Thursday, 13 September 2012
How Kindle changed my reading habits.
A year or two ago I was one of those people who didn't understand ereaders. I never thought I would be happy reading on an ereader after spending my life buying books. I grew up in a bookstore, so to speak, because my mother owned one for years. My first job at 10 was working in a bookstore.
But when the Kindle became popular it caught my interest, then a fellow author, Maggi Andersen, showed me her new kindle and how easy it was to use and buy books on, that I thought I should give it ago, though I still had misgivings about spending that much money on a reading device!
Anyway I bought my kindle in January and adored it from the moment I opened the box.
I love the ease of using it, but more importantly I love the 'sample' function. It has to make the Kindle one of the most money-saving things I have bought.
By using the sample function, I have found so many new authors, whose books I've at first sampled and then ended up buying. But it has also allowed me to test some unknown authors as well, and if I didn't like the sample, I've not bought the book and saved myself money! This wouldn't have been possible without the sample option.
Here are some authors I've found by reading their samples on Kindle:
Gemini N. Sasson
Deanne Raybourn
Barbara Freethy
Cindy Gerard
De-ann Black
Oh, and a lot of old classics are available for free on Kindle, which is really good.
I've read quite a few historical biographies for free, too.
I now take for granted the possibility of having several books available to read whenever I turn my Kindle on. I like the freedom of being able to have many books at my fingertips to choose from. I also can search Amazon for more if I'm in a Wi-Fi area. Bliss!
Do be prepared though to spend a lot of time searching Amazon for books, a healthy pastime really, there are worse things to do, like shopping for toasters, or going to the dentist, scrubbing the toilet...
For more information on my books on Amazon's Kindle:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B00705A120
Wednesday, 5 September 2012
Far After Gold - New Excerpt
Flane sat on the bed, grasped her shoulders
and pulled her back to lie on the mattress beside him. He laughed into her
wide, shocked eyes. His lips dived to the skin beneath her jaw and nuzzled
towards the neckline split in her chemise while his fingers untied the knot
that held the strings closed. He parted the fabric and his mouth slid down
towards the newly revealed curve of her breast. His bristles rasped against her
skin and Emer fended him off with both hands.
“Don’t! Don’t!”
He braced one hand to either side of her
shoulders and loomed over her. “What’s wrong?”
Emer gulped. “It isn’t right,” she muttered,
unable to meet his steady gaze. She looked across the hall, where children ran
about, getting in the way of their elders, and a dog barked as it leapt crazily
about his newly returned master. The rest of the world seemed to be going on as
normal, and here she was fighting for her virtue. No one cared.
No one had even noticed.
Flane chuckled, and she faced him
suspiciously. “I can’t think of anything better,” he said. “What’s not right?”
At his tone, some of her anxiety dispersed. She
focussed on his leather jerkin and a part of her brain registered that someone
had dressed the leather very well indeed, and threaded small tassels through
the shoulder seam. She admired the pale shade, which so nearly matched his
hair.
“Be brave,” he said. “Tell me.”
He taunted her now. Emer saw the mischief in
his eyes, and caution vanished. “I cannot be happy in a place where we are on
public view.” She opened her eyes wide and words, unheeded, shot out of her
mouth. “And we should be married before you bed me!” Her breath came and went
as if she’d been running and warm blood rushed beneath the skin of her throat
and face.
“Really?” His voice betrayed nothing, but his
silver brows drew down in a frown. “And how would marriage change anything?”
Available now at http://www.amazon.co.uk/Far-After-Gold-ebook/dp/B008COC94Q
Sunday, 26 August 2012
Lindsay Townsend : 'The Snow Bride' - Medieval Historical Romance
Here's a new excerpt from my medieval historical romance, The Snow Bride.
The hero and heroine are in a tower belonging to their enemy, the
necromancer.
Excerpt:
Baldwin finally brought two spitting torches.
