Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

Dec
03

It’s a book…

Posted by Denise on December 3, 2010 under Books


I’ve been buying books for a Very Small Person in my life, for Christmas. I always buy him books, always, even though he shows a tendency to devour them - literally. *grin* I had to force myself to stop after three - The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Peepo and Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes

These are all old friends in my family, and the source of many beautiful memories.  Did you know The Very Hungry Caterpillar is thirty years old? Talk about a classic! It gave me tremendous pleasure to click my way to the amazing Book Depository and plug in the credit card. (More about the Book Depository in a moment.)

 But I also came across this wonderful - wonderful! - YouTube trailer for a book called It’s a Book by Lane Smith. Oh, I just love it! My Small Person is too small for It’s a Book, but yours may not be. Just watch it, it’s great! It did my Luddite heart good. heh. My blog software isn’t happy about inserting the YouTube link so here it is. Do go watch it, it’s charming.

About the Book Depository - This online book store is in the UK. It has a very wide range of stock, maybe not as big as Amazon, but I’ve never searched for something and come up empty. The prices are very reasonable too. But the best part? NO POSTAGE, anywhere in the world! Yup, none at all. Delivery time to Oz is about 10 to 14 days. It works out cheaper than my local bookstore. Which is pretty sad, but there you go.

Keep well and happy!


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Nov
18

Introducing… Dark Siders Down Under!

Posted by Denise on November 18, 2010 under Books, Freebies

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Introducing the Dark Siders Down Under - a group of writers from Australia and New Zealand who write speculative fiction with romantic elements. Be it fantasy, paranormal, dark urban fantasy, futuristic and everything in between.

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Pretty cool, huh? Even better, every ‘Magic Thursday” there’s a giveaway on the blog, and every Saturday there’s a ‘Darklight On’ post where you can learn more about one of the Dark Siders. Today’s ‘Magic Thursday’ is Maree Anderson, a Kiwi with a penchant for wickedly handsome demons. Be in the draw to win a copy of one of her sexy Red Sage novellas by leaving a comment.

There’s a bio for everyone, lists of latest releases and loads of links. How’s this for an impressive mix of new and established talent? Jess Anastasi, Maree Anderson, Keri Arthur, Kitty Bucholtz, Astrid Cooper, Rowena Cory Daniells, Michelle de Rooy, Jessica Dorney, C.T. Green, Fiona Gregory, Kylie Griffin, Erica Hayes, Shona Husk, Shannah Jay, Loretta Kelly, Eleni Konstantine, Emmeline Lock, Nicole R Murphy, Janni Nell, Tracey O’Hara, Christina Phillips, Jenny Schwartz, Nicola E. Sheridan, Bec Skrabl, Nicky Strickland, Mel Teshco and Joanne Vogel. Oh, and me, of course. ;-)

Go to it and watch that TBR pile grow. heh heh (I’ve put a permanent link in the sidebar.) In the meantime, keep well and happy!


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Sep
02

Celebration: A Strongman Vignette (free!)

Posted by Denise on September 2, 2010 under Books, Excerpts, Freebies, Lust Objects

Here it is - free on my website - a vignette with Griff and Fort from Strongman. Ah, I love those two! What can Griff give Fort as a Natal Day present when he’s already handed the big man his heart and soul? All in one pdf file.

Here’s a taste, followed by the link.

***

Almost a year.

Griff glanced across the interior of the lamplit van as Fort ran a hand through his hair for what had to be the hundredth time. He was glaring down at the papers spread across the table, the end of an ink brush clamped firmly between his teeth. Gods, he had no idea what he looked like, not even now, after Griff had told him Twister knew how many times. Big and tough and oh-so-serious. Not handsome, not by any stretch, but with his own rough beauty.

Griff’s chest went tight. Blinking rapidly, he drained the last of his Aetherian brandy. And all his, since that day in the hidden valley, almost a year ago. Some sort of celebration was definitely in order, but what?

Fort frowned more ferociously than ever, one big finger running down a column of figures.

