Showing posts with label Amber Quill Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amber Quill Press. Show all posts

Truth or Dare, by Brenda Williamson

Truth Or Dare

by Brenda Williamson

Available from: Amber Quill Press / Amber Heat
ISBN: 978-1-61124-222-5

Caught up in a game of Truth or Dare, Laura finds herself in a nightclub, dressed in next to nothing, and nervously awaiting her turn to perform in a pole dancing contest. To make matters worse, her old boyfriend, handsome Mark Cantrell, appears at the club with his new bride. Upset by long-buried emotions, Laura wants to run for home, yet jealously roots her in place.

When a twist is thrown into the competition and Laura has to have a man perform with her, Mark actually volunteers to be her partner. From that point, Laura struggles with the right and wrong of seducing a married man, especially when Mark abandons his wife into his brother’s care and offers to drive her home.

Desperate to feel loved once more, will Laura lose the battle with her conscience?

EXCERPT:

...I slapped my hand down on the wood surface as if I were blind to seeing a sheet of paper. “Where is it?” I cried weakly, looking up and down the bar, spotting nothing except beer bottles and drinking glasses on small white napkins.

“What are you looking for?” Bev asked.

“That entry sheet. I’ve change my mind.”

“You can’t change your mind. They’ve already taken that paper away and given it to Paul to make the announcements.”

A round of loud hooting and hollering forced me to glance at the stage. Meg’s beaming smile showed how well she felt she had performed. In my mind, she was already a winner.

“Here, drink this.” Bev shoved a small glass into my hand.

I gulped down the whiskey shot while looking at Mark. He had that “aw shucks, anyone could have done it” expression he always had after an amazing catch during a high school football game.

Then his gaze landed on me. His expression changed.

Turn away. Turn away. Turn away. I couldn’t.

Trapped by the happy twinkle in his blues eyes and a smile that seemed meant for only me, I stood helpless. That old feeling of love had me in its clutches. Was Mark experiencing the same sort of déjà vu? He stared at me with a similar spellbound stillness like an animal trapped by the lights of oncoming traffic. Then he went further with his intense look. He stripped me naked, not literally, but thoroughly. His gaze rolled downward as he traced the rim of his lips with his tongue. He paused at my breasts. Did he see my nipples harden, denting out the fabric of my bikini top? I put a hand to my chest as I took a deep breath. The feel of my denim jacket reminded me he couldn’t see what I was wearing underneath. It didn’t mean I didn’t imagine the feel of his tongue pressed against my breast, massaging the ache in the stiffened tips.

Trembling, I squeezed my knees together to fend off the sharp twitches releasing moisture and damping my panties. It was awful the way he had the capability to stir an orgasm from me with his lustful perusal of my body.

“Do you see the way he’s eyeing you?” Bev whispered. “That’s not the kind of look a married man gives another woman, if he’s in love with his wife.”

I had noticed. My heart rate had elevated several notches. I struggled to breathe evenly. More importantly, I tried to remember how to act normal. “Who?” I asked, thinking pretending ignorance might get a grip on my sanity...


Impossible? Who says?, by KC Kendricks

One of the coolest things about writing is the amount of information that comes my way. Perhaps I'm a bit off kilter but I hope I never stop wanting to learn. My brain may atrophy one day and stop absorbing information - old age does happen to all of us - but I'm not going down without a fight.


A few months ago a friend who knows me very well sent me a website link. It wasn't a link to a joke or anything because this person knows my hunger for the obscure and the inspiring: http://www.des.emory.edu/mfp/impossible.html
My two favorite sayings there are from Jean-Luc Picard and Seven of Nine. The universe imparts wisdom according to its own rules. Who am I to turn away from it?

"Things are only impossible until they’re not.” - Jean-Luc Picard

‘Impossible’ is a word that humans use far too often.” - Seven of Nine, Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix Zero One

Are they actual quotes from the realm of Star Trek? I don’t know. The words do ring true to those characters, and from a fictional world or not, impart some good advice. How we define “impossible” often defines how we live our lives, and I think it’s time for a little redefinition in my life.

Too often I’ve listened to voices not my own, and as I look back across my life I wonder what I’ve missed. A lot? A little? The past is unchangeable so I’ll let it be. But as I notch another birthday on the bedpost and enter a new year, I’ll pay closer attention to the future. The characters in my new book may get a second chance, but in real life the ones we need the most are few and far between.

I’m tossing “impossible” out of my vocabulary, and starting a new relationship with “possible.” I may not get far, but then again, I just might. Who says I can’t try?