Magnus told the youth to keep up and took a torch from him. “Do you stay here?” he
asked Elfrida.
* * * *
The Snow Bride
http://www.bookstrand.com/the-snow-bride
Lindsay Townsend
http://www.lindsaytownsend.net
http://www.twitter.com/lindsayromantic
Excerpt:
Making torches, lighting
them, took some little time. Magnus could sense Elfrida’s tension and almost
see her fears tearing at her like the harpies preyed on their hapless victims
in the old tales that he had heard around campfires in Outremer. She stayed
within the tower, calling encouragement to Christina and praying aloud, “To
cleanse this space,” she told him. She did not attempt to move farther than the
few steps they had come from the threshold, for which he was grateful.
“Your sister must be sleeping deeply,” he said when she fell silent and despondent after no
replies. “It is the time of winter dark and solid
slumber.”
“Or she is drugged,” Elfrida answered.
Once he spotted her gazing at him, a cool, farsighted,
assessing stare. Where he considered pits and traps, she concerned herself with
magical dangers. He knew she felt responsible for his safety, a strange and
queer reversal of nature to him, but one he accepted that he could not shake
her from.
All
will be better with more light,
he told himself, fending off a vague feeling of being watched.
She shook her head—he had not
expected otherwise—and he put her between himself and Baldwin. Leading the way,
Magnus began to pick a careful path across the nails and snares and wooden
stakes, walking steadily and lifting his feet high. All the while, puffing like
a small, furious dragon at his back, he could hear Elfrida and sense her taut,
barely reined-in impatience. She fairly bristled with it. Not far and all will
be well, he wanted to say to comfort her, but he said nothing, for they had
reached the stairs, and it might not be true.
Gray, narrow, worn, and
unlit, the stairs were also slimy on certain treads. Spilled oil or melted
candle wax? he speculated, calling out softly in the old tongue and his own
dialect, so Baldwin would know, “Grease, here,
step over.” He did not lower his torch. Some things were best left as a
mystery.
“Christina, you are safe,
beloved. Walter is waiting for you, and all is prepared for your return.”
Elfrida was becoming more
urgent and desperate in her wishes. He longed to shield her from this trial but
knew it was impossible.
She is a warrior of magic,
besides, and a warrior always faces things. She would never forgive me if I
kept her out of this.
Yet it was so ponderous, step
after step, climbing in the dark, with the stair walls and roof feeling to
close in around them, pressing down and choking...
Unless that is just me. Since early youth he had loathed shut-in
places, which was why in any siege he had always volunteered for any digging or
mining. Now the disgusting, spineless fears of his boyhood shook down the backs
of his legs.
If Christina is dead, will
Elfrida blame me? No, she will not..
He trod on an object that
cracked and slithered beneath his peg foot. He checked the cry bubbling in his
throat and kicked the unknown thing away, down the stairs. He heard it flopping
into the darkness and vowed to burn the whole tower with fire once they were
done.
If Christina is dead or
alive, will Elfrida return to her village? Will she want to stay there? Ask
her, man, and find out!
He was wary of asking and at
the same time eager to ask. As much as Elfrida wanted to see her sister, he
wanted to know her mind.
It is my future. Have the
stakes ever been so high?
He ran up three more steps
and reached the first floor. The staircase continued higher, but now there was
a tiny, cramped passageway, again unlit, and at its end, a door.
A blue door, he realized,
hearing Elfrida’s gasp of recognition. He spun about and gripped her shoulder
tightly, in a gesture of warning and support, then let her go.
He reached out and touched
the door with his stump. Elfrida said nothing, did not try to stop him, but he
glanced at her for confirmation.
She nodded, her own hands
clenched in tight fists, her face unreadable.
“Baldwin .”
He handed the lad his torch and set his shoulder to the door, drawing out his
knife—better a knife than a sword in such close quarters.
Surprise was impossible, for
if there was a guard, he must have heard their plodding trail, so Magnus called
a final warning.
