Thursday, March 6, 2014

Here it is: The Opening Scene from End of Mercy

I have been remiss.  Another project has kept me wrapped up, but it is nearing the end.  So, I'm going to begin posting un-edited (please, keep that in mind) excerpts of my progress on End of Mercy.  Oh, and did I mention there will be a cover reveal!  So excited about that.  Trust me, it's another great cover by LFD Designs for Authors.  I can't wait to share it. 

Without further ado though, here is the unedited opening to End of Mercy:


            I woke slowly, tightened my eyelids to block the sunlight streaming through my window, and listened for the sounds of the household coming alive as I snuggled deeper into my covers.  I could hear my mother and father moving around upstairs, getting ready for another busy day of work.  Before I opened my eyes though, I inhaled deeply, searching for the smell of my mother’s pancakes and sizzling aroma of bacon frying in a pan.  I couldn’t seem to get a whiff of them, but I could almost taste the sticky syrup on my tongue as I turned over and slid into consciousness.

            Confused, I blinked a few times when my eyes slid open, and I took in the gritty, gray concrete blocks that made up the wall in front of me.  I pushed up on my elbow and looked around the room slowly.  As my vision cleared, the reality of my situation came back to me.  I wasn’t home.  My parents weren’t here.  The sounds, smells, and sunlight drifting in were coming from outside my small cell in The Heart of Mercy Research facility where I currently was locked in a basement cell.

            I should be used to waking in strange places and even stranger situations by now, but every once in a while, I woke at home again--at least in my mind--and the disappointment was sharp when I realized that place and time was completely gone, would never be something I experienced again.  Gone forever, along with the people I loved most in the world.

            Metal clinked against metal as the door was unlocked from the outside.  I didn’t have to look at who it was.  For some time now, a month apparently, Ben Parsons had been the only person at my door.

            Except for once.  Once it had been someone…or something…else.  It had been Zeke, or what was left of him.

            Now that time, not so long ago, felt like a dream to me.  Maybe it had been one, though it had seemed real enough.  He’d stood there until armed guards had come and taken him away, his eerie ice-blue stare never breaking away from my gaze until he was completely out of sight.  It had been him…but changed.  Even now, I shivered at the memory.

            I threw the covers back and pushed myself to a standing position.  Never wanting to appear vulnerable, I was always ready when Ben walked through the door.  Ready for what?  I really didn’t know.  They’d only drawn my blood once, three tubes of it when I first arrived, and hadn’t run any medical tests since.  In the time I’d been here, I’d only seen a small portion of Mercy as I was dragged through the hallways by armed guards and brought here to this small hole in the ground.  Well, hardly a hole since it had a small, but comfortable, bed and an attached bathroom, but considering I couldn’t come and go as I pleased, it was a prison cell just the same.

I was sure I hadn’t left the safety of the building.  Yet, somehow I suspected whoever was in charge had control of everyone and everything.  And that control was absolute.  What they didn’t know about me was that I didn’t back down and I didn’t give up--not after what I’d been through in the community and fighting my way to Mercy.  Now more than ever, I was determined I would survive.  And so would my sister Star, as soon as I learned where they were keeping her.  Until they let me see her, they weren’t going to get a cooperative prisoner.

            But Ben didn’t appear.

            “Step away from the door.”  The voice was feminine, and I stood beside the bed, too shocked to tell her I wasn’t near the door.  I hadn’t seen a female since my mother nearly a year ago.  There had been no women or girls remaining in the community, and I didn’t dare tell them the truth about me.  Until the end, they all thought I was just one of the boys.  The only female allowed had been my sister.  At the time, I didn’t know why there were no women; I just knew they were gone.

            It was only later that I learned the truth—all the women and girls were sent into The Dead Forest with a few guards to either live or die because females attracted Draghoul.  Or, at least, they believed that to be true.

            On the way to Mercy, I’d encountered one woman, but I didn’t count the pitiful creature I’d found locked in the back room of an underground bunker.  She was more Draghoul than human at that point.  But this, this person was an actual human female.

            She swung the door wide and stood solidly in the frame of the door.  I couldn’t move or speak or anything.  I just stared.
Happy Reading and Writing!

