USA Today bestselling author

Author: Aimee Easterling (Page 21 of 29)

Giveaway for clean (and cleanish) fantasy lovers

Fantasy giveaway

Do you enjoy your fantasy without all the sex, drugs, and rock ‘n roll? (Ahem, I mean with little to no swearing and with only closed-door sex scenes.) If so, this giveaway is for you!

One lucky winner will nab a new Kindle preloaded with 30 hand-selected fantasy books…one of which is my Pack Princess (the second book in the Wolf Rampant series after the permafree Shiftless).

In the interest of full disclosure, you’ll also be added to those authors’ mailing lists…which you can immediately unsubscribe from if you want. Enjoy!

A conversation with Hunter

Poll results

Aimee: I polled my super-readers and 55% of them said they’d like to hear about your background. Do you think you have a short story in you?

Hunter: Sure.

Aimee to herself: Hmm, he sure is terse. But I’ll bet I can drag at least one anecdote of him.

One week of dictation later….

Aimee: I’m starting to get worried here. I’ve already pounded out 6,000 words…and we’re not quite to the one-quarter mark yet. I thought you said you’d give me a short story.

Hunter: I am.

Aimee: A short story is under 7,500 words. A novelette would be okay — that’s 7,500 words to 17,500 words. More than that and we’re in novella territory and pushing into my fall deadline for Wolf Landing.

Hunter: Do you want to hear this story or not?

Aimee [sighing]: Okay. What happened next?

***

In other words, your bonus short story is turning into a bonus novella and Wolf Landing might arrive in late fall rather than in mid fall. I swear it’s not my fault. Here, how about you take a poll to help me decide on a title so Hunter can make me ignore that request just like he did your previous one?

Lone Wolf Dawn is live!

Lone Wolf DawnI’m excited to announce that book two in the Alpha Underground series is live on Amazon! And as a thank you for my loyal fans, you can now catch up on Fen’s two-book adventure for a grand total of 99 cents. That’s right, Lone Wolf Dawn is 99 cents and Half Wolf is free for the next few days. So grab them both while they’re hot!

In case you’re wavering, I thought I’d regale you with a few highlights from the early reviews:

“Romance, passion, suspense, and intrigue all in one book” — happyreader10

“Fun, exciting, thoughtful, suspenseful” — L. Dalzell

“An awesome power packed modern story” — Diana P

“I have never read a book that makes me feel so much a part of their world.” — Celeste C. Crotts

“Rarely does a second book surpass the first, but this does.” — Amazon Customer

Not yet sold? Perhaps it will help to mention that both books are free to borrow with Kindle Unlimited.

I hope you enjoy the book as much as I enjoyed writing it! And now to dive into Hunter’s background as a Navy EOD (pun intended). His bonus story should go live sometime in August.

June SFF Recommendations

Star NomadA couple of days ago, I shared my favorite recent urban-fantasy reads. If you’re not set on a single genre, though, this trio is just as enticing…and also free with kindle unlimited.

The Mermaid’s Sister by Carrie Anne Noble is just one of those books that makes you feel *good* the whole time you’re reading it. I really enjoyed the hook, the characters, the simplicity and at the same time complexity of this fairy-tale world.

Timebound by Rysa Walker includes some of the best parts of The Time Traveler’s Wife (but the girl gets to be the time traveler!) combined with some of the best parts of Connie Willis’s Blackout (but without the excess of characters). Overall, a great young-adult read.

Star Nomad by Lindsay Buroker is a Star-Wars-esque book with just a little more depth. It’s fast, it’s fun, and the heroine is perfect. I read all three books in the current series over the course of a long weekend so clear your schedule before you pick up book one!

How about you? Read any good books lately?

June urban fantasy on Kindle Unlimited

Descended from DragonsI’ve read so many delightful books since my last recommendation post that I’m going to have to break my reviews into two installments. This one is the most relevant to most of you — strictly in the realm of urban fantasy. So, without further ado, let’s stuff your kindle!

Moon Born by Marina Finlayson is different, deep, and thought-provoking. This shifter novella has intense character development and top-notch worldbuilding…just like all of the author’s other books. (Yes, I’m a fan.)

