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Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers (aka RMFW) is holding their 30th annual writing contest for unpublished writers of commercial fiction. Submit the first twenty pages of your manuscript and a three to four page synopsis. Categories: Romance, Mystery, Mainstream, Action/Thriller, Speculative Fiction, and Young Adult. The five highest-scoring submissions in each category will move on to the finals and be judged by an agent or editor attending the Colorado Gold Conference. Winners receive $100.00 and a certificate. The remaining finalists receive $30.00 and a certificate. |
Important Dates:
For more information, including contest rules and submission guidelines, visit the RMFW Web site.
P.S. I entered HAVEN in this contest in 2012, and my story was one of three finalists in the romance category, yay! Best of luck to those of you who enter! ☺
Image:
Rock Wall Photo – Copyright 2013 Elinor Mills, all rights reserved. Used with permission.
Hi Everyone! Master craftswoman Rayne Hall returns to my blog to share some of her tips for crafting fight scenes. Take it away, Rayne…

More Fight Scene Tips
About RayneRayne Hall is a professional writer and editor. She teaches online workshops for intermediate, advanced and professional level writers. She has published more than thirty books under different pen names with different publishers in different genres, mostly fantasy, horror and non-fiction. Recent books include Storm Dancer (dark epic fantasy novel), Six Historical Tales Vol 1, Six Scary Tales Vol 1, 2 and 3 (mild horror stories), Six Historical Tales (short stories), Six Quirky Tales (humorous fantasy stories), Writing Fight Scenes and Writing Scary Scenes (instructions for authors). |
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Connect With Rayne Twitter | Web site | Goodreads |
Image Credit:
Female Pirate with Sword, Illustration by Paul Davies. Copyright Rayne Hall.
Author portrait (Woman in Blue) by Kuoke. Copyright Rayne Hall.

Today, I’m interviewing my critique partner and fellow RWA-FF&P chapter mate Georgia Lyn Hunter.
She joins me at my second online home – Paranormal Unbound – to share her thoughts on all things paranormal.
She’ll also give us the scoop on her debut paranormal romance release Absolute Surrender. And one lucky commenter will receive an e-ARC copy of her book.
Join us today at Paranormal Unbound for this lively discussion and a chance to win a great free read. –>
Book Cover/Image Credit
Cover Design by Montana Jade, Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Used here with permission of author.

I’m super pleased to announce the launch of a new group blog, Paranormal Unbound. I’m one of the nine writers who’ve joined forces to share with you, dear readers, our love of the paranormal genre.
What can you expect? Chatter on books, books, and more books, of course!
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* Amber Belldene * Celia Breslin * Lexi George |
* Erica Hayes * Suzanne Johnson * Lisa Kessler |
* A. J. Larrieu * Angela Quarles * Elizabeth Staab |
Hello Dear Readers. I’m delighted to welcome my writer pal and chapter mate from RWA-FF&P Paula Millhouse to my blog. Paula writes romantic suspense, fantasy, and paranormal romance. Three of my favorite things. 🙂
She joins us today to share her latest release Three Wishes and some fun facts about herself. Take it away, Paula!
What’s on your bookshelf and/or in your To Be Read pile?
I’m reading The Genie Ignites, by Kellyann Zuzulo, and really getting into the mystery/fantasy of her exotic desert story. My bookshelf holds Harlan Coban and James Patterson thrillers, right beside Deborah Harkness’ Discovery of Witches and Diana Gabalon’s Outlander. Your new release, Haven, is at the top of my list when it comes out in June.
Do you have a favorite author?
I find there are too many excellent authors out there to simply choose one. Now that I know what goes into writing quality fiction, I’m in awe of so many storytellers.
What two authors would you love to chat with over a meal? Better yet, what two authors would you take on a writer’s retreat?
Shakespeare, and JRR Tolkien – just imagine the discussions an author could get into with that duo.
If the Earth was about to be destroyed to make way for a Hyperspace Bypass (Hello, Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) and you have mere minutes to vacate, what book would you grab to take with you? In addition to your towel, of course. ?
My blank journal. I’d use it to document all the cool stuff happening, and how it makes me feel.
Favorite food:
Fresh micro-greens from my kitchen garden (which I harvested this morning), served with garlic sautéed shrimp. Oh, and a glass of wine, of course.
