Immortal Lust Blitz

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Paranormal Romance & Dark Fantasy

Date Published: January 16, 2023

 

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For years, Raymond du Sable has chased rumors of a woman shrouded in
legend, a woman of unearthly, hypnotic beauty. Finally, on Crusade, he finds
her. She is Cytharea, daughter of Aphrodite, irresistible to mortal man —
and Raymond’s key to grasping the throne of France. To transport her there
safely, Raymond hires a Templar Knight, Gerard d’Amiers.

Sworn to chastity, Gerard has a deep mistrust of women, born of the
infidelity of his boyhood love. Yet Cytharea stirs him in a way no woman
ever has. And Cytharea herself is battling a deadly imperative — she must
feed from the sexual energy of a man soon, or die.

Together, Gerard and Cytharea discover a passion so overpowering it shakes
the very foundations of Gerard’s faith. Upon reaching France, he must
abandon every vow he’s ever made or lose Cytharea to the abusive ambitions
of a madman.

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EXCERPT

 

Copyright ©2023 Sierra Dafoe

 

Acre, The Holy Land, 1191

 

In the hot, stinking dust of a desert night, Raymond du Sable crept closer
to his goal across sands soaked with the blood of battle. Over four hundred
men had died today, Saracens and Christians both.

But tonight, Richard of England and the infidel Saladin exchanged gifts of
courtesy. Chilled fruits served on crushed ice, transported hundreds of
miles from the mountains of Mongolia, delicate embroidery and lace carried
all the way from Britain. The sheer wealth required to bring such items this
far staggered Raymond.

But that was all right — he would have such riches soon enough.

He grinned in the darkness, thinking of the monarchs in Richard’s pavilion.
Bent over a game of chess perhaps, or enjoying the wailing of zurnas that
the Turks considered music. They played at chivalry while Christians bled
and died to reclaim the Holy Land from the godless Turks.

Fools, the lot of them.

He himself had no interest in the Crusade or its goals. He had accompanied
his cousin on this fool’s mission for one reason and one reason only. And
that reason lay just ahead in a heavily guarded tent within Saladin’s
encampment.

Only fools and infidels would bring their women to war.

No doubt his cousin Philip was with the others in Richard’s pavilion,
chafing likely as not at the intricate shows of royal politeness. A vain,
pious, unimaginative man, Philip, just thick-skulled enough to be
dangerous.

Did such a man deserve to hold the throne of France?

Raymond thought not. Thrones and crowns belonged to those with the strength
— and imagination — to take them. He grinned again, keeping his lips
closed so that the flash of his teeth in the dark wouldn’t betray him.

There were two guards along each side of the large tent, with two
additional men stationed at the entrance. Raymond had no intention of
gaining admittance through the front flap. No, his quarry was here, housed
toward the back of the large, opulent tent that housed Saladin’s hareem — a
fact he had paid a pretty penny to learn.

But it was worth it. It all would be worth it.

He had discarded his armor in favor of stealth and speed, yet despite its
absence he felt invulnerable, almost divinely protected. The first guard
fell easily to his knife and the small, secretive, almost sexual excitement
he always experienced while doing murder sang along his veins. It was so
different from the crudity of killing in battle — there was no finesse in
that, no private thrill. As the second guard started to turn, Raymond
slipped behind him and slashed his throat.

Blood spurted across the sand, black in the gibbous moonlight, and Raymond
stared at it a moment, picturing it as a sacrificial offering to whatever
gods there were. Truly, he could almost believe in the old gods tonight.
There was a tension in the air, a sense of fate, of destiny…

Cytharea. Her name whispered in Raymond’s mind with all the potency of
legend. Quickly he slashed a gap in the side of the tent and slipped through
it, finding himself in a small, enclosed space.

Cushions were scattered about the floor, and a single brass lamp dangled
from a chain overhead. By its soft amber light, he could see the girl
cowering back against the silken blue stuff that made up the far wall. Her
dark hair tumbled down, obscuring her features. The thin fabric of her
raiment barely concealed her body. Crossing quickly to her, Raymond seized
her hair and pressed his knife to her throat.

What if she wasn’t the one? What if the legends were no more than fables,
fancies spun of air and idleness? Well, at worst he could slit the girl’s
throat and be gone as silently as he had come, he supposed, and find some
other means by which to wrest the crown from Philip.

Then the girl lifted her head, staring up at him, and Raymond froze,
licking his lips. His heart thudded heavily in his chest and a hot, painful
yearning unfolded in his loins.

