Friday, December 20, 2013

Giveaway: The Rainbow Man by P B Kane (and Midwinter’s Eve Hop)

The Rainbow Man - P.B. Kane

Giveaway for The Rainbow Man by P. B. Kane. It’s international and we have two copies.

It’s a young adult paranormal thriller. Here’s a bit more about The Rainbow Man:

When Daniel Routh, together with friends Jill and Greg, and little brother Mikey, discover a body washed up on the beach after a storm, it’s one of the most exciting things ever to happen on the island of Shorepoint. And, as the man in question slowly recovers, he befriends the inhabitants of this small fishing community one by one. Only Daniel suspects something might be wrong with the newcomer, who cannot remember who he is, nor how he came to be there. To start with, this John Dee (as they label him, short for Doe) brings prosperity and happiness with him, but it isn’t long before the tide begins to turn. Then John begins to worm his way into Daniel’s own family, trying to take the place of his late father, and the teenager knows something must be done. Little does Daniel realise that he’s now involved in one of the most ancient conflicts of all time; one that might decide the fate not only of Shorepoint, but of the entire world.

This very special short novel from the imagination of award-winning and bestselling author P.B. Kane (the Arrowhead Trilogy, Lunar, The Butterfly Man), marks his first foray into the realms of YA fiction. With great characterization, emotional impact, action and shock twists, this is a genre release that’s sure to become an instant classic.

Page count: 162 | Genre: YA/Dark Fantasy/Paranormal Thriller/Supernatural/Adventure | Rocket Ride Books | November 15, 2013

For further information we have an informative interview with author P. B. Kane that you can visit by clicking on this text.


2013-Midwinters-Eve-Hop

This giveaway is part of the Midwinter’s Eve Giveaway Hop from December 21 to 31. To visit our host’s site please click on the picture for this hop.

  • Please be a reader/follower to enter this contest.
  • You can choose one way to qualify from the list below.

Ways to “follow”:

  1. Facebook: for updates in your feed -add me as a friend.
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And please fill out the Google form and note which format you would like the book in, should you win.

  • US: print, audio(mp3 download) or eBook (mobi or ePub)
  • Non-US: audio(mp3 download) or eBook (mobi or ePub)

These are the other blogs that are part of the hop. Click on them to visit their blogs and enter other bookish giveaways. Good luck and happy holiday hopping!

Interview: P B Kane author of The Rainbow Man

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We have a few questions asked of P. B. Kane around his lasted novel – The Rainbow Man.

It’s a paranormal thriller and his first foray into writing for a young adult audience (although it will appeal to adults too – since I’ve read and loved it.) 

Let’s welcome Paul!


The Rainbow Man is a dark fantasy/paranormal thriller and it’s your first young adult novel. Tell us about your process and/or reasoning for creating a dark book for teens; and what are the differences between writing for a younger audience compared to writing for adults.

It stems back to reading that kind of material when I was younger, in particular a book called Brother in the Land by Robert Swindells which we read as part of our English classes. This was before the term YA even came into effect as a marketing category and genre in its own right. That was a post-apocalyptic tale set in the kind of community I knew well, and was more than a little responsible for inspiring the Arrowhead/Hooded Man novels under my other name ‘Paul Kane’. My daughter Jen was around 13 or 14 when she started reading and enjoying those, so I began thinking about writing something that was aimed specifically at teens, but could also be enjoyed by any age group – like all good YA fiction. I think the main difference between writing for a younger audience, as opposed to an older one, is that your main characters are a bit younger and the focus should – necessarily – be on them and their lives or their adventure. Because of the kind of story The Rainbow Man is, I didn’t go too far in terms of subject matter – for example this book isn’t anywhere near as violent or adult in tone as some of my other books; Arrowhead begins with a torture scene for example – but hopefully delivered some more subtle chills this time.

The Rainbow Man - P.B. Kane

To entice us, tell us about the fantastical/paranormal themes for your story.

I’ve drawn once again on mythology here, like I’ve done for a lot of my stories. For Lunar, I was influenced by mythology about the Moon, for the Arrowhead books it was the mythology of Sherwood Forest because we were dealing with a futuristic version of Robin Hood. And I’ve always been a fan of stories where a mysterious stranger turns up to cause trouble, like The Witches of Eastwick or Stephen King’s Storm of the Century, or even his Needful Things. If that stranger has supernatural powers, then so much the better. So that was something I wanted to bring into play with my villain John Dee (‘short’ for Doe), who our main protagonist – 15 year-old Daniel – suspects might not be the nice guy he appears to be.

