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Cover Reveal StrangeLove by T.L. Bradford

Cover Reveal

StrangeLove by T.L. Bradford


Title: StrangeLove
Author: T.L. Bradford

Cover Reveal: StrangeLove by T.L. Bradford


ABOUT:

Archer

The year began great for me.

Became the starting quarterback for an NFL team – check.
Secured a multi-million-dollar contract – check.
Moved to LA and lived the glamorous life – check.

What could possibly cause me any issues?
Oh yeah, one more thing. I’m gay.

I was outed a couple of years ago to my former team and my family, but it hasn’t been made public knowledge yet. Well, that is, until now. I’ll be known as the first LGBTQ+ active player in the league’s history. And if I stick to the conditions of my contract, it won’t be a problem. The thing is, I’m not really a guy known for playing by the rules.

Most people think of my personality as the three B’s: bold, brash, and blunt. My mouth has gotten me into more predicaments than I can count. Even my best friends have told me I’m stubborn as a mule and have the delicacy of a bull in a china shop. This presents a big problem for me because I have my eyes set on winning over the guy who stole my heart years ago, only he doesn’t know it yet.

Getting his attention is going to be challenging. It’s a good thing I’m tenacious.
Unfortunately, it’s not great timing and could get me into a whole mess of trouble.
Why does falling for a guy need to be anyone’s business but mine?

Kai

The past couple of years were a whirlwind of activity. My career took off after my guest shot appearance in Americana. I appeared in a few indie features and finally got a shot at my first major motion picture release. The work came as a great distraction from my personal life, which took a further nosedive after I found out the guy I was falling for had already fallen for someone else.

Why should I be surprised? He was another in a string of failed relationship attempts. I swore I wouldn’t get involved with anyone else, choosing to stay focused on my career instead. That is, until the force of nature known as Archer McMillan came storming into my life.

To be the pursued instead of the pursuer was not in the cards. To top it off, he’s everything I’m not. Yet, there’s something to be said for a guy who can make you laugh when it’s the last thing you want to be doing. I’ll admit he’s got a playful and determined spirit. Archer also has one of the biggest hearts of anyone I’ve ever known. Not the mention the cute way he… Hold on. What am I doing? We cannot be a thing. Nope. Not gonna happen. Ever. Right?

**

Follow Kai and Archer as they cross the lines as friends, partners-in-crime, and confidants, to discover a love beyond boundaries that needs no definition.

(StrangeLove is a funny, heartwarming, slow-burn love story. It contains a cast of fully developed characters that encounter romance, laughter, and life lessons. It contains adult language, mature themes, and is best enjoyed by those over the age of 18. It can be read as a standalone; however, if you would like to know the backstories of some characters, check out the prior books in the series.)


Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/60291958-strangelove


Cover Reveal

Cover Reveal StrangeLove by T.L. Bradford




AUTHOR BIO:

Cover Reveal StrangeLove by T.L. Bradford
T.L. always hated math, so it was a good thing she had a way with words.  Since she was a shy and quirky kid; words were her best friends.  She would imagine entire worlds in her head and talk to herself endlessly.  Her mother wondered if she was speaking with ghosts for a while.
 
Her older sister was a voracious reader of trashy romance novels and would pass them down to her after she had finished them.  T.L. was the only 10-year-old kid sitting in class reading “The Stud” by Jackie Collins during reading time.  Oddly enough, she never got called out on it.
 
As she grew older, her tastes evolved, but one thing held fast; her undying attachment to love stories. One day out of the blue, she decided to write the love stories she always wanted to read instead of searching for her story.  Since then, writing has been a dream fulfilled for her and she could not be happier.

She enjoys writing about love, regardless of gender and is a proud supporter of the LGBTQ community.
 
T.L. calls the Pacific Northwest her home and enjoys the quiet rural life of her little oceanside home with her playful/crazy husband and their giant dog Noah.


Author links:

https://tlbradford.com/
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19366370.T_L_Bradford
https://twitter.com/tbradfordauthor
https://www.instagram.com/tlbradfordauthor/
https://www.bookbub.com/profile/tl-bradford?list=about


Cover Reveal StrangeLove by T.L. Bradford






Cover Reveal Butterfly Sisters by Jenny Hale

Cover Reveal

Butterfly Sisters by Jenny Hale


Title: Butterfly Sisters 
Author: Jenny Hale

Cover Reveal Butterfly Sisters by Jenny Hale


ABOUT:

“When emerging from its cocoon, a butterfly needs the struggle to push the fluid from its body into its wings. So essentially, without the struggle, it never flies.”

