the staircase, I descended toward the lower level of the house not knowing what or who I may find. I parted a purple tattered sheet that segregated the stairway from the living space and entered the next room. For a brief second I felt a warm breeze blow against my shivering body, but it quickly faded once more into bitter coldness.
The house seemed to be empty. It felt antiqued and abandoned; the type of house a dead man might live in. I began to explore the house, first I entered the kitchen. The kitchen smelled of moldy bread and spoiled milk. Crumbs of previous meals laid scattered amongst the countertops. Crushed cans of vegetables littered the ground, which I kicked as I shuffled along. What really struck my attention at the time though was not the mess of the counters, or the untidy appearance of the floors, or even the unnatural coldness that one might find only upon death, but the unopened pie that sat on a wooden cutting block beside the sink. It looked quite delicious.
I began to rummage through the cabinets looking for a fork, my mouth watered, and I was starved. My stomach began to roar as if it were a demon; it became more and more agitated as each cabinet opened was revealed to be empty. Finally though I came upon a cabinet that possessed a single spoon.
I opened the pie and stuck the spoon into it with uncoordinated quickness, then shoved a spoonful of the cherry substance into my mouth. A smile began to smear across my face as the ruckus of my stomach began to subside.
As unsettling as it may be, while the roar of hunger left my stomach, I heard a new noise. The noise was not pleasant to my ears. I dropped the spoon to the crumb-littered counter as the noise grew louder by the seconds. Something traveled to my bowels; my throat dropped to my ribcage as my organs, lungs, liver, and kidneys all exploded out from my rectum. A hole blew clean through my gray sweatpants and splattered onto the unkempt floor signaling lights in the room to dim.

Crime Drama Novel: The Execution of Justice by Michael Phelps



Book Description:

CHARLES ASHBACHER, Nationally syndicated, Amazon Top 50 Book Reviewer; April 17, 2009; Posted on www.amazon.com – FOUR STAR Rating: A depiction of a detective, who’s professional like expands while his personal life suffers, Mike Walsh is a patrol cop with a stable marriage and a so far unfulfilled desire to have children. He is good at this job, dedicated to preserving the peace and well respected by his peers. When his mentor Jack needs a new partner, Mike is offered the position of detective within the department. Considering it an enormous opportunity, Mike accepts and this is the story of his daily challenges. Although Mike and Jack are on the trail of a brutal serial killer of women and an increasingly violent gang of thieves, there is no buildup to a climatic end. While the police are meticulous in gathering evidence against the serial killer, unlike other stories, there is no corresponding meticulous buildup of tension. Therefore, it is inaccurate to describe this as a thriller, while there is action; it is not of the form where the tension is slowly ratcheted up. Mike discovers that his new position puts a good deal of strain on him and his marriage, for now he feels personally responsible for the capture of the villains. In order to gather the evidence, it is now necessary for him to attend autopsies and examine the murder victims in great detail. This creates mental baggage that he brings home; he often works late and comes home mentally and physically exhausted.Despite the lack of a buildup to a climax, this is still a book that will keep your attention if you enjoy stories about the daily routine of being a robbery/homicide detective. The cover announces that this is the debut novel of a “Detective Mike Walsh” series of novels. Given this good start, I believe it will be a successful one.

RAY VEROLA, Author of Oakdale, PA, on April 10, 2009, posted his FIVE STAR rating on www.amazon.com: An Entertaining Read, “The Execution of Justice” is a well-paced, exciting novel. Author Michael Phelps has created a likeable, interesting lead character in Detective Mike Walsh. There are two appealing story lines in the book; Walsh’s work as a new, fast-learning detective and the up-and-down relationship with the wife who loves him but also has a big problem with his dangerous line of work. The action is fast with many twists and turns that grabs the reader. Two twists toward the end of the book really caught me by surprise and moved the action in an interesting way. “The Execution of Justice” is an entertaining read.
ALAN MR, a Reader, posted his FIVE STAR rating on www.BarnesandNoble.com on March 03, 2009: I just read this book and found it to be exciting. It gave me an insight into how cops work, and their personal side as well. Parts are sad, but it shows dedication on the part of the detective characters. I could easily visualize what was going on in the plot. I really enjoyed it, and hope for my by this author.
Buy now at Amazon.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Romance Fiction: Wind from Danyari by Laurel Lamperd


Book Description:

Book one of a saga about the Hennessey family of Walara, a sheep run in the north of Western Australia.

In 1898 when Joe Hennessy saw Alicia Pennington, the beautiful spoilt daughter of one of Perth’s leading businessmen, he wanted her, but would she make a suitable wife to take to Walara, his sheep station in the wild untamed north of the state.
Running through the books is the question whether any of the survivors from the Dutch East Indiaman, Zuytdorp, wrecked on the West Australian coast north of Kalbarri in 1712, lived with the Aborigines.

Author Bio:

Laurel Lamperd lives on the south coast of Western Australia. She writes poetry, short stories and novels. She has novels published by Wings ePress and You Write On.

Excerpt:

When Alicia met Joe Hennessy, she thought he was like no other man she had known before. Tall, strong, dark haired with blue eyes and a wide smile, he looked handsome and sensuous, though she pushed the sensuous bit from her mind. Nice girls didn’t think things like that, but she enjoyed the spasm that went through her at the thought. Her mother wouldn’t think him suitable for a husband. She didn’t either. Joe Hennessy looked too much of a bushranger.
Frances had made discreet inquiries about Joe Hennessy’s prospects. When she discovered he owned a sheep station up north somewhere, she said to her husband, Edward. “At least he is a man of some property though Alicia would never live up there.”
Alicia met Joe again at a garden party hosted by one of her mother’s friends. “So we meet again, Miss Pennington.” He lifted his hat in salutation.
She nodded mockingly. “How do you do, Mr. Hennessy?”
“Very well, thank you.” Before she realized what he was about he had taken her hand and kissed it.
She withdrew in surprise, still feeling the warm imprint of his lips.
He looked ironical. “Have I embarrassed you, Miss Pennington?”
“Why should I be embarrassed?” She had to get away while she could still control her emotions. “If you’ll excuse me, Mr. Hennessey?” she said haughtily, feeling his sardonic gaze as she left. She touched her hot cheeks and felt weak with exhilaration and nervousness. A man had never had this effect on her before.
Author Links: