Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress – Now Available as an ebook

Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress is now available as an ebook at Smashwords.com for $1.59. Follow the link on the right, or click here. Hopefully the paperback will be available in a few weeks.

Calibre

I’ve blogged about Calibre before. It is a wonderful program written and constantly updated by Kovid Goyal. Version .612 is now out. It works with virtually any ebook reader or with none at all. It converts books from one format to another and it organizes and saves your ebook library for you. Best of all, it’s free– though donations to the creator are accepted. Download it here.

Feedbooks

Feedbooks is probably the most visited site offering free ebooks on the web. You can’t imagine how exciting it is to go to the main page and see your own book sitting next to The Call of the Wild and The Count of Monte Cristo!

I’m upset though, because His Robot Girlfriend has fallen to the fifth most popular new book download for the week, though it is still climbing the all-time chart. Get over to feedbooks and download it. It’s free! You’ll find plenty of other great reading material too.

His Robot Girlfriend – Still a hot download.

Exactly three months ago, I reported that His Robot Girlfriend had been downloaded 1, 234 times. I was very excited. It is still available on the same two sites, Feedbooks and Smashwords, and it is now on Manybooks.net as well. It still seems to be popular. As of today it has been downloaded….

(Drumroll)

7,543 times.

Mobile Read Forums

If you want to find out more about ebooks and ebook readers of all types, there just simply is no better place than Mobile Read Forums. There are many people there who read the forums on a daily basis and are glad to help out anyone with questions. You can also download the BEST ebooks, hand-made if you will, in many different formats.
Also notice, this blog is going out at 9AM on 9-9-09! SPOOKY!

Manybooks

Many books has many books, and they are all free. As you know, His Robot Girlfriend can already be found there. I think Eaglethorpe Buxton will be making appearances there soon. I’ll let you know.

Free eBooks at Munseys

Just a reminder of one of the many great places to get wonderful eBooks for free. Munseys at http://www.munseys.com/ adds five books a day to their growing library of thousands of books. Stop in and check them out. And for you who don’t yet have a portable reading device, you can download the books as pdfs and read them on your computer.

Donation Button

I added a donation button because several people asked me to. If you downloaded and read “His Robot Girlfried” or “Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess” or even “Women of Power” and you want to pay for it you can. Still, I would rather if you liked one of the above books, that you purchase “Princess of Amathar”.

His Robot Girlfriend – Popular Download

For a while, His Robot Girlfriend was the most popular download at Feedbooks.com. It has been pushed down into second place for the week, but continues to be the most popular download for the past month. And on the all time most popular book list, it continues to climb– it’s now number 12 with a bullet.

Princess of Amathar – Chapter 19 Excerpt


“Look over there,” said Tular Maximinos, suddenly at my shoulder. It was his company who had come to our aid.


I turned to see one of the black Zoasian battleships explode into a huge fireball and fall into the city below, setting off even more explosions. The battle seemed to be going well, and I could see three other enemy ships burning in the sky, as they spun out of control. All of the ships in our squadron were still in the air, though many had taken quite a bit of damage. I imagined that the squadron making the direct assault against the city was incurring even greater losses, but we had our reserves, and we knew what we were after.


Suddenly all the soldiers on deck were knocked from their feet, myself included. I jumped up to see another Zoasian ship grinding along our bow. The two ships had collided in mid-air, and the enemy was sliding down our side. As the black battleship moved closer to where we stood, it began to move away.


“Come on,” I shouted to my men, and taking a running leap into the air, I crossed the distance to the reptiles’ airship. This wasn’t really part of a plan. It just seemed like a good idea at the time to take the battle to the enemy.


Landing on the deck with a thud, I turned around to see how many of my company had made it across with me. About thirty others, including Tular Maximinos, had made it. One young warrior had not been able to make the jump, and was still falling the several thousand feet to the ground below. The remainder of our small battalion had remained behind, being unable to cross the distance before the two ships had moved too far away from each other.


“Where now?” I called to Tular Maximinos, as there seemed to be no Zoasians on deck.