From the USA Today bestselling author of The Beach House comes a story about family bonds, second chances, and finding out who we really are. Butterfly Sisters is the perfect escape for fans of Susan Wiggs, RaeAnne Thayne, and Susan Mallery.

About to land her biggest deal yet, Leigh Henderson is on her game. She’s prepared for this, and nothing can get in her way. Except Rebecca Mayer, who’d sashayed in a few weeks ago with a former client list that would fill the entire hallway to Leigh’s office if she laid it out end to end. When her boss unexpectedly offers the deal to Rebecca and tells Leigh he’s letting her go, Leigh finds herself without a job.

But that’s the least of her worries. 

Her mother has some news that will change everything. She’s asked Leigh and her sister Meredith to meet her at the family cabin on Old Hickory Lake. Not only has Leigh been unable to pin her sister down in years, but going back to the cabin would mean dealing with the loss of her beloved grandmother and also chance running into her old flame Colton Harris, the one love she’s never been able to completely let go of.

Will confronting her grief, speaking to her estranged sister, and being forced to face the love she’d left behind help Leigh to learn who she really is? 

A heartwarming story that will have you laughing, crying, and rushing to those you hold dear. If you loved the Christmas movies based on Jenny’s books and are looking for more feel-good, small-town romance, look no further!


Cover Reveal

Cover Reveal Butterfly Sisters by Jenny Hale


Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/60212478-butterfly-sisters

Pre-order:
Amazon: https://amzn.to/3g1ia1T

AUTHOR BIO:


Author Jenny Hale
Jenny Hale is a USA Today, Amazon, and international bestselling author of romantic contemporary fiction. Her books have sold worldwide, have been translated into multiple languages, and adapted for television. Her novels Coming Home for Christmas and Movie Guide Epiphany Award winner Christmas Wishes and Mistletoe Kisses are Hallmark Channel original movies.

She was included in Oprah Magazine’s “19 Dreamy Summer Romances to Whisk You Away” and Southern Living’s “30 Christmas Novels to Start Reading Now.” Her stories are chock-full of feel-good romance and overflowing with warm settings, great friends, and family. Jenny is at work on her next novel, delighted to be bringing even more heartwarming stories to her readers.

When she isn’t writing, or heading up her romantic fiction imprint Harpeth Road, she can be found running around her hometown of Nashville with her husband, two boys, and their labradoodle, taking pictures—her favorite pastime.


Author links:

https://www.itsjennyhale.com/
https://www.facebook.com/jennyhaleauthor/
https://www.instagram.com/jhaleauthor/
https://twitter.com/jhaleauthor
https://www.pinterest.ca/jhaleauthor/_saved/
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7201437.Jenny_Hale
https://www.bookbub.com/profile/jenny-hale
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4xY4E_pNRwzu_S3IHrvwiQ



Cover Reveal Butterfly Sisters by Jenny Hale



Endless Pre-writes  Effective Prewriting Techniques  Guest Post By Howard Michael Gould

Endless Pre-writes 

Effective Prewriting Techniques

Guest Post By Howard Michael Gould

 

Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads
Authors seem locked in an eternal (even tiresome) debate between “pantsers” and “plotters.”  I can’t gainsay the former, but I’ve never met another writer who’s quite as extremely the latter as myself.  So I thought I’d share how I got that way, and detail my process.

It began long before I became a novelist.  I started as a playwright (college, then off-off-Broadway), then worked successfully in TV audience sitcoms for a decade. Then I wrote another play, which Mike Nichols wanted to direct, which got the attention of the movie side of the business.  But the more successful I got, and more importantly, the better I got at my craft—specifically, the more I knew about what a good script actually was—the harder it got for me to actually write.  I’d intimidated myself into paralysis.  It was hell.  

I came to think of it as page fright.

I still have it.  And I still think of all I’m about to describe as a workaround.  But it’s an effective one.

When I start a new project, whether it’s a movie rewrite or my own novel from scratch, I start by opening a Word document, and just talking to myself, doing all my thinking is on paper (well, pixels).

At some point—and if it’s a novel, this may be weeks in—I have an idea of some things I know.  So I’ll list them.  But what’s more glaring and scary, of course, is how very much I don’t know.  So I’ll make a list of questions.  Where’s the action?  Which characters from the last book are in this one?  Do we need another dead body somewhere?  Usually they’re pretty general at this point.  