“You need spectacles,” said Griff absently.

Fort’s head jerked up. “Nonsense.”

Griff lay back against the pillows and grinned. Fort’s bark was worse than his bite and to be honest, he had no objection to either. “Then why are you squinting?”

“Am not,” said Fort automatically, but his storm-gray gaze skimmed over the other man’s body in the skintight costume, lingering on Griff’s fingers, drumming casually on one muscled thigh.

***

Read it! Celebration: A Strongman Vignette

***

Read the first chapter

Read the Reviews | Read the free Epilogue

Ebook: Ellora’s Cave

 Print: Ellora’s Cave | Australian Bookstores


Remember that the free epilogue (all 30 pages of it) is only available if you subscribe to my monthly newsletter.  Enjoy, my dears!And let me know what you think, okay?  All feedback is welcome.


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May
08

Friends who make a difference

Posted by Denise on May 8, 2010 under Books, For Writers, Life

What’s that old saying? You can choose your friends, but you can’t choose your family. Or - Friends are your family of the heart.

One of the most precious things this crazy business of writing has given me is friends.  Not just girlfriends, but women who share my obsession, who understand. There’s Joey Hill, whom I’ve never met, though we’ve spoken on the phone and by Skype. From Joey, I get unqualified support and an unsparing critical eye.

Then there’s Christine Wells, who actually lives not far from me. I’m so lucky! We meet for lunch and too much bubbly followed by rather giggly critique sessions. Occasionally, we run away to spend a weekend with the amazing Anna Campbell.

Quite often, Christine and I talk on the phone. Take last week - I was feeling very down. Yeah, yeah, I know, but I get like that sometimes, especially staring down the barrel of a deadline. Writers are neurotic creatures.  In desperation, I rang Christine.

And what did I get? Exactly what I needed, that’s what! Complete support and understanding - straightaway - followed by a good (metaphorical) slap around the chops and the reassurance that I really can do this. I’ve been able to move forward since then. Plus, it’s a two-way street.  I try to give back to the best of my ability. We’re there for each other, you know?

And yet, on the face of it, it’s not a likely friendship. Different professions, different backgrounds and quite an age difference. (I won’t tell you which way it goes. I’m sure you can guess! *snork*)

Christine has a new release, Sweetest Little Sin, a sexy, action packed spy thriller that stars reader favourites Lady Louisa Brooke and that ruthless bad boy of the Beau Monde, the Marquis of Jardine. You’ll love it! Click on the image to read an excerpt.

BTW, my family are terrific. Love them to bits, but they’re not writers!

Do you have a friend who’s always there for you? How do you show them what they mean to you? (Apart from writing blog posts about their new books, that is!)


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Apr
19

Magic on your ereader

Posted by Denise on April 19, 2010 under Books, Life, Quirky

Gutenberg would have a fit. Imagine if the written words on a screen were watching you reading them and making adjustments accordingly? Eye-tracking technology and new generation tablets promise to react, based on how you’re looking at text — where you pause, how you stare, where you stop reading altogether. The act of reading will change what you are reading.

The entire concept boggles my tiny mind. Watch the video for an excellent explanation of how it will work.

The technology monitors your eyes in order to define words if you stare at them puzzled, eliminating non-essential information when you’re skimming, helping you pick up exactly where you left off, swapping images based on what you’re reading, surfacing relevant reference materials and more.

Ebook readers and multi-purpose devices like the iPad will have reader-facing cameras, attached to large screens and coupled to processors capable of running eye-tracking software.

The pundits say that to compete for our attention with other methods of storytelling, books need to evolve — especially for readers born more recently — and this (it’s called Text 2.0) is one way forward, enhancing the written word with more than just multimedia fireworks.

Most of you will know I’ve always thought storytelling was a form of magic. Here’s Fledge speaking for me in Tailspin -

Stories have a power, a magic all their own. Consider the fact that the actions, thoughts and feelings of people who have no existence in reality can make you laugh, make you weep. That’s the art and that’s the magic.

