Blog Tour – Traveler by S.E. Anderson Excerpt Reveal

Traveler Blog Tour Sincerely Karen Jo

Welcome to the Traveler BLOG TOUR. 

Hello wonderful bookish friends! Today, I have an exciting EXCERPT REVEAL from Traveler by S.E. Anderson to share with you. I absolutely love this sci-fi fantasy series and cannot wait for the third book to be out in the universe. So, please take your seat and strap yourself in for an out of this world tour!!!

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Sally’s search for Earth isn’t off to a good start: chased out of her hotel room and into the broom closet of a spaceship, she’s accidentally become a stowaway on the Alliance Flagship, Traveler.

But when sabotage and murder show the crew’s true colors, Zander and Blayde are forced to stay and help them out of their mess. Lies, drama, and deceit lead them light years away to a mysterious planet on the edge of the galaxy, where the crew must band together just to stay alive. Which would be much easier if they didn’t have to deal with a diva first-mate, a droid with a religious obsession, and Blayde’s Ex whose brain is a spaceship.

Finding Earth has to be put on the back burner, as Sally’s stuck tending alien boo-boos – and she still has no idea what she’s doing. And she might live long enough to get off the planet in one piece.

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CHAPTER ONE

The Most Interesting Closet in the Universe

 

When you hear knocking at the door in the middle of the night, you may be inclined to answer it; if you’re in an alien space hotel, it’s probably a bad idea.

My first instinct was to ignore it. For a few blissful minutes, I half-believed I was back on Earth waking from a bad dream—a dream in which my best friend had gotten me lost in some forgotten corner of the universe with no way of knowing how to get back to Earth. But that was a lie. The more aware I became, the more certainly I knew I was anywhere but home.

That might have had something to do with the giant window to my left, past which alien fish were swimming and paying a pretty penny to see what was unofficially an alien zoo. They stopped when they realized I was awake, probably hoping to glimpse some cool “alien” tricks. I groaned and tossed a pillow at them. It bounced off the glass, landing on the floor.

I sat up, groggy, letting my eyes become accustomed to the gloom. The room was dimly bathed in gentle waves of light, cast by the immense ocean outside. It would have been nice to watch, if it wasn’t for the pounding on the door.

“Coming, coming,” I grumbled, pulling myself from the warm sheets and shuffling to the door. It was probably Zander, back with an exciting story of Blayde’s exploits at the hoverpool table.

Before I could reach the lock, the door flew off its hinges, slamming into the window across the room. Three men shoved inside, their weapons glinting in the ocean’s blue glow. They pushed past the shattered doorframe toward me.

I didn’t have time to move. They lifted me off my feet and shoved into the wall before I could make a sound. The gloved hand was sticky against my neck, the grip was hella strong. My breathing was ragged against his palm, and pain radiated through my body.

Oh, shit. This was not good.

One of them flipped the light switch, illuminating not only the room but themselves. Finally, I saw their faces: definitely not human. Bald and green, with pointed ears and squashed noses, and taller than any human I knew. My first thought was of a goblin or an orc.

This really wasn’t Earth, but I still hoped it was a dream, the same way I’d hoped this whole disaster was a dream. I especially hoped this part wasn’t real because I had no intention of dying.

“Who … what …?” I hissed through my constricted windpipe. Bad idea. My mouth tasted metal, burning fire. Stars flickered in front of my vision, and not the pretty space kind.

I swung a foot forward and was rewarded with a grunt of pain. The hand around my throat loosened, and I crumbled to the floor, panting heavily. But there was no time to catch my breath. I psyched myself up to hop on my feet, take a fighting stance, and defend myself against the intruders.

Which I would have done, had I been someone with even a minute of training. Middle school karate club didn’t count. I didn’t have the strength to even get off the floor. All I could do was breathe as I struggled to get air into my lungs. Dark and bright spots flickered before my eyes, blinding out everything else.

Only three days had passed since I had survived my ordeal on Da-Duhui, falling miles down the chasm of their highways and taking a pounding from robot-zombie-aliens. The bruises had barely healed, yet here I was, being attacked once again.

“J’quad, that’s not her,” said one of the attackers. I was too busy staring at the ground to know which one.