When that document becomes too cumbersome, I’ll open a second—called “Notes2”—and start again by taking stock of what I have, and what I don’t.  A new set of questions, becoming more granular.  How does Waldo know his client is lying?  How many suspects are there?  How does he figure out who the killer is?

For the fourth Waldo novel (in progress), I had four of these documents, totalling 150 single-spaced pages… before I even started outlining.

Once I’ve answered every question I can think of, I start putting everything on index cards.  When I started in TV, we used real index cards on a cork board.  (For the last 25 years I’ve been addicted to software called Writer’s Blocks.  If they ever go out of business, I’ll have to retire.)  I use different colors for different storylines, and put absolutely anything that I think might go into the book onto a card.  For the Waldo in progress, there were around 350 of them.

The next step is putting those cards in order, a daunting task.  Here the screenwriting background helps.  Mainstream movies traditionally have major story turns at the ¼, ½, and ¾ points.  I think of my Waldo books as sort of overstuffed screen stories, and put the major turns of each storyline at about those marks, so the cards naturally group roughly into more manageable quarters.  I order each of those quadrants, then further divide each into chapters.

That done, I use the “manuscript” function in Writer’s Blocks to turn it all into text, and import it into a new Word document, which I’ll expand into my outline.

To do that, I flesh out each chapter from the list of index card thumbnail notes into a detailed telling.  I write in unabashedly clunky prose, in present tense—vestigial from my screenwriting years—and throw in everything I can think of, and grind on anything that might slow me down later.  If I’ll need to do some research, this is the time.  If I know I’m going to need to refer to a previous Waldo book, I’ll note the exact spot here.  The idea is to do every bit of work that I can, before the scary parts starts.

This phase alone can take me months.  It usually yields about 70 single-spaced pages, or 30,000 words, toward a novel which will run 70,000 to 75,000.

When I get through that… at last, it’s time to brave the blank page.  But with a hell of a head start.

One famous writer-director I collaborated with laughed when I told him about my process.  He said, “You’re tricking yourself into writing while you’re telling yourself you’re not writing.”

Maybe he’s right.  But at this point, it’s the only way I know how to get through it.


Endless Pre-writes  Effective Prewriting Techniques  Guest Post By Howard Michael Gould

Howard Michael Gould graduated from Amherst College and spent five years working on Madison Avenue, winning three Clios and numerous other awards.

In television, he was executive producer and head writer of CYBILL when it won the Golden Globe for Best Comedy Series, and held the same positions on THE JEFF FOXWORTHY SHOW and INSTANT MOM. Other TV credits include FM and HOME IMPROVEMENT.
He wrote and directed the feature film THE SIX WIVES OF HENRY LEFAY, starring Tim Allen, Elisha Cuthbert, Andie MacDowell and Jenna Elfman. Other feature credits include MR. 3000 and SHREK THE THIRD.

His play DIVA premiered at the Williamstown Theatre Festival and La Jolla Playhouse, and was subsequently published by Samuel French and performed around the country.

He is the author of three mystery novels featuring the minimalist detective Charlie Waldo: LAST LOOKS (2018) and BELOW THE LINE (2019), both nominated for Shamus Awards by the Private Eye Writers of America, and PAY OR PLAY (2021). The feature film version of LAST LOOKS, starring Charlie Hunnam and Mel Gibson and directed by Tim Kirkby, will premiere February, 2022; Gould also wrote the screenplay.

Catch Up With Howard Michael Gould:
HowardMichaelGould.com
Goodreads
BookBub
Instagram - @howardmichaelgould
Twitter - @HowardMGould
Facebook - @HowardMGould


Endless Pre-writes  Effective Prewriting Techniques  Guest Post By Howard Michael Gould


Plotting or Plodding  Pro Tips for Sharper Writing    Guest post by John Nardizzi

Plotting or Plodding?

Pro Tips for Sharper Writing

 

Guest post by John Nardizzi


We've all heard expert advice from writers and teachers on sharpening our writing. Here are some of the top tips I've learned from fellow writers and editors.

 

Plotting or Plodding  Pro Tips for Sharper Writing    Guest post by John Nardizzi
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble |
 
Goodreads | Kobo | Google Play | iBooks
Opening Mood

 

G. Miki Hayden's primer Writing the Mystery points to the opening of John Grisham's The Firm as a tour de force in setting a sinister tone: “The very start of the book exudes largeness. The new hireling attorney achieves an opulent lifestyle, almost without effort, but something ominous lurks beneath the surface.” The current state of the publishing industry seems to reflect this sentiment, which is unfortunate, given some of the best novels do a slow burn before exploding. Even if you don't leap into external action, the mood and tone of some internal conflict in a character can make your opening sing.

