*

Snippet Saturday: Love and Brimstone (Brimstone Vampires 1)

Saturday, May 25, 2013
(This is more than a snippet. Love and Brimstone was my first published book, so it has a very special place in my heart. And it's not your typical vampire story. Think Buffy the Vampire Slayer meets Boston Legal. Originally released in e-book only by another publisher, it was re-released by Siren in e-book and print. I have plans for at least four more books in this series. Book two, Brimstone Blues, is also available from Siren.)

--
Two weeks later, Taz was settled and busy. The office layout was a little smaller, but similar to the LA building, with their executive offices on the top floor. Except now Tim had the office on the other side of her, there wasn’t a security office, and they had a lovely shaded outdoor terrace she took the liberty of outfitting with several large potted tropical palms.

Matthias was out of the office, or so she thought. Albert and Tim were somewhere together doing research when the receptionist buzzed her.

“I’m sorry, Ms. Proctor. There is a Mr. Babson here to see you.”

“Babson?”

“Yes.”

Taz checked her calendar. “I don’t have anyone listed,” she said.

“He says he doesn’t have an appointment. He’s very sorry about that, but needs a few minutes of your time for some forms.”

Murry chose that minute to jump on her desk. Taz gently shooed him off. He returned, meowing loudly, and she wondered if he’d been fed yet. He suddenly seemed very agitated.

“Okay, ah, hold him for ten then send him up with a visitor access pass.”

“Yes, Ms. Proctor.”

Just what I need, she thought.

Murry jumped up on her desk again and loudly meowed.

“Stupid—listen!” she thought she heard someone say. But she knew she was alone and shook it off.

Must be a radio on somewhere. “Murry, you can’t do that. What’s gotten into you?” She scooped him up, scratching him under the chin. “Are you feeling ignored?”

He shrugged out of her grasp and bolted out the door. She sighed, finished what she was working on, and kept an eye on the time.

* * * *

Murry knew Matthias, Albert, and Tim were two floors down. He ran for the stairwell.

This is bad. Very bad.

* * * *

Taz eyed the elevator lights and timed it so she was standing in the hall when the doors opened. She caught a whiff of a strange odor, rotten eggy, reminding her of high school chem lab. She’d have to call Engineering to look at the AC unit.

“Mr. Babson, was it?” she asked.

He nodded. He was about her height and wore a cheap grey business suit a size too large. He had flat slate-grey eyes, and thinning reddish hair stuck up at odd angles like he’d been caught in a wind tunnel. He carried a large, scuffed leather briefcase.

“Sorry to drop in unannounced like this,” he said. “I was told to ask for you in person, that you had the authority to look through these papers.”

She motioned him to follow her, suddenly not wanting to shake hands with him. “What’s it regarding?”

There was that funny odor again. Chemical? It was acrid, not smoky, but close. Sharp, odd. She led him to the conference room.

“Beecham Manor.”

“I don’t know what that is. I’ll need to get my laptop. Please wait here and make yourself comfortable.”

He nodded, and she walked to her office.

* * * *

Murry found the three men and bounced, hard, off Matthias’ knees.

“COME NOW!”

The men looked at the cat and then bolted for the stairs as one.

* * * *

Taz smiled as she returned and set her laptop on the conference table. Babson had opened his briefcase and laid a couple of files on the table. He now stood across the room, examining the bookcases, his back to her.

“Can you please spell that for me?” she asked.

He did, working his way along the wall toward her, browsing titles while she searched, his back to her, hands in front of him.

Taz turned to speak to Babson and saw him approaching, a large knife in his hand. She didn’t have time to register what was happening. Matthias suddenly roared through the open conference-room door, carrying a large, upraised sword, and sliced through the intruder.

By the time Taz scrabbled backward away from them, the knife Babson wielded hit the floor, a bright orange flash lit the room, and then an acrid cloud of dust settled to the carpet.

Her mouth fell open, her scream imminent.

Albert and Tim flanked Matthias, who turned to her, lowering the sword as he reached out to her. “Anastazia, are you okay?”

Murry chose that moment to jump on the conference table, startling her. She screamed—loud, long, panicked. She backed away from Albert and Tim, her hands in front of her, warding the men away.

