Friday, 8 November 2013

SNOWBOUND WITH A STRANGER by Patricia Keyson

http://www.amazon.com/SNOWBOUND-STRANGER-romance-PATRICIA-KEYSON-ebook/dp/B00GI28W5E/

http://www.amazon.co.uk/SNOWBOUND-STRANGER-romance-PATRICIA-KEYSON-ebook/dp/B00GI28W5E/


SNOWBOUND WITH A STRANGER (romance books)

“I read well into the night to find out if Megan would end up with Jamie, after they are snowed in together in beautiful Scotland. Curl up with this great book in front of a nice log fire!” Ann Devon 

“Well written and a great read, this is a compelling romance novel.” Beth Boyd, bestselling author of Love 

“A delightful winter romance that will warm your heart on a cold night. Made me wish I was snowed in with a cute guy.” Sarah Williams 

A brilliant romance novel with a wonderful winter setting, which you won’t be able to put down 
Far from spending a cosy Christmas with her highflying boyfriend the arrogant Douglas, aspiring actress Megan finds herself snowbound in a cottage in the beautiful but frozen Highlands of Scotland. Prepared to wait until the snow melts, Megan is surprised by a knock on the door by the handsome Jamie, also stranded in the snowy wilderness. With little in the way of Christmas treats to share between them, they survive and prosper with Jamie's wit and Megan's creativity. But come the melting of the ice and a return to the real world, will they find a way to continue the fun they shared in each other's company? 

Also available on Amazon by bestselling author Patricia Keyson: THE MAGIC TOUCH, HOLIDAY ROMANCE, and SUZI LEARNS TO LOVE AGAIN. 

WHY DO WE WRITE? BUD CRAIG

WHY DO WE WRITE?

Bud Craig, author of the crime thriller TACKLING DEATH talks about writing with NSNB


TACKLING DEATH (a crime thriller)
Q. Bud you’ve written much in the past, what drives you to write?
A. Writing has its frustrations, but when it all starts coming together (usually after I’ve written and rejected lots of stuff) it’s very satisfying. I can’t imagine not writing. And it’s a solitary occupation, so it suits a miserable bugger like me!

      Q: What made you write this particular book?
About 5 or 6 years ago I resuscitated an old idea. I wanted to set it in Salford, where I was born and bred. For most of my adult life I have lived in a village near Darlington, quite a contrast with my early life. I barely recognize my home town now. This distance probably made it more interesting to write.   
The basic plot has remained unchanged throughout the writing process, so I suppose the urge to tell the story was a strong motivating factor. It was slow going at first - I was writing other things as well and it was hard to get it right. I’d almost given up on it a couple of times. In the end it was sheer determination that made me write it. After several drafts I did some drastic pruning and made the style more direct. I kept telling myself, ‘You can make something of this.’
Now Not So Noble Books say it has ‘good cohesion, narrative flow and a natural style’. Who am I to argue? Those are the things I’m constantly striving for. I’ve never been all that keen on hard work, but believe me I worked on this.

Q. Name your favourite crime writers. What is the best crime novel of all time and why?
My favourite crime writers at the moment are, in no particular order, Simon Brett, Laura Wilson, Kate Ellis and John Dean. They all tell a good story but I particularly like their believable central characters.
Simon Brett was judge of the Steyning Short Story Competition in 2012. He chose my entry as one of the highly commended ones and said nice things about it so now I like him even more! The contest was judged anonymously so he doesn’t know my name. Perhaps we should tell him!  
My favourite non-crime writer is PG Wodehouse. I recently read Pat Barker’s latest book, Toby’s Room, on my Kindle. It’s fantastic. Another writer I like is Deborah Moggach - I’ve read most of her books and have been catching up on her back catalogue.
I haven’t got a best ever crime book, I’m afraid.

      Q: Your daughter is a successful novelist, tell us a little about her books.
Her first book, Northern Soul Revival by Claire Moss, was published a couple of years ago. It’s a modern romance and it’s brilliant. (I know I would say that - if you don’t believe me read it!) It is set in Sheffield, Tasmania and a fictional North Yorkshire town.
I was drawn into it from the first and soon forgot my daughter had written it. It has some very funny passages, good dialogue and strong characters. It is marketed as a ‘woman’s book’ but the male protagonist is particularly good, I think.
Claire has recently signed a two book deal with Carina UK. Her next book Who Do You Think You Are? will be out as an e-book, probably in November 2013. It is set in the present day, with flashbacks to the miners’ strike of 1984 and 1985.

Q. Is yours a literary household then?  Where did you get the bug?
I don’t know about literary, that sounds a bit grand. We certainly have a lot of books - there are some in every room in the house. Thank goodness for e-books, otherwise we’d be overrun by now!  
All the family are avid readers. I’m sure my 4 grandchildren will grow up to be book lovers.
My younger daughter, Ruth was runner up in the Sid Chaplin Short Story Competition when she was about 14 and when she has time she may get back to writing.  
My wife, Ann, concentrates on arts and crafts, for which I have absolutely no talent. 
How did I get the writing bug?  I suppose I wanted to do something creative. I like words and people have said I’m good with words. Maybe that’s it, but really these things can’t be explained.

Q. How important was success in writing competitions to your progress as a writer?
I would say two things in particular have helped me progress: writing competitions and joining the Inkerman Writers, a Darlington writing group.
Competitions first. In 2005 I was shortlisted in a novel writing competition in Writers’ Forum. A few months later I got  a rave review - no exaggeration- when I was shortlisted in Opening Lines on Radio 4. This was with The Final Test, a short story set during the 2005 Ashes series. (I’m a big cricket fan. I heard about Not So Noble Books’ interest in publishing Tackling Death the day Durham won the county championship. Does it get any better than that?)  
Things went on from there. In all I have done well in competitions on about 20 occasions. This includes being shortlisted in the Kenneth Branagh Windsor Festival Drama Awards 2 years running. 
I haven’t made much money from competitions, but this is the sort of thing that has helped keep me going.
I joined the Inkermans in 2003. We attend writing classes run by crime writer, John Dean. Three of us have been members for 10 years, many for 5 years or more. I have learned to write short stories while I have been with the group and have benefitted from my fellow writers’ feedback. It’s not a question of being told how to write (that’s impossible anyway). It’s more subtle than that. Learning to write is a gradual, incremental process and is mainly up to you. And you must practice!

Q. How has your career as a social worker informed your writing?
I first got published in Community Care, a social work magazine more years ago than I’m prepared to admit. They paid me what seemed like a lot of money at the time for The Adventure of Ivor Problem episodes one and two. These satirical stories were called It Doesn’t Matter Any More and Mama Weer All Crazee Now. I have recently written updated versions. They’re still getting laughs.
Tackling Death is partly set in a social work office, but I don’t think the book’s about social work. The setting, and Gus’s occupation, are things I have experienced. In social work, “All Human Life is Here”, as a newspaper said of itself in the old days. So I reckon it must have influenced me, even though I’m not always aware of it. As with Salford I am more distanced from it now. On a personal level this is quite a relief, given the current headlines about social work.
The titles of the Ivor Problem stories show how pop music has inspired my writing. Most of the work I have had success with has mentioned Elvis, though I’m not sure what that means. The King of Rock’n’Roll can’t tell us as he has left the building.
Sport gets the occasional mention too, for example in The Final Test. The best short story I’ve ever written is called Marching On, partly set at the time of the Munich air crash. One of the plays shortlisted in the Windsor Awards is based on this. And of course Rugby League features a bit inTackling Death.   

Q: Sum up your book in tweetable length.
I’ve never tweeted in my life but here goes:
Gus finds boss’s body. Becomes Private Eye. Investigates murder and that’s just the start of it!

Q. When are we going to see the sequel?
No pressure, I suppose? It’s too early to say at the minute, but I’ll be giving this priority above other writing. I’ve made a start and know who gets killed and whodunnit.  All I have to do is write it! 