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About the Author

An award-winning author who received three CAPA nominations in her first
year of publishing, Sierra Dafoe has gone on to receive numerous awards and
recommended reads for her work. Check her website for free stories, a link
to her readers’ group, sneak peeks, and all her latest news. Sign up for her
newsletter to be entered in her monthly contest, and reach out through the
“contact” page — she loves hearing from her readers!

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Publisher’s Instagram/Facebook/Twitter: @changelingpress

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A Reservoir Man Blitz

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Coming of Age

Date Published: 05-23-2022

Publisher: Film Valor

 

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A Reservoir Man, critics have hailed this explosive and timely work as
“a must-read coming-of-age story of 2022.”

 

A Reservoir Man has unique insights in to life and a compelling narrative
about an individual grappling with truth, identity, and freedom.

 

Early Reviews

“Twists and turns further pull the reader in to Michael’s
action-packed tale, with powerful themes, from betrayal and family to
secrets and identity.”

“Be sure not to blink because you just might miss a pivotal moment in
Michael’s rousing, larger-than-life story.” — R.C. Gibson,
Indiestoday.com.

 “This book is a dream, a gamble, a utopia, even.” —
Kalyan Panja, Bookmarkks.

A Reservoir Man by L.J. Ambrosio is a brilliantly written coming-of-age
fictional memoir that is sure to steal your heart and leave you craving for
more. – The Reading Bud, Book Critic

The book “A Reservoir Man focuses on a coming-of-age story that will
highly impress anyone who comes across this wonderful piece. -Emilee
Jackson, Book Critic (UK)

This is a thought-provoking story that will resonate with readers wherever
they are in their personal journey. I expect everyone to take something
different from this tale, but no one who reads it will be unaffected. – Gina
Rae Mitchel, Book Critic (US)

 

About the Author

Louis J. Ambrosio

Louis J. Ambrosio ran one of the most nurturing bi-coastal talent agencies
in Los Angeles and New York. He started his career as a theatrical producer,
running two major regional theaters for eight seasons. Ambrosio taught at 7
Universities. Ambrosio also distinguished himself as an award-winning film
producer and novelist over the course of his impressive career.

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Carrion Virtual Book Tour

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A Byrd & Crowe Mystery Series, Book 1

Mystery / Suspense

Date Published: 10-15-2022

Publisher: New Atlantian Library

 

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A young woman with a questionable past…

A family struggling to find common ground…

A murder victim with no known enemies…

 

Determined to overcome the dark secrets she helped reveal three years ago
when she rescued a baby from a locked car and ran away, Xandra Byrd is now a
student in criminology at the local community college and an accepted part
of her biological family. Still, she struggles to escape the demons of her
dysfunctional childhood. But when the woman who helped put her family back
together is murdered, and she and her brother implicated in the crime,
Xandra must return to the dark side of human nature in search of a killer.
Will she solve the mystery and clear her name, or will she become the next
victim?

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EXCERPT

One 

 

Xandra Byrd stepped out the back door of the Buns N Fries and headed into the wind. Above the drive-thru lane, a vulture circled, its graceful swoop a contrast to the ugliness of its beaked face. Sunset streaked the sky in shades of red and purple, deepening the shadows as the bird hovered, then, joined by a companion, dipped lower. One of the lids on the garbage bins must have blown open, inviting the scavengers to feast on discarded French fries and half-eaten burgers. Goose bumps peppered Xandra’s arms. She inhaled sharply.

Along with the odor of grease emanating from the restaurant, the scent of decaying lilacs, now past prime bloom, drifted from the bushes separating the eastern half of the parking lot from the dinner theater next door. She gazed from the hedge to the screen of cedars hiding the trash enclosure and the prairie and the wooded land beyond. The forest called her. She wouldn’t mind disappearing into the cool darkness under the trees. A hike was preferrable to gathering used ketchup packets and nagging employees to bus tables. Dragging the trash, Xandra swallowed the unease that had dogged her since the argument with her parents earlier that day. Their suggestion that she return to counseling with Reverend Loving meant she wasn’t successfully hiding her unhappiness. But she didn’t need counseling. She needed to move on with her life, to leave the past behind for good. A discarded burger bag blew across the lot. When a stronger gust ripped the trash from her hand, she chased it down and trudged on.