There are a lot of adults reading books for young adults. Why would The Rainbow Man appeal to an adult audience? And/or why should a young adult read your book?

The answer to both is probably the same, because hopefully it’s a good story with well-rounded characters that will appeal to all ages. It was one of those books which seemed to just flow, which is usually a good sign. But I’ll let some of the comments about it so far speak for me. Rachel Caine – of the bestselling Morganville Vampire series – said in the wonderful introduction, ‘I loved this tale, pure and simple.’ The YA, Yeah Yeah site said the book, ‘Drips with menace.’ And Starburst magazine called it, ‘Emotionally charged. A gripping novel not easily put down!’ Needless to say, I’m extremely delighted with all this.

As a prolific artist in many types of mediums, a writer of screenplays, horror, fantasy, an editor, painter, and photographer – which is your favorite hat to wear when you’re creating and why?

That’s a really difficult question to answer, because they’re all tied in for me. All parts of the creative process. One of my literary heroes, Clive Barker – who I’m very lucky to now call a friend – said when I asked him which he preferred doing, writing or painting and he said: ‘When I’m painting, it’s writing. When I’m writing… well, you can guess the rest.’ And that pretty much sums it up. Whatever I’m doing, I’ll be thinking about other projects in other areas, because that’s just the way I work. Makes it hard to separate them out, though. At the moment I’m writing my second feature script, after adapting Lunar, and I’m really enjoying that.

Why write horror and why are you attracted to darkness?

It’s not so much being attracted to the darkness as writing about what scares you personally so that seems a little less frightening. I’ve always found it to be so at any rate. The world can be a scary place, but when you write about those kinds of things at least you have a degree of control over what happens in them. Or at least that’s what you tell yourself, as very often stories take on a life of their own – as it should be. Horror’s also a great way to comment about life, death, society, whatever you want to talk about indirectly. For example, in The Rainbow Man, I explore the issues surrounding friendship – and especially when you’re young – family, community… all kinds of things. When people are threatened it’s usually when you see their real natures come to the surface, all of which is very interesting to me as a writer. And hopefully that all makes it interesting for the reader as well. That’s the intention anyway.


Author Bio:    Paul Kane is an award-winning writer and editor based in Derbyshire, UK. His short story collections are Alone (In the Dark), Touching the Flame, FunnyBones, Peripheral Visions, Shadow Writer, and The Adventures of Dalton Quayle, and his latest The Butterfly Man and Other Stories. His novellas include Signs of Life, The Lazarus Condition, RED, and Pain Cages. He is author of the novels Of Darkness and Light, The Gemini Factor and the bestselling Arrowhead Trilogy, a post-apocalyptic reworking of the Robin Hood mythology.

His novel, Lunar, is set to be turned into a feature film. He has also written for comics, most notably for the Dead Roots zombie anthology. He is co-editor of the anthology Hellbound Hearts – stories based around the Clive Barker mythology that spawned HellraiserThe Mammoth Book of Body Horror, A Carnivàle of Horror, and the forthcoming Beyond Rue Morgue from Titan.

His non-fiction books are the BFS Award-nominated and critically acclaimed The Hellraiser Films and Their Legacy and Voices in the Dark, and his genre journalism has appeared in the likes of SFX, Rue Morgue, Fangoria, Dreamwatch and DeathRay. He has been a guest at events such as Alt.Fiction, SFX Weekender, comic convention Thought Bubble, the Derbyshire Literary Festival, Edge-Lit and Off the Shelf, as well as being a panelist at FantasyCon and the World Fantasy Convention.

His work has been optioned for film and television, and his zombie story ‘Dead Time’ was turned into an episode of the Lionsgate/NBC TV series Fear Itself. He also scripted The Opportunity, Wind Chimes and The Weeping Woman.

You can find out more at his website www.shadow-writer.co.uk and his twitter account at  https://twitter.com/PaulKaneShadow.


About The Rainbow Man:   When Daniel Routh, together with friends Jill and Greg, and little brother Mikey, discover a body washed up on the beach after a storm, it’s one of the most exciting things ever to happen on the island of Shorepoint. And, as the man in question slowly recovers, he befriends the inhabitants of this small fishing community one by one. Only Daniel suspects something might be wrong with the newcomer, who cannot remember who he is, nor how he came to be there. To start with, this John Dee (as they label him, short for Doe) brings prosperity and happiness with him, but it isn’t long before the tide begins to turn. Then John begins to worm his way into Daniel’s own family, trying to take the place of his late father, and the teenager knows something must be done. Little does Daniel realise that he’s now involved in one of the most ancient conflicts of all time; one that might decide the fate not only of Shorepoint, but of the entire world.

