The Token 9: Chet Sinclair by Marata Eros
(The Token #9)
Publication date: February 27th 2015
Genres: New Adult, Romance
(The Token #9)
Publication date: February 27th 2015
Genres: New Adult, Romance
Synopsis:
An Addiction.
Kiki is desperate to stop the twisted relationship she shares with Chet Sinclair, but finds that she can’t. He is too vital, too potent… like a magnet, she cleaves to him. Desperate to break the pattern, she goes into hiding to escape her feelings and a ghost from her past comes back to haunt her.
The Consumption.
Needy and unnerved, Kiki turns to the one person that offered her solace from the past. Can Damon Axton erase what’s begun? Will he be the one to break the cycle of sexual intensity and obsession that Chet uses to imprison her, body and soul?
A Recompense of Love.
When Sinclair discovers where Kiki is hiding, their passion explodes once again. Can either admit their true feelings for each other? Or will sensual enslavement destroy their dark love before it has begun?
Kiki is desperate to stop the twisted relationship she shares with Chet Sinclair, but finds that she can’t. He is too vital, too potent… like a magnet, she cleaves to him. Desperate to break the pattern, she goes into hiding to escape her feelings and a ghost from her past comes back to haunt her.
The Consumption.
Needy and unnerved, Kiki turns to the one person that offered her solace from the past. Can Damon Axton erase what’s begun? Will he be the one to break the cycle of sexual intensity and obsession that Chet uses to imprison her, body and soul?
A Recompense of Love.
When Sinclair discovers where Kiki is hiding, their passion explodes once again. Can either admit their true feelings for each other? Or will sensual enslavement destroy their dark love before it has begun?
Excerpt:
“No.” I stare down at Ax
from where's he perched on the beat-up futon—my bed. “We're not a team until we
get some shit straight.”
Ax's jet black eyebrow hops to his hairline. “Baby—”
“No,” I say, waving a palm in his face like a railroad arm
coming down over a track. “Don't you baby me.” My eyes shoot sparks, and
he leans back with a grunt.
“You clobbered Chet.” I cross my arms.
“Yeah-huh.” He gives his short hair a rough scrub. “And
Chump was deserving, Kik.”
I stomp my high heel. “Maybe!” I stab the air with my
finger. “But you nailed him from behind, and now he's, I don't know, dead or
broken somewhere.”
Ax shakes his head. “I've looked into Chet-buddy, and his
rich ass can take care of its own self.” He wags a finger and leans back again.
I pace as if the energy is pouring off me. I whirl and
point at him.
His eyes narrow on my hot pink nail tip.
“You have a closet full of chick’s clothing,” I say.
Ax shrugs, giving my once-pristine outfit an eye rake. “I
see you made use of it.”
“Why, Ax?”
His expression is unreadable, not the open face I remember
so well. “The Crawl isn't my only business, Kik. I have some others.”
“What do you mean?” I search his face, and a flicker
skates across his dark gaze. “Don't bullshit me, Ax. It won't work. I'm a
fucking hard-charging broad. You know this.”
He grins, white teeth slashing across his face. “Oh, I know.
Damn, girl, do I know.” He chuckles. “This isn't where I normally hang. In
fact, this is just a little lily pad I hop on to sleep over once in a while.
Sometimes employees from my other businesses need somewhere to crash, and I
give them a boost.”
“How much of a boost?” I'm aware my voice has just dipped
into suspicion.
“Kik…” His eyes meet mine, and they're not remotely soft,
but hard as flint. “Why do I feel you're coming down hard on me when I've been
doing nothing but helping you? Let me count the ways of my awesome.” He winks,
ticking off his great points on his fingers. “I took you in when Chump was
admiring his own dick.” I roll my eyes, and he continues. “I haven't put the
moves on your hotness.”
Oh.
Purchase:
SALE NOTE: Token # 4-8 are on sale today through the release of Token #9 on a KCD 99 cent countdown. It's a savings over regular price of $10.
B&N: http://www. barnesandnoble.com/s/token- Marata-Eros-?store= allproducts&keyword=token++ Marata+Eros+
Earlier books in the series on Amazon can be found here: http://www.amazon.com/ Marata-Eros/e/B005CLHG3Q/ref= la_B005CLHG3Q_st?qid= 1424892175&rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_ 82%3AB005CLHG3Q&sort=price- asc-rank
Ode to the Three Star Reviewer
This is
a love letter of sorts. Anyone who's ever bothered to check out my blog,
Facebook or twitter sites knows that I'm positive, assertive and command a
great respect for my readers (and all other supporters). Some authors won't
make the ballsy move to say anything about reviewers because we're terrified of
offending anyone by accident and getting labeled as one of “those” authors.
Well, no need to worry about that, guys. I'm not one of “those.” I'm a normal
chick whose day job is writing. I'm a wife, a mother of four, and daydream from
mind to paper. It's not complicated. I'm not here to spread negativity so rest
assured, the words that follow are positive, truthful and from the heart. It's
all good.
This
month I'd like to touch on reviewers. I love my readers; I am one. I
read about 3-4 books per week and understand my taste intimately, select
accordingly and won't go past 10% [eReader] on any work unless it engages me.
