Hailey Edwards's Blog, page 62

July 8, 2012

Breed of Innocence by Lanie Jordan

[image error]Six hours ago, men in dark suits and sunglasses came looking for me.


 


Four hours ago, they offered me training to hunt the things that killed my family: demons.


 


Two hours ago, I joined their secret organization—the CGE.


 


Now… All I have to do is survive demon-hunting school.


 


The classes won’t kill me, but the finals might.


 


 


To read an except, go here.


For more information on the author, go here.


To purchase from Amazon, go here.


For B&N, head over here.

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Published on July 08, 2012 22:45

June 26, 2012

Soul Weaver Now Available on NetGalley

For those of you with NetGalley access, Soul Weaver is now available for request!


http://bit.ly/MQB9GT

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Published on June 26, 2012 12:43

Release Day for Eversworn! Plus Contest

[image error]Steal the salt. Bind the grimoire. Escape the male.


Daughters of Askara, Book 3

When an exchange of stolen goods in the Feriana marketplace turns sour, Isabeau stumbles from the encounter bruised and laden with new orders to complete an even larger heist. With her child’s life at stake, there’s no room for error—or allies. Armed with a lethal book of spells, she strikes a dangerous bargain with Roland Bernhard. Steal a shipment of salt from the Feriana colony, and she’ll have her freedom—and her daughter. It’s all she’s ever wanted. At least it was…until she runs into Dillon Preston.

Dillon is out of commission after a mine explosion, and itching for a distraction. He gets it when the female who saved his leg arrives at the colony with nothing but flimsy excuses and even flimsier attire. She’s after something, but is it him—or the salt? Trapped in a desperate bid to gain true freedom, Isabeau is willing to sacrifice her life for her daughter’s, but Dillon has other plans. He wants a package deal, and he’s not willing to lose either female, even if it means the future king of Sere’s head will roll.

Warning: This title contains a heroine desperate to save her daughter and a hero determined to make them a family. It also includes wings, horns and other assorted appendages. 

To celebrate, I’m having a contest. Leave a comment on this post.
I’ll pick a winner Tuesday, July 3rd!
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Published on June 26, 2012 06:26

June 25, 2012

Grave Tells Gives Eversworn 4.5 Hearts

Grave Tells has done some great reviews of my books over the past few months. This morning they released a new one, this time for Eversworn. :D


Eversworn takes you even deeper into the realm of Askara and presents more characters to fall in love with. It’s a story of overcoming a dark past, learning to trust, learning about the person you are at your core, and fighting for love. If you’re a fan of fantasy romance, you must go read this!


You can read the full review here.

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Published on June 25, 2012 11:27

Eversworn Blog Tour

It’s that time again–time to hit the blog tour trail. Here are a few of the places you can find me over the next couple of weeks:


June 25-July 9


June 25 Advance Review
Gravetells.com


June 27 Interview
http://ravencraftrealm.blogspot.com/


June 28 Promo
http://readingonthewildside.blogspot.com
 

June 30 Guest blog
Read 2 Review
http://read2review.com

July 2 Promo,
Paranormal Romantic Suspense,
http://sjclarke.com/blog-2/


July 3 Guest blog
Ex Libris –
www.stella-exlibris.com

July 4 Guest blog
Ramblings From This Chick
http://ramblingsfromthischick.blogspot.com/

July 7 Review
Books, Books, and More Books
http://dream-reader-dreamer2229.blogspot.com/

Review mid July 18
Julie Opipari
Manga Maniac Cafe
www.mangamaniaccafe.com

Review and Guest blog
http://rubys-books.blogspot.com/

Promo
A Dream Within A Dream
http://adreamwithindream.blogspot.com

Promo
I Just Wanna Sit Here and Read!
http://www.sithereandread.com/

Interview
Romance Book Junkies
http://romancebookjunkies.blogspot.com

Promo
JeanzBookReadNReview
http://jeanzbookreadnreview.blogspot.co.uk/

Promo
Howling Books and Design
http://howlingbooksanddesign.blogspot.ca/


Promo
My Guilty Obsession
http://myguiltyobsession.blogspot.com/

Promo
Charlene Blogs:
http://CharleneAWilsonBlog.blogspot.com

Promo
A Bibliophile’s Thoughts on Books
http://bibliophilesthoughtsonbooks.blogspot.com/