This very special short novel from the imagination of award-winning and bestselling author P.B. Kane (the Arrowhead Trilogy, Lunar, The Butterfly Man – as Paul Kane), marks his first foray into the realms of YA fiction. With great characterization, emotional impact, action and shock twists, this is a genre release that’s sure to become an instant classic.

Page count: 162 | Genre: YA/Dark Fantasy/Paranormal Thriller/Supernatural/Adventure | Rocket Ride Books | November 15, 2013

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Review: The Water Thief by Nicholas Lamar Soutter

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Review by John for The Water Thief by Nicholas Lamar Soutter

John’s quick take:   A dystopian tale about what happens when corporations and capitalism replace government and democracy.

John’s description:   Charles Thatcher belongs to Ackerman Brothers Securities Corporation, one of the biggest corporations in a near-future world where all governments have disappeared, to be replaced by businesses whose only concerns are making money and beating the competition. Generosity and free access to anything are believed to breed weakness and lead to laziness, so everything is for sale. Even air and rainwater have to be paid for. Image is also everything so perception is deemed to be far more important than the truth.

Charles is a Delta – not the lowest of the low but a mid-grade class. Along with many others he works in perception management, tasked with finding any information or news that might harm his employer, and spinning stories and messages that help to put his company, Ackerman Brothers in the best possible light. He is constantly striving to be promoted to executive, something which very few achieve.

Then he stumbles across some information about a woman charged with stealing rainwater and decides to embellish the story - accusing the thief of being a seditionist and revolutionary who believes in government. What he doesn’t realize is that his story might be close to the truth. Disgruntled by his life, his investigation leads him to become enamored by the woman’s cause and the possibility of life beyond the corporations. But such beliefs are deadly and dangerous as the corporations will stop at nothing to squash revolutionary thoughts and to keep the masses in line.

John’s thoughts:   This is an interesting theme for a book. Already we live in a world where corporations hold far too much political power and influence, and Soutter extrapolates this into a dystopian future where corporations have become all powerful. What might a world look like where governments no longer exist? He paints a grim picture.

Everything has a price tag and there is no such thing as social rights. Individuals are only worth what they can contribute to company profits, and if they cannot contribute anything then they are worthless –  considered a drag on efficiency and company morale. It is wrong to save money as it is only through spending that people contribute to the economy. Indeed, people are encouraged to trade their own “futures”, thereby maximizing their spending (and forever indebting themselves to the corporation which already owns them).

The problem for me was that the picture was too extreme. It’s a bit like when you read a politically oriented article or news story that has been written by someone with hardline extreme views – personally I tend to go glassy eyed rather quickly due to a lack of balance and reasonableness. For a futuristic novel to achieve maximum impact it has to be believable, even if it stretches credulity a bit; and to my mind this novel goes a little too far.

Still, it was an interesting and thought-provoking read. The story is well written and it built nicely to the climax. I have to say that the ending, though perfectly in line with the theme and the story, did leave me a bit dissatisfied. Overall I’d rate this three stars and recommend it to anyone who is a fan of futuristic, dystopian novels.


Paperback | 248 pages | CreateSpace | April 23, 2012

For more information on The Water Thief check our our Incoming Books post for October 12, 2013.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Win a Nook from ChiZine!

nookimage2 (1)

You could win a Nook from ChiZine! (Click on the picture to find out more information at the publisher’s site.)

Purchase a trade paperback copy of either Steve Rasnic Tem's Celestial Inventories or Christopher Golden's Tell My Sorrows to the Stones at Barnes & Noble or barnesandnoble.com and email your proof of purchase to felicia@chizinepub.com. (In-store receipts can be scanned or sent as a photo.)

Two lucky winners will be randomly picked from the draw and will each receive a Nook! And we're also throwing in the entire 2013 ChiZine ebook catalogue!

Enter by midnight PST on December 31st. Draw will be held on January 1st, 2014.


About Celestial Inventories: Celestial Inventories features twenty- two stories collected from rare chapbooks, anthologies, and obscure magazines, along with a new story written specifically for this volume. All represent the slipstream segment of Steve Rasnic Tem’s large body of tales: imaginative, difficult-to-pigeonhole works of the fantastic crossing conventional boundaries between science fiction, fantasy, horror, literary fiction, bizarro, magic realism, and the new weird. Several of these stories have previously appeared in Best of the Year compilations and have been the recipients of major F & SF nominations and awards.

