If you love gay romances with shapeshifters and a healthy dose of thriller, you will be sure to enjoy this week’s release by Emily Veinglory. Kerry is a werewolf and Bern is a vampire and the two are on the run, seemingly from everybody. A strange situation for two men employed by the local police agency.
Bern is a quiet sort of man who works as a receptionist at a police station. He is legally registered as a vampire. Not so, Kerry, a born werewolf, who is keeping his paranormal status quiet. But when a murder takes place, Kerry knows that he’ll be suspect number one. The victim was attacked by a wolf.
Prejuidice takes shape in all sorts of forms and this time it is between humans and ‘otherkin’; and between the ‘born’ not ‘made’ groups of paranormals. Kerry and Bern have trouble all around them and it’s going to take a lot for an unasumming vampire to step up and keep Kerry safe.
Visit Aspen Mountain Press today and pick up a copy of Blue Murder.
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At the end of January I attended Digital Book World in New York City. The two day event was interesting. The first day was spent doing a lot of hand-holding for print publishers and talking about price-fixing (I’m pretty sure that is illegal according to anti-trust laws, but my history is rusty) and the Apple iPad. There was even a speech about how publishers could save money on shipping by using another company’s product and procedure…that had absolutley nothing to do with digital books or digital publishing.
The real treat, for me, came on day two. I listened to Raelene Gorlinsky tell the audience how Ellora’s Cave made $5 million dollars selling just eBooks within a few years of their opening (Ellora’s Cave is TEN this year); and that they’ve been around as long as they have been selling eBooks. There was literally a corporate gasp from the tables near where I sat and then a stunned sort of silence.
Publishing has changed. This isn’t new news. In the ancient days, books, the few there were had to be copied by hand. This made them highly valuable to the owner and costly as well. Then along came Guttenberg. Books came down in price. Then came Luther and others like him who had the radical idea that books should be in your home language. The Industrial Revolution automated the publishing material. Costs dropped again. (more…)
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