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Thursday, February 22, 2024

Blog Tour- THE NIGHTMARE MACHINE by Tim White With An Excerpt & 2 #Giveaways!

I am thrilled to be hosting a spot on the THE NIGHTMARE MACHINE by Tim White Blog Tour hosted by Rockstar Book Tours. Check out my post and make sure to enter the giveaway!

 

About The Book:

Title: THE NIGHTMARE MACHINE

Author: Tim White

Pub. Date: February 20, 2024

Publisher: Ocean Scribe Publishing

Formats:  Paperback, eBook, Audiobook

Pages: 600

Find it: Goodreadshttps://books2read.com/THE-NIGHTMARE-MACHINE

Purchase the book directly from Tim! There’s also a prequel novella! 

What is The Nightmare Machine? Think Silent Hill meets Inception and Monster Hunter International.

Five millennia of suffering. A pilgrimage steeped in terror. Will her quest bring redemption or only a false promise of salvation?

Bangor, Maine. Sara Holcomb knows what she must do. Raised within a secret order devoted to protecting humanity from a malevolent god, the dutiful seventeen-year-old prepares for a terrifying expedition through a world of nightmares. So when the time comes, she convinces three close friends to escort her on a perilous journey to an otherworldly cathedral of bone and blood.

Transported to a land of chaos and horror while they sleep, Sara wrestles with guilt at bringing people she holds dear to this hell from which they may not escape. And as vicious traps and pitiless creatures tear at their bodies and minds, the honor-bound young woman fears they won’t be strong enough to complete the mission that will preserve mankind.

 

TimWhite The Nightmare Machine

Dreams

December 17, 2021

Bangor, Maine

It was a typical teenage girl’s bedroom, if neater than most. Strips of LED lights, switched off for the evening, ran along the edges of the ceiling. The window in the eastern wall had a broad sill, upon which rested several well-tended potted plants, carefully arranged to soak up the morning sun. The posters of actors and bands were perfectly vertical and precisely aligned next to one another.

Similarly, the books and papers on the desk were stacked neatly and arranged at ninety-degree angles. The white carpet was free of clothes and freshly vacuumed. The walls were a soft pink—a color the paint store called Rose Dust.

In one corner, a pair of tangled headphones lay on top of a hastily discarded backpack, the only sign of mild untidiness. On the wall above the backpack, three shelves displayed various awards for academic achievement and community service. The trophies were meticulously polished, the wooden plaques free of dust.

The alarm clock on the nightstand read 10:00 p.m. The girl asleep in the bed looked like the proper owner of the bedroom. Like the room, she was all right angles, one knee drawn up, the other leg straight, one arm down at her side, the other tucked under the pillow. Her pajama top was white, the bottoms light pink, matching the walls and carpet. Her breathing was slow, even, and perfectly consistent. Like the backpack tossed in the corner, her red hair splayed wildly over the pillow was the only thing that suggested disorder.

An hour passed. She remained motionless, perfectly at peace.

Down the hall, her father slept less peacefully. His room was more sparsely decorated but equally tidy. A few framed vinyl records adorned one wall; an autographed bass guitar hung on another.

The bed was big enough for two, but he slept alone. A single framed photo on the nightstand showed a smiling couple on a beach—him and a woman who hadn’t slept in his bed for twelve years.

A beautifully hand-painted urn on a high shelf held her ashes.

The man often had vivid dreams. Some nights, he dreamed of his wife, waking with moisture in his eyes and a smile on his face. Other nights, his dreams were plagued by dark forms and whispered promises of perdition.

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TimWhite The Nightmare Machine

Tonight, he had no dreams. Even so, he slept fitfully. He always did. Another hour passed.

His eyes flew open at the sound of an ear-splitting scream from down the hallway. “Sara!” he shouted, as if by reflex, before he’d even come fully awake. His feet hit the floor as he yanked open the nightstand drawer and closed his fingers around the loaded pistol. He was at his bedroom door in a flash. It opened outward, and even though it was unlocked, he shouldered it open forcefully, causing the knob on the opposite side to punch a large hole in the drywall. His daughter needed him.

At a running pace, her bedroom door was only six steps away. Many thoughts raced through his mind in that brief distance.

At first, he wondered if she had merely had a bad dream, the same sort of bad dream that every teenager has once in a while. He dismissed that notion immediately. Her scream carried discordant notes of heart-wrenching terror far beyond anything that a normal nightmare caused.

Then he thought—hoped—that she’d screamed because someone had broken into the house. That seemed a horrible thing for a father to hope for, that an intruder was in his daughter’s bedroom. But he was armed, he was reasonably strong, and he’d been taking Krav Maga classes twice a week for years; so had Sara. They could defend themselves against an intruder.

