Posts Tagged ‘recommended reading’

Honor Among Orcs

by Amalia Dillin 

Designed by: Melissa Stevens (Website)

Publication Date: April 1, 2014

Series: Orc Saga, Book One

Genre: Fantasy (18+)

After nearly a decade as the king’s whipping-girl, Princess Arianna has no intention of going quietly into marriage to some treasonous noble, or serving obediently as the king’s spy until her death is more convenient. When she discovers a handsome orc, chained and trapped inside a magic mirror, Arianna cannot help but see a lasting freedom from her father’s abuse.

Left to rot inside a mirror by the king, Bolthorn never imagined his prayers would be answered by a princess. Nor did he ever expect to meet so worthy a woman after knowing her father’s cruelty. He needs her help to escape the mirror before the king marches against the orcs, but all he can offer Arianna is ice and darkness in exchange for her aid.

If Arianna can free the monster behind the glass, perhaps she might free herself, as well. But once they cross the mountain, there will be no return, and the deadly winter is the least of what threatens them on the other side. Romance blossoms in this gripping fantasy adventure.

EXCERPT

He knew these woods, sparse as they had become, and when they broke, he knew the tundra of the foothills too. Just before dawn, he found the outcrop beneath which he had made a shelter his first night beyond the mountains, and though he did not dare to light a fire, the sedge made a soft bed.

After a meal of apples and cheese, the last of their food, Arianna curled against his side, sharing the fur, and rested her head on his shoulder. He tested her forehead for fever and breathed his relief when she did not burn against his palm.

She tugged his hand away, a small smile curving her lips. “You worry overmuch. There are still two days of warmth before I must fight your cruel winds. I will be well enough for your mountains by then.”

His fingers lingered against her skin and her smile faded. He traced the clan-markings on her cheek and her lips parted, her heart thrumming in his ears.

“Bolthorn –”

Up the bridge of her nose and over her eyebrow, the umber flaked from her skin, coloring his fingertip. Down along the line of her jaw, to the pulse point beneath. Her breathing hitched. He only wished the marks had reached her collarbone, to give him some excuse to trail his fingers across the smooth skin there.

“You make a beautiful orc.”

“Not a Vala?” she asked, her eyelashes sweeping across her cheek.

“The Vala cannot marry.” The sunlight caught in her hair, flashing reds within the rich brown and he smoothed the soft, wild strands from her face. “They cannot bear children, or know the touch of any kind of man after they have made their vows. They know only the ancestors and the mysteries they reveal.”

“Oh,” she breathed.

Oh. It was the first thing she had ever said to him, trembling against the stone. She trembled now, too. As she should, he thought, knowing herself within the arms of an orc. He closed his eyes and drew his hand back. This was a dangerous game to play with her so near, so vulnerable.

“Sleep well, princess,” he said, his jaw tight against his need. “You’ll want your strength.”

She made a noise in the back of her throat, but when he glanced at her, she had turned away.

About the Author

Amalia Dillin began as a Biology major before taking Latin and falling in love with old heroes and older gods. After that, she couldn’t stop writing about them, with the occasional break for more contemporary subjects. She lives in upstate New York with her husband, and dreams of the day when she will own goats–to pull her chariot through the sky, of course.

Amalia is the author of the Fate of the Gods trilogy from World Weaver Press, and the soon to be released Orc Saga, coming April 1, 2014. You can learn more about her work at www.amaliadillin.com

  

GIVEAWAY

95perHuman-Tour-500px‘Ninety-five percent Human’ is a new YA sci-fi about sixteen-year old Joe Kendrick, living on a failing hill farm in the Welsh mountains. When he saves a girl, Sarah, from drowning, he could never have guessed she was born on a planet halfway across the next galaxy and has been sent to Earth to test the latest genetically engineered body. But is being human just about DNA? The book has a cast of characters and the most humane are not always one hundred percent human.

First up is Sarah. Sarah has 95% human DNA. She knows if her body is a success and she survives, a whole army of hybrids will be made, Earth will be invaded, and the aliens don’t take prisoners. She doesn’t want to be responsible for the destruction of the human race so she determines to kill herself. She has a strong sense of responsibility and is willing to die for what she believes in; very noble human values indeed.

Sarah’s identity is inadvertently compromised by Joe’s ambitious friend Rhys. He doesn’t consider anyone but himself when he sells their story to the local newspaper. Ambition and selfishness are human traits too but not ones we should probably be proud of.

Next, we come to the MI6 operatives sent to capture Sarah and transport her to the UK centre for bio-hazards. Trained to do what they’re told and not to use their own judgment, here we have humans with inhuman values: humans at their worst, scared and stupid enough to kill something because it’s different even though it poses no threat.

Their alien counterparts in the book are the Keepers, robotic technology stationed on Earth to protect it and keep the gene pool uncontaminated. This means Sarah’s presence is definitely in violation and protocol stipulates she must be sent back to the planet she came from. But the Keepers are evolving, are they learning to be more human? Who knows what they will do?

Jake, the laughing geologist, turns out to be an alien robot too. Programmed to learn about Earth culture, he has a childish sense of humour, poor fashion sense and lacks social skills but he is also loyal and trustworthy, particularly if he thinks you’re his friend.

