Cover Reveal for {S.A. Molteni}

Cover Reveal – I.T. Geek to Farm Girl Freak:  Along the Bumpy Road of Rural Life

Bumpy-RoadTurk

Mark your calendars for November 1st!

Or if you like, you can pre-order I.T. Geek to Farm Girl Freak: Along the Bumpy Road of Rural Life (Book 2) at the following link:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B015IG50IM

Description:

After ditching a full-time career and moving to a small hobby farm to enjoy a slower pace and a healthier lifestyle, isn’t everything supposed to be idyllic or “peaches and cream” as they say in the South? Well, not exactly …

In this second installment of the “I.T. Geek to Farm Girl Freak” series, follow the author as she holds on for the ride, “along the bumpy road of rural life” where her friendly neighbors become not so nice and her farm animals evolve into completely coddled pets – with her Royal Palm turkeys becoming the most pampered ones of all.

Enter the New Release Give-a-way!

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About the Author: 

S.A. Molteni is a retired systems engineer. She is also currently a hobby farmer, avid traveler and an author of several award-winning short stories. She lives on a small homestead with her husband and a menagerie of farm animals.

S.A. Molteni can be found on the following social media sites:

Blog – http://samolteni.blogspot.com/
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/author.samolteni
Twitter – https://twitter.com/samolteni

Submerged and Immersed by {Katie Hayoz}

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Synopsis

WHAT IF EVERYTHING YOU KNEW ABOUT YOURSELF WAS A LIE?

Melusine Doré is as practiced at guarding a secret as she is at wielding a weapon. Yet her past refuses to stay buried. Her worst fears are realized when Melusine and her companion, Levi, get called to hunt a beast in her birthplace of Malheur. The second she sets foot on her native soil, nothing proceeds as she planned: a beautiful tinker sets her sights on Levi, a gentle monster kills for sport, and an admission of love becomes a betrayal. Melusine comes face to face with the lies of her family’s past—and a truth that could destroy her.

Adventure number two in the Clockwork Siren series, Submerged takes us from the muddy trenches of steampunk Chicago to the sticky swamps of Louisiana to the slippery side of love.

Submerged Teaser

Excerpt

The broadside under the heel of Melusine’s boot taunted, MELUSINE DORE: FRIEND OR FIEND?

Good question, thought Melusine. It was the third headline this week that sought to put Melusine in the same category as the monsters she hunted.

She twisted her foot, the thin paper folding like an accordion and ripping under the pressure. She would worry about the accusations later. Now, she had a job to do.

She descended step by rotting step down a ladder and into a muddy trench. The air was ripe with the odor of insects and stagnant water and sewage. She tugged her chatelaine out from her corset and opened a tiny vial of rosemary oil, dotting a drop of it directly under her nose.

Her boots squelched in the muck, her hands out on either side, scrabbling the walls of the trench. The darkening night made it difficult to see; she scraped against newly laid pipes and tripped over littered debris. A fur-backed troll had taken up residence in the ditches dug for the new pipelines that were intended to clean up Chicago. The creature had been making meals of the workers, leaving nothing but picked-clean bones behind. If the city wanted to move forward on its project to raise itself out of squalor and sewage, the troll had to be taken care of.

An itch at the base of her skull told her she was close. Fingering her chatelaine again, she unhooked a bag of goblin powder from the links. She was at a crossroads of sorts, the trench tunneling both straight ahead and to the right. To the side, almost completely hidden in shadow, was a misshapen figure. Ahead of her was another one; she could just make out the two bulging orbs of its eyes. As it stepped forward, Melusine threw the goblin powder in its face. “Sweet dreams, little troll,” she said.

But instead of dropping into an instant deep sleep, the creature sneezed. Loudly. Once. Then twice. A voice Melusine knew well swore, “Tarnation! Mel, please tell me this isn’t goblin powder!”

Levi Cannon. Now that she was closer, Melusine saw the strange copper and glass contraption Levi wore strapped to his face. Night goggles, his inventor friend Zahn’s latest design. Levi sneezed three more times then took the glasses off. Already, even in the dim light, Melusine could see the pink stain of irritation from the powder blossoming on his face everywhere but where the goggles had been.

“I’m hunting a troll. Of course it’s goblin powder. What are you doing here?”