Grim Haven by Jen Rasmussen is beautifully written and also entirely gripping. This urban-fantasy novel includes a great hook (a heroine who makes magic by writing story spells in her own blood), an intriguing evil to battle against (which I want to tell you about, but won’t for fear of spoiling the plot), and a light love story with an enticing romantic lead. Sold yet? Like all of the titles in this post, Grim Haven is free to borrow with Kindle Unlimited!

Descended from Dragons by Tricia Owens is everything urban fantasy should be…plus dragon shifters! I particularly loved the Las-Vegas-turned-magical world, complete with gargoyle shifter, cursed pawn shop, underage master magician, and werewolf who’s reluctant to shift to two legs. Try it, you won’t regret it.

Want up-to-the-minute information on books you really have to read? I’ve been posting my recommendations as I finish them on this facebook group. I hope you’ll drop by and share your own favorite reads!

Two tips for aspiring writers

Facebook request

Now that I’ve entered the digital age and joined facebook, I’m fielding a lot of questions from new and aspiring writers. Actually, some days seems like every one of my readers has a manuscript stashed away in their closet…which I shouldn’t find entirely surprising given the fact that my voracious reading habit is what made me want to write in the first place. If that sounds like you as well, here are a couple of answers to frequently asked questions to help steer you in the right direction.

Question #1: Will you read my unpublished book and give me advice?

First of all, I’m thrilled to hear you’re writing! That is definitely the best way to make your literary dreams come true. However, I’m afraid the sheer quantity of these requests has made me unable to check out anyone’s unpublished manuscripts. Instead, I recommend seeking out a writer’s group in your area or joining an online group like Critters.org.

That said, if you comment below with the link to your book once it’s live on Amazon, I’ll take a quick look if it’s enrolled in the Kindle Unlimited program. I’m a tough reader, but if your book floats my boat I’ll review it and share it just like I would any other title I truly enjoy. (If I don’t like it, I’ll probably quit on page two and will tell no one.)

Question #2: I’ve recently published my first book and am shocked by how hard it is to get visibility. Can you give me any advice on helping my labor of love see the light of day?

When you self-publish, you become a publisher as well as an author. The best resource I’ve found for learning that new skill set is Kboards Writer’s Cafe forum. Read the posts there for about a month and you’ll know most of what I know…then try it all out and see what works for you and your books. Good luck! It’s a slow uphill slog at first, but the payoff is worth it if you stick to your guns.

Do you have other questions about writing and publishing in the modern age? Comment below and I’ll do my best to answer. Thanks for reading!

24 Amazing Facts About Wolves

Black and white wolfHow much do you know about wolves? Here’s a quick summary of the most fascinating points from Barry Holstun Lopez’s Of Wolves and Men to get your imagination soaring.

 

Daily life

Wolves can live for a week without food and can travel for twenty miles without resting. In the winter, they average 30 miles traveled per day and one pack was reported traveling 125 miles in one day.

The lupine digestive system is made for feast and famine cycles. Wolves won’t eat for three or four days straight, then they’ll gorge on up to 18 pounds of meat, will nap for a few hours, then will gorge again.

A wolf’s diet consists of deer, moose, elk, musk ox, wild sheep, caribou, reindeer, beaver, buffalo, hares, marmots, mice, squirrels, grouse, geese, rabbits, fish, carrion, and insects.

 

What you see is what you get

Wolves aren’t nearly as big as you’d think from their massive paw prints (twice the size of a similar weight dog). Instead, they average 45 to 100 pounds in size, with smaller wolves living in warmer climates and bigger wolves living in colder climates.

An expert can tell a female wolf from a male wolf even from a distance. Females average five to ten pounds lighter, their hair is often redder, and their leg hairs are smoother.

Females are also faster than males. They grow up faster (two years versus three years) and run faster than males of a similar age.

 

Not every wolf is created equal

The Iranian wolf is small, doesn’t howl, and travels alone or in very small packs. Worldwide, there are 37 subspecies included in Canis lupus.

The canine lineage split away from the feline lineage when the former moved onto plains and lost their retractable claws. Yes, that does mean your cat has a reason to feel superior to your dog.

