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Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Excerpt Spotlight: Surrender to the Highlander (The Highlander Series ) by Lynsay Sands + giveaway


 

by Lynsay Sands
January 30, 2018 
Genre: Adult Historical Romance
Publisher: Avon Books 
In New York Times bestselling author Lynsay Sands’ captivating romance, a lass targeted by an unknown foe is saved—and seduced—by a bold Highlander.

Edith Drummond owes her life to Niels Buchanan and his brothers. Waking after an illness to a castle overrun by rugged Highlanders is disconcerting, but so is learning that she’s slowly being poisoned. Niels insists on staying by her side, and Edith soon discovers that even more dangerous is her wild attraction to the fierce warrior.

Niels has never met a more courageous—or enticing—woman than Lady Edith. The idea of such a bonny lass being forced to enter a nunnery is more than any red-blooded Scotsman could bear. He’ll gladly marry her himself. But while sweeping her off her feet is easy, it’ll take all his skill to defeat her family’s relentless enemies, and convince her to surrender to his sweet embrace. . . .


EXCERPT:
He would kiss her now…

It was why she had brought him here, to get that kiss he was about to give her before they had been interrupted.

Niels lowered his head until his mouth covered hers. His lips lightly brushed over hers. But when Edith raised her hands to slide them up his arms, his tongue traced the crease between her lips.

Edith instinctively opened to him on a little sigh and he caught her lower lip between his, and drew on it teasingly. Then he tilted his head as his tongue swept to fill her mouth and the sweet tempo suddenly changed.

She clutched his shoulders tightly as his mouth ravished hers. It was as if the passion they had shared by the loch had been merely restrained when they’d been interrupted, and now he had unleashed it.




About the Author:
    
LYNSAY SANDS is the nationally bestselling author of the Argeneau/Rogue Hunter vampire series, as well as numerous historicals and anthologies. She’s been writing stories since grade school and considers herself incredibly lucky to be able to make a career out of it. Her hope is that readers can get away from their everyday stress through her stories, and if there’s occasional uncontrollable fits of laughter, that’s just a big bonus. Please visit her on the web at http://www.lynsaysands.net



Tour Wide Giveaway 
To celebrate the release of SURRENDER TO THE HIGHLANDER, we’re giving away two paperback sets of FALLING FOR THE HIGHLANDER and THE HIGHLANDER TAKES A BRIDE by Lynsay Sands!


GIVEAWAY TERMS & CONDITIONS: Open to US shipping addresses only. Two winners will each receive a paperback set of Falling for the Highlander and The Highlander Takes a Bride by Lynsay Sands. This giveaway is administered by Pure Textuality PR on behalf of Avon Romance. Giveaway ends 2/3/2018 @ 11:59pm EST. Avon Romance will send the winning copies out to the winner directly. Limit one entry per reader and mailing address. Duplicates will be deleted.
CLICK HERE TO ENTER!





Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Book Review: Gallowglass: (Gallowglass Series Book 1) by Jennifer Allis Provost + giveaway

Gallowglass: (Gallowglass Series Book 1) 
by Jennifer Allis Provost
June 6, 2017
Genre: urban fantasy, paranormal romance
Publisher: Bellatrix Press
ISBN: 978-1622510320
ASIN: B06XXQCPFB
Number of pages: 272
Word Count: 75k
Cover Artist: Deranged Doctor Design

Karina didn’t set out to free the Seelie Queen’s gallowglass. Now she’ll do anything to keep him.

After Karina and her brother, Chris’s, lives fall apart in separate yet equally spectacular ways, they leave New York behind and head to the UK. Karina buries herself in research for her doctoral thesis, all the while studiously not thinking about the man who broke her heart, while Chris—who’d been a best-selling author before his ex-fiancée sued him for plagiarism—drinks his way across the British Isles.

In Scotland, they visit the grave of Robert Kirk, a seventeenth- century minister who was kidnapped by fairies. No one is more shocked than Karina when a handsome man with a Scottish brogue appears, claiming to be the Robert Kirk of legend. What’s more, he says he spent the last few hundred years as the Gallowglass, the Seelie Queen’s personal assassin. When they’re attacked by demons, Karina understands how dearly the queen wants him back.

As Karina and Robert grow closer, Chris’s attempts to drown his sorrows lead him to a pub, and a woman called Sorcha. Chris is instantly smitten with her, so much so he spends days with Sorcha and lies to his sister about his whereabouts. When Chris comes home covered in fey kisses, Karina realizes that the Seelie Queen isn’t just after Robert.

Can Karina outsmart the Seelie Queen, or is Robert doomed to forever be the Gallowglass?


After Karina and her brother’s life fall apart due to broken hearts they decide to leave New York and head to Scotland where Karina has received a grant to work on her doctoral thesis. Rina buries herself in her work while Chris drinks everything he comes across. Chris has never believed in Rina’s work, so when she inadvertently frees Robert Kirk, a seventeenth-century minister who was imprisoned by the Seelie Queen, Chris thinks he’s a con artist and Rina doesn’t know what to believe.

I read a lot of books that take place in Scotland, and that deal with the Fae, Provost provided an imaginative story that had some magic and romance as well. Something I enjoyed about the book, was the fact that I didn’t know how the story would end. Provost did a superb job of keeping the mystery and holding the reader’s attention until the very end. Look for Book 2 Walker in December.

Getting 5 sheep





DeniseB

Excerpt:
I sped back to the ruined kirk, my knuckles white as I gripped the wheel. The real reason I didn’t get on Chris about his constant mooning over Olivia was that at least he and Olivia had had something. I’d had nothing with Jared. No it hadn’t quite been nothing, but it may as well have been. One thing that Chris and I had both learned on this trip is that an ocean is not nearly enough distance to outrun your past.
I parked in the kirk’s tourist lot, leapt out of the rental and ran across the bridge and up the fairy hill, startling some of the local wildlife along the way. When I reached the Minister’s Pine I was panting, my heart pounding as sweat poured down my back.