The sneezing was constant now, and Levi had to speak in gasps. “With the rumors…I just…wanted…to be positive…no one…would…try to hurt…you.”

He sneezed an explosion, then yelled, “Behind you!” But Melusine was ready. The back of her neck had been crawling at the monster’s approach. She yanked her dagger from the sheath on her thigh and whipped around, throwing the blade between the troll’s giant, milky eyes. The beast was pale, its yellow-blue skin wrinkled, translucent and hairless but for the thick rug of brown fur growing over its shoulders and down its back.

The dagger stunned it for a second, but then it let out a gurgled roar and raced for Melusine. She readied the dregs of the goblin powder, was just waiting for the creature to get close enough when clink, clink, clink, pop, pop, pop, she felt the whizz of bullets passing over her shoulder. The monster burst into a mess of fluids, tufts of brown fur covering Melusine like an itchy blanket.

“A crank gun?” she moaned. “You planned on making a mess. Admit it, Mr. Cannon.” She tried wiping the coarse fur off of her arms, but all she managed to do was spread it around.

“Not unless you admit that throwing the goblin powder my direction was not entirely an accident.” Levi was now scratching at his face, the pink blotches growing red. “Ow! Tonight of all nights! You know I have an appointment with a woman on Ashton Avenue to remove the gnome that’s taken up residence in her garden.”

Oh, yes, Melusine remembered the elegant and beautiful sophisticate who’d made the appointment. Who’d insisted that Levi come work alone. Melusine held back a twitch of a smile.

“That’s tonight?” She took her dagger from the troll’s skull and wiped the purple blood off on the leg of her trousers. Holding the blade up in front of her, she inspected its cleanliness, the tip pointed at Levi’s heart. “But what does it matter how you look? Surely, you were not planning on seducing the lady?”

Levi set a gloved finger on top of the blade and lowered it until the point was facing the ground. His eyes stayed trained on her face, the intensity of them tugging at a thread of longing stitched in Melusine’s chest.

“There’s only one woman who interests me,” he said. “I’d kiss her now if I could, but my lips are beginning to blister.”

Submerged

the series

Immersed

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About the author

Katie

Katie grew up in Racine, Wisconsin where she acquired an irreversible nasal twang and an addiction for books with a slightly dark edge. She now lives in Geneva, Switzerland with her husband, two daughters, and two fuzzy cats. She has been an avid reader of YA fiction for years. While she has a penchant for the paranormal, she devours a range of books — along with popcorn and black licorice. She consumes all three in large quantities. Luckily, the books don’t stay on her hips.

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Brief review of Immersed:

Immersed begins with headlines in a steam-punk, fantasy version of 1850s Chicago. Our heroine, Melusine, hunts creatures for a living. When she is pulled into a reluctant partnership with Levi Cannon, her competition, sparks fly. Levi Cannon inspires delicious, mechanized, steam infused sparks. While some historical details of Chicago are used, Katie Hayoz does a wonderful job of crafting a new world. Her writing is easy to follow, smooth, and varied. The action sequences are expressed clearly. The romantic scenes are light in tone, tastefully sprinkled throughout, as is any harsher language.

I’m already on to the follow up! Definitely recommended.


Brief review of Submerged:

Submerged is the latest adventure of Melusine Dore and Levi Cannon. We open to Melusine making headlines as a previous enemy (from book one of the Clockwork Siren Series) tries to stir Chicago against her. Levi Cannon is as dashingly cocky as ever. They hunt together and apart, but still find themselves romantically involved. A new threat emerges. One that calls Melusine back to Louisiana. However she avoids it, in order to move forward, there must be a reckoning. Back in Louisiana, Melusine discovers that she is not the only one vying for the handsome Levi. An old curse comes back to haunt her.

Katie Hayoz has a lovely style of writing. It’s smooth and varied, but easy to follow. Her characters are complex and believable, and I love how we learn secrets from Melusine’s past. Light sensual encounters and light cursing. A recommended read.

I received a copy of Submerged in exchange for an honest review.

How to Read a Book Like a Boss

And by boss, I mean mom….

How to Read a Book Like a Mom

(This post is a part of Wednesday’s Paranormal Love Blog Hop. Be sure to visit the other awesome bloggists!)