Arthur C. Clarke said, “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” And here’s an excellent example.

I’m trying to work out how I feel about this. I guess you could just ignore reference material if you didn’t want it. For example, you might be interested in the biology of flight when you read Tailspin, you might not. And if you had any kind of reading difficulty, this technology could be enormously helpful.

It could be totally amazing. Certainly our grandchildren will probably take it for granted. What do you think? Will you?


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Apr
05

STRONGMAN’S in print!

Posted by Denise on April 5, 2010 under Books, Contests, Excerpts, Freebies

STRONGMAN is in print!!! Hallelujah!!! Can you believe it? I cannot tell you how delighted I am. Perhaps you can guess, hmm? *chuckle*

To celebrate, I’m giving away a signed copy. Yep, anyone who subscribes to my newsletter before midnight Sunday 25th April goes in the draw to win. Existing subscribers already have an easy contest to try, so if you subscribe quick, you’ll have two chances.

drum_roll.gif   Sign up!      Sign up!       Sign up! drum_roll.gif

Just so you know, I started the year with a completely revamped monthly newsletter. The format is all new and nifty, no more clunky old Yahoo!

Every month in your inbox - giveaways, exclusive sneak peeks at new work, contests and prizes. Not to mention the occasional vignette with characters you know, and hopefully, love.

And because I love you, there are free gifts on joining, among them the complete Epilogue to Strongman - only available to newsletter subscribers.

Read an Excerpt | Read the Reviews
Read the free Epilogue

Ebook: Ellora’s Cave
Print: Ellora’s Cave | Australian Bookstores

Here’s a taste to celebrate. I still think this is one of the best kisses I’ve ever written. I know I enjoyed it anyway. ;-)

About the Book:

A hard-bitten mercenary who’s had a gutful of mud and blood and death, Fortitude McLaren joins the Ten Nations Fair as a roustabout.
Tough, cold and competent, he’s shocked and angered by his hunger for Griff, a circus acrobat. Brought up in the bigoted society of the Straight Church, Fort regards manlove with casual contempt. Not for him. Never for him.
Athletic, cocky and single-minded about he wants, Griff sets about getting it. Fort fights with everything in him, but Griff affects him like no one else. It’s not just his strong, supple body. Fort is irresistibly drawn by the openhearted friendship the other man offers so freely.
Fort may have found a friend, but the cruel memories of his childhood are the greatest enemy of all. When a job for Jan the Aetherii puts Griff in danger, Fort discovers what’s really at risk - everything he is and everything he’s ever believed in. To save Griff’s life and preserve his own sanity, Fort must not only fight the battle in his soul, he must win it.

Excerpt:

Griff wiped his mouth with the damp cloth Fort handed him, careful not to get grease on his costume. Sourly, Fort reflected it had obviously been designed to showcase and flaunt the body, with a standing collar to frame the tumbler’s lively face, the smooth, strong muscles of his shoulders and arms exposed by the singlet-style top. Golden-brown hair curled rakishly over his brow, tumbled over the collar. It needed cutting. A light mat of hair furred his chest, golden down dusted his forearms, glinting in the lamplight.

The tights were so positively, gloriously indecent, Fort had to keep dragging his gaze back to Griff’s knowing eyes. He could swear the other man was laughing at him, completely unabashed by the outline of a more-than-adequate cock stretching the knit fabric, clamped against his flat belly by the material.


“So the deep-fish pie was all right?” inquired Griff politely. “I wasn’t sure, but Ember loves me, so I begged for noodle cakes as well.”


Fort frowned from where he sat on the edge of the bed, the shaving lather drying on his face. He’d bolted the food, made them a cup of hot roberry, keen to finish the job and get rid of Griff’s confusing presence. He tightened his grip on the razor. “She loves you?”


“Sure.” Griff grinned. “All women love me. It’s part of my peculiar charm.” He blew on his roberry.


“Peculiar is right,” grunted Fort, grimacing as he scraped. “Who’s Ember?”