“Release your prisoners unharmed
and you shall not be injured or killed. Yield now.”
He pushed on the stout wood,
astonished to find the door unlocked, and entered.
* * * *
The Snow Bride
http://www.bookstrand.com/the-snow-bride
Lindsay Townsend
http://www.lindsaytownsend.net
http://www.twitter.com/lindsayromantic
Wednesday, 22 August 2012
Special Offer on Dark Pool
Finlay, newly crowned king of Alba, isn't pleased when he feels obliged to abandon his duties and go in search of a missing ward of court. He tracks the headstrong young girl to Lord Sitric's stronghold of Dublin, but Sitric and his followers deny all knowledge of her.
Eba is forced to adapt to the Viking way of life in eleventh century Dublin, with all its dangers, furious horse races and vicious games. When a cruel young man takes an interest in her, she fears the worst...
When Waterford Vikings attack Lord Sitric's holding, Eba makes her escape, but only places herself in greater danger...
Available at:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dark-Pool-Banners-Alba-Sequel-ebook/dp/B004SREKJI
at a new, LOW PRICE from 26th August for one week only!
Wednesday, 15 August 2012
Two people crash and clash, desire and despise...when his fire meets her silk.
Fire & Silk is the story of a gruff, red-headed bachelor named Flann, son of an Irish king, and a fiery Iberian virgin named Mariana.
In this excerpt, Flann commits an act that will bind him to a naive yet headstrong woman, as she seeks his protective cover during a furious rainstorm.
The slight shift in wind told Flann that the rain would begin in a matter of minutes. He eyed the corner of the tarred cloth as he continued to play his bone whistle—more to confound and anger the woman than to extend the improvised melody. When he felt the first fine spray of rain on his face, he seized the corner of waterproof cloth nearest him and, in one sweeping motion, wrapped it around himself. Then he lay waiting for the real rain to fall.
He saw by the dancing fingers of fire that the woman was defenseless against the cold night—not a shawl, not a cloak or brat or any kind of wrap that might have kept her warm or dry. And yet she merely stepped closer to the fire, as though defying the heavens. Except for her last commanding words, she had apparently decided to stand there, soaked to the very bone, even after the rain had drowned his fire, cursing him and his peasant attitude.
Good! Tá go maith. Let her feel the cold arms of night and the loveless kiss of an autumn thunderstorm. He wrapped the cover tighter and pulled it over his head just as the rain began in earnest. From under the cloth, he clearly heard her anguished cry. “Oh, help me! ¡Ayúdame! Do something!”
Flann felt himself grinning in spite of his resolve to ignore her. He lifted the cloth and opened it wide like an eagle’s wing, inviting her inside.
The woman, to her credit, did not hesitate coyly, drawing back from touching the body of a stranger. She dived for him and the protective covering, and as soon as he felt her all along the length of his body, he closed the cloth around both of them, one wing-like arm drawing her against him. They lay there cocooned while he breathed evenly and she gasped in a kind of throaty cough. Shush, shush, he crooned to her in his mind, and after a while her spasms of cold ceased and she was silent.
They were lying face-to-face, close as lovers. In the darkness, he could not see her face, but he felt her uneven breath on his cheeks and mouth. And then, unbidden, his body betrayed the fact that he had not been near a woman in several months.
“Oh!” she exclaimed, and in spite of the tightness of the cloth around them, she tried to turn away from his adamantine groin.
Deeply amused, Flann spoke for the first time. “Volo vobis vesperum, O great lady. As ye can see, there is scant room to roll about like a cork in a barrel. Lie still.”
“You…you are a cad and a scoundrel! Touch me not!”
Flann lapsed again into silence, still grinning, his urgent groin pressing into her silken dress—not by design but by necessity of their unusual encounter. Completely encased by the tarred cloth, he could feel the insistent rain pummeling them, almost laughing at them, daring them to change position. And so, he merely lay stretched out, one arm around her shoulders, enjoying this last night under the vast sky of his beloved Éire.