Having rendered his own planet uninhabitable, the alien leader, Keltan, has only one objective: annihilate the human race and take over the planet. Keltan kills because he likes it, takes over planets because he relishes the power and has no respect for anyone regardless of their genetic origins.  As every James Bond movie and every war throughout time has proven, humans have these twisted aspirations too.

We finish with our hero. Joe always means to do the right thing, although at the beginning of the story he doesn’t always stand up for himself and the people he cares about as much as he might. He has a strong sense of responsibility but low self-esteem. It takes the influence of someone with only ninety-five percent human DNA to put that right.

So, what do you think? Is it our DNA that makes us human? Or can aliens be human too?

Ninety-Five Percent Human

Ninetyfive percent Human full cover smallTeenager, Joe Kendrick, thinks he’s got problems. The farm he’s looked after since his father’s suicide is falling and his brother wants to sell it, his girlfriend has dumped him and his normally down-to-earth Nan starts muttering about seeing UFO’s. And all Joe wants is a ‘normal’ life. Then he saves suicidal stranger, Sarah, from drowning.

What Joe doesn’t know is that Sarah is a human/alien hybrid, sent to test the viability of life on Earth, and, as she’s survived hostile aliens are already planning their attack.

Ninety-five percent Human is the first in a two-book sci-fi adventure.

Genre: Young-Adult / Sci-Fi

209 pages

ISBN13 9780957466234

August 31st 2013 by Beresford Publishing House

Buy Links

AMAZON

http://bit.ly/95HUMAN

About the Author

Suzanna Williams is a perpetually eighteen year old YA author who lives in the wild, wet, Welsh borderlands surrounded by ruined medieval castles and Celtic mythology where she looks for UFO’s amongst the stars and imagines all the people she meets have dark secrets.

When she is not inventing radical problems for her unsuspecting heroes and plotting their escape, Suzanna is a serial collector of random badly paying jobs and has never found a use for her BSc in Psychology whatsoever.

As a child, Suzanna filled notebook after notebook with stories and her first taste of writing success was a poem published in the local newspaper aged just nine years old. She has written and directed several plays and pantomimes before publishing her debut novel, ShockWaves, in 2012.

Suzanna loves sci-fi action adventures, playing the piano, believes Romeo and Juliet should have talked more and considers sarcasm to be the highest form of wit.

She has a daughter who is a drummer, another daughter who is a driving instructor, a son who is a dancer and a ‘nearly’ grandson she’s dying to meet.

Social Media Links

 WEBSITE – http://www.suzannawilliams.com/

FACEBOOK – https://www.facebook.com/pages/Suzanna-Williams/269357693135545

TWITTER – https://twitter.com/suzannawriter

YOUTUBE – http://bit.ly/SuzannaYouTube

YOUTUBE EXCERPTS

http://youtu.be/6XGt_alvT2c

http://youtu.be/rXKWc74Gk9Y

http://youtu.be/kmjRtfW48To

http://youtu.be/YIzs6y2Vba8

http://youtu.be/mpVohKbsl4A

Blog Tour Schedule
Froggaritas Bookcase 30th August
J E Haldeman Author 31st August
Fi’s Magical Kingdom 1st September
411 ON BOOKS, AUTHORS, AND PUBLISHING NEWS 2nd September
Random Reviews by Leanne 3rd September
Maer   Wilson 4th September
All That’s Written 5th September
Now is Gone 6th September
Who’s Reviews 7th September
Always Jo Art 8th September
OwenSage.com 9th September
To   Another World – Charli’s Book Blog 9th September
Jess   Resides Here 10th September
Lady Reader’s Bookstuff 11th September
Library Girl Reads 11th September
Mama’s Reading Break 12th September

This blog tour post was provided by:

Kriss Morton Writer, Designer, Blogger, Publicist, Reviewer, Chaos Creationist,  Alaskan, Cabin Goddess…cabingoddess.com  |  thefinishingfairies.com

onedayinbudapestA relic, stolen from the heart of an ancient city.
An echo of nationalist violence not seen since the dark days of the
Second World War.

Budapest, Hungary. When a priest is murdered at the Basilica of St. Stephen and the Holy Right relic is stolen, the ultra-nationalist Eröszak party calls for retribution and anti-Semitic violence erupts in the city.

Dr Morgan Sierra, psychologist and ARKANE agent, finds herself trapped inside the synagogue with Zoltan Fischer, a Hungarian Jewish security advisor. As the terrorism escalates, Morgan and Zoltan must race against time to find the Holy Right and expose the conspiracy, before blood is spilled again on the streets of Budapest.

One Day In Budapest is a chilling view of a possible future as Eastern Europe embraces right-wing nationalism. A conspiracy thriller for fans of Daniel Silva, where religion and politics intersect.

Amazon.com: http://amzn.to/172uqUd (and all other Amazon stores)
Amazon.co.uk: http://amzn.to/1d5BYeX
Kobo: http://bit.ly/13R2LDt
Nook: http://bit.ly/1d1z2Rs

I’ve also done a short video all about my research trip for the book, and how much of the story is based on reality. You can watch it on this page:
http://jfpenn.com/budapest-research/

Right now, the novella is less than the price of a coffee 🙂

PLUS, to encourage the readers of Budapest to try my main series, Exodus, ARKANE #3 is on sale this week for $2.99

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00ALJ09HO/
Kobo: http://bit.ly/14j0YuL

Join the hunt for the Ark of the Covenant!

Thanks, Joanna