BOOK INFORMATION
TITLE – One With the Darkness
SERIES – The Companion Series
AUTHOR – Susan Squires
GENRE – Regency Paranormal Romance
PUBLICATION DATE – October 6, 2015
LENGTH – 341 pages
PUBLISHER – Independent
COVER ARTIST – Rebecca Poole, Dreams2Media
BOOK SYNOPSIS
New York Times bestselling author Susan Squires invites you into the world of two lovers who share a seductive past and a dangerous desire…
DIVIDED BY CENTURIES
Contessa Donnatella di Poliziano has power, beauty, and—as a vampire—eternal life. Her overwhelming regret is a mistake she made centuries ago when she chose not to transform her one true love, Jergan, into a vampire too. Donnatella’s choice has deprived her of the only true love she’s ever known. But just as all seems lost, the discovery of a 300-year-old note leads her to a gift left by her old friend, Leonardo da Vinci: a machine to take her back in time to rewrite the history of her heart…
UNITED BY OTHERWORLDLY DESIRE
Once back in time, Donnatella’s memory of the intervening years is lost. Yet when she sees the breathtaking barbarian slave, Jergan, from afar, she feels like she has always known him. The instant attraction she feels draws them together. For Donnatella, the romance is tantalizing, awakening a passion that feels both old and new. But as the two fall in love again, a new danger threatens to tear them apart. Now Jergan’s love for Donnatella will be tested in a most perilous way—and if he fails, the two lovers will be separated again…for eternity.
Blog Comments
“Squires combines extreme sensuality with dangerous drama.” —Romantic Times BOOKreviews
BUY & TBR LINKS
EXCERPT
“Let me get your property, my lady,” the trader said. They turned to the back of the stall. Three men clustered round the straining barbarian, laughing as he tried to twist away. Blood dripped from his wrists where he had pulled against his shackles. He spat at them. It was his only means of defiance.
Graccus wiped his face and laughed. “Oh, he’ll be a joy to break.”
“I agree,” she said. The three yanked their gazes up, as did the barbarian. He flushed in shame. “Now unhand my new slave, sirs, so I may begin.”
“What? But I am buying him for my brothel!”
She waved the receipt scroll. “Too late.” Her She turned to the trader. “For the price I just paid, you can throw in a pair of shackles.” The trader nodded and clapped his hands. Slaves appeared with the required bindings. They unlocked the barbarian’s wrists from the poles and chained them behind his back before they released his feet. His ankles, too, were bloodied. Those green eyes stared at her, burning with intensity, as though he was still not sure what had just happened to him. Excitement churned inside her. This was the start of something—she didn’t know quite what. “Come quietly, slave,” she ordered, putting all the force of her personality behind her words, just shy of raising her Companion for compulsion. “You two—see that he does.” Two of Titus’s bodyguards nodded. Each took one of the slave’s arms and dragged him forward.
“You knew I wanted him,” Graccus was saying. The trader only shrugged. He couldn’t have gotten two thousand dinars for a slave bound for a brothel.
They pushed into the market throng. “There you are,” Titus called, hurrying over. Livia saw him frown as he registered the barbarian. “Livia Quintus, what is this? You’ve never purchased this creature!”
“I have, Titus. He was a soldier, therefore skilled in martial arts. He even speaks Latin. He’ll be a perfect bodyguard.”
“Livia, return him at once. This is no slave for a woman.”
Livia turned to her new purchase, seeing him through Titus’s eyes. Bloody and sweating, he looked fierce, with those intense green eyes and all that hair. But he was the one she wanted. She knew that as certainly as she knew her own name. “Once we clean him up you won’t recognize him.”
“He needs more than a bath to make him suitable.”
“You were the one who suggested a bodyguard slave, and now that I’ve meekly done as you ask, you rail at me.”
Titus rolled his eyes. “Meek? I would welcome meek.” Livia gestured her entourage forward. Titus sighed and fell in step. “I just hope you haven’t bitten off more than you can chew.”
AUTHOR BIO
Susan Squires is a New York Times bestselling author known for breaking the rules of romance writing. Whatever her time period, or subject, some element of the paranormal always creeps in. She has won multiple contests for published novels and reviewer's choice awards. Publisher's Weekly named Body Electric one of the year’s most influential mass market books and One with the Shadows a Best book of the Year. Time for Eternity, the first in the DaVinci time travel series, received a starred review from Publisher's Weekly.
Susan has a Masters in English literature from UCLA and once toiled as an executive for a Fortune 500 company. Now she lives at the beach in Southern California with her husband, Harry, a writer of supernatural thrillers, and two very active Belgian Sheepdogs, who like to help her write by putting their chins on the keyboarddddddddddddddddddddddd.
AUTHOR TOP TEN ADVICE TO AUTHORS
1. First—don’t
give up. You can’t finish a book if you don’t write. You can’t sell it if you
don’t try.
2. Learn your craft. Everybody’s first book sucks
(or isn’t the best you can do.) Mine was awful. But I persevered. Eventually
that book (in a much revised form,) was published by a NY publisher.
3. Go to conferences—before you sell, concentrate
on the craft presentations, as you get close to ready, then start with the
selling and business presentations. It can be overwhelming to get into the
business end of writing too soon.
4. Don’t
write to the market. Write what you care about and what you like to read.
5. Hang
out with other authors. Critique groups are great when you are first starting
out. But have the courage NOT to take suggestions as well being open to others’
ideas. You need a strong center line about what you want your story to be. If
you take everybody’s advice, your book will sound generic.
6. Don’t
get depressed if your first draft needs work. They all do.
7. Revise!
Revise some more! My favorite writing quote is from Ernest Hemingway. He said
“Great books are not written, they’re re-written.” Thank goodness. But don’t stint on the hard
work of editing and making your book the best it can be.
8. That
said, perfection doesn’t exist. If you can’t get off the first chapter because
it has to be perfect, take a deep breath and move on. Then fix it later.
(Second favorite quote is from Nora Roberts. “You can’t fix a blank page.”)
9. Think
small. If you’re stuck, pick a small problem to solve. Never ask yourself, “How
can I make this a bestseller.” Too big a question and too scary. Ask “How can I
make this scene more exciting?” or “How can I end this chapter on a hook that
will keep the reader reading?” Those are more manageable and less scary
problems.
10. Write
regularly. I don’t say you have to write every day. I didn’t. I had a big day
job, and the schedule mad writing every day impossible. But I scheduled writing
in at least three times a week. I wrote 26 books that way. If it’s been a while
since you wrote, writing starts becoming scary, and you tend to procrastinate,
which just makes the problem worse. Have a schedule and keep to it!
Good luck with your writing endeavors. It’s a satisfying
way to make, not only yourself, but others happy.
AUTHOR FOLLOW LINKS
This Event Was Organized & Hosted By:
No comments :
Post a Comment
I was born when we kissed; I died when we parted. I lived in your embrace while we loved..........