Sunday, October 27, 2013

Demon Lord 8, When Angels Fall, now available from Barnes & Noble and Kobo


Demon Lord 8, When Angels Fall, is now available for pre-order from Barnes & Noble and Kobo.


Readers can read a sample of the first few chapters on Smashwords, and today I share another sneak peek into the book’s pages.

The archangel Majelin has been imprisoned and tortured in the underworld of Sherinias’ domain for five centuries. Eventually, his light will die and he will fall to the darkness. Whispers of a tar’merin travelling with Kayos have reached Airedene, the Sacred City of Angels, giving Sarmalin hope that her husband might be saved, and she goes to plead with the Demon Lord.

The archangel is in a chamber warded against dark gods, however, so Bane must enter it powerless, or Majelin will die. Bane is forced to use the shadows when demon guardians attack, triggering the trap. He follows the archangel into the underworld’s depths to protect him, and they fall into a hidden world inhabited by legendary beings from the Times of Reckoning.

Many of Bane’s powers do not work there, and his attempts to escape fail, but if he does not return to Sherinias’ domain in time, the dark gods he cast down will rise again and enslave the child goddess. He must find a way out, but the further he travels and the more he learns about the hidden realm, the more he fears that he is in a prison created by a Grey God, and there is no way out…

 
Extract from Demon Lord 8, When Angels Fall

Something brushed Bane’s neck, and he spun, his hands raised, to face empty air. A soft snigger from behind him made him whip around again. He rubbed his stinging neck, his hand coming away bloody. The invisible entity was not an air demon, for there was no smell. Another skirl of laughter made him turn. An invisible foe was hard to fight, but two could play at that game. He cloaked himself and listened for sniggers. He turned twice more before it came again, beside him, just as something stabbed him in the flank.

Bane clasped the wound, cursing. The frisson of dark power he could sense when dark gods became invisible evidently gave away his position to a certain degree, and his enemy had only to keep stabbing at the area to eventually skewer him. He unleashed an unfocussed swathe of dark fire, and then waited. A blade pierced his flank from behind, sliced across his ribs and emerged from his chest. Bane spun, ripping the weapon from its wielder’s grip, and more sniggers came from behind him. He groped for the sword’s hilt and tried to tug it out, but the angle was awkward and the pain searing. With a grunt, he Moved to Retribution’s mess hall.

Bane sank down on the nearest vacant couch, his breath catching. Mirra cried his name and hurried to his side. Drevarin jumped up and hastened over to examine the injury.

“It is not too serious,” he said. “It is just under the skin.”

“Just pull it out,” Bane gritted.

“I will do it.” Kayos appeared and strode towards them, Sherinias trotting at his heels.

Mirra and Drevarin moved aside, and the Grey God placed a hand on Bane’s side, dulling the pain as he drew the weapon out. Bane leashed his power while Kayos healed the wound.

He straightened to frown at Bane. “There is only one thing that could attack you like that.”

Monday, October 21, 2013

Demon Lord 8 – When Angels Fall – extracts, author interview and more

Today the latest book in my Demon Lord series, When Angels Fall, is showcased on Fireblade Publishers’ blog. The showcase includes an interview with me on the book, a pre-publication review, an extract that’s never been shared before, and more.

For more information, visit the Fireblade blog. Enjoy!




Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Interview with author Tracy Falbe


1. What or who inspired you to write?

I credit my mother as my initial role model for writing. She has a passion for literature and I remember her getting a short story published when I was a kid. She was always drawing, painting, or writing. I easily absorbed her love of the arts. I started writing stories as soon as I was taught to write in grade school.

2. Do you have a day job?

Writing novels and running my publishing company are my day and night jobs. I have not had outside employment since 2006 when my second son was born.

3. What attracted you to write in your particular genre?

I started reading fantasy novels at about age 12 and fell in love with the genre. Although I read all kinds of things, fantasy is my first love. I also like historical settings, especially American Westerns. The most attractive elements in fantasy writing are magic and sword fights. Plus I can always have horses too. Love horses. I don’t feel the need to write a story in our so-called reality. I want to go beyond it. When my life problems weigh me down, which happens often, writing is my refuge.

4. What is your least favorite part of the creative process?

What a surprising question. I never even thought of the concept of having a least favorite part. The toughest thing must be the unbearable compulsion to be creative. Sometimes I wish I was boring and unimaginative and able to sit at some pointless mind-numbing job and collect a check. Maybe life would be easier that way.

5. What do you do when you are not writing?

I have young children and they take up most of my time. My other main interest is growing food. I’ve spent a lot of time studying permaculture techniques and applying them to my yard. My goal is to create an edible landscape. Another hobby is baking, and I like bicycling and boating too.

6. Where is your favorite place to write/work?

I use a portable word processor called a Neo so I’m not tied to any particular spot for writing. When the weather is good, I like to write in my three seasons room. I also write on my couch or in bed. Sometimes I go to the library and write there. I don’t have a favorite spot. As long as no one is bugging me, I can write anywhere.