Available from Amber Allure (an imprint of Amber Quill Press)


Jude Thatcher needs a life fix. He walked away from a serious love affair, lost the job he worked years to get, and his severance pay is dwindling. A little dancing is in order to help clear his head, so Jude takes a stroll to the local nightclub and gets a surprise.

Wynn DeRocher’s talent and ambition catapulted his band to the top of the charts, but he paid a steep price to achieve success. He needs a flesh and blood man, one who understands the demands of his music. He needs the man he let get away - Jude Thatcher.

Wynn pitches a proposal - a lucrative job modeling the band’s new line of logo’d clothing. Jude accepts but both men know it’ll take more than fancy dinners and limo rides to convince Jude to risk his heart again.

To covet might be a sin, but Jude needs a gesture of good faith. And he wants Wynn’s leather jacket as much as he wants Wynn. Almost.

Excerpt:

Wynn held the hip-length coat for me as I slipped my arms into the sleeves, then he let the weight of it come to rest on my shoulders. The jacket was light, but incredibly warm. I flipped open the left side to check the lining.

“Don’t bother. You’d have to cut the cloth to see what the insulating layer is.”

I stretched my arms out in front of my chest. The jacket moved with me, giving just enough to remain comfortable.

“This is a nice jacket. I see why you liked. Does he make bombers?”

Wynn reached in the closet and pulled out a black bomber complete with silver studs and chains. He caressed a front panel. “This is so you, Jude. Take it.”

For a moment, I was tempted. “I can’t accept this. It’s hand-stitched so I’m sure it was expensive.”

“Nine large. But take it. Call it a signing bonus.”

“Wynn, I don’t know the first thing about modeling. You need a professional, or better yet, model this yourself. Your fans will go wild.”

His fingers trailed down my leather-clad arm until they found mine. He hesitated, then stroked his thumb over my knuckles. His voice was so low I had to strain to hear it.

“I knew you were here. I came back to Marionville to find you, Jude.”
____________
KC Kendricks

Shannon Leigh on being a nurse



When you ask most nurses why they chose their profession, a common answer you might get is that they like to help people. Which, in my opinion, is a good reason. A few may say money, which is a terrible reason. While others still may state they didn’t know what else to choose. Another poor reason. Nursing is a very humbling job. There’s not a lot of glory, so to speak. Which typically weeds out the good from the bad. And believe me; I’ve met some terrible nurses, as well as great ones.

Why did I pick nursing? Probably a combination of things. Primarily, I’m a nurturing type of person. I do like helping people, and I have a knack for remaining calm in the throes of an emergency—although I tend to fall apart afterward, particularly when it involves my kids! Yes, the pay is nice. Yes, it seemed the best choice at the time when trying to decide what to do. But ultimately, I think the deciding factor came one day when I was watching TV and saw a commercial for Kosair Children’s Hospital (in Louisville, Kentucky) talking about the rewards of being a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse. I knew right then and there that that’s what I wanted to do. I wanted to work with those little babies and help make a difference.

After six years of college—a bachelor’s degree in four years is a joke unless you have no job, no kids, and no other responsibilities but going to school for 17+ credit hours a semester—I finally graduated from Indiana University in 1996 with a medal of distinction, a RN BSN certificate of degree, and a bleak job market. Believe it or not, nursing jobs were hard to come by back then. There were so many little colleges popping up that offered two year RN degrees (Associates) that the market was saturated with nurses. Luckily, I’d been working as a nurse’s aid at the local hospital, had managed to squeeze my way into the Obstetrical Unit (OB), and was able to begin work as an intermittent nurse for a few hours a week.

While I hadn’t made it to the NICU yet, I did work for a while in postpartum. Spending time with new moms and their babies, teaching them how to breastfeed, change diapers, etc. was a lot of fun. Since jobs were scarce, the possibility of getting into the actual delivery room any time soon was pretty much non-existent. Not long after I graduated from college, another hospital nearby posted a position for a PRN (as needed) nurse in their OB Unit, which included Labor and Delivery. I applied and got the job so I began working a few hours there as well. I was moving closer to the NICU I’d dreamed of.

After several months of delivering babies and learning that along with the reward of bringing life into the world came a hefty dose of responsibility and liability, I realized that as enjoyable as the OB department was, I didn’t like the fear of getting sued and losing my license. Six years was a long time to watch go down the tubes. At that point, I decided NICU was no longer for me. I applied for a temporary, second shift position for the US Census Bureau as an Occupational Health Nurse and was offered the job. At the time, I expected it to be a short-term thing. Once the Decennial Census was over, they’d let me go and I’d be looking for a job once again. I was so wrong.

