Showing posts with label historical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

On The Subject of Griffons by Lindsey Byrd - Blog Tour with Author's Guest Post and Giveaway




Blurb
They’ll do anything to save their children’s lives, even if it means working together.
Kera Montgomery is still mourning the sudden death of her husband, Morpheus, when her youngest son falls victim to a mysterious plague. With no medicinal cure, Kera must travel to the Long Lakes, where magical griffons capable of healing any ailment reside.
As an heiress unused to grueling travel, Kera struggles with the immense emotional and physical strain of her journey—one made more complex when she crosses paths with her husband’s former mistress, Aurora. Aurora’s daughter is afflicted with the same plague as Kera’s son, so despite their incendiary history, the two women agree to set aside their differences and travel together.
The road is fraught with dangers, both living and dead. Each night, old battlegrounds reanimate with ghosts who don’t know they’ve died, and murderous wraiths hunt for stray travelers caught out after dark. If Kera, Aurora, and their children are going to survive, they’ll need to confront the past that’s been haunting them since their journey began. And perhaps in the process, discover that old friends may not be as trustworthy as they once thought—and old enemies may become so much more.
Now available from Riptide Publishing and where ebooks are sold.


Setting


On the Subject of Griffons has a relatively stable setting despite it taking place over a wide area. As far as towns are considered, the characters only really interact with two. They stay at a settlement and a town that’s being built, but there’s really only one fully formed city. For the rest of the book, the characters are travelling and the setting can best be described as: woods, woods, lots of woods, lots of woods and trees. With the exception of the Long Lakes, there aren’t any other geographic features mentioned as landmarks. And the Lakes themselves are only seen once the characters are at their journey’s end.
The two towns are Ship’s Landing and Doleystown. As far as aesthetics go, Ship’s Landing is very much based on late 18th century New York City. Its streets and architecture are post-revolution, with the only key exception being that there’s a distinct barrier surrounding the city to keep the ghosts out at night. Doleystown, by comparison, is more of a small village with a simple street and a few houses/businesses along the strand.
Because I naturally made Ship’s Landing New York City’s 18th century-fantasy equivalent, the journey in my mind seemed synonymous with traveling south through the States. While writing, I naturally envisioned my characters riding down the coast until they reached the Carolinas. Perhaps, unnaturally, that’s where the comparisons end. Although there are plenty of lakes I could have chosen to serve as the visual for the Long Lakes, in my mind they were always New York’s Finger Lakes. 
These lakes are thin, but very long. So long that although you can see across them from shore to shore, you can’t see their ends when you’re standing at one point or the other. They’re also beautiful. These lakes tend to turn a very particular shade of blue. Due to the conservation efforts of environmentalists in the Finger Lake region, they’ve retained a healthy overlook that I’ve always been fond of.

Perhaps because I’ve been to them so often, visiting friends or just driving by on my way to school, I enjoyed the image of griffons flying by overhead more than anything else. If I was any better at photo editing, I’d probably manip a little griffon over an image of the lakes. To be honest, I probably will do it at some point. But if you ever wondered which lakes were the inspiration: they’re these.  


About Lindsey Byrd
Lindsey Byrd was brought up in upstate, downstate, and western New York. She is a budding historian of law, medieval, and women’s studies and often includes historical anecdotes or references within her works. Lindsey enjoys writing about complex and convoluted issues where finding the moral high-ground can be hard to do. She has a particular love for heroic villains and villainous heroes, as well as inverting and subverting tropes.
Email: thelindseybyrd@gmail.com
Giveaway
To celebrate this release, one lucky person will win a $25 Riptide credit! Leave a comment with your contact info to enter the contest. Entries close at midnight, Eastern time, on June 1, 2019. Contest is NOT restricted to U.S. entries. Thanks for following along, and don’t forget to leave your contact info!

Friday, January 25, 2019

The Fairy Pond by Jason Black - Release Blitz with Excerpt


Title: The Fairy Pond
Author: Jason Black
Publisher: Self-pub
Release Date: 12/19/2018
Heat Level: 1 - No Sex
Pairing: No Romance
Length: 29 pages
Genre: Fantasy, Horror, historical

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Synopsis

Nevan lives a simple life. He works hard in the fields with his brothers and his grandpa, and adores his mother wholeheartedly. He's a good boy who usually stays out of trouble, but even when Grandpa warns him to stay away from the pond, he can't help feeling curious about it...and the creatures that watch him whenever he's near.

Excerpt

It had been a long day. Nevan had come out to the fields with lunch after helping with the home chores and stayed to work the rest of the day. He enjoyed this time alone with his grandfather. Each night they were the only ones who stayed awake for the ride home, Grandfather telling stories of times past while Nevan soaked it in like a sponge.

That evening, Grandfather was quiet, glancing around as if uneasy with the sounds of the coming night. Nevan turned to look out at the familiar shapes around them. In the distance, he saw the barn come into view and knew their destination wasn't far beyond. As they finished rounding a grove of fruit trees, he could also see the small pond that sat next to the barn; home for geese, ducks, and fish. It also served as a cool respite on a warm summer day.