C. C. Marks

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Indie Authors Naked Book Blast

  Indie Authors Naked

Indie Authors Naked explores and defines the world of independent publishing. Comprised of a series of essays and interviews by indie authors, booksellers and publishers, readers will get a look at the many aspects of the indie community, where publishing professionals of all types come together with the simple goal of creating something unique; something that speaks directly to the reader, no middleman necessary. Contributors include: James Franco, Hugh Howey, McNally Jackson Books, Sarah Gerard, OHWOW Books, Raine Miller, David Vinjamuri, Toby Neal, Rachel Thompson, Eden Baylee, Christoph Paul, Jessica Redmerski, Dan Holloway, Orna Ross and more.  
Amazon * Barnes & Noble * Smashwords
  About the Authors


Loren Kleinman is a writer and poet with roots in New Jersey. She has a B.A. in English Literature from Drew University and an M.A. in Creative and Critical Writing from the University of Sussex. Kleinman is a columnist for IndieReader.com (IR) where she interviews New York Times and USA Today bestselling indie authors. Some of those interviews in IR reappeared in USA Today and The Huffington Post. Her poetry has appeared in literary journals such as Nimrod, Journal of New Jersey Poets, Paterson Literary Review, Wilderness House Literary Review, Writer’s Bloc, Resurgence (UK), HerCircleEzine and Aesthetica Annual. She was the recipient of the Spire Press Poetry Prize (2003), was a 2000 and 2003 Pushcart Prize nominee, and a 2004 Nimrod/Pablo Neruda Poetry Prize finalist. In 2003, Spire Press published her first collection of poetry Flamenco Sketches, which explored the relationship between love and jazz. Her second collection of poetry, The Dark Cave Between My Ribs, is due to release with Winter Goose Publishing in March 2014. She is currently working on a New Adult romance, This Way to Forever.
Website * Facebook * Twitter




Amy Holman Edelman launched IndieReader, the essential consumer guide to self-published books and the people who write them, way back in 2007. Since then, indie authors have stormed the bestseller lists, been courted by trad publishers and (after all that), finally gained a modicum of respect. Amy self-published her first book, The Fashion Resource Directory, back in the 80s, long before POD and Amazon and e-readers roamed the land. Her second and third books (The Little Black Dress and Manless in Montclair), were traditionally published (by Simon & Schuster and Shaye Areheart Books, an imprint of Crown). As an author and a publicist with over 20 years’ experience, Amy’s goal for IndieReader is no less than to make indie a respected and desirable category within the publishing world. This book is just one step in that direction.
Website * Twitter * Facebook * Twitter

  Excerpt from the Introduction of Indie Authors Naked by Amy Edelman:

IndieReader was launched in ‘07, otherwise known as the dark days of self-publishing. Back then, every book was considered a vanity publication, every author a failed writer. Denial ran so high that when the self-pubbed book, Her Last Letter by Nancy C. Johnson hit The New York Times bestseller list, the good folks at the NYT were still saying that they’d never include one! And then there was The Shack, another indie that snuck through the gauntlet to appear on the NYTimes list for an astounding 172 weeks between June 2008 to early 2010 (52 of those weeks at #1). Flash forward to 2012-2013. With the advent of ebooks, the publishing landscape has completely and irrevocably changed. Bowker, the ISBN people, recently reported that the number of self-published books in 2012 rose 59% over 2011, growing to over 391,000 titles in 2012. That’s a lot of indie. But it’s not just availability that has changed the notion of what a self-pubbed book can be. Either the whole “vanity” thing was propaganda on the part of trad publishing—after all, Virginia Woolf famously did it with Hogarth Press—or publishing ebooks makes it easier for talented writers to get their work seen. Either way, over the last couple of years—beginning with the high-profile snagging of Amanda Hocking—at least 50 indie authors (many of them interviewed in this very book) have been courted and won by traditional publishers. Did these authors’ books change from when they were self-pubbed to when they became trads? Or did their appearance on the bonafide bestseller lists (The New York Times, USA Today) just make it easier for the Big 5 to spot them? Not that getting picked up by a traditional publisher is always an indie author’s end-game. In fact, a recent survey conducted by The Bookseller noted that only about one-third of the self-published authors surveyed stated that they would consider a traditional book deal. That’s a lot of authors who aren’t willing to trade the freedom of creation for the chance to have their works packaged by committee. So whether an author decides to sell their work to a trad publisher or not—it is clear that indies are here to stay. Their books resonate with readers who really couldn’t give a damn if they came through the hallowed halls of a traditional publisher or just via their ereaders. The indie writing community is strong and getting stronger, as are the options for placing their books (been to your local bookstore lately? You may be surprised at the titles you find on the shelves). Yes, dear readers, this time—thanks to technology and changing perceptions—self-publishing is clearly here to stay. And via interviews and essays, Indie Authors Naked aims to highlight the best of the best.