Favorite color: Royal Purple
Favorite music: ‘70s Classic Rock
Favorite supernatural creature? Definitely Dragons. They’re the perfect anti-hero.
Favorite TV show? I like to DVR cooking shows.
Milk chocolate or Dark chocolate? Dark chocolate – it’s so good for you!
Vampires or werewolves?
Seriously torn here on this one, Celia. A vampire like Andre Maras in Amber Belldene’s Blood Vine wins a definite yes. Heroes are required to display valiance to catch my eye, regardless of their form. I can think of a couple of Wolf-shifters who fit my description of a hero.
Sexy demons or sexy angels?
Sexy half-angels like The Eternal Order in Angel Bait by Tricia Skinner.
Tell us about your new release, Paula.
Oh, thank you for asking, Celia.

Three Wishes, my new Lunchbox Romance release from Boroughs Publishing Group, tells a magical fairy tale of love lost, and found again. Set in Savannah, Georgia, Abby O’Malley finds herself down on her luck, and lonely. She gets a chance to ask the Universe for a mighty favor – and boy does she get a surprise in return.
Michael McKnight responds the second Abby asks for help. Cursed by the fairy court to wear the insidious disguise of a tiny leprechaun for hoarding gold and misappropriating magic, he’s loved Abby since they were children. He means to see her wishes granted. Together they do battle with an evil banker bent on stealing Abby’s bar, a Savannah historic landmark. Even though Abby doesn’t recognize Michael in his current form, her soul somehow falls for his all over again.
That sets off some pretty spectacular fireworks, and magical transformations.
I’ll avoid any more spoilers and let your readers discover the rest of the story.
I enjoyed writing Three Wishes. Watching these characters come alive and assume their true nature amazed me. I set Three Wishes in Savannah, my hometown – and because we southerners think of St. Patrick’s Day as a national holiday, the setting morphed into a character, too.
Oh, and did I mention all the fairies? Did you know in Irish folklore that leprechauns, a type of fairy, were once enormous, formidable protectors? When organized religion moved in they changed the old stories and reduced the leprechauns to their current size and reputation. Who knew?
Urban legend, or truth? You decide. All I know is tales like this fire up my writer’s imagination.
A special thanks to for giving my short story fairy wings to fly on, and to Celia Breslin for hosting me today.
Three Wishes Excerpt
“For the love of God, you’re a leprechaun!”
Folklore about these little men swam in Abby’s clouded head as she reared up, the creature’s lapels in her grasp. Leprechauns were a sort of fairy without wings. But also… “Gold! Good God! Leprechauns are magic fairies who own gold!”
He narrowed his eyes. “That’s the best you can do?”
“What?” She couldn’t believe she’d caught him.
“Gold. That’s all you got? Is that the only thing you know about us?”
Abby cocked her head but didn’t take her eyes or hands off the creature. Weren’t they supposed to be ugly little old men with canes and a penchant for evil? She moved in closer and inspected him. Definitely not ugly. Handsome, in a way, if a good deal smaller than herself. He looked about four feet tall. More like a dwarf.
A smile lit her eyes. “You’re tall for a leprechaun.”
He leered at her. “Let me introduce myself. My name is Michael McKnight…the Tall.” He winked.
The bitterness in his comment surprised her. Leprechauns were apparently sensitive about their size. Who knew?
She opened her mouth to speak but found herself mute. Michael McKnight didn’t look old, maybe in his late twenties. He had green eyes that sparkled with a color she’d seen somewhere before—maybe in the depths of the ocean? Almost turquoise, with flecks of gold, they drew her in. His hair hung long, a shock of red-blonde locks like hers. Coarse, untamable and thick… She reached out and touched it, curious about the texture. He tried to pull away, his eyes wide, and under her hands firm muscles rippled. She blinked her eyes to clear them while her tummy responded with a strange flutter. Was that attraction? Her leprechaun was buff. Weird.
She shook her head to clear her thoughts and stared into the ocean of Michael’s eyes for a second too long. His expression softened and he drew in a breath, flaring his nostrils. Then he put his hand on her arm and tried to wiggle free. “Not so tight.”
Her heart pounded in her chest. “You owe me three wishes.”
His mouth fell open, and an expression of annoyance clouded his face. “Let me guess. You want my pot of gold.”
A smile pulled at the edges of her lips. Was that what everyone who caught a leprechaun wished for? It would certainly solve a lot of her problems.