“The glass-blower. Makes all sorts of baubles. And she can cook.” Griff sighed and ran a hand through his hair. Immediately, it tumbled back over his forehead. “She’s a lovely woman, but so sad. And she won’t tell me why.”


“Some people actually have dignity, reserve.” Fort pulled the skin of his cheek taut. “You wouldn’t understand that.” The razor whispered over it, leaving a chill in its wake.


“Mmm. But everyone needs someone to love.” Griff drained his cup.


Fort laid down the razor. “To fuck, you mean.”


“That too.” Griff examined his features so boldly, a wave of heat rolled through Fort’s belly, washing over his aching cock, his balls lifting in automatic response. The tumbler said, “You missed a bit.”


“No I didn’t.”


“Here, hold these. I’ll get it.” Griff thrust the shaving brush into Fort’s left hand and the soap dish into his right. “Lean back a bit.”


“Griff —
oompf!” The tumbler clambered onto the bed and knelt across him, Fort’s thighs between his knees. He pushed Fort’s chest with the heel of his hand, and to his own bemusement, Fort felt his shoulders hit the wall behind him.

The chill of the razor iced across his neck. “Lift your chin and don’t move.”


His stomach knotting with apprehension and arousal, Fort did as he was bid. Controlling his problem absorbed his entire attention. So did the heat of the tumbler’s body, his clean scent, of soap and flesh and muscle. Nothing like a woman’s soft feminine smell.


A woman. Desperate for balance, for normalcy, he lassoed a random thought. “Can Katahaya really wrap her ankles around her ears?”


“Don’t know.” Humming under his breath, Griff drew the razor over Fort’s chin, one strong hand cradling his jaw, holding him still. “But she sure wrapped them around mine. Don’t move, I said!”


“You’ve had her? But I thought—”


“I only fuck men?”


This time, the flush felt like a fever. Fort knew he reddened, clear to see without the protection of the whiskers. He made an indeterminate noise in his throat.


“Then you’d be wrong,” said Griff calmly, but a drop of sweat coursed slowly down the side of his neck. “Usually, I prefer women. I’m making an exception for you.” Carefully, he ran the razor under Fort’s chin.


Fort could scarcely believe his ears. Or his reaction. The surge of his blood was so violent, it made him light-headed, stupid. When the other man drew back, running a considering thumb over freshly shaved skin, he said, “Gods, Griff, you’ve got balls.”


As soon as the words were out, he could have taken the razor and sliced his tongue off at the root. “I mean…ah, hell. Get off!” He heaved with his hips, but all that accomplished was to press his hungry cock against the tumbler’s hip.


Griff froze, exhaling in a gusty rush. “Not yet,” he said absently. He plucked the towel from around Fort’s neck and wiped away the last of the foam, taking his time, grinning when Fort swore at him. “There.”


He leaned back a little, his right hand braced on Fort’s shoulder, still holding the razor. “You look…” A slow flush crept over his golden cheek and his sloe eyes narrowed. “Uh, lots better. That’s how you look. Your eyes have gone all dark and smoky.” His hands clenched, closing over muscle and bone. “Fuck, I can’t do this slow anymore.” He sucked in a deep breath. “Remember the razor.”


Griff’s lips came down on his, surprisingly soft and hot. Gods, so
hot!

The shock stiffened every muscle in Fort’s body. Especially one. In panic, he tried to jerk his head away, but Griff murmured, “Nu-uh,” into his mouth and something cold pressed under his ear. Shit, the razor! He froze and Griff chuckled.


When he opened his mouth to curse, Griff slipped his tongue inside, humming with delight. Hot chills raced up and down Fort’s spine and then Griff curled his tongue around his and the world went away, lost in some sort of soft red explosion of lust. His fingers relaxed and the soap dish bounced to the floor. The shaving brush followed with a wet splat. Dimly, he heard a clatter as Griff tossed the razor aside, but he was completely preoccupied with the amazing sensations careering through his body. He’d never been kissed like this before, with such strength and ruthless expertise. Griff seemed to read his mind, knowing exactly when to push and when to pull, when to lick, when to suck.


