Hooray! Adventures By Moonlight is my new collection that gathers together all the short stories I published in 2011 and 2012. It also features a specially written story called Adventures In The Moonlight, which I like to think of as the tale that Robert E Howard never dared tell.
That means it's packed with 71,000 words of supernatural doings and occurrences. Thrill to the adventures of occult investigator Liz Sanford as she battles with the forces of darkness - and with her own workmates. See a Victorian super-sleuth who refuses to follow the script. Find out what happens when a metaphorical being loses her lucky hand. All this and a whole lot more besides.
Features the stories:
ADVENTURES IN THE MOONLIGHT.
WAITING FOR THE WIREMAN IN 1974.
LEAVING THE CIRCLE.
THE WEAKEST LINK.
CARRYING.
SEND ME YOUR HORROR.
THE MUMMY SHRUGGED.
STONE.
THE STRANGE CASE OF THE STRANGE CASE OF THE DOG.
WHEN DROMGYDDRU GETS HERE.
WHO THE HELL IS DOMINIC PINE?
STONE DREAMS.
THE DOWNWARD SLIDE.
DON'T MAKE ME SHOOT YOU, SANTA!
GETTING OUT.
You can download Adventures By Moonlight from:
Amazon.Com, Amazon UK and all other good branches of Amazon.
Showing posts with label eBooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eBooks. Show all posts
Friday, 13 September 2013
Tuesday, 27 November 2012
I Need An Earth Girl! Vital questions answered.
| Available from Amazon.Com, Amazon UK and Smashwords. |
1. What is the title of your book?
I Need An Earth Girl!
2. Where did the idea come from for the book?
After watching the first Dr Who Christmas Special, back in 2005, the one that introduced David Tennant, I said to myself, "I'm going to write one of those!" And so I did. Admittedly it took me seven years to finally get round to it but, as we all know, you can't rush genius.
3. What genre does your book fall under?
Science Fiction. Some might label it Science Fantasy, as I'm perfectly happy to play fast and loose with the laws of Physics in order to achieve my ends. I think it's also probably Space Opera, although possibly on a more human scale than that title might threaten.
4. What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
All of the major characters are aliens. One is sort of a bird woman, another is an insectoid and another is an octopod, so I don't have a clue. Are there any actors out there with eight arms? Squid James?
5. What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Sentenced to death, queen Petra 97 becomes a space adventurer but soon discovers that being an official heroine of the empire doesn't guarantee people will be pleased to see you
6. Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
It's out right now and it's self-published. My wild, independent streak sees to that.
7. How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
I think it was two or three days. Normally I break a story down into scenes and then work my way through it a scene at a time, getting each one right before going onto the next. This time, I went straight through it from start to finish, as one piece of narration with no scene or chapter breaks.
Trouble was, when I read it back, I didn't like the effect and therefore completely rewrote it in my usual way, breaking it up and adding scene beginnings and endings.
Also, thanks to the initial method I'd used, I found there was a lot of telling and not showing going on. Therefore I had to totally restructure it in places to better dramatise the situations that were being described.
8. What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
I can't think of any. I suspect that's more thanks to my ignorance rather then my having totally reinvented literature.
9. Who or what inspired you to write this book?
As I said, Dr Who did. Also, I quite fancied doing what I'd been doing with my Department of Occult Investigation stories but to do it in space, so I could do things on a bigger and more imaginative scale. There's also a couple of things in there that were my attempt to do a Jack Kirby.
10. What else about the book might pique the reader’s interest?
Well, there's a fair bit of nudity - although none of it's by humans.
Most of all, I hope people'll like the fact it doesn't take itself too seriously. There are life and death matters involved and, of course, our heroine learns an important lesson about both herself and the universe but it does have a tongue-in-cheek side to it too. I think the characters are quite endearing. They're not like us. And yet, somehow, they are.
I Need An Earth Girl! can be downloaded from:
Amazon.Com, Amazon UK and Smashwords.