They lay immobile for half an hour, by his reckoning. He could feel that her shivering had ceased completely, and he knew that the warmth of his body was saving her from an agony of wet and cold. Her breath on his face was regular and easy, as though she had fallen asleep. And so, he shifted slightly, trying to ease the pressure on his groin by moving away from her.
“Nolo tangere!” she hissed. Touch me not!
“Ye be a scourge and a nag and not in the least desirable to me. Do ye understand? Do ye know nothing of the ways of a man?”
“I know enough,” she whispered defiantly. “I know I would rather die than be ravished by a—a low criminal.”
“Ye’ll deem yourself fortunate to be touched by any man at all, your highness. For while your body is not repugnant, your attitude is. I have a mind to let ye loose to the wind and the rain. Believe me, I would sleep more soundly by meself.”
She began to struggle under the cover, and Flann held her even closer, suddenly reluctant to let her go.
What really happened under the cover that night? The answer to that question tells the story of Fire & Silk.
Publisher: SirenBookStrand
Genre: Historical Romance
Heat rating: “Steamy”
Buy Link: http://amzn.to/P6jZtn
Erin O’Quinn has also published a historical romance trilogy, The Dawn of Ireland, and an erotic M/M historical titled Warrior, Ride Hard. Please see the signature line below.
OQ Erin O’Quinn’s Gaelic blog: http://bit.ly/Jgz6tU
Erin O’Quinn’s Manlove blog: http://romancemanlove.wordpress.com/
Storm Maker: http://amzn.to/O218y7
The Wakening Fire : http://amzn.to/N1Gc6C
Captive Heart: http://amzn.to/Qm8b1X
Fire & Silk: http://amzn.to/P6jZtn
Warrior, Ride Hard: http://www.bookstrand.com/warrior-ride-hard
Erin O’Quinn’s Manlove blog: http://romancemanlove.wordpress.com/
Storm Maker: http://amzn.to/O218y7
The Wakening Fire : http://amzn.to/N1Gc6C
Captive Heart: http://amzn.to/Qm8b1X
Fire & Silk: http://amzn.to/P6jZtn
Warrior, Ride Hard: http://www.bookstrand.com/warrior-ride-hard
Sunday, 12 August 2012
Strangely attractive....
Reluctance by Jen Black
Set in 1803, Jen Black does a marvelous job at painting a very brilliant picture of the strangely attractive countryside of Northumberland that has a very important place in that story. I never visited that part of England but I definitely felt at home and ready to go there.
She has created a whole string of wonderfully lively characters. The two main protagonists, Frances and Jack, are a joy to observe and listen to as they interact. There's a very exciting tension between them that began from the first moment they met. There is a lot of emotion and drama with a magnificent and infamous villain who will let nothing and no one stand in his way; he's ruthless and he'll use all possible means to reach his nefarious goal.
Life is often unpredictable and these two people who both went through some difficult times and were not destined to be together, find themselves forced to deal with the accidents of life and at one point they'll have to decide what kind of future they want to build for themselves.
I have to admit that I do understand why the author developed her story the way she did, and the fact that I didn't like a little part of it doesn't diminish in any way the quality of this book. Ultimately I don't regret having read it. She was able to catch my attention again and to me it says a lot about her skill. This will not prevent me from reading her other books. In fact, I already have two on my reading pile ... Fair Border Bride and Far After Gold.
