Thursday, April 12, 2018

Memories of Voyages (Dubai)


My husband worked for three months in Dubai one year, and I took a week off work to join him. Leaving in the middle of winter, I arrived in sunny Dubai and was immediately entranced by the wonderful architecture. We went for an evening in the desert, complete with open fire, incredible food, and a show! We hung out at the plaza where the fountains sing. We went to the malls, saw aquariums, went to the beach - in short, a magical vacation!


Dubai!
I had such a great time in this city. I loved the architecture, the sea, the people, the shopping, and the singing fountain. The food was wonderful, in short, I had a fantastic trip.
Here I am, in front of the man-made lake where the singing fountains are played at night.


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Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Interview with Edward James, historical fiction author



Edward James wrote The Frozen Dream, a book that impressed me with its plot, characters, writing, and also the research!

Jennifer:  On your blog, you tell about your life and work, and I was much
impressed to see you'd written about economics and poverty in Europe* -
no wonder your book about reading with Russia and the Sami rang so true!
Have you ever been to visit the Sami people? Is it something you'd like to do?

Edward: I had a brief contact with the Sami people before writing my book,
on a voyage up the Norwegian coast on the 'Coastal Express', during which
I also visited the Lofoten Islands, Vardo (Wardhouse) and North Cape.  
After writing the book I went to central Finland, where much of the action was set,
to learn cross-country ski-ing, like my hero Arthur.
I also visited a family of reindeer herders and they took me for a hair raising ride
on a reindeer sleigh!

Alas, I am not so good at time travel as your Ashley.
Since the 16th century the area inhabited by the Sami has shrunk by about half,
and the place where I met the herders has been settled by the Finns since the 17th
century, although I was told there were still some families of Sami descent.  
The Finnish settlers adopted the Sami dress and lifestyle but not their language or
religion. Today they follow their herds on skidoos and most have second jobs -
e.g. lecturing at the local technical college. Nor can the reindeer range as they did,
thanks to international frontiers which have divided Lapland.  Yes, I would like to
meet the real Sami but their Finnish neighbours are extremely hospitable.

Jennifer: I liked Arthur, the plucky cabin-boy, and thought his character came
across just as realistic as Richard, who was a real person! Did you plan for his
character to become so important to the story? What would a sequel be like featuring Arthur and Kate, I wonder?

Edward: I was inspired by the real life story of Richard Chamberlaine and Arthur
was introduced to give a voice from the lower deck.  However, like Kate,
he became more real to me than Richard.

When Kate and Arthur get together, the intention is that Arthur will run the
trading enterprise and  Kate will look after the political side, essential in the
managed economy of the Tudors. Of course Queen Mary's death will change
all that and Kate's religion and role under Mary will become a liability.  
But they will find a way around that and the break with Europe will force
England to find other markets.

Jennifer: When you wrote the book, did you have it all plotted out, or did you
write usinghistory as a sort of framework and simply advancing, waitng to see
what would happen?

Edward: The plot evolved.  I knew Richard would get lost and end up in Russia
and that Sir Hugh would die in the Arctic but the Sami came into the story to
rescue Arthur and then the whole Sami adventure flowed from there.

Jennifer: Kate is an interesting character, it's rare to find a strong, independent 
woman in historical fiction. Why did you choose to create her? 

Edward: Originally she was there to be part of the audience in the investors meeting
and was just going to wait until the male adventurers came home.  Gradually she
became more pro-active. She starts out as a failed businesswoman looking for a rich
husband to bail her out and ends up as a successful businesswoman - thanks to saving
London for Queen Mary - who can marry whoever she chooses, regardless of wealth
or rank.

The model for Kate is Dorothy Wadham, the founder of my college at Oxford.  
She was the widow of a rich West Country cloth merchant who decided to use her
money to set up an Oxford college.  The fact that she was a woman and a Catholic
(by then Elizabeth was on the throne) didn't seem to be a problem.
She petitioned for the charter and was a very hands-on benefactoress,
taking a firm role in choosing the college Fellows, even though they had to be male
and Protestant.  Fittingly, her college became (370 years later) the first mixed college
in Oxford.

One agent told me that Kate did not 'reflect the subservient role of  women in
Tudor society' - nobody told that to Dorothy.

Jennifer:  So much research went into that book, and there are several pages on your blog telling about it. If you write another book, will you set it in the same time period,
or does another time period appeal to you? 