He drew in another sigh and searched the far-off woods with his eyes. “Go ahead. Ask away.” The resignation in his voice only spiked her curiosity.
“It’s true, I need money. I…I…”
He leaned closer and peered into her eyes. “Go on, Abby.”
She knitted her brows and chewed on her bottom lip. “How do you know my name?”
His expression brightened considerably. “Is that one of your wishes? To know how I know your name?”
Curiosity flared, but she held her tongue. He seemed to want to tell her, but panic raced through Abby’s mind and she shook her head. Just state your three wishes. They’re known for their trickery. She refused to let him cheat her out of what she really needed.
“State them.”
“Huh?”
He averted his eyes. “Your wishes. Let’s get this over with, shall we?” Disappointment resonated in his voice.
Where To Find Three Wishes
Boroughs Publishing Group | All Romance | Amazon | Smashwords
Three Wishes Book Cover Design / Image Credit:
Cover copyright 2013, Boroughs Publishing Group.
More Paula
Paula Millhouse grew up in Savannah, Georgia where Spanish moss whispers tales in breezes from the Atlantic Ocean, and the Intracoastal Waterway. As a child Paula soaked in the sunshine and heritage of cobblestones, pirate lore, and stories steeped in savory mysteries of the south. She’s a member of Romance Writers of America, the Fantasy, Futuristic, & Paranormal chapter, the Mystery/Suspense chapter (Kiss of Death), and a member of Savvy Authors.
In the southern tradition of storytellers, she loves sharing the lives of her characters with readers, and following her muse on the quest for happily-ever-afters in thrilling romantic fiction.
She lives with her husband at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains with their pack and pride of furry babies.
Connect with Paula
Web site | Twitter | Facebook
Last week, I attended EPICON, aka writer’s conference for the Electronic Publishing Industry Coalition. It was my very first conference as a professional writer and I was excited to attend. They offered an interesting workshop line-up and, best of all, I’d get to meet my publisher, senior editor, and editor from Champagne Book Group. Yay!
When my family found out the conference was in Vancouver, WA – mere minutes from Portland, OR – the husband insisted they tag along. “We’ll play tourist while you geek out,” he said. Fine by me. What was sooooo NOT fine by me, however, was the stomach virus that invaded my system shortly before our departure. Argh!
Perrier, rice crackers, and ginger tea helped me survive and, despite the annoying stomach-bug-from-hell, I managed to spend quality time with my wonderful, Champagne Book Group peeps: J. Ellen Smith, Publisher; Cassie Knight, Senior Editor; and Acquisitions Editor (and my editor) Virginia Nelson. I also attended an enlightening Q&A Publisher/Editor panel plus most workshops, including these:
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After the workshops on Thursday evening, all day Friday, and Saturday morning, my daughter gave me wistful, I-miss-you-Mama, little-kitten eyes and asked me to go to lunch with the family in Portland.
Lunch turned into playing tourist in the rain for the rest of the day.
Fun stops included the infamous Powell’s bookstore and the home of the Best Doughnuts On The Planet, Voodoo Doughnuts. And yes, people do wait in lines wrapped around the block – in the rain – to get into this shop. They’re that good, or so my husband and kiddo assured me.
Next year’s EPICON will take place at the historic (and possibly haunted!?) Menger Hotel in downtown San Antonio. This conference also includes a reader’s event. Maybe I’ll see you there. 🙂
Rayne Hall visits my blog today to share how locations inspire her creativity. Take it away Rayne…
“Where do you find your ideas?” people often ask me.
The truth is, I don’t find ideas. Ideas find me.
Like ghosts, they seek me out, haunt me, and don’t let go until the story is written. My mind is like a revolving drum filled with hundreds of jigsaw pieces, each representing a story idea. Sometimes two or more pieces click together, and that’s when a story takes shape.
The location is often among the first jigsaw pieces to click. The setting lends atmosphere and determines the flavour of the story. Some of the places in my stories are real, others exist only in my imagination, while yet others are a blend of the real and the imagined.
The tales in 13 British Horror Stories are inspired by the places where I have lived and travelled in Britain. I live in a small dilapidated town of former Victorian grandeur on the south coast of England, and if you know the region, you may recognise the landscapes that inspired some of the tales.
