Showing posts with label Laura Kaye. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura Kaye. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Bloggy Awards--Promo Queen Nomination!

Happy Wednesday, everyone! I hope you all had a great weekend!


Message from Kait about the blog: Hi, everyone! I started Nocturnal Readings in July of 2010 both as a way to promote my own author name and to help my fellow authors, as well. My reviews and author interviews/guest posts consist primarily of the paranormal romance, urban fantasy, and YA genres, but I've been known to branch out into other genres on occasion. As an author for HQN Books (Harlequin's single title line), I know how important it is for authors to build an active social media platform and spread their name to readers in every way they can, so when I decide to aid a fellow author by interviewing them, allowing them to guest post, hosting giveaways, or doing an honest review of their work at Nocturnal Readings, I wholeheartedly devote myself to promotion of that post--though I do always encourage my authors to post on their own, as well. I post my reviews to Amazon, B&N, Goodreads, Shelfari, and sometimes LibraryThing, and I actively promote all my author related posts on Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, and Google+, along with multiple email groups/author forums I belong to, underneath both of my author pseudonyms (Kait Ballenger for my PNR and Kaitlyn Schulz for my YA). Some of the authors I've interviewed or hosted include: Laura Kaye, Amanda Carlson, Kate SeRine, Kristin Miller, Jenny Sulpizio, Lea Nolan, Catherine Bybee, Christine Ashworth, and Lynnette Hallberg/Austin. In the coming months, I'm In the works of trying to secure interviews/posts with author Cecy Robson, and several other paranormal authors as well. Social media is one of the best ways an author can spread his or her name nowadays and I pride myself in helping make that promo successful.

So PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PPPPPPLLLLLLEEEEEEAAAASSSSSEEE vote for me! I'd really appreciate it.
 
Cheers ;-)

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Never Ending Reading List???

Happy Thursday, everyone!

I apologize that this post is a day late, but I promise it won't be a dollar short ;-)

I thought I would share with you a lovely little graphic made by my publisher Harlequin. Tah dah!


This got me thinking about my own seemingly-never-ending reading list. So I thought I'd share my own current reading list.

PRINT                                                                        
1. Night Pleasures--Sherrilyn Kenyon                  
2. The Girl in the Steel Corset--Kady Cross     
3. North of Need--Laura Kaye                                
4. The Darkest Night--Sherrilyn Kenyon              
5. Night Embrace--Sherrilyn Kenyon                    
6. Men of the Otherworld--Kelly Armstrong        
7. Sword of Darkness--Sherrilyn Kenyon              
8. Snow Flower and the Secret Fan--Lisa See      
9. Crave--J.R Ward                                                                    
10. Blood Trinity--Sherrilyn Kenyon and Diana Love


 NOOK
1. Red--Kate SeRine
2. All the Flowers in Shanghai--Duncan Jepson
3. A Touch of Dead--Charlainne Harris 
4. Fallen--Lauren Kate
5. Linger--Maggie Stiefvater
6. The Book Thief
7. Grave Witch--Kalayna Price
8. Weird Girls Novella--Cecy Robson
                                                         

Phew! A LONG list! And that's just the very beginning of it! Not even including schoolbooks. Can you see I'm trying to get caught up on my Sherrilyn Kenyon reading? Lol!

How about you: what's your TBR list? Share it with us in the comments! ;-)

Friday, July 20, 2012

Follow Friday #106

Happy Friday, everyone! I'm sure you're all glad it's the weekend! And the weekend means, it's time for some blog hopping. So please hop on over to Parajunkee's View or Alison Can Read, and hop around to some new blogs. You can also participate in the social media hop as well and our second blog hop at Crazy-for-Books! So have fun and check out my answer to the weekly blog hop question below. Also, don't forget to check out my review from Wednesday of Kristin Miller's Forbidden by Fate! There's a giveaway involved! Cheers! 
http://sonythebooklover.com/wp-content/gallery/cache/256__520x440_follow-friday-1.jpg
This week's question: 

Christmas in July! Someone gives you a giftcard for two books (whatever that costs). What two books will you buy?