Deep in his heart, he knew there was no intruder. The gun in his hand would be useless against this threat. In seventeen years, he’d never heard Sara scream that way before.

Only one thing could make her scream like that.

He reached her bedroom door and flung it open. His eyes weren’t fully adjusted to the darkness, but he could see her sitting up in bed, clutching the sides of her head as though she were suffering the worst headache imaginable. She screamed again, so loudly that he half-expected the window to shatter. He dropped the gun on the floor and grabbed her shoulders, shaking her.

“Sara! It’s okay, I’m here!”

She screamed again. Blood dripped from her nose onto her white shirt. Her eyes were screwed shut so tightly that, in the darkness, it looked like she had no eyes at all. Jesus, she’s still asleep, he thought. He shook her again, more violently, shouting her name over and over. He fumbled around on her nightstand until he found the small lamp, switching it on so he could see better.

She was turning blue. She just kept screaming, hunched over, hands clapped over her ears. He tried to move her hands so she could hear him, but she resisted with strength that seemed impossible for her petite frame. His mind raced, trying to think of how he could snap her out of it.

An idea came to him. He swept her up in his arms and jogged back down the 2 of 3

TimWhite The Nightmare Machine

hall, toward the bathroom. With an elbow, he clicked on the light, then gently laid her in the bathtub, careful not to bang her head on the porcelain. Hesitating only for a moment, he turned on the cold tap full blast.

Frigid water erupted from the shower head, drenching her instantly. The water was barely above freezing, liquid only because the pipes were wrapped. It had the desired effect. Sara’s eyes shot open, and she gasped in a breath, choking off another scream. She spluttered and began to thrash. She probably thought she was drowning.

Before she could hurt herself, he dragged her out of the tub and sat next to her on the floor. She blinked once, twice, three times, slowly regaining her senses. Her green eyes focused on him, and finally, she saw him.

“Dad?” Her voice was barely above a whisper.

“I’m here, baby,” he said, moving her wet hair out of her face.

She collapsed against him, sobbing. He held her and said nothing, letting her come out of it slowly. He didn’t ask what had done this to her. He knew. An icy chill ran up his spine.

She said nothing either, as though it wouldn’t be true as long as neither of them spoke it aloud.

Gradually, her sobs tapered off, and she began to shiver violently against him. He realized that she was probably freezing in her soaked pajamas. “Go get changed,” he said softly, “before you turn into an ice cube.”

She looked up at him. He could see a question in her eyes that she seemed embarrassed to ask.

“I’ll wait right outside your door,” he said.

That seemed to give her the strength she needed to stand up. He followed her back to her room, retrieved the gun from the floor, and quietly shut the door behind him as he left.

He stood in silence in the dark hallway, his eyes unfocused. He’d known this day was coming, but now that it was here, it seemed unreal.

He wept, silently, just for a minute. It would be the last time he’d allow himself to cry.

His daughter was strong, but she would need his strength as well. He prayed that it would be enough.

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About Tim White:

Tim White is an author, editor, writing coach, and game designer in Phoenix, Arizona. He started writing fiction in 1996 and nonfiction in 2006. As of 2023, he has published more than 1,000 nonfiction articles and three nonfiction books. He has written three novels, four novellas, dozens of tabletop role-playing game (TTRPG) scripts, and hundreds of short stories.

Tim is a zealous crusader for the power of storytelling to promote human flourishing. He writes fiction in several genres, particularly one that he calls “Romantic horror” (as in “Romantic-era novelists” such as Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas, not as in “romance novel”). This little-known genre is unique in that it uses fear as a backdrop against which heroism is sharply contrasted, dramatized, and elevated.

Tim’s storytelling philosophy is summed up eloquently by one of his favorite authors:

“I often hear people say that they read to escape reality, but I believe that what they’re really doing is reading to find reason for hope, to find strength. While a bad book leaves readers with a sense of hopelessness and despair, a good novel, through stories of values realized, of wrongs righted, can bring to readers a connection to the wonder of life. A good novel shows how life can and ought to be lived. It not only entertains but energizes and uplifts readers.” ― Terry Goodkind

Before transitioning to writing full time, Tim was an Army combat medic, and later, a nurse paramedic specializing in trauma and surgery. He is a lifelong shooter and has ranked moderately well in state-level 3-gun competitions. He loves board games, video games, and role-playing games; cats; Pembroke Corgis; good coffee; good books; and escape rooms. He owns an escape room venue in Arizona, where he designs and builds every prop and puzzle in-house.

Sign up for one or all of Tim's Newsletters!

Website | Goodreads | Amazon | BookBub

 

Giveaway Details: (there are 2 giveaways)

Bargain Booksy Giveaway:

One winner will be chosen at random on 4/15/2024 and notified via email that they have won the 20 eBooks and a Kindle.