About Tell My Sorrows to the Stones:  A circus clown willing to give anything to be funny. A spectral gunslinger who must teach a young boy to defend the ones he loves. A lonely widower making a farewell tour of the places that meant the world to his late wife. A faded Hollywood actress out to deprive her ex-husband of his prize possession. A grieving mother who will wait by the railroad tracks for a ghostly train that always has room for one more. A young West Virginia miner whose only hope of survival is a bedtime story. These are just some of the characters to be found in Tell My Sorrows to the Stones.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Review: Bellman and Black by Diane Setterfield

Bellman & Black

Review by Shellie for Bellman & Black by Diane Setterfield

Shellie’s quick take:  Set in England in the 1800’s, in a Yorkshire mill town and on the outskirts of London, this literary thriller has a dark, otherworldly, and mysterious thread with a hidden moral. It also includes facts and mythology about the Rook woven through its story-line.

Shellie’s description:  Bellman & Black is primarily about the life of the main character, William Bellman. It begins on a fateful day when the youthful William kills a Rook (a crow of sorts found mostly in Europe) during a moment of bravado in front of a group of his amazed friends - via a lucky catapult from his slingshot. This unlikely once-in-a-lifetime strike turns out to be an example of the luck and success of William’s life. In addition to being lucky, he is handsome and driven, and the world appears to open its arms for the young man.

But like every human, life delivers William Bellman the hard knocks that are unavoidable. It is during one of these periods that he encounters Mr. Black - a man who is to become for William the metaphor for the one thing that he cannot escape.

Shellie’s thoughts:  This is a gothic-like literary thriller. Although technically not a gothic novel, it has some aspects that make it feel like it is - for example there is that dark, moody feel to the tone of of the story. And because it is a literary novel from an established author, there is definitely strong character development. I found myself knowing and understanding the main character quite well. There is also a great plot with interesting ups and down throughout, including a light paranormal thread. Happily I found myself wondering what was going to happen next, including some nice chills every so often, that will appeal to horror fans.

I liked that the author uses lovely period-styled prose, though paradoxically she kept it modern-ish, giving the book an authentic feel without the difficulty of having to decipher the old-fashioned writing style often found in Victorian literature. I definitely liked this particular aspect of the novel, which is perfect for anyone who enjoys historical fiction.

Recommended for anyone interested in literary thrillers and horror, those who enjoy a gothic feel to their reads, readers interested in a light paranormal element, and anyone who is interested in historical England. I would also recommend it to readers interested in birds. A terrific and well-written book, the author has apparently taken years to complete it and it shows. It’s highly recommended at 4 stars.


Atria/Emily Bestler Books |  336 pages |  November 2013

For more information about Bellman & Black you can take a look at our Incoming Books post for November 8, 2013 including it.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Giveaway: To Dance with the Devil by Cat Adams (US/CAN–3 copies)

To Dance with the Devil

We have 3 copies of To Dance with the Devil (The Blood Singer Novels – Volume 6 of 9) by Cat Adams for US or Canadian addresses.

In To Dance with the Devil, the latest entry in Cat Adams's Blood Singer series, Celia Graves’s newest client is one of the last surviving members of a magical family that is trapped in a generations-old feud with other magic-workers. She’s supposed to die at the next full moon unless Celia can broker peace between the clans or break the curse before it can take effect.

For the first time in a long while, Celia’s personal life is looking up. Her vampire abilities seem to be under control, her Siren abilities have gotten more reliable, and even though her office was blown up, her services are more in demand than ever now that she's fought off terrorists and been part of the royal wedding of the year. Her friends all seem to be finding love and her grandmother has—finally—agreed to go to family therapy.

The only trouble spot is Celia’s love life. Not long ago, she had two boyfriends. Now she barely has one and she isn’t sure she wants him. But Bruno DeLuca is a powerful mage and Celia needs his help…especially after she's attacked and her client is kidnapped.

Tor Books | 11/5/2013 | Trade Paperback |352 pages

About the Author  -  CAT ADAMS is the author of the much-lauded Blood Singer series, Blood Song, Siren Song, Demon Song, The Isis Collar, and The Eldritch Conspiracy. Adams is the joint pen name of C. T. Adams and Cathy Clamp, who live deep in the heart of Texas. They are USA Today bestselling authors with their Sazi and Thrall series.


Please fill out the Google form to enter this contest:

Good luck!

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Incoming Books: December 5, 2013

Apparition - Trish J. MacGregor

It’s our Incoming Books post for December 5, 2013.

MacMillan/Tor

Apparition (The Hungry Ghosts – Volume 3) by Trish J. MacGregor

Trish J. MacGregor returns to a mythic city high in the Ecuadorian Andes in Apparition.