 

Character Drives the Plot

 

Readers want to engage with the book emotionally. That means characters crashing together in dramatic and unexpected ways that raise the themes of what it means to be human.

Few books deliver that more powerfully than Delia Owens’ mystery novel When the Crawdads Sing. The narrator Kya is a young girl who comes from a family eking out a living in a marsh near the North Carolina coast, "squeezed together like penned rabbits… in a rough-cut shack, its screened porch staring big-eyed from under the oaks". Her alcoholic father abuses her mother, who one day gathers her life's treasures in an old blue suitcase and walks away in her fake alligator skin shoes. Kya knows something major is happening: “Her throat tight, she whispered, "But Ma's carrying' that blue case like she's goin' somewhere big." The action is simple—a woman walking down a dirt road. But the sense of character Owens created in a few deft strokes rivets you to the page.

 

A Visual Chapter Layout

 

My last book, The Burden of Innocence, felt a little unbalanced as I edited a draft. So I took a tip from the writer Tom Davidson, and got a bunch of index cards, one for each chapter. I then wrote a basic 3 to 10 word summation on each index card of what happened in each chapter: “PI meets a witness near the harbor” or “Detective gets attacked in Chelsea”, “Detective eats dinner again with a witness.” Then I laid out the cards in chronological order (in a block) on the floor.

This visual exercise made this clear that I packed too many heavy action scenes in one section. I took photos to record the current layout. I then rearranged the cards a bit to redistribute the action and make the plot evolve more smoothly. And I rearranged them a few more times. Yes, you can do this with just an outline, but laying out every scene like a filmmaker (and we live in the age of video) was more helpful in plotting than anything I had done.

 

Vary Sentence Length

 

In the beginning of my career as an investigator, I wrote long sentences, a habit from law school; law review articles and case law tend to favor this style. Not a promising trait for a fiction writer (unless your last name is Faulkner). One of by best editors tore my early drafts to shreds, telling me the writing had potential, but only if I simplified my approach. She pointed out that, as the plot changed, I could use varying sentence length in different ways: to accelerate the reader along in action scenes, or slow them down if the mood was one of careful scheming or a quiet talk. Think of a tense situation in life. How is your sense of sight and sound affected? The way you structure language can heighten or undercut the rhythm of a particular scene.

 

Poetry Versus Plain Writing

 

T.S. Eliot once wrote, “Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood.” He advocated the use of sharp, hard images that bypassed the conscious mind to make the reader feel things, or understand certain instinctive truths.

Contrast that advice with crime fiction Elmore Leonard, who wrote a humorous (yet serious) piece about his rules of writing: “Try to leave out the part that readers tend to skip… If it sounds like writing, I rewrite it.”

Of course, we all strive to write that unforgettable line, to find Eliot image, something that communicates deeply. But know that you're probably going to fail. Eliot's images can be effective, but only if used sparingly; otherwise, the writing appears bloated— “the part that readers tend to skip,” as Leonard says. Finding that balance between working your own unique voice and just getting the darn book done is the constant struggle of writing.

 

Bio

 

John Nardizzi is an award-winning writer and investigator. His crime novels have won praise for crackling dialogue and pithy observations of detective work. He speaks and writes about investigations in numerous settings, including World Association of Detectives, Lawyers Weekly, Pursuit Magazine and PI Magazine.

His work on innocence cases led to the exoneration Gary Cifizzari and James Watson (he was awarded the Arc of Justice for the Watson case in 2021), as well as million dollar settlements for clients Dennis Maher and the estate of Kenneth Waters, whose story was featured in the film Conviction. Prior to his PI career, he failed to hold any restaurant job for longer than a week. He lives near Boston, Massachusetts.



Author links:


http://www.johnnardizzi.com


https://twitter.com/AuthorPI



Book Tour for The Burden of Innocence by John Nardizzi


Plotting or Plodding  Pro Tips for Sharper Writing    Guest post by John Nardizzi



Book Spotlight Devil's Deal by Tessa Hastjarjanto


Book Spotlight 

Devil's Deal by Tessa Hastjarjanto


Book Synopsis

Book Spotlight Devil's Deal by Tessa Hastjarjanto

When two angels break their deal with the Devil, he comes for the one they’re trying to protect.