Albert turned to Matthias. “Put that damn thing down. Can’t you see she’s frightened?”

Matthias looked at the sword, laid it on the conference table, and held up two empty hands. “It’s okay, Anastazia. It’s gone. I took care of it.”

She stopped screaming only because she had to take a breath.

“Here it comes,” Tim said. Albert shot him a warning look.

“What the fuck was that?”

* * * *

Taz looked at the men, still backing away, still warding them off. Had time slowed? Stopped? Because in the space of less than a few seconds a strange-smelling man attacked her with a knife, her employer took him out with a sword, and the attacker disappeared in a cloud of smoke.

Not your normal day at the office.

Matthias tried again. “Anastazia, it’s okay. You’re safe—”

“What the hell is going on?” she shrieked. Matthias winced.

Robertson smiled. He was used to her volume. “That’s my girl. She’ll be fine.”

She turned on him. “What the hell is going on? I want answers!”

Matthias took a step toward her. She backed away from him. “Calm down and I’ll—”

“Calm down? Did you just tell me to calm down? What the fuck just happened? Where did that guy go? What the hell is going on—is that a sword?”

Murry, always helpful, chose that moment to reveal himself to her. “Calm down, sweetie. It was just a demon. Well, not technically a demon, but close enough.”

She’d started to scream something else, but it died on her lips as she stared at the cat. Her eyes grew even wider as a frightened squeak escaped her slack jaw.

The cat stepped toward her, across the table, deftly avoiding her laptop. “Yes, you heard me. A demon.”

She looked at the men, certain she’d just lost her mind. Obviously, what happened was that stress had triggered some sort of mental breakdown and—

“Yes, Murry just spoke to you,” Tim said gently.

Must. Focus. On. Breathing. And Taz did just that, the astonishment frozen on her face. She thought. She couldn’t tell for sure, because her whole body had gone numb.

* * * *

She kept the conference table between herself and the men and warily eyed the sword. Albert had pulled Matthias back for fear she’d bolt from the room. They let Tim take point.

“Taz, honey, it’s okay.”

“What?” It came out a whisper. She wasn’t screaming anymore, but somehow this was worse. She sounded like her sanity had slipped a cog. Tim couldn’t blame her. Get her through the initial shock first, then figure out how the hell a demon not only tracked her down, but got into the office.

“Anastazia, Taz, look at me—look at me, sweetheart.” If he could just get her to look into his eyes, he could hopefully calm her, or, if necessary, push her over the edge into a faint. Then they could regroup.

Her eyes glazed over. She still wouldn’t look at him. Instead, she looked from the sword, to Matthias, who still had his hands up in front of him, showing her they were empty, to Albert, to the cat, who was now licking himself.

Repeat as necessary.

“Anastazia, look at me,” Tim tried again. When he took a step forward, she took a step back. He was actually happy to see that, because it meant at least some of her instincts were trying to kick in.

She was slipping toward shock. Barely a minute had passed.

He opted for a change in approach. “Anastazia!” He used his angry parent tone, and she looked at him, but before he could catch her gaze she stared at the sword again.

With his focus still on her, Tim said, “Get. The sword. Out of here.”

Albert grabbed it and set it around the corner, outside the door.

“See?” Matthias said. “The sword—”

“Shut up, Matthias,” Tim and Albert said together.

Surprisingly, that was all it took to bring her back.

What did you call him?” she asked Tim, her tone still too low and far too quiet for his liking.

“Anastazia, it’s okay. We have a lot we need to talk—”

“Oh, you bet your ass we do!” Her normally calm and professional veneer had finally shattered.

The Ice Queen, melted.

Her eyes still wide, her gaze rapidly skipped from one man to another. She started to tremble, shock imminent.

Tim tried again. “Sweetheart, look at me. Now.”

She finally focused on his eyes long enough he could take her. He motioned to Albert, who brought a chair.

“You have to calm down.” Tim reached out for the woman he loved like a daughter, took her hand, and gently guided her to the chair. He stepped back. He didn’t like to do this to her for too long, but at least she was seated.

He released her. She blinked and looked at the three men. Her voice still trembled, sounding near breaking. “Will one of you please explain what the hell just happened?”

Tim struggled to keep his voice low and soft. “It’s very difficult to explain, and it’s a very long story.”

