GIVEAWAY REMINDERS

GIVEAWAY REMINDERS:

The Reading Cafe currently has 2 giveaways in progress.

Just a friendly reminder in case you haven’t entered.

 

∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞GIVEAWAY NUMBER ONE∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞

THE READING CAFE is offering a GIVEAWAY to one  of our eligible members.  A copy of Johanna Lindsey’s WHEN PASSION RULES-will be offered. James is the cover model for When Passion Rules.   To be eligible for the giveaway:

1.  You must be a member of THE READING CAFE website.

2.  You MUST post a comment on James Rizzo Interview Post.

3.  Between February 6 and February 12, 2012, all members who post a comment on the interview with James Rizzo, will be eligible for the giveaway.  At the end of the posted dates, a name will be drawn from all of the eligible entries, and the winner will be notified.

CLICK HERE: James Rizzo Interview

∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞GIVEAWAY NUMBER TWO∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞

For our Grand Reveal…we are offering a GIVEAWAY… for every member who registers between February 3 and February 20, your name will be entered into a draw for a giveaway. For those who previously registered prior to February 3, your name will ALSO be entered into the giveaway. (Canada and US only)

ALSO…recommend THE READING CAFÉ to one of your friends….let us know their name, and if they register between February 3 to 20th, you will receive another entry into our Grand Reveal GIVEAWAY. (Canada and US only)

First Prize:  $15 ecard to either Amazon or Kobo plus a book

Second Prize:  A book

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Thea Harrison Exclusive

Thea Harrison Exclusive!

Thea Harrison today decided to treat her fans with a sneak peek at her Natural Evil novella to be released on Samhain -March 20th.  Not only do we get an excerpt, but she just release the hot hot cover for Natural Evil.

 

Thea Harrison: We’re in the copyedit stage for the novella, so I can’t post much–but I did want to give you a small tidbit from NATURAL EVIL.  Introducing Luis and Claudia:

The woman came down on her hands and knees in front of his face.  “Hey,” she said.  Her voice was like the rest of her:  strong, bright, and clean.  “My name is Claudia Hunter.  Can you talk to me?  I’d like you to tell me who you are, and who did this to you.”

            He ignored her.

            She said telepathically, Cat got your tongue?  Come on, say something.  Let me know you understand me.

            He closed his eyes.

            “Don’t have anything to say?  You were such a good boy earlier when you didn’t bite me.  What a sweet, good boy, yes you are.”  She paused then crooned, “I think I’m going to name you Precious.”

            His eyes flared open and shifted toward her in offended startlement.

            The woman’s own gaze widened.  Her eyes were gorgeous.  She whispered, “Bloody hell.  You are Wyr.”

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Dark Desire by Christine Feehan Re-release

DARK DESIRE by Christine Feehan 

Dark Desire by Christine Feehan

NEW COVER RELEASE

The re-release of Christine Feehan’s 2nd book in the Dark Series of Carpathian Novels –DARK DESIRE– is set for July 31, 2012.

The stranger silently summoned her across the continents, across the seas. He whispered of eternal torment, of endless hunger . . . of dark, dangerous desires. And somehow American surgeon Shea O’Halloran could feel his anguish, sense his haunting aloneness, and she ached to heal him, to heal herself.

Drawn to the far Carpathian mountains, Shea found a ravaged, raging man, a being like no other. And her soul trembled. For in his burning eyes, his icy heart, she recognized the beloved stranger who’d already become part of her. The imperious Carpathian male had compelled Shea to his side. But was she to be his healer. . . or his prey? His victim . . . or his mate? Was he luring her into madness . . . or would his dark desire make her whole?

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TEN KISSES TO EXCITE

 

TEN KISSES TO EXCITE

Valentine’s Day is fast approaching, and we are offering up some kissing advice to excite you and your partner.

Does kissing your spouse mean a quick peck on the lips before you leave for the office? Spice up your love life with these 10 new kisses to try. Get ready to pucker up! By Good Housekeeping.

 

1. The Butterfly Kiss

Bring your face very close to that of your partner and then flutter your eyelashes rapidly. For the ultimate fringe effect, glue on a pair of temporary false eyelashes and wink away.

 

2. The Earlobe Kiss

Suck your partner’s earlobe, taking care not to make any loud noises or sudden movements that might startle him. Bonus points if you whisper something sexy.