Tess and Ian have been living in the high city of Esperanza for years, along with Tess’s niece, Maddie, and her partner, Nick Sanchez. They thought they could rest, that they had defeated the brujo threat to our plane of existence. But they were wrong.

A new and greater threat has formed, a new tribe of the hungry dead, seeking to possess the bodies of the living in order to experience the passions of physical life. This new tribe has found the door to the physical plane that is Esperanza, and they threaten all human life. Only the outnumbered Light Chasers and their human allies can stand against the evil brujos.

Tor Books | November 2013 | Hardcover | 336 pages

Renegade - J. A. Souders

Renegade (The Elysium Chronicles – Volume 1 of 3) by J. A. Souders

J.A. Souders's haunting debut—Renegade

Since the age of three, sixteen-year-old Evelyn Winters has trained to be Daughter of the People in the underwater utopia known as Elysium. Selected from hundreds of children for her ideal genes, all her life she’s believed that everything is perfect. Her world. Her people. The Law.

But when Gavin Hunter, a Surface Dweller, accidentally stumbles into Elysium’s secluded little world, Evelyn comes to a startling realization: Everything she knows is a lie.

Her memories have been altered.

Her mind and body aren’t under her own control.

And the person she knows as Mother is a monster.

Together with Gavin she plans her escape, only to learn that her own mind is a ticking time bomb...and Mother has one last secret that will destroy them all.

Tor Teen | October 2013 | Trade Paperback | Young Adult Fiction |  368 pages | Age: 13 to 18 | Grade Range: 8 to 13

Revelations - J.A. Souders

Revelations (The Elysium Chronicles – Volume 2 of 3) by J. A. Souders

The Elysium Chronicles, J.A. Souders’ riveting SF series for teens which began with the psychological thriller Renegade, continues in Revelations.

Six weeks after her arrival on the Surface, Evelyn Winters is no closer to unlocking the memories lost in her subconscious than she was when she first came. Isolated in a strange new society, Evie has only Gavin Hunter to remind her of who she once was.

But even with a clean slate, it’s easy to see that Evie doesn’t fit in on the Surface. And as her differences make her feel more and more alone, she can’t help but yearn for that place she doesn’t remember: the isolated city hidden in the depths of the ocean. Elysium. Home.

But she can’t exactly tell Gavin what she’s feeling. Not when he’s the one who helped her escape Elysium in the first place, and has the scars to prove it. Though the doctors say otherwise, Gavin believes that Evie just needs time. And if her memories don’t come back, well, maybe she’s better off not remembering her past.

But the decision may be out of their hands when Evie’s ever-elusive memories begin to collide with reality. People and images from her past appear in the most unlikely places, haunting her, provoking her…and making her seem not only strange but dangerous.

Evie and Gavin can’t wait around for her memories to return. They’ll have to journey across the Outlands of the Surface to find help, and in the end, their search may just lead them back to the place it all started…

Tor Teen | November 2013 | Hardcover | Young Adult Fiction | 352 pages | Age Range: 13 to 17 | Grade Range: 8 to 12

Bloodstone - Gillian Philip

Bloodstone (#2 of the Rebel Angel Series) by Gillian Philip

Bloodstone is the second novel in Gillian Philip’s critically acclaimed Rebel Angels series, debuting in the United States for the first time.

For centuries, Sithe warriors Seth and Conal MacGregor have hunted for the Bloodstone demanded by their Queen. Homesick, and determined to protect their clan, they have also made secret forays across the Veil. One of these illicit crossings has violent consequences that will devastate both their close family, and their entire clan.

In the Otherworld, Jed Cameron, a feral, full-mortal young thief, becomes entangled with the strange and dangerous Finn MacAngus and her shadowy uncles. When he is dragged into the world of the Sithe, it’s nothing he can’t handle until time warps around him, and menacing forces reach out to threaten his infant brother. In the collision of two worlds, war and tragedy are inevitable, especially when treachery comes from the most shocking of quarters….

Tor Books | 11/19/2013 | Hardcover | 400 pages

Penguin/Random House

Work Done for Hire - Joe Halderman

Work Done for Hire by Joe Halderman

Joe Haldeman’s “adept plotting, strong pacing, and sense of grim stoicism have won him wide acclaim” (The Washington Post) and numerous honors for such works as The Forever War, The Accidental Time Machine, and the Marsbound trilogy. Now, the multiple Hugo and Nebula award–winning author pits a lone war veteran against a mysterious enemy who is watching his every move—and threatens him with more than death unless he kills for them.