Overall I found this novel very engaging, attractive and moving with some clever and thrilling dialogs.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All in all, a good review, though I do wonder about the "strangely attractive countryside of Northumberland!" ~ Jen Black
ENGAGING
AND MOVING STORY 11 July 2012
By AC - Published on
Amazon.com
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Reluctance-ebook/dp/B007ROL46Q
Amazon
Verified Purchase
Something unusual happened to me when reading this book. I was extremely
excited by this story, until I stumbled on a drastic and dramatic situation
halfway through, and unfortunately I've never been a fan at all of such an
occurrence (I will not elaborate more here) and I was quickly finishing the
thirty pages in question, with a sinking heart ...! But against all odds, the
author succeeded in recapturing my curiosity at a given time, which is a first
because once my interest is lost, it is lost!Set in 1803, Jen Black does a marvelous job at painting a very brilliant picture of the strangely attractive countryside of Northumberland that has a very important place in that story. I never visited that part of England but I definitely felt at home and ready to go there.
She has created a whole string of wonderfully lively characters. The two main protagonists, Frances and Jack, are a joy to observe and listen to as they interact. There's a very exciting tension between them that began from the first moment they met. There is a lot of emotion and drama with a magnificent and infamous villain who will let nothing and no one stand in his way; he's ruthless and he'll use all possible means to reach his nefarious goal.
Life is often unpredictable and these two people who both went through some difficult times and were not destined to be together, find themselves forced to deal with the accidents of life and at one point they'll have to decide what kind of future they want to build for themselves.
I have to admit that I do understand why the author developed her story the way she did, and the fact that I didn't like a little part of it doesn't diminish in any way the quality of this book. Ultimately I don't regret having read it. She was able to catch my attention again and to me it says a lot about her skill. This will not prevent me from reading her other books. In fact, I already have two on my reading pile ... Fair Border Bride and Far After Gold.
Overall I found this novel very engaging, attractive and moving with some clever and thrilling dialogs.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All in all, a good review, though I do wonder about the "strangely attractive countryside of Northumberland!" ~ Jen Black
Wednesday, 8 August 2012
Far After Gold
Far After Gold by Jen Black
Available from Amazon Kindle

“Come with me.”
Emer stood rooted to the deck. Flane reached
the gangplank, turned and beckoned.
Emer scowled and did not move.
Flane clicked his fingers. Astounded, Emer
lifted her chin, turned her head and stared pointedly out to sea. From the
corner of her eye she saw one sailor nudge another and both stopped what they
were doing to watch what would happen next. Memories of the overseer and his
cane flashed through her mind, and she decided moving might be her wisest
choice even though he treated her like his favourite hound. Pride stiffened her
spine as she halted before him.
“My name is Flane.” He tapped his chest and
repeated the words, as if she were stupid, and then sighed. “Trust me to pick a
girl who doesn’t understand the language.” He drew his dagger, and the fierce
blade flashed silver in the sunlight.
Emer’s heart leapt into her throat. Would he
kill her because she could not speak his language? What other reason could he
have? Should she speak now, before it was too late? She met his blue glance for
an instant even as she took a swift step back, ready to run, heedlessly, in any
direction.
He caught her wrist and dragged her in close.
Her heart thudded wildly at the sudden
contact of chest, hip and thigh. Mesmerised by his steady blue gaze, she stood
there in the thin sunlight with the sound of water lapping against the ship and
the smell of seawater and seaweed in her nostrils. She drew a swift, choked
breath of air. Her last moment in the world had arrived, and she could not free
her tongue to speak. Dear God…. She
shut her eyes, awaiting the bite of cold steel at her throat. Dear Lord, accept my soul this day…
He hooked one finger under her leather slave
collar. Surprised, she opened her eyes and flinched at the sight of the steel
blade flashing wickedly in the sunlight.
“Steady, steady,” he murmured, as if to a
nervous animal. “I thought you’d rather be free of this.” He gave a couple of
gentle tugs on the leather collar at her neck, and before she grasped his
intention, the steel sliced through the hated thing. She never even felt the
coldness of the blade.
He dangled the strip of leather with its
attendant piece of rope in front of her. “Do you want to keep it?”
Furious at being frightened and then gentled
like a nervous horse, Emer seized the hated collar and hurled it far out over
the loch.
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