Edward: My second novel, Freedom's Pilgrim, is based on another of the stories in
Hakluyt's Navigations, published in1589.  It is probably the best known story, about
14 year old Miles Philips who was marooned on the coast of Mexico and spent 17
years finding his way home.  That was published by Endeavour Press, which has
now gone into liquidation, so it is looking for a new home. My third novel,
Beyond the Big River, is not finished yet. It concerns three of Miles' shipmates who
instead of striking south head off over the Rio Grande and eventually reach Canada,
through territory never visited by Europeans.

Jennifer: Thank you for answering my questions! I will be looking for your other
books - let me know when they are published!


* Dennett, J., E. James, G. Room and P. Watson (1982), Europe Against Poverty: the European Poverty Programme 1975-80, London: Bedford Square Press


Monday, April 9, 2018

One for the Price of Two by Howard Weiner


One for the Price of Two
by Howard Weiner

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GENRE:   Fiction, Thriller, Crime

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Fraternal twins are raised by an ambivalent aunt who provides an unusual childhood experience. One twin leaves home to join the armed forces and is ultimately assigned to a Special Forces unit conducting clandestine operations in North Korea. The death of one his unit members produces an introduction to an organized crime family specializing in murder for hire. The funeral for the family's son and an interest in their daughter brings new blood and methods to the family business.


Enjoy an Excerpt

Opening the leather bag, he removed a smaller explosive device and a metal strap designed to hold it firmly in place beneath the bottom of the tank. The thick, blast-proof strap had tightening bolts at each end. By turning the bolts clockwise, Bell removed what little slack there was. When he could turn the bolts no further, the taut metal straps pushed the device firmly against the metal shell of the gas tank.

When he was finished and the leather bag much lighter, he paused before sliding out from underneath the vehicle. His intent was to exit from the same side he entered. But then he heard DeFaeo’s unmistakable voice.

He was trapped.

Bell could hear DeFaeo and Lenny disagreeing about some aspect of the new office. They came to a stop directly behind the rear liftgate.

“Boss, I’m only telling you what you already know.”

“Which is?” DeFaeo asked.

“The car is a safer place to work—all things considered.”

“Lenny, you’ve already made that argument. Let me see if I can recall? Oh yeah, we have a 360-degree field of vision. We can see anyone come and go. Right?”

DeFaeo was no more impressed with this argument now than when he first heard it. The irony wasn’t lost on Bell as he lay prone beneath the SUV and only feet away from both of them.

“Look, I’m hungry. We’re late as it is. Let’s go, now, please?”

Lenny lead the way to the rear passenger door. The car floor above Bell’s head crept an inch or so closer as DeFaeo’s weight was transferred to the thick, upholstered seat. Lenny closed the door and moved to the back of the vehicle on his way to the driver’s side.

Bell knew he had to make his move now, or risk being discovered—and worse.

As quietly as he could, Bell slithered to his right side—away from the garage’s exterior wall and in the direction of the Honda in the adjacent parking stall. Lenny opened his door and took his seat, starting the engine.

The engine noise prevented Bell from hearing the conversation inside the car. Lenny took the opportunity to look at his employer in the rearview mirror to continue his arguments against the new office space, but not before placing the transmission in reverse. The car lurched rearward for a foot, trapping Bell’s pant leg at the cuff beneath the tire.

About the Author:
Howard Weiner is a recent addition to the literary genre of fiction. Writing mysteries, thrillers, crimes—with a touch of romance—an approach described by one reader as “one bubble off.”

Many authors sharing the genre have characters whose fortune is determined by others. They literally have dodged the bullet that otherwise would have killed them. Weiner’s characters make their own fortune—good or bad—and they live with the results.


Weiner’s own experiences are blessed with no small number of noteworthy characters and events. He brings these slightly off-kilter individuals to life, complete with their own stories and dramas. Like the child prodigy in his first novel, "It Is Las Vegas After All", who comes to the starting edge of adulthood and then loses the approval of his doting parents, the sponsorship of one of America’s great institutions of higher education, and gains the enmity of his girlfriend’s father—an international arms dealer—to become a home-grown terrorist operating on U.S. Soil.