The lack of talk and the swaying of the wagon served to lull Nevan toward sleep. He let a shivering yawn pass his lips, his eyes again turning toward the pond. A splash, a movement. Nevan blinked, now fully awake, and squinted his eyes in disbelief.

"Grandpa?"

"Yeah, boy?" his grandfather answered in a hushed tone.

"There are people swimming in our pond!"

"T'ain't no one out this late, boy. People be sleepin'." Grandfather's words had a finality to them that told Nevan not to argue.

Another splash and Nevan couldn't hold his tongue.

"But… look!" His finger shot out toward the pond, now directly to the right of the wagon.

Nevan could clearly see the shapes of the figures in the water, even the gleam of eyes in the moonlight as they looked directly at them.

"Boy," Grandfather said sternly, "Don't look and don't be talking about that no more."

Purchase at Amazon

Meet the Author

 
Jason Black lives in Texas with his partner and two roommates. 
He cooks. He writes. He's an okay guy.


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Tuesday, November 20, 2018

The Breaths We Take by Huston Piner - Release Blitz with Excerpt and Giveway


Title: The Breaths We Take
Series: Season of Chadham High, Book Three
Author: Huston Piner
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: November 19, 2018
Heat Level: 1 - No Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 101100
Genre: Contemporary YA, LGBT, historical/early 90s, YA, high school, first love, coming-of-age, aging relative, family issues, weddings, HEA

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Synopsis


It’s 1992, and seventeen-year-old Ben Carpenter has everything all figured out. He’s gay, with a supportive family; he makes decent grades; and in Ted, Hope, and Doris, he’s got three great friends he can always depend on. If he only had a boyfriend, life would be perfect, and he’s working on that.

But things are getting complicated. First, Doris drags him into an ill-fated matchmaking scheme that could destroy their friendship with Ted and Hope. Then, Grandpa Marty moves in, throwing the whole Carpenter household into a total uproar. If that’s not enough, the only way for Ben to get in his community service hours is to volunteer at the senior center, even though old people give him the creeps. And then there’s that little matter of his feelings for Ted’s brother Adrian that confuse him and threaten to expose a secret Ted must never know.

Ben’s journey is littered with misunderstandings, tender moments, and unexpected ghosts from the past that reveal a two-decades-old mystery. As events unfold, Ben is forced to reevaluate what friendship, family, and love are really all about, and he discovers that, sometimes, there’s more to life than a happy ending.

Seasons of Chadham High explores the evolving experience of gay teenagers in different eras—from the psychedelic sixties, through the me generation seventies and eighties, to the nihilistic nineties and beyond.

Excerpt


The Breaths We Take
Huston Piner © 2018
All Rights Reserved

Chapter One
September 1992

There are certain days when everything just seems to come together. Then there are those days when things all fly apart. Well, there’s also the kind when things begin to change. For me, a sunny day at the start of my junior year of high school was such a day. It began like any other, but before it was over, my life had taken a turn, and soon, everything—from my relationships with friends and family to what I thought I knew about love—would be changed forever.

So there we were, at one of the tables outside the lunchroom, just back from Labor Day weekend. Doris and I were sitting across from Hope and Ted, all of us soaking up the sunshine. The wind was a little gusty, but nobody was complaining. At least it drove the stench off. (Only Chadham High would put the dumpsters right around the corner from the school’s one outdoor eating area.)

“Hey Ben, pass the salt.”

I cut Ted a reproachful glance. The only shaker was two tables away.

“Why am I always the one who has to get the salt?”

“Don’t be such a whiner. It’s like social contract theory. You do little things for us, and we all do little things for you.”

“Such as…?”

Hope flicked sandy-brown bangs out of her face. “Such as making sure you find the right guy to hook up with.”

“The right guy?” I said, depositing the shaker just out of Ted’s reach. “What do you mean the right guy?”

“Oh come on, Ben. You know when the right guy comes along, we’ll all chip in to help you get him.”

“Yeah, yeah, like that’s ever going to happen. Here. At Chadham High. In this lifetime.”

Doris nudged me in the side. “You’ve just got to be patient.”

“Patient? My high school career’s already halfway over, and I’ve got nothing to show for it. ‘The right guy.’ At this point, I’d be happy to have any guy show even a hint of interest in me.”

I hadn’t even finished speaking when Grant Framingham shuffled past us. Doris raised a sarcastic eyebrow and snickered, watching me grimace at his weasel-like nose and mousy brown hair.

“Really? Any guy?”

“Uh, no. On second thought, I’ll wait for the right guy.”

“You mean Colby Ryder,” Hope said in a playful, mocking tone.

As if on cue, Colby emerged from the lunchroom, that luxurious ebony hair of his floating in the breeze, those dark-chocolate eyes gleaming in the sunlight. My heartbeat quickened, and my skin tingled at the very sight of him. He was so hot you could get burned by just touching him—not that I’d ever had that opportunity.