Cover credits:
Teddy Bear 27 by Waugsberg (own photograph - eigene Aufnahme) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html), CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/) or CC-BY-SA-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5-2.0-1.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Earth From Space by NASA (Public Domain), via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Earth_from_Space.jpg
Overall cover design, copyright Stephen Walker, 2012, available under Creative Commons License CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/) or CC-BY-SA-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5-2.0-1.0)
Argh! Now I have to nominate someone.
In that case I'll try nominating:
Ryan Harvey at the Realm of Ryan.
Craig Smith at the Fantasy/Reality World of a Writer.
Mercedes Ludill at MercedesLudillBooks.
David P Perlmutter at Wrong Place, Wrong Time.
Jeff Whelan of Jeff Whelan.
Labels:
eBooks,
Shameless self-promotion
Sunday, 14 October 2012
Who the Hell is Dominic Pine?
Hooray! The world of literature is saved, as my latest eBook hits the shelves of Kindle faster than you can say, "Holey Moley!"
It's another adventure for this land's most put-upon occult investigator Liz Sanford, as she finds herself having to bodyguard the idol of millions.
And, right now, it's yours for just 99c or 77p from Amazon.
Thanks to Canadian animator Stephen Sloan for supplying the cover. You can find out more about Stephen at his site: http://www.uponanimation.com/Bio.html
As for you, thanks for your time. And, remember, you don't need one of those fancy Kindle machine-thingies to read it. Thanks to Amazon's free software, you can also download it direct to your PC/Laptop/Netbook.
Who the Hell is Dominic Pine is available from:
Amazon.Com, Amazon UK, Amazon France, Amazon Germany, Amazon Spain and Amazon Italy.
It's another adventure for this land's most put-upon occult investigator Liz Sanford, as she finds herself having to bodyguard the idol of millions.
And, right now, it's yours for just 99c or 77p from Amazon.
Thanks to Canadian animator Stephen Sloan for supplying the cover. You can find out more about Stephen at his site: http://www.uponanimation.com/Bio.html
As for you, thanks for your time. And, remember, you don't need one of those fancy Kindle machine-thingies to read it. Thanks to Amazon's free software, you can also download it direct to your PC/Laptop/Netbook.
Who the Hell is Dominic Pine is available from:
Amazon.Com, Amazon UK, Amazon France, Amazon Germany, Amazon Spain and Amazon Italy.
Labels:
eBooks,
Kindle,
Shameless self-promotion
Monday, 9 January 2012
Leaving the Circle.
Holey Moley! Can it be that I actually have a hit on my hands?
Before I've even told anyone it exists, my latest story on Amazon's Kindle Store's already started selling!
How that happens, I don't have a clue, but thank God it does. Perhaps one day my dream of not having to fight off the local foxes to get all my meals from my neighbours' wheelie-bins can come true.
And there was me thinking my decision not to call it Nightmare Horror Citadel of Doom, Death Terror, Argh! might turn out to be a mistake.
Anyway, it's true. It's here, Leaving the Circle. It's 1934, and an entity from Other Realms discovers there might be more lurking beneath the snows of, "The Roof of the World," than first meets the eye. But, now it has that information, what's it going to do with it?
Leaving the Circle can be downloaded at the following places (and remember, you don't need a Kindle-machine-thingy to download it or any of my other legendary tales. It can be downloaded straight to your computer):
Amazon.com. Amazon UK, Amazon Germany, Amazon France, Amazon Italy, Amazon Spain.
Cover image credit: Fitz Roy 2 by Prissantenbar (Public Domain), fiddled-about-with a fair bit by me. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Thanks for your time and tolerance ~ Steve.
Before I've even told anyone it exists, my latest story on Amazon's Kindle Store's already started selling!
How that happens, I don't have a clue, but thank God it does. Perhaps one day my dream of not having to fight off the local foxes to get all my meals from my neighbours' wheelie-bins can come true.
And there was me thinking my decision not to call it Nightmare Horror Citadel of Doom, Death Terror, Argh! might turn out to be a mistake.