16-year-old Eleonora Santos works through the summer break so she can visit her family in Italy when she graduates. With the new school year around the corner, her focus is back on homework and enjoying life with her tight group of friends. But on their first day back, she finds them fawning over two new guys in their class—Ben and Danny.

Not a day goes by before Nora’s life is turned upside down. Her best friend now hates her, and the boys seem eager to get to know her. Despite their charming efforts, she’d rather have her best friend, not a boyfriend.

When Nora discovers Ben and Danny are not who they claim to be, and their nefarious deal goes wrong, Nora is caught in the middle.

To fix their mistakes, she must face the Devil and betray herself—or pay with her life.

Devil's Deal is a YA romance novel with a paranormal twist set in the Dutch fictional city Lakeside. The Infernal Contracts trilogy is perfect for fans of the Twilight Saga, The Vampire Diaries, and Fallen.

Author Bio

Book Spotlight Devil's Deal by Tessa Hastjarjanto

Tessa Hastjarjanto is a Dutch/Indonesian writer from the Netherlands. She writes speculative fiction, and blogs at narratess.com about books, fountain pens, and writing.

From a young age, she imitated popular stories and games in creating her own worlds. This love eventually led to a master’s degree in media and game studies at the University of Utrecht. However a mundane desk job was enough to inspire her to follow her creative passion. The first fanfics were written in lunch breaks and soon original fiction followed.

With the support of her husband, she now focuses on her writing career while battling chronic pain. Swiss white shepherd, Shiro, acts as a therapy dog to keep her healthy and reduce stress through extensive cuddle sessions.


Buy Links

Amazon affiliate link


Author Links

http://www.tessahastjarjanto.com 

https://twitter.com/Endalia 

https://www.facebook.com/tessahastjarjanto/ 

https://www.instagram.com/tessa.hastjarjanto/ 

https://www.bookbub.com/profile/tessa-hastjarjanto 

https://www.amazon.com/Tessa-Hastjarjanto/e/B07Q8RK3FH 


Book Spotlight Devil's Deal by Tessa Hastjarjanto



Writing Strategies For Beginners Tips for Beginning Novelists  Guest Post By Robert Douglass

Writing Strategies For Beginners

Tips for Beginning Novelists

Guest Post By Robert Douglass

 

Writing Strategies For Beginners Tips for Beginning Novelists  Guest Post By Robert Douglass
Purchase Links: Amazon
I wrote the first draft of my novel and had a fine story for a cozy mystery. However, it was flat. I thought my characters would be so compelling, but they didn’t have much depth. As I worked to correct the problem, I found a few books on writing (Truby, Bird, Cron – listed below) and found a vast array of principles and concepts that made sense to me after spending so much time writing the manuscript.


  • John Truby – The Anatomy of Story
  • Matt Bird – The Secrets of Story
  • Lisa Cron – Story Genius

This new knowledge showed me areas that were lacking but also showed me how to frame things correctly and avoid the problems. It made sense to me and I was excited, and rightfully so, and I began to edit and re-write the manuscript and tell a better story.


The overall structure of the story began to shape up which allowed me to fine tune the plot with the best sequence of events. I referenced the books now and then to make sure I was following the concepts I thought would work best for the story. I liked where the story was going and worked through the scenes and noted how I could add details about the surroundings, sequence of events, characters, etc.

 

As I considered the scenes I got back to the original intent as I was now able to see how the characters would really act in the situation – like telling the boss his idea is great but slumping in the desk chair after he left the office to show the new throbbing headache. The characters began to form in a much deeper way and it became apparent how to show the inner struggles of the characters and their real life emotions and attitudes.

 

Was this the cure all for the entire story? No, my editor still had recommendations to form a fuller story, but it was essential learning and a way to get the manuscript to the next level. And the recommendations from the editor made sense as I had the ability to understand ideas with fresh thinking as I had found ways of writing that worked for me.

 

Writing Strategies For Beginners Tips for Beginning Novelists  Guest Post By Robert Douglass
Robert has an AAS in Microsoft Networking Technology from Glendale Community College and is a Microsoft Certified Professional.

He likes reading, writing, and exploring natural wonders. His favorite pastime is telling tall stories around the campfire.

Catch Up With Robert Douglass:
RTDouglass.com
Twitter – @RTDouglassLit
Facebook – @RTDouglassAuthor

 

Writing Strategies For Beginners Tips for Beginning Novelists  Guest Post By Robert Douglass

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