Wounded in combat and honorably discharged nine years ago, Jack Daley still suffers nightmares from when he served his country as a sniper, racking up sixteen confirmed kills. Now a struggling author, Jack accepts an offer to write a near-future novel about a serial killer, based on a Hollywood script outline. It’s an opportunity to build his writing career, and a future with his girlfriend, Kit Majors.

But Jack’s other talent is also in demand. A package arrives on his doorstep containing a sniper rifle, complete with silencer and ammunition—and the first installment of a $100,000 payment to kill a “bad man.” The twisted offer is genuine. The people behind it are dangerous. They prove that they have Jack under surveillance. He can’t run. He can’t hide. And if he doesn’t take the job, Kit will be in the crosshairs instead.

288 pages | 07 Jan 2014 | Ace | 18 - AND UP

Elementary - Mercedes Lackey

Elementary (All-New Tales of the Elemental Masters) edited by Mercedes Lackey

In March 1987, Mercedes Lackey, a young author from Oklahoma, published her first novel, Arrows of the Queen. No one could have envisioned that this modest book would be the beginning of a fantasy career that would span decades and more than a hundred novels, with no signs of slowing yet.

And among Ms. Lackey's many novels, few are as critically-acclaimed and beloved as those of the Elemental Masters. The novels in this series are loosely based on classic fairy tales, and take place in a fantasy version of turn-of-the-century London, where magic is real and Elemental Masters control the powers of Fire, Water, Air and Earth.

Now the voices of other authors join Mercedes Lackey to add their own special touches to this delightful alternate history, in a world where magic is always just around the corner...

DAW | 320 pages | 03 Dec 2013 | DAW | 18 - AND UP

Darkwalker - E.L. Tettensor

Darkwalker (A Nicolas Lenoir Novel) by E. L. Tettensor

He used to be the best detective on the job. Until he became the hunted...

Once a legendary police inspector, Nicolas Lenoir is now a disillusioned and broken man who spends his days going through the motions and his evenings drinking away the nightmares of his past. Ten years ago, Lenoir barely escaped the grasp of the Darkwalker, a vengeful spirit who demands a terrible toll on those who have offended the dead. But the Darkwalker does not give up on his prey so easily, and Lenoir has always known his debt would come due one day.

When Lenoir is assigned to a disturbing new case, he treats the job with his usual apathy—until his best informant, a street savvy orphan, is kidnapped. Desperate to find his young friend before the worst befalls him, Lenoir will do anything catch the monster responsible for the crimes, even if it means walking willingly into the arms of his own doom…

368 pages | 03 Dec 2013 | Roc | 18 - AND UP

Kensington Publishing

The Seventh Victim - Mary Burton

The Seventh Victim (Texas Rangers #1) by Mary Burton

If At First You Don’t Succeed

It’s been seven years since the Seattle Strangler terrorized the city. His victims were all young, pretty, their lifeless bodies found wrapped in a home-sewn white dress. But there was one who miraculously escaped death, just before the Strangler disappeared…

Kill

Lara Church has only hazy memories of her long-ago attack. What she does have is a home in Austin, a job, and a chance at a normal life at last. Then Texas Ranger James Beck arrives on her doorstep with shattering news: The Strangler is back. And this time, he’s in Austin…

And Kill Again…

He’s always craved her, even as he killed the others. For so long he’s been waiting to unleash the beast within. And this time, he’ll prove he holds her life in his hands—right before he ends it forever…

Mass Market Paperback | 416 pages |  Zebra | January 29, 2013

No Escape - Mary Burton

No Escape (Texas Rangers #2) by Mary Burton

He Was Taught How To Kill

Even behind bars, serial killer Harvey Lee Smith exudes menace. Psychologist Jolene Granger has agreed to hear his dying confession, vowing not to let the monster inside her head. And Harvey has secrets to share—about bodies that were never found, and about the apprentice who is continuing his grisly work…

And Now He’ll Teach Them

He buries his victims alive the way his mentor Harvey did, relishing their final screams as the earth rains down. And as one last gift to the only father he knew, he’ll make the most perfect kill of all.

How To Die

Everything about this investigation is unnerving Jo, from Harvey’s fascination with her to the fact that she’s working alongside Texas Ranger Brody Winchester, her ex-husband. Harvey’s protégé is growing bolder and more vicious every day. And soon the trail of shallow graves will lead them to the last place Jo expected, and to the most terrifying truth of all…

Mass Market Paperback |  384 pages | Zebra Books  | Mass Market | October 29, 2013

Simon and Schuster

1001 Ideas That Changed the Way We Think

1001 Ideas That Changed the Way We Think edited by Robert Arp

1001 Ideas That Changed the Way We Think is a comprehensive guide to the most interesting and imaginative thoughts from the finest minds in history. Ranging from the ancient wisdom of Confucius and Plato to today’s cutting-edge thinkers, it offers a wealth of stimulation and amusement for everyone with a curious mind.