I’m a writer, so I read a lot of books. I also have five children. People often ask how I have time to do anything. I have compiled a list of five tips for Boss Mom Book Reading.

  1. Find a book you want to read.

    This may seem overly simplified, but sometimes, as a boss mom, you know you just had that book you wanted to read. It was a good book. You may not be able to recall what it was about, but you definitely remember that it was a good book. There were people. Words. A plot that lasted longer than the time it takes to lose kitten mittens. Real, grown up words. People did things. No tantrums. Or, at least, tantrums about things like missile crises, and there was no mention of potty training anywhere. Yesterday, I was forced to sit down for a caffeine respite with Little Bunny Foo Foo. It was all I could find. You have to survive.

  2. Sit down.

    When you find that novel – or your Kindle – in the freezer, have a seat. Alright. Standing up may also be an option. And, let’s face it, last time you sat down, you woke up thirty minutes later with your toenails painted in Sharpie and wrapped in wet toilet paper. There was half a banana… but we won’t discuss that. You think you’ve only had three cups of coffee since the kids came to the edge of the bed at 4 AM to breathe in your face, and it takes at least six cups to manage a sit down. You’re right. Standing up to read is probably best.

  3. Find the bookmark.

    This is a game you all love to play with your paperbacks. Your daughter runs away with your bookmark or un-dog-ears your marker page. Better yet, when she’s feeling uber playful and creative, she dog-ears all of them and leaves you Picasso-esque drawings that completely obscure the words on the page that you’re pretty sure you’ve read already, but you need to read again (just in case). And for the Kindle days, you’re pretty sure your entire library was eaten by Angry Birds Star Wars. She downloaded it six times – how does this even happen? – and your email just thought you should know she bought $6,543 worth of extras.

  4. Refreshments.

    Mommy, I’m hungry. Mommy, I’m thirsty. Mommy, I need you to wipe… Look! The cat wanted to sleep in a pillowcase. (Even though you conducted a parent-pet meeting with that cat yesterday, and you clearly discussed what it takes to survive in this household.) There’s nothing better than a hot cup of java in a real mug with real creamer. Though, your memory may be faulty. You haven’t had a hot cup of coffee since 2001, and you’re pretty sure the kids are drinking your coffee when you aren’t looking. You’ve filled that cup at least five times, and you still want to pass out. The kids on the other hand…

  5. Music.

    Mozart. Beethoven. Classical Rock. Old jams from high school. This is going to be an awesome reading session. Until the squealing and screeching reminds you, one of them wants to be a plumber and managed to dig up the recorder you successfully flushed down the toilet. And that sparkly pink microphone? The one with Let It Go echoing in all its tin-y glory? It has been found. By your head. And it’s concert time. Grandma would be proud.

And when you get high five-d in the face with last week’s half-eaten apple or you wake up to the re-enactment of that one scene from Avengers, you’ll know. Congratulations. You made it. Welcome to reading a book like a boss, mom.

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And because I’m an extra dose of crazy and super excited about it 😀

(Find me on NaNoWriMo as I write this clean read this November):

Coming Spring 2016

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Cover by Lori P. at Contagious Covers. Thanks, Lori!


(This post is a part of Wednesday’s Paranormal Love Blog Hop. Be sure to visit the other awesome bloggists!)

The Irks of Being a Writer

This post is a part of the Paranormal Love Wednesdays Blog Hop

Be sure to visit the other awesome participants. Keep hopping. (:


I’ve been editing a SciFi novel and plotting in an urban fantasy world all day. I’ll be sending the SciFi off to my editor on Monday. I’ll start writing the urban fantasy on Nov 1, 2015, as a part of this year’s NaNoWriMo. (If you’re participating, I’m “bokerah.” I need some buddies.) And then, there’s a SciFi short that’s due to betas by the end of October. And first round of #PitchSlam in a few days.

I am stuck in the middle of the very real world of being a writer. I’m pedaling like mad, writing as much as I can so I can work my way out of the “sucky zone.”

I’m pretty sure my SciFi is stuck in crap-mode, and I just can’t tell. It’s pretty much like being nose-deep in the tree trunk of a tree that must be pruned in some places and grafted in others. And you’re starving. And there’s a fire coming. Zombies also.