 

3. The Finger Kiss
While relaxing with your partner, take his/her fingers and suck on them slowly

 

4. The Foot Kiss


Gently suck on your partner’s toes and then kiss his foot very lightly. If you or your spouse is self-conscious about odor, take a relaxing shower or bath together beforehand.

5. The Forehead Kiss
Sweetly brush your lips across your partner’s forehead.

 

6. The Freeze Kiss

Put an ice cube into your mouth and kiss your spouse, while passing the cube to his mouth with your tongue. The icy sensation will give you both a pleasant shock.

7. The Hot and Cold Kiss
Lick your partner’s lips to make them warm and then blow on them to make them cold.

8. The Lip-Sucking Kiss
Suck on your partner’s lower lip while kissing to break up your usual routine.

9. The Nip Kiss

Slightly nibble on your partner’s lips while kissing. Take it slow and easy to determine a pleasurable, not painful, amount of pressure for the object of your affection.

 

10. The Trickle Kiss
Take a small sip of your favorite drink and then trickle it into your partner’s mouth while kissing.

 

 

http://ca.shine.yahoo.com/photos/10-kisses-you-ve-never-tried-1328208515-slideshow/1-butterfly-kiss-photo-2234967-222000273.html

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Kelley Armstrong Exclusive

Kelley Armstrong today gave her fans some fabulous news. Women of the Otherworld ends with her next novel “Thirteen“. But she has received permission from her publishers to make all hardcover books a collectors edition for “Thirteen, which will have bonus material. The bonus material will be very short story about Women of the Otherworld’s greatest heroine, the one who started it all “Elena”. Here is the post from Kelley herself.

Kelley Armstrong – Febuary 9, 2012
If you’ve followed publishing at all in the last couple of years, you know the industry has been grappling with the explosion of ebooks. What price should they be? If they’re more than the mass-market, that hardly seems fair. But if they’re significantly less than a hardcover, that doesn’t seem fair either. Maybe we can release them a few months after the hardcover, like pay-per-view release? But is that fair? How do you juggle the two readerships (print and e-book) without making either feel like they’re getting a raw deal?

There’s no easy answer. I do know, though, that as an author with hardcover releases, my readers often wonder at the price discrepancy between the hardcover and ebook. They want to support me by buying hardcover and they want the book for their shelf, but what “extra” are they getting to justify the price difference? Usually nothing except the physical copy. With the Otherworld finale, though, I saw an opportunity to add a little something Smiley After all, it is the last book. Let’s make that hardcover special.

After much negotiating, we’ve decided to make all Thirteen hardcovers a collector’s edition with bonus material. They’ll be priced the same as regular hardcovers, but the story will be “bookended” with the character who started it all–Elena. The hardcover will reprint the prologue from Bitten, along with a note from me about the genesis of the series. Then it will end with a brand new story about Elena and the Pack after Thirteen, along with yet another note from me, discussing the end of the series.

The Elena story is, of course, the big bonus. It’ll be called “From Russia, With Love” (yes, they let me keep that title Smiley ) It’s a hefty story (about 7500 words or 25 pg). I didn’t want to just write a little epilogue scene. Elena and the Pack deserve more, so I gave them an actual story.

That’s the plan, then. I’m thrilled that my publishers allowed me to do this and I hope readers will enjoy this little extra.

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DARING YOU TO READ

Every Thursday, Tynga at Tynga’s Reviews hosts an event entitled “Daring You To Read”. The premise involves ‘daring’ the readers to go back and read one of their favorite novels. The Reading Cafe is offering up a dare. It may be a difficult dare for some, or for most, but the book we are daring you to read is ACHERON by Sherrilyn Kenyon.

ACHERON is one of those books, where you either love it or hate it, but in the grand scheme of all things Dark Hunter, ACHERON is a necessary read.

Acheron is a difficult book to read, especially the first 2/3-the first chapter in Acheron’s life.  The abuse and torture of such a pure soul, will leave the reader anxious, angst ridden and requiring stock in Kleenex tissues.  Sherrilyn does NOT hold anything back when she writes about the abuse Acheron has endured. We have discussed ACHERON on other sites, and found there are two types of readers with ACHERON:  1.  They read it, cried, sobbed and required therapy when all was read and done.  2.  They quit reading The Dark Hunter series-never to continue.  Where do you stand on reading ACHERON?