“What do you mean that’s not her?” said the one closest to me, wheezing. Apparently, I had struck gold with my swinging feet. Maybe luck would go my way tonight after all.

“It’s human, though.”

“How would I know? They all look the same!”

“Woah, man, that’s specist,” said the third guy. “It might be true, but you don’t say that!”

“The human can’t understand me. Chill, bud,” said the wheezing one.

I could have pointed out that the universal translator sitting behind my ear did a great job of conveying what they were saying, though my lips stayed sealed. I might have been a survival novice, but I knew better than to throw away an advantage.

“Human,” hissed the one behind me. The tone of his voice changed.

I heard the words coming from his mouth but understood them as English. I was still getting used to the device, but it was probably the best thing to come out of this whole ordeal. Maybe after all this was done and I was home, I could watch anime without subs or dubs.

“Are you the human they call Blayde?” he asked, his sense of urgency clear.

Well of course they were after Blayde. The woman was unhinged. As an immortal, it seemed she had no limits; when she wasn’t off saving the world, she was cutting deals with shady lowlifes. There was no in-between with her. What she had done this time, I couldn’t even begin to imagine.

“No. I’m Sally Webber,” I said, pulling my legs under me and easing myself into a seat. It wasn’t a good position to be in. They had the upper hand on me, and I knew it. The one who had pinned me against the wall was wincing, still in pain from my kick. Go, me.

“She’s lying,” said the one closest to the door–or, more accurately, to where the door had been before they’d busted it. “Humans lie to get their own way.”

“The Blayde one has different colored hair, though, more…”—the middle one waved his gnarled green fingers around his head—“explody. Red, orange. This one doesn’t.”

“She might have changed”—wheeze—“before we got here. An alien camouflage,” said the one I had kicked.

“We know she’s with them! They’re the only humans in this place.” The third one stormed over to me, lowering his weapon so it pointed between my eyes. I strained to stare down the barrel, trembling. Good Lord, please let this be a dream. “Give us our falushing money!”

“I don’t have your money, please, I—”

They hit the floor simultaneously, and there, standing above them, was Zander, looking dapper in a trim crimson suit. He shot me a look, his brows furrowed.

Zander, one of my closest friends and interstellar… something. I still wasn’t sure if he was a mythical hero or an outer space outlaw, but I didn’t think he knew either. Like his sister, he was immortal and had lived so long his own home planet was lost to him. He was my best friend and the person who had stranded me on the far side of the universe rolled up into one, a paradox I was still trying to work out.

“Sally,” he said, eyes wide, reaching a hand to help me up. “Are you hurt? What did they do?”

“Nothing.” I rubbed my neck and took his hand. A few seconds was all it took to ruin a perfectly good throat. “They were looking for Blayde, but they didn’t have time to hurt me.”

“That’s a relief.” Zander helped me up, glanced me over, and nodded. “Look, Sally, I’m—”

This is why we don’t let anyone come with us.”

Blayde stood in the doorway, her rainbow hair flowing in an invisible breeze. She wore a tight, silver cocktail dress, the kind a Bond girl would be comfortable in.

Zander’s sister and only other immortal in the room, perhaps in the entire universe, made me anxious simply by existing. The woman didn’t like me all that much, despite the fact I had proved myself to her at least twice. I had helped save my own planet then Da-Duhui. That had to count for something. She had been polite enough during our stay in this hotel, but only when she had to. Any other time, she avoided me like the plague–though maybe not the plague, seeing as how catching it wouldn’t phase her one way or another.

“Sally was sleeping and still managed to get in trouble.” She stepped over an unconscious alien. An incredible feat in those insanely high heels of hers. “I keep telling you bringing her along was a big mistake.”

“Excuse me?” I said. “I didn’t have anything to do with this, they were after you. It’s not like I asked to be stuck here. So, what did you do this time?”

“I was trying to pay our bill.”

“Our number one priority is getting her home,” said Zander and turned to me. “Sally, this won’t happen again. I promise.”

“Stop making promises you can’t keep,” said Blayde.

“Only when you stop hustling hoverpool.”

“It got us the money for the hotel, didn’t it?” She reached down to pick up a gun, sniffed it, shrugged, and hung on to it. “Sally, pack your things. We’re leaving.”

“What, now?”