Giveaway Link: https://www.bargainbooksy.com/thriller-giveaway-021524/

Rockstar Book Tours Giveaway:

1 winner will receive a $10 Amazon Gift Card courtesy of Rockstar Book Tours, International.

Ends March 5th, midnight EST.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tour Schedule:

Week One:

2/19/2024

@darkfantasyreviews

IG Post

2/19/2024

Kountry Girl Bookaholic

Excerpt/IG Post

2/20/2024

jlreadstoperpetuity

IG Post

2/20/2024

Writer of Wrongs

Excerpt

2/21/2024

The Melting Plot

IG Post

2/21/2024

A Dream Within A Dream

Excerpt

2/22/2024

Two Chicks on Books

Excerpt/IG Post

2/22/2024

GryffindorBookishnerd

IG Review

2/23/2024

Kim's Book Reviews and Writing Aha's

Review/IG Post

2/23/2024

@books.mo.reads

IG Review

 Week Two:

2/26/2024

Books and Zebras

IG Review

2/26/2024

@stargirls.magical.tale

IG Review

2/27/2024

@dana.loves.books

IG Review/TikTok Post

2/27/2024

Review Thick And Thin

Review/IG Post

2/28/2024

FUONLYKNEW

Review

2/28/2024

The Momma Spot

Review

2/29/2024

One More Exclamation

Review/IG Post

2/29/2024

Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer

Review/IG Post

3/1/2024

Confessions of the Perfect Mom

Review/IG Post

3/1/2024

Country Mamas With Kids

Review/IG Post


Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Blog Tour- MISS AUSTEN INVESTIGATES: THE HAPLESS MILLINER by @NovelistJessica With An Interview & #Giveaway! @UnionSqandCo

I am thrilled to be hosting a spot on the MISS AUSTEN INVESTIGATES: THE HAPLESS MILLINER by Jessica Bull Blog Tour hosted by Rockstar Book Tours. Check out my post and make sure to enter the giveaway!

 

About The Book:

Title: MISS AUSTEN INVESTIGATES: THE HAPLESS MILLINER

Author: Jessica Bull

Pub. Date: February 27, 2024

Publisher: Union Square Co.

Formats: Hardcover, Paperback, eBook, Audiobook

Pages: 368

Find it: Goodreadshttps://books2read.com/THE-HAPLESS-MILLINER

A witty, engaging murder mystery featuring Jane Austen as an intrepid amateur sleuth—the first in a series.
Jane Austen—sparkling, spirited, and incredibly clever—is suddenly thrust into a mystery when a milliner’s dead body is found locked inside a cupboard in the middle of a ball. When Jane’s brother Georgy is found with some jewelry belonging to the deceased, the local officials see it as an open-and-shut case: one which is likely to end with his death. Jane is certain that he is innocent, and there is more to the murder than meets the eye. Her investigations send her on a journey through local society, as Jane’s suspect list keeps on growing— and her keen observational skills of people will be put to the test to solve the crime and save her brother. 

Featuring the same lively wit, insightful social commentary, and relatable characters that have made Jane Austen books into perennial classics, this first entry in the Miss Austen Investigates series is perfect for anyone who enjoyed The Dante Club by Matthew Pearl or other historical mystery books based on real people, as well as fans looking to add to their Jane Austen collection.

 

Interview

For the readers: can you tell us a little bit about your book and the characters?

My debut novel, Miss Austen Investigates: The Hapless Milliner, is a tribute to the life and work of Jane Austen in the form of a murder mystery. It begins with 33nineteen-year-old Jane enjoying a flirtation with a handsome gentleman at a glittering ball. Unfortunately, their romance is cut short when a milliner is found bludgeoned to death. Jane wants to solve the crime as she knew and respected the milliner, but the case turns personal after her gentle brother, Georgy, is accused. Now she has only seven weeks to find the true culprit, or Georgy will be hanged for a crime she knows he could never commit.

 

What are you working on now?

I’m editing The Foreign Princess, which is the second book in the Miss Austen Investigates series. In the summer of 1797, Jane travels to Kent to look after her brother Neddy’s children and further her writing. Once arrived, she realizes her time would be better spent uncovering the true identity of a mysterious young woman claiming to be a foreign princess, kidnapped by pirates and held for ransom, before the interloper can swindle Neddy’s adoptive mother out of her fortune and steal the much-anticipated inheritance all the Austens rely on.

 

Were any of the characters in The Hapless Milliner inspired by people from your real life?

Nearly all the characters are based on the real people in Austen’s life, rather than my own, and I have pieced together their lively personalities from surviving accounts and letters. But I must admit, whenever I was trying to come up with one of Mrs. Austen’s withering rebukes to her daughter, I would ask myself what my own mum might say!