I had to find that quartz. I just had to.

I dropped to my knees and felt around near the base of the tree. I found my brush rather quickly, along with my hairclip and the stupidly expensive Mont Blanc pen that my advisor had given me when I earned my masters degree. But the quartz, the quartz wasn’t anywhere. The bits of lunch I’d had turned to lead in my stomach; if the quartz was gone, then it was really, truly over.

“Lookin’ for this, are ye now?”

I turned toward the voice, blinked, and pushed my glasses up to my forehead. Yeah, he was really there. Standing in front of me was a tall man in what I assumed was period dress. Instead of a kilt—we American girls tend to think that all Scotsmen run around in kilts, no matter the occasion; sadly, this is not the case—he was wearing a padded brown leather coat topped with chain mail, along with matching brown pants and well-worn leather boots. A helmet was tucked under his arm, and I could see the hilt of a claymore, one of those medieval broadswords that were so heavy you had to swing it with two hands, poking up over his shoulder. A shield rested next to the sword’s hilt, its curved edge just visible above the man’s shoulder.

I hadn’t realized they did reenactments at Doon Hill, and I made a mental note to check the brochure for show times. I also noticed that the actor had his hand extended, with my lump of rose quartz sitting on his open palm.

“Yes!” I got to my feet, and grabbed the stone. “Thank you,” I said once I remembered my manners, stroking the stone with my thumb. The man looked at me intently, his expression wavering somewhere between confusion and curiosity. “What made you think it was mine?”

“Saw ye drop it, I did,” he replied.

“And you’ve been waiting here since then?”

“I knew ye would be back for me.”

I blinked, since I must have misunderstood his accent. What I’d heard as ‘me’ must have really been ‘it’. Accents do tend to garble words. “I really appreciate you waiting for me. Thank you,” I said, extending my hand.

He eyed my hand, dark brows low over his blue eyes. Then he grasped my fingers and brought them toward his mouth.

“What are you doing?” I snapped, snatching my hand away.

“I thought ye wanted me to kiss your hand,” he explained.

“I wanted to shake your hand!” He looked befuddled rather than offended, so I attributed this to yet another cultural misunderstanding. It was becoming quite the list. “Well, regardless, thank you. I’m Rina.”

“Rina,” he repeated, that Scottish brogue of his making my nickname sound positively decadent. “’Tis quite an unusual name.”

“It’s short for Karina,” I explained. “Karina Siobhan Stewart,” I added, wondering why I’d felt compelled to give him my full name. Historically I’d only been called Karina Siobhan when I was in trouble.

“And I am Robert Kirk,” he said, extending his hand. This guy was way deep in character, like method actor deep. I shook his hand, and we both smiled.

“Good to meet you, Mr. Kirk.”

“Reverend Kirk,” he corrected.

“My apologies, Reverend Kirk.” These reenactors sure liked to stick to their roles, though I’d never expected to see a reverend wearing chain mail. We stood there for a moment, holding hands and grinning like a couple of fools, and I took the time to really look at him. He was older than me, probably a bit older than Chris too, with dark, tousled hair, chiseled features, and a roguish glint in his blue eyes. They had obviously picked reenactors that would appeal to the ladies.

“Do no’ fash, Karina lass, no offense was taken,” he murmured, and my cheeks were suddenly hot. I took back my hand, barely resisting the urge to fan myself.

“I should be going,” I said. “My brother’s waiting for me.” I scanned the area around the Minister’s Pine, ascertained that I’d left nothing else of import behind, and turned toward the path. A hand on my arm stopped me.

“Ye canna leave me here,” the reenactor said. “Ye must take me with ye.”

“What? No!” I faced him, planting my feet before him and whipping out my cell phone. “I don’t know what goes on here in Scotland, but I’m an American citizen. Stay back, or I’ll call 911.” I didn’t even know if they had 911 in Scotland. Would I have to call Scotland Yard instead? I hoped my phone had some kind of app for international emergencies. I waved my phone in what I hoped was a menacing manner, and Robert—or whatever his name was—eyed it as if it would bite him.

“Put away your tricks, lass,” he said. “It was ye what called me here in the first place.”

I shook my head. “This is an act, right? Reverend Kirk, freed at long last from the Minister’s Pine?”

“’Tis no act, lass. Would that it were.” He stepped closer, and took my hands in both of his. Robert’s hands were warm and callused, and, despite all this nonsense, comforting. “I am Robert Kirk himself, and ye have freed me no from just a tree, but from Elphame, and the Seelie Queen herself.”

“Elphame?” I asked.

“Aye,” he replied. “Some refer to it as the Fairy Realm.”

I leaned against the Minister’s Pine. He claimed he was from Elphame. Of course he was. How did I always attract the weirdos?

It was generally agreed that when magic left the world, it was because the fairy realm had closed its doors to humans. Some claimed that human industrialization, and its rampant use of iron, had caused the fae to retreat, while others claimed the global shift from pagan to monotheistic faiths was the culprit. No matter which theory you favored, the end result was the same; there was no new magic. For hundreds of years humans had made do with a few crumbling artifacts and enchanted items, but those items were wearing out too. It was as if magic had a half-life, and we’d long since passed the middle point.

“You can’t be from Elphame,” I said. “It’s closed. It’s been closed for centuries.”

“Has it, now? I will say this, when I was a boy the land was thick with magic. Ye could hardly walk the roads without encountering one o’ the Good People.”

