The Tiger King (Paladin Shifters Book 1)

Monday, November 9, 2015

A cover, a blurb, and an excerpt from "Say My Name" Coming soon!!!



     Dawson Thomas is a rent boy, a young man who goes out hoping to impress a man who’ll pay him to be a submissive for a kinky night together. One night he accompanies a friend to a BDSM club in New York. Raw Hide is a place where men gather to live out their fantasies and Dawson can’t believe his good luck when the owner invites him upstairs to be paid for a night of kink. When others whisper that the man is hideously deformed, calling him “The Monster”, Dawson remembers the cost of his tuition and puts aside his fears, accompanying the bodyguard to the man’s apartment.

     Each night, Cole Chambliss paces in his rooms above Raw Hide, watching beautiful submissives give themselves to their Doms, just a few steps down the stairs. Cole longs for days past when he could go out in public… when no one would stare at him in horror. After paying a bitter price when fighting for his country, Cole knows his days of walking among whole men are gone forever... that is until one night he takes a risk that terrifies him. The stunning submissive who’s caught his eye is something extraordinary and Cole decides he must chance everything for one last shot at happiness.

     One dark night, one desperate risk, and one horrifying request later, Cole hears the words he’s feared since his return from the war. “Say my name, Sir… please just… say my name…”


Excerpt from "Say my Name" Coming soon...

Cole waited in his room and at the appointed time, Bull knocked on the door. He glanced at his watch and noted it was midnight, right on the nose. He walked to the door and opened it to find Dawson waiting with his large friend, naked and blindfolded as he’d instructed. Cole nodded his thanks to Bull and reached out, taking the boy’s hand and drawing him into the room before closing the door. He knew his bodyguard would stay outside guarding the door against intrusion for as long as he kept the boy inside. Dawson stood expectantly, just inside the door to his living room as he waited for Cole to do what he wanted with him. Cole had planned what he wanted to do with the boy and it would take place in his playroom.

“H-hello, Master,” Dawson began.

Cole had the feeling the boy wanted to talk with him but there was no way he was going to carry on a conversation with him. He didn’t do that with anyone any more. Even his exchanges with Bull, the only man he did speak to, were short and to the point. His days of long conversations were over.

“Come,” he rasped. Cole took Dawson by the hand and pulled him down the hallway to the playroom where he had everything laid out for the scene he’d so thoughtfully concocted. He was going to test the boy’s mettle tonight and had every intention of pushing him hard. Cole wanted to find out whether the boy was actually attracted to the pain or more comfortable with the bondage and control. Some submissives wanted it all and there was almost always bondage with the pain. It gave a submissive a feeling of security to be tied or bound in some fashion, while pain was applied. All submissives wanted to give up control but not all were pain sluts. Some wanted it hard and would take anything a Dom wanted to dish out, to the point where they’d allow themselves to be beaten into unconsciousness before uttering a safeword. That was not what Cole wanted and though he’d participated in painful percussion play and very hard scenes many times, it was not his preference unless the submissive required it. Tonight he intended on finding out just how far he could push the young twink submissive before he gave in. 



Friday, November 6, 2015

Talking self-publishing today on Books and More


Self-Publishing- My Step by step guide for authors

Self-Publishing- MY step by step guide

Good day, everyone! I hope you’re all ready for the weekend. I know I sure am. It’s not been a terribly productive week. I keep looking at the calendar and thinking I should be further along on this MS than I am in order to meet my own publishing deadline for “The Brat”, the book I’m working on right now.

As a self-publisher of over 40 books, I have found that the only way I get paid on a regular basis, is if I keep to a strict release schedule. This means writing one book after another and getting them edited, formatted, cover art(ed)… lol, and doing it all on a tight deadline without sacrificing quality. My readers demand that I do this so they will have something of mine to read.

Don’t get me wrong. I adore what I do for a living and I feel immensely blessed to be able to be able to do it. Writing was never a dream job for me as it is for so many authors, but once I began doing it, it became a passion and when I discovered others appreciated what I did and actually started giving me feedback about my stories, I was convinced that there wasn’t anything I’d rather put in the effort and time that writing takes to create. Being an author and being known for a quality product became my life.

Being a self-publisher is a little different than working with a publishing house. I’ve done both successfully but here I am self-publishing, so you can guess which I prefer.

I’ve always been decent at running my own business and most people in my life will tell you that my personality requires me to help run their business/life whether they like it or not. First of all, I started off working pretty young. My wonderful parents instilled in me the best work ethic on the planet… Work hard and make yourself satisfied with your work, or don’t work at all. Oh, yeah, that last part wasn’t an option.

My parents both worked and they made me proud when I saw how hard it was for them sometimes. My mom went back to work after my brother was born and would come home exhausted only to have to take care of the rest of us. I learned how to cook in my early teens to help out my mom but she still did a hell of a lot of work in the home. This was a good lesson for me to learn because I found myself doing this a mere ten years later when I started my own family and had to work full-time. Publishing is much like this.