Sherrilyn Kenyon wrote the WHY behind ACHERON:

From the desk of Sherrilyn Kenyon-THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY: First let me say that I’m more than aware of the fact that the ancient calendar differed dramatically from our own. But since I’m dealing with a time of unrecorded history, I used our calendar for the dates to allow the reader to have an idea of when things were taking place. I hope for those of you who are sticklers for such things that you’ll understand why it was necessary.

That being said, I’ve also taken license with how things were in the ancient world in the beginning. I’ve structured the world of ancient Greece and Atlantis around a later time period and given them more technological advances than what the historical record shows for the true time of when the book is set.

In my world, they had a lot of nifty toys until Atlantis was sank into the ocean and Apollymi’s wrath sent mankind back into the Stone Age. This is also dealt with and explained in more detail in the latter part of the book.

It’s so strange now to have this tale written. I can still remember the first time I sat down to write a Dark-Hunter novel. Ash was one of the original characters, but back in the day, he was actually the leader of the Daimons and not the Dark-Hunters.

He’s changed a lot over the years, but the one thing that hasn’t ever changed is my love for him.

For my normal readers, I want to warn you that the first half of this book is very different from the previous ones. Ash’s human life is grim and it’s harsh. I promised you the whole sordid truth of it and that’s exactly what I’ve written. I’ve pulled no punches.

As a survivor of childhood abuse myself, I know the strength it takes to try and silence the voices in your head and heart that haunt you long after you’ve broken free. It’s not an easy thing to do and just when you think you’ve buried those demons, they come back for you with a vengeance.

It takes a lot strength and courage to trust a stranger when you’ve been harmed by the very ones who were supposed to protect you. But the one thing I’ve learned is that it can be done. That all of us are worthy and that we all matter. To this, I can never thank my husband enough for being the man he appeared to be both inside and out. Thank you, baby, for saving me, and for showing me that there are people in the world like you.

As my friend Tish taught me to say: Digmus Sum. Thank you Tish.

And a couple of QUOTES from ACHERON by Sherrilyn Kenyon:

pg 662-663: She reached down to brush the hair back from his forehead. Ash buried his face against her thigh and nipped the tender flesh there as her hand touched his cheek.

“Please don’t pull my hair”, he breathed in a ragged whisper, now wanting anything to spoil this moment.

“I would never hurt you, Ash.”

pg. 680: “Yes,” he breathed, reaching down so he could stroke her while she rode him slow and easy. His throat tight, her gentleness succeeded in breaking him where the beatings never had.

One small tear slid from the corner of his right eye. Slamming them shut, he surrendered himself to her. Right now, this moment, she owned him in a way no one ever had before. NO, she didn’t own him. He gave himself to her, and for the first time, he understood the difference.

*sniff…hands everyone a tissue*….Now, where was I?-Sandy

You can find Tynga at : Tynga’s Reviews

 

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READER SHAMING-Romance Genre

An Article by Sarah W at Smart Bitches/Trashy Books Feb 6, 2012

Another day, another article about genre fiction, including romance, selling quite happily in digital format. And the reason?

Wait for it….

Reader embarrassment!

Kindle-owning bibliophiles are furtive beasts. Their shelves still boast classics and Booker winners. But inside that plastic case, other things lurk. Sci-fi and self-help. Even paranormal romance, where vampires seduce virgins and elves bonk trolls.

The ebook world is driven by so-called genre fiction, categories such as horror or romance. It’s not future classics that push digital sales, but more downmarket fare.

Lovely.

Here’s the thing:

I hear from many readers weekly that they do feel embarrassment about their love of romance. Sometimes they are conflicted about finding that their feelings of loving what they read are at cross-purposes with their feelings of dislike or even revulsion when they identify problematic elements within it. Others say they feel shame and embarrassment about what other people say or think about the romance genre, or better yet, the people who read it.

The people who write to me about these subjects do not ever, and I mean EVER, include a statement that they are embarrassed because they are reading books that aren’t any good.

They usually go on and on about the books they did find incredible, the ones that made their brains fire up and made them stay up all night long, and how they love finding new books to enjoy.