The southeast of England has many village churches from the Norman period and the Middle Ages, many of them in isolated locations, often surrounded by tilting, lichen-encrusted gravestones. To research Take Me To St. Roch’s I spent a night in one of those old cemeteries, taking notes about every flickering shadow and every creepy noise. I jotted down how the wooden gate creaked on unoiled hinges, how the gravel crunched under my steps, and how the twigs of the trees beckoned like skeleton fingers, withered and pale.
Locals know what a menace herring gulls can be, but well-meaning tourists always feed them leftovers from their fish&chips takeaway, and this encourages the birds to even more aggression. Like daring highwaymen, they swoop and rob anyone holding food. I live in a top floor flat near the seafront. Every morning, seagulls hammer their beaks on my windows as if trying to break the glass. Watching them gave me the idea for the Seagulls story.
Never Leave Me was the first horror story I ever wrote, a long time ago. Inspiration came from reading about the archaeological discovery of the mummified “Druid Prince” and from a visit to the wind-swept Yorkshire Moors.
When the tide is out, it’s possible to walk on the seabed below the chalk cliffs, across black boulders and rust-coloured shingle. The air smells of salt and seaweed. Waves swish and slurp across the shingle, and in the distance, seagulls squawk. On one side, the sea glints like a diamond-studded sheet, on the other, the steep cliffs tower like unassailable fortress walls, a sublime sight. But woe when the tide comes rolling in while you’re still on the seabed! With no accessible path for miles, you’ll be trapped between the rock face and the smashing waves. In Double Rainbows, I imagined this scenario. What happens if you realise you got the time wrong?
The ferocious force of wind and waves sometimes erodes the cliffs and breaks off whole sections. The first time I walked below Fairlight Cliffs, the sight made my throat constrict. A large chunk of the cliff had recently fallen, leaving houses half destroyed, half standing. From below, I could see the inside of living rooms and kitchens, still furnished, as if any moment the inhabitants would enter. For years, the sight haunted me, but I could not come up with a story. Then St Leonards Writers decided to write stories about a local area, the so-called America Ground. Around the same time, I revisited Hastings Castle, which was partially destroyed during a violent storm 1287 when part of the cliff on which it stood fell. The three places – Fairlight, Hastings Castle, America Ground – clicked together, and I placed my story Scruples during the 1287 storm.
I had long mulled over a ghost story idea, but could not bring it to life until the plot clicked with several places from my memory. I recalled the railway tunnel next to the station where I used to wait after school for the train home, its entrance gaping like a black, hungry mouth. This combined with memories of travels in Wales, of steep slopes, grey slate houses, and drizzling rain. The story Through the Tunnel is the result.
The Devil You Know started with the memory of a night I spent as a young woman on a platform at Richmond station, waiting for the morning train to take me home, trying to sleep while the cold from the metal bench seeped through my thin dress. I kept the bench but moved it to an imaginary railway station on the Kent-Sussex border. Many of the small railway stations these days are unstaffed most of the time, with the waiting rooms and toilets locked, and the help points are often out of order.
Many years ago, I joined a group of divers for a holiday in Dorset. I couldn’t dive – I still can’t – but I listened to them as they talked about their plans for the day, and discussed the adventures at the evening campfire. I wondered if a wreck could be haunted, and what would be the worst thing that could go wrong on a dive. The divers were eager to help me with their know-how. The resulting story was I Dived the Pandora, which has been published in several versions. The current version is set in Sussex.
The main idea for Four Bony Hands haunted me for many years. What if the events in a certain fairytale didn’t happen quite the way everyone believes? After several abandoned attempts, another jigsaw piece clicked: the place was a cosy interior, heated by a big oven, providing shelter from the cold weather, refuge from persecution, and sanctuary from evil. Although the story takes place indoors, you can imagine the pine and oak woods surrounding the cottage, snow-laden like the Scottish forests in winter.
Beltane was my entry for a contest where each writer has twenty-four hours to create a complete story about a given topic. The theme was something about a blind fruit vendor and a young female customer. It was the first of May – the date of the traditional Celtic Beltane festival – and fresh green leaves and white blooms covered the trees, so I decided to set the story in ancient England in Celtic times. What did the blind vendor know that the girl did not? The story didn’t win, but I liked it, and a year later I wrote a more polished version.