---

http://www.bookstrand.com/love-and-brimstone

Blurb:

[Siren Classic: Erotic Paranormal Romance, vampires, HEA]

The soul always comes home…

Ice queen Anastazia “Taz” Proctor is an aloof attorney, a “fixer.” Hunky Matthias Hawthorne wants her for more than just an employee…much more. Will she believe him when he reveals their shared secret—that they’re vampires, but that it’s not the way Hollywood portrays them? Maybe not, but with someone out to kill her, she might not have a choice. She also can’t ignore what her body tells her about her handsome boss.

An escape with Matthias to the safe refuge of Yellowstone National Park leads Taz to discoveries about her lineage and what she can do with her newly awakened powers. Even more disturbing is her unexplainable attraction to Matthias’s handsome cousin, Rafael.

Time grows short as a traitor in their midst makes another attempt on Taz’s life. Will she and Matthias survive when they’re caught in a vicious showdown between Love and Brimstone?

Note: This book has been extensively revised. It was previously published with another publisher.

A Siren Erotic Romance

You can find all my Siren releases as Tymber Dalton, Lesli Richardson, Macy Largo, and Tessa Monroe on my Siren page at:

http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton

Release Day: Triple Trouble 5 - Out of Smoke and Ashes

Friday, May 24, 2013
Woot! It's release day for the next installment in my Triple Trouble series, Out of Smoke and Ashes! And for a limited time, if you also purchase books one and two of my Placida Pod series, you can get them at a discount.

(And yes, I'm finishing up book 6, tentatively titled A Wolf in the Fold.)

http://www.bookstrand.com/out-of-smoke-and-ashes

Blurb:

[Siren Ménage Everlasting: Erotic Paranormal Ménage a Quatre Romance, M/F/M/M, shape-shifters, sex in shifted form, consensual BDSM between secondary M/F characters, HEA]

Elain Pardie’s wedding is interrupted when her matron of honor, Lina, goes into labor. Unfortunately, events spiral downhill from there for the Lyalls and their kin when an old foe refuses to roll over and play dead. As everyone suspected, Rodolfo Abernathy won’t give up.

What Abernathy doesn’t know is he’s become more prey than predator. Shifters with grudges of their own enter the fight with their sights set on Abernathy’s downfall.

When the fur hits the fan, it won’t be pretty.

While Elain and Lina struggle to cope with their new roles, various shifter Clans band together to fight their common enemies. Devastating heartaches are finally laid to rest as new love blossoms.

And Baba Yaga isn’t even done with them yet. Elain, Ain, Brodey, and Cail, along with their ever-growing band of friends and adopted family, must still confront those who’d gladly destroy all they love as evil and vengeance once again return from Out of Smoke and Ashes.

Note: There is no sexual relationship or touching for titillation between or among siblings.

A Siren Erotic Romance

Tymber Dalton is a Siren-exclusive author.

--

The correct order to read all of the Triple Trouble books and prequels is:

"Boiling Point" (Tasty Treats, Vol. 3)
Steam
Fire and Ice
Trouble Comes in Threes (Triple Trouble 1)
Storm Warning (Triple Trouble 2)
Three Dog Night (Triple Trouble 3)
Triple Dog Dare (Triple Trouble 4)
Out of Smoke and Ashes (Triple Trouble 5)


You can find all my Siren releases as Tymber Dalton, Lesli Richardson, Macy Largo, and Tessa Monroe on my Siren page at:

http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton

Of Hobbits and habits and sharks, why sometimes less is more in writing and movies.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Source
I stumbled across a series of separate but related articles today that sort of helped me gel something I've known for a long time about similarities in writing and in movies:

Sometimes, less is more. Far more.

Apparently this is never as true as Peter Jackson's recent experiment with using a high frame rate speed on The Hobbit. In some theaters, it released in two or three versions -- 2D (24 frames per second, or FPS), 3D, and 3D HFR (high frame rate).

I haven't seen any of the three versions, so I can only go by third-party reports. People are saying they get a better experience viewing the 2D version over the 3D or 3D HFR versions (which are shot at 48 FPS, twice the speed of regular film). One of the many repeated complaints is that at the higher frame rate, sets look fake, prosthetic make-up is very noticeable, and the movie is a sometimes physically painful experience for viewers when their eyes have difficulty focusing on any given part of the screen. Worse, parts of the movie that should have been magic, such as battle scenes and CGI sections resembled little more than video game footage to some people in the 48 FPS versions.