“Yes, now,” she said, glaring at Zander. Whatever problems she had with me seemed to emanate from him.

And so, I packed. I didn’t ask questions; I knew better than that. I had enough information to understand that she had been running a scam in the game lounge and had conned the wrong people. It was odd that the woman who had saved billions of people on Da-Duhui was also playing hoverpool schemes to get an easy buck.

Then again, it wasn’t like anybody paid her to save the world. A girl has to eat somehow.

The hotel was empty enough that no one had heard the commotion in my room. Zander dragged the bodies away (just unconscious, I hoped) as I packed. I stuffed all my earthly belongings into my duffel bag. IPod, dwindling prescription bottle, clothes, toothbrush, towel. I decided to keep the silky pajamas the hotel staff had given me, in case I’d be sleeping somewhere strange tomorrow night. I changed into jeans and a t-shirt, laced up my chucks, and was ready for the next jump.

Ready to go home, if indeed we were lucky enough to get there on the next try. The way jumping worked was randomized. You could only go back to the last place you visited. With Earth a few jumps behind us, finding it again would be nearly impossible.

But a girl can dream.

Zander came in next, changed from his bright red suit to something less conspicuous: a silver-gray pair of pants and a lighter gray shirt, hair standing tall and reaching for the heavens. Blayde followed in the same colorless clothes, tight leggings whereas Zander had loose pants.

“Let’s go,” she said, without asking if either of us were ready. She was ready, so we must be, too. I took their hands, and my atoms scattered across the tide of space.

For a few nauseating seconds, the only thing left in the universe was the dark. The dread. A cold nothing. It clung to me, seeping into my bones and freezing me to the core.

I felt like this would be my lot in life, forever. Like I would be stuck in this in-between, the backstage of the universe. But the darkness flickered, wavering like a candle’s flame.

Somehow, I felt the intensity of the universe, its size, its scale, but it was like there was a curtain between me and it. I felt part of the whole; part of the everything, and yet I was nothing.

And then, as quickly as it had struck, the darkness pulled away. Whoosh. The blindfold was ripped off, the universe snatched away—and I was in a broom closet.

The hair on my arms prickled as I was met with an unpleasant cold, the kind that nipped at your skin and made you regret not bringing a sweater. Not that I could do anything about that. Unless we had hit Earth on our first attempt, my closest sweater was a few light years away, along with all my other clothes, personal belongings, family, and friends. Which left me in a broom closet with two aliens, neither of whom seemed bothered by our being here.

I inhaled a deep gulp of stale air. It tasted processed, recycled. There was a hint of metal in the aftertaste, iron coating the back of my tongue. But it was real; not fresh, but real, and I forced the oxygen into my lungs.

My heart beat again. When had it stopped? The jolt surprised me, like a harsh reminder that, yes, it was supposed to pump blood through my veins. Warmth trickled through my body, silently re-acquainting itself with my limbs.

Or not so silently. My stretch smacked one of the mop handles, knocking over the carefully stacked brooms and whacked Zander on the head. He put them back in order like it was the most natural thing in the world to do after making it through vast distances in space.

Odd to think we were breaking the laws of physics. Maybe if we acted casual enough, science wouldn’t catch up with us.

“Arms-fingers-toes-shoulders-head-feet, all here,” said Blayde. She was close enough for her breath to make the hair on my neck stiffen. “All in one piece.”

“Arms-fingers-toes-shoulders-head-feet-Sally, all here,” Zander replied, composed and as calm as his sister.

There was a pause, and Zander finally made eye contact with me, his head twisting at an uncomfortable angle. The room was small, and I suddenly realized that his leg was touching mine.

“Um, I’m in one piece, too,” I said, awkwardly, pulling my foot away. I wasn’t sure what the protocol was after a jump, seeing as the only times I had traveled this way I had passed out or gone a little loopy.

“Not going to throw up this time, then?” asked Blayde.

I didn’t have to answer. Jumping randomly through space could do that to a person, sometimes, but the fact I was standing there in one piece, holding back the bile in the back of my throat, was enough to show I wasn’t going to. I nodded at her, head held high.

“Where are we now?” Blayde asked, trying to turn around. I let out a grunt as her elbow jabbed my back, and, per usual, she ignored me. I shot her a glare, not that she noticed.

