PMS can
be a real witch.
Ivie
McKie isn’t your run-of-the-mill kindergarten teacher. After an encounter with
a horny goat, Ivie has a confrontation with her lying, cheating fiancé. She is
shocked when the big jerk suddenly transforms into a skunk—the black and white
furry variety.
Enlisting
the help of her shopaholic friend Chloe and sexy club magician Jackson Blake,
Ivie is forced to play a literal game of cat and mouse as she races against the
clock to change her ex back before she’s arrested for his murder.
With
every new spell, a fresh wave of sexual desire draws Jack further into Ivie’s
troubles, along with her panties, the car, the kitchen, and assorted seedy
bathrooms.
Ivie soon
discovers what every witch worth her spell book knows: There’s nothing worse
than a bad case of Post Magical Syndrome.
About the Author:
After
walking away from her career as a business banker to pursue writing full-time,
Erica Lucke Dean moved from the hustle and bustle of the big city to a small
tourist town in the North Georgia Mountains, where she lives in a 90-year-old
haunted farmhouse with her workaholic husband, her 180-pound lap dog, and at
least one ghost.
When
she’s not writing or tending to her collection of crazy chickens and diabolical
ducks, she’s either reading bad fan-fiction or singing karaoke in the local
pub. Much like the main character in her first book, To Katie with Love, Erica is a magnet for disaster and has been
known to trip on air while walking across flat surfaces.
How she’s
managed to survive this long is one of life’s great mysteries.
Review by Rochelle:
Suddenly Sorceress was a delightful
surprise. It had everything I love in a book—humor, suspense, a fast pace, well-drawn
characters, and magic. There was a bit too much sex for my taste, and by the
end I was skimming through the sex scenes. In fact, I came to a sex scene in
the book I’m writing and just skipped it because I was burnt out. But that’s
me. If you like hot, sexy books, you’ll love Suddenly Sorceress.
The
only thing that kept me from giving it five roses was the slightly stilted
dialog. I see it everywhere. Authors need to read their dialog aloud, and see
where they tend to slide over words or use contractions and then make those
changes. Unless you’re writing historical or fantasy, or your character’s an
android who can’t use contractions, read it out and listen to whether or not
your characters sound a bit wooden. At any rate, if you want an hysterical romp
with a somewhat klutzy sorceress whose magic makes her, um… climb the nearest
magician, check out Suddenly Sorceress.
Author Website: http://ericaluckedean.com/books
Heat Rating: R
Length: 262 Pages
Prices:
Print: $11.99
Digital: $5.99
Buy Link:
Digital: http://www.amazon.com/Suddenly-Sorceress-Erica-Lucke-Dean/dp/1940215218/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
You’ll
notice we always include the publisher’s buy link. That’s because authors
usually receive 40-50% of the net proceeds from the publisher. Editors and
cover artists usually receive about 5%. When you buy a book from Amazon, Barnes
& Noble or another third-party vendor, they take a hefty cut and the
author, editors and cover artists receive their cuts from what is left. So, if
a book costs $5.99 at E-Book Publisher.com and you buy from there, the author
will receive about $2.40-$2.99. If you buy the book at Amazon, the author will
receive about $1.70-$2.10.
Download
the file from the publisher onto your computer as you would any other file.
I’ve created a folder for books on my computer, with subfolders by source
(Marketing for Romance Writers, Net Galley, Authors who find me on Kindle
lists, etc.). That way, if there’s a glitch with your Kindle, the books are on
your computer. Some publishers send books in all digital formats. If my Kindle
breaks and my kids buy me a Nook, I won’t have to replace all of my books. If
you have a Kindle and your hubby has a Nook, you won’t have to buy separate
copies, so buying directly from the publisher can save you money.
Moving
the file from your computer to your e-reader is as easy as transferring any
file from your computer to a USB flash drive. Plug the larger USB end of your e-reader
charging chord into a USB port on your computer and simply move the file from
the folder into which you’ve downloaded the book to Documents/Books directory
on your e-reader. You can move the file by highlighting it and dragging it to the
documents directory in you Kindle you want to move it to. Or right click on it,
and then left click copy or move. Or hit Control/C for copy, Control/X for cut,
and Control/V for paste.
Your
author will be happy you did when he/she sees his/her royalty statement.
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