“When you were a boy,” I repeated, then I remembered that Robert Kirk had lived in the seventeenth century. Magic hadn’t started disappearing until a century later. “Still, it’s closed now.”

“Just because a door has been closed, does no’ mean it canna be reopened.”

I slid down to the ground and Robert sat beside me, both of us leaning against the tree he’d recently emerged from.

Wait, when did I start believing him?

“So, um, you think all of this is real?” I ventured, gesturing around the clearing. “The legend and all?”

Robert smiled wanly. “Ye have heard o’ me, then?”

“They say you told the world of the fairies’ secrets, so they imprisoned you in a tree.”

“That is no the whole of the tale.” Robert closed his eyes as he leaned his head back against the trunk. “I did have dealings with the Good People, but it was no them who abducted me.”

“Then who did?”

“’Twas Nicnevin, the Seelie Queen herself.”

My jaw dropped, and if I hadn’t already been on the ground I would have fallen. As it was, my arm went out from under me, and my shoulder bumped into Robert. “Are ye all right, lass?” Robert asked.

“Yes,” I lied. There was nothing all right about this. “Why did the queen take you?”

“She fancied me,” he replied. “Offered me an apple, ye ken. I said no, it angered her, she cursed me. And here we are today.”

I looked up at him. He still had his head tipped back against the tree, his eyes closed. “That sounds like the ridiculously oversimplified version.”

At that, he opened his eyes and speared me with his gaze. “Would ye be likin’ all the details, then, lass?”

I swallowed. “Um, maybe not just yet.” My gaze moved from Robert’s face to the quartz in my hand. “What makes you think I freed you?”

“Ye made contact wi’ the tree, wishin’ to rescue me. Wishes are powerful things, ye ken.” Robert leaned over and touched the quartz. “Then ye dropped your stone, and a door opened for me. I ha’ been waitin’ for ye ever since.”

“Wishes are powerful things,” I repeated. “Why do you want to leave with me? You don’t even know me.”

“I know ye freed me, and that is no small thing,” Robert replied. “I also know that as soon as Nicneven kens I’ve left me post, she will send her creatures to retrieve me.”

“Creatures?”

“Aye. And I do no’ want to be here when they arrive.”

I took a deep breath and got to my feet, Robert following suit. Once we were standing I looked into his clear blue eyes, his guileless face, and sighed. He was either telling the truth, or he was the greatest actor in the world. Or I was the world’s biggest idiot; the jury was still out on that.

“Well, let’s go.”

“Go?” he repeated hopefully.

“If you’re telling the truth—and I’m not saying that you are—I can’t just leave you here. And, if you’re not telling the truth, I’ll drop you at the nearest police station,” I added, trying to act tough in front of the armored man with the sword.

Robert inclined his head, and took both of my hands in his. “Lass, soon enough ye will ken that I only speak what’s true.” He once again brought my knuckles to his lips; this time, I let him kiss me. It was nice, having one’s hand kissed by a dark, handsome man. “Karina Siobhan Stewart, I am now your charge, and I shall follow your every command.”

“Okay. Um.” I looked him over and issued my first command. “First of all, you can’t tromp around Aberfoyle wearing chain mail. You’re going to have to take off your armor.”

About the Author:
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Jennifer Allis Provost writes books about faeries, orcs and elves. Zombies too. She grew up in the wilds of Western Massachusetts and had read every book in the local library by age twelve. (It was a small library). An early love of mythology and folklore led to her epic fantasy series, The Chronicles of Parthalan, and her day job as a cubicle monkey helped shape her urban fantasy, Copper Girl. When she’s not writing about things that go bump in the night (and sometimes during the day) she’s working on her MFA in Creative Nonfiction.

Tour giveaway 
1 $10 amazon gift card, to be sent electronically to the winner’s email.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

New Release: Historical Hellions: Seven Historical Romances for $.99

Seven novels for $.99
Historical Hellions: Seven Historical Romances
by Christina McKnight, Elizabeth Essex, Erica Monroe, Lila DiPasqua, Eileen Richards, Madeline Martin, Christy Carlyle
April 11, 2017
1587 pages
From bluestockings to scandalous heiresses, these strong-willed, unconventional historical romance heroines don’t let anything stand in their way when it comes to love and happily ever after. Featuring seven novellas and novels from award-winning and bestselling authors.

The Pursuit of Pleasure by Elizabeth Essex

Independent, politically-minded heiress Elizabeth Paxton has never wanted to marry, but longs for the freedom afforded to widows. The last thing she wants is dangerously attractive Captain Jameson Marlowe as a husband.

The Thief Steals Her Earl by Christina McKnight

The Earl of Cartwright is determined to find out who stole from his family. When he finds out the thief is the woman he’s fallen in love with, he must choose between duty and love.

Secrets in Scarlet by Erica Monroe

When a bluestocking with a scandalous past meets an idealistic sergeant, sparks fly as they work to solve a murder...but her secrets may lead to their undoing.

Sleeping Beau by Lila DiPasqua
Inspired by the tale of Sleeping Beauty—a scorching hot historical romance novella from the Fiery Tales series. One sleeping rake, one scorching kiss, one night of unforgettable passion...

The Art of Seduction by Eileen RichardsA spinster finds freedom as a theatre set painter until a chance meeting with the marquis who broke her heart has her questioning what she wants for her future.

The Madam’s Highlander by Madeline Martin
What’s the madam of a successful bawdy house in Edinburgh to do when she finds one of the English supported Black Watch soldiers needing to desert his post? She helps him, of course – but there’s a high price to pay. 

Reckless Wager by Christy Carlyle
Victorian propriety and passions collide when a beautiful widow makes a wager with a wounded police detective bent on solving the Ripper mystery.