Promo
The Dark Phantom review
www.thedarkphantom.wordpress.com

Promo Lisa’s World of Books
www.lisasworldofbooks.net

Promo
Fictional Candy
http://www.fictionalcandy.com/

Paranormal Cravings Book Reviews
www.paranormalcravings.blogspot.com

Amber @ Fall Into Books
http://falln2books.blogspot.com

Avril’s Blog
http://avril-ashton.blogspot.com/

Kay Dee
http://www.kaydeeroyal.blogspot.com

The Wormhole
www.wormyhole.blogspot.com 

Butterfly-o-Meter Books
http://butterflyometerbooks.blogspot.com/ 

Saph’s Book Blog
http://saphsbookblog.blogspot.com/

Interview
Books Books Magical Fruit
http://booksbooksthemagicalfruit.blogspot.com/

The Black Raven’s Erotic Café
http://theblackraveneroticcafe.com/?page_id=6

The Full Fang
http://www.bitten2ice.com/TheFullFang 

For more information, get all the details here .
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Published on June 25, 2012 00:15

June 24, 2012

Soul Weaver Excerpt

August 7th will be here before we know it. Until then, here’s an excerpt from Soul Weaver.


Soft snores carried from the darkness on Nathaniel’s right. Weak sunlight slanted over his shoulder, cut through the gloom, and illuminated the weathered face of his mark. The mattress squeaked as the man rolled onto his back. His tangled limbs twitched in peaceful sleep.


 


Nathaniel traced the cool metal handle of his shears, sheathed in their fitted holster.


 


The black marker on the man’s soul pulsated, calling to Nathaniel. The only sounds came from a pay-per-view skin flick he’d already seen playing in other seedy motel rooms just like this one.



He crossed the room and glanced at the nightstand.


 


Pictures lay spread like glossy fans across the chipped laminate surface. He glanced away. Soon he’d know the story behind those photos as well as he knew the man who had taken them.


 


Knocking a fly from his ear, Nathaniel sent the pest zooming around the room in circles.


 


He lifted his pendant over his head and tucked it into his pocket.  His skin rippled and faded to the golden outline of his spiritual form. He winced as the psychic bond between a soul harvester and his prey snapped into place. A deluge of sickened thoughts branded their knowledge inside Nathaniel’s skull as he slid his fingers into the handle of his shears.


 


“She wanted it. Begged for it. Should’ve made it last. Damn camera. Ran out of batteries. Now I won’t remember it all.”


 


Nathaniel’s gut clenched. It never got easier. Each time his stomach roiled as bad as the last, maybe worse. His mark’s twisted pleasure trickled through their connection. He shivered with loathing and tightened his grip.


 


“They’ll never know. No one ever knows. I liked the look of that blonde. Could’ve had them both. Be ready next time. She’ll still be there. Waiting for me.”


 


“Enough.” Snarling through gritted teeth, Nathaniel made his accounting. “You’ve taken innocence not yours to have, and you will be held responsible for that loss.”


 


He braced his hand over the man’s heart. Steady thumps pulsed beneath his palm as he sank intangible fingers into the man’s chest. There, on his left. He’d found it. Miniscule thing it was.


 


Cradled inside the man’s rib cage, Nathaniel’s quarry clung to its host.


 


The marked soul slithered right outside Nathaniel’s grasp. Sinking his wrist inside the man’s body, he growled his frustration. Disgusted, he plunged deeper, opened his fingers wider, and sifted through organs and tissue until his fist closed over his prey.


