Flame’s Dawn by Jillian David – Review, Guest Post & Giveaway

Flame’s Dawn by Jillian David – Review, Guest Post & Giveaway

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Flames DawnAmazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / BAM

Description:
The Vietnam War throws tough but vulnerable Specialist Jane Larson into the strong arms of cursed immortal Captain Barnaby Blackstone. As the world disintegrates around them, one night of passion ends with him shoving her onto a helicopter as a bomb explodes right where he stood.

Years later, Jane is neck deep in an undercover DEA operation gone horribly wrong. Kidnapped and then committed to an asylum, she has no hope of escape from the clutches of cult