Settings:
France
Scotland
England
Time Periods:
Victorian
Romantic Era
Regency
Georgian
Tropes:
Class warfare/cross-class romance (TAOS, SIS)
Unconventional heroine (all books)
Reunion (TAOS)
Fake marriage/engagement (TMH, TAOS)
Redemption (SIS, RW, TMH, TAOS, TSHE)
Virgin (TMH)
Detective hero (SIS, RW)
Tortured hero/heroine (SIS, RW)
Protector hero (SIS, RW)
Widowed Heroine (SIS, RW)
Beta Hero (SIS)
Reclusive Hero (TSHE)
Scholar Hero (SIS, TSHE)
Thief Heroine (TSHE)
Woman/Man in Peril (SIS)
Heroine in Disguise (TSHE, SIS)
Mistaken Identity (SIS, TSHE)
Secret Baby (SIS)

Monday, February 8, 2016

Book Review: Gifted Thief (Highland Magic #1) by Helen Harper

Gifted Thief (Highland Magic #1)
by Helen Harper
January 29th 2016 
Paperback, 348 pages
Orphan. Runaway. Thief.

Since the moment I was ripped from my mother's womb, I've been an outcast amongst my own kind. The Sidhe might possess magical Gifts, unbelievable wealth and unfathomable power but I don't want a thing to do with them. I ran away from their lands in the Highlands of Scotland when I was eleven years old and I've never looked back. I don't need a Clan. I've got my own family of highly skilled thieves who mean more to me than any Sidhe ever could.

Unfortunately for me, the playboy heir to the Moncrieffe Clan has something I desperately need. To get it back, I'm going to have to plunge myself back into that world, no matter what the consequences may be. I suppose it's just as well I have sense of humour. I think I'm going to need it.


Helen Harper’s new urban fantasy series, Highland Magic, unfolds in modern day Scotland where fae clans enjoy power, privilege, and prestige while also serving as high-glam tabloid fodder. Integrity Taylor spent her formative years as a nameless orphan in the fae court. Tired of being ostracised, Integrity defects and carves out a life for herself among the clanless. Deemed criminals for the most part, the clanless provide refuge and an occupation for Integrity. As a woman, she’s a first-rate thief in a small ring of professionals, but wearies of the life and has plans to go straight. But when her trusted confidants find themselves in trouble, Integrity must not only put her thievery skills back in action, she must also face the fae court she’s tried desperately to avoid.

This book was fantastic; I read it like a fiend. The plot is action-packed and filled with romantic tension. Integrity is sassy, smart, and determined; definitely my kind of heroine: “I liked Hello Kitty and hot pink and sparkly nail polish. But pigeonholing me was unfair; I also liked science fiction and scaling high walls without a rope. Why did men always think you were either a tomboy or a princess? It was possible to be both.”

Integrity meets her match in fae prince Byron Moncrieffe. The sandy-haired fae with a playboy reputation is pulling strings of his own and a delicious revolving plot line of cat and mouse ensues. The worlds of urban fantastic Scotland and the fae realm are imaginatively described and wonderfully creative. This was my first Helen Harper book and I will certainly be adding her earlier series to my TBR list.

The worst part of this reading experience is realizing I’ll have to wait for the second installment. Gifted Thief is a fabulous read. You really must steal a moment to pick this up.

Five Sheep






Bianca Greenwood

About the Author:
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After teaching English literature in the UK, Japan and Malaysia, Helen Harper left behind the world of education following the worldwide success of her Blood Destiny series of books. She is a professional member of the Alliance of Independent Authors and writes full time although she still fits in creative writing workshops with schools along with volunteering to teach reading to a group of young Myanmar refugees. That’s not to mention the procession of stray cats which seem to find their way to her door!

Helen has always been a book lover, devouring science fiction and fantasy tales when she was a child growing up in Scotland.

Helen currently lives in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia with far too many cats – not to mention the dragons, fairies, demons, wizards and vampires that seem to keep appearing from nowhere!

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Alpha Male Diner: Chieftain Logan MacLomain by Sky Purington + giveaway



Chieftain Logan MacLomain

Recipe created by Sky Purington 
Quest of a Scottish Warrior (The MacLomain Series: Later Years, Book 1)


Ingredients:
* A six-foot-five, Highland wizard
* Equal portions of Unbreakable Honor, Avid Loyalty, and Incomparable Leadership Skills
* Icy pale blue eyes, sensual lips, broad shoulders, slightly scarred chiseled muscles
* Master with bows & arrows, broadswords and daggers

Seasoning:
* Just enough humor
* Sinfully magical talents
* Heart-stopping chivalry
* A deep brogue

After tossing the ingredients well, kneed in the following:
* A methodical mind
* Unwavering determination
* A lifetime of training in warfare
* A dash of bitter vengeance

Turn heat to HIGH and indulge in a shot of Scottish whisky.

Before serving this adventurous dish, sprinkle heavily with a mixture of time travel and unexpected romance.

Be prepared for an explosion of flavor that causes visions of medieval castles and sexy men in kilts. Expect to hear the whisper of a knee-weakening brogue and the haunting call of the distant past. CAUTION: If the room starts to spin and you hear the lilt of a bagpipe on the wind, it’s highly likely you’ve traveled back to the thirteenth century. Och, lass, all ye can do now is hold on tight as yer swept up into the arms of a Scottish warrior.




Taste Test

Cassie nodded and as they’d done the past couple of nights, they settled into comfortable conversation. She was a pleasure to chat with. Though humble, she possessed a sharp wit. He suspected had she pursued any of her college majors, she would have excelled.

