Archive for the ‘book recommendations’ Category

Goddess of the Hunt: twitter talk contest!

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Do you want some cool stuff?  A copy of Tessa Dare’s Goddess of the Hunt?  Some wicked artisanal chocolates?  How about some other copies of awesome romance releases today?

Here’s how it works.  You have until midnight, PST, August 31, 2009.  Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to talk up Goddess of the Hunt on twitter.  Now, I’m not just talking about the regular sort of buzz–you know, blah blah blah, starred review in Publisher’s Weekly saying it fit “fit all the best of romance into one novel”, or blah blah blah, 4 and 1/2 stars from Romantic Times, or even blah blah blah I loved GOTH it was so awesome!

No.  Here are some examples of appropriate twittering:

I hear Barack Obama invited Jeremy over to the White House. #tessadare

or:

@TessaDare’s acclaimed GODDESS OF THE HUNT released 14 minutes ago; already solving global warming. Go Tessa and GOTH! #tessadare

or:

@tessadare ‘s GODDESS OF THE HUNT was released in NY 30 minutes ago. Does LUCY rule the world? #tessadare

The more egregious (and positive) your tweet, the better! Goddess of the Hunt solves all your problems, and gives you a bag of chips.

You must tweet to win this contest (but twitter is free).  I will give away:

  • 4 copies of GOTH (to different people of course)
  • 1 copy each of other awesome historical romances that release today, July 28, 2009: Eloisa James’s A Duke of Her Own, Julie Anne Long’s Since the Surrender (Pennyroyal Green Series), and Meredith Duran’s Written on Your Skin.
  • A box of artisanal chocolates and a fine Nerf pistol, which has been used by historical romance greats Tessa Dare and Sherry Thomas (among others) (edited to add: it is the Nerf pistol that has been fired by Tessa Dare and Sherry Thomas; the chocolates are unused, thank you!), will be awarded to the person with the most over-the-top tweet.

Each tweet is an entry.  To enter, you must mark your tweet with the #tessadare hashtag; entries marked with the #tessadare hashtag that are not appropriate talk-up tweets are not valid entries.  Enter as much as you like.  Your chances of winning depend on how many people enter.

Go forth and talk up Tessa Dare!

Dangerous Excerpts!

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Those of you who were at RWA Nationals know that we had the Dangerous Book of Excerpts–a book that had first chapter excerpts from both me and Tessa Dare–in full force there.  We printed 400 copies, and walked away with maybe 30 between us, total, left over. And that’s only because we didn’t put those 30 out in the Goody Room.

So for those of you who missed out, we made a PDF version of the Dangerous Book. Warning: it’s 1MB in size (and I tried to get it as small as I could–this is down from the initial size of 10MB.  Sorry, but that’s just how it turned out!) Second warning: The original Dangerous Book of Excerpts had the full first chapter of both my novella, “This Wicked Gift,” and my debut novel, Proof by Seduction. But I got special permission from Harlequin to reprint those, as they’re longer than the average 2,500 word excerpt.  Since I only have permission to post up to 2,500 words on my website, this copy contains not quite the full first chapter.  Those of you who got one of those print versions should count yourselves very, very lucky.

Enjoy! Celebrate! And buy Tessa Dare’s July 28th, 2009 release this Tuesday!

Literacy Signing RWA!

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Tomorrow, Wednesday, July 15th, is RWA’s annual literacy signing.  500 authors get together and sign books; all proceeds are to be donated to literacy.  I love the literacy signing; even though the rest of the conference offers free books, I love the idea of paying money to both show my love and support for my favorite authors, meet authors I might never have found on the shelves browsing on my own, and support a great cause while we’re at it.  This will be my third literacy signing.  If you’ve never gone, here are a few helpful hints.

1. Buy Tessa Dare’s debut novel.  You’ll get it two weeks before it releases–and visit early, because she’s sure to sell out.

2. Find books by authors you don’t know.  Look particularly for debut authors, or authors whose books are not shelved in romance–you may find a new favorite author!

3. Look for me and Tessa; you can get your free copy of the Dangerous Book of Excerpts.  Which is exactly what it sounds like.