My Answer: I have so many books on my shelf lately that I haven't read that I can't imagine buying more at the current moment lol. But I would buy a copy of Laura Kaye's newest novel, Her Forbidden Hero, and I'd also pre-order a copy of Cecy Robson's debut urban fantasy novel, Sealed with a Curse.


Second hop question: What's the ONE super-hyped book you'll NEVER read?


My Answer: This is a hard question because I can't imagine saying I'd never read any piece of fiction. I know I'm not likely to read Fifty Shades of Gray, simply because I've read other novels with BDSM that (from what I hear) are way better written than 50 Shades. I'm also not likely to read J.K Rowling's debuting adult novel. I think reading something non-Harry Potter by her would just be strange and almost ruin my image of her as an author...I have no clue why, and I know it's kind of silly. I CAN say with absolute certainty though that for non-fiction I'd never read an autobiography or a biography about a conservative jackass, such as Rush Limbaugh, or some other douche.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Review: In the Service of the King by Laura Kaye

Hey, everyone! It's Monday, which means today is book review day! Today I have a review of Laura Kaye's paranormal romance novella, In the Service of the King. Enjoy!
 

Synopsis: "Kael, Warrior King of the Vampires loathes the Night of the Proffering. He needs the blood of either his mate or a human virgin to maintain his strength, but hasn't enjoyed the ritual since he lost his mate centuries ago. Kael doesn't want a new companion, yet his resolve is tested when he lays eyes on his new offering, Shayla McKinnon. He is drawn to Shayla's beauty and poise...and the submission she offers. She is eager to give him anything he wishes, including her innocence, to please him. Will Kael give in to their overwhelming desire -- even if it means risking Shayla's life?"

Genre: Novella--paranormal romance

First Sentences: "Kael paced the length of his private sleeping chamber, avoiding the plush emerald carpet and keeping to the uncovered stone floor at the edge of the room. After an hour of ceaseless movement, the cold of the polished slabs bit into the flesh of his bare feet and gave him something to focus on besides the Proffering, which he loathed but required." From the beginning sentences, we already know that the hero of the novella, Kael, is in some sort of emotional distress. Distress is conflict and tension, and tension is what keeps us reading. This novella kept me reading!

Brownie Points: After several more lines like the ones above, I was quickly hooked into the world of this novella. I'm a slow reader, but I stayed up half the night and read it all in one sitting. I couldn't stop turning the pages. What amazes me most is how much story Laura Kaye was able to pack into such a small novella. I've read full length novels which weren't nearly as strong without nearly as well-characterized heroes/heroines as in this little novella. I was also impressed by how well the fictional world was established without loads of backstory to slow the pacing down. Kudos to Laura Kaye!

Beefs: I had no beefs with this. I thoroughly enjoyed every bit of it. And let me add, this novella was HOT HOT HOT!

Ending: As with any romance, the ending was a wonderful HEA. In the end, I felt that all the conflicts were resolved and the character's story had made it's complete arc. Great wrap up!

Recommendation and General Comments: This novella is EXTREMELY well-written and is a great read even for those who aren't normally interested in short fiction. Paranormal readers will drool over Kael, the sexy vampire king, and as usual, Laura's books never lack for extreme passion and heat. With each book I've read by Laura, I've been more and more impressed. In each story I can see her growth as an author and I know she will only continue to get better and better. I can't wait for the next installment in the novella series, Seduced by the Vampire King, which releases June 1st, 2012. 


For all the above reasons, I give In the Service of the King by Laura Kaye a rating of full moon.