Overhead, the raptors wheeled back. They often soared above the Hopewell-Springboro corridor, drawn to the fast-food joints and the Kroger Superstore. Vultures, Xandra recalled, could detect rotting meat up to a mile away. Yuck, and useless trivia. She scurried across the drive-thru lane, threading the queue of vans filled with soccer moms and their kids. Fumes from the idling vehicles made her eyes water. Her parents’ request echoed in her mind. They knew her previous years had not been easy, and they supported her decision to enroll in Sinclair Community College’s criminal justice program. What they didn’t know is she hoped that following in her real father’s footsteps, becoming a detective someday, would convince her she belonged in the Zetts family, that Joe and Leah, despite giving her up when she was born, did truly love her. She was trying to fit in. She did her fair share of chores and was paying her way through school, even though Joe and Leah insisted she didn’t have to. If her parents would just stop trying so hard to make things right. Screw the past and let it go. Yeah, if only she could do that, too. Shoving a loose strand of hair behind her ear, she unlatched the gate in the fence around the trash cans. 

Lost in thought, she yelped when the hasp pinched her thumb, then sucked at the blood blister. The wind caught the door and banged it against the enclosure. She stepped inside and paused, puzzled by a dark smudge on the concrete beneath her sneaker. She detected the faint odor of burning, then shrugged. Maybe one of the other employees had grabbed a smoke during their break. She inspected the bins. None of the lids stood open. The fence slammed shut behind her just as a third vulture glided past, wings spread to slow its descent. Still favoring the bruised thumb, she lifted the lid on the first bin, assailed by an unfamiliar odor. Fighting the urge to throw up, she deposited the garbage and turned to leave. Then she screamed.

A woman in a dark skirt and jacket lay splayed across the concrete apron, her face turned away from Xandra. Low-heeled black flats dangled from the woman’s feet. One arm curled around her waist. The other lay at a ninety-degree angle above her shoulder, the hand clutching a scrap of paper that rustled in the wind swirling through the openings in the wooden slats. Xandra clapped a hand over her mouth and swore. Pinching her nose against the smell, she crouched over the body. Blood had pooled beneath the woman’s head and neck, spreading around her like a large, malignant shadow. A last ray of twilight leaked between the slats, illuminating the concrete pad. Something metallic gleamed by the woman’s shoulder. Xandra leaned closer. A pin in the shape of a bird stared up at her, the beak smeared with crimson. Glancing over her shoulder, she snatched the pin and stuffed it in her pocket. 

“Xandra?” Her name drifted, tinny and remote, from the squawk box on the outside order kiosk. Reggie Lynx, one of the night shift workers, shouted again. “Hey, Byrd, you get lost out there?”

She shoved her shoulders against the gate, which rattled but refused to open. When the door slammed shut, the latch must have fallen into place. She backed away from the body and stood on tiptoe to peer over the fence. “Reggie? Help! I’m locked in.” 

Laughter echoed from the speaker before a car drove by, cutting off the sound. Xandra snaked her hand over the pickets to slap at the latch until it slid free. When the gate swung open, she braced her leg against the wood to prevent it from reclosing. Then she took out her phone.

“911. What is your emergency?” A dispatch officer answered on the second ring.

“Hello? This is Xandra Byrd. I manage the night shift at the Buns N Fries.”

“What’s your emergency, Ms. Byrd?”

Xandra closed her hand around the bird pin in her pocket. The vultures circled lower. “I’m at the Buns N Fries, 728 Hopewell-Springboro Pike. There’s a dead body in the trash shed.”

“Did you check for a pulse?”

“No, but I don’t have to. The woman’s dead.” Xandra paused when the sound cut off. “Hello? Are you there?”

“An officer is on his way to your location. Stay on the line, Ms. Byrd.”

Xandra gripped the phone so tightly her hand shook. “Hurry, please. I’m not positive, but I think it’s Reverend Loving.”

About the Author

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J.E. Irvin is the author of five mystery/thriller novels, a two-time winner
of the Whodunit Award, and a member of SistersinCrime, Central Ohio Fiction
Writers, Buckeye Crime Writers, and the Ohio Writers Association. Irvin, her
husband, and their two cats reside on the edge of a nature park which serves
as inspiration for her work. For more about the author, check out
www.janetirvin.com and sign up for her newsletter as well as updates on
future Byrd& Crowe mysteries.
 