“Broom cupboard,” Zander said, scanning the walls. “One unit long by one unit wide, maybe three high. Five brooms and a mop. And—”

“I can see that, you egg salad croissant,” Blayde snapped, reaching over me to smack his head. He pushed her back, jolting me around, and I pulled my arms close to my chest to get out of their way. Brooms shimmied and rattled in their wake.

“But, in all seriousness,” he said, lifting his arms as far above his head as they could go, “not quite three high.” He put his arms down and bumped the brooms again. They fell over, as was to be expected, and it was my turn to catch them, right in the shoulder.

“So, um, where is this broom closet exactly?” I asked, shoving the brooms against the wall and edging out of the way. Blayde’s shoulder in my back was starting to hurt. Zander lifted a corner of his mouth to give me a sly half-grin that his sister couldn’t see. I smiled back, a little shaky still.

“Want to make an educated guess?” he asked, gesturing to the room with arms as wide as they could go.

I snorted. “How am I supposed to tell where we are? You two are the space travelers. I’m fairly sure I don’t have the experience or know-how.”

“Go with your gut,” said Zander. “Use your senses. Smell, sight, touch. Tell me where we are.”

Well, I couldn’t see much; that was for sure. Nothing beyond the confines of the closet. I closed my eyes, trying to take in everything around me. I tasted the stale air, feeling the taste of metal on my tongue. But there was also a rumble: a small hum that I could hear if I listened hard enough; faint, but present.

Stale air, rumbling. Could it be true, or was I just projecting?

“Are we on a—”

“A spaceship, yes,” Blayde finished for me, shoving Zander against the wall to clear the floor.

“Hey, I was about to say that!” I snapped, but she was engrossed by the floor. She dropped to her knees and pressed her ear against the metal at our feet. Zander and I were smooshed against opposite walls, watching her work.

“We’ve heard these before. The engines sound like they belong to an interstellar ship, so I’d say… storm class. Possibly military but incredibly smooth, so they must be new.”

“We’re on a spaceship,” I muttered. Or, at least, the broom closet of a spaceship. Sure, I was lost in space, but this was Christmas.

“Isn’t that what I just said?” Blayde hopped back on her feet and brushed herself off, not that there was much dust in the closet.

“Does that mean we’re stowaways?”

“Not for long.” She reached out to grab my hand, none too gently. “Seeing as this isn’t Earth, let’s try again. On my mark—”

“No!” I ripped my hand back from hers, maybe a little too quickly. I might have made the jump vomit-free, but who knew what two jumps in a row would do to me. “Sorry, Blayde, it’s just… my stomach isn’t up to jumping any time soon. And you owe me for letting those creeps attack me.”

“Wimp,” she scoffed, but stopped as she made eye contact with Zander. There was a brief second in which they exchanged a collection of glares and eyebrow movements, further convincing me they had some kind of sibling telepathy going on. She rolled her eyes and looked back at me. “Fine, let’s give the earthling a tour.”

“Awesome!” Zander was practically jumping for joy. “We’ll be off in an hour, tops, okay? Just enough time to see the ship and not get spotted by the crew.”

Blayde rolled her eyes again, letting out a heavy sigh. She reminded me of my mother when I’d asked her if I could go to a convention: Why would you want to do such a thing?

“One hour. Not a minute more. One hour, and we’re gone, you hear?”

Zander nodded enthusiastically. He seemed just as excited as I was, maybe even more so, since he was furiously fumbling with the door.

“Oh, thank you! Thank you so much!” I smiled at her, but she didn’t even look at me. Instead, she took out her laser pointer and aimed it at the door. The red beam sliced through it like it was butter. Seconds later, it slid open to reveal a plain, white hallway.

“One hour,” she repeated, and I nodded again. How much trouble could we get into in an hour?

Traveler Blog Tour Banner

A MILLION THANKS TO S.E. ANDERSON FOR SENDING ME A COPY!!! CANNOT WAIT TO CATCH UP WITH MY FAVORITE SPACE SQUAD!!!

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Read my Review for Starstruck (Book#1) HERE

Check out my Book Spotlight post for Alienation (Book #2) HERE

Read my interview with S.E. Anderson HERE

 

Traveler Blog Tour All Blogs

 

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S.E. Anderson can’t ever tell you where she’s from. Not because she doesn’t want to, but because it inevitably leads to a confusing conversation where she goes over where she was born (England) where she grew up (France) and where her family is from (USA) and it tends to make things very complicated.