Here at Nocturnal Readings, this is the mother of all ratings!!! I loved this novella! If you are a fan of paranormal romance, you MUST go to Amazon or B&N.com immediately and get this novella. It's a great price and a great read. Enjoy!
Don't forget to stop back in on Wednesday! Til then ;-) 

 

If you're interested in learning more about Laura Kaye and her novels, visit her at laurakayeauthor.blogspot.com or hit her up on Twitter @laurakayeauthor

Monday, May 23, 2011

Author Interview: Laura Kaye

Happy Monday, everyone! Hope you all had a great weekend. We have a treat today--an interview with paranormal and contemporary romance author Laura Kaye! She's going to be talking about her debut paranormal romance novel, Forever Freed. I recently reviewed Laura's contemporary romance novella, Hearts in Darkness, which I gave a rating of full moon, the highest of all the Nocturnal Readings ratings. She is an author to keep your eye on! For those who missed the review, you can check it out HERE.

Enjoy the interview! And don't forget to read all the way to the bottom where you can find special discounts on Laura's books, and other goodies!

Laura writes paranormal and contemporary romance full of feel-good heart and breathe-hard heat. Here is the back cover blurb of her paranormal romance, Forever Freed, which I will be reviewing this Thursday.

"A heart can break, even one that no longer beats.
I stalk my new neighbors, a single mother and her child, drawn by the irresistible scent of their joy and love. I crave their blood, starved for some healing respite from my ancient grief. Now to lure them into my grasp.
But they surprise me. Little Olivia accepts me without fear or reservation—talking, smiling, offering innocent affection that tugs at my long-lost humanity. Her mother, Samantha, seeks me out when she should stay away, offering sweet friendship, and calling to the forgotten man within me. They lure me instead.
Ah, Dio, Lucien, run and spare them while you can…"

Thanks for coming by, Laura! We're really glad to have you. Let's get started.

Forever Freed is your first published novel, how did it feel to find out it would be published?

It was incredible! I cheered out loud at the Panera, where I was writing with my best friend! LOL It was thrilling to know I’d get to hold the book in my hands. Just the other day I got to do so for the first time, and it was as thrilling as I’d hoped.

Hearts in Darkness, your contemporary romance novella, was released before Forever Freed. Which were you more excited about: the very first or the first larger project released?

I was excited about them for different reasons.  Forever Freed was the first novel I wrote and first manuscript I sold, so that has always held a special place for me, and always will.  And the main character of FF, Lucien Demarco, is probably the character I know in the greatest depth.  Hearts in Darkness was exciting though because I was so eager to see how people would respond to the premise of the darkness.

What was your inspiration and how long did it take you to write Forever Freed?

Forever Freed was born from my lifelong fascination with vampires in general and, in particular, from asking the question: what would happen if a vampire became a caregiver for a human child—that’s how the relationship between the hero and the heroine’s young daughter was born. The rest of the story fell in very quickly after that.

I wrote the first draft of what became Forever Freed in 11 weeks, but then it went through three revisions over the course of about 8 months before I submitted it to The Wild Rose Press.

Forever Freed is set in Detroit, my hometown ;-) Why did you choose to set the novel here? How big of a role does setting play in your writing?

Without question, Detroit is a character in this novel. What I mean is the historical fabric of the city and its architecture became central to telling the story—from their houses, to Cadillac Square where Lucien and Sam have their first kiss, to the train station where the climactic battle takes place. 
And it was important to me to get it right, and to incorporate the decline the city’s experienced in the past 50 years into the setting description.

I chose Detroit for four reasons: 1) its urban decline could provide a good mask for a supernatural criminal element, 2) the high crime rates of the city would further mask the vampires’ activity, 3) the bad guys in the story (the Laumets) were real historical characters from the late-17th/early-18th centuries who founded what became Detroit, and 4) Detroit is among the U.S. cities with the fewest sunless days per year, important for a sun-sensitive vampire!

Tell us a little about your main characters. Who did you create first?

Lucien came first, hands down.  The first scenes in my head were of an incredibly lonely vampire watching a happy woman and child.  Lucien is a good man to whom something very bad happened, and he’s carried the guilt and grief for that bad thing on his shoulders for a century. His vampirism turns him into an empath, which exacerbates his suffering by making him drink in his victims’ emotions at every feeding. To avoid that, he starves himself for long stretches.