  
BookBlast Giveaway $50 Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash

 Ends 2/10/14
 Open only to those who can legally enter, receive and use an Amazon.com Gift Code or Paypal Cash. Winning Entry will be verified prior to prize being awarded. No purchase necessary. You must be 18 or older to enter or have your parent enter for you. The winner will be chosen by rafflecopter and announced here as well as emailed and will have 48 hours to respond or a new winner will be chosen. This giveaway is in no way associated with Facebook, Twitter, Rafflecopter or any other entity unless otherwise specified. The number of eligible entries received determines the odds of winning. Giveaway was organized by Kathy from I Am A Reader, Not A Writer and sponsored by the author. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Please Welcome Amy Durham as She Shares her New Release--DUSK!

It's always a pleasure to have Amy Durham on the blog.  I'm especially excited to know more about Dusk, her latest paranormal young adult romance!  So, without further ado, here she is:

Thanks for the invitation to come hang out in your corner of the blogosphere! I’m always happy to meet new readers and writers!

I write young adult romance, with a bit of a paranormal twist. In DUSK, my newest release, Zoe Gray, high school senior, must work through a tragic season in her life and learn the power of forgiveness and second chances. There to help her is Adrian Shaw, hot new guy at school and biker-boy. But, as Zoe discovers, there’s more to Adrian than meets the eye.

In the following excerpt, Zoe is getting her first, up close look at Adrian. She’s at her locker, looking around for her best friend, Vivian. She finds Adrian instead.

Looking to my left, I saw Viv making her way down the hall. And then he stepped into my vision, blocking out Viv and the rest of the chaos in the hallway.
          Umm, wow. He was even better up close. The ability to speak left me.
          “Hey,” he said, and considering he was standing so close, I knew he was talking to me.
          I looked up. Way up. He had to be over six feet tall. And looked straight into the most gorgeous set of baby blues I’d ever seen. The deep green shirt he wore today accentuated the color of his irises.
          Black hair and blue eyes were totally hot together.
          “I saw you yesterday,” he continued, unaffected by my stunned silence. “I’m Adrian.”
          Adrian. It suited him. His name was just as beautiful as he was.
          I should talk. Say something. Introduce myself. Wipe the drool from my chin.
          “Zoe,” I squeaked, cringing at how stupid I sounded. “Zoe Gray.”
          “Adrian Shaw.” He stuck his hand out, waiting for me to shake it.
          I stared at his hand. He wanted me to put my hand in his, and even as I told myself it was just a simple greeting, the thought of feeling his skin against mine left me frozen.
          Snap out of it! Act like you have a brain, not just raging hormones!
          I gripped his hand. His fingers closed around mine, and everything inside me went still, calm… right. The noise around me stopped. The bustle of the kids in the hall faded away. And I found myself lost in the feeling of my hand in his, drowning in the way his eyes searched mine.




DUSK (blurb)
Zoe Gray lost her father... in more ways than one. Angry and bitter, Zoe spends the summer before her senior year of high school doing everything she can to forget, legal or not. But a close call triggers a reality check, and Zoe decides to put her life back together, a task that proves a lot harder than she thought.

Adrian Shaw shows up on the first day of school, creating quite a stir with his striking good looks and gleaming black motorcycle. But Adrian is much more than a "biker boy", and as Zoe discovers, he may just hold the key she needs to put her life back on the right path.

But as they do battle with evil forces that want nothing more than to destroy Zoe's chance at a normal life, will their feelings for one another make them stronger, or be the reason Zoe's happiness slips away forever?

And will Zoe learn to forgive before it's too late?

Learn more about Amy at the following places:

Find DUSK:





Available soon at iBooks and in print edition from Amazon.

Thanks!

Happy Writing and Reading!

Monday, December 23, 2013

Is The Mercy Series' Main Character More Taylor or Miley? Oh, and pick up the Box Set for $.99

Charlie Little is an interesting character.  She's a fighter, but I don't think it comes natural to her.  I think the reason she continues to move forward is because she doesn't want to let down those around her.  She's still young, only seventeen, and has much to learn about the way of the world. It doesn't help that her world is such a dangerous place to exist.

But, if I had to say of whom in the Zeitgeist she reminds me, I probably wouldn't choose Taylor. Personally, I'm rather passive-aggressive myself, and would be more likely to turn to snark to assert my independence, but that's not Charlie.



Likewise, Miley likes the spotlight.  I don't think Charlie wants to stand out.  She's got a pretty big secret to hide.

Hmmm...she might be more like Selena Gomez, confident in who she is, able to find her way without forgetting her values.