 

A wolf pack

The average wolf pack contains five to eight members, but packs ranging from two to thirty-six wolves have been sighted.

The pack often breaks up after breeding season, but they drift back together to raise the pups as a unit.

 

Alpha dominance

There are three hierarchies within a wolf pack — the male hierarchy, the female hierarchy, and a both-sex hierarchy. A wolf’s ranking is often age-based (the older you are, the more dominant you are).

The pack’s social structure can be entirely reversed in play. But the dominance hierarchy is important for determining breeding, feeding, travelling, and territorial maintenance.

In the wild, an alpha wolf scent marks or inspects previous scent marks every two minutes, hitting every point in the territory at least once every three weeks. Markings are concentrated at trail junctions and may be primarily used to help younger wolves map their range and to communicate with absent members.

The omega wolf is often the previous alpha or beta (second in command), and his treatment seems to coincide with how he treated his underlings in the past. If he was a good leader, he’s treated well; if a bad leader, he’s treated badly. The omega follows the pack at a distance and is sometimes allowed to help drive off trespassers or even to rejoin the pack.

 

Pups

Only one female in each pack has pups each year. This alpha female is in charge of choosing the denning site, which determines the entire pack’s territory for four to five weeks.

Wolves first howl at four weeks old…if they live that long. The species has a 60% mortality rate between birth and adulthood.

The average life span of a wolf in the wild is 8 to 9 years.

 

Wolf behavior

Howling is used to assemble the pack for a hunt, to call the alarm, to locate distant members, and even to synchronize moods from a distance.

A wolf’s howl can carry up to six miles.

Wolves don’t bark much. But when they do, a bark is a warning.

In hot weather, wolves lie in bodies of water to cool off and they also become nocturnal in the heat.

Some scientists believe that wolves hunt more by sound than by smell, although they can sometimes scent prey from a couple of miles distant. In fact, wolves aren’t that great at detecting faint odors, although they are quite adept at discerning subtleties within odors (your pee vs. my pee).

 

Bloodthirsty beasts

Wolves kill trespassers of their species, especially if the latter threaten their pups. They also kill pups who act strangely and they may kill injured pack mates. Despite the apparent bloodthirstiness of those observations, wolves usually work out issues ritualistically within the pack.

The Eskimo believe that certain wolves in a pack never kill while others specialize in small game.

 

Yes, almost every item on this list gave me an idea for a story! How about you?

A huge thank you to my awesome beta readers

Lone Wolf DawnMy crew of hard-working helpers seems to grow larger with every book I publish…and that’s a good thing! Rather than being redundant, I’ll send you back to my acknowledgments for the first book in the series for general thanks. The short version: my cover artist, editor, husband, father, and early readers continue to be the rising tide that floats my boat. (Look, I can mix metaphors on the blog and my editor can’t stop me!)

So what’s new? Three kind readers emailed to ask if they could beta read the second book in my Alpha Underground series, and after some soul-searching I decided to give it a try. I wasn’t a very nice author to beta read for, though. I didn’t write a finished book, send it to the copy editor, then pass the polished manuscript on to my volunteer crew. Instead, I self-edited as I went and sent a quarter at a time their way…ending each installment on a cliffhanger, of course. So each beta reader was forced to read a buggy novel over the course of two months — a recipe for disaster!

Despite the unfriendly format, my beta readers really came through. Two pointed out a problematic pizza parlor scene in which three things were happening at once. (I eventually managed to smooth it down to two.) There were house layout problems, wardrobe problems, and general flow problems. Overall, the book ended up in much better shape due to their hard work and keen eyes.

Which is all a long way of saying — thank you so much, Jen Thuline, Chuck Aylworth, and Sean Cleary for going dramatically above and beyond the call of duty! I hope you’ll give yourselves a pat on the back and a virtual gold star. It was a pleasure working with you.

Lone Wolf Dawn: Chapter 2, Scene 2

Still reading after the beginning of Chapter Two? Find out how the chapter ends…

Chapter 2 Scene 2

Werewolves should be burned, not buried.