Samantha Sutton, the heroine, is a good-hearted young woman who has experienced loss and abandonment, but makes the most of things to give her five-year-old daughter Ollie the best life possible.  Ollie, well, she’s much more than a typical secondary character—she truly is a main character in everything that happens between the three of them.

Which characters were the hardest/easiest to write and why?

Hmm…Samantha was probably the hardest to write from a technical standpoint since the book is written in first person from Lucien’s perspective. While that’s unusual for a romance, I had no choice—that was the way the book demanded to be told. Lucien was the easiest to write, because he was the narrator and he was literally in my head. I truly felt he was writing through me at times. Ollie was also very easy, and for the most part her characterization and dialogue are based on my oldest daughter, now seven.

What was the biggest challenge for you in writing Forever Freed?

It wasn’t the writing I found challenging (that came quick), it was the revising. The first draft of Forever Freed was 145,000 words long. The published edition of Forever Freed is 95,000 words. You see what I mean. I chopped the first almost 60,000 words off the beginning of the manuscript, rewrote a new beginning, and did a lot of other revisions along the way. The manuscript’s the better for all that work. And those original 60K I’m planning to turn into a prequel called Forever Damned.

If you could tell us one fun fact about any of your characters, who and what would it be?

Oh, man, it’s hard to pick just one! Lucien’s birthday is November 2, known as “the Day of the Dead” in many cultures. I thought that was a fun bit of foreshadowing. Okay, I can’t hold back—it’s also very fun to me (since I am a historian of early America) that Antoine and Jacques Laumet were real people and actually the founders of Fort Ponchartrain, which became Detroit.

Can you tell us about what you’re currently working on? Forever Freed is a paranormal romance, but you also write contemporary romance. Do you plan on writing any more contemporary or other genres, or is paranormal the only thing in the current future?

I am published (or soon to be published!) in paranormal, contemporary, and erotic romance. I plan to stick with the genre-hopping to the extent my contracted writing commitments allow.  I have a number of projects in the works right now. First, I’m revising a novel-length women’s fiction I hope to begin querying this summer. Second, I expect edits soon from Decadent Publishing on the erotic romance, Just Gotta Say, I sold a few weeks ago. Third, I expect edits soon from Entangled Publishing on the fantasy romance series I sold in April. North of Need releases in November. Writing Book 2 in the series is my next writing priority.

Without giving too much away, what’s your favorite scene in the novel? How did you feel when you completed that scene?

Ooh, another hard question! But, I’m going to have to go with the “Black Moment”—the moment when everything goes as bad as it can. Because it brought tears to my eyes when I was writing it. I mean, I did bad, bad things to my characters there. LOL Even now, the song that helped inspire those pages is hard to listen to because it brings that heartwrenching moment right to mind.

What’s your favorite line from the story?

“Your love has helped me forgive myself. And that is a gift, Samantha, a priceless gift, this feeling of absolution. I have been searching for it my whole life.”

Classic Lucien right here, and also special to me because the first draft of the manuscript was entitled Absolution. I’ve never shared that before!
         
If you could go back to when you were first writing this story, what advice would you give yourself?

LOL There are a hundred different lessons about genre and craft and querying I’d want to tell myself.  But, here’s the thing, writing is always going to be a process, one that you’ll get better at with time and practice and effort. So, without having made some of the mistakes I made on this first project, I wouldn’t be where I am now. I’m in hard love with the journey of being a writer, so I’m not sure I’d want to change anything. The advice I think is *key* is keep writing, keep writing, keep writing, no matter what.
           
Which authors have most influenced your writing?

J.R. Ward and Sherrilyn Kenyon are my models for all things male POV! LOL (Mmm…Brothers…  Mmm…Dark Hunters… *grins*) But, even more fundamentally, Stephen King and Anne Rice are my greatest inspiration for writing paranormal which, despite my genre-hopping tendencies, is where I feel most at home.

Favorite book?

Not a chance in the world I could pick just one.

Favorite author?