Strong fingers speared into his hair, gripping the back of Fort’s skull, tilting his head for better access. Griff pressed hard into his body, chest to chest, his cock mashed into Fort’s stomach. He shifted his hips, enough that his stiff length rubbed all along Fort’s. The coarse fabric of Fort’s working trews rasped over the sensitive head of his cock, Griff’s shaft throbbing against his, right through two layers of clothing. The other man did it again.


Ruler God!


White-hot instinct obliterated conscious thought. Rearing up, Fort wrapped one arm around Griff’s waist, the other around his shoulders. He took them down to the mattress, rolling so the other man was pinned beneath him, taking advantage of his weight and size. Bracketing Griff’s head between his forearms, he nipped at his lips, ran his tongue over the tumbler’s crooked tooth, growling deep in his throat.


Griff growled back and one hand clamped on Fort’s buttock, the fingers digging in hard.


The sound of it, so deep, so masculine, hit Fort like a shower of cold water. Fuck,
fuck! What the hell was he doing?

He wrenched himself away. Panting, they stared at each other.


Fort’s head felt curiously empty, wiped clean of coherent thought. Finally, he said, “You’re shaking.” He’d get up in a minute, of course he would, but Griff had spread his thighs to accommodate his hips and he wasn’t particularly uncomfortable. Not physically, anyway.


“That’s because you’re going to kill me. But I’ll die reasonably happy.”


Strangely, Fort had to fight the desire to laugh, though the fact there was no air left in the wagon made it easier. “Only reasonably?”


“One lousy kiss isn’t worth dying for.”


Fort blinked, stung. “It wasn’t lousy!”


“We can do better.” Griff smiled like a hungry fellwolf and ran his hand into the open neck of Fort’s shirt, the pads of his fingers brushing a nipple. Fort could have sworn the tingle coursed all the way from his chest down to his toes, with a significant detour to the groin area. Under him, Griff murmured, “Care to try again?” sworn the tingle coursed all the way from his chest down to his toes, with a significant detour to the groin area. Under him, Griff murmured, “Care to try again?”

Read the first chapter | Read the Reviews
Read the free Epilogue

Ebook: Ellora’s Cave
Print: Ellora’s Cave | Australian Bookstores

 


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Mar
04

The Great Aussie Fantasy Giveaway!

Posted by Denise on March 4, 2010 under Books, Freebies

Erica Hayes, fabulous new Australian urban paranormal writer is celebrating the release of her second novel,  Shadowglass, with an incredible giveaway. Five fantasy/paranormals by five Australian authors! Including me. *ahem*

Erica’s giving away a copy of Thief of Light - plus a book each from Nalini Singh, Keri Arthur, Tracey O’Hara - and of course, her own Shadowglass.

All you have to do is visit Erica’s blog page and leave a comment. Ends Saturday 9th March. What could be simpler?

Go for it!

Erica’s blog


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Feb
15

Vale Dick Francis

Posted by Denise on February 15, 2010 under Books, For Writers

Did you see Dick Francis died? I feel personally bereft. I don’t follow horse racing. let alone steeple-chasing. (In fact, I’m scared of horses, beautiful creatures though they are. They’re so damned big.) But Francis was an uber-champion jockey. He rode for the Queen. He was also a real gentleman and an extraordinarily gifted and interesting person. He didn’t have much of an education, but when he gave up riding and turned to writing, he was amazing. He wrote a book a year for years on end, all of them terrific reads.

If you want to learn what tension and narrative power is all about, read Dick Francis.  I used to swallow his books whole, in one big gulp, they were that good. I bet he was a dream to edit. His heroes are usually quiet, competent men, assured in their masculinity - rather like their creator, I imagine. Not chest-beating alphas, but real men! There’s generally a romance, though it’s low-key and understated.

