An AWESOME post from Eric Arvin

(From Tj writing for Eric)

Thank you everyone for your good wishes. It’s been a difficult last few months, but your words have helped me greatly. I am getting better every day, but it will take time to get back to the way things used to be. I have faced large obstacles before and have overcame them, and I know I can do the same here.

I will try and be around as much as possible, but just know that I read your words of encouragement and they helped me and my family greatly.

Oh, and TJ is wicked awesome and this is really Eric saying this part.

Love, Eric and Tj

 

u0stJtC

Outtake from Dirty Laundry Narration

From Greg Tremblay.
“Even our favorite characters do dumb things. 🙂  Outtake from Dirty Laundry.

Yes I … talk to the characters as I read…  DON’T YOU JUDGE ME!  :D”

I mutter at them too, Greg Tremblay Voiceovers

The Devil’s Brew-ing. Releases in Half An Hour!

The Devils Brew Rhys Ford CoverSinners Series: Book 2.5

Miki St. John’s life has been turned upside down, but it’s the best thing that’s ever happened to him.

His best friend, Damien Mitchell, is back from the dead. He has a dog named Dude. And more importantly, he and his lover, SFPD Inspector Kane Morgan, now share Miki’s converted warehouse.

For the first time ever, Miki’s living a happy and normal-ish life, but when Valentine’s Day rolls around, Miki realizes he knows next to nothing about being domestic or domesticated. Nothing about the traditional lover’s holiday makes sense to him, but Miki wants to give Kane a Valentine’s Day the man will never forget.

Can he pull off a day of wine and roses? Or will his screwed-up childhood come back and bite Miki in the ass?

Link to Dreamspinner!

Sad News

We lost our black Pom today. Dickens passed very suddenly following a stroke. He was preceded by a few of his brothers in fur and I’m pretty sure they’ll be glad to see him.

Or not because he was a thief and took everyone’s cookies.

Much love to everyone who’s known him and snuck him treats while you thought we weren’t looking.

We knew. But it was okay.

 

My Love for Jordan L Hawk’s Necropolis

Necropolis (Whyborne & Griffin, #4)Necropolis by Jordan L. Hawk

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I have always been honest about my love for Jordan L. Hawk’s writing. She’s delivered fantastical and well crafted stories time and time again. In Necropolis, the fourth in the Whyborne & Griffin series, Hawk once again shows why she is a master of her craft.

Simply put, she uses the RIGHT words, threads them together so the whole is so much greater than the sum of its parts. Or rather to go with the “true” phrasing; The whole is other than the sum of the parts.

I think Hawk’s books are in fact a damned good representation of the concept of “gestalt”. The primary construct of words into phrases bring to rise secondary tangible concepts and reactions for a reader to shift through and experience. The layering of her main characters’ motivations, fears and — even if I dare say it—loves, bring the reader to a world only Hawk could have imagined up. Even seated in the real world with a bare toe-dip into our own history, Hawk reveals a reality hidden in the shadowy folds of what-ifs.

That being said, while her world might be a few steps out of physical sync with our own universe, it is her fully-realized characters that drive home to the reader that we are all human—regardless of what surrounds us at that time.

In Necropolis, Whyborne and Griffin are transported to a time in Egypt when wholescale looting of tombs for the entertainment of the world’s rich was par for the course. It is a time when no one thought anything of burning a mummy in a fireplace because that’s what one did to amuse one’s guests or perhaps even grind up a forgotten Princess’ remains to be mixed into a tincture to cure a cough. The starkness of this time is laid down carefully, a lace of realism sewn over the satiny pleasure of Hawk’s main characters’ existence. To see Whyborne and Griffin embellished in this location only serves to strengthen who they are in the book and cements their bond in ways that would satisfy even the most particular of readers.

I cannot wait to re-read this book. I finished it a few days ago and am even now, craving for the taste of Hawk’s words again. Her stories are an opiate and I for one, am always glad to walk into her Den.

View all my reviews