Stone circles hold a deep fascination for me, and there are many of them in Britain. I’ve visited many stone circles, from the big ones like Avebury and Stonehenge to the ones which are so small they’re hard to spot among the bracken, from the major tourist attractions to the unknown ones, accessible only after a long hike, climbing across stiles and squeezing through thorny brambles. My favourites are the stone circles of Cornwall: Tregeseal, Merry Maidens, Boscawen-Un and all the others. Sometimes I would reach an out-of-the way place and discover that a previous visitor had left an offering, such as a posy of wildflowers, which always delighted me. On one occasion, though, I was disconcerted to find the offering was the flattened, fire-parched body of a frog. Readers familiar with Cornwall will recognise the landscape in the story Druid Stones and may even guess which circle was the fictional inspiration for the Dredhek Stones.
Burning was one of the most difficult stories I’ve ever written, and I believe it’s one of my best. Several places combined in my mind to form the inspiration. The first was a house on fire in the neighbourhood. My father forced me to watch it burn, even though at the age of seven I was upset and terrified. The second was also a house that burned out. This time, I did not witness the inferno, but I heard afterwards that the Turkish family who lived there had not been able to get out. Their charred skeletons told how they had cowered in the corner as the flames devoured them, and the father had shielded his daughters with his own body for as long as he could. This moved me deeply, and then I heard someone say, “They were only Turks. Good riddance to the vermin.”
Later, I learnt about the atrocities committed against Jews during the Nazi period. In the town of my birth, locals burnt the synagogue and then built a church on that spot. In a nearby town, the eager citizens went even further: they locked the Jewish population into the synagogue before they set it on fire. The fire brigade, instead of putting out the flames, fanned and fed them, and made sure none of the Jews could escape. Much later, after the al-Qaeda bombings in London, a wave of burning hatred against Arabs swept through England, and it frightened me. Burning houses, churches, racial hatred, hypocrisy, a scared child witnessing events she cannot understand… these elements clicked together into a disturbing tale of human evil.
The story Only a Fool started with a real incident. As a young woman, I lived in London. One night I walked home from the Tube station when a drunken man attacked me, and I was saved by my wits and vivid imagination. For the story, I added memories of the many places where I had been nervous to walk alone, the kind of alley where shattered windows wink in the sparse light and footsteps echo as loud as your thudding heart.
I enjoy evoking the atmosphere of a place with the senses of sound, touch and smell.
My stories involve little violence. They are horror, but not of the slash-and-gore type with chainsaw massacres and lakes of blood. My brand of horror is of the suspenseful, creepy kind. Where other horror writers shock their readers with graphically mangled corpses, I tantalise mine with places that ooze creepy atmosphere.
About Rayne Hall

Rayne Hall has published more than thirty books under different pen names with different publishers in different genres, mostly fantasy, horror and non-fiction. Recent books include Storm Dancer (dark epic fantasy novel), Six Historical Tales Vol 1, Six Scary Tales Vol 1, 2 and 3 (mild horror stories), Six Historical Tales (short stories), Six Quirky Tales (humorous fantasy stories), Writing Fight Scenes and Writing Scary Scenes (instructions for authors).
She holds a college degree in publishing management and a masters degree in creative writing. Currently, she edits the Ten Tales series of multi-author short story anthologies: Bites: Ten Tales of Vampires, Haunted: Ten Tales of Ghosts, Scared: Ten Tales of Horror, Cutlass: Ten Tales of Pirates, Beltane: Ten Tales of Witchcraft and more.
Her short online classes for writers are intense with plenty of personal feedback. Writing Fight Scenes, Writing Scary Scenes, Writing about Magic and Magicians, The Word Loss Diet and more.
For more information about Rayne Hall visit her website.
Image Credit:
Portrait of Rayne Hall by Fawnheart. Used with permission of Rayne Hall.
This week, January Bain, my fellow Champagne Book Group author, shares her newest release, Forever Clan, the third book in her paranormal Forever Series. Enjoy.

Forever Clan
Sunday Rose’s soul mate is a vampire. If that isn’t difficult enough to deal with, she’s pregnant with a child that prophecy states can either help or destroy the vampire race. And there are those that fear either outcome.
If she is to protect her child from those who would exploit the prophecy, she must awaken unknown abilities and call upon her guardian angels to buy the time necessary to get her family to safe harbor.