Yet the more he got to know her the more he sensed she lived her life a certain way…as if she knew its outcome already. Almost like someone planning to move to another country and preparing themselves for a different language and customs. Eventually, he intended to find out exactly what she was getting ready for. Whatever it was, it had her purposely changing subjects on a somewhat regular basis.

As he figured she would, Cassie eventually said, “Why are we eating separately from everyone tonight?”

Though tempted to say it was unintentional, he would be lying. The truth was he wanted her all to himself. “‘Twas a trying experience earlier. I thought you might want some privacy to relax.”

She arched her brow and offered a lopsided grin. “Yet you’re here.”

“Well, you cannae be alone in these woods, lass.” He polished off his meat and leaned back on his hands so that his shoulder was almost against hers. Voice lowered, he said, “And I’ll admit to wanting to spend some time alone with you. ‘Tis a luxury I rarely get.”

“Ah.” This time he didn’t have to touch her to enjoy her becoming blush. His eyes dropped to her mouth when she licked her lips. He had never wanted to taste a lass so much in his life. When she cleared her throat, his eyes slowly returned to hers.

“You should probably stop looking at me like that,” she said.

“Like what?”

“Like we’re here alone for another reason altogether.”

“Aye,” he murmured, caught by how the firelight reflecting off the shrubbery behind her seemed to magnify the pale green in her eyes. Unable to stop himself, he brushed his thumb down her delicate jawline, eager for far more contact. “May I kiss you, lass.”

Her eyes widened slightly. “W-what?”

“Kiss you.” He ran the pad of his thumb over her lower lip and leaned even closer. “I’ve wanted to do it since I pulled you onto my horse that first day.”

“Oh,” she whispered, not shying away.

Wrapping his hand in her hair, he didn’t kiss her right away but brought his lips close to her ear and murmured, “I’ve never seen such a bonnie lass.” He flicked his tongue beneath her dainty earlobe, relishing her quiver. “I’ve never wanted to touch and taste a lass so much that I cannae think straight.”

“Oh,” she whispered again, her head tilting to give him more access. God, she tasted warm and sweet and so bloody soft. He gently peppered kisses along her jaw, desperate to reach her lips but equally eager to sample everything along the way. Sharp arousal speared him when her breath hitched and she squeezed her thighs together. Hell, he had known the lass less than a week and he’d already imagined a hundred different ways he wanted to make love to her.

At last, his lips hovered over hers, savoring the heat of her breath, the ravenous anticipation before he finally…

“Och, m’laird, ye should have gotten to that sooner,” Machara quipped as she came around the corner.

Cassie pulled back sharply and Logan scowled as he redirected his attention to his intrusive cousin. “What is it?”





Quest of a Scottish Warrior
The MacLomain Series: Later Years

Book 1
Sky Purington
Genre: Time-travel Fantasy Romance
Date of Publication: September 8, 2015
ASIN: B010EKKQUE
Number of pages: 257
Word Count: 82,800
Cover Artist: Tamra Westberry
Historian and ancestry website owner, Cassie first became interested in her long lost Broun clan when she realized life was about to change forever. Faced with possible blindness, she seeks out her Scottish bloodline only to discover there is so much more to it than she could have anticipated. Not only will she find answers to her questions but a doorway into the distant past via a Claddagh ring.

Betrothed since birth to a lass he has never met, Chieftain Logan MacLomain thought the unending tie between his clan and the Brouns was long past. Never was he more wrong. When Cassie appears in a skirmish on the border of his clan’s land, all his noble intentions are put to the test. To desire her is wrong but still he seeks her out every chance he gets. Just a glimpse of her passing smile brightens the honorable yet lonely path he must see through.

Everything changes for Cassie and Logan the day war ravages a nearby village and a young king’s fate is put at risk. Scotland’s future hangs in the balance as denied love blossoms and four MacLomain warriors band together to save all that might soon be lost. Set to avenge the harm done, Logan embarks on a quest with Cassie that will take them both down a road fraught with risk, heartache and the beginning of an end they never saw coming.


About the Author:
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Sky Purington is the best-selling author of seventeen novels and several novellas. A New Englander born and bred, Sky was raised hearing stories of folklore, myth and legend. When combined with a love for nature, romance and time-travel, elements from the stories of her youth found release in her books.

Visit Sky's website, http://www.skypurington.com to download her free App on iTunes and Android or sign up for her quarterly newsletter. Love social networking? Find Sky on Facebook and Twitter.

Friday, August 21, 2015

True Story: A few days in the life of a detective by Luke Delaney (The Toy Taker book tour)

A few days in the life of a detective. 
Luke Delaney. 
Metropolitan Police Detective - Retired.


Sunday– a little past seven in the morning and I’m standing at a bus stop on my way to work. It’s absolutely freezing and the rain, that feels more like ice, is coming down at a forty-five degree angle, forcing me to take cover behind the side of the bus shelter. I think of the warmth of my wife and the faces of my three young children who will soon be demanding to know why daddy isn’t there – again. 

The weather truly is foul, making the sky dark of forbidding, as if it knows something I don’t, but I welcome it. Apparently it’s been as bad as this all night. I breath I sigh of relief and remind myself of the old saying – Rain? Best policeman in the world. I’m pretty confident the adverse conditions would have kept the particular part of London I covered quiet overnight, which means there shouldn’t be too much to deal with. I may even get a chance to catch up on some paperwork – the curse of every busy detective. Who knows – I might even be able to salvage some of the weekend and get home before the kids are marshaled off to bed. It’s already been a heavy week at work – a heavy month and I could have done with the weekend off to re-charge, but it wasn’t to be. Never mind – at least the weather’s foul.