What?

The whole point of Peter Jackson's experiment was to give viewers a more immersive experience. To put them in the film. Congratulations, he apparently did just that, but not in the way he intended. People felt like they were standing on the set and seeing the mayhem behind the "magic" of filmmaking.

Definitely not what Jackson intended, I'm sure.

Yes, innovation is key. Innovation is necessary. If we didn't have innovation, we'd still be flinging our own poo at each other while we waited for something to eat us, so to speak.

Now, pair this with a talk Steven Soderbergh gave at the 56th San Francisco International Film Festival on the state of cinema. Read through the whole thing. If you're in the publishing industry and don't have your head firmly wedged up your ass or under a rock, you'll see some glaring similarities between "New York" publishing versus indie and self-publishing sectors.

What does all this mean? Why am I rambling on?

I'll tell you.

Who here hasn't seen Jaws? (If you raised your hand, I'll slap you later. Go get the frickin' movie and watch the whole thing. It's a masterpiece of storytelling. Then get your ass back here so I can continue without it being a spoiler.)

When did you first see the shark make his appearance in the film? If you said in the opening sequence when the female swimmer got eaten, let me slap you now and also send you out to go watch the movie.

The shark doesn't actually appear on film until 81 minutes into a 124-minute movie.

Think about that for a little bit.

 Yes, it was due in no small part to the shark actually malfunctioning, allowing relative newbie director Steven Spielberg to borrow a valuable lesson from Alfred Hitchcock and his "less-is-more" school of moviemaking.

And it scared the hell out of countless moviegoers and swimmers alike when it came out.

Do you think Jaws would be as effective a movie if it were made exactly like that only filmed in 48FPS? (Bear with me.)

Hell no. You'd see every single flaw, catch every tiny oopsie of the mechanical shark, lose all of the magic.

Now, here's where I bring my two trains of thought into the same railyard: Why is it some writers insist on telling more than their story needs? Show, don't tell.

I harp on this constantly. We don't need to know the color of the wallpaper in the dining room unless it's a key point later in the plot. We don't need to know every last frickin' detail of the heroine's dress. We don't need THREE FRICKIN' PAGES of description about one damn thing just to prove that you spent twenty-five-eleventy-thousand hours of research on Wikipedia to get the damn thing right!

MOVE THE FRAK ON.

You are like Peter Jackson trying to force our eyeballs into accepting a higher frame rate that we not only cannot effectively process, but does the exact opposite of what's intended, it exposes the weakness and fakeness in the picture on the screen. (Or, in this case, in your writing.)

I don't care if you've read every book on Elizabethan frilly underwear there is to read. I don't care that you're an expert in neolithic sex practices.

I don't care that Peter Jackson wanted to experiment with a higher frame rate.

What does this mean to me as a writer? I tend to go toward less description. I give the reader the barebone-basics and let them take off from there, because that's the kind of writing I love reading the best. Yes, there are sometimes I flavor the stew with a little bit of description for my own tastes. But you won't read me waxing melodic about how it took the heroine three months to make up her mind between low-pile and Berber carpeting, unless that point is specifically included to demonstrate how wishy-washy she is.

In fact, my idea of her house will probably look completely different than how the reader pictures her house, other than the skeleton of detail I threw in there. She's neat or a slob. Or it's lived-in and comfortable, somewhere between the two extremes. Maybe she collects art and straightens a crooked frame, or maybe there isn't a picture in the place. Maybe she likes bold, strong, dark paint colors, or maybe it's a white-washed beach house.

Does it fricking matter? Not really.

If you have a place in your book that doesn't forward the plot, create conflict, or lay a foundation for your characters that pays off later in the book, GET RID OF IT. "You're boring people, sweetie," as Penny tells Sheldon in the Big Bang Theory.

And yes, you are.

And too many writers worry about "big names" that New York houses sign and sell. They want to write like them.