7. How did you choose the title for your book/s?

I’ve written 8 novels so far. Picking titles used to be hard work. I would keep a running list of ideas for a title and eventually pick one after weeks of consideration. The process is getting easier for me. The titles pop into my head pretty much the way I want them now.

8. If you could go back and do anything differently, would you?

I assume you are referring to changing something in one of my published novels. I don’t dwell on the content of a novel once it’s published. I do look over my work and see where I can improve for future works, but I have no lingering regrets. When I publish a novel, I am personally satisfied. Publishing is my way of letting go. If I did not do it, I could never move on to new stories.

9. How do you market your books?

I’ve tried all kinds of things over the years. For a long time I used advertising through Google and Project Wonderful, but unfortunately this method has been losing effectiveness. I’m not sure why. I’ve also done blog tours and guest blogging. Online press releases are also part of my outreach. I’m beginning to add face-to-face marketing by being a vendor at conventions and fairs. This does not mean that I am abandoning internet marketing. It remains important because I have always relied on my worldwide distribution. I get readers from all kinds of countries and the internet is my way of reaching them. I will continue to seek guest blogging opportunities. I also have written my own blog for a long time. I do this because I enjoy it. I dabble in social media, but really have no idea how to market myself on that platform.

10. Where do you publish your books, and which distributor do you see the most sales from?

I publish my books first at my Brave Luck Books web store. I then put them into the Amazon Kindle publishing system and Smashwords. Through Smashwords my titles go to Barnes & Noble, iTunes, Kobo, Sony, and several other places. Additionally my novels are at Allromanceebooks.com and Drive Thru Fiction. I get the most sales in the Amazon Kindle stores, but my sales at Barnes & Noble are a close second. I’ve never really broken out at Amazon, and I wish I could do better there.

11. What is the most interesting lesson you’ve learnt about yourself through your writing?

I’ve learned that I am ridiculously obsessive and able to endure years upon years of hard work for very little reward.

12. What is the harshest criticism you’ve received about your book/s?

Someone wrote me to say that his conscience demanded that he beg me to stop writing. He wanted to spare hapless readers the chance of encountering my work. I deleted the email without replying. I assume my writing was so powerful that I triggered feelings in him that he could not cope with.

Another bad review at Amazon goes on and on about how stupid my characters are. Apparently that reader missed the clues about how magic sometimes influenced the actions of some characters. Also, my characters do stupid things sometimes because that’s how people are. People do stupid things all the time, myself included. I’ve had many reviews state that my characters feel very real.

13. How do you handle criticism about your book/s?

Poorly. It hurts too much for me to be gracious about it. However, I do consider everything that readers say about my novels, even the bad things. When someone does not like my work, I acknowledge that I failed to communicate with that person. I sincerely want to improve and I work very hard at my craft. I know I will never please everybody. I’ve been doing this long enough to know that for every person who hates my writing another person will think it’s great. I can’t focus on the haters.

14. Is there a message or a lesson that you’d like to convey to your readers?

I’m always grateful to the people who have read my books. I appreciate that they gave me a chance. Some readers won’t because I am self published. People have looked down on me and dismissed like I was stupid my whole life. Nobody in the world wakes up and decides to make my dreams come true. I have to do it myself. If there’s something you want to do, then I say do it. Not doing it is the failure.

15. Please share your purchase links with us.

Currently I have 8 fantasy novels published:

Union of Renegades, The Goddess Queen, Judgment Rising, The Borderlands of Power, Rys Rising, Savage Storm, New Religion, and Love Lost.

Please visit my web store Brave Luck Books to download free ebooks or buy ebooks. http://www.falbepublishing.com/braveluck/index.html International readers welcome!

Union of Renegades: The Rys Chronicles Book I is a free ebook here: http://www.falbepublishing.com/braveluck/Union_of_Renegades.html


Also see my author pages at:










A young warrior ruined and near death is saved by Onja a mysterious rys female. Forsaking all that he was, he will take the name Amar and serve his new magical mistress. A lord among outlaws he will become, feared by kings and called the dro-shalum or curse demon by the common folk.

Onja nurtures his growing power among the tribal kingdoms so she can strike against the tabre of Nufal. They are the ancient race of magic users that created the rys with their experimental spells, but they revile their creations. The tabre keep the rys hidden away while they rule over their beautiful realm. The key to Onja’s victory will be if she can win over the rys prodigy Dacian who is loyal to the ruling tabre order. Will he endure more dark abuses for the sake of peace or reach out to Onja and her growing army of allies?

Packed with primitive energy, the intertwining stories of this fantasy world will indulge your cravings for intrigue, bravery, desire, and freedom.

I was born in Michigan in 1972 and grew up in Mount Pleasant. It's called the "Mountain Town" but there is no mountain and it's debatable about whether it's pleasant. They say it's a party town and based on extensive research as a young adult I can concur.

Because I always had the childhood fantasy of running away and joining the circus, I moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1995 and lived there until 1997. Those who only stay a week are wimps, but I will say that it's the second year in Vegas that wears you down. Then I realized the pioneers were trying to get to California, so I moved to Chico, in Northern California and lived there until 2009.