I feel my mobile phone ringing before I hear it and pointlessly look around to make sure I’m alone. The display says number withheld. This is bad news. This time on a Sunday morning it can only mean one thing. I start to feel a little sick, but answer anyway. What choice do I have? My fears are quickly confirmed – it’s the Night Duty CID phoning to give me a heads up. There’s been two serious robberies. Both victims are seriously injured and in hospital – four local hooligans have been nicked and await my attentions.

Instinctively I know what the next three days will be like – no sleep, bad food, dangerous amounts of caffeine and pain killers, but this one’s especially bad because I already feel exhausted and the job’s only just begun. If I could have just had one day to rest. Still, you rarely got to choose in this job. The bus arrives and takes me on the short mournful journey to the station. By the time I get there I’ve already scrambled the other weekend staff to get in as fast as possible so we can get on with the investigation as soon as possible. From the moment the suspects were arrested the clock is against me. I have twenty-four hours to get enough evidence to charge my charming guests or they’ll be released. I can ask the Superintendent to give my a twelve hour extension and I already know I’m going to need it and if that’s not enough I can always apply to the Magistrates for a longer extension, but they could say no. Better to get the job done, so we’re going to have to push ourselves to the limit or fail.

The first day if a constant blur of talking to defence solicitors, interviews, checking on the unfortunate victims, both of whom have been kicked near to death, their heads looking like grotesque footballs, eyes swollen shut, lips sealed closed with dried blood. They’re both still unconscious. One’s sixty-years old and never truly recovers from the attack – all faith he had in humanity lost forever. And there’s forensic evidence to preserve, witnesses to find, CCTV to recover and watch. One piece of footage shows the suspects attacking the old man and for the first time we see they initially smash a bottle over his head to bring him to ground before kicking him unconscious. It’s hard to watch, even for a seasoned detective. What I wouldn’t give for a little time alone with our four heroes.

I get home around 3.30am, exhausted, but unable to sleep, my head buzzing and throbbing and fully aware I’m not even halfway through the investigation yet. I sneak upstairs, trying not to wake the kids and slip into bed next to my wife. She asks me if I’m ok and I lie and tell her yes. I lie their for about three hours until the alarm clock goes off and sure enough I feel like I could sleep for the first time, so quickly climb from the bed and head for the bathroom. After a shower and a change of clothes I feel surprisingly human, but I know it won’t last.

I get to the station around seven and meet the Superintendent who gives me my extension of detention and so the day begins – a carbon copy of previous day, only we start to pull the investigation tighter and tighter, until finally I’m satisfied we have more than enough evidence to convict the heartless, remorseless, brainless thugs, but there’s still the CPS to convince and it’s getting late again. They won’t like me pushing them for a decision at this time of night, but they and I have no choice. After some pointless arguing and rather pathetic issues they finally agree to authorizing the charging of the suspects. I head back to the office relieved, but cursing the day the powers-that-be decided we police were too stupid to make our own decisions on charging.

We charge the four little loves, who spit and curse and threaten. I enjoy giving them the good news we’ll be opposing bail. More threats, more curses. I give them a wink and head back to the office to tidy up the paper work for court the following morning and eventually head home. I get back about 3am, have a hit of something strong and crawl into bed, more relaxed than the previous night and able to sleep for almost three hours, which after almost no sleep, feels unbelievably good.

A little later that morning I make my way to the Magistrates Court and go in hunt of the CPS lawyer, finding him reading through the morning files and looking sorry for himself. He has no idea what my last two days have been like and lays on the superior attitude thick – tells me he hasn’t got time to read the file properly and therefore it won’t be his fault if the little angels get bail. I give him a look that leaves him in no doubt of what I think of him and tell him just to stick to what was in the case file that I was up until two in the morning preparing, my computer screen blurring and warping as exhaustion threatened to swallow me. He’s a good boy and does as he told, sticking to my script and the four heroes all get remanded. Bye-bye boys. A few months later they all plead guilty and get indeterminate life sentences and the streets of London are a little safer – for a while anyway.

It’s another robbery crew off the streets. Another group of psychopathically violent hooligans safely locked up because my team and I worked our tails off and got everything right and got it right first time – everything – the law, the forensics, the interviews, procedures, medical evidence. Everything, and all without the luxury of time to think or refer to books and manuals. We got it so right that even the defendants army of highly paid barristers couldn’t find a single chink in our armour and hence the little charmers were forced to plead guilty and save the tax payers a small fortune. So why was it that a few days later I opened my pay packet and saw I was still being paid an insultingly poor wage? The sort of money that made it impossible to make ends meet when you have a young family, especially in London. I knew in that moment I had no choice but to leave the job I loved – the job I thought I’d do for life, but I couldn’t stay and be so undervalued anymore. You have to know your value in this world and I knew mine.

A few years later I had a top literary agent, Simon Trewin and a fantastic three-book deal with Harper Collins. My first novel, Cold Killing, hit the shops shortly after with novel number two, The Keeper, hot on its heels. People keeping asking me what’s it like trying to make the publishing deadlines and how I’m coping with the pressure. Pressure? Trust me – after the police nothing feels like pressure. Nothing!


The Toy Taker (DI Sean Corrigan #3)
By Luke Delaney
Publication Date: July 28, 2015 HarperCollins PublishersOutside the house, it’s cold and dark. Inside, where it’s warm, children are sleeping.

Former detective Luke Delaney returns with the third chilling novel in his DI Sean Corrigan series: THE TOY TAKER (Harper Mass Market; July 28, 2015; ISBN: 9780062219503) might be the most thrilling installment yet. Cold Killing and The Keeper, the previous two books in the series were published to high acclaim, delivering a “gritty and hard-hitting crime novel” (Iron Mountain Daily News) with “scary authenticity” (The Sun). Now, with THE TOY TAKER, Delaney has created another gripping, realistic work of crime fiction with a sharp psychological edge.

