Winners, Radio Shows and Other Insanity

It’s NEWS time, baby!

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1. Blog Tour Cage Match
Remember the blog tour I took part in?

Well, I didn’t win — that honor went to Ann Charles and her excellent novel Nearly Departed in Deadwood — but I had a blast taking part, and got to meet a bunch of new people, so I feel like a winner anyway.

But some of you don’t need to be content with just feeling like winners. Some of you ARE winners… of my Hungry For You giveaway!

I pulled in all the comments from my sponsor’s websites (infinite amount of thanks to them: Hopeless Bibliophile, Attack of the Book, Black Sun Reviews, The Itzel Library, ParaYourNormal, and The Pen & Muse) and pulled out a trusty random number generator.

Then I realised there were over 60 people entered to win, and felt a little guilty. So I decided to DOUBLE the prizes. (Yep, I’m crazy.)

Without further ado, congratulations to:

  • Ally and Andii, for winning signed paperback copies of Hungry For You, a surprise ebook, and limited edition postcards;
  • Heather Powers, Summer, Lisa, Elena Gray, Alexisread & Eileen for winning a postcard and surprise ebook each!

I’ll be emailing the winners for their details. And thank you all for taking part!

2. Other Insanity
If you didn’t win and are feeling a little sad, never fear!

Over at 1889 Labs (my publisher), we’re running Party Like It’s 1889, a month-long promotion with over a dozen prizes up to grabs and loads of ways to take part. Prizes include a KINDLE, and even VIP tickets which will get you free advance ebook copies of every book we publish this year. #yesreally

My week of promotion on site begins May 16th and I’ve got some fun stuff lined up, but feel free to swing by now and win prizes!

3. Kindle Nation Daily
My big KND day I mentioned in my last post is next Monday (gasp!) and right now I’m sitting at 11 reviews on Amazon.com. If you’re one of four kind-hearted people who want to help bring that number up to 15, please swing by Amazon (it’s got to be the US site) to leave a 2-line review. I’ll love you forever.

4. Radio!
On Sunday at 9:30pm (4:30pm EDT), I’m going to be interviewed on Jake Rakestraw Talks, a weekend online radio show dedicated to interviewing authors about their passions, writing, and publishing. Due to time differences, the show will be pre-recorded, but I’ll make sure to be online while it’s airing. I hope you’ll stop by and listen in!

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So that’s what’s up with me. What’s new with you?

Help Me Conquer the World! (Please?)

“I have a surprise for you!” my publisher said, grinning manically. Well, I assume he was grinning manically; he lives in Canada and the conversation was over Google chat, so I can’t be sure. “May 9 is your day!” he added.

A long pause. My fingers hovered over the keyboard, trying to decide how best to insult him. Instead I settled for: “Okay.”

As expected, my (apparent) lack of enthusiasm prompted him into leaking more details — he’s a little like a child, desperate for a reaction. So I kept playing the hard-to-get game until he revealed all: I was to be featured on Kindle Nation Daily.

For those of you unfamiliar with KND, it’s a great little site with a considerable subscriber base that offers daily emails listing free and bargain books available on the Kindle. Authors and publishers can sponsor the site, and in return get a great deal of exposure for their book, which then hopefully leads to finding a whole new set of readers.

In short: this is a great opportunity to get Hungry For You in front of an entirely new audience. And it’s a solid step in my grand master plan of taking over the world!

But taking over the world is a difficult business, and it’s impossible to do alone. This is where you come in.

Taking Over The World – Part 1

The more reviews a book has on the day of its Kindle Nation Daily spotlight, the better that book tends to do. This is, after all, the age of peer reviews. As a reader, you have never had more power in your hands.

So if you’ve taken the time to read Hungry For You, or even have already written a review on your blog, you would have my undying gratitude if you posted a line or two on amazon.com (it’s got to be the US site).

I would really like to get up to 15 reviews on there by next Monday, May 9th.

It doesn’t have to be anything complicated: even just a sentence or two of how the book made you feel would help.

Hungry For You currently has 8 reviews up, so I only need 7 trusty helpers to take over the world. Up for grabs, as compensation, are high-ranking positions in the new world government I’ll establish. You pick your job title (except Chief Chocolate Taster; I’ve taken that one already).

What are you waiting for? Let’s show Amazon just what us zombie fans are capable of!

SPEECH RECOGNITION

I wake up in a bed I do not recognize. My left temple is throbbing unnaturally and the shining white ceiling only makes it more difficult to see.

I bring the duvet up to my nose, contemplate going back to sleep. But when I close my eyes my head begins spinning wildly, and I have to choke back the nausea.

Awake it is, then. I turn my head to the side. There is another pillow next to mine, the centre still indented from the weight of another’s head.

The memories return: a flash of black hair, green eyes. I’d met him at the bar when I’d gone up to order a round. All of a sudden I can remember kissing him in the streetlight, but for the life of me I cannot remember his name.

I glance under the blankets. Still wearing yesterday’s clothes, although that could mean anything.

So where is he, then? I turn my head to either side, searching for clues. It’s a luxurious room, but impersonal; the duvet I’m clutching is goose down, but the painting above the bed is a mass-produced print. I’m definitely in an upper scale hotel. That’s right, wasn’t he a tourist?