The words bounced around inside my skull as I hovered just inside the tree line that ringed the backside of the cemetery. I was here to tell my father goodbye and to meet my mother for the first time in over a decade. But I kept getting stuck on the incongruity of the scene before me.

I could smell shifters. Even with my half-breed nose, the distinctive aroma of fur and fangs was heavy on the air, proving that I wasn’t the only werewolf who’d been invited to this solemn occasion.

And yet, there were no flames. No praise for the fallen and howls of tribute for the dead. No ceremonial pyre to burn away our pain and warm our lupine souls.

Instead, a woman who seemed far too young to be my mother held court in front of a huge statue of an angel—an angel for crying out loud—that rose out of a ring of daylilies surrounded by perfectly manicured grass. Even from a distance, Celia was so absurdly human that I couldn’t quite imagine having spent nine months growing from egg to fetus within her womb. High heels, a black suit with tight mid-length skirt, red lipstick. She looked the part of a bereaved human wife mourning her lost husband.

But no one would have mistaken her for the mate of a shifter.

We should talk to her, my wolf murmured. Get to know her.

Unconsciously, I rubbed at the mostly healed bullet wound midway up my left arm. But the real pain came from within my chest.

Even though I knew I was lying, I told myself the ache was just heartburn. No way would I acknowledge the truncated memories of Celia that flickered through my mind.

But the recollections of my father were harder to push aside.

Harbor, the werewolf half of my parental unit, had done his level best to turn us into a real family. Even twelve years later, I still vividly recalled my father kissing away my boo-boos and trying to do the same for the pinched expression that came onto his wife’s face every time she glanced in my direction.

It hadn’t worked, though. It had never worked.

Instead, Celia exploded into regular bouts of tears and rage. A one-night stand turned into a surprise pregnancy turned into a marriage—that Celia could accept. She could also overlook her husband’s tendency to don fur as long as he did so far out of sight and never mentioned the bestial half of his personality in her presence.

But when her young daughter’s eyes turned feral every time a sparrow alighted on the family’s bird feeder…. That was too much to handle.

I wasn’t even old enough to shift for the first time when the tears and sighs gave way to screaming matches and finally to an ultimatum. Celia was leaving our clan, leaving me, leaving her mate.

For a werewolf, though, being separated from his mate was akin to driving hot spikes under his fingernails. So Harbor packed up alongside her and left me behind in his quest to make their relationship work.

Not fair, my wolf whispered. Daddy wanted to take us with him.

My inner beast had matured considerably during the last month, but she still possessed the naivety of a child. So, for her sake, I allowed one Celia-related memory to rise up and fill our joint mind. For the wolf’s sake, I replayed the final conversation I’d shared with the shifter who even now rotted in the ground forty yards away from the spot where my feet remained rooted to the earth.

“You know I love you, right?” Harbor asked as we sat together one summer evening on the stoop of our ramshackle single-wide. The landscaping was a bit shabby, dirt trails worn between residences and everything in need of a fresh coat of paint. But the pack’s territory felt warm and welcoming in a way this human cemetery never could. That night, nine-year-old me had been completely content.

“I know,” I answered cockily. I hadn’t known yet that Harbor planned to rip out my heart that very evening. So I parroted back his words easily. “I love you too, Daddy.”

My father smiled and pulled me onto his lap. But his voice was grim as he broke the bad news. “But your mother needs to be around people like her,” he started, and abruptly I wanted to be anywhere but there. My throat tightened with tears as I realized what was coming.

Still, my father wouldn’t continue until I spoke. So I forced out a single word. “Yeah,” I answered, itching to run away under the moon with a mason jar, to capture fireflies for bedroom illumination and pretend the current conversation wasn’t happening.

But I could hear my mother’s gut-wrenching sobs wending through the open window behind me. The sound alone was proof that something drastic needed to be done if we ever hoped to unify our own small corner of the pack.

Replaying the memory a dozen years in the future, I realized that my father had been painfully young then. Celia had gotten pregnant at fifteen and a half, and Harbor hadn’t possessed many additional years. Which meant the pair of them were only a little older than my current age when they’d broken all ties with their daughter.