One of the things I loved was how hard he worked and how much attention he paid to detail. His research was always meticulous. Not all of his heroes are horse or racing people. I remember one about a toy inventor, another about an actor. But whatever it was, he knew everything there was to know about it.  And he made the research an integral part of the story without beating you over the head with it.

Haven’t read them? I envy you. If you’re looking for a place to start, you couldn’t do better than the Sid Halley books. (The three covers pictured here.) Sid is brave without bravado and he makes brains sexy. Your local library will have them for sure. 


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Feb
11

Audiobooks rock!

Posted by Denise on February 11, 2010 under Books

I’m here to tell you audiobooks rock! What? You already knew that? Well, duh! I’ve always been a late bloomer.

It started with Stephen Fry reading Harry Potter. Not only a gorgeous voice, but so many voices. How a man with a dark velvety baritone makes himself sound like a fourteen year old girl, let alone a squeaky house elf, is beyond me, but he does. I heard in an interview with him and J.K. Rowling that the recording engineers keep a special CD with snippets of all the different voices he does, as a reference. There must be hundreds.

I’m in awe of these vocal artists - because they are artists, in every sense of the word. Lord John and the Private MatterScots, Irish, slum London and, of course, Lord John’s mellifluous oh-so-English tones. He’s fabulous, but OMG, I was gobsmacked to discover he’s American! WTF? How did does he do it? by Diana Gabaldon is read by Jeff Woodman. He does a complete range of accents -

I’m pretty good at detecting accents. For example, I can still hear Sam Worthington’s Aussie accent in Avatar. Kinda cute coming from an eight foot tall blue guy.*snicker* But Woodman had me completely convinced. Brilliant. Just like High Laurie in House. DD wouldn’t believe me when I told her he was the quintessential Englishman. Had to find the evidence on YouTube!

Then there’s Nigel Planer reading Terry Pratchett. I lurve Terry Pratchett, and even though I’ve read them all before, there’s something so indugent and well, cuddly, about being read to. A throwback to childhood, I guess. As some of you have intuited, I suck at housework because I hate it. Actually, I dislike pretty much any kind of routine. So I’ve been listening to Men at Arms as I clean up the kitchen (DD is on a baking jag) or trudge through my exercise program or drive to work. It really helps. Though I laughed so hard at Janet Evanovich’s Visions of Sugar Plums, I nearly drove up a telegraph pole once.

Ellora’s Cave have just started a new line of audiobooks. You can check it out here. Look at the upper right hand corner of the Home Page for the direct link.  Wow. I can’t imagine anyone reading my books aloud, except I think I’d want it to be a man. Can’t decide whether to blush or go jump My Beloved’s bones.

Do you listen to audiobooks? Do you enjoy them? What about erotic romances though? I suspect I’d be too embarrassed to listen. Which is pretty dumb really, because visuals/movies don’t bother me - quite the reverse, actually! heh heh


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Feb
01

Laced with Desire Cross-Blog Tour

Posted by Denise on February 1, 2010 under Books, Contests, Excerpts, Freebies, Life

Welcome to the Laced with Desire cross-blog. 

This is our second ‘corset’ anthology together and we had such a blast with the Unlaced cross-blog, we decided to do it again.

This time, Jaci Burton, Jasmine Haynes, Joey W. Hill and I are talking about clothes - what they do (and don’t do!) for us. Yes, fashion disasters, unwise addictions, sex-kitten outfits - all is revealed. There are even a couple of pictures. Woot! (Possibly.)

Four authors, four blogs - four chances for free books. And it’s easy, just leave a comment. (Photographic evidence not required. heh heh) What’s not to love? Winners announced 9am EST (USA) Wednesday 3rd February.

Visit each of the blogs in turn to check out the giveaways from each author.I’m giving away a set - Unlaced AND Laced with Desire. If you happen to own them both already, I’m sure we can find something else.

I’ve put an easy link for you under each of our responses to the questions about clothes.

Here are the four questions  - 

1. What’s your most appalling shopping weakness, especially when it comes to clothes? Go to Jaci Burton’s blog. Giveaway - an advance review copy of her March release, Bound, Branded and Brazen.