Book Recommendation Redux

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Okay, it is time for a lightning book recommendation fest!

In no particular order:

  • Start Me Up, by Victoria Dahl.  I’ve basically loved every book Victoria Dahl has written and Start Me Up is no exception.   It’s got some of the best dialogue centered around sex that I’ve ever seen in a romance novel, and the book is just plain fun.  I particularly appreciated Quinn–who is nerdy in just the right way.  Which is to say, he’s hot, he’s absent-minded, he’s successful…but when he concentrates on Lori Love, whew, does it ever get steamy!
  • What Happens in London, by Julia Quinn.  I am also a huge Julia Quinn fan, and I haven’t read a bad book by her yet.  But as with all my favorite authors, I like some books better than others.  With Julia Quinn this is the difference between finishing the book and hugging it tight, and finishing the book and hugging it tight and giving it a gentle kiss.  And I just loved this one–this one got a hug and a kiss!  I read this when my husband was asleep in the other room, and I woke him up three times because I was laughing so hard.  This book was hilarious, and yet touchingly sweet.  The bar is extremely high when it comes to Julia Quinn books, but this one is one of my favorites, ever.  It’s going to be read and reread.  A true keeper.
  • Bound by Your Touch, by Meredith Duran.  I’ve been absolutely bonkers to read this ever since I read the excerpts on Meredith’s site, and I’m completely insane to have a copy right now–I’m moving (like, tomorrow), I don’t have space for more books, I don’t have time to read… and yet I picked up a copy at my local Borders, and I’ve been sneaking pages in between my mad dash for cleaning.  Meredith Duran’s first novel blew me away; there was something about her writing that just drew me in.  This book (so far) is reminiscent of The Duke of Shadows in the sense that the writing is so compelling and unputdownable, but as of chapter three, I can say that it’s even better.  Truly an amazing book.
  • A Hint of Wicked, by Jennifer Haymore.  I feel like such a schlub, for not having promoted this book yet on my blog.  In my defense, I plead being busy (see: moving; also see: writing).  I read this book in one sitting, and it is an incredibly emotional journey.  I literally could not put it down.  Jennifer Haymore takes what seems like an impossible emotional situation–a woman whose husband, who she loved, returns from the dead, only to find her remarried–and makes that love triangle into one where we really believe that she loves both the men she is married to.  I could not stop reading this book, because I so desperately wanted all three of them to be happy.  This book is an example of truly fine writing: Jennifer Haymore took an insoluble conflict, pulled no punches, and got to a HEA at the end without cutting through the Gordian knot she’d created.  (Also, if you read the pages at the end for her next book, A Touch of Scandal….  I am already lusting after it!)
  • I am also dying to read Loretta Chase’s Don’t Tempt Me. I’m not sure when I will have a chance to do that, as tomorrow I am hopping in a car and driving 2000 miles (with a cat and a dog–what was I thinking?), and I can’t read in a car without getting car sick…. but my guess is that I will just accept the nausea and go for it.  Loretta Chase never fails to deliver.  So you should read this one, too–just don’t tell me about it until you’re sure I’m finished!

Coveting the Goddess

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Many of you know that I am Tessa Dare‘s biggest fangirl.  (And no, I am not referring to my weight.)

It’s been hugely exciting for me to watch everyone fall in love with her, starting with the agents who wanted her, to the auction that ensued when Goddess of the Hunt went on submission.  Now her book is only slightly more than one month away from release, and reviews are beginning to show up.  In the last week, I’ve seen reviews from the two major print sources that review romances.

Library Journal gave Goddess of the Hunt a coveted starred review, and said: “This is an exceptional debut novel, from the first hilarious “practice” session to the gradual melting of Jem’s outward reserve and Lucy’s maturing realization of whom she really loves. VERDICT A beautifully crafted tale that captivates with sassy wit, a lush, sweetly intense sensuality, and an abundance of beautifully articulated, appealing characters.”