A survivor of rich, nuanced bureaucracies in the public and private sector, Weiner writes about characters whose career choices and decisions are morally questionable. A student of personal behavior in complex circumstances, Weiner brings these often cringe-worthy characters to life. Some are amoral, others immoral in a narrow slice of their lives, yet they otherwise look and act like people we all know from work or even childhood. Like one of the female leads in his novel, "Serendipity Opportunity", an out-of-the-box thinker who flunks most of life’s basic relationship tests, yet she is someone you never want pursuing you in the cause of justice. There’s a former foreign security official who uses his protected status as a witness for federal prosecutors to provide cover for his own mayhem and murder in Weiner’s third novel, "Bad Money".


Many of Weiner’s stories are born out of real life events: The mix-up in luggage claim at the airport in, "Bad Money", the chronic high school slacker in "Serendipity Opportunity" whose one stroke of good fortune creates his opportunity to perpetrate a complex series of frauds, or the brilliant student in "It Is Las Vegas After All" who uses his prodigious talents toward an evil end.


As a former federal official, Weiner can neither confirm nor deny having the highest security clearances in classified security programs. Yet, his knowledge of the dark web, criminal organizations, and security organizations takes stories from the popular press to the next level.

Amazon Author Central Web Site: https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B001KE771A
Author Web Site: https://www.hdweiner.com
The book will be $0.99 during the tour. https://www.amazon.com/One-Price-Blood-Relations-Book-ebook/dp/B07BC6GHDW/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Sunday, April 8, 2018

The Frozen Dream


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So far, this year, I've read some good books - but this, so far, is my favorite. I know a book is good when I start slowing down so I don't reach the ending.

The Frozen Dream, by Edward James

 The Frozen Dream, a story of adventure, romance, tragedy and survival based on England's first contact with Russia in the period of Tudor history between Henry VIII and Elizabeth. The Frozen Dream was winner of the Silverwood Kobo Open Day prize in 2015.

Blurb: As the boy-king, Edward VI, lays dying in Greenwich Palace, three ships set sail from London to find a new route to China across the North Pole. At their helm is Richard Chancellor, a reluctant pilot-general who is more scholar than sailor. He must leave his entire life behind him: his work, his family and his beautiful, wealthy lover, Kate Thomas. 


When the ships are forced to land in uncharted Arctic lands, a plucky cabin-boy named Arthur Petty is taken in by a native Sami tribe after his shipmates abandon him. Richard, meanwhile, finds himself at the court of the formidable Tsar Ivan the Terrible who coerces him into waging a war…on Arthur and his new people. When Arthur discovers Ivan – and Richard’s – plans for the Sami, he will stop at nothing to save them. Will he, with the help of the headstrong Kate, be able to bring peace to Lapland and return Richard to England? 

'The Frozen Dream' is a novel about a forgotten chapter of English history, tucked between the oft-remembered dramas of Henry VIII and Elizabeth. It’s an extraordinary tale of courage, endurance, murder, war, betrayal, tragedy and love. 


Review: 
The story follows the fate of three ships and two main protagonists - Richard Chancellor is the leader of the expedition. He's been coerced into taking the trip - his wife is expecting their first child, and he doesn't want to leave. He doesn't really want to leave at all - he is skeptical of finding a new route to China (what they called 'Cathay' at that time).
The other main character is Arthur, a cabin boy, who is travelling on another ship which becomes lost in the north. After a mutiny, the captain is killed, the ship becomes locked in ice, and most of the sailors take their chance across the rough ice to retrace their voyage and hopefully return home. Alone, Arthur decides to head out inland. He nearly dies, but is saved by a tribe of the Sami people, who heal him and welcome him into their clan. 
Richard, in the meantime, has found a Russian trading post and is taken to meet Ivan the Terrible, Tsar of Russia. Since his boat has canons, Ivan has decided Richard will help him win his war against Sweden, to recapture the lands in the north. 
Richard does not want to become involved in a war that has nothing to do with England, but Ivan is holding his men and ship hostage - and he fears that if he does not agree, Ivan will simply kill them all and take his ship and its precious cargo. Besides, Ivan dangles a promise of trade - and a possible route to China via the Volga. Against his better judgment, Richard agrees, and sets in motion a chain of events that would affect everyone involved.
Richard and Arthur meet for the first time on opposite sides of a war neither wants - and it is a clash of personalities and civilizations as the Russians, with the English guns and canons, smash their way into the Sami's territory on their way to battle Sweden. But the Sami are not defeated, and soon the Russians find they are not as superior as they believed. 
The Frozen Dream stayed with me long after I finished it.  Mr. Jame's prose is descriptive and lyrical. I was entranced by the story, especially the part about Arthur, the humble cabin boy who became a Sami shaman. Reading it was a pleasure, and I'm looking forward to reading more by Mr. James.