In 2000, I earned a journalism degree from California State University, Chico with the conscious ambition of becoming a fiction writer. With the rapid demise of the newspaper industry and journalism in general, novelist is not such a daft pursuit after all. It's not like I'm actually going to get a job that values my education. Luckily I'm cursed with the impulse to write in a popular yet competitive genre.

My wandering has circled back and I'm currently residing in Battle Creek, Michigan, and for now my existence within the post-apocalyptic Rust Belt is suitably fascinating.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Horror Dad Writes

Today I bring you a guest post from horror writer Alex Laybourne. Enjoy!



Being a writer isn’t easy, holding down a full time job in today’s economy is not easy, and being a parent is certainly not an easy job at times. Doing all three can, at certain moments, be a recipe for madness. Yet all of us in this position push on.

As a result, I have learned to compartmentalize. I divide my time. Everything has its place. I write when I am supposed to write. I work when I need to write, and when my kids are around, we play, sing, dance and have a riot.

Sure, sometimes things overlap, but only because I want them to. Normally I have my structured approach and it works.

Being a parent and a horror writer, I am often faced with difficult questions from my children. Like when they ask me about the monsters. Should I tell them that old lie, that monsters don’t exist? Do I tell them that monsters aren’t real? That would be a lie. The world is filled with monsters. Or do I sit down, tell them about monsters, that the things they think are monsters is really their imagination? That the monsters are real because they exist inside them, and that likewise, they can control them. Turn them into anything.

Maybe it is unconventional, maybe other people reading this will take me for a fool, but I know that when it comes to the monsters under the bed and the things that go bump in the night, my kids will know the truth, and will allow themselves to believe anyway, because they are the writers of their own dreams.

That being said, it has gotten me into trouble on occasion. One such incident came in the swimming pool with my son as he prepared for his weekly lesson.

We walked into the large communal changing room, and the kids were there with the usual plethora of questions. Can I have an ice cream after swimming? Can we eat chips tonight? Can we go to the playground? I want to go home! I don’t like swimming.

In walks my son, who had been a few feet. “So Dad, let me get this right. Vampires drink your blood, zombies eat your brains, and werewolves just kind of eat everything.”

You can imagine the impression that made. Everybody just fell silent in the whole changing room. All eyes were on us. What did I do as a parent? I did what Horror Dad should do. I clapped my boy proudly on the shoulder and said, “Yep, got it in one, now let’s get ready for swimming.”

Oddly enough nobody sat near me that afternoon beside the pool. 

Born and raised in the coastal English town Lowestoft, it should come as no surprise (to those who have the misfortune of knowing this place) that I became a horror writer.

From an early age I was sent to schools which were at least 30 minutes' drive away and so spent most of my free time alone, as the friends I did have lived too far away for me to be able to hang out with them in the weekends or holidays.

I have been a writer as long as I can remember and have always had a vivid imagination. To this very day I find it all too easy to just drift away into my own mind and explore the world I create; where the conditions always seem to be just perfect for the cultivation of ideas, plots, scenes, characters and lines of dialogue.

I am married and have four wonderful children; James, Logan, Ashleigh and Damon. My biggest dream for them is that they grow up, and spend their lives doing what makes them happy, whatever that is.

For people who buy my work, I hope that they enjoy what they read and that I can create something that takes them away from reality for a short time. For me, the greatest compliment I can receive is not based on rankings, but by knowing that people enjoy what I produce, that they buy my work with pleasure and never once feel as though their money would have been better spent elsewhere.

Links:



Amazon:
-                      Trials and Tribulations: http://www.amazon.com/Trials-Tribulations-Highway-Hell-ebook/dp/B00EKJI8TM/ref=pd_sim_kstore_1
-                      Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Alex-Laybourne/e/B00580RB18/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1


Thursday, October 3, 2013

Demon Lord VIII - When Angels Fall


Good news! Demon Lord VIII - When Angels Fall is now finished and will be available for pre-orders at Apple iBookstore very soon, perhaps tomorrow! It should also be available for pre-orders on Barnes & Noble and Kobo by next week. Follow Bane’s continuing trials and tribulations has he fights the darkness in all its forms. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it!

Demon Lord VIII - When Angels Fall

The archangel Majelin has been imprisoned and tortured in the underworld of Sherinias’ domain for five centuries. Eventually, his light will die and he will fall to the darkness. Whispers of a tar’merin travelling with Kayos have reached Airedene, the Sacred City of Angels, giving Sarmalin hope that her husband might be saved, and she goes to plead with the Demon Lord.

The archangel is in a chamber warded against dark gods, however, so Bane must enter it powerless, or Majelin will die. Bane is forced to use the shadows when demon guardians attack, triggering the trap. He follows the archangel into the underworld’s depths to protect him, and they fall into a hidden world inhabited by legendary beings from the Times of Reckoning.

Many of Bane’s powers do not work there, and his attempts to escape fail, but if he does not return to Sherinias’ domain in time, the dark gods he cast down will rise again and enslave the child goddess. He must find a way out, but the further he travels and the more he learns about the hidden realm, the more he fears that he is in a prison created by a Grey God, and there is no way out…