 


The man’s eyes popped open wide, his gaze searching the room. “W-who’s there?”


 


His feeble swipes through the air might as well have swatted flies. The urge to take a pound of flesh from the man’s wrinkled hide tempted Nathaniel, but he could only touch fellow spirits without his pendant to ground him, to wrap him in flesh like the odd gift to the world that he was.


 


On a choked sob, the man began begging for pity, for leniency, for mercy.


 


The words should have burned his forked tongue as he spoke them. Instead, he blathered on about things he’d left undone, words he’d left unsaid. As if he hadn’t ended lives while indulging his sick tastes. Without a thought about who his victims left behind as he silenced their voices.


 


A tic worked in Nathaniel’s cheek. He would not snap. This death would not be the one to break him, though if it did, he could hardly be blamed. Teach a man to kill, and he lusted for blood. Show him how scales are balanced, and he will discover how they can be tipped.


 


He chuckled darkly as hatred unfurled in his chest. Pity had no place here. In any case, he’d run dry of that emotion long ago.


 


A twist of Nathaniel’s wrist pulled taut the length of soul writhing in his fist. His mark’s body strained and bowed off the bed in an effort to remain connected.


 


He snipped the man’s soul free with a quick clip of his shears, and the body fell in a limp heap against the mattress. His mark’s sightless eyes stared into nothing. His parted lips dry.


 


Holding the swath of soul at arm’s length, Nathaniel retrieved his pendant and threw the chain over his head. His skin prickled as he became corporeal. Once he shook off the sting, he reached for the short velvet pouch hanging from his belt. He freed it, forced the mouth open, and shoved the hand holding the blackened soul down the gullet of the bag. Familiar suction nursed his fingers as a vortex swirled around his hand and a portal swallowed his arm up to his elbow.


 


Heat singed his fingertips as his hand burst through the bottomless bag and into a soul pit.


 


He smelled flesh cooking and knew it was his. Of course, if he hadn’t worn his pendant, his soul would have been sucked into the bag—into Hell—too. Any spirit not tethered by a body would.


 


Considering a soul lost to the pits was a spirit lost for eternity, he’d suffer the burns any day.


 


Wrenching his arm free of the bag, he wiped the residue from his fingers on the bed’s soiled sheets. He cinched the ties, closed the bag, and reaffixed the pouch to his belt.


 


His shears still vibrated from the power that had radiated from his spiritual form. Holding their jaws open, he sliced through the air and opened a rift. He was intent on returning to his home, but his blood hummed from the kill and his mind itched for distraction. He took a step, and that same pale sliver of sunlight glinted off the toes of his boot.


 


His head was heavy, and lifting it was difficult. Through the crack in the curtains, the mortal world beckoned. He craved fresh air to clear his lungs, needed the feel of sunlight warm against his skin. He longed to walk among the living and leave the taint of death behind him for a while.


 


After exiting the motel, Nathaniel ambled through the parking lot and onto the crumbling sidewalk. Cold wind slashed his cheeks, numbed his face. Slush froze in the cracks and pried the concrete apart.


 


A rumbling growl overhead diverted his thoughts from the urban decay of the block where his latest mark had resided. Above him, a roiling blanket of clouds stretched across the horizon. He stumbled as he experienced the same instant of vertigo he always did when faced with the clouds’ darkened underbellies rather than their luminous crowns.


 


His steps slowed, giving him time to regain his balance. He touched his hip, feeling the reassuring presence of his shears and soul bag. Rubbing his palm across his pants, he knew there was no blood to wipe from his fingers. The stain ran deeper, having seeped into his soul and corroded it.


 


A truck sped past, spraying his pants with icy slush from the roadway. Nathaniel paused for a heartbeat before shaking the sludge off. His soaked pants slicked to his leg, and his boots sloshed on his next step.


 


He glared at the driver, but his lips parted when the truck’s front wheels locked, sending it skating across a patch of ice. He watched with morbid fascination as momentum carried the truck through the intersection and into oncoming traffic.