Read Bud Craig’s crime thriller TACKLING DEATH here:

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

OUR MUTUAL FRIEND by Charles Dickens

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GGS5DW0

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00GGS5DW0

OUR MUTUAL FRIEND ( with illustrations from its first publication)

The Definitive Edition of OUR MUTUAL FRIEND
-With illustrations by Marcus Stone from its first publication
-Complete, unabridged, and formatted for kindle to improve your reading experience
-Linked table of contents to reach your chapter quickly

“Epic Charles Dickens tale of passion, greed and betrayal. Lizzie and her father scrape a living on the banks of the Thames until one day they recover a body that links them with another world.” BBC

“Dickens' last full novel, and his best in my opinion. Will the aristocratic Eugene seduce the noble working-class Lizzie, or repent? . . . Will everyone good wind up married and/or rich anyway?” Zab

“Described as Dickens' best comic novel, it really is chock-full of wonderful characters once the story gets going it pulled me along with it. There's conspiracy, greed, redemption, romance and plenty of sarcastic social commentary. A Tale of Two Cities used to be my favorite Dickens novel, but I think Our Mutual Friend may claim that place.” Heidi

OUR MUTUAL FRIEND is one of the most profound and exciting novels of all time. It has been made into many film and television adaptations. This is Dickens’ masterpiece presented as it was meant to be read, with original illustrations approved by Dickens himself.  

WORLD'S BEST ROMANCE BOOKS

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00GH15A0G



4 Classic Romance Books in one beautifully illustrated edition

“Wonderfully presented for kindle, these are 4 romance books universally acknowledged as among the best ever. They represent some of the greatest achievements in world literature.” Classic Romance Fiction

Includes complete and unabridged:
ANNA KARENINA
FIRST LOVE
THE AGE OF INNOCENCE
MADAME BOVARY

Four of the greatest romance novels ever written, which define the genre
-Illustrated with stunning images
-Complete, unabridged, and formatted for kindle to improve your reading experience
-Linked table of contents to reach your chapter quickly

Praise for ANNA KARENINA
“Possibly the greatest novel ever written. Tolstoy captures the rollercoaster arc of Anna's passion for Vronsky, and shows us the impossibility of her love ever being a match for what she's lost. “ Esther Freud

FIRST LOVE
“Ivan Turgenev's novella First Love is one of the most perfect things ever written.” H. Matar
“One of the thousand novels everyone should read” The Guardian
“In so much of Turgenev's finest fiction, love fades, slips away, vanishes before it can even flower.” New York Times

THE AGE OF INNOCENCE
“Winner of the 1921 Pulitzer Prize, The Age of Innocence is Edith Wharton’s masterful portrait of desire and betrayal during the sumptuous Golden Age of Old New York” Goodreads

MADAME BOVARY
“Poor Emma Bovary. She will never escape the tyranny of her desires, never avoid the anguish into which her romantic conceits deliver her, never claim the oblivion she sought .” New York Times 

Monday, 4 November 2013

THE CHARLES DICKENS COLLECTION

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GF5S93E
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00GF5S93E

THE CHARLES DICKENS COLLECTION (with the true illustrations)

4 of Charles Dickens’ Greatest Novels in one beautifully illustrated edition


“Most people would agree that these are four must read masterpieces by Charles Dickens. Wonderful to see them with their original illustrations.” Classic Fiction

Includes complete and unabridged:
OLIVER TWIST
A TALE OF TWO CITIES
GREAT EXPECTATIONS
DAVID COPPERFIELD

Four of the greatest novels ever written, which define his oeuvre
-Illustrated with the stunning original illustrations which bring the texts to life
-Complete, unabridged, and formatted for kindle to improve your reading experience
-Linked table of contents to reach your chapter quickly

Praise for OLIVER TWIST
“The characters are amazing. The setting is perfect. The plot manages to throw out hundreds of threads and ties them all together at the end, while never losing or boring the reader.” Darwin8u
“Oliver Twist has taken its place near the very top of my all time favorite books. It is a relatively fast-paced adventure story containing all the elements of great fiction.” Jim Kinkade
“Oliver Twist- one of Charles Dickens’s most famous novels tells the tale of a young orphaned boy named Oliver. Born in a workhouse, Oliver Twist follows Oliver as he endures turbulent times in nineteenth century London- a city plagued by poverty, crime and malice. As the road goes on for Oliver he meets the wonderfully created characters such as the miserly Fagin, the troubled Nancy, the ever so sweet Rose Maylie and the charismatic Artful Dodger.” The Streetlight Reader