And today, Publisher’s Weekly chimed in.  It also gave Goddess of the Hunt a coveted starred review: “Dare seems to have fit all the best of romance into one novel, from sensuous interludes and crafty humor to endearing multidimensional characters. Readers will eagerly anticipate the two sequels due in the fall.”

Now, you may notice that I’ve referred to both those reviews as “coveted.” But let’s face it.  What’s really coveted isn’t the review.  What you are coveting right now is . . . an early copy.  Oh yes, those are coveted.  But, you say, ARCs were few and far between.  Tessa gave away her last ARCs on Dear Author; and auctioned one off for charity for a fairly hefty sum.  There are no more ARCs to be had.

Except . . . what’s this?gotharc

Oh, my.  That would be . . . an ARC. Of Goddess of the Hunt.  In my hot, greedy, cunning little hands.

Tell me, do you covet it?  Yes?  Well, one of you will get it.  Here’s what you need to do to win a chance to get the last Goddess standing.

  1. Post on your blog, or post a tweet, about Tessa Dare’s Goddess of the Hunt.
  2. Post a comment on this blog post, with a link to your blog.  If you are entering a tweet, mark your tweet with the hashtag “#goth” to enter and make sure to reference the author of GOTH by including @TessaDare.
  3. Enter by Thursday, June 25th, at 6 PM EST to win.
  4. One winner will be chosen by random drawing to receive the truly coveted ARC of Goddess of the Hunt.  Two other winners will be chosen, also by random drawing, to receive slightly less-coveted proof copies of “The Dangerous Book of Excerpts.”  “The Dangerous Book of Excerpts” contains an excerpt of Goddess of the Hunt (longer than the one on Tessa’s website), an excerpt from Surrender of a Siren (longer than the one on her website, which is nonexistent).  It also contains excerpts from my own works, but pshaw; those are not coveted at all!  These exhibit some signs of wear and even have scribblings in them, as they really were used as proofs.

Enjoy! Covet! And spread the word–Goddess of the Hunt managed to “fit all the best of romance into one novel.”  And that is something to talk about.

Edited to add: Romantic Times comes in with a 4 1/2 star review and a TOP pick!  “Dare is on the path to stardom….  Dare uses wit and wisdom, humor and sensuality to relate a tale of tangled love that reveals her ability to touch hearts with her appealing characters.”

Behind the Red Door (Giveaway)

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Today is, once again, the semi-official something-annual holiday of “Buy a Book Not Written by Courtney” day.  And the holiday it is, is Buy Jackie Barbosa’s Behind the Red Door, a single-author anthology which collects three erotic novellas.

Now, I have to admit, novellas are an interesting art form.  That is: As an author, you have to tell (a) a complete story (b) with character growth on the part of the hero and heroine without (c) skimping on description.  Add in the requirement that the story must be erotic, and you have a further constraint:  You have to use a large number of your words for sex.  What I sometimes see happening with such erotic novellas is that the characters and/or the plot get lost in the erotic elements.  It’s hard not to fall into this trap; you have a small number of words, and so much to accomplish with them.  This might make you think that novellas are doomed to be inferior to whole books, that by necessity they must be limited creatures.  But this isn’t true.  A great novella can be even better than  a book–a finely crafted piece of work, every sentence, every word serving double or even triple duty in its service of character, heat, and story.  And this means that plot, character, and yes, eroticism, are constantly present–because she weaves them into the story with a deft touch.

Jackie delivers three novellas that fit that bill.  The stories have a powerful economy to them.  And even though her heroes and heroines have a great deal to overcome, Jackie also manages to weave a thread of sly humor into all their interactions.  I don’t want to offer too many spoilers, but let me just say that to find a story that mixes eroticism and emotion in equal measures, and then present it, alongside questions of family feeling, takes a lot.  And with BEHIND THE RED DOOR, Jackie does this not just once, but three times.  I adore these novellas, and hope that you will too!

In celebration of “Buy a Book Written by Jackie Barbosa” Day, I’m going to be tromping off to neighborhood stores to take pictures in the wild of BtRD.  And one lucky commenter will win a copy of the book!