She’s lived pretty much her entire life in the South of France, except for a brief stint where she moved to Washington DC, or the eighty years she spent as a queen of Narnia before coming back home five minutes after she had left. Currently, she goes to university in Marseille, where she’s starting her masters of Astrophysics.

When she’s not writing, or trying to science, she’s either reading, designing, crafting, or attempting to speak with various woodland creatures in an attempt to get them to do household chores for her.  She could also be gaming, or pretending she’s not watching anything on Netflix.

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THE COVER IS ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS!!!

Follow and Connect with S.E. Anderson

WebsiteInstagram / Twitter 

FacebookGoodreads / Blog


That’s it for my stop! I hope you enjoyed reading the excerpt. Be sure to follow the rest of the tour for other fun stuff and reviews. Oh and don’t forget, this beauty will be released in all the galaxies on April 27, 2018.

sincerelykarenjo2

Review – Fighting Fate by Shaila Patel

Hello my wonderful bookish friends! FIGHTING FATE, the sequel to Shaila Patel’s 2017 debut novel Soulmated, is FINALLY OUT TODAY and I’m so excited for you all to read this amazing series. I have my review, a fun interview, and an excerpt to share with you, so let’s get to it!

 

Fighting Fate

Joining of the Souls #2

Shaila Patel

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5 ★ – BREATHTAKING, HEARTFELT, AND A LOT OF FUN
PUBLISHED BY  East Girl Publishing  APRIL 5, 2018
GENRE(S): YOUNG ADULT, FANTASY, ROMANCE
BUY NOW AT AMAZON

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Empath Liam Whelan is determined to protect Laxshmi “Lucky” Kapadia, the girl he loves, at all costs–even if it means breaking her heart to keep her alive. Stopping the joining cold means Liam’s life is in danger from the Soul Seekers and the ruthless Minister Gagliardi who now has designs on Lucky. Liam has no choice but to find the strength to fight his desires, fight the joining, and fight fate.

After the unthinkable happened, Lucky’s “hallucinations” have been working double-time. Heartbroken and plagued by doubts, she meets a man who gives her a mind-blowing explanation for her predicament. Her apparent savior provides her with an escape from her hell: run away with him or return to her drab existence and watch Liam move on with her heart in his hands. All Lucky ever craved was to be in control of her own fate, but when her only choices fight against her heart, can she find the strength to battle for what she wants?

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review

I LOVED Soulmated and have been eagerly waiting for months for the second book. When I finally got an ARC for Fighting Fate, I was beyond excited to continue the series and get back into the fascinating world of empaths. However, I didn’t get to it right away since I had other books to finish for blog tours and reviews.

As soon as I read the first page of this book, everything came rushing back to me and it felt so damn good being with Liam and Lucky again. Fighting Fate was even more breathtaking, heart-wrenching and completely electrifying than the Soulmated! Shaila Patel without a doubt knows how to create the best emotional chaos that will have you undeniably hooked turning page after page after page.

The ending in Soulmated left so many unanswered questions and my heart breaking into pieces. I was really looking forward to learning more about empaths, some lighthearted moments, more steamy kisses and playfulness, and of course MORE of Liam.  Well, let me just say that Shaila gave me more than what I was expecting and threw in some amazing thrills and chills and twist and turns.

The writing was fantastic! The characters continued being awesome and the villains perfectly played their roles —they were manipulative, menacing, and creepy. The plot was amazingly fast-paced, suspenseful, exciting, and emotional. And the romance… swoon swoon swoon!!! I honestly could not get enough of this amazing story and found it extremely difficult to find a good place to stop. This book was a masterpiece and I loved that every moment just felt so real — real pain, real sadness, real hope, real love — just REAL EVERYTHING. Definitely be prepared to be overwhelmed with so many FEELS… because Shaila’s writing style is wonderfully evocative, utterly incredible and so beautiful!