 


His shoulders tensing in anticipation, he cringed as the truck plowed into the side of a sleek van with a sickening crunch of steel on steel. Metallic screams filled his ears as both vehicles exploded through the guardrail and vanished from sight.


 


Silence engulfed the strip of asphalt where Nathaniel stood.


 


He wasn’t human. He had no duty to those people. He had done his job, collected his mark.


 


He swallowed hard. Help would come. Someone must have heard the cry of metal grinding over pavement. His fingers twitched with the urge to slice a rift. He should take his shears and leave.


 


The harvest was messing with his head, making him feel kinship with these mortals whose lives had spun from their control. Madness. This was insanity. He took a step and glanced around to prove he was alone. He was. He took another step, and another, until the pounding of his feet became a full-out run. He slid to a halt at the gap where twisted railing curled as if pointing a sharp finger down the slope and into a ravine.


 


He tore his gaze from the violence below to scan the turbulent skies, expecting the gloom to part and his angelic kin to descend. No light pierced the thunderheads. No peace settled into his bones at that stolen glimpse of home. Nothing happened. That delay meant one thing—there were survivors.


 


For now, the mortals would be left alone to live or die. Only then would angels intervene.


 


At the bottom of the ravine, the black truck flashed its silver underbelly. Its cab was crushed, the driver’s side door collapsed. Glass was strewn like glitter across the ground. The van slumped on its side, its front end an accordion of crumpled metal. Exhaust hissed from its bowels.


 


There were survivors? If not for the absence of his kin, Nathaniel wouldn’t have believed it. He shifted his weight and tested the incline. Brittle kudzu vines tangled around his boot on the first step.


 


His every step tampered with the natural balance of things. Death was inevitable.


 


Rolling his shoulder, he shook off the imagined burn of the implant heating beneath his skin. The sterling triquetra embedded to the left of his spine marked him as property of Delphi, the reigning governor of Hell. Part of Nathaniel’s initiation into soul harvesting had been a vow of service to Delphi. Dark vows stamped into his memory.


 


Forget all you know of Heaven, for you have forsaken it. Hell is your home now, and I am your new master. Mortals are ours to patrol and ours to punish. Form no attachments. Their lives are fleeting and intervention in their deaths is forbidden.


 


Nathaniel’s vows were sealed with blood—both his and Delphi’s. As the first fallen angel recruited for Delphi’s campaign against mortal corruption, Nathaniel wielded power second only to the master seraph. Unique even among his fallen brethren, Nathaniel was the Weaver of Souls.


 


A duty he would have never asked for and a title he would have never wanted.


 


But who among his brethren would he burden with his tasks? None deserved to know how mortal souls felt once they had been stripped bare, shredded, and repurposed. Harvesters wore their wings with gratitude. Wings he had woven, wings fashioned from the souls of the damned.


 


Yet if Nathaniel did more than watch this tragedy unfold from the sidelines, Delphi would retrieve the shears and toss him in one of the soul pits burning on Hell’s borderlands for eternity.


 


Mercy was not in Delphi’s—or his—vocabulary. Justice, vengeance…those were words they knew. Why should they care if a few mortals faded from existence? After all, the human body served only as temporary housing for the soul. Their forms weren’t meant to weather eternity.


 


He should leave, not continue his downward slide into the ravine, toward the wounded mortals, but he wanted…what? A bird’s-eye view of a different kind of death than the sort he dealt in? He had been the cause of it often enough to know with unfailing accuracy how those final living moments would play out.


 


He leaped the last several feet to the bottom and sucked in a reverent breath at the sight before him. A wavering aura bathed his bleak surroundings in sunset colors.


 


Homesickness speared through his chest. Aeristitia.