It looks like this…

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I may have dissolved in the insane quicksand of second guessing myself into the oblivion of inaction. I am now certain that everyone is just not telling me how bad I stink at storytelling.

Someone, anyone! Tell me what I’m doing wrong!  *Whimpers* Why won’t anyone tell me?

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Today, I don’t know anything.

But I read this. I cried. It might be hormones, but I think it was Janet.

(I love you, Janet Reid! Just think of me as the weird fan in the balcony seat that takes everything two steps too awkward.)

So… maybe…

200 (1)

And…

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So because I’m crazy like this…

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Here’s a sneak peek of my NaMoWriMo Cover (for release in Spring of 2016):

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Thanks to Lori at Contagious Covers. I think I also love you. Don’t tell Janet.


I might be a little…

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Happy Wednesday from the deep dark cave of perpetual optimism wrapped in a self-doubt straight jacket. Maybe the next one will make me feel like a real author. ❤

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P.S. Keep Writing. It’s the only thing that keeps us writers marginally sane.


This post is a part of the Paranormal Love Wednesdays Blog Hop

Be sure to visit the other awesome participants. Keep on hopping. (:

Submerged by {Katie Hayoz}

Happy Release Day, Katie!

Submerged Banner26396993

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Synopsis

WHAT IF EVERYTHING YOU KNEW ABOUT YOURSELF WAS A LIE?
Melusine Doré is as practiced at guarding a secret as she is at wielding a weapon. Yet her past refuses to stay buried. Her worst fears are realized when Melusine and her companion, Levi, get called to hunt a beast in her birthplace of Malheur. The second she sets foot on her native soil, nothing proceeds as she planned: a beautiful tinker sets her sights on Levi, a gentle monster kills for sport, and an admission of love becomes a betrayal. Melusine comes face to face with the lies of her family’s past—and a truth that could destroy her.
Adventure number two in the Clockwork Siren series, Submerged takes us from the muddy trenches of steampunk Chicago to the sticky swamps of Louisiana to the slippery side of love.
Submerged Teaser
the series
Immersed

GRAB IT NOW FOR ONLY $.99!

Buy Links

AMAZON * AMAZON UK

About the author
Katie
Katie grew up in Racine, Wisconsin where she acquired an irreversible nasal twang and an addiction for books with a slightly dark edge. She now lives in Geneva, Switzerland with her husband, two daughters, and two fuzzy cats. She has been an avid reader of YA fiction for years. While she has a penchant for the paranormal, she devours a range of books — along with popcorn and black licorice. She consumes all three in large quantities. Luckily, the books don’t stay on her hips.
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Interview with {Geralyn Wichers}

unnamed (3)I met Garalyn Wichers after reading her fantastic book, Sons of Earth. She graciously agreed to do an interview. My review will be posted later this week.

Tell us about you. What do you write?

I write speculative fiction, lately tending toward Dystopian. While I don’t stray far from “real life,” my stories always have a twist. I like to ask the question, “What if this happened?” In the case of Sons of Earth, the question was, “What if humans could be mass manufactured?” (B: I love this premise!)

I also blog about my love of running and healthy eating at runningbumblebee.wordpress.com. It’s kind of an outlet for the obsession, since my friends and family are a little sick of hearing about it! (B: Be sure to check it out!)

Has there been a progression through genres for you?

I wrote three unpublished fantasy novels before I wrote and published my first novel, We are the Living, a love story set in a zombie apocalypse. I’ve loved the Chronicles of Narnia and Lord of the Rings since I was a young teen, and I’ve enjoyed making up my own worlds since I was a child. Lately I’ve been mentally building a fantasy world just for fun. Maybe I’ll return to fantasy soon. (B: Let me know when you do. As much as I love LotR and the Chronicles, AND your writing in Sons of Earth, I’d love to read it!)

How did you come up with “Sons of Earth”? Do you recall where or how the idea first struck  you? What do you wish to accomplish with “Sons of Earth”? Do you often grapple with these weighty subjects within your works?