Like in the first book, the chemistry between Liam and Lucky was satisfyingly adorable and heartwarming. I think they’re so perfect for each other and I thoroughly enjoyed all their interactions. Their romance was super swoony, cute, and sexy. They were playful, honest, confused, infatuated, fearful, guarded, protective, loving, sweet, determined and could not get enough of each other. Soulmated or not, Lucky and Liam acted like teenagers who were hopelessly in love, but also deeply cared about each other. That certainly took me down memory lane and gave me the BEST FEELS! Their story may be fiction and fantasy, but their emotions were real, raw and relatable — And that’s one of the many reasons why I love this series so much. I can connect with the characters and their stories, and share their experiences and feel all their emotions as they go through them.

With gorgeous writing that will keep you intrigued, delicious chemistry that’s nicely balanced with heat and sweetness, and complex characters you can’t help but love, Fighting Fate by Shaila Patel was an absolute joy to read. It’s undeniably fascinating, romantic, thrilling, and so heartfelt leaving you breathless and impatiently waiting for the next installment. I know I AM!

If you’re looking for a heart-stopping edge of your seat YA romantic fantasy, then I highly recommend you add this to your TBR.

I received an advanced reader copy of this book from the author in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

 

authorinterviewShaila Patel is such an amazing and talented writer and I am so honored and excited she took the time to do this interview. Thank you Shaila! I loved reading your answers and I hope you had fun with my questions!!

So without further ado, let get started with this interview… (oh hey that rhymes…)

Describe the Joining of Souls Series using ONLY GIFs. Give me 3-5. 

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Which character in this series are you most and least like?

I’m probably most like Moira, Liam’s mum. She’s not only the type of mother I strive to be—logical, calm, rational—but she’s also an intellectual with strong reasoning skills. (Translation: I’m pretty nerdy.) I do have an artistic side too, so there are times when I identify with Lucky, but not only because of the dancing. I also had a very over-protective, traditional mother like hers. I’m probably least like Patrick, Liam’s father. He’s more spontaneous and cares less about what others think of him.

What’s your favorite and least favorite thing about being a writer?

The best thing about being a writer is the ability to tell stories and create tangible worlds that other people can enjoy. My least favorite thing is the self-doubt and the resulting need for outside validation that what you’re creating is worthy.

If you’re not writing books, what would you be doing for a living?

I’m actually doing it now! I manage our family business during the day and write at night. I’m also a pharmacist by training, so I could always return to that profession if I wish to.

If you were a superhero, what would your name be and what power would you have?

Lol! I love this question! I’d call myself Lady Love, and I’d go around changing hate and negativity to love and positivity. I’d also have a sidekick called Drink Slinger who could make my love potions 😉

What was the last Young Adult book you read and absolutely LOVED? Why? 

Jessica Pennington’s Love Songs & Other Lies. I adore second chance romances, and this one also threw in an interesting setting: a traveling reality show of battling rock bands. The writing was gorgeous and beautifully done. It’s also an upper YA book that deals with characters at the end of high school as well as a year later. It was a nice balance of young adult and new adult. Also, I happen to be writing a contemporary series where the heroine is eighteen and where the story spans both young adult and new adult themes, so it was interesting to read from the writer’s perspective too. We need more books that cover this period of time!

If you could tell your younger writing-self anything, what would it be?

Do what you want! There are no rules about being a writer—you can make your writing career into anything you want.

Do you read your book reviews? How do you deal with the negative feedback (if any)?

I do read them—even though everyone says not to! The good ones are obviously very encouraging and supportive. They feed my artistic soul, and I’m so thankful there are people out there who want to read MY book! As for the negative ones, I know I’m not going to please everyone. Sure, they sting, but readers are entitled to their opinions. I’ve been lucky enough not to have many that were outright mean, hateful, or hurtful. They’ve been constructive for the most part, and I take those as lessons to help me improve my writing where I can. There will always be things I can’t change, but I depend on my self-respect to not take the harsher criticisms as personal attacks.

Which author(s) have inspired your writing?

I learn so much from different authors and every book I read, but if I had to pick who has inspired me consistently—to enjoy the storytelling, to enjoy the words…to be better—it would have to be Jennifer Armentrout, Kelly Oram, and Julie Anne Long.

What advice do you have for new writers?

Learn to cope with constructive criticism. Mope and wallow, if you need to, but find a way to shake it off quickly and move on. Humility will go a long way in preventing those words from hurting you.

