Ebook Release: Crossing the Naiad

For fans of Sarvet, as well as readers who enjoy tales of how the dead past reaches forward through time to touch later ages, Crossing the Naiad follows Sarvet on the first adventure of her wanderyar. Below a ruined bridge, she encounters two lowlanders and two ghosts.

water spirit under waterIts truth forgotten in the mists of time, the old bridge harbors a lethal secret. Neither marble statues awakened for battle nor an ancient roadbed grown hungry, something darker and more primal haunts the stones and the wild river below.

Kimmer knows the stories, but she doesn’t know why the crumbling span feels so fraught with menace. Her way home lies across the ruin. Dare she take it? Or will horror from the lost past rise up to claim her, when she does?

 
 
 

Crossing the Naiad is available in electronic bookstores.
Amazon.com I Amazon UK I Amazon DE I Amazon ES
B&N I Diesel I iTunes I Kobo I Smashwords I Sony

 

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Goodreads Giveaway: Sarvet’s Wanderyar

This Goodreads giveaway is over. Many thanks to all who entered and congrats to the ten lucky winners! I plan to run a giveaway for Livli’s Gift, the sequel to Sarvet’s Wanderyar, as soon as the proof copy of the print edition is error-free. Keep your eyes open!

feature size imageGoodreads is an online book club with 14 million members and over 20 million visits every month.

That’s a little overwhelming! (To me, at least.) But the site is organized into thousands of smaller groups that focus on different kinds of reading experiences: cozy mysteries, steampunk fantasy, beach reads, and every other flavor you might imagine. That’s much more approachable.

Why do I draw Goodreads to your attention? Two reasons.

One, I have an “author page” there. If you’re already a Goodreads member, you might want to check it out here.

And two, during this month of September I’m running a giveaway (here) on Goodreads for paperback copies of Sarvet’s Wanderyar. Now’s your chance to win a free book! 😀

 

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Sarvet's Wanderyar by J.M. Ney-Grimm

Sarvet’s Wanderyar

by J.M. Ney-Grimm

Giveaway ends September 30, 2013.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win

 

Running away leads right back home – or does it?

Sarvet walks with a grinding limp, and her mountain culture keeps girls close to home. Worse, her mother emphasizes all the things Sarvet can’t do. No matter how gutsy her spirit or bold her defiance, staying put means growing weaker. Yet only boys get wanderyars. Lacking their supplies and training, how can Sarvet escape?

Can dreams – even big dreams – and inner certainty transform impossible barricades into a way out?

Sarvet’s Wanderyar is available as an ebook and as a trade paperback.

The ebook: Amazon.com I Amazon UK I B&N I Diesel I iTunes I Kobo I Smashwords I Sony

The paperback: Amazon.com I Amazon UK I B&N I CreateSpace

 

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Sarvet’s Wanderyar in Paper!

I’m delighted to announce that the trade paperback edition of Sarvet’s Wanderyar is now available for readers everywhere to enjoy. Order it from Amazon. Order it from CreateSpace. Order it from Barnes & Noble. Or order it from your local independent bookstore. It’s all good!

Sarvet's Wanderyar, print on demand edition

Sarvet walks with a grinding limp, and her mountain culture keeps girls close to home. Worse, her mother emphasizes all the things Sarvet can’t do.

No matter how gutsy her spirit or bold her defiance, staying put means growing weaker. But only boys get wanderyars. Lacking their supplies and training, how can Sarvet escape?

Can dreams – even big dreams – and inner certainty transform impossible barricades into a way out?

Here are the “stats” for the trade paperback:

5″x 8″ trim size • 112 pages
ISBN-10: 0615743099
ISBN-13: 978-0615743097
Amazon.com I Amazon UK I B&N I CreateSpace

And, of course, for ebook lovers, Sarvet’s Wanderyar continues to be available as an ebook. Amazon.com I Amazon UK I B&N I Diesel I iTunes I Kobo I Smashwords I Sony

 

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Ebook Release: Skies of Navarys

Three cheers! Skies of Navarys is available from all the e-tailers at last! (Kobo took a while to have the book go live. Not sure why.) But here it is, the very first tale about the lodestones of old and how they came to be.

Three airships over landscape, feature sizeTwo friends. Two ways of approaching life. One dilemma.