Kindle edition: https://www.amazon.com/Frozen-Dream-Edward-James-ebook/dp/B016J0NXL2

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2354546694

Author website: https://busywords.wordpress.com/

Contact the author: busywords_ed@yahoo.com







Saturday, April 7, 2018

The Uncle Peter Stories

When my twins were little, I'd tell them a story every night. Sometimes I'd read a book - Rosie Anderson MacDowell gave Alex his favorite book "Goodnight Moon", and we read it until it literally fell apart. Sebi liked Thomas the Tank Engine stories. We read Curious George and The Runaway Bunny - But both boys loved Uncle Peter Stories. Those stories were their absolute favorites, and they would beg and plead for an Uncle Peter story.

My brother Peter got into more scrapes than any kid I know - and he must have broken both arms, both legs, had over a hundred stitches - and the twins relished each and every accident and mishap. The time when he hoed his toes, the time when he rolled down the hill in the tractor wheel and it was full of glass. The time he played tag with Julie and she shut the glass door just as he ran into it. The motorcycle accidents, the falling off the ladder, the time he ate too many children's aspirin and had to get his stomach pumped. The boys loved these stories.

And even my husband would sometimes listen in. This was my husband's favorite Uncle Peter story: One day, Peter was riding his motorcycle when a lady cut in front of him and turned with no blinkers. At the red light, Peter pulled up beside her, reached into her open window, and snapped off her turn signal lever. "I guess you don't need this," he said, and drove off.

My husband still tells that to anyone who doesn't know the story. The twins preferred the stories that started off with blood and gore and ended up with everything all right, and Peter safe and sound. Even though they knew he was OK, they still worried until the story was over. The stories weren't all about accidents. Peter stories included where we lived, our treehouse, the rope swing, the Tarzan phase (when he decided he didn't want to wear clothes), his best friends, his love of frisbees and the time he burned the farm truck. It was a nice way to include my brother in my children's life - they loved his stories, and I'm just glad they all had happy endings.


sibs_n Julie, Peter and me[/caption]

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Her Sir by Megan Slayer

Her Sir by Megan Slayer

Evernight Publishing

Contemporary Erotic Romance

There’s only one man for Andi—her Sir.

Andi McCarron knew the moment she met Sir’s gaze, he’d change her life forever. Despite other Doms wanting her as their sub, she only submits to him because he knows how to make her skin tingle. The pain delivered from his crop makes her spirit sing. She needs Sir but she wants more—except he’s not interested in taking the relationship outside of the club. What’s a girl to do when the man of her dreams, the one wielding the crop, won’t leave the club?

Dean Meyer craves his sweet sub, Andi. She fills his dreams and fantasies, but she wants a relationship. He’s not sure she can handle both his demons and secrets. Still, he can’t deny the attraction to her. When fate throws them together, he has to make a choice—give his sub what she needs or let her go for good. 



Excerpt:

"Dean.” He smiled. “Are you okay?”

“Me?” She shut the door and held onto the handle. “Yeah, I’m dealing.”

“With Trey?” He shouldn’t have been so bold, but he didn’t care.

“Oh.” She shrugged. “He’s harmless.”

“I disagree.” He steered her away from the chilly freezers to the end of the aisle. “You’re shivering. Would you like to grab coffee?”

“Me?”

“You keep asking me that.” He chuckled. “Yes, you. I’d like to buy you a cup of coffee. How about we go over to the coffee bar?”

“Uh … sure?” She nodded. “Let me pay for my stuff first.”

“I’ll follow.” He strode alongside her. “How’ve you been?”

“Okay, I guess.” She queued up at the self-checkouts. “I’m surprised to see you here.”

“I’m not allowed to shop?” He nodded to the open machine.

“We’ll resume this conversation when we’re done.”

She stared at him for a moment, then stepped over to the register. While she scanned her items, she kept glancing back at him. 

Was she afraid he’d disappear? Did she want him to? He took his place at the next available register, scanned, then paid for his items.

When he finished bagging the last item, he gathered the bags and waited for her.