 

Who was your favorite character to write? What about your least favorite?

My favorite was Jane: this series is really an excuse for me to spend as much time with, and take my readers as close to, my hero as possible. Mary was a surprise favorite. Austen and Mary Lloyd’s real-life relationship was complicated, as they were genuinely close but, after Mary married Austen’s eldest brother, James, their friendship became strained.

Despite this, when Austen was dying, it was Mary who Austen’s sister, Cassandra, turned to for help nursing her through her final illness. Cassandra knew she could trust Mary to care for Austen as no other would. I really wanted to convey this sense of a loyal friendship that could endure through the years, despite many differences of opinion and character.

I found it difficult to write about the actual murder, as I’m quite squeamish and very emotional. It was important for me to show Madame Renault was more than just ‘a victim’: I wanted her to be a character in her own right, whose life had been unfairly snatched away.

 

What is your favorite passage/scene in your book?

I took great delight in making all the things Austen did in real life integral to solving the mystery. In particular, there’s a ball scene at the center of the novel where Jane must dance with as many gentlemen as possible in order to further her investigation. It was enormous fun to imagine what such an occasion might have been like and to let Jane enjoy her flirtation with Tom Lefroy, even if it was only for a very brief moment. It was also exciting passage to write as all of the characters have their own motives for behaving suspiciously, and these are just about to explode into the narrative.

 

What kind of research did you have to do for the story?

I’m a huge Jane Austen fan and I spent years reading her work and researching her life before I even thought of writing about her. As I got closer to planning the novel, I set myself the challenge of understanding what it was like to physically inhabit Austen’s world, so I could make my portrayal as immersive as possible. I kept my own flock of hens, learnt to dance in the Georgian style, and I made and wore my own Regency-inspired gowns.

I also attempted to learn how to ride a horse - something which I later realized is very difficult as an adult. It did not go well, as you might be able to glean from Jane’s attitude to riding horseback in the story!

 

Lightning Round Questions

 

What are you reading right now?

Sarah Marsh’s A Sign Of Her Own (Park Row Books, June 2024) - an incredibly moving and fascinating story of a young deaf woman’s struggle to find acceptance.

 

Favorite social media site?

Instagram – I can spend hours watching reels of people recreating historical costumes.

 

Favorite Superhero or Villain?

Can I choose an Austen Villain? If so Lady Catherine de Bourgh is an absolute legend.

 

Favorite TV show?

Hulu’s The Great, which starred Elle Fanning as Catherine the Great of Russia. I especially love its tagline ‘an occasionally true story’, which could apply equally to Miss Austen Investigates.

 

Sweet or Salty?

Both – but I’m a chocoholic.

 

Any Phobias?

I used to be very afraid of big dogs, but I have my own little pooch now (Toby, a Jack Russel X Toy Poodle) and I’m working very hard to conquer this fear.

 

Song you can’t get enough of right now?

Shake It Out by Florence and the Machine. I always make a playlist to help set the mood for each of my writing projects and this is the unofficial theme song for the second Miss Austen Investigates.

 

2024 Movie you’re most looking forward to?

Argylle – because the idea of a writer getting to inhabit the world she created is irresistible.

 

Do you play video games? If so what are some of your favorites?

My husband installed a retro arcade machine in our lounge, so I’m reliving my youth by playing Street Fighter with my daughters. 

 

About Jessica Bull:

Jessica Bull grew up in southeast London, where she still lives with her husband, two daughters, and far too many pets. She’s addicted to stories and studied English Literature at Bristol University, and Information Science at City University, London. She began work as a librarian (under the false impression she could sit and read all day), before becoming a communications consultant. Miss Austen Investigates: The Hapless Milliner is her debut novel.

 

Twitter | InstagramTikTokGoodreads | Amazon

 



Giveaway Details:

1 winner will receive a finished copy of MISS AUSTEN INVESTIGATES: THE HAPLESS MILLINER, US Only.

Ends March 5th, midnight EST.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tour Schedule:

Week One:

2/19/2024

Kountry Girl Bookaholic

Guest Post/IG Post

2/20/2024

Two Chicks on Books

Guest Post/IG Post

2/21/2024

@stargirls.magical.tale

IG Review

2/22/2024

Kim's Book Reviews and Writing Aha's

Review/IG Post

2/23/2024

anitralovesbooksanddogs

IG Review

Week Two:

2/26/2024

Country Mamas With Kids

Review/IG Post

2/27/2024

@dana.loves.books

IG Review/TikTok Post

2/28/2024

Two Points of Interest

Review

2/29/2024

Confessions Of The Perfect Mom

Review/IG Post

3/1/2024

FUONLYKNEW

Review


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