All-time: Stephen King. More recently: J.R. Ward.

Top three hottest fictional heroes?

(Besides my own??? *winks*)

Okay, lest I fill all three spots with Black Dagger Brothers (Would. Be. So. Easy.), I’ll say:
1)     Zsadist – the ultimate tortured hero.
2)     Lestat de Lioncourt – Old school, I know, but the vampire that made me fall in love with vampires.
3)     Acheron Parthenopaeus – A warrior-god the other gods fear, worship, and do anything to get in bed. Yes, please.

Favorite Forever Freed character and why?

Olivia “Ollie” Sutton—she’s such a scene stealer! And I love that she’s as pretty much as powerful as my vampire hero, just in different ways.

Thanks again, Laura, for stopping by! We're glad to have you any time!

For more information on Laura and her work, or how where you can purchase a copy of her novel, you can find her at the following places:




Twitter: @laurakayeauthor


Also, Laura is currently promoting a special offer! Through May 31st, you can get 25% off all titles/formats at her publisher, Wild Rose Press, with the code: 18b632d0b0 

Don't forget to check back on Thursday to read my review of Forever Freed until then ;-)

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Review: Hearts in Darkness

Happy Thursday, everyone! Hope you're all headed toward a fun, stress-free weekend. I can't say I am myself, since I'm in the midst of finals for my last semester of undergrad. But I WILL prevail! And it shall soon be finished. Onto the review of this awesome novella, Hearts in Darkness by Laura Kaye.

Synopsis:  Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind; and therefore is winged Cupid painted blind.~William Shakespeare

Makenna James thinks her day can’t get any worse, until she finds herself stuck in a pitch-black elevator with a complete stranger. Distracted by a phone call and juggling too much stuff, the pin-striped accountant caught only a glimpse of a dragon tattoo on his hand before the lights went out.

Caden Grayson is amused when a redhead literally falls at his feet. His amusement turns to panic when the power fails. Despite his piercings, tats, and vicious scar, he’s terrified of the dark and confined spaces. Now, he’s trapped in his own worst nightmare.

To fight fear, they must both reach out and open up. With no preconceived notions based on looks to hold them back, they discover just how much they have in common. In the warming darkness, attraction grows and sparks fly, but will they feel the same when the lights come back on?

Genre: Novella--Contemporary Romance

First Lines: "'Wait! Can you please hold that?' Makenna James huffed her frustration at her crappy day as she jogged toward the waiting elevator." A good, solid opening. We jump right into the action of the story without hesitation or unnecessary build-up. I enjoyed that.

Brownie Points: The intimacy of two people being in a dark elevator with each other and talking about things they probably couldn't say otherwise and with no preconceived notions about one another is both unique and fantastic. I absolutely loved the premise of this story. I also enjoyed the slight awkwardness between Makenna and Caden once the lights came back on--the whole story felt very realistic and believable. And the steaminess in the elevator was hot hot hot. I was so frustrated, in a good way, when the lights came back on haha.

Beefs: I had very few beefs with this story. My main wish was that I knew more about Makenna. Caden's character is very well revealed and I felt like I definitely knew him by the end of the novella, but I wanted just a little more about Makenna. However, this was nothing to deter this from being a fantastic read.

Recommendation and General Comments: Anyone who has ever had a conversation in the dark (say a car, for example) where they've been able to talk about things they wouldn't say otherwise would be able to relate to the premise of this book. This is a great read that kept me turning the pages and never lulled in pacing. I was thoroughly impressed. For this reason, I give Hearts in Darkness a rating of full moon!



This is a really great read that I would recommend to any romance reader. Hearts in Darkness appeals to a wide audience and doesn't disappoint.

Would I aspire to write like this author? 
Definitely. Laura is a fantastic writer and she does a great job at creating realistic relationships between characters. I would love to work with her.

For more information about Laura Kaye and her upcoming books, please visit her blog at http://laurakayeauthor.blogspot.com/ or her author website at http://www.laurakayeauthor.com/index.html