That’s when I spot the small black box installed on the ceiling, and realize just how upper class this hotel is. If I’m not mistake, that box is an AI. This room had its own AI! Despite the clenching of my stomach and the vile taste in my mouth, I cannot contain the sudden surge of excitement. I have a vague recollection of talking to the AI last night; let’s see if I can remember how it works.

“Computer?” I say tentatively.

As soon as I speak, the AI powers out of snooze and comes to full attention, brightening the lamps in the room up to daylight levels.

I cringe, shield my head. “Dim lights!”

When it’s safe to look, I poke my head back out from under the blankets and push myself up to a sitting position, leaning back against the wall to catch my breath. In the corner of the room is a kitchenette, separated from the bedroom by a breakfast bar.

I sit up properly, now, eyeing the distance. It’s about twenty steps: far too far in my condition.

“Computer,” I say smugly, “make tea.”

A smooth, cultured female voice replies, the source of the sound impossible to pinpoint: “What did you say?”

Ah, yes. One has to enunciate things carefully for computers. I clear my throat. “Make. Tea.”

“What did you say?”

“Tea. Make tea. T. E. A.”

“What did you say?”

Okay. I rub my forehead. This requires some lateral thinking. “Boil water,” I then say.

No response.

“Kettle, on!”

“Command not found.”

I scream in frustration and flop back down onto the bed. That black box is laughing at me, I know it. I glare up at the ceiling, crawl over to the foot of the bed to better scowl at it. “What’s a girl got to do to get breakfast around here, huh?”

Finally, the AI seems to pick up on my words. “You would like breakfast, is that right? Just say yes or no.”

“Yes!”

“What did you say?”

“Yesssssssssssssss.” I probably look like a complete idiot, crouched on hands and knees on the bed, hissing at the ceiling. Oh well.

The light in the kitchenette brightens. Success! Something is happening! I wait for the AI magic to begin, ready to be impressed. Everyone talks about these miracles of science, these must-have gadgets that simplify even the hardest of tasks.

“Kitchen is fully stocked,” the AI says. “Please proceed to the kitchen to prepare your breakfast.”

To prepare my—?

“You’ve gotta be kidding me,” I tell the black box, shaking my fist at it. “You can’t even make tea? What’s the use of an AI if it can’t make tea?!”

A door behind me opens. I look over my shoulder, watch my mystery man walk into the room with a towel around his waist, fresh out of the shower.

He takes in the scene: me crouched on the bed, hand in middair, as the AI says for the umpteenth time: “What did you say?”

“Not this again,” he says.

Today’s To Do List

  1. Sleep through the Royal wedding
  2. Eat breakfast
  3. Write a to do list
  4. Tidy bedroom
    1. Write a to do list for bedroom tidying
    2. Actually tidy bedroom
  5. Clean kitchen
  6. Plan for Party Like It’s 1889 blog tour
    1. Panic
    2. Email book bloggers
    3. Schedule posts
  7. Find out whether rabbits can scream
    1. Spend twenty minutes watching rabbit videos on youtube
  8. Eat lunch
  9. Google “funny to do lists”
  10. Sulk about people using “your” when they mean “you’re”
  11. Write a short story for fridayflash
  12. Write a book review
  13. Retake the Jung Typology Test for the fourth time, just to be sure
  14. Browse todolistblog.com
  15. Decide what to have for dinner
  16. Write a chapter
  17. Last round of novel edits
  18. Realise how little has been accomplished today
  19. Write a blog post about to do lists

What a productive day.

All’s Fair in Love and Zombies

Had you told me one year ago that I would become know as ‘the zombie girl’, I would have laughed in your face. Or punched you, depending on hormone levels.

“What?” I hear you cry. “But you’re the freaky zombie love anthology writer everyone is raving about a couple people have vaguely heard about!”

“Errrr,” I respond eloquently. “I suppose I am.”

But see, you know how in school, you didn’t really set out to become known as the girl who could turn grown men into little crying puddles — or the one who could fold her tongue backwards, or do something else noteworthy and unusual — but somehow it happened anyway?

Well, I didn’t really set out to become ‘that zombie girl’.

As a matter of fact, zombies terrify me. Which, of course, begs the question as to why my debut is a collection of zombie stories.

Rather embarrassingly, the main reason is sheer hard-headedness on my part. I’m terrified of zombies, so why not challenge myself to write about them?

That was how Hungry For You started. At least, that was my original reasoning, but as I wrote one story, and then another, and then another, I began to fall under the zombie spell.

For some people, the appeal of these decaying, disgusting, ever-hungry once-humans must be hard to fathom. But I’ve given the matter some thought, and I’ve come to the conclusion that the reason zombies are so fascinating is because they turn our fears into something we can fight.

A zombie represents our elemental fears — fear of the unknown, of death, of sickness, of danger — while also giving us a safe way to tackle those fears. We know how to fight a zombie; it’s a a monster we can understand. Shoot it in the head and move on.

As soon as I realised this, it was no great leap to mix zombies and love together, and from there more and more story ideas kept coming, until I had an anthology in my hands and a newly-minted ‘that zombie girl’ badge. Go figure.

“Zombies and love?” you say. “Still not seeing the connection.”

Put it this way: the zombies in Hungry For You represent our fears about love — fear of loneliness, of heartbreak, of relationships gone sour, of bitterness and betrayal. They turn these fears into something you can manage, something you can fight.

And if a zombie breaks your heart, at least you know how to fight this monster. Shoot him in the head and move on.

After all, all’s fair in love and zombies.