Within the pages of this book you will find a wide variety of answers to the great, eternal questions: How was the universe created and what is the place of humans within it? How should a person live? And how can we build a just society? 1001 Ideas That Changed the Way We Think also includes a host of hypotheses that are remarkable for their sheer weirdness—from the concept of the transmigration of souls to parallel universes and the theoretical paradoxes of time travel (what happens if you travel back in time and kill your own grandfather?).

Discover how the Greek philosopher Zeno “proved” a flying arrow never moves; how modern science has shown that a butterfly’s wing can stir up an Atlantic storm; and the mathematical proof of the existence of life in other galaxies. The inspirational ideas explored here range from Gandhi’s theory of civil disobedience to Henry David Thoreau’s praise of the simple life and Mary Wollstonecraft’s groundbreaking advocacy of women’s rights. The book also covers a wide variety of lifestyle concepts, such as “rational dress” and naturism, and cultural movements including Neoclassicism, Surrealism, and Postmodernism.

Supported by a wealth of striking illustrations and illuminating quotations, 1001 Ideas That Changed the Way We Think is both an in-depth history of ideas and a delightfully browsable source of entertainment.

Atria Books |  960 pages | October 2013

Wicked as they Come - Delilah S. Dawson

Wicked as they Come by Delilah S. Dawson

First in a steampunk-tinged paranormal romance series in which a woman is transported to a world filled with vampires and magic.

When nurse Tish Everett forced open the pesky but lovely locket she found at an estate sale, she had no idea she was answering the call of Criminy Stain, from the far off land of Sang. He’d cast a spell for her, but when she’s transported right to him, she’s not so sure she’s ready to be under the spell of another man. (It didn’t go so well last time with controlling, abusive, domineering Jeff.) If only Criminy wasn’t so deliciously rakish….

Half the inhabitants of Sang are Pinkies—human—and the other half are Bludmen, who in Tish’s world would be called vampires. But they don’t mess with any of the bat/coffin/no sunlight nonsense. They’re rather like you and me, just more fabulous, long living, and mostly indestructible. (They're also very good kissers.) But when the evil Mayor of Manchester (formerly Bludchester) redoubles his efforts to rid Sang of the Bludmen once and for all, stealing Tish’s locket in hopes of traveling back to her world himself for reinforcements, Criminy and Tish must battle ghosts, sea monsters, wayward submarines, a secret cabal, and thundering Bludmares to get the locket back and allow Tish to return home…but has she found love with Criminy? Could she stay in Sang forever?

Pocket Books |  416 pages |  March 2012

ChiZine

Things Withered - Susie Maloney

Things Withered by Susie Moloney

HERE ARE THE LOST WOMEN OF SUBURBIA, EVIL IN A T-SHIRT AND A PONYTAIL, WASHING BLOOD OFF THE WALLS AND MAKING SURE THE CHILDREN DON’T TELL. . . .

For the first time in one collection, award-winning author Susie Moloney unveils thirteen of her most dark and disturbing short stories.

A middle-aged realtor makes a deal that could last forever. A cheating woman finds herself swimming in dangerous waters. A wife with a dark past can’t bear the fear of being exposed. The bad acts of a little old lady come home to roost. A young man with no direction finds power behind the wheel of a haunted truck.

From behind the pretty drapes of the average suburban home, madness peers out.

Paperback | 280 pages  | ChiZine Publications | December 31, 2013

The Hexslinger Omnibus - Gemma Files

The Hexslinger Omnibus by Gemma Files

It’s 1867, and the Civil War is over. But the blood has just begun to flow.

For asher Rook, Chess Pargeter, and Ed Morrow, the war has left its mark in tangled lines of association and cataclysmic love, woken hexslinger magic, and the terrible attentions of a dead god. “Reverend” asher Rook is the unwilling gateway for the Mayan goddess Ixchel to birth her pantheon back into the world of the living, and to do it she’ll force Rook to sacrifice his lover and fellow outlaw Chess Pargeter. But being dead won’t bar Chess from taking vengeance, and Pargeter will claw his way back out of Hell, teaming with undercover-Pinkerton- agent-turned-outlaw Ed Morrow to wreak it. What comes back into the world in the form of Chess Pargeter is a walking wound, Chess’s very presence tearing a crack in the world and reshaping everything around him while Ixchel establishes Hex City, a city state defying the very laws of nature—an act that will draw battle lines between a passel of dead gods and monsters, hexes galore, spiritualists, practitioners of black science, a coalition set against Ixchel led by allan Pinkerton himself, and everyone unfortunate enough to be caught between the colliding forces.