“To the engine room!” he called back, and the two of us rushed toward the back of the ship, followed by thirty or so men and women.


A wide path ran along the side of the vessel between the superstructure and the edge, giving us a metal avenue down the length of the ship. It was good that it was a broad space too, because there was no rail along the side, as there was on Amatharian ships. We had gone down about half the length of the mile long vessel when I heard weapons fire behind me. I turned to see over a hundred Zoasians at the bow of the vessel, where we had just been. They were firing at us, and had already shot two of our team.


I sheathed my sword, and whipped out my light pistol. The Amatharians with me did the same, and we soon had the hulking reptiles diving for cover.


“Swordsman,” I called to a female Amatharian, “take five warriors and hold this position.”


“Yes, knight.”


I could see in her face that this young woman knew that she had just been ordered to give her life, but I could also see the fierce determination to complete her orders, and a strong desire to sell her life as dearly as she could.


Tular Maximinos and I led the other soldiers onward. At last we reached the rear of the superstructure, but there seemed to be no opening.


“We need to find a way inside.” said the Amatharian knight.


“Well then,” I said, putting away my pistol, and whipping out my long sword. “Let’s go inside.”


The blade of my sword began to glow even before my arm started its movement. I swung down to the deck, slicing with my sword, through the metal, like a butcher knife cutting through a soap bubble. With four clean strokes, I cut a large square hole in the deck. Tular Maximinos kicked the newly made door with the heal of his boot, and sent the square of metal flying downward. I whipped out my pistol and jumped into the new hole, landing some ten feet below and rolling to one side. A moment later, Tular Maximinos and the warriors of Amathar were beside me.


We were in a long hallway which seemingly stretched the length of the ship. It was brightly lit with artificial light. There were no Zoasians in sight. With a wave of his hand, Tular Maximinos signaled us to follow him, and we moved silently down the hallway toward the stern of the vessel. At each intersection of the hallway we glanced down the perpendicular shafts, expecting at any moment to be confronted by a large group of heavily armed lizard men. We ran across only one unfortunate Zoasian, whom Tular Maximinos sliced into three separate pieces.


After running literally more than a quarter mile down the hallway, we found ourselves at its end. The hallway opened up to a balcony overlooking a huge room full of machinery a hundred feet below. On the floor far below us, was the apparatus responsible for keeping the ship aloft. It looked something like a great turbine, though its hum was below the sound level of our own voices.


Almost immediately, we were spied by one of the enemy crew members on the floor, and seconds later we were engaged in a firefight with a dozen Zoasians below. Seconds later, two of my companions fell, wounds in their backs, and I turned to see a whole army of reptiles running toward us from the hallway we had just exited. I knew that the brave soldiers we had left behind had been overcome. I called out a warning to the others and fired several shots down the hall. But we were caught in a crossfire. A narrow catwalk led to the right or left of the balcony, but with weapons fire from below, and an enemy approaching from behind, it was suicide to attempt it.


“Good luck to you, my friend,” said Tular Maximinos, smiling. He then jumped to the top of the balcony railing, and holding his sword straight out, jumped down toward the machinery below.


As Tular Maximinos fell, he carved his blade into the great machine. The mechanism began to sputter and spark and shriek loudly. The Amatharian’s body continued to fall though, and hit the floor with a horrid crunching sound. I looked down to see him lying on the deck below, his legs a twisted mess of blood and bone. Before I could raise my own weapon in his defense, a nearby Zoasian pointed his ray pistol at the knight’s head and shot him.


Like a streak of lightning, a blazing light bust forth from Tular Maximinos’s sword. It danced around the room for a moment, and then blasted through the bodies of every Zoasian in the engine room. Finally it disappeared. Before my eyes had readjusted to the normal light levels, a huge fireball engulfed the room, as the massive machinery that the Amatharian had damaged, exploded.


“Come on!” I called to the brave men and women with me.

Just a reminder that Princess of Amathar is available now as an ebook for only $1.59.