 


Except that in Heaven’s first city, this sight would go unnoticed. When standing on streets constructed from flawless clouds set in gilded skies, even the shimmer of rainbow souls paled in comparison to their surroundings. Streets cobbled with golden pavers, houses erected of snowy marble, even the trees were frozen in eternal bloom. Aeristitia was called Paradise for a reason.


 


Nathaniel’s new existence was monochromatic by comparison. Here on Earth, everything seemed muted, darker, and hungrier. He’d grown used to it, though, and learned to thrive amid the mortal chaos. What that said about him, he didn’t want to know. What he did know was that he hadn’t seen anything so beautiful in an achingly long time.


 


Circling the van, he found the aura’s source lying in an ever-widening puddle of her own blood. The nape of his neck prickled and he returned his gaze skyward. He couldn’t be caught here. The loss of his shears would cripple him. Assuming his shears were all Delphi took from him. His life, well…he wasn’t worth much without those shears.


 


As he turned on his heel to go, the woman’s pained whimper froze him in place.


 


“Please…help.” Her chest rattled when she spoke.


 


Those two words shattered something in his chest. How easily he’d dismissed his mark’s pleas, but hers sank hooks into his heart and tugged. He glanced over his shoulder and found he couldn’t look away a second time. Approaching her with caution, Nathaniel gave himself time to reconsider. Dropping to his haunches, he stared at her aura’s unfamiliar spectrum. His job meant dealing with only the foulest offerings of mankind. Her purity of spirit humbled him.


 


The woman’s eyes blinked open. Her irises were the color of dark chocolate. “You’re…an angel?”


 


“Afraid not.” He hadn’t been one in too many of man’s ages to count.


 

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Published on June 24, 2012 15:54

What Would You Like to Know?

I’m working on the Araneae glossary that will be included in Vaughn’s book, A Feast of Souls. Any terms you want defined? Pronunciation questions you’d like to ask? Should I include major characters? What would you like to know? Ask and ye shall receive. ;)

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Published on June 24, 2012 14:11

June 23, 2012

RT Book Reviews Gives Eversworn 4 Stars!

This review came as an awesome surprise today. My thanks to the marvelous Victoria Miller, who was quick with her phone and took this picture for me. :D


 


[image error]



I have always had a soft spot for Dillon, and I’m so excited for his book to be released. :D

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Published on June 23, 2012 16:35

June 19, 2012

Soul Weaver Now Available on Amazon!

I’ve had several emails about when Soul Weaver would be available for pre-order on Amazon. I wasn’t sure when it would  appear, and today POOF! It popped up while I was grabbing a copy of the one Mercy Thompson  book I can’t find in my Kindle library.


So here it is: http://www.amazon.com/Soul-Weaver-ebook/dp/B008CJ2446/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1340134569&sr=8-2&keywords=soul+weaver


It also looks like I have a new release date. Instead of August 1st, this says August 7th.

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Published on June 19, 2012 12:38

Lucky 7

This is a fun game called Lucky 7, and Annie Nicholas tagged me and six other authors to play.
Here’s how it works:

Post seven lines from a current work by following these rules:
Go to page 7 or 77 in your current manuscript (fiction or non-fiction)
Go to line 7
Post the next 7 lines or sentences on your blog as they are (no cheating, please!)
Tag 7 other authors to do the same


So here’s my Lucky 7 from my June release, Eversworn.


Tugging at my collar, I swallowed past the sensation of her strong fingers wrapped about my throat. As acting consul of Askara, she’d wring my neck for this betrayal, and I would deserve it.

Living at the consulate with her, putting my healing craft to good use, helping ex-slaves begin new lives in either the city of Feriana or its colony…I loved that life. And it was all a lie.


Glamour crackled over my skin, but the only things I concealed were the black spell-crafting runes inked from my forearms to my fingertips. Still, the static shock of power coating my skin led others to believe my concealment was more than cosmetic, a misconception I let flourish.


Given my consulate position, most assumed I was a female Evanti hiding in plain sight.

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Published on June 19, 2012 05:32