Then again, she is a fictional character.  One that I'd like to share with the world.  If you or someone you know likes a good deal, for a limited time (through December), The Mercy Series Box Set 1 will be available for $.99.  Inside you'll find Edge of Mercy (Book 1), Heart of Mercy (Book 2), and Range of Mercy (A Mercy Series Short Story).  Maybe you could decide for yourself whom Charlie resembles.

Happy Reading and Writing!

C. C. Marks

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

A Sense of Magic and Wonder--L. Jagi Lamplighter with The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin

Please Welcome 
L. Jagi Lamplighter
to the blog today as she shares her novel, The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin.

I recently got to see this beautiful cover up close and personal at a sci-fi/fantasy panel in which I participated.  It is GORGEOUS!

Jagi was kind enough to answer a few questions for the blog and to give all the awesome details on her latest release.  I'm also giving away a $5 Amazon Gift Card to one lucky commentor today.

Without further ado, let's get right to it:

    What aspect of writing comes easy to you?  What is difficult?

Dialogue comes easiest—I love the fun banter between the characters. Also the general flow of the scene, the basic things characters say and do comes pretty easily.

The hardest part for me is showing the character’s emotions through action and writing description. I often just write ‘description here’ and come back and fill it in later.

What inspires you?

I pray before I write. So, I would say what inspires me is the Divine Muse. I also enjoy listening to foreign music , or any music that does not have words. And I enjoy talking to my husband, SF and fantasy writer, John C. Wright, about the ideas. We both find it very helpful to bounce our ideas off the other person.

In the case of The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin, the story is based on ideas created by my friend Mark A. Whipple. So, I would count him as part of my inspiration.

Also, I enjoy taking a long walk, preferably in the woods.

But the main thing I do to get inspiration is go rollerblading. I skate a couple hours a week and use the time of going around and around the rink to review my project to date and work out the next few scenes.

    Where in the world would you want to visit (all in the name of research, of course) and why?

My books are filled with old houses. I’m not sure why, but all my characters seem to live in really huge fancy old houses filled with odd magic. I always enjoy visiting castles and mansions and looking at the rooms and smelling the smells.

I’d like to visit Dartmoor National Park in Devon, England, as that is where the family of my main character, little British sorceress Rachel Griffin, lives.

    What does it take to be a successful author in today’s publishing world?

It used to be that all an author had to do was write.  Advertising money made little difference to sales. Tours made little differences to sales, except for the very elite. Even being on Oprah is said not to matter, unless Oprah cries over your book.

Nowadays, all of that has changed. Having an active online presence sells books. Perhaps because people know if they like a blog that they might like the person’s writing? I’m not sure. But the result is that an author has to do much more than they once did.
This makes the task much more difficult!

    What obstacles have you overcome to get where you are, and what advice do you have for anyone in a similar situation?

I did not start out as a good writer. I couldn’t spell. My grammar was so-so. And my writing was terrible. My descriptions were flat and uninteresting. 

But I wanted to write!

So, I set out to improve. When I got out of college, I studied grammar for two hours a day, doing things like writing out passages from authors I liked and studying how they structured their sentences.

Once I got that down, I began to work on each section of writing I was bad at. I learned to write descriptions and add sense impressions to make them more vivid. I practiced sentence structure. I took classes in how to express emotion through descriptions of action.

I just kept plugging away.

Nowadays, I still have weaknesses in my writing, and I still struggle to improve them. But my writing has improved a thousand fold.

Which just goes to show…if you want to do something badly enough, you can! If I can write books people enjoy reading, anyone can.

    What did you enjoy most about writing your latest work?

What I enjoy most about writing the Unexpected Enlightenment series—starting with volume one, The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin – is the sense of magic and wonder. It’s a delightfully fun series to write. I love the characters. I love the romance. I love developing the world. But the thing I like most is putting across a sense of wonder that makes the story seem like something beyond the norm. It is very easy when writing about magic, to make it seem humdrum. The character gets used to it. It’s not any different than technology.
Some of my magic is that way, but other things—such as the world around the students—maintain a sense of mystery and awe that adds a great sense of fun to the work.

    What emotional reaction are you going for when your readers read your work?

Wonder. Awe. At times, romance and angsty sadness. At times, rather frightening things happen—so fear. At other times, a rousing cheer.

But most of all, I would like the reader to walk away having had at least some moment when the world seemed greater, more astonishing, than they had expected.

BLURB:  
Rachel Griffin wants to know everything. As a freshman at Roanoke Academy for the Sorcerous Arts, she has been granted the opportunity to study both mundane and magical subjects.

But even her perfect recollection of every book she has ever read does not help her when she finds a strange statue in the forest—a statue of a woman with wings. Nowhere—neither in the arcane tomes of the Wise, nor in the dictionary and encyclopedia of the non-magic-using Unwary—can she find mention of such a creature.

