Tags
free books, humor, paranormal, SciFi, steampunk, urban fantasy
Please don’t forget…
Don’t Touch is FREE on Kindle from 31 July – 2 August!
Hope flares each morning in the tiny flash of a second before Lette touches that first thing. And destroys it.
Her online journal spans a decade, beginning with the day a thirteen-year-old inherits an extreme form of the family “gift.” Every day whatever she touches converts into something new: bunnies, bubbles, bombs, and everything in between.
Lette’s search for a cure leads her to Stefan, whose fairy-tale looks hide a monstrous legacy, and to Rag, an arrogant, crabby ex-angel with boundary issues. The three face an army led by a monster who feeds on children’s fear. But it’s their own inner demons they must defeat first.
REVIEWERS ARE SAYING:
“If you like Null City’s fast paced edgy romance cum chase scene, Don’t Touch is a different tempo with the same cool, different, and edgy characters.”– Mary Rosenblum, best-selling author and instructor at the prestigious Clarion West Writers Workshop
“What a fabulous story! I really enjoyed this unique book, full of interesting characters and fascinating magic powers. The idea of people inheriting abnormal powers that they just want to be rid of, and what they go through to make that happen (or learn to live with who they are) makes engrossing reading.” — Reviewer Sonoma Lass
“…let me tell you I want to read more of this heroine and her companions…Her feelings and decisions resonate well within me, and the two male characters pose a fantastic balance to her emotional evolution and to the story. One of them is really important to help Lette realize who she is. The other one is strangely well suited to her wits and temper. Both of them are necessary and very welcome…There is magic, bad guys you want to punch in the gut, intense love interests, mysterious entities, and lots of fun. Definitely worth a read. “ — Tower of Babel Reviews
Reblogged this on Don Massenzio's Blog.
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Listen up, Barb. I am a dog and I have limited computer skills. Although they surpass my human’s (who shall remain unnamed). Anyway, where is the link to your book? After a hard day of sniffing around the neighborhood and burying (milk) bones, not to mention rolling in the occasional dead carcass of an animal, I need some good reading material. Oh, my human just told me that I could click on the cover image. Come on! Are dogs and old men supposed to know that. You kids and your crazy rock and roll music. I’m an old dog, BUT if I was a human, I’d be yelling, “Get off my lawn, you damn kids.”
I digress. That is why my unnamed human allows me only limited computer time.
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Danny, I’m so sorry to be late in responding to your comment. And I’m absolutely devastated to realize that I’m guilty of speciest discrimination against the opposable-thumbs challenged species. I asked my own dog what I can do about it, but she says she has no interest in the blog and thinks my time would be better spent on healthy outdoor pursuits such as throwing tennis balls for deserving dogs.
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I’m not a chasing kind of dog. When I first aquired Andrew, he took me outside and threw a tennis ball to the other side of the yard. I yawned and looked at him. He retrieved said ball and threw it again. Again the yawn and indifference. After throwing the ball a number of times and running after it (because I sure as hell wasn’t gonna play that game), Andrew was significantly trained. That was thirteen years ago and we have had no more of that foolishness since. We have had a lot of foolishness, mostly Andrew’s doing, but no ball chasing. My regards to your dog.
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Dear Danny,
My dog Peri returns your regards.
For years we have suspected that she is not Doggie Mensa material, and your post confirms it. She will chase the ball in the garden or park until she literally collapses in a faint. She will chase it in the water until drowning is an imminently real possibility.
Perhaps you should have a talk with her?
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