mercredi 5 février 2014


150

About B.A Morton
Born in the North East of England, B.A.Morton writes across a number of genres including crime, romance, horror and historical fiction. After a twenty year civil service career, she and her family escaped the rat race and relocated to the remote beauty of the Northumberland National Park. She now works part time in the village GP surgery and lives in a cottage built on the remains of a medieval crypt. Her debut novel “Mrs Jones” a fast paced, romantic, crime thriller set in New York, was runner up in the Yeovil Literary Prize 2011, published by Taylor Street Publishing and closely followed by the sequel “Molly Brown”, and the first in a medieval trilogy “Wildewood Revenge”. Her latest book “Bedlam” is a psychological/horror/thriller.

150
About Bedlam
Joe loves Kit. Everyone thinks she’s dead. Joe knows she’s not.
If you lost the love of your life, how far would you go to get them back?
Detective Joe McNeil would do absolutely anything.
When Joe breathes life into a crime scene victim, he discovers what anything really means.
Nell will use whatever is necessary to ensure she survives, including Joe. Is she really a victim or merely the weapon being wielded by a much more cunning foe?
Against the background of a multiple murder investigation, Joe struggles between his love for missing Kit and his growing obsession with the enigmatic Nell. Plunged headlong into a spiralling nightmare of kidnap, murder and betrayal, his relentless search for the truth jeopardises his career, his sanity and his life.
But for Nell, the risk is even greater.

A haunting tale of obsessive love, ultimate sacrifice and deadly consequences


Selling the Imaginary House
I was distracted by a recent discussion regarding sales. More specifically, book sales and how to stack the odds in your favour when writing your “best seller”. It got me thinking about the advice given when selling a house and how strangely relevant it is. Both start with a plot and when we write, we are, after all, creating a property - a building to house the imagination.
Some of us may follow set plans, start, middle and ending all established from the outset. The timber framed kit house formula. It works; it’s effective and particularly useful if you’re planning a series, an estate of imaginary houses, numbers 1-6 Adventure Drive. Others may adopt the strategy of the weaver bird, skilled builders of fine structures. You marvel at their work and wonder how such a delicate structure can survive and protect its contents. Of course the bird knows what it’s doing, but it’s not obvious to the onlooker, to the reader who is simply enchanted by the skill. And then we have the beavers and their precariously placed lodges. The constant battle against the elements to shore up the holes in the plot, contain the runaway storyline. Diligence and constant maintenance win the day, but will the building ever be fully complete? Will the story leak out on its own?

You’ve followed advice and built according to the market. You’ve ignored the lure of the mansion, the trillion word doorstop, that only a minority of insomniacs will be inclined to invest their money and time in. You’ve also steered away from the quirky windmill. Yes, you love windmills, but reluctantly accept that for most buyers, those pesky sails would be a problem. You’ve settled on that tried and trusted three bed semi. Romance on the first floor, Crime on the ground floor, Horror in the cellar, and with an eye on a possible series, plenty room for expansion. So, you’ve built your dream house. In your opinion it’s the best house on the street, the best book on the shelf, and everyone will want it...won’t they? Not necessarily, it’s a buyer’s market after all. So what else can you do?

De-clutter - All that stuff, all that unnecessary prose smothering your wonderful creation. Do yourself a favour, get rid. Hire a skip, or a red pen. Engage the services of the delete key and if you can’t bear to see your bric-a-brac, your endless waffling consigned to the tip, hire a house clearer or an editor to do it for you.
De-personalise – I’m talking curtain swags and crocheted loo roll covers, acid green wallpaper and shag-pile carpets. You might love these things, but remember, this marvellous structure you’ve proudly built isn’t just to house your imagination. You have to leave a little room for the reader too. So, don’t over describe, leave the vital statistics of the hero to the readers imagination and you’ll find your property appeals to a far wider audience. Don’t underestimate your readers by overwriting. Allow them to discover, to work it out for themselves.

That something special - Okay, so you’ve done what you can. You have what the market wants. It’s freshly tidied, awash with magnolia paint and the smell of ground coffee and home baked bread. Trouble is, everyone else on the road, the bookshelf, the genre has followed the same advice, so what makes your gem stand out from the crowd? It’s that “thing” that twist, that unique aspect and if you’ve got it, you’d better make sure everyone knows about it. Sea views, quirky provenance, marvellous architecture, killer plot. Whatever it is, you’ve got to advertise it, give all those buyers a taste of what they’re missing and that’s where the blurb comes in. It’s the sneak preview, the seduction, the big sell. Your house may be in the estate agents window, your book up there on Amazon but you need to find that hook, and you’d better make sure it’s a good one.

Kerb appeal - You’ve done all of the above. Your house of imagination is the best it can be, you know it is, you believe in it. There’s one last thing you need to do to get people to agree with you and open the gate and come in. Remember you’re in a row of other semis. You might think all houses look the same. They don’t have to. It’s time to create your cover. A cover to draw the eye and tempt a buyer to read the blurb that will draw them into the property. So they’ll believe, as you do, that this is the best house on the street, the best book on the shelf. A cover isn’t meant to tell the story, remember the de-clutter rule - less is more. Allow your reader some imagination. Set the right mood and make sure the genre is clear.
Sell – Finally it’s out there, you’ve ticked all the boxes, you’ve given yourself the best chance possible...now all you need to do is sit back and count the sales...erm...not quite. Make yourself a coffee or a stiff drink and get ready for the hardest part of all...promotion!

We can’t all have best sellers, but we can make sure our house of imagination is the best on the street.


This giveaway is international For a chance to win one of five mobi copies of Bedlam and one paperback copy of Bedlam The winner will be announced at the end of the tour.

 a Rafflecopter giveaway © 2014 MicrosoftTermsPrivacy & cookiesDevelopersEnglish (United Kingdom)
And to further host the 'Bedlam' tour ...

http://darkscreambooktours.com/wp-content/uploads/150.jpg%22

http://darkscreambooktours.com/wp-content/uploads/1505.png%22


http://darkscreambooktours.com/wp-content/uploads/newsletter-logo-2.jpg%22

dimanche 24 novembre 2013

'Unholy Alliance' by Juliet B Madison

Please check this out by my friend and fellow author Juliet B Madison. she's good and she deserves to be read! http://julietmadisoncrimeauthor.wordpress.com/unholy-alliance-official-release/

jeudi 14 novembre 2013

The new one from Tom Winton

https://www.facebook.com/ajax/messaging/attachment.php?attach_id=91a915b9166db7cfa4bb9cd7f5cea8f7&mid=mid.1384293422053%3A13a45d06fa02e3db89&hash=AQCy06Iyji7gbHcK

click on this link and it will take you to the page of Tom Winton's latest bestseller classic!

dimanche 10 novembre 2013

Buy Sorcerer ahead of official publication for only £1.99

Go yo payhip now at www.payhip.com/b/NXpF and buy 'Sorceror' for only £1.99 or equivalent in your own currency.