Though I began writing books after I finished up working outside the house, I still had a family and a house to run. My husband and kids still appreciated food on the table when they got home from work and school no matter how much my characters were screaming at me to write their love scenes. Sometimes I had to leave them on the page mid-coitis just to cook dinner. I’m sure they didn’t appreciate that one little bit!

These days when I self-publish, I follow a pretty simple formula which has worked for me like clockwork so far:

1.      Plot out my book in my head- This is the stage which usually occurs in the shower or at the sink when my hands are wet and never in front of my computer when I can actually sit down and write my thoughts. (of course it does)

2.      Scratch out a synopsis- Preferably this has a beginning, middle, and an ending which will make me and my readers happy with it once I actually present the finished book to them. It also contains details (in an unorganized fashion) that may or may not ever make it into the finished book.

3.      Order my cover art- For me, this comes before the story is written. I have my concept down, I know who my main characters are and what they look like, and I have at least a major part of their story in my head. I like my covers before I write the story because if the models are good, I refer back to their images often while I write my book.

4.      Write my outline- I’m a plotter and a planner, not a panster. I definitely need the bones and structure a well-written outline provides. Because I write books with at least an element of mystery and always with bad guys, I need to know what’s going to happen before it does. I need to have some guideline to follow. I learned this running my own business. If you don’t have structure, the whole thing is going to crumble… plus, I’m just plain OCD to the max.

5.      Sit down and write my book- Obviously, this part takes the longest and for me, it requires that I set a strict writing schedule to complete it by a particular release date. I try to write a minimum of 2,000 words a day. If I don’t do this, meeting a deadline on time is very difficult because I give myself about two months in between releases, sometimes less. I have cranked out a book a month, but that takes extraordinary creative juices and let’s face it, we can’t all be “ON” all the time.

6.      Deliver it to my editor- I adore my editor but she does keep me on my toes. I give her about two days for every 10,000 words of my story for first round edits. This means, if I don’t give her two whole weeks with a novel-length book, she gets cranky. I get it. She explained it very well one time. She said, (paraphrasing) “Look, like you, if I read over the manuscript and try to find mistakes and rush… I’m going to miss some. Being an editor means that I have to NOT become comfortable with your style and flow… which I do when I read more than 10,000 words at a time. I need to take a fresh look after 10K the next day, or I will become “USED” to your style and miss stuff the same way you do when you proof your own MS.”

After the first round of edits, we do one more. She finds additional stuff she missed her first time around. Then… when I get back her final, I give it one more word-by-word proofing that takes two more days for a long book. Though I adore my editor, and she makes every conscious effort to catch all my boo boos, I admit, during this last stage, I usually find a few more typos. I’ve found as many as 8 on a very long book but I blame myself for those because (A) I made them and didn’t catch them to begin with and (B) I rushed her in this case… just like she told me not to. This part of my to-do list is the longest because in my opinion, editing is the most crucial part of the book. Let’s face it, any author worth their salt can write a book. It’s the editor who polishes the rock into a diamond (or the closest thing I have written to a diamond thus far J ).

7.      Send my completed baby to my formatter- I have to say, my formatter is a cranky guy. He’s gonna kill me for saying that but he has figuratively slapped my hand more than once. (Say in your most whiny voice) “Don’t double space between paragraphs.” “Don’t hit the space bar twice after a period in a sentence.” “Don’t add stupid little squigglys to your chapters. Smashwords hates that!”… I think you get my drift. He’s cranky but he’s taught me a lot about what he goes through to make my MS look pretty so I try to make him happy with me. Oh… he hates crushing deadlines too. (Hee Hee- apparently, I’m a failure at my own time table because I seem to demand “Rushes” from everyone.) I chalk that up to an attitude of “Okay, I’m done and now you should be… RIGHT NOW!” “Are you done yet? Are you done yet? Are you done yet?”

Inevitably someone, usually my conscience, yells… “Shut the eff up!”

8.      Finally, we publish- This takes even MORE patience, something I’m usually short on. I always put up my book on Amazon first. This bookseller is the worst when it comes to checking my MS for flaws, typos, etc. They also run software to detect unacceptable key words and phrases that will raise a red flag to whether they should publish my book or not. An example of this for a book in the “Romance” category would be the word Incest. In a self-help or psychology text, Incest is probably perfectly acceptable to Amazon and it wouldn’t be flagged but in the “Romance” or “Erotica” category, this is a big no-no and Amazon will (and has) refused to publish it. This is probably why they run a finished book through such a strict review process but they are most definitely worse than most. Smashwords, for example, takes anywhere from a minute to an hour to publish my book once it’s submitted and then it is later “checked” for inclusion to their extended distribution catalogue. See, Smashwords distributes to 8 or 10 major retailers such as Barnes and Noble and iBooks. Kobo, which is huge in Europe, takes about 72 hours to publish but I do my foreign language translations over there because a lot of my readers in Spain, Italy, and France read on the Kobo platform.

I suppose that’s about all I can say about self-publishing. I hope, if you are a new author and haven’t published before, some of what I do will be helpful to you. For my readers, I have just let you into the “business” side of being an author. I hope I’ve been able to give you a little bit of an appreciation for what it is I do and why. Until later, thank you so much for tuning in J