I watched him pass us, my shoulders slumping, while various fantasy images danced through my head.

“Oh God, what I could do to that boy. Why oh why couldn’t he be gay?”

“Benjie,” Doris chirped in a singsong voice. “Whining.”

“It’s just not fair,” I said peevishly. “And I’m not a whiner.”

They all laughed.

Okay. The truth was, maybe I did whine a bit—every now and then. But whining just came with the territory when you were seventeen years old, gay, and devilishly handsome, and you had about as much chance of finding a boyfriend as winning the lottery.

My problem was a question of demographics. Chadham High was one of those places where everybody fit into neat little boxes. We had the snotty I’m Involved in Everything and All the Teachers Love Me association. Then there was the I’m a Jock and I’ll Punch Your Face if I Want To crew. We had the obligatory I’m Smart and You’re Not guild, the My Religion Says You’re Going to Hell congregation, and any number of the I’m a (fill in the demographic group of your choice) and I’m Better Than You societies. And of course, what self-respecting high school would be complete without the Dude, Pass that Joint tribe? As for the rest, they all fell into the Please God, Just Let Me Live Long Enough to Get Out of Here nation. That’s the box Ted, Doris, Hope, and I were all in.

But what we didn’t seem to have at good old Chadham High, at least as far as I’d been able to tell over the past two years, was more than the one lone gay student—me. Now, they say statistically, at least five percent of any given population will be homosexual. That meant there should have been about a hundred or so young gay people running around, and therefore, at least a few of them should have been healthy gay males. But if there were any other queers at Chadham High besides me, I’d long since come to the conclusion they were masters of disguise. I mean, sheesh. Talk about keeping a low profile.

I plopped my elbow on the table and cupped my chin in my hand. “Why can’t any of the beautiful guys around here be gay?”

“Well,” Ted said, “good looks are God’s compensation for not giving us straight guys a good sense of fashion.”

Doris leaned back in her chair with her mouth hanging open and stared at him.

“Oh Ted, I’m so sorry, and you lost out on both.”

She burst into a fit of laughter, and Hope and I snickered.

Ted ignored her, stretched for the shaker, and sighed when he had to half stand to reach it. Then he unceremoniously dumped an ungodly large mountain of salt on his food.

Doris scowled.

“Ted, I swear you’re going to give yourself a coronary.”

He raised a sodium-laden fork to his mouth. “It’s the only way I can stand to eat this crap.”

She shook her head as Hope picked up the shaker and poured a liberal mound of salt onto her own plate.

“You know, you could just get an apple or an orange.”

“Even the fruit here stinks,” he said through a mouthful of whatever it was he was eating.

He was right. I glanced at the orange peel lying in my tray. There’s sour, and then there’s sour, but the sour in that orange had just been plain off.

Doris twiddled a strand of wavy black hair. “Has anybody had any luck finding something for their community service project?”

“I was hoping to do the Y,” Hope said, “but they told me all their volunteer openings were already filled weeks ago, and they’ve got a waiting list a mile long.”

“Yeah,” Ted said. “I got the same answer when I called the city park service Friday afternoon. Apparently, the school board didn’t take into consideration there are only so many volunteer positions available in Chadham County. Adding juniors and seniors to the number of underclassmen already required to do CS was an idea bound to fail.”

“Well,” Doris said with a grin, “I’ve got mine all set and ready. I talked with my priest, and she said I could help out preparing the Saturday meals-on-wheels plates.”

“Hey,” Hope said, “do you think I could help out there too?”

“I can ask. I don’t know how much help they need though. She told me they’ve got a pretty large group of people working it. But yeah, I’m sure they’ll let you. And even if they don’t, if I drive you there Saturday, they’ve at least got to give you credit for the time you’re there with me.”

Hope smiled. “Cool. What about you, Ben? Are you having any luck?”

I folded my arms and sighed. “Oh yeah, I’m having great luck—all of it bad. Last week, I went to city hall, and they said no to everything, even the neighborhood beautification program. Apparently, you’ve got to have some kind of advanced degree in agriculture just to pull up weeds around here. And Saturday, I even checked out the library. Nothing.”

“Well,” Doris said, “you’d better come up with something. Two hundred hours is a lot of time to fill, especially if you’ve got to limit it to weekends and after school.”

“Don’t rub it in,” Ted said.

Hope patted him on the wrist. “Aw, I’m sure you’ll both find something.”

I scoffed. “Tell me something, Hope. Your middle name wouldn’t happen to be ‘Springs Eternal’ by any chance, would it?”

Purchase

NineStar Press | Amazon | Smashwords | Barnes & Noble | Kobo

Meet the Author

Huston Piner always wanted to be a writer but realized from an early age that learning to read would have to take precedence. A voracious reader, he loves nothing more than a well-told story, a glass of red, and music playing in the background. His writings focus on ordinary gay teenagers and young adults struggling with their orientation in the face of cultural prejudice and the evolving influence of LGBTQA+ rights on society. He and his partner live in a house ruled by three domineering cats in the mid-Atlantic region.

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