I've got news for you, buttercup, you need to write like YOU write and not worry about what anyone else is writing. Following a trend means you're already behind it. Focus more on writing strong stories from your heart, stories you as a reader first are proud of. Because every quarter, Amazon and others release sales numbers that show New York no longer has the stranglehold on publishing it used to. Let New York keep doing what it's doing. You need to follow the people pursuing indie publishing houses and self-publishing routes and write stories. Don't just write books.

In other words, make cinema. Don't just make a movie.

Make a GOOD story, don't try to shove the reader around in the narrative. Good storytelling (and cinema) is when you don't notice the writer or the writing (or the director or film techniques) while in the process of reading (viewing).

In fact, a GOOD story should feel like a cinematic experience.

So drop the gimmicks. Go back to basics. Study not only great books in different genres, but also great movies. Watch from a director's (or writer's) point of view.

And remember that your biggest ally can be your reader's brain, if you let them in on the partnership. You don't need to spoon-feed them the story. Sometimes a little ambiguity in a book is a good thing. Sometimes it makes it richer, creates layers the narrative might not otherwise have.

It also means you can't be lazy. (And yes, writing all that extra, unnecessary description IS lazy writing.) It means you need to have a story strong enough to stand on its own without the fluff. Change your writing habits. Get yourself out of the rut of what feels comfortable and force yourself to stretch as a writer. Create new habits, stronger habits, better habits that will improve your writing in the long run and make your readers happier.

So put away that goddamned shark until 81 minutes in, and leave the fancy, new-fangled camera at home. You'll be a better writer for it in the long run.

OKC Donation Info

Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Here's some quick donation info for tornado disaster relief for Moore, OK:

Text message $10 donation (appears on your bill) with your phone to:

Red Cross (text REDCROSS to 90999)
OKC Food Bank (FOOD to 32333)
Salvation Army (STORM to 80888)
Operation USA (AID to 50555)

(They will reply with a message for you to confirm the donation. Make sure you confirm it.)

Red Cross: http://www.redcross.org/okc
Salvation Army: https://donate.salvationarmyusa.org/uss/eds/aok
United Way of Central OK: http://www.unitedwayokc.org/
Moore and Shawnee Tornado Relief Fund: http://tulsacf.org/
Operation USA


The "other" Dark Side: Loose Leaf Tea

Sunday, May 19, 2013
Source: Teavana.com
*clears throat* Hello, my name is Tymber, and I'm a new loose leaf tea whore.

I love herbal teas, and after my couple of cups of coffee first thing in the morning, I switch over to tea for the rest of the day. I know there are people who hate bagged tea, but the ones I drink always tasted great to me.

Well, at the mall I go to where I visit Build-A-Bear on occasion (that's a post for another day LOL) I've noticed a few doors down, there's a place called Teavana. Never had time to get in there, but it intrigued me.

Finally, last week, I had a chance to go there. Got me some Earl Grey white tea, and two different fruit teas in white. And a strainer. And a tin.

*clearing throat again*

Yeah.

Well, I'm hooked. I still like my bagged herbal tea, because the ones I get I've been drinking for years. But yes, there is definitely a stronger, richer flavor to loose leaf tea.

Yesterday, I stopped by again with Sir (who's long been a fan of loose leaf tea and I made fun of Him when he spent $300 on tea while on a trip to London a couple of months ago). I dropped more money on more tea and a few more tins.

And that's how they suck you in... LOL

Triple Trouble 5: "Out of Smoke and Ashes" available for pre-order.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Woot!! Siren just put up "Out of Smoke and Ashes" (Triple Trouble 5) for pre-order AND is running a special on the first two installments of my Placida Pod series, too! :)

http://www.bookstrand.com/out-of-smoke-and-ashes

Blurb:

[Siren Ménage Everlasting: Erotic Paranormal Ménage a Quatre Romance, M/F/M/M, shape-shifters, sex in shifted form, consensual BDSM between secondary M/F characters, HEA]

Elain Pardie’s wedding is interrupted when her matron of honor, Lina, goes into labor. Unfortunately, events spiral downhill from there for the Lyalls and their kin when an old foe refuses to roll over and play dead. As everyone suspected, Rodolfo Abernathy won’t give up.

What Abernathy doesn’t know is he’s become more prey than predator. Shifters with grudges of their own enter the fight with their sights set on Abernathy’s downfall.

