For the Love of Death
(Death #7)
by Tamara Rose Blodgett
Publication Date: September 5th 2014
Genres: Adult, Dystopia
Synopsis:
The
year is 2049 and in the new dystopian order, the Randoms have risen to the top
like cream. Earth faces dire consequences because of the Helix Complex and
their illicit use of mass-sterilization. Many who could have children, were
made into mules from the virulent Zondorae concoction of 2030.
Now
middle-aged, Death’s children do their best to move forward in a world where
technology and paranormal powers collide in a mix of tragedy and circumstance.
Zombies have been raised for the slave trade by those Randoms in power.
Paxton
Hart and Parker’s twin girls are grown and on the radar for those that
understand how critical they are for the future. The tight-knit circle of
friends continues to network for solutions to the depravity that has taken
hold.
Can
the original group right a tremendous wrong? Will the new generation of Randoms
find a solution for propagation, or will their power base cannibalize those who
choose harmony instead of greed?
Buy Links:
GUEST POST
Hybrid Authoring
Indie?
Traditional?
Hybrid?
What on God's green earth are all these
new monikers for authors now? Well, we're a secret club, making these
classifications as difficult as possible to figure out for our readers!
Ha! Just joking. Actually, until a
few years ago, it was pretty straight forward.
You (the author) wrote a really cool
story, sent it out to a million agents, hoped someone gave a care, and got
published by one of the Big Five publishing houses.
Sounds reasonable.
Not.
I wrote my first book in 2007, and was so
inspired by TWILIGHT. I know there's readers out there rolling their eyes so
hard in their collective heads it's like a seizure. I hear you, I do. But Twilight
was a big deal. Why? It helped put YA paranormal romance on the map; big
time. Did you know that Fifty Shades is fan fiction based on Twilight?
Yeah. Twilight was revolutionary. I loved it. I wrote Blood Singers
and finished it after reading that book. I was too chicken to send it out so I
put BS in a drawer. Then I hit on the idea for Death Whispers and
did get brave enough to send it out. I fully expected a ton of
rejections. I got a few (lol). Then there were agents who made helpful comments
(yay!). Then one agent wanted a partial (that's about 50 pages).
I was stoked like a chimney on fire.
Then he was like: revise this hard and
I'll look at it again.
I was crushed! What? He doesn't like my
“baby?”
Well—yeah. But the good news? The really
great news? He gave me hope. I revised the MS hard (like a good girl). The day
before I was going to send him the entire thing, I heard about Amanda Hocking.
A chick that was truly brave had tossed her stories on Amazon. I was
riveted.
Could I do that?
Yes.
So I did.
Self-publishing changed my life. A
homemaker of twenty-five years that always wrote stories can [now] do it as a
job?
But was I really a writer if I didn't get
pubbed from a Big Five?
Yes.
It sure felt real when I was working
40-60 hour weeks, at a minimum. Then Hubs encouraged me to write under a pen
name. He made it up himself (super-sexy). I wrote a lot of titles under that
name.
Then A Terrible Love came out
under my pen name and made the New York Times list. I about died. (I had
an agent by then.) She phoned and told me, because the magic reaches their ears
first.
Did I feel like I was a real writer then?
No. I felt
like I was a writer in 2007 when I finished Blood Singers.
Then Simon and Schuster picked up ATL and
had me write two more books. That's when I became a “hybrid.”
I'm not the only indie who went on to get
a traditional book deal from a Big Five publisher.
I've done both now, and love the hybrid
thing. It diversifies an author. That said, I am completely pleased to
self-publish and enjoy the freedom the Amazon platform provides.
I dig a guest post that breaks down the
mystique of a profession. And that is the case with writing. It's a cool job.
But like any job, it's hard work. Now we have Amazon and our dream of
storytelling can be realized whether it be through self-pubbing or traditional.
Being a hybrid is a wonderful thing.
About the Author
Tamara Rose Blodgett is the
author of forty titles, including her NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY bestselling
novel, A Terrible Love. Tamara writes a variety of dark fiction in the genres
of fantasy, science fiction, romance and erotica. She lives in South Dakota
with her family and is an ardent reader who enjoys interacting with her
readers.
Author Links:
***GIVEAWAY***
$25 Amazon Gift Card + paperback of For the Love of
Death.
Open to US/CA/AU/GB/UK; ends September 15th.
Book Blitz Organised by:
For the love of Death sounds great. I love books like this, and would enjoy the read.
ReplyDeletethanks for the giveaway
ReplyDeleteThank you for the chance to win!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for introducing me to Tamara Rose!
ReplyDelete