What could it be? And why are the statue’s wings missing when she returns?

When someone tries to kill a fellow student, Rachel soon realizes that, in the same way her World of the Wise hides from mundane folk, there is another, more secret world hiding from everyone—which her perfect recall allows her to remember. Her desire to know everything drives her to investigate.

Rushing forward where others fear to tread, Rachel finds herself beset by wraiths, magical pranks, homework, a Raven said to bring the doom of worlds, love’s first blush, and at least one fire-breathing teacher.

Curiosity might kill a cat, but nothing stops Rachel Griffin!

EXCERPT:
Even among the Wise, animals did not talk.
These two were talking.
Rachel Griffin awoke in her bunk bed in prestigious Dare Hall. It was her first night at Roanoke Academy, her first night in America, her first night away from home. The other girls in her dormitory room were asleep. She could hear their rhythmic breathing. Yet she distinctly heard voices. She opened her eyes and sat up.
The tall, arched window was open. A chill blew in through it. On the windowsill sat an enormous raven, jet black with blood red eyes. The raven addressed the familiar that belonged to one of Rachel’s roommates. The girl must have been a fan of the new fad of shrinking wild animals and turning them into cute playthings. Her pet was a tiny lion the size of a house cat.
The raven croaked harshly, "You are not supposed to be here."
The lion sat regally beside his human, who lay sleeping across the room, on the other set of bunk beds. "I was called. Where I am called, I come.”
“None of my people called you.”
“You called one of my daughters. I am always in her heart."
“You need to depart.”
The lion yawned. It turned in a circle three times and settled down to sleep.
The raven cawed raucously and flew away.
Rachel replayed the conversation in her head. She did not know what the phrases meant, but she was certain she had just overhead something crucial, something not meant for her, something not meant for any human ears. It was like hearing a door swing open to another world. She would never forget a word of it.
But then, Rachel Griffin never forgot anything.

Are you hooked? Click HERE to read the entire first chapter.

Or even better, click the link to purchase the book:

Amazon BuyLink

A little more about L. Jagi Lamplighter:

L. Jagi Lamplighter is the author of  the YA fantasy: The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin. She is also the author of the Prospero’s Daughter series: Prospero Lost, Prospero In Hell, and Prospero Regained. She has published numerous articles on Japanese animation and appears in several short story anthologies, including Best Of Dreams Of Decadence, No Longer Dreams, Coliseum Morpheuon, Bad-Ass Faeries Anthologies (where she is also an assistant editor) and the Science Fiction Book Club’s Don’t Open This Book.

When not writing, she switches to her secret identity as wife and stay-home mom in Centreville, VA, where she lives with her dashing husband, author John C. Wright, and their four darling children, Orville, Ping-Ping Eve, Roland Wilbur, and Justinian Oberon.

On Twitter: @lampwright4

Be sure to leave a comment for Jagi before you go and be entered to win a $5 gift card to Amazon. Please leave an e-mail address where you can be contacted if you win.




Sunday, November 10, 2013

Edge of Mercy's Cover Finaled in EPIC's ARIANA Cover Awards!

The amazingly talented Dara England of LFD Designs for Authors made a gorgeous cover for Edge of Mercy, and it finaled in the EPIC Ariana Awards for E-book Covers.






Congratulations to Dara!  I knew it was a great cover!

Check out the entire list, if you'd like.  Scroll and peruse the e-book finalists if you'd like and keep going to see the cover finalists below.

So exciting!

Happy Reading and Writing!

C. C. Marks

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Top Ten Reasons Zombies Make Great Friends


It's been a while since I've done a Top Ten List, but here's one I've been hanging onto for Halloween. Though it's advisable not to kiss these friends, even on the cheek, here are the Top Ten Reasons Zombies Make Great Friends:

10. No pesky appointments getting in the way of hanging out. They're always available.
9. Not worried about outward appearances.
8. Other than a few interrupting grunts, they make great listeners.
7. And they never bore you with their problems (remember this is about them being good friends, not you).
6. They don't expect presents during the holidays.
5. Matter of fact, they have no expenses. Talk about never having to pick up a tab.
4. You can always blame bad smells on them.
3. You no longer need a security system.
2. They're not usually name droppers even though they've more than likely starred in some horror movies and possibly have been highlighted on The Walking Dead.
1. They'll never send you annoying memes on social networks.

There you go! Ten reasons why zombies make great friends and an annoying meme to...well...annoy your friends on social media with.

Happy Reading and Writing!