Not long after I began my career at the Census Bureau, one of the other dayshift nurses (there were only two) decided she could no longer work. She went out on disability, claiming the job was causing her undue stress. Undue stress? Ha! Try delivering babies and hoping like hell everything goes okay. That’s undue stress. Anyhow, my temporary nightshift position was suddenly converted to a permanent dayshift job. Yea! What’s so funny about all of this is during nursing school, a counselor came in and gave my graduating class a little speech about what our futures would entail, how some of us would work in this field or that field. She said, based on our size (52), that it was likely that two of us would go into Occupational nursing. I remember thinking at the time. “Not me, I’m going to the NICU.” *snickers* How naïve I was.

So what is an Occupational Health Nurse, you wonder. What do I do? Well, it’s sort of like being a school nurse, for grown ups. And believe me, if I didn’t know how old my patients are, I’d swear I was dealing with a bunch of kids! Don’t even get me started. You’d be amazed at how childlike adults can behave, but that’s best left for another blog.

What do I do all day? Well, if you ask my ex, he’d say I sit on my butt and do nothing, which is grossly inaccurate. I do sit a lot. I have an office with a nice, ergonomic chair (working for the government does have its perks) that my butt stays parked in for a large portion of the day. But that’s not to say I don’t do anything from that position. Actually, I’m up and down a lot. It really depends on what my patient needs. Which is good because having your butt fall asleep is a very unpleasant sensation. Even worse than a foot. I never even knew a derrière could go numb, but it can and mine has. It sucks.

A blood pressure check, some Tylenol, a pep talk, yeah, I can multitask; I can sit and do all those things. Digging out splinters, looking for foreign objects in the eye, cleaning freely bleeding wounds acquired through the poor use of box cutters, those usually require me to leave the comfort of my seat. I also respond to emergencies on the job site, teach CPR and First Aid to the employees, perform ergonomic evaluations, the list goes on…

Occupational nursing is a lot different from hospital nursing. There’s a lot more teaching, a lot more problem solving. Everything revolves around how it impacts the job and the employee’s ability to do their job, both immediately and long term. You don’t have the benefit of having all your orders on how to take care of your patient illegibly scribbled in a chart. Yes, I meant illegibly. Have you ever tried deciphering a doctor’s chicken scratch? It’s terrible.

At my job, there is no doctor. You make the decisions on how to treat you patient’s ailment based on their symptoms. This not only means deciding whether to give Tylenol, Ibuprofen, Excedrin, or Aspirin for the typical headache, taking into consideration their other health issues and medications, but also whether or not someone’s chest pain is heart related and they need a trip to the emergency room, or they just have indigestion from the burrito they ate at lunch. And let me just mention that just because I think they may need to go to hospital doesn’t mean they agree. So dealing with difficult patients and convincing them that the money spent on an ambulance run is money well spent if it saves their lives is another one of my job duties.

Believe me; I’ve had patients come in wanting their blood pressure checked, discover it’s stroke-level high, admit they haven’t taken their medicine in the last week or so because they just didn’t bother to call it in or won’t have the money until payday (despite the fact that they smell like an ashtray so they obviously have money for cigarettes), then tell me they’ll call their doctor if they don’t get to feeling better and just want to go back to work. Why’d they come to the Health Unit to begin with? Just to verify that yep, their blood pressure is astronomically high? Yeah, makes me want to throttle them. However, I do believe strangling the employees is a no no, even for a government facility. So I return them to duty, praying they don’t go out on the floor and have a heart attack or stroke. Then I usually get a call from an angry supervisor wanting to know why I sent them back to their job with a dangerously high blood pressure. Like it was my choice!!! And I have to calmly explain that I can’t force anyone to seek medical treatment, whether I advise it or not. It’s great. Everyone loves to bash the Health Unit nurses when they think we don’t know what we’re doing, yet we’re the first ones they call in an emergency. Ironic isn’t it. Remember what I said about glory?

There’s a lot of autonomy and in many ways, a lot more responsibility with my job. I remember when I first started working at the Bureau; I asked my supervisor if I needed to carry malpractice insurance (like you do as a hospital nurse). She laughed and said, “Why? You’ve got the entire government and their best attorneys on your side.” It was an eye-opening statement, in more ways than one.

Needless to say, that was nearly 14 years ago. My temporary delve into the Occupational Health world morphed into a fulfilling career that I love, despite the frustrations. So when someone asks, “What do you do?” I proudly say, “I’m an Occupational Health Nurse.” Then with a dramatic pause, I have to add, “For the Federal Government.” Kinda makes me feel like a special agent or a super hero.