Liliyah studies energea as all thirteen-year-olds in Navarys do, devoting her mornings to mastering the music that controls her magic. Afternoons, she hobnobs with the artisan crafters and shopkeepers who built the island city-state into the trade capital of the world.

Her friend Mago faces struggles unsuspected by carefree Liliyah. His father, a renowned inventor, succombs to irrational flashes of rage. His mother holds a lethal secret close.

When a royal geomancer announces that the goddess Evaia shrugs, every citizen on the island springs to action. Disaster waits on no one’s leisure! Amidst the uproar, the aeromancer Palujon steals Mago’s father’s latest invention: unique lodestones with the potential to revolutionize life as the Navareans know it.

Mago discovers the theft and vows to make good his father’s loss. But Liliyah questions Palujon’s motives. Why would a man of his stature break the law? Is he truly a rogue?

Two friends. Two answers. Life and death hang on their choices.

All seven electronic bookstores:
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Troll-magic print edition!

The picture says it all, doesn’t it?

I’m delighted to announce that Troll-magic is here in a trade paperback edition!
And – am I allowed to say this? – it’s such a pretty book!

photo of paper books

Fighting against a nightmare pales beside fighting for a dream.

An accursed prince and her own longing for music challenge Lorelin to do both.

But tradition and a hidden foe stand squarely in her way. How do you make dreams real when vision fails, allies undermine you, and all roads toward hope twist awry?

Can courage, honor, and loyalty prevail against a troll-witch’s potent curse?

Set within the enchanted North-lands, this new take on an old Norse folk tale pits distorted malice against inner wisdom and grit.

Troll-magic is available as a trade paperback from Amazon.
You may also order it from your local bookstore!

ISBN-10: 0615702546
ISBN-13: 978-0615702544

Of course, the novel continues to be available as an ebook for e-reader aficionados.
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New Release! Perilous Chance

cover image for Perilous ChanceIf only Mama were well. If only Papa were . . . not like this.

Clary needs a miracle, but wonders rarely step forth to solve life’s problems.

While her mama lies wearily abed and her papa spends the day . . . elsewhere, Clary struggles to look after her younger sister and their baby brother. And longs for more than making do. If only.

Then, one spring morning, Clary and Elspeth visit the old bramble-grown quarry to pick wild cabbage leaves. Hidden within the rock’s cleft, Clary’s miracle awaits. But this miracle sports razor-sharp talons, world-shaking power, ravenous hunger, and a troll-witch to guard its sleep. When it cracks the egg, will Clary survive?

Something wondrous this way comes!

Perilous Chance is available in electronic bookstores.
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Star-drake is Live!

Dragon profile against starry night skyGefnen – troll-herald and hound for Koschey the Deathless – hunts life across the moors of the far north.

Not deer, not pheasant, not meat for the table. His master eats choicer fruits.

When the piercing scent of youth tingles his senses, Gefnen focuses his chase. The prey – a boy – lacks guardians strong enough to best a troll. Swift triumph awaits.

But other seekers tilt the chances of this game. Spirit of storm, poignant memories of a sea-prince, and something more ancient than memory or the wind shape the looming tumult.

Gefnen hunts victory, but a darker victory hunts him.

Star-drake is now available in electronic bookstores.
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Livli’s Gift is Here!

art by Kay Nielsen depicting a queen in her gardenSome of you have watched a Twitter stream of plot teasers while I wrote Livli’s Gift. Some of you have followed my progress notes on Facebook. And some of you have simply waited patiently. But wait and watch no more. Livli’s Gift is finished and ready to be enjoyed!

Livli heals challenging injuries among the pilgrims to Kaunis-spa. Its magical hot spring gives her an edge, but Livli achieves spectacular cures mainly because she refuses to fail.

A pioneer, she hopes to match her new ways for banishing hurt with new ways of living.

But the sisters of Kaunis-lodge fear rapid change. What precious things might they lose while tossing old inconveniences?

Livli pushes forward the new, and one influential foe pushes back. Kaunis-home will keep its revered traditions, even if Livli loses almost everything.

Everything . . . and the one thing she absolutely cannot lose.

Livli seeks an answer in the oldest lore of her people, something so ancient, it′s new. But mere resolve against failure meets an immovable counter force this time. Victory requires more.

Must surrender spell defeat? Or could letting go harness real power?

Livli’s Gift is available as an ebook in electronic bookstores.
Amazon I B&N I Diesel I Kobo I Smashwords

For lovers of print, the trade paperback edition is coming this summer!

