The Sorceress and her Lovers – $2.99 at BN

The Sorceress and her LoversThe Sorceress and her Lovers (Senta and the Steel Dragon book 6) is available at Barnes and Noble for the nook platform for $2.99.  Find it at this link.  The Voyage of the Minotaur (Senta and the Steel Dragon book 1) has been reduced in price at Barnes and Noble to 99 cents.  So now is a great time to start the series.

In a world of steam power and rifles, where magic has not yet been forgotten, an expedition sets out to found a colony in a lost world. The Voyage of the Minotaur is a story of adventure and magic, religion and prejudice, steam engines and dinosaurs, angels and lizardmen, machine guns and wizards, sorceresses, bustles and corsets, steam-powered computers, hot air balloons, and dragons.

It’s been three years since the Kingdom of Greater Brechalon, with the help of Zurfina the Magnificent, defeated their hereditary enemies, the Freedonians. The world has changed. Port Dechantagne, once a distant outpost of civilization, has grown to be a large city, the center of prosperous Birmisia Colony. Steam-powered carriages share the streets with triceratops-pulled trolleys, fine ladies in their most fashionable bustle dresses lead their lizardmen servants through the shopping districts, and an endless stream of immigrants pours into the region.

The young ladies of the colony are busy with fashion, coming out parties, and securing partners among the smaller male population. Eleven-year-old Iolana Staff, daughter of the colonial governor, has more important things on her mind—the mysterious machine known as the Result Mechanism, and her relationship to the machine’s creator.

Meanwhile, sorceress Senta Bly returns from the continent with a new male companion, an illegitimate daughter, and a long lost brother. Hated and feared for her magic, she must face wizards, assassins, and an old enemy from another reality.

The Sorceress and her Lovers continues the story of Senta and the Steel Dragon, taking up where The Two Dragons left off. It is a story of magic and power, fear and revenge, and love.

Now at the Library

His Robot WifeSmashwords has just announced a deal with Overdrive, the largest distributor of ebooks to libraries around the United States.  That means that all of my books will soon be available at your local library.  In addition, many of my ebooks– His Robot Girlfriend, His Robot Wife, Tesla’s Stepdaughters, Women of Power, The Voyage of the Minotaur, and others– are available free to libraries.  So if you are a library ebook user, ask your local library to get my books from Overdrive.

The Sorceress and her Lovers – Now Available

The Sorceress and her LoversAs you read this, The Sorceress and her Lovers should be available at Amazon, iBooks, Barnes & Noble, and Kobo.  If you haven’t already tried preordered it, I invite you to pick it up for $2.99.

As a bit of promotion for the series, Book 1: The Voyage of the Minotaur will be lowered in price from $2.99 to 99 cents at least until the end of the year.  It’s a great time to check out Senta and the Steel Dragon.

The Voyage of the Minotaur tells the story of colonists from the Kingdom of Greater Brechalon as they travel to the distant land of Birmisia in a world that is not quite like our own Victorian Age. The Dechantagne siblings; Iolanthe, Terrence, and Augie lead an expedition aboard the battleship Minotaur, hoping that the colony they build will restore their family to the position of wealth and power it once had. Along with them is the mysterious sorceress Zurfina, an orphan girl turned sorceress’s apprentice Senta Bly, and the newly hatched steel dragon. Waiting in dark and mysterious forests of Birmisia is the promise of a new life, along with hosts of dangerous beasts—from velociraptors and tyrannosaurs to the inscrutable reptilian aborigines. Senta and the Steel Dragon is a tale of adventure in a world of rifles and steam power, where magic and dragons have not been forgotten; a world of bustles and corsets, steam-powered computers, hot air balloons and dinosaurs, machine guns and wizards.

 

No Changes for Brechalon After All

Brechalon (New Cover)Well, the other day I announced that I was going to change the Senta and the Steel Dragon series, by making Brechalon part of book 2 and offering The Voyage of the Minotaur as a series starter.  The idea was that I could offer it for 99 cents, or maybe even for free, encouraging people to read it and the subsequent books.  I forgot about the big A problem.

Amazon doesn’t let authors sell books for $0, unless they become exclusive to Amazon.  I don’t want to do that.  They also prohibit an author from selling a book at Amazon when they sell it cheaper somewhere else (perfectly understandable).  Anyway, I couldn’t offer The Voyage of the Minotaur elsewhere for $0 and at Amazon for say, $.99.