2. What’s your most comfortable outfit and what do you enjoy doing most to relax? Go

to Jasmine Haynes’ blog. Giveaway - autographed copy of Yours for the Night.

 3. What’s your most sexy/naughty-feeling outfit? Go to Joey W. Hill’s blog. Giveaway - a signed copy of Laced with Desire.

4. What’s the outfit that gives you the most confidence? Read on! Giveaway - the set, Unlaced AND Laced with Desire.


What’s the outfit that gives you the most confidence?

Jaci Burton:

I have this sleeveless black dress that I adore. I can dress it up or down, wear a shirt under it if it’s cold outside or put a sweater over it. It’s multifunctional, looks great on me, I can wear heels or boots or flats with it, punk it up or class it up and it still looks great. Everyone should have a basic black dress they can do so many things with. It’ll make you feel great about yourself.

Visit Jaci’s blog for the shopping disasters and Jaci’s giveaway!

Excerpt from Jaci’s story, No Strings Attached.


Jasmine Haynes:

For confidence, I like a suit, feminine lines with a short tailored, form-fitting jacket and a skirt, either calf-length or well above the knee, never knee-length.  Under the suit, of course, very feminine lacy bra and barely there thong panties.  Thigh high stockings top it off.  Professional, feminine, and naughty all rolled into one.

Visit Jasmine’s blog for comfy clothes and Jasmine’s giveaway!

Excerpt from Jasmine’s story, La Petit Mort.


 Joey W. Hill:

jungledress-thumb.jpgThat would be this dress. I wore it at the 2009 Romantic Times for the Jungle Party. Typical of an OCD personality type with body image issues, I don’t often feel gorgeous in anything, but I loved this dress. It had sexy lines, and flowed when I walked like I was a romance heroine come out of her chrysalis. It flattered hip line, maximized my minimal cleavage (grin), and had a whimsical flirtiness to it I adored. I found some great Wal-mart White Stag jewelry to go with it for almost nothing, and my mom, who went with me to RT, took this lovely near sunset picture. She was probably trying to commemorate the one time her daughter didn’t look like a bag lady!Of course, on the flip side, sometimes when I’m wearing my most comfortable outfit (see the question on Jasmine’s blog), that’s also when I feel most confident. That’s because it’s the outfit that says “this is the real me”, and there’s always a reassurance to that…as long as I don’t end up in the wrong environment for it. I remember one conference, I brought too many “comfortable clothes”, and when I went to one of the more formal events, I felt far from confident! So matching the setting to the outfit helps. However, when I’m at home and around town, I always feel quite confident in my comfy clothes. Though I think the sexy zebra dress would work anywhere (I plan to wear it to Wal-mart one day for fun – laughter).

Visit Joey’s blog for naughty/sexy outfits and Joey’s giveaway!

Excerpt from Joey’s story, Honor Bound.


Denise Rossetti:

I don’t mind admitting it - clothes are really important to my self-confidence. Feeling over or under dressed, badly groomed or untidy disconcerts me dreadfully. I suspect it’s shallow, but there you go.If I think my day at the Evil Day Job is going to be challenging, I’ll make a point of dressing from the skin out to bolster my confidence.
bracelet_jan10.gif
Matching undies first. Beyond that, I absolutely have to feel ‘put together’. I’m not a frilly or froufrou dresser, I like well-cut classics and a close fit. So it might be belted tailored trousers and shirt, with a jacket and discreet jewelry. I combine rich bright colours with neutrals because they give my skin a lift. Anything beige, dusty or muted and I could get work as an extra on Night of the Living Dead. LOL

I always wear my charm bracelet – I have a charm for every book I’ve written – because it reminds me of who I am and what I can do if I put my mind to it. (If you were wondering why the two silver inkpot/quill charms, they’re my Passionate Plume Awards.)

Excerpt from my story, Rhio’s Dancer.

Tell us about the outfit that makes you feel a million dollars. What’s so special about it?


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