 

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Locked in Mortal Combat

Today was supposed to feature an “inquiring mind” post. Not only that; I’d planned to tell you about my favorite non-fiction read.

But I’ve been wrestling with InDesign, the go-to application for designing print books. Wrestling with the electrons on my computer and, because I’m losing, wrestling in spirit and in heart. InDesign – thus far – has trounced me, toppled me, stomped and stumped me, and kicked me to the curb.

I hope to rise from my ashes.

In the meantime . . . draw close, my readers, and I shall tell of my midnight tussle and abrupt defeat! (That is, today’s blog is a “behind the scenes” post.)

First, a little background. I used to design books in PageMaker. I liked Pagemaker. It was straightforward, moved type and images around the way I wanted, and, in the immortal words describing Bilbo Baggins before his adventure, “never did anything unexpected.”

But PageMaker wasn’t so handy for designing book covers. In the fullness of time, another computer application arrived on the scene to handle color and permit the complicated wrapping of text around illustrations. I learned Quark. It never became so intuitive as Pagemaker (for me), but I could make it do what I needed.

Fast forward 20 years. InDesign is the book designer’s app and has been for some while, but this is my first time using it. I’ve heard it is remarkably similar to PageMaker. If you know the one, you know the other. Or can figure it out.

Well, okay then!

Kay Nielsen art depicting a lassie aback a north-bearI dive in, eager to turn the ebook Troll-magic into an ink-on-paper book. Trusting in InDesign’s kindly reputation, I don’t even bother to acquire a copy of InDesign For Dummies or some such title.

Mistake!

When I attempt to place the text of my story, InDesign cannot see my OpenOffice (Oo3) file where the text resides. I check the Adobe online help page.

Ah! Save the Oo3 file as a Word file and I’ll be good to go.

I do it, and now I can place the text. But, oh, what ugly ugly print! Some of it is tiny at 4 points, and some of it is huge at 18 points. Some of it overlaps, and some has 4 inches between lines. Plus all the italics – which my story uses to indicate thought versus the spoken word – have disappeared.

I return to the help page.

This time I save my Oo3 file in rich text format. This will – I’m told – retain things like type size and spacing. And italics.

W-e-l-l. It does look better than the Word file version, but all of the italics remain missing.

Hmm. What to do?

I decide that this is as good as it gets and wade in. Three days and 626 pages later, I have a book! Or the computer file for a book. (And, yes, I neglected my family: those were 16-hour days. Mea culpa!)

But the book is beautiful! Each page begins and ends cleanly, features lovely Palatino type plus elegant embellishments between scenes. I am thrilled. (Although my thrill has one buzzing and annoying fly: my InDesign file tells me it cannot find the font I’m using for those embellishments. But I feel sure I’ll sort it out.)

Flush with success, I decide to do a little tidying. Let’s sweep that useless Word file and the rich text format file into a folder along with the original Oo3 one.

Alas! There is the moment of my downfall.

Back in my PageMaker days, the illustrations in a book were not actually inside the PageMaker file. When I sent a book to the printer, I sent the PageMaker file and the TIFF files that were the illustrations. There was a link between the Pagemaker file and each of the TIFF files.

Now, in that era, the tidying of files also occurred. And the links were broken. Reforging them was not really a problem. I just had to be sure I did it (with the click of a few buttons) before sending the file to press.

But the text of the book was actually inside the PageMaker file itself. No links. The original Word file became an archived irrelevancy.

Not so for InDesign!

When my InDesign file and my rich text format file parted ways to different folders, I broke the essential link between them. (Apparently.) And restoring it was . . . well, it seemed simple until I looked at what I had wrought.

All my formatting had disappeared.

The paragraphs had lost their indents. The chapter headings looked just like the rest of the text, not big and bold. The page breaks, carefully crafted, were no longer present. And all the italics, lovingly reapplied word by word by word, were gone.

If I were the crying sort, I’d have sobbed. As it was, I merely sat stunned. Then closed the file without saving.

Is there a way to restore what I have lost?

Must I begin again from the foundations?

I don’t have those answers, but I do have a vision: the vision of the beautiful book I’d created before the tidying impulse took me. Rest assured, I will bring that vision to paper and ink, whether it can be done easily or only after great labor! Rise, my phoenix, oh rise!

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