With the barriers between worlds crumbling, a new war being waged across the american West, and Ixchel preparing to kick off an apocalypse fed by shed human blood while Rook plots one, final, redemptive treachery of his own, everything will come down to Chess Pargeter, once again trapped in a nightmarish underworld. But Chess has fought his way out of hell before . . .

It contains all 3 titles of the Hexslinger series plus bonus material.

Ebook | 900 pages  | ChiZine  | December 17, 2013

Misc. Publishers

Erasmus and the Golden Arrow - Andrew Fish

Erasmus Hobart and the Golden Arrow by Andrew Fish

Robin Hood was a crook! But was his "rob the rich and give to the poor" legend anything more than good PR? Schoolteacher Erasmus Hobart isn't a man content to speculate. Instead, with his home-made time-travelling privy, he journeys back to mediaeval Nottingham on a quest for knowledge. But with homicidal knights, amorous female outlaws and mischievous squirrels all providing obstacles to his progress can he really find the truth and still get back in time to mark 4A's history homework?

In this time-travelling romp, Andrew Fish brings a new slant to the classic legend. Erasmus Hobart is the perfect new adventurer for fans of Douglas Adams and Terry Pratchett.

208 pages | Authonomy (an imprint of Harper Collins) | December 6, 2012

The Rainbow Man - P.B. Kane

The Rainbow Man by P. B. Kane

When Daniel Routh, together with friends Jill and Greg, and little brother Mikey, discover a body washed up on the beach after a storm, it’s one of the most exciting things ever to happen on the island of Shorepoint. And, as the man in question slowly recovers, he befriends the inhabitants of this small fishing community one by one. Only Daniel suspects something might be wrong with the newcomer, who cannot remember who he is, nor how he came to be there. To start with, this John Dee (as they label him, short for Doe) brings prosperity and happiness with him, but it isn’t long before the tide begins to turn. Then John begins to worm his way into Daniel’s own family, trying to take the place of his late father, and the teenager knows something must be done. Little does Daniel realise that he’s now involved in one of the most ancient conflicts of all time; one that might decide the fate not only of Shorepoint, but of the entire world.

This very special short novel from the imagination of award-winning and bestselling author P.B. Kane (the Arrowhead Trilogy, Lunar, The Butterfly Man – as Paul Kane), marks his first foray into the realms of YA fiction. With great characterization, emotional impact, action and shock twists, this is a genre release that’s sure to become an instant classic.

Paperback | 162 pages | November 15th 2013 | Rocket Ride Books

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Rustication by Charles Palliser

Charles Palliser’s work has been hailed as “so compulsively absorbing that reality disappears” (New York Times). Since his extraordinary debut, The Quincunx, his works have sold over one million copies worldwide. With his new novel, Rustication, he returns to the town of Thurchester, which he evoked so hauntingly in The Unburied.

It is winter 1863, and Richard Shenstone, aged seventeen, has been sent down—“rusticated”—from Cambridge under a cloud of suspicion. Addicted to opium and tormented by sexual desire, he finds temporary refuge in a dilapidated old mansion on the southern English coast inhabited by his newly impoverished mother and his sister, Effie. Soon, graphic and threatening letters begin to circulate among his neighbors, and Richard finds himself the leading suspect in a series of crimes and misdemeanors ranging from vivisection to murder.

Hardcover | November 2013  | 336 pages | W. W. Norton

The Lost Girls of Rome - Donato Carrisi

The Lost Girls of Rome by Donato Carrisi

A grieving young widow, seeking answers to her husband’s death, becomes entangled in an investigation steeped in the darkest mysteries of Rome.

Sandra Vega, a forensic analyst with the Roman police department, mourns deeply for a marriage that ended too soon. A few months ago, in the dead of night, her husband, an up-and-coming journalist, plunged to his death at the top of a high-rise construction site. The police ruled it an accident. Sanda is convinced it was anything but.

Launching her own inquiries, Sanda finds herself on a dangerous trail, working the same case that she is convinced led to her husband’s murder. An investigation which is deeply entwined with a series of disappearances that has swept the city, and brings Sandra ever closer to a centuries-old secret society that will do anything to stay in the shadows.

432 pages  | Mulholland Books  | November 19, 2013

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