Excerpt from Chapter Thirteen
“I can’t sleep Grandma Rose.” Sunday Rose, with a bad cough, had been unable to accompany her parents and sister. Not that she minded. She loved staying with her grandmother. “Please, tell me a story about faeries!”
“Well, you remember how your grandpa always wore a feather in his cap?”
Sunday Rose nodded; her face full of anticipation as she waited for the tale to continue.
“Well, this night was Samhain night—our Celtic New Year’s feast night—and it is the time other worlds come into close contact with ours. A time when faeries and humans can come together to celebrate. Your grandpa and I were courting and he was taking me to the festival. I begged my ma and got the material to make myself a brand new dress—a beautiful white eyelet dress with ruffles at the shoulders and a full skirt that would be just perfect for dancing. I tied a blue velvet ribbon in my hair and I felt like a faerie queen myself!”
Her grandmother’s still beautiful features softened as her memory swept her back to that magical time when her man had come a-courting. Sunday Rose waited patiently for her to continue. Her stories were always worth the wait. Better than books, she got to hear a living story.
“Your grandpa—he was a handsome devil. Dark shiny hair and the bluest eyes you ever did see! Dressed to the nines in a new suit and a jaunty hat to boot. He brought me a red rose corsage and pinned it to my dress at the waist. He said it was impossibly tiny, my waist, that is, that his two hands could circle it. Ah, your grandpa, he was a charmer.”
“I wish I knew my grandpa.” Sunday Rose couldn’t help the words from falling from her lips.
“Ah, child. He was taken from us too soon, before you were born. That’s the way of it, the good die young. I’ll probably live forever, not having lived the life of a saint.”
“Grandma! You’re a good grandma!” Sunday Rose could not bear the idea of anything slanderous being said about her beloved grandmother.
“Well, when you’ve lived as long as I have child, you see too much. But, I’m telling you a story.”
Sunday Rose settled in closer in her grandma’s comforting arms.
“The town square was all lit up with glittering candles and fireworks were going off and lights were strung around the dance floor. It was a wonderful sight. People were so happy to be out now that the harvest was in, talking with neighbors and kin alike. We joined another couple, William and Martha, who were just married a few weeks before. William and your grandpa worked together at the steel mill and were good friends. Your grandpa always spoke well of him. He was devastated when he was hurt on the job—helped out Martha and the kids for years after. Felt it was his obligation. I so admired that man.”
Her grandma paused for a sip of water and continued. “Now, as luck would have it this was a very special Samhain night. The faeries were out in full force as it was the five hundredth anniversary of Queen Avallach’s death. When a faerie queen dies, child, the web between the two worlds thins and faeries, playful creatures that they are, like to cavort about in our world, knowing they can pull lots of pranks on humans and get away with it. Samhain is an excuse for them to do all sorts of things, because they can make themselves invisible.”
Sunday Rose’s eyes grew round as she thought of all the mischief faeries could get into being invisible. She immediately wanted to be a faerie and play jokes on others. There was one boy in the neighborhood who really deserved a prank played on him, she thought with glee. She hated it when he would squish flat her fancy mud pies and laugh at her distress. Imagine what she could do to him if she was invisible.
“Wow, Grandma, I wish I could be invisible.”
“No, you don’t child. It’s a heavy responsibility, one I’m sure you don’t need to worry about.” She smiled and continued, “It was time to light the bonfires in the Macalister’s meadow and we all headed over there. Your grandpa took my hand and I let him this time. I knew something momentous was happening between the two of us and I was so excited, child, to be out and about with such a handsome man. Your grandpa, he was some man!”
The two females smiled at each other. Sunday Rose thought her grandma looked so beautiful when she talked about her grandpa.
“A particularly annoying faerie named Abby was looking to cause trouble between a pair of humans this night—any human pair would have suited her purposes—but she set her cap on grandpa. Well, soon as I realized what was up I let her know that she wasn’t going to get away with any of that nonsense!”
“What did she do, Grandma Rose?”
“She asked grandpa to dance and tried beguiling him with the act of mesmer. Faeries have this ability to kind of mesmerize humans into doing what they want. And Abby was looking to lure your grandpa away for a night of pleasure.”
“What’s a night of pleasure?”
“Well, um, she just wanted to have him to herself to dance with and talk to—to steal him away from his human.”
“Wow, that’s not nice.” The very idea seemed to arouse Sunday Rose’s ire. “Grandpa should be dancing and talking with you. I’m glad you didn’t let her get away with anything!”