Since I'm a niche writer... well, that typically means I don't like “broad”
work. However, there's exceptions, like BEAUTIFUL DISASTER. I loved that work
and its wide appeal cannot be denied. The one that took the rug out from
underneath me was the wonderfully dark, poignant and clearly controversial CJ Roberts
masterpiece, CAPTIVE in the DARK. Wow. Just- wow.
So- I
understand your pain. I read, I select, and I... critique.
What? You
don't like everything you read? The short answer is: no.
However,
as a writer, your constructive criticisms are helpful. I won't lie: I adore the
fives stars, the one stars are tough... the three stars are [typically]
informative. As an artist I don't “learn” much from that wide pendulum, though
I appreciate every review. Appreciate doesn't mean like or dislike, it's
a nod to the time it took that reader to voice their thoughts in a tangible
way. Stephen King once said: “The worst advice? ‘Don’t listen to the
critics.’ I think that you really ought to listen to the critics, because
sometimes they’re telling you something is broken that you can fix.”
Okay,
King is The Master. Since we write, we need to listen to our readers so we can
continue to improve our work: the craft of writing. Everyone's time is valuable
and I don't ever dismiss readers who share their thoughts.
I love
hearing what resonated in my work; I need to hear what didn't work just as
much. Some things compromise the work and I can't alter those, but I can add
things that readers need. My break out dark romantic suspense, A TERRIBLE LOVE
is a case in point. When I read some reviews where readers wanted to hear more
back story, and just more “why,” I fleshed that out in the companion, A BRUTAL
TENDERNESS. However, the intrinsic character's personalities must remain true
to who they are, a product of what shaped them in the past, and what the
present is feeding them. I usually use the rule of “3s.” If I hear the same
criticism three times (or the same “love”) I will emphasize the latter and
improve the former.
I'll
speak for all those who write: if you care about your words, you care about
who's reading them. Altering your work to improve it for your reader while
remaining true to your style isn't cheating, it's progressing.
Thank
you so much for reading our work. Without you, they're just words on a page.
Colorblind and Loving It
What race are you?
Amazon has begun adding categories I couldn't have dreamed
up if my life depended on it. Yes, on goes my obsession with categories, which
I've touched on before (give me as many subs as you can!).
This is where it gets good. Now, I have a spot for my men
and women of color.
That's right.
Non-caucasian people want love, hot sex and all the other
trappings of being human! Who knew? This is such an obvious thing, saying it
feels like putting on a pair of shoes that fit badly. Why do we even need
categories for such things? Because most of the literature does not speak to
the racial diversity that is exploding across America (I'll stay to that
country because that's where I live).
Do I plug certain characters into my books to be
diverse?
Hell no.
The characters are in charge guys, I couldn't any more
force my muse to do what I want than become a man.
The character is who they are and it predicates race. And
honestly, lots of my MCs are mixed anyway. I just SEE them that way. My first
book had MCs that were black, Asian and the ambiguous race of other. You
know what that is? Anything that is several things mixed together.
Now it seems as if writing mixed-race fiction is becoming
the flavor of the month. (My vote is to make it the flavor of forever.)
Amazon's noticed, adding interracial romance and erotica
to its sub-genres. Well goody gumdrop, because those authors who enjoy writing
a mixed bag which include different ethnicities are digging putting our stuff
where it belongs. And where our readers of color can find it. And all our
readers.
My current work that just wrapped is about a Haitian guy
that locks horns with the French mob.
See how my muse slid that in there? Is he “black?” Not really, he's
Haitian, and speaks French... but not Parisian, not that city stuff, but raw
and unfiltered creole style. Yeah... that was fun. Who's his love interest?
Well a really cool caucasian girl... but that's not all she is.
Ohh la la!
I'm loving that the further we go, the less we see.
Amazon's colorblind, and many writers are seeing the need to expose our unique
cross-section of domestic humanity right here in the little US of A. For me,
writing about different cultures and races feels right. Keeps things fresh...
doesn't allow for as much regurgitation of the same old thing.
What race are you?
Ultimately, does it matter... if you're a woman—you want
love. To be loved; erotically, passionately, unconditionally. I haven't found
color makes that different.
Color really is all the same.
Marata Eros (a pen name for Tamara Rose Blodgett), is the NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY bestselling author of A Terrible Love. Marata has more than thirty-five titles in multiple genres including Dark Fantasy, Dark Romance as well as her highly successful Dark Erotica series.
Marata lives in South Dakota with her husband, children and fur kids. She is an ardent reader of many genres. Tamara enjoys interacting with her readers via Twitter, blog and newsletter as often as possible. Please stop by and say hi :)
Website: http:// marataeroseroticaauthor. blogspot.com/
Twitter: @MarataEros
FaceBook: http://tinyurl.com/ MarataErosFB
Marata lives in South Dakota with her husband, children and fur kids. She is an ardent reader of many genres. Tamara enjoys interacting with her readers via Twitter, blog and newsletter as often as possible. Please stop by and say hi :)
Website: http://
Twitter: @MarataEros
FaceBook: http://tinyurl.com/
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