 

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The Body Politic Release Blitz

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Book II of The Tribal Wars

Science Fiction

Date Published: 1/8/2022

 

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BookLife Editor’s Pick

 

Brianna Miller returns to Dolvia where tribal women protest the oppressive
rule of Rabbenu Ely by self-torchings in the Cylay Square.  Brianna
re-establishes her tribal schools and takes on assistant Kelly Osborn who is
mixed blood and also a poet.

Kelly visits a neighboring planet Cicero where her aunt Carline Bryant
takes over her education. While returning to Dolvia, Kelly meets the
Australian adventurer Hershel Henry who has signed on for a tour of Dolvia
as a photo-journalist.  Henry takes an opportunity to interview the
khalif on the opposing side of the tribal wars.

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Book I of The Tribal Wars is AVAILABLE NOW!

Fantasy

Date Published: 10-08-2022

 

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BookLife Editor’s Pick

On Dolvia, Lt. Mike Shaw demands Dr. Greensboro’s doctoring skills at
the hospital, forcing the closure of her bush clinic. She witnesses forced
labor, forced migration, and the threat of an epidemic from bad water. She
sees how tribal women–often wearing burkas–find solutions for
saving the children in a conflict zone, and she commits to the their cause
for Home Rule.

Brianna Miller is an isolated girl–a mixed-blood orphan–among
the Dolviet tribes. With the lessons from Dr. Greensboro, the abuse from
soldiers, the sisterhood among victims, Brianna prepares for a future she
will choose for herself. But first she must travel offworld.

FREE FOR A LIMITED TIME – 12/27 – 1/16

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About the Author

Stella Atrium

Stella Atrium is an award-winning writer who presents otherworld stories
about female protagonists of diverse ethnicity who encounter obstacles
relatable to our lives today. How do women in a war zone gain voice in the
marketplace using the few tools available to women?

Stella Atrium teaches at university in addition to online writing courses.
She lives in Chicago, Illinois.

 

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I’ll Never See It Virtual Book Tour

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Tomorrow Seemed Impossible

Self-help – Memoirs

Date Published: 10-25-2022

Publisher: Rope Swing Publishing

 

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From childhood well into her adult life, Keeley Brooks struggled quietly
with trauma and the very dangerous effects it took on her physical, mental,
and emotional health. In her late teens, Keeley was diagnosed with four
mental health challenges and an eating disorder after suffering extreme
panic and anxiety at a young age.

Struggling with crippling feelings of isolation, unworthiness, desperation,
and fear, as well as the inherent urge to heal, she turned to writing. Now
offering her human truths and personal experiences on how she navigated
them, survived them, then healed and has grown from them, Keeley shares in
graphic detail her deeply personal perspective on trauma, mental health, and
side effects while bravely giving readers an intimate peek behind the
curtain at the functioning of a mind rooted in trauma and riddled with fear,
anxiety, panic, depression, shame, and silence.

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EXCERPT 

CHAPTER 3 

I was told when young to pick a dream in life and go for it. “Do what makes you happy!” they’d say. My only dreams were to find my mate in life and to be a writer. 

Do you know how it feels when you’ve been wearing a brace on your wrist for days or weeks—months, even—and then you finally take it off so your limb can wander freely? You know that stiff, unbroken feeling that is left? 

It’s like a numbness that leaves your once-restricted limb feeling cold and empty. 

 

Vacant. 

 

That’s the feeling I live with, except that it isn’t in my wrist or ankle or elbow, but it isn’t much of an unbroken feeling at all. It’s more like damaged or spoiled—tainted—and it’s in my head, in my mind. It has been there for as long as I can remember. Ever since I was a child old enough to write. 

And write I did … things I didn’t understand at the time, things that didn’t make any sense after I read them. They made sense when I wrote them, though, and had my rage not gotten the best of me in my teenage years, these writings would probably make sense to me if I could read them now. 

If only I had paid attention to what I was trying to tell myself, things might’ve been different. 

I was too young to pay attention to writing back when I was small. All I knew was that I often got this feeling of intense fear and nervousness at inappropriate times. It was a feeling to which I became submissive and was forced to pick up a pen and bleed through as much paper as I could. It was the most exhaustive feeling while it was happening, but once I had written and gotten everything out, relief would comfort me. 

The more I wrote, the more I realized something was off. Something inside was different. The confusion I felt only increased my anger, and the more frequently I wrote, the more compelled I was to burn it all. 

 

So, I did. 

 

I burned it all because I didn’t understand it; it was dark and sad and would surely cause alarm with my mother if she read any of it, and I didn’t want her to see it. I burned it all because I didn’t want to be bound to and haunted by my indecipherable words anymore. 