D.I. Sean Corrigan might have a tiny new office at Scotland Yard and a huge new beat—all of London—but the job is the same. His team has a knack for catching the sickest criminals on either side of the Thames, thanks in large part to Corrigan's uncanny ability to place himself inside the mind of a predator.

But he just can't get a read on this new case. Four-year-old George Bridgeman went to sleep in his bedroom in a leafy London suburb . . . and wasn't there in the morning. No tripped alarms. No broken windows. No sign of forced entry or struggle.

As his investigation zeroes in on a suspect, Corrigan's gut tells him it doesn't add up. Then another child is taken. Now someone's toying with Corrigan. And the game is about to turn deadly.

The Toy Taker Chapter 1:

The street was quiet, empty of the noise of living people, with only the sound of a million leaves hissing in the strong breeze that intensified as it blew in over Hampstead Heath in north-west London. Smart Georgian houses lined either side of the deserted Courthope Road, all gently washed in the pale yellow of the streetlights, their warming appearance giving lie to the increasingly bitter cold that late autumn brought with it. Some of the shallow porches added their own light to the yellow, left on by security-conscious occupiers and those too exhausted to remember to switch them off before heading for bed. But these were the homes of London’s affluent, who had little to fear from the streets outside—the hugely inflated house prices ensuring the entire area was a sanctuary for the rich and privileged. Constant highly visible police patrols, private security firms, and state-of-the-art burglar alarms meant the people within slept soundly and contentedly.

His gloved fingers worked quickly and nimbly as he crouched by the front door, the small, powerful torch—the type used by spelunkers, strapped to his forehead by an elasticized band—provided him with more than enough light to see inside the locks on the door: two deadlocks, top and bottom, and a combined deadlock and latch in the center. His warm breath turned to plumes of mist that swirled in the tubular light of the torch before disappearing into the night, making way for the next calmly expelled breath. He’d already unlocked the top and bottom deadlocks easily enough—a thousand hours of practice making the task simple—but the center locks were new and more sophisticated. Still he remained totally calm as he gently and precisely worked the two miniature tools together, each of which looked similar to the type of instruments a dentist would use—the thin wrench with its slightly hooked end holding the first of the lock’s pins down as the pick silently slid quickly back and forth until eventually it aligned all the pins in the barrel of the lock and it clicked open. It was a tiny sound, but one that in the emptiness of the street made him freeze, holding his breath as he waited for any reaction in the night that surrounded him. When his lungs began to burn he exhaled the dead air, taking a second to look at his watch. It was just gone 3 a.m. The family inside would be in the deepest part of their sleep—at their least likely to react to any slight sound or change in the atmosphere.

He inserted the slim hook wrench into the last remaining lock and once more slid the pick through the lock’s barrel until within only a few seconds he felt the pins drop into their holes and allow him to turn the barrel and open the lock, the door falling open just a few millimeters. He replaced the tools in their suede case along with the other dozen or so lock-picking items, rolled it up and put it into the small plastic sports holdall he’d brought with him. He added the head-torch, then paused for a second before taking out the item that he knew was so precious to the little boy who waited inside—the one thing that would virtually guarantee the boy’s cooperation—even his happiness.

He eased the door open and stepped inside, closing it behind him and silently returning the latch to its locked position. He waited for the sounds of an intruder alarm to begin its countdown to the wailing of sirens, but there was none, just as he all but knew there wouldn’t be.

The house was warm inside, the cold of outside quickly fading in his mind as he stepped deeper into the family’s home, heading for the staircase, his way lit by the street light pouring through the windows. Their curtains had been left open and lights strategically left on in case little feet went wandering in the night. He felt safe in the house, almost like a child himself once more—no longer alone and unloved. As he walked slowly toward the stairs that would lead him to the boy, he noted the order of the things within—neat and tidy, everything in its place except for the occasional toy on the hallway floor, abandoned by the children of the house and left by parents too tired to care anymore. He breathed in the smells of the family—the food they had had for dinner mixing with the mother’s perfume and bathtime creams and soaps, air fresheners and polish.

He listened to the sounds of the house—the bubbling of a fish-tank filter coming from the children’s playroom and the ticking of electronic devices that seemed to inhabit every modern family’s home, accompanied by blinking green and red lights. All the time he thought of the parents rushing the children to their beds, too preoccupied with making it to that first glass of wine to even read them a bedtime story or stroke their hair until sleep took them. Parents who had children as a matter of course—to keep them as possessions and a sign of wealth, mere extensions of the expensive houses they lived in and exotic cars they drove. Children they would educate privately as another show of wealth and influence—bought educations that minimized the need for parental input while guaranteeing they never had to step out of their own social confines—even at the school gate.

More discarded toys lay on the occasional step as he began to climb toward the boy’s room, careful not to step on the floorboards that he already knew would creak, his gloved hands carrying the bag and the thing so precious to the boy. His footsteps were silent on the carpet as he glided past the parents’ bedroom on the first floor, the door almost wide open in case of a child in distress. He could sense only the mother in the room—no odors or sounds of a man. He left her sleeping in the semidarkness and climbed the next flight of stairs to where the children slept—George and his older sister Sophia, each in their own bedrooms. If they hadn’t been, he wouldn’t be here.

He reached the second-floor landing and stood still for a few seconds, looking above to the third floor, where he knew the guest bedrooms were, listening for any faint sounds of life, unsure whether the family had a late-arriving guest staying. He only moved forward along the hallway when he was sure the floor above held nothing but emptiness.