NQaH: Winner and twitter

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Huzzah!  It’s “Buy a Book Not Written by Courtney” Day, and today, the book you should buy is Sherry Thomas’s Not Quite a Husband.  As you can tell from my post yesterday, I loved it!  (If you’re sitting on the fence, read the excerpt from Sherry’s website–I promise you, the book more than lives up to the potential you see there.)

Sherry was nice enough to offer up a copy of Not Quite a Husband for a commenter on yesterday’s post.  And the winner of Sherry’s book is . . . colleen!  Colleen, send me an e-mail at courtney@courtneymilan.com, and we’ll arrange delivery.

But as I’m headed to the bookstore today to get my own copy (yes, I read it early, but I want my very own official copy for my Sherry Thomas collection!), I figured I could pick up two (I’m also getting a copy of Diana Peterfreund‘s eagerly-awaited conclusion to her Secret Society series, Tap & Gown).  So Lesley, send me an e-mail as well!  You’ve won a copy, too.

Now onto the good stuff.  As you might have been able to tell from my last post, I think there’s some fascinating, complicated stuff going on in this book, and I would love to dish about some of it.  I’ve already talked to some people about Sherry Thomas’s newest on twitter, and thought to continue the discussion there.  (There’s already a few threads on it, if you search).

Here’s how you participate:

1. Get a twitter account  (if you don’t already have one)

2. To make sure people can find your tweets, mark your book-club discussion with the hashtag #nqah

3. You can use http://www.tweetchat.com to follow the #nqah hashtag, or search.twitter.com.  If you use tweetdeck or tweetie or almost any other twitter interface, you can create searches.

4. If you post a spoiler, you must encode it in ROT-13 so as not to spoil unsuspecting twitterers.

What’s ROT-13?  ROT-13 encoding is a code.   So you can post spoilers in ROT-13, and they’ll look like this:  Thrff jung! Crbcyr guvax Ybeq Vna vf znq!  That way, people who don’t want to be spoiled can avoid reading anything they don’t want to read.

The easiest way to write/read ROT-13 is to use Firefox and install Leet Key, a plugin that (among other things) can decode ROT-13.  Once you have the plugin installed, you can highlight text in ROT-13 (or the text you want to put into ROT-13), right click with your mouse, choose “Leet Key” then “Text Transformers” then “ROT-13.”  If you don’t use FireFox, or don’t want to install another plugin, you can use this webpage instead.

There is no time that’s too late for discussion.  The #lordian hashtag from the last twitter conversation is still in occasional use.  I imagine there will be talk for at least a week.  So grab the book, read on, and then join in the discussion!

Not Quite a Husband: A Giveaway!

Monday, May 18th, 2009

So it is too early (by one day) to buy Sherry Thomas’s Not Quite a Husband. Still, it is early enough that I feel like I can gloat about having read an early copy of this book.

I don’t think anyone here needs to be told about Sherry Thomas.  Her debut novel, Private Arrangements, took the internet by storm.  Everyone was delighted by the mature characters, the elegant prose, the sly wit.  It was recognized as one ofPublisher’s Weekly’s best books of the year, is a Rita finalist in both the “Historical” and the “Best First Book” categories. . . .  And then, three months after the release of Private Arrangements, she did it again with Delicious–a book that would suffer from being called “elegant food porn” because the love affair with food was a romance, not pornography.

So when Sherry offered me the chance to read Not Quite a Husband early, I was all over it.

And how heavenly was Not Quite a Husband?  First, as always with Sherry, there was the writing–an elegant stretch of awesome that brought to life unfamiliar places.  I’ve never been to the Swat valley.  Heck, I’ve never even been to the requisite subcontinent.  But Sherry Thomas fooled me into believing I was there at every step of the way.

Second, there was the hero.  Leo Marsden is one of the most delicious heroes that Sherry has ever penned.  He’s sexy, obstinate, and steadfast without crossing the line into creepy-oh-my-god-a-stalker.  One of the things that makes Leo so appealling is that he recognizes on some level that his feelings for Bryony–a mix of love, despair, and worship–could become just a little weird if he doesn’t buck up and have a backbone.  This determination.  In some ways, this is his greatest strength . . . but it’s also, as you will see, his biggest weakness.  Like all tragic heroes, it’s Leo’s strength and individuality that ultimately does him in.