When the fur hits the fan, it won’t be pretty.

While Elain and Lina struggle to cope with their new roles, various shifter Clans band together to fight their common enemies. Devastating heartaches are finally laid to rest as new love blossoms.

And Baba Yaga isn’t even done with them yet. Elain, Ain, Brodey, and Cail, along with their ever-growing band of friends and adopted family, must still confront those who’d gladly destroy all they love as evil and vengeance once again return from Out of Smoke and Ashes.

Note: There is no sexual relationship or touching for titillation between or among siblings.

A Siren Erotic Romance

Tymber Dalton is a Siren-exclusive author.

--

The correct order to read all of the Triple Trouble books and prequels is:



You can find all my Siren releases as Tymber Dalton, Lesli Richardson, Macy Largo, and Tessa Monroe on my Siren page at:

http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton

Snippet Saturday: Many Blessings (Coffeeshop Coven 1)

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Today's Snippet Saturday is from my new release, Many Blessings (Coffeeshop Coven 1).

Sachi grinned. “Hey, at least one of us is getting lucky around here. I think tomorrow night’s gathering needs to include a ‘sex magick 101’ chant or something for the rest of us suffering through a dry spell.”

Mandaline had made the mistake of trying to sip her coffee. She managed to get most of it back into her mug as she laughed without choking or spewing it all over the computer. “And how, exactly, do you plan to do that?”

Sachi made a serious face and held her arms up toward the ceiling. “Oh, hail, Dildous, god of the Mighty O. Send us your celestial vibrations.”


http://www.bookstrand.com/many-blessings

Blurb:

[Siren Menage Everlasting: Erotic Paranormal Menage a Trois Romance, M/F/M, ghosts, HEA]

Mandaline Royce swore off love. She?s happy working for her best friend, Julie, at her New Age shop, Many Blessings. Then her life?s turned upside down by Julie?s tragic death. Julie leaves her everything, including the shop and her dog, but the gaping hole in Mandaline?s heart isn?t one she?s sure will ever heal.

Ellis Fargo and Bradley Sawyer are as close as brothers. Ellis feels his life?s mission is caring for Brad, a former veteran who suffered debilitating injuries. Brad insists their house is haunted. Ellis doesn?t believe in ghosts and thinks the trouble is Brad?s injured brain. He humors Brad by having Mandaline check the house for supernatural issues.

Ellis doesn?t understand the sudden, scorching attraction he has for Mandaline, but he can?t settle for anyone who won?t also put Brad first. Brad thinks Mandaline would be the perfect woman--for them both. Can they help each other heal and turn their various emotional wounds into Many Blessings?

A Siren Erotic Romance

Tymber Dalton is a Siren-exclusive author.

While all the books are standalone and can be read independently of each other, the best reading order for the series is:

1) Out of the Darkness (Coffeeshop Coven prequel)
2) It's a Sweet Life (Coffeeshop Coven prequel)
3) Many Blessings (Coffeeshop Coven 1)

They're all available at my author page on Siren-BookStrand's site:

http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton

You can go to my Siren-BookStrand author page and click on the Notify Me link to get an email from Siren when they update my page and add new books for pre-order. (It's also where you can find all my releases under my various pen names: Tymber Dalton, Lesli Richardson, Tessa Monroe, and Macy Largo.)


WIP Wednesday: A Wolf in the Fold (Triple Trouble 6)

Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Today's WIP Wednesday comes from A Wolf in the Fold, my working title for Triple Trouble 6. Triple Trouble 5, Out of Smoke and Ashes, releases on 5/24 from Siren-BookStrand.

Enjoy!


--

“Thirty seconds,” Elain called out.

The pack of shifters tensed. Even Wally, who’d opted to run it shifted, lumbered from sitting up into a four-footed running stance. Jan, Rick, and Kael were in their smaller dragon forms and would likely give Wally a walk for his money.

The seconds ticked down. “Ten…nine…eight…seven…six…five…” She was vaguely aware of the Beasts suddenly bursting into frustrated cries but didn’t look or stop the count. “Four…three…two…one!”

The pack let out an excited shout, as if now one melded beast. They headed off into the woods, following the trail Darryl had set.

Another, different cry hit Elain’s ears over the din of the racing shifters.