Pink and blue light from the children’s night-lights seeped through their partially opened doors—the blueness guiding him toward George, his grip on the special thing tightening. He was only seconds away from what he’d come for. He passed the girl’s room without looking inside and moved slowly, carefully, silently to the boy’s room, easing the door open, knowing the hinges wouldn’t make a noise. He crossed the room to the boy’s bed, which was pushed up under the window, momentarily stopping to look around at the blue wallpaper with white clouds, periodically broken up by childish paintings in the boy’s own hand; the mobile of trains with smiling faces above the boy’s head, and the seemingly dozens of teddy bears of all kinds spread across his bed and beyond. He felt both tears of joy and sadness rising from deep inside himself and swelling behind his eyes, but he knew he had to do what he’d come to do: a greater power than he or any man had guided him this far and would protect him the rest of the way.

He knelt next to the boy’s bed and placed the bag on the floor, his face only inches away from the child’s, their breath intertwining in the space between them and becoming one as he gently began to whisper. “George . . . sssh . . . George.” The boy stirred under his duvet, his slight four-year- old body wriggling as it fought to stay asleep. “George . . . sssh . . . open your eyes, George. There’s nothing to be afraid of. I have something for you, George. Something very precious.” The boy rolled over slowly, blinking sleep from his narrow eyes—eyes that suddenly grew large with excitement and confusion, a smile spreading across his face, his green eyes sparkling with joy as he saw what the man had brought him—reaching out for the precious gift as the man’s still gloved hand stroked his straight blond hair. “Do you want to come to a magic place with me, George? A special place with special things?” he whispered. “If you do, we need to go now and we need to be very, very quiet. Do you understand?” he asked, smiling.

“A magic place?” the boy asked, yawning and stretching in his pale blue pajamas, making the pictures of dinosaurs printed on them come to life.

“Yes,” the man assured him. “A place just for the best, nicest children to see.”

“Do we have to go now?” the boy asked.

“Yes, George,” the man told him, taking him by the hand and lifting his bag at the same time. “We have to go now. We have to go right now.”


About the Author:
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Luke Delaney joined the Metropolitan Police Service in the late 1980s and his first posting was to an inner city area of South East London notorious for high levels of crime and extreme violence. He later joined CID where he investigated murders ranging from those committed by fledgling serial killers to gangland assassinations.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Book Review: Chance the Darkness (The Dark Series, #1) by L A Wild

Chance the Darkness (The Dark Series #1)
by L A Wild

Kindle Edition, 285 pages
November 20th 2014
by Smashwords Edition
In the depths of half-human, half-unknown, twenty-year-old, Summer Keese’s mind, the walls are beginning to crack....

I must be going mad. When my twin sister dies, my whole life begins to unravel in ways I never could have dreamed. A crazy lady ranting in my head, blood-drinking ghouls, a psychotic cult demanding I channel some powerful objects, dangerous men who want to control me.... Total insanity, right? Except, it’s all real.

Then I meet him. Black. Tall, handsome, godlike. The man harbors sinister secrets and lives by his own set of rules—rules I can't begin to comprehend. One minute, he seems to want to save me. The next, I swear he's going to bury me six-foot under. Why can't he just tell me what's really going on?

While searching for my sister's killer in a seedy part of Glasgow, I discover nothing about my life is what it seems. Family secrets, betrayal. Emotions running hot, I make some seriously bad choices. And with the heart of Scotland becoming a paranormal battlefield, I have to wonder.... When did staying alive get so damn hard?



Art student Summer Keese takes an abrupt break from her studies in Glasgow when she must fly to Amsterdam to identify the body of Carla, her murdered twin. Carla’s unprecedented death starts a chain of events in Summer’s life that leave the telepathic twenty-year-old forever changed and constantly on the run. In Summer’s new life as both the hunted and wannabe hunter, she encounters a cast of characters seemingly benevolent and violently malevolent, but all enigmatic. Frenetic plot twists and turns leave the reader entertained, puzzled and wholly absorbed.

I adored this book. In fact, I hazard to say that it’s the best series opener I’ve read in years. Fans of Karen Marie Moning’s Fever series will love Chance the Dark. Wild is undoubtedly influenced by Moning as the books share some similarities. What Fever was to Dublin, The Dark could be to Glasgow. The series are different enough, however, to provide the reader a fresh, but almost equally stunning experience. When I started Chance the Darkness, I did find myself slightly confused by the highly descriptive, dense language. Initially, I had to reread sections to clarify; however, once I got use to Wild’s style, I became lost in the text. There are a lot of facts, elements, and characters, that are revealed first, explained later, and I came to really appreciate this as a reader. It was a more interesting way to tell the story and created loads of dramatic tension during the reading experience.

As a character, Summer is a work in progress. She’s young with a naivety that comes from youth and inexperience. Her most irksome trait has to be her stubbornness. She has tools at her disposal that she refuses to utilize, and I found this beyond frustrating. But in this respect, Summer is not at all unlike other heroines in similar books of this genre. Summer isn’t the born-to-kick -ass assassin. In fact, she gets her ass kicked and sometimes there’s no one there to bail her out, except herself and her own spontaneous instinct. Warwick Black as the brooding alpha is a cold SOB; totally edgy, completely clandestine, and sexy as hell.

Chance the Darkness ends with a cliff-hanger. You will immediately need book two. Good news. Book two, Sense the Darkness is already available, with book three set for July release. Our wait will not be long. I highly recommend this abundantly creative, completely spellbinding book. Take a chance on The Dark Series. You won’t be disappointed.

Four and a half sheep




Bianca Greenwood

About the Author:
L A Wild is an urban fantasy novelist who grew up in England, then later lived in Greece, Glasgow and Milton Keynes before moving to Australia in 2006. She is the creator and writer behind the Dark Series.