A TALE OF TWO CITIES
“Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities thrives on tension and conflict, all set against a bloody backdrop of the French Revolution . . . Through the senses, Dickens transports us deeper and deeper into another era with each turn of the page. Smell the acidity of red wine as it spills on the streets and ominously stains the faces, hands and feet of peasants who lap it up in desperation; feel the competing emotions of heartache and hope as one of Lucie's suitors stands trial; hear the cries of the raging mob and the clangs of their weapons as they storm the Bastille; see the glint of the guillotine as it falls swiftly to its victim below. The novel's sense of urgency and intimacy will draw you in and propel you through one of the most tumultuous times in history.” Oprah’s Book Club

DAVID COPPERFIELD
“David Copperfield by Charles Dickens was a superb story with an engaging cast of characters, and I think this might be Dickens’ greatest achievement yet.” Midnightfaerie
“This has got to be one of the best books I’ve ever read. The vivid descriptions of the characters were just fun to read.” John

GREAT EXPECTATIONS
“Great Expectations is a masterpiece.” The Atlantic
“Great Expectations is an unforgettable tale of fate and a chance encounter between two strangers that radically and arbitrarily alters the lives of everyone around them.” Oprah.com 

Friday, 1 November 2013

FREE TODAY till Guy Fawkes THE UGLY MANS A TO Z GUIDE TO GETTING LAID

http://www.amazon.co.uk/UGLY-GUIDE-GETTING-humorous-books-ebook/dp/B00FPXATNK/

http://www.amazon.com/UGLY-GUIDE-GETTING-humorous-books-ebook/dp/B00FPXATNK/

THE UGLY MAN'S A TO Z GUIDE TO GETTING LAID (humorous books)

"LOL funny, rude, and offensive in a nice way. Get it for your inner ugly man!"

“If you like Monty Python, The Onion, or just laughing about men’s eternal and pathetic quest to meet women then you will love this.”

A hilarious how to guide that will make any man (or woman) laugh


The Ugly Man's A-Z Guide To Getting Laid is a tongue-in-cheek accompaniment to the aesthetically forlorn man's social paralysis, providing 24-hour, alphabetical guidance on how best to turn sexual famine into something marginally more than a hand-held party for one.

“The RRP of my sexual encounters has dropped significantly since having this book read to me.” Stephen Gawking, Tribulator, Oxford, England

“Up until receiving this book as a present, I thought a Kentucky Family Bucket was the closest I'd get to a modified chick. Bwoy! I was wrong.” Marshal Lloyd, Lady Bwoy, Atlanta, USA

“After learning to read just to put these wonderful tips into practice, the entirety of my weekly dole money has been spent on condoms. My right hand now permanently stinks of rubber.” Trippaniel Fall, Unemployable, Enfield, England

“Prior to digesting this guide, I thought I was just plain ugly. Turns out I'm brutiful.” Ted Ray, Vet, Arkinsas, USA 

FREE till 5 November SUZI LEARNS TO LOVE AGAIN

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00DRN6VQY/
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DRN6VQY/
SUZI LEARNS TO LOVE AGAIN (romance books)
A brilliant romance novel about finding love again 
"A story of two people working out if they can fall in love. The characters and story feel real and alive." Beth Boyd, best-selling author of ‘Love’ 

"A feel-good romance, and a real page turner!" Julie 

"This is a beautifully told book and Suzi is believable and engaging with an interesting choice." Sarah Westin 

When a disruptive kid joins her class, teacher Suzi is immediately attracted to his father Cameron. But handsome architect Cameron’s situation is complicated and Suzi isn’t sure she is ready for love after recently losing her husband. Will they work it out or has the perfect man come too soon for Suzi? A heart-warming full length romance novel which you won’t be able to put down. 

Patricia Keyson is the best-selling author of HOLIDAY ROMANCE and THE MAGIC TOUCH, also available on Kindle.