It wasn’t long after that I began to understand I was broken in a way that could not be fixed. The longer I harbored this idea, the more I began to realize what I had so recklessly burned. I instantly became frightened at the thought of having possibly destroyed the only keys that would release me from the hell I had been locked into. 

But time passed and all desire to struggle quickly faded. 

I soon stopped trying to find meaning in new things I’d written. I even quit reading my work and trying to make sense of it. To me, I believed it to be of no use and hope. So, I just gave up on it altogether until one day, nearly a decade later, it hit me: 

I can’t make sense of my writings because the writings themselves are sick! 

My writings were products of a sick mind. They weren’t explanations for what I was feeling; they were a product of what I was feeling. They were manipulations and therefore not meant to be understood. 

That is why, for those of you who try, it is hard to write about your mind and the state in which it lives. In fact, that is why it is even harder to decipher what is written by a sick mind; however, if you know what to 

look for in these writings and you are successful in finding it, all that is left to determine is what you will do with what you have found. 

Of course, you will never get there without being able to see where the simplicity of it all lies, which is not in any meaning of the writing; it’s in the writing itself … it’s in the words. They are so simple, so basic. 

 

It’s the way they are linked 

 

together and the rate 

 

at which 

 

they flow 

 

that 

 

create difficulty, 

 

and how quickly they flow 

 

is unknown to anyone 

 

other 

 

than 

 

the 

 

writer. 

 

But, as a reader, even when you feel you are getting somewhere, there is still one thing to be remembered: writings of a sick mind do not want to be deciphered, not even by their creator. 

 

So, why, then, are they here? To confuse those who are able to think with a rational mind? 

Maybe. 

For others like me, they are here as portals of communication, which require no thought. You see, a meaning (quite different from an understanding) comes from within, from what is felt when (and if) you succeed in unlocking the words. 

And more often than not, those of you who operate on level playing ground just walk away from these portals full of confusion and sometimes pity, but mostly just with thoughts of how “psycho” or “mentally ill” 

the writer is. And lucky for you, you are usually right, but not always. Just because I struggle and think differently and want to voice how I feel so it doesn’t devour me whole does not make me psycho or ill. It makes me a human being who battles some things but is still here growing and learning and trying. 

And this leads me to where I am today, with a silly dream of being a writer, because how can I be a writer when what I produce will touch no one in a positive manner? 

Still, another day passes, and it seems I just can’t leave well enough alone. I’ve never been able to, instead becoming one who pokes and prods and pulls at every opportunity to make well enough worse. 

I’m the one who chases after what others fight off: instead of running away from the darkness, I run towards it holding flares in each hand, hoping to draw it closer. I just don’t know that I’m doing it until it’s too late to turn back. 

And that’s how it all started. 

At a mere eleven years of age, I lost all sense of reality that once surrounded me. What I should’ve feared and fought became a home to me. 

 

Living in darkness became second nature. 

 

In fact, it has been so long since I’ve been able to differentiate between reality and fantasy (because of trauma that happened in reality and because I kept quiet about it) that for a long time, I forgot what all sense of reality looked, felt, tasted, and sounded like; thus begins my story of how I came to live amongst a handful of demons—puppet masters, if you will—who, to this day, will not and cannot let me go. 

You know, Oscar Wilde also said that the truth is rarely pure and never simple. 

This is my truth, and I have lived it, survived it, learned from it, and evolved and moved forward because of it. 

And I can assure you it is as pure as I remember and indeed not simple at all. 

 

About the Author

Keeley Brooks

Keeley Brooks is an author, writer, poet, and editor. She’s a contributing
author to the #1 bestseller My Labor Pains Were Worse Than Yours and in May
2022 released her first poetry collection Poetry from an Isolated Soul. With
a decade’s experience in entertainment journalism, she currently writes
health & lifestyle articles for Modern Grace Magazine and is an arts
& entertainment writer and managing editor at Mixed Alternative
Magazine.

Keeley has just published her first creative nonfiction book, which details
her deeply personal struggle with trauma and mental illness, as well as
their effects on her mind, body, and spirit. She also offers an intimate
peek behind the curtain at the functioning of a mind riddled with fear,
anxiety, panic, and depression, then she shares how she has healed and grown
from it all and has found the balance needed to reclaim her life.

Keeley is currently focused on several literary projects, including a
collaborative fiction novel with three additional authors and a women’s
self-care book with her integrative health practitioner.

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