I remember the moment quite well, actually. I’d just begun working at the pharmaceutical factory where I work now. After almost two weeks of training in vast procedures, I was working in process cleaning (basically, dishwashing on an industrial scale). I mused about the practice of ‘rejecting’ any product that didn’t meet specification. For some reason, my mind jumped to cloning. What if we were mass-producing clones instead of medications? What if they were out of specification? Well, then they would be ‘rejected.’ I played with this idea for a while, but it wasn’t until late October, when I began preparing for my first National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) that I fleshed out the idea into a plot.

In regards to the ideas within the book, and what I set out to accomplish: I never set out to be didactic. I don’t write a story to teach a lesson. I write a story to tell a story, and hope that people learn from them. Let me make that very clear. I don’t like heavy handed moralizing. I don’t write allegories. That being said, in the latter stages of writing Sons of Earth, I was involved in conversations with a friend, in which the value of human life played a factor. We fell on opposite sides of the debate about abortion and human rights. I thought a lot about how my Christian faith affects my view of humanity–that each human being is inherently valuable. They aren’t valuable based on their use to me. They are valuable just because they are human, an image-bearer of God.  As a result, I saw even more clearly the themes of human value that I could tease out of the story.

Bokerah, you asked me if this is a pro-life story. Yes, I suppose it is–but not specific to the abortion debate. It’s also about racism, classism, other sexual orientations, or anyone we might discriminate against. Dominic and Sebastian are clones. Justine and Casey are poor, blue-collar workers. Khalia is an educated career woman who hides a drug problem and the scars of an abusive relationship. They all long to be treated like the valuable human beings they are. They all demonstrate that, despite what their society says about them, they have a contribution to make and a mark to leave.

The clones are seen as non-humans. I had some people challenge me, saying that would never happen. But I say that we dehumanize each other in small ways every day. We see ourselves as deep characters with good motives, intentions, and dreams but we see our dragon-lady supervisor as a one-dimensional, evil witch. She’s not a person like us, she’s just bad. At the McDonalds drive-through we ignore the cheerful greeting over the speaker, and spout out our order like we’re speaking into a dictaphone. Don’t even get me started on YouTube comment debates. So if we’re so willing to overlook the humanity of others in these small ways, who’s to say that we couldn’t convince ourselves that a certain group of people weren’t people? I’m pretty sure that’s already happened.

Is that too long of an answer, Bokerah? 🙂     (B: It’s perfect! I think I fan-girled at least three times during this answer. 😀 )

Where do you find inspiration? What do you do for writer’s block?

I consider reading novels and watching movies an integral part of my job as a writer. I find inspiration, often, in the smallest detail or secondary character. Someone will twig my interest, and I’ll be off, building a character around that idea. The character almost always comes first. The world and the plot come second and third.

For writer’s block, the best solution seems to be to plow through and write crap until the good stuff comes again. But prevention is the best cure. Running keeps my mind alert, and reading keeps it full of ideas.

As a writer, what’s next for you?

I am currently writing the second book in a trilogy (the first book is unpublished) that I hope to publish spring of 2016. The story is, once again, in the real world with a twist. The twist is that there is a secret society of Immortals among us. The story follows an Immortal as he is initiated into the society. He soon becomes a pawn in a century-old feud between powerful Immortals. He himself has never come to grips with his immortality, and over the trilogy fights to find the courage to make something of his long, long life instead of trying to find a way to die. There are some fantastic characters in play in this story. It spans two continents. I’ve got a blue collar worker, a history professor, a knight, a mixed martial arts fighter, a couple who fell in love after she shot him by accident. It has a lot of potential. I hope I can sort out the whole story.

Do you have any advice for new writers?

I am a new writer. Ha ha ha. (B: You’ve written / published one! You’re not so new as you might think.)

Work hard and be humble. Be willing to take advice and criticism. Likely, you’re not a good writer. That’s okay, you’re new. If you were good right off the bat, all the veterans would hate you because they had to get good the old-fashioned way: hours and hours of writing and studying their craft. Join a writers group. Get a critique partner who actually knows what they are talking about and will tell you the truth. Hire an editor. Be willing to trash your first novel instead of publishing garbage. Then, maybe you’ll get to be pleasantly surprised when people actually like your stuff!

B: Thank you for rocking this interview, Geralyn. I can’t wait to read your next bunch of awesome!


unnamedGeralyn Wichers is a writer and blogger, who also moonlights as a manufacturing operator at a large factory. When she’s not wearing a respirator and handling hazardous chemicals, Geralyn is either writing about the impending zombie apocalypse or training to survive it by running long distances.