Thank you so much Shaila for this wonderful interview!

excerpt

Under the cover of her porch, I returned her bag to her. We moved apart. With the connection broken, she let out a shuddering sob. The pain of separating from her hit me square in the chest. I wanted to hold and comfort her, but I was already making a dog’s dinner of this just by being here. This would set her back—set us both back.

She turned away from me. Her hand shot up to her mouth, and her shoulders shook. I instinctively stepped forward, but all I could do was curl my fingers into my palms to keep from touching her.

“I miss you so much, Liam,” she said, the words choked out between hoarse cries. “I’m sorry. I know I’m not supposed to be weak.” She slapped away her tears and turned to face me. A bolt of lightning cracked nearby. I couldn’t stay. The tingling was pulling us together like it was some sort of magnetic current.

“You’re not weak. I miss you too, Lucky.”

Her eyes grew cold in an instant. The fury of the sandstorm I sensed from her made me gasp, and I stumbled back. “Jaysus, Lucky.” We were crossing interpretations again. I was reading her emotions as air metaphors instead.

She barreled toward me, her hands balled up, apparently unaware of the effect her anger had on me. “You have no right to miss me. You left me!” She beat her fists against my chest, and I had to grab her by the wrists to stop her.

“Are you thinkin’ this has been easy for me?”

She wriggled free from my grip. “Whose fault is that?” she yelled above a roll of thunder. I didn’t want her to see the pain on my face, so I turned away, holding myself up on the white, wooden railing. The whirlpool of her anguish surrounded me, making my head ache.

I took a deep breath and lowered my voice. “Lucky, I broke my promises to you. For that, I’m truly sorry. But I had little enough choice. None of that changes my feelings for you.”

“I’m not The One, so it’s time to move on. Is that it? Regardless of how you feel? Of how I feel?” Her voice cracked. “You’re a coward.”

I heard her fumbling for her keys. She’d be inside soon, and I’d rather be fighting with her on the porch than be without her.

“So where next, hmm?” she asked. “North Dakota? Vermont? Ooo, I know. You should go to India. You could play this game for the rest of your life!”

I turned to face her. Her sarcasm was brutal, but I deserved all that and more.

She tried to unlock her door, but the keys slipped from her grip. She stooped to pick them up, but her fingers were shaking so badly, she dropped them again.

“Dammit!” She crouched a second time and sucked back another sob.

I swept down and set my hands over hers to steady them. Taking the keys, I unlocked the door, followed her inside, and bundled her in a blanket from off the sofa. Lucky didn’t protest. We stood there, dripping water on her mum’s carpet, staring into each other’s eyes. Grabbing fistfuls of the covering around her neck, I gently rocked her, tugging her closer, fighting the craving to kiss her. My breaths came out fast and shallow, and only clinging to the material with both hands kept me from sneaking a touch of her soft skin. If I didn’t leave now, I’d stay because I didn’t have an ounce of the strength she had. Maybe I was the coward she’d accused me of being.

booksintheseries

soulmated

4.5 ★ – AN ADDICTIVE AND FUN READ
PUBLISHED BY MONTH9BOOKS, LLC JANUARY 24, 2017
GENRE(S): YOUNG ADULT, FANTASY, ROMANCE
PAGES: PAPERBACK 300

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abouttheauthor

Shaila_Patel_3x4.5As an unabashed lover of all things happily-ever-after, Shaila Patel’s younger self would finish reading her copy of Cinderella and chuck it across the room because it didn’t mention what happened next. Now she writes from her home in the Carolinas and dreams up all sorts of stories with epilogues. A member of the Romance Writers of America and the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, she’s a pharmacist by training, a medical office manager by day, and a writer by night. SOULMATED, her debut novel and the first book in the Joining of Souls Series, was the winner of the 2015 Chanticleer Book Reviews Paranormal Awards for Young Adult. Book 2, FIGHTING FATE releases April 2018. She loves craft beer, tea, and reading in cozy window seats—but she’ll read anywhere. You might find her sneaking in a few paragraphs at a red light or gushing about her favorite books online.

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I hope you enjoyed reading this post and getting to know Shaila Patel. Don’t forget to add this amazing series to your TBR or just grab your copy today!

sincerelykarenjo2