Never once do they say they are embarrassed because the romances they read aren’t any good.

It’s the opposite: they know romances that are high quality narrative stories, and they can identify books that made them think and consider abstract conflicts and emotional tangles as much as any other lauded piece of fiction.

They are embarrassed and ashamed by the reputation of the genre among those people who care about what it is you’re reading. They feel awkward about the packaging, the covers and the descriptions, the bare chests and the o-face heroines depicted in lurid colors.

They may not want to defend the genre to anyone, and thus hide it and keep it an intimate secret.

I personally don’t feel any shame about what I read, even though I’m still asked by people whether I read “other things,” (so my brain doesn’t atrophy, I am guessing). I have romance everywhere in my home, and I’ll recommend a romance to anyone who asks me.

So when someone sends me an email, begging me not to publish it (which I wouldn’t) but wanting to share their conflicted love and shame about the romance they read, I don’t yell at them that they should stand up and defend themselves. Often they are thanking me for running this site where so many romance-reading book addicts hang out (my response: Just wait until you see how many romance communities there are online now. We’re freaking everywhere.) There is often a sense of relief and comfort in finding people with whom they can talk about their romances.

Thus every time one of these articles comes out that reinforces all the negatives that romance readers face when they select the reading material they love, it makes me want to yell louder because the key fallacy is the repeated supposition that romance isn’t any good and that’s why people are embarrassed about it.

No one should be ashamed of what they read – and no one should be made to feel ashamed about what they read. But look, here’s another article that rests an argument on exactly that kind of reader shaming. This article today does it: Ebooks sell because people are embarrassed that they love crap. Digital readers proliferate because they allow privacy. (NB: this isn’t actually true because buying a digital book ties your name and credit card transaction to the title purchased, a data point that can be shared with bloody anyone).

Articles like these imply that everyone is ashamed of their reading when they read romance or any genre fiction for that matter. Terms like “boundless idiocy” and “God help us” and “reading public in private is lazy and smutty.”

I am not an idiot, I am not lazy, and neither are you. None of this is true.

But there are many readers who do judge themselves harshly for liking romance, and these are the types of articles that make me infuriated on their behalf, which is why I don’t shut up about them, and ignore them. Some readers internalize these messages, feeding their own shame with the reinforced idea that they should be embarrassed. And that is why I yell.

Julia, who reviewed Everything I Know About Love, I Learned From Romance Novels recently, saidat the end of her reviewNever feel guilty for reading something. A book can mean anything to anyone. 

Romance means a lot to people who love it, even those readers who harbor shame and embarrassment for loving the genre so much. Articles like this one infuriate me because they are saying someone should feel bad for loving romance, that readers should feel ashamed that they enjoy books that this writer thinks are dross.

No. No, you should not. Read what you like, then read more of it, and go on with your badass self.

 

The Reading Cafe would like to thank Sarah at Smart Bitches/Trashy Books for the authorization to repost this article.  Sarah is the author of Beyond Heaving Bosoms and Everything I Know About Love I Learned From Romance Novels.   You can find Sarah W. at : Smart Bitches/Trashy Books

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The Wood Queen by Karen Mahoney

Karen “Kaz” Mahoney’s new release:  The Wood Queen–February 2012

 

To keep her best friend, Navin, from being killed at the hands of vicious wood elves, Donna Underwood stole the elixir of life. Now she’s facing an alchemist tribunal while her mother lies dying, succumbing to the elven curse that shattered her mind. In desperation, Donna seeks an audience with Aliette, the fierce and manipulative Wood Queen, who offers a deal: if Donna can use her strange and burgeoning powers to help the wood elves, Aliette will free her mother from the curse.

Along with Navin and Xan, the half-fey guy she’s falling for, Donna struggles to unlock the secrets of her iron tattoos in time to save her mother’s life. But some secrets are better left untold…

http://www.kazmahoney.com/novels/the-wood-queen/

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karen Mahoney is the author of The Iron Witch, the first book in a trilogy that continues in 2012 with The Wood Queen. She has also published stories about a kick-ass teen vampire called Moth in various anthologies, and there is a Moth novel coming in September 2012 called Falling to Ash. Karen is British and currently lives near London with way too many books and comics, though she dreams of one day living in Boston. She doesn’t mind if you call her Kaz.

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