“Sorry.” She tucked her arm through the handles. “I’m slow.”

“No need to apologize.” He offered his free arm. “To answer your question about me being here, I do eat. Hell, I love food.”

She blushed. “I guess you’re permitted.” She slipped her hand around his forearm. “Thanks.”

He escorted her over to the coffee bar. “I guess they knew we were coming. Hardly anyone’s here.” He strode over to an empty booth. “What would you like? My treat.”



©2018 Megan Slayer, All Rights Reserved



Buy a copy here:

Evernight Publishing: http://www.evernightpublishing.com/her-sir-by-megan-slayer/ 

Universal link: https://books2read.com/u/38goyO 

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BY57KMD/ 

Amazon AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B07BY57KMD/

Amazon FR: https://www.amazon.fr/dp/B07BY57KMD/

Amazon JP: https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B07BY57KMD/

Amazon IT: https://www.amazon.it/dp/B07BY57KMD/

Amazon DE: https://www.amazon.de/dp/B07BY57KMD/ 

Amazon CA: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07BY57KMD/


Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07BY57KMD/



Author Megan Slayer 

Links:

Website: http://wendizwaduk.com/indexMegan.htm

Blog: https://wendizwaduk.wordpress.com/

Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/wendizwaduk.meganslayer/

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Megan-Slayer/e/B008BJCFSC

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/megan-slayer

AllAuthor: https://allauthor.com/profile/meganslayer/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wendizwaduk/

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5330530.Megan_Slayer

Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/MeganSlayer

Newsletter: http://ymlp.com/xgjmjumygmgj 



Wednesday, April 4, 2018

THERE ARE GECKOS

THERE ARE GECKOS
by
Jennifer Macaire
Copyright © 2002  All Rights Reserved

There are geckos crawling up the sides of the tent. The moon is so bright that I can see their silhouettes as they trot across the canvas. The only problem is, I can't tell if they're inside or outside the tent.

Beside me in the dark I can hear my sister's soft breathing, and the harsher breathing of my mother and her boyfriend as they try not to make the cot squeak. It makes no difference to me. What bothers me is the thought that maybe a gecko will leap on a spider and they will both fall onto my face during the night. The thought keeps me awake while the soft moans from across the tent fade and snores take their place. My eyes trace the geckos' paths across the tent, while the moon slides through the tropical night and waves crash softly onto the beach.

The next morning we snorkel around the reef. I'm tired, and let the waves carry my body where they will. Up and down I bob, my hands dangling beneath me, my hair floating all around, my eyes half closed and the sound of my own breathing in the snorkel-tube lulling me to sleep.
"You're the only person I know who can sleep in the water," my sister tells me. I crawl just far enough to reach my towel and then I sleep again. Parrotfish, yellow tangs and angelfish swim through my dreams, while my back burns to a crisp.

That evening we eat at a cafeteria. We were going to have a barbecue but we didn't buy meat, my mother's boyfriend is too stoned to light a fire, and besides; the bright neon lights and white linoleum tables lure us into the cafeteria like moths. I take a tray. There is wilted salad with anemic tomatoes, half grapefruits with faded maraschino cherries, and tuna sandwiches. I take a sandwich and a can or orange soda. "Get your elbows off the table," my mother hisses. "Stop slurping."

Her boyfriend says, "Leave her alone," and gives me a wink. Lately he's been winking at me a lot. I turn away. He has bright, gecko eyes.

We spend three nights camping on Saint John. Each night I stay awake, listening, watching. There are rules to living in a tent. A blanket becomes a wall. In the morning, take your toothbrush to the showers and hold the toilet door for your sister so you don't pay an extra dime. When you fall asleep on the beach, make sure you're in the shade. No one tells me the rules; I learn them by myself. When the sun sets, we take the ferry back to Saint Thomas. My mother's boyfriend lights a joint and when she isn't looking, offers it to me. I refuse. As the boat cleaves the waves, I wonder what rules guide other people's lives, and how they learn them. Then I close my eyes, and think about geckos.

LESSER KNOWN TRAVEL TRIPS - Book IV "How to React When Woken at 3am by Drunk Argentinian Backpackers While Staying in a Youth Hostel and Other Lesser Known Travel Tips" by Simon Yeats

  Welcome to the cover reveal of Book Four of the LESSER KNOWN TRAVEL TRIPS series, How to React When Woken at 3am by Drunk Argentinian Bac...