Imagine the Mission Impossible theme playing; me decked out in a tight-leather, black, body suit; cool sunglasses; armed with a syringe in one hand and a blood pressure cuff and stethoscope in the other; ready to battle the forces of hypertension and promote disease prevention…

Leigh, Shannon Leigh. Occupational Health Nurse for the US Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Ha ha ha.

Okay, maybe not tight leathers—I have to wear scrubs. Nothing wrong with an active imagination, which leads me to one of my many hobbies: writing. But that’s a story for another time. I’m off to fight sickness and poor life-style choices. Now where’d I leave that cape…

_______________________________________________________
 

Chasing Booty
by Shannon Leigh

ISBN-13: 978-1-60272-267-5

Available from Amber Quill Press
 
 
BLURB
 
When cops can’t catch the most-wanted criminals, they hire Gaelyn. She comes from a long line of bounty hunters, including her father, uncle, and grandfather. Extensive training in weaponry, hand-to-hand combat, and adverse conditions have seasoned her into a formidable opponent against any contracted hit, whether male, female, alien, or human. She has little fear of the unknown and thrives on adventure.

Only one other hunter matches her status—Reese, a Trøndite from the small planet of Sør-Trøndalag in the Capricornus Sector. And the man has a knack for stealing her contracts. Both cunning and gorgeous, the mix doesn’t seem quite fair. But attractiveness holds little power over money. Reese had beaten Gaelyn out of a half-year’s pay a scarce three months ago, and she will be damned if he outwits her again.

Thinking she’s duped Reese back onto Jupiter, Gaelyn isn’t too happy when she runs into him on Quaoar at the Blue Moon, an authentic hole-in-the-wall bar tucked at the end of a narrow alley in what would be considered the rough part of town; just the place to find her contracted hit. But Reese not only has the information she needs to find her mark, he also has a business proposal that’s too tempting to pass up. And a partnership with Reese just might prove rewarding in a way Gaelyn never expects...

EXCERPT

...With an air of “don’t-fuck-with-me” in her step, she made her way toward him. “The bartender seems to think you can be of some assistance,” she declared, stopping a mere six inches to the left of the man’s seated frame.

He ignored her, choosing instead to take a long swig from his mug.

Removing her laser from its holster on her left thigh, she plopped it onto the counter top. Her hand rested lightly on its black metallic shape, her finger hugging the trigger. “Well?”

“I can take you there, for a price,” he replied, his deep voice a thunderous rumble within his muscular chest.

Annoyed, she lifted her chin. “Name it,” she practically growled.

The man chuckled. “It’ll be steep,” he warned. “Perhaps more than you’re willing to pay.”

Gaelyn’s patience wore thin. They wasted precious time. Is this guy gonna get down to business or what?

Struggling to see his face beneath the shadowed hood, she leaned a little closer. “Look, buddy. I don’t have time for games. Either name your price or I’ll take my business elsewhere.”

He glanced at her, his onyx, deep-set eyes two bottomless black pits within his handsome angular face. “I want half the booty. For starters.”

Gaelyn’s breath caught in her throat. Reese.

This wasn’t happening.

He pulled back his hood, letting the heavy material fall onto his broad shoulders in a neatly folded pleat. “Hello, Gael. It’s been a long time.”

Her right fist doubled at her waist. With forced control, she resisted the urge to knock that superior smirk right off his handsome face. “Reese,” she said through clenched teeth. “I suppose you’re after the same hit.”

He shrugged. “It’s a sizeable payoff.”

“He’s my contract.” Warning laced her tone.

Reese turned fully toward her, his massive frame almost comical atop the strained bar stool. “Well now, seems we have a difference of opinion on that matter.”

He offered a grin so seductive it could melt the ice right off Quaoar’s frozen surface. The bartender’s description fit him to a tee. With his rectangular features—the wide zygomatic breadth, the broad jaw and flaring gonial angles, the prominent chin—Reese did look like the devil himself. Of course the red skin, horns, and barbed tail only added to his demonic appearance.

Gaelyn’s gaze dropped to the tight black T-shirt stretched across his bulging pecs and flat abs. Warning bells clamored in her head, but her inspection continued on to the waistband of his faded jeans, and inevitably to the generous bulge at his groin. An old song her father used to play popped in her head and it took everything she had not to belt it aloud.

The devil went down to Georgia, he was lookin’ for a soul to steal.

In a bind, cause he was way behind, he was lookin’ to make a deal...