So, Brechalon stays as it is.  I probably will still lower the price of The Voyage of the Minotaur, at least experimentally, to 99 cents.  I may go ahead and attach Brechalon to The Dark and Forbidding Land, but I’m going to leave it available where it is for free.  Incidentally, Amazon’s rules about free books are why Brechalon can’t be found at Amazon.

Changes for Brechalon

Brechalon (New Cover)I’m making a change in my book lineup. I’ve been thinking about this for a long time. It has to do with series starters, and specifically with Brechalon. His Robot Girlfriend, for instance, is a good series starter for the rest of the series. People download and read His Robot Girlfriend and like it, and so they may purchase the other books. I never envisioned Brechalon as a series starter. I always thought of it as an extra for readers of The Voyage of the Minotaur. Because I thought of it as sort of an add-on, I eventually decided to offer it free. Now however, because it is free, it gets downloaded and people read it to decide if they want to buy the rest of the series. I don’t think it represents the series very well. The characters, especially Senta, don’t grow much in this story. You could say that’s understandable, considering she’s a child of six in the story, but it’s not what readers picking up a cheap read want. I think The Voyage of the Minotaur is a much better starter for the series. It was always intended to be the first book read.

Here’s what I’m going to do. I’m pulling Brechalon from the ebookstores. It will still be available at Smashwords. I’m adding Brechalon onto the The Dark and Forbidding Land, which is the shortest of the series and as it’s number two in the series, it maintains Brechalon’s position as something to be read after reading The Voyage of the Minotaur. Since Minotaur is now officially, and obviously, the first book, I’m going to lower the price. Hopefully this will encourage more people to buy the book and then read the rest of the series. Already well over 60% of readers of Minotaur purchase The Dark and Forbidding Land. As a publisher, the idea here is short-term loss and long-term gain. Since I’m not really a publisher, but an author, I really just want my books read.  Everything should be in place for the arrival of book 6 in the series The Sorceress and her Lovers, in just over one month.

New Cover for The Voyage of the Minotaur

Voyage of the Minotaur (New Cover)

Just like Brechalon, The Voyage of the Minotaur has a new cover to put it in line with The Sorceress and her Lovers.  If you have an earlier version that has a font problem on chapters 12 and 13, this version fixes them.  If you didn’t have  any font problems, forget I said anything.

Free Books for Read An Ebook Week

Read an ebook week starts today, and for the next seven days, you can get the following books free at Smashwords.  Follow the links below and be sure to use the coupon code: RW100.

Princess of Amathar

Princess of Amathar

The Voyage of the Minotaur

The Voyage of the Minotaur

Tesla’s Stepdaughters

Tesla's Stepdaughters

Women of Power

Women of Power New

Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbike

Astrid Maxxim Cover

Astrid Maxxim and her Undersea Dome

Astrid Maxxim 2

The Two Dragons – Zeah Korlann

The Two Dragons (New Cover)Zeah Korlann is a character in the series Senta and the Steel Dragon.  I really created him for the first book in that series.  His story arc was one of an older man pursued by a younger woman.  He and his young lady Egeria really parallel Mike and Patience in His Robot Girlfriend, and its no surprise that I put that book together from some earlier pieces, right after I had written The Voyage of the Minotaur.

After that, I didn’t have much for Zeah to do, but I used him as an observer.  He really is a stand-in for me in the Senta books.  In The Two Dragons, his chief occupation is to observe the three women revolving around his life: his daughter Yuah, their shared nemesis Iolanthe, and Zeah’s wife Egeria.  At this point in the story, he watches the conflict between Yuah and Egeria.

The children had already gone through the house and come out in the garden.  Egeria had ordered the dining room table set up in the backyard, and Chunny was already covering it with fancy dishes filled with delicious looking food.

“Can we play games?” shouted Augie.

“We will play after lunch,” said Egeria.

“What games can we play?  We don’t have enough people to play Doggy Doggy.”

“Perhaps we could play Honey, Do You Love Me.”

“That’s no good,” said Terra, in her squeaky voice.  “Everybody here already knows who loves who.”

“You mean ‘who loves whom’,” corrected Egeria.  “I have a new game I think you will enjoy.” 

She made a sweeping gesture to indicate that they should all sit, and insisted that Zeah sit at the head of the table.  He was still dressed in his suit, so he still felt rather formal.  His wife certainly seemed formal as well.  Her white day dress made her fiery red hair stand out all the more.  Yuah’s dress was, in Zeah’s opinion, slightly scandalous.  It showed entirely too much back.  She sat at the opposite end of the table, while Egeria and the children stared at each other from either side.  Both women sat with a posture that could only have been achieved by rigid corseting.

“Pass around the chips,” ordered Egeria.