Mai screaming.

Elain turned to look and realized the Beasts were doing their best to crawl off the blanket toward the rapidly disappearing runners. And BettLynn was missing.

And a little brown and black ball of fur went wobbling past Elain.

Elain ran across the yard toward Mai. “What happened?”

Lina, who’d gone inside to pee, came bolting through the doors to help Carla try to corral the Beasts, who had made their way completely off the blanket.

“BettLynn!” Mai screamed, running toward Elain.

Elain turned. Her men had just hit the woods, the little furball catching up and gaining speed as it got its wobbly legs under control. Then everything finally clicked in her brain as she remembered her vision from earlier that morning. “Brodey!” she screamed. “Stop! Grab her!”

The great Scrivener conversion update.

I mentioned a few weeks ago I'd had to ditch my previous writing program SuperNotecard due to it totally fucking not working anymore problems with it after a Java update broke it and the programmers' not giving a shit lack of a timely response to addressing the issue. Thus since word slinging is sort of how I pay my bills and put food on my table, and my writing software is an invaluable part of my writing process, I switched to Scrivener.

Well, ironically, now that I've switched to a MacBook Air from a PC-flavored laptop, I had to get the Mac version of Scrivener which I already knew had more features.

And now, the same company's come out with Scapple for Mac, an AWESOME mindmap software that totally gets me. (I think I'm in lurrrrrve!)

No, it's not available for PCs as of this writing, although they say they're working on it.

I tried it the other day and immediately bought it. (Shut up and take my money!) Especially when I found I could literally drag and drop my entire mindmap from Scapple into a corkboard folder on Scrivener, in the SAME arrangement as it was in the mindmap (Mac Scrivener has a free-form corkboard that the PC version doesn't yet.)

Oh.

My.

Goddess!

Yes, I'm hooked. I'm in love, and definitely not regretting my decision to switch to the MacBook Air. (Also, was able to stream something from my MacBook Air to our Apple TV device so we could watch it on the living room TV the other night. WOW!)

So if you're considering a Mac, GET IT. Yes, they're more expensive, but now I'm mentally whacking myself on the head for not getting one sooner. And if you're on the fence about Scrivener (in either flavor) don't be. BUY. IT. Do yourself the favor and use the free trial, and get the Dummies book for it. I know there are more advanced features I haven't even tapped into yet, but I'm really loving the software now that I've totally made love to it gotten to know it better.

Scapple is definitely worth a look-see if you like free-flow note-taking. I've already transcribed a shit-ton of handwritten notes from my WIP notebook into Scapple and dragged them into Scrivener.

Now, please excuse me while I go get cuddly with Spunky (my MacBook Air) and get this WIP cranked out.

Writing How-To: The dreaded blurb.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013
I've got a post about writing loglines and blurbs for writers over on the Write Your Ass Off blog.

http://writeyourassoff.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-dreaded-blurb.html

Write Your Ass Off: Monday Mash-Up

Monday, May 6, 2013
Yes, I fell waaaay behind on updating the Write Your Ass Off blog. I'll try to get back into that. Today, I've got a mash-up of helpful links from the Interwebz on various topics:

http://writeyourassoff.blogspot.com/2013/05/monday-mash-up.html

I went to the Dark Side. (And the cookies are nommy!)

Sunday, May 5, 2013
Grimmy trying to "help."
I had a scare a few weeks back with my Toshiba Satellite laptop, where a security software update farked the boot process and for the better part of two days I was in panic mode trying to straighten it out.

Fortunately, I did get it straightened out, but it was a grim reminder that I was due for a new one. (I prefer to upgrade while the old unit is still working, because one of my early laptops died and while I was waiting for it to be fixed, I was stuck writing on a tiny Asus teensy mini netbook.)

I should note I go through laptops at a rate of 1 about every 2-3 years. That's not a statement on the quality of the laptops--that's a statement about how much I put them through the wringer. (And to be fair to my little red Toshi, the issue was software, not hardware or firmware or bios.)

I've been an ardent and devout Toshiba person for the past three laptops of my own, in addition to one for Hubby, one for my son, and a shared one for Hubby and myself that is a monster, wide-screened workhorse containing my Adobe Photoshop and other software. I'm pretty loyal, and they're good computers.