But finally, and most importantly, there’s the heroine.  Now, I have loved all of Sherry’s heroines.  I loved Gigi, for her strength of mind and independence, for her ability to see what she wanted and focus on it with laser-like intensity.  I loved Verity, for her skills, and because she would not give up no matter what life threw at her.  But Bryony . . . . I love Bryony like I’ve never loved a Sherry Thomas heroine before.  In fact, Bryony may be one of my favorite heroines ever.  She’s one of the most flawed, complex, and yet despite her prickly exterior, lovable heroines that I’ve ever read.  Like Leo, her greatest strength is her biggest weakness.  Bryony is smart and focused.  She is a doctor, and a damn good one, too, in an era when women were just beginning to become doctors.  In many ways, because of her upbringing, Bryony eschews the feminine.  She wears severe clothing, doesn’t think about boys, and . . . well, she’s not exactly the kind of doctor you’d call “nurturing.”  She’s brilliantly competent.  If you’re dying, she’s the one who will bring you kicking and screaming back into the daylight, but it’s a brisk, cool competence, not the warm, soft capability that you so often see ascribed to female doctors.

Like all truly intelligent people, Bryony is aware that this coolness hides a certain amount of brittle awkwardness.  When she falls for Leo, she never considers approaching him; she just assumes that she’s going to have to wait out her infatuation on the sidelines.  And when Leo reciprocates her feelings, she knows, deep down, that it’s too good to be true–but she’s too weak to walk away.  Bryony is one of the most fascinating, complicated heroines that I’ve read in a romance novel.  She’s prickly–but only because she’s afraid of her own vulnerability, and so she curls up like a hedgehog, sharp spines pointed outward.  I really empathized with Bryony every step of her journey.

As to what happens to these characters, let us just say that Sherry Thomas is going to make Bryony very, very vulnerable indeed–but without once robbing her of her innate dignity.  And that’s such an important line to me.

One of the things I love about Sherry Thomas is that I can read her books knowing that I’m going to get a good dose of unsettling.  She’s going to make me feel uncomfortable.  She’s going to make me feel the real pain that her characters must endure.  But, because Sherry writes romances–I know that at the end of the book, she is going to make it all better.  And she does.  The end of Not Quite a Husband made me feel like I was walking out of a dark movie theater into a bright, hot summer day–just a little dazed, my eyes blinking in the sunlight.

There are so many interesting aspects of this book that I want to talk about, and so tomorrow, on release day, I’m going to suggest that you join me on twitter under the hashtag #nqah to talk about Sherry Thomas’s newest.  I’ll post instructions in the morning.

But I’ll do more than that.  Sherry has been kind enough to offer up a free copy to one commenter.  As tomorrow is (you guessed it) “Buy a Book by Sherry Thomas” day, I figured we should hold the drawing early in the day so that the people who do not win will have all the extra impetus to . . . you know, Buy a Book by Sherry Thomas.

So leave a comment, and tell me your favorite kind of heroine.  One lucky commenter wins a copy of Not Quite a Husband!

Werestag: The Winners

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

The winners of the free copies of “Legend of the Werestag” are: 1. Rhonda W. 2. Louise Fury Jerrica Knight-Catania (Louise already won a copy) 3. Patty Rosellini Send me an e-mail to get your free copy!

It’s “Love Your Werestag” Week!

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009
werestag-cover-200x300

Get the Werestag today!

Today is the semi-official something-annual “Buy a Book Not Written by Courtney” day, again!  It is also the start of a relatively unknown, minor holiday, keyed to the moon.  This week-long celebration has been traditional in certain cultures since the time of the Ancient Visigoths.  Yes, my lovelies; today is the start of “Love Your Werestag” Week.  If you don’t have a Werestag to love, today would be a good day to find one.