Geralyn is the author of We are the Living, an apocalyptic story of love and hope in the midst of destruction, and Sons of Earth, the story of a clone finding his humanity in a dystopian near-future. She writes the blog Running Bumblebee, where she encourages others toward an active lifestyle through stories, self-deprecating humour, and practical recipes. She writes from small-town Manitoba, Canada.
Meet Geralyn

Siren’s Kiss by {Margo Bond Collins}

Review (Be sure to check out the giveaway at the bottom of this post!)

Siren’s Kiss by Margo Bond Collins begins in an ancient playground. On a soul searching trip, Clay visits Athens, and he finds himself drawn to the ocean’s edge. Driven by an outside force, he discovers Skyla, illuminated by moonlight, shifting from mer to human. When she disappears beneath the surface, Clay wearies and returns to his hotel. The following day, again guided by an unexplained pull, Clay finds Skyla in the midst of Athens.

Margo Bond Collins writes in alternating first person, weaving a lovely romance throughout. Skyla speaks with an ancient wisdom interwoven with old tales of Titans and gods, beautiful words ordered in a melodic telling. Clay is a modern-day police officer struggling to reconcile the magic between them with realism and what he knows to be true. Some adult situations and language. An enjoyable afternoon read.

I received a copy of Siren’s Kiss by Margo Bond Collins in exchange for an honest review.


Siren's KissHer kiss might save the world . . .

Unless his kiss kills her first.

It’s been almost two thousand years since the mer-shifter Skyla walked the streets of Athens—not since her heart was broken by a human man and she exchanged the land and sky for the ocean depths. Ever since, she has lived in the underwater ruins of Atlantis, studying with the priestesses of the goddess Amphitrite, refining her mermaid powers and ignoring her human half.

But her studies are interrupted when she is called upon by the god Poseidon himself to investigate rumors that the world above is being polluted by the magic of creatures from another realm—and worse, that the ocean kingdom of the mer-people might be next.

When her inquiries in modern-day Greece lead her to an American detective asking similar questions, Skyla realizes that the magical problem she’s been sent to research is bigger than she anticipated—and that one human’s kisses might be more dangerous to her, and her world, than she ever could have imagined.

Goodreads | Amazon

Beautiful girl dressed in a red dress on sea background

EXCERPT

This is not a love story.

It’s been over two thousand years since I walked these shores, and even then, the man who broke my heart was centuries gone, sailed away into death—the last journey into yet another land where I will not follow.

Truth be told, though, he left me long before he died, gone away to rejoin a wife he hadn’t seen in twenty years, to reclaim a rocky, wind-swept island for a son he barely knew.

Gone home, to spin stories about his absence like his wife spun his death-shroud—picking out the stitches at night and reweaving them anew to postpone the inevitable moment when the stories wear thin and you find the monsters have been in your home all along, posing as suitors who would win your heart.

The poets lie, you know. They say our songs seduce the sailors, draw them into the ocean to drown.

But if the ocean sings to them, it is not our doing—no more than the earth’s call to us is theirs.

And Odysseus never tried to resist.

On the cliff above the Theatre of Dionysus, the Parthenon loomed, its marble columns partially obscured in scaffolding. The last time Skyla had been here, when the marble seats of the open-air amphitheater were new, she watched the Oresteia trilogy—tragedies to the Athenians surrounding her, but too far from reality to be anything but comic to Skyla. Agamemnon had been a monster, a tyrant of a man who murdered his daughter for the joy of killing, a sacrifice to the gods of power and control. When his wife Clytemnestra killed him in return, other women did not blame her. Their house fell, but it was not of her doing.

But the memories of men are short, and the stories they share shift and change, like the ocean’s surface.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

margoMargo Bond Collins is the author of urban fantasy, contemporary romance, and paranormal mysteries. She lives in Texas with her daughter and several spoiled pets. Although writing fiction is her first love, she also teaches college-level English courses online. She enjoys reading romance and paranormal fiction of any genre and spends most of her free time daydreaming about heroes, monsters, cowboys, and villains, and the strong women who love them—and sometimes fight them.

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Connect with Margo

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Email: MargoBondCollins@gmail.com

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