But.

And again, this isn't Toshiba's fault.

Nope, the fault lies squarely on Microsoft this time. Windows 8, from everything I've read and heard and seen, is NOT an OS I want to upgrade to. I'm the kind of person, when a new OS is released, I'll wait until its been out a loooong while, usually until one or two service packs come out, to upgrade/change over.

So Friday, Hubby and I took a trip to the Apple store. I'm not Mac-averse, but I've never personally had a Mac-flavored machine of my own. I've used them before with no issues, and I have an iPod, iPad, and iPhone.

Well, we came home with a 13" MacBook Air. It was a decision I needed to grit my teeth to make, because the math in my head kept coming back with the reply of, "You can buy THREE OR MORE DAMN TOSHIBAS FOR THAT MONEY!!" We dipped into savings to get it, but I have to say, I love it. And considering what I've heard from everyone so far, this laptop should easily last me 3-5 years (or longer) making it worthwhile.

Another consideration, since I'm now using Scrivener, the Mac version of Scrivener has more features than the PC version. And they just came out with Scapple, the PERFECT mind-map software for how I work...but only available for Macs at this time.

The MacBook Air has good battery life (another consideration for me), and is VERY lightweight (yet another consideration for me). So I still have my little Toshi as a good back-up machine, and now have all my important files transferred over to the new one. After a few hiccups caused by user error (I'm used to tapping, not clicking, the trackpad LOL) and then overcoming that by hooking up my wireless mouse, I've settled in quite nicely with "Spunky."

Yes, I name my computers and my cars. Shut up. Don't judge me.

So I am now a fully Mac person. Honestly? I didn't cross over sooner because of the cost differential. I think Apple could fully give Microsoft a complete run for their money if they figured out how to drop the price of their units. I had NO problems with software installs, or hooking up to my network, or anything. It's been completely painless and went far faster than I imagined it could.

So are you a PC or a Mac person? Or, like me and Hubby, a hybrid of both? (Before my iPhone I had an Android, so I was split three ways then. LOL) Or do you run a Linux-flavored machine? Do you have a Mac and what do you think of it? Are you interested in a Mac? Are you a Mac wanting to switch to PC? Sound off in the comments.

Release Day: Many Blessings (Coffeeshop Coven 1)

Friday, May 3, 2013
Yay, it's release day for Many Blessings (Coffeeshop Coven 1)!

http://www.bookstrand.com/many-blessings

Blurb:

[Siren Ménage Everlasting: Erotic Paranormal Ménage a Trois Romance, M/F/M, ghosts, HEA]

Mandaline Royce swore off love. She’s happy working for her best friend, Julie, at her New Age shop, Many Blessings. Then her life’s turned upside down by Julie’s tragic death. Julie leaves her everything, including the shop and her dog, but the gaping hole in Mandaline’s heart isn’t one she’s sure will ever heal.

Ellis Fargo and Bradley Sawyer are as close as brothers. Ellis feels his life’s mission is caring for Brad, a former veteran who suffered debilitating injuries. Brad insists their house is haunted. Ellis doesn’t believe in ghosts and thinks the trouble is Brad’s injured brain. He humors Brad by having Mandaline check the house for supernatural issues.

Ellis doesn’t understand the sudden, scorching attraction he has for Mandaline, but he can’t settle for anyone who won’t also put Brad first. Brad thinks Mandaline would be the perfect woman…for them both. Can they help each other heal and turn their various emotional wounds into Many Blessings?

A Siren Erotic Romance

Tymber Dalton is a Siren-exclusive author.

--

While all the books in the series are standalone and can be read independently of each other, the best reading order for the series is:

Out of the Darkness (Coffeeshop Coven prequel)
It's a Sweet Life (Coffeeshop Coven prequel)
Many Blessings (Coffeeshop Coven 1)

They're all available at my author page on Siren-BookStrand's site:

http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton

You can go to my Siren-BookStrand author page and click on the Notify Me link to get an email from Siren when they update my page and add new books for pre-order. (It's also where you can find all my releases under my various pen names: Tymber Dalton, Lesli Richardson, Tessa Monroe, and Macy Largo.)

Blessed Beltaine!

Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Blessed Beltaine, peeps! :) Hope it's a safe and merry one.