In modern, post-Visigothic times, this has presented a problem, as there has been a dearth of Werestags available for loving. You could not find a Werestag, not for any amount of salt licks left in the woods.  You could not find a Werestag for ready money.  But  today we see an astonishing synchronicity.  You can celebrate these events–two holidays that have not seen adequate ceremony for a clear millenia–”Buy a Book Not Written by Courtney” day, and “Love Your Werestag” Week–with just a few clicks of your mouse.

To give you an idea how momentous this occasion is, this is like Jupiter coming into conjunction with Mercury with Halley’s comet streaking by in the background.  This is the mountain coming to Mohammed.  This is the Visigoths entering into a treaty with the Mayans, for the joint purpose of peaceful exploration of Mars. (Little known fact: they actually attempted to do so, but they never could agree on a preamble, and so that was the end of that.)

That’s right.  Today, you can purchase Tessa Dare’s novella, which sports the catching title of . . . THE LEGEND OF THE WERESTAG.

What?  Was that too ridiculous?  Too over the top?  Fine.  I know what you’re thinking.

You’re thinking, “Courtney, everyone that reads your blog already knows about the awesomeness that is Tessa Dare. Could we have possibly missed the Smart Bitch review in which Smart Bitch Sarah praised The Almighty Werestag? In which she said ‘I was hard pressed to find a shortcoming,’ when Smart Bitch Sarah is normally all over the shortcomings?  We have already all been slavering over this novella.  Your puny promotional attempts are preaching to the loudest choir ever, and I don’t know why you keep talking about Visigoths.”

I know, I know.  But the truth is, I’ve been reading Tessa Dare for a very long time, and this is the first time I’ve been able to point a link somewhere and tell you, BUY THIS.  Tessa and I got serious about writing around the same time; we exchanged draft after draft of our first novels.  When Tessa decided to write seriously, she took the brave step of quitting a paying job so she could have the time to do it.  She was awake at all hours of the night, working; she believed in herself enough that she took a financial risk with two very young children. And she went for broke–every sentence, every chapter, every word that she wrote, she examined critically.  And when it didn’t work, she ripped it out and did it again.  Tessa’s writing is a tribute not only to her talent as a writer, but to a strength of character that led her to believe in herself enough to sacrifice time, sleep, and financial security.

I love that you are finally going to have the chance to see what it is about Tessa Dare’s writing that makes me admire her so ardently.  She makes it look so easy and effortless when you read her writing.  But I know it wasn’t easy.

In the next handful of months, the entire world will be able to read not just about Werestags, but about strong huntresses with secret vulnerabilities, about unhangable pirates who find a core of honor after a lifetime of mistakes, and about men who are not werestags, but who make up for their lack of prongs with a hidden, smoldering passion.  Tessa’s books are brave and daring and perfectly crafted.

But there’s more to Tessa’s writing than just stellar writing, captivating and different settings, and poignant emotion.  What raises Tessa’s work up above mere technical perfection is the humor that she brings to every page.  Even in the depths of the darkest moments of her books, her characters maintain an inner grace and a sense of tongue-in-cheek proportion.  The writing makes these books phenomenal; the emotional intelligence makes them keepers; but it’s the humor that makes you want to read them again and again and again.  Even when your heart is aching for the characters on the page, you’ll do it with a smile on your face.

I want you to buy and read Tessa Dare not just because she is one of the best writers out there, but because I want you to be as filled with wonder for her as I am.  I want you all to squee with real delight and e-mail her about how much you love her.  I want her to get letters from people she has never heard of before in her life, telling her how much they have loved her work.  I know what she’s put into this book, and I want to see it repaid a thousand fold, not only in sales, but in the excitement she deserves.

So go and buy a copy of the Werestag today, even if you aren’t a Visigoth. This is the start of something really, really special.

You can buy it from Books on Board (for $2.78), or for your Amazon Kindle (for $2.80), or you can buy it from Samhain directly (but I can’t put up a link since I will be on a plane when this post goes live, and Samhain doesn’t set up reasonable preorder links–fix this, Samhain!)

In any event, I am so excited about this story that I am going to give away three copies.  Leave your name in the hat, and let me know you want it.

And above all, remember: LOVE YOUR WERESTAG!


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