Trying to imagine raising a kid of my own when I barely felt old enough to make my own way in the world, I felt a little more sympathy for the duo…even if the gut-wrenching pang of parting hadn’t faded one bit in the last dozen years.

Back in the past, Harbor’s lupine eyes bored into mine as he begged me to understand. “You can come with us if you want. Or you can stay here with a pack that loves you.”

See! my lupine half barked in my ear now. I shrugged off her jubilation because I’d been the one responding to Harbor then just as I was the one trying to decide whether or not to face Celia now.

My wolf still didn’t get it, but my human half had been savvy enough even at nine to understand what my father was saying between the lines. Harbor couldn’t bear to relinquish either of his responsibilities. He wasn’t an alpha werewolf, but he still possessed a deep-seated urge to protect his wife and daughter, the instinct like a heavy yoke dragging down his broad shoulders. Harbor would never leave me against my will.

But he and I both knew that I was the rotten apple tearing his marriage apart.

So nine-year-old me had puffed out her little chest and told Harbor what he needed to hear. “I’m old enough to take care of myself,” I said, simulating tween arrogance that I didn’t really feel. “Who wants to go live with humans when I have a whole pack to hang with?”

Behind us, the screen door creaked open then slapped shut with a bang. “Are you ready yet?” Celia asked her husband, averting her gaze from a daughter who she neither wanted nor loved.

The one-body clutched a cardboard box full of the few possessions she planned to take with her. Possessions that didn’t include the carton of baby photos and mementos I later found when I tore our little home apart in search of something to remember my parents by.

In contrast to my desperate clutching for the past, there was very little of our shared life that my mother hoped to remember.

“I’ll be right there,” Harbor soothed her, his voice calm and deep like the rumble of lullabies that lulled me to sleep every night.

For a moment, Celia hesitated, tapping one hard-soled sandal against the rough planks of the porch step. But then she turned toward our family’s car to stow her luggage in the trunk before sliding into the passenger-side seat. Keeping her eyes safely averted, she waited for the arrival of her mate.

My father sighed, but didn’t jump immediately to do her bidding. Instead, he rumpled up my short hair with one huge paw. “Never forget that I love you, Fen,” he murmured so quietly that Celia wouldn’t have been able to hear even if she possessed superior shifter ears. I could barely hear him, my half-blood nature meaning that my inner wolf slept most of the time. “If you ever need me, call and I’ll come.”

Then he’d turned away and walked toward my mother, leaving me shivering and abandoned in front of our little home. In the distance, I could hear the howls of our pack mates reminding me that I could turn up on their doorsteps for food or hugs at any hour of the day or night, no questions asked. It wasn’t as if I was alone in the world.

But it sure felt that way.

Years later, when I’d needed a father, Harbor hadn’t been present. I’d ached to turn to him when I grew into my own skin and ran away from the pack to spend eight months wandering alone through outpack territory. I’d needed him again when I returned to my clan and slid into a new role, slowly learning to guide teenage shifters not much younger than myself. And I could sure have used his advice at the present moment as I strove to figure out a mate bond that left me alternately giddy with joy…and on the verge of fleeing in terror.

Still, I’d never picked up a phone to call Harbor because I’d known he wouldn’t come. When I was nine years old, my father had chosen Celia over me. And now he’d fled beyond my ability to follow.

We still have a mother, my optimistic wolf whispered.

I only shook my head by way of reply. Because no matter what my inner animal thought, the one-body whose high heels were currently sinking into the sod before me was mother by blood alone. There was no point in poking my nose where it didn’t belong.

So I turned away from my father’s funeral even as I felt the electricity of transformation fill the air and heard my relatives howl out their eulogies to the clear blue sky. My wolf wordlessly yearned toward the possible companionship. But instead of pacing forward to join these family members who I barely recognized, I just retraced my steps back toward a shifter whose affections weren’t fickle and flighty, who cared for me with no strings attached.

I was plenty old enough not to need a parent. And I was better off without Celia in my life.

Want to read the rest of Fen’s story? Buy Lone Wolf Dawn today, the second book of the Alpha Underground Trilogy. Hope you enjoyed the excerpt!

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