“I want a biscuit,” said Augie.

“Not till after.”

They passed around golden fish, beans, cheese, fruit, and of course crisp, beautiful chips.  Augie wanted nothing but chips and beans, and Terra wanted only fruit.  As the little girl used both tiny hands to hold the platter loaded with grapes, sliced apples, pear halves, bananas, and strawberries, she dropped the edge onto her plate.  With a loud crack, the plate broke into two pieces.  With a little cry, she dropped the platter, and although it didn’t break, fruit went rolling in all directions.  Zeah caught his breath.  Here as everywhere, Egeria employed dishes that were far too valuable to be used by normal humans, let alone children.

Egeria made no sound or expression that could be construed as any kind of admonishment.  She simply got up and gathered the stray fruit.  Yuah was upset though, probably with the same thoughts in her head that Zeah had in his.

“What kind of fool leaves out dishes like this for little children,” she said.

Egeria didn’t reply, but both her mouth and her eyes grew small.

Chunny came out to the table and removed the two plate halves, replacing them with a plate that to Zeah’s mind looked even more valuable than the one that had broken.  A few moments later, the lizardman returned with another platter loaded with butter biscuits.  These were the neat, perfect biscuits that Egeria bought in a tin, preferring them over homemade ones.  Now that his duty had been done by eating his chips and beans, Augie set to work ridding the property of buttery desserts.

When they had all finished, Egeria led the children around the house to the side yard.  Set up across the green lawn was a net for badminton, and four light rackets had been placed on a small occasional table that had been brought down from the upstairs hallway.  Zeah went to the gazebo near the edge of the yard and picked up the wicker armchair, bringing it back.  He intended to be a spectator in this sporting event.  By the time he had made himself comfortable, the sides had already been chosen.  Yuah and Augie were set up on the east side of the net, while Egeria and little Terra, whose racket was almost as large as she was, were arrayed on the west.

Yuah served first, taking the bright yellow shuttlecock and whacking it with a force that should have knocked it clear to the ocean.  The feathered birdie lost its steam though just above Egeria and wafted down right in front of her.  With a mighty backhand blow, she sent it soaring back again over the net.  Despite the fact that neither woman, with their corseted waists, long dresses trailing upon the ground, and voluminous hairstyles seemed ready for athletics, they pummeled the hapless cork and feather device back and forth.

Thwack!  Egeria smashed the birdie directly toward Yuah’s face.  Thwack!  Yuah sent it back.  Thwack!  This time Yuah had to reach around.  Thwack!  It went toward the back end of the court.  Egeria, a good four inches shorter than her opponent was unable to reach it, and the birdie alighted gently upon the grass.

“Ha!” cried Yuah.  Then her eyes rolled back into her head and she fell to the ground in a faint, an often enough occurrence for women walking in corsets, let alone participating in sporting events.

Egeria smiled triumphantly.  She wobbled for a moment and then she too fell down into the grass, gulping for air.

“Hey, I want to play!” shouted Augie, but Terra had already lost interest and was busy chasing a butterfly.

“Grandpa will play with you,” said Zeah, “as soon as we clear the court.”

Late Night Ideas

The Sorceress and her LoversI’m working hard on The Sorceress and her Lovers.  I’m right in the middle of chapter 11 (of 25 plotted).  So far, all of the Senta books have come in shorter than I originally plotted them– 21 or 23 chapters instead of 25– because as I write I combine some things and move others around.  This time though, I plotted shorter chapters.

Anyway, the other night before bed, after I had taken a sleeping pill, I had a rash of story ideas that I wrote down.  I’m substituting letters for names here.  A turns on B.  We find out that C is working for D the whole time.  D plots to get E.  F meets G when she shouldn’t.  H saves I’s life.  C saves the life of J, leading us to think he’s all right, when he’s really in league with D.  F and J give us two very different stories about what happened between the two of them in between the last book and this one.

I expected when I went back to look at these ideas the next day, that they would be really bad.  Sleeping pills don’t usually aid creativity, though they may make you think they do at the time.  But all of the ideas except one (F meets G when she shouldn’t) actually work.  In fact that other one works too, but it’s not right for the story.  So, now I’m kind of excited to get them worked into the book.  I’ll keep you up to date.

The Voyage of the Minotaur Review

The Voyage of the Minotaur There is a review of The Voyage of the Minotaur up at the Books, Life, & Wine blog.  This review has appeared before, but it is one of my favorites.  It’s critical (in the best sense of that word) and the reviewer isn’t afraid to point out what they don’t like.  But it’s honest and well-thought-out.  You can find it here.