Despite her fury, Gaelyn’s insides responded. Her stomach knotted with instant need, causing her pussy to clench. One couldn’t dispute the man’s virility. While they’d never “hooked” up, she couldn’t deny her attraction. She’d be willing to bet half the contracted pay that he’d be awesome in bed.

She’d heard Trøndite males had large penises, that they were, in fact, able to do extraordinary things with their members. She wasn’t sure what those things might be, but the swell in his pants clearly indicated his considerable endowment. She imagined herself down on all fours with Reese up behind her, pounding his big cock in and out of her tight channel.

Moisture seeped between her legs, making her leather pants cling to her crotch most uncomfortably. The room felt hot. She hadn’t had a good fuck in quite a while. Perhaps they’d work that into the deal...

__________________________________
 
Shannon Leigh
 
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Breathe!

Writing a book is easy.
Writing a good book, a bit more difficult.
Writing a great book, a lot more difficult.

I'll always remember the night I got my first acceptance on a manuscript. I checked my e-mail and there it was – “Congratulations! We'd like to publish your book.” I forgot to breathe, and I’m not sure I’ve taken a deep breath since.

It's astonishing to look back and see how many years ago that was. Writing has changed my life in so many ways. My world expanded exponentially. I learned, and grew, and I blossomed in ways I could never have anticipated. I've met so many wonderful people along the way, and a few, like our blog hostess, Brenda Williamson, have become friends.

Being a published author is about more than just writing the book. Once we finish the manuscript there is a submittal process to go through. After that, we go through contract acceptance, which is a very important step. Then we wait, and just as we’re hot and heavy into the next story, we get zapped with the edit. And sometimes another edit. Release day rolls around, and it's time to promo, promo, promo. And promo some more.

Website updates, mailing lists, Yahoo chat rooms, blogs, Twitter, Goodreads, facebook, MySpace, reviews- the list gets longer and longer, and we get more creative. It's truly a labor of love. And while all the promo is happening, we are writing, or corresponding, or plotting; we’re e-mailing, or taking care of children, spouses, parents, day jobs.

But when do we breathe?

Other authors make it possible for us to breathe. They know our passion, they speak our language. They know the things we'd like to do and are sometimes forced by things we cannot control to leave undone. No explanation is necessary. They sense when we are close to a burnout, and they remind us to breathe.

When we’re stuck on a story, call a writer's block or whatever you like, we can turn to them and say, “Help!” When we have a great idea, we turn to our critique partners and they applaud us. And then they tell us to breathe.

If you spend any time in the blogosphere of authors, you'll see a lot of guest spots, just like my being here on Brenda's blog today. Sure it's one way to promo our latest release while driving traffic to a different blog, but it's more than that.

It's a step back from the pressure to write a thousand words a day. It's a break from all the rules on those infernal lists and groups. Its e-mails back and forth with a friend joking a kidding and grousing about having to write a blog. It's a chance to take a much-needed night off.

It's Brenda saying, “Girl, you need to breathe.”

* * *

DOUBLE DEUCE
Contemporary gay romance mystery
available now at Amber Allure
http://www.amberquill.com/AmberAllure/DoubleDeuce.html

Free spirited Ian Coulter works hard and plays harder. An ex-cop turned private investigator, Ian enjoys meeting new men and making new friends. A night out ends up with one man on the floor at his feet, and another asking for his help. Big trouble’s brewing in little Amethyst Cove, and Ian’s a step behind. He’s quick to see Rick Mohr is the man holding the flare at the end a long, dark tunnel.

Undercover agent Rick Mohr walks a fine line, serving two masters. Insider trading, counterfeit printing plates, and a blown-up yacht have Rick stuck between two Federal agencies, one of which has been compromised. Rick has to discover the mole before it’s too late. When Ian Coulter walks into his life, Rick grabs the chance to salvage his assignment with both hands.

It doesn’t take Ian and Rick long to discover joining forces, and sharing resources, has definite perks - ones not found in any departmental manual.

__To read an adult excerpt, please follow the link below.__

DOUBLE DEUCE
ISBN-13: 978-1-61124-185-3
Contemporary gay romance mystery

KC Kendricks

Cowboy Obsession

I have signed a contract for Cowboy Obsession. It's a contemporary m/m romance and has a tentative release date of August 2011. It's being published by Amber Quill Press (Amber Allure) under my GLBT pen name, Sineth Killiri.

This novella is about librarian, Braden Hollace moving to a small Texas town and meeting handsome rancher / mayor Eric McCaffrey. While they both have reasons for keeping their sexual orientation out of the public eye, neither can stop lustfully eyeing each other. But all cannot be at peace between them, until a ban on gay literature in their town is stopped.

http://www.sinethkilliri.com/