“Of course I spoke up and gave her the what for when she tried her nonsense. You’ve got to watch faeries, child. Some are good and some are up to no good.”
“What about grandpa’s feather?”
“I’m getting to that part now. We were walking home when a shimmering blue feather dusted my white dress in the moonlight. Probably off a wild turkey—very iridescent and ever so pretty. Well, grandpa picked it up and placed it in his hat and said these very words.” She waited deliberately to be sure she had her granddaughter’s full attention before she continued in a wondrous tone.
“I’m keeping this feather, Rose, as a reminder of how you set your cap for me on this night. And I’ve something to ask of you.’ And then he got down on one knee and asked in his wonderfully rich baritone voice, ‘Will you marry me, Rose? You’ll make me the happiest man on earth. Please, say ‘yes’.” Grandma Rose sighed. “And say ‘yes’ I did. Best decision of my life!”
~ * ~
A sudden stirring in her womb jerked Sunday Rose back to the present and she patted the child within. “Grandma Rose wouldn’t know what to think of you, child. But I do know she would want me to fight for what is right.”
Forever Clan Review
By The Book Maven
“Forever Clan [is] a great paranormal romance. I have grown accustomed to this genre. I tend to read a lot of these types of paranormal books and I have acquired quite a distinguishing taste. Forever Clan has left a positively wonderful impact.
The story was well-rounded and thought out. But, it wasn’t just the story but the characters that leave the strongest impact. Even though it is quite tough to believe, in the world we live in, that you can fall madly in love with [someone] in three days, Sean and Sunday Rose’s love is felt through the pages and will turn you into a believer of true love.
Read the full review on The Book Maven’s Web site –> .
Book Cover Design / Image Credit:
Cover by artist Petra K, Champagne Book Group. Used with permission of author.
About the Author
January Bain hails from Manitoba, Canada. Married to the love of her life, she has combined her love of romance with her interest in the paranormal and vampires to produce the FOREVER SERIES. She teaches English and Computer courses during the day and writes at night. She hopes to touch your heart with this series.
Read some fun facts about this author in Celia’s interview.
Connect with January
Web site | Blog | Twitter | Facebook | GoodReads
Where to Find Forever Clan
Champagne Books | Amazon | All Romance
Adrian, one of my characters from HAVEN, Carina’s best friend and co-owner of their dance club, absconded with my Muse today. The cheeky bugger.
“Don’t worry babe,” he cooed at me, ignoring my narrowed eyes at the ‘babe’ endearment.
He usually reserved that for Carina, or “Rina” as he fondly called her. He was totally sucking up. “It’s a quickie. I’ll have Muse back in time for your next writing session. Promise.”
He blew me a kiss and hopped in his BMW convertible, en route to the wine country to get his flirty groove on with Pedro, winemaker extraordinaire for Kastel Estate Winery.
Head on over to Amber Belldene’s blog to find out what transpired when Adrian and my Muse visited Amber and Pedro.
See you there.
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Image Credit: Wine Glasses Photo – Copyright 2013 Elinor Mills, all rights reserved. Used with permission. |

Action, thrills, snark, love…Tricia Skinner’s debut novel ANGEL BAIT has it all.
The first story in what is sure to be a fierce and fabulous urban fantasy series, ANGEL BAIT transports us to a gritty Detroit where humans co-exist with a variety of preternatural creatures–shifters, vampires, angels, demons, and of course, the nephilim, Heaven’s half-human, half-angel assassins.
The author’s tight plot, great pacing and world building sink the reader deep into this dark world where we meet nephilim Jarrid, one hot badass alpha male who doesn’t know what hits him when he teams up with Ionie, a smart, tough-as-nails female journalist. Their sexual tension sizzles and adds a satisfying layer to the overall story (sorry, no plot spoilers here).
The rest of the cast of characters–both good guys and bad guys–are as well-drawn as the hero and heroine. With unique voices and personalities they add a richness and depth to every scene. Solid and natural dialogue and delicious twists and turns in the plot kept me turning pages as did the action scenes, each one well-choreographed and vivid.
I highly recommend this book and look forward to reading the next.
[*I received an ARC of this story in exchange for an honest review.]
Where to find ANGEL BAIT
Amazon.com | Barne & Noble
More Tricia Skinner
Web site | Twitter
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