Anyway, it's true. It's here, Leaving the Circle. It's 1934, and an entity from Other Realms discovers there might be more lurking beneath the snows of, "The Roof of the World," than first meets the eye. But, now it has that information, what's it going to do with it?
Leaving the Circle can be downloaded at the following places (and remember, you don't need a Kindle-machine-thingy to download it or any of my other legendary tales. It can be downloaded straight to your computer):
Amazon.com. Amazon UK, Amazon Germany, Amazon France, Amazon Italy, Amazon Spain.
Cover image credit: Fitz Roy 2 by Prissantenbar (Public Domain), fiddled-about-with a fair bit by me. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Thanks for your time and tolerance ~ Steve.
Labels:
eBooks,
Kindle,
Shameless self-promotion
Saturday, 10 December 2011
Fatal Inheritance. Bunging up the Plug Hole.
With my recently plugged short stories doing so well that they're actually matching sales of my hot cakes step-for-step, it's the perfect time to announce I now have a full-blown novel on Kindle.
In Fatal Inheritance, when her flatmate is left a house that brings death to all who own it, occult investigator Liz Sanford goes into action.
Can she find out what deadly secret the house contains?
And, if she does, can she stay alive long enough to celebrate that success?
Personally I think it'd make the ideal Christmas present.
That is of course assuming you know someone who likes spending their Christmases reading about people being killed by the forces of evil.
I know I do.
That's why I'll be reading Fatal Inheritance.
Actually I won't. I've already read it, so I'll be watching Mary Poppins.
But don't let that put you off.
The might and majesty of Fatal Inheritance can be downloaded at the following places:
Amazon US Amazon UK Amazon Germany Amazon France Amazon Italy Amazon Spain.
Thank you for your time. And please don't forget to vote for Iron Man's greatest ever foe.
In Fatal Inheritance, when her flatmate is left a house that brings death to all who own it, occult investigator Liz Sanford goes into action.
Can she find out what deadly secret the house contains?
And, if she does, can she stay alive long enough to celebrate that success?
Personally I think it'd make the ideal Christmas present.
That is of course assuming you know someone who likes spending their Christmases reading about people being killed by the forces of evil.
I know I do.
That's why I'll be reading Fatal Inheritance.
Actually I won't. I've already read it, so I'll be watching Mary Poppins.
But don't let that put you off.
The might and majesty of Fatal Inheritance can be downloaded at the following places:
Amazon US Amazon UK Amazon Germany Amazon France Amazon Italy Amazon Spain.
Thank you for your time. And please don't forget to vote for Iron Man's greatest ever foe.
Labels:
eBooks,
Kindle,
Shameless self-promotion
Wednesday, 7 December 2011
Lies! Lies! Buy your cheap lies here!
While the world queues up to nominate its favourite Iron Man villains, I might as well take this lull in blogging proceedings to shamelessly plug my alternative ventures.
As you may know, in the past I've been known to dabble in fiction. My novels Danny Yates Must Die and Mr Landen has no Brain (HarperCollins/Voyager) are still spoken of in hushed whispers wherever people have laryngitis. Likewise, my short stories were once scattered around genre periodicals, like chaff.
Years ago, however, I gave up the lure of lying for a living, to concentrate on telling the unvarnished truth in blogs like this one.
But a man can only resist making things up for a limited spell, and now I'm back in the making-things-up department, with three short stories available for download on Amazon's Kindle Store. At last I know how Stan Lee and Jack Kirby felt all those decades ago when they started a shocking new era in publishing by launching issue #1 of the Fantastic Four on the world.
Not only do these stories have words in them but they're as cheap as the bloke who wrote them. Who says this isn't the Steve Age of Bargains?
First published in the award-winning The 3rd Alternative magazine, the dark fantasy Waiting for the Wireman in 1974 discovers just what two children might get up to on a dark October night when the scarecrow fails to scare and there's a storm a-brewing.
Available for download at:
Amazon US. Amazon UK. Amazon Germany. Amazon France. Amazon Italy. Amazon Spain.
Carrying sees a "woman" known only as the Relentless Heliotrope stumble across a mystery on the thirteenth floor of a building that's only meant to have twelve.
Just why has the man she finds there been sat alone for so long?
Why has his expected visitor never arrived?
And what is the secret of the shoebox he's meant to have delivered all those years ago?
Available for download at:
Amazon US. Amazon UK. Amazon Germany. Amazon France. Amazon Italy. Amazon Spain.
In a lighter vein altogether, a complimentary sausage and her boss's incompetence plunge occult investigator Liz Sanford into an unlikely mystery involving a big night out, her self-declared arch-enemy, and a cabinet minister.
Just who is behind the least likely award nomination of all time?
Will Liz Sanford finally get to use that coffin with her name on it?
And who is that woman in the cupboard?
Thank you for your time - Steve.
Cover image credits:
Carrying:
Self-Portrait by Moonlight by Alessandro Zangrilli (self-made for wiki) [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
&
Moon at its Fullest a Few Minutes Before the Lunar Eclipse of 20 Feb 2008 by Thom Rains [CC-BY-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
Waiting for the Wireman in 1974:
Noche de luna llena by Luz A. Villa from Medellin, Colombia (Noche de luna llena - Full moon night) [CC-BY-2.0], via Wikimedia Commons
The Weakest Link:
by moi.
As you may know, in the past I've been known to dabble in fiction. My novels Danny Yates Must Die and Mr Landen has no Brain (HarperCollins/Voyager) are still spoken of in hushed whispers wherever people have laryngitis. Likewise, my short stories were once scattered around genre periodicals, like chaff.
Years ago, however, I gave up the lure of lying for a living, to concentrate on telling the unvarnished truth in blogs like this one.
But a man can only resist making things up for a limited spell, and now I'm back in the making-things-up department, with three short stories available for download on Amazon's Kindle Store. At last I know how Stan Lee and Jack Kirby felt all those decades ago when they started a shocking new era in publishing by launching issue #1 of the Fantastic Four on the world.
Not only do these stories have words in them but they're as cheap as the bloke who wrote them. Who says this isn't the Steve Age of Bargains?
First published in the award-winning The 3rd Alternative magazine, the dark fantasy Waiting for the Wireman in 1974 discovers just what two children might get up to on a dark October night when the scarecrow fails to scare and there's a storm a-brewing.
Available for download at:
Amazon US. Amazon UK. Amazon Germany. Amazon France. Amazon Italy. Amazon Spain.
Carrying sees a "woman" known only as the Relentless Heliotrope stumble across a mystery on the thirteenth floor of a building that's only meant to have twelve.
Just why has the man she finds there been sat alone for so long?
Why has his expected visitor never arrived?
And what is the secret of the shoebox he's meant to have delivered all those years ago?
Available for download at:
Amazon US. Amazon UK. Amazon Germany. Amazon France. Amazon Italy. Amazon Spain.
In a lighter vein altogether, a complimentary sausage and her boss's incompetence plunge occult investigator Liz Sanford into an unlikely mystery involving a big night out, her self-declared arch-enemy, and a cabinet minister.
Just who is behind the least likely award nomination of all time?
Will Liz Sanford finally get to use that coffin with her name on it?
And who is that woman in the cupboard?
Available for download at:
Thank you for your time - Steve.
Cover image credits:
Carrying:
Self-Portrait by Moonlight by Alessandro Zangrilli (self-made for wiki) [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
&
Moon at its Fullest a Few Minutes Before the Lunar Eclipse of 20 Feb 2008 by Thom Rains [CC-BY-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
Waiting for the Wireman in 1974:
Noche de luna llena by Luz A. Villa from Medellin, Colombia (Noche de luna llena - Full moon night) [CC-BY-2.0], via Wikimedia Commons
The Weakest Link:
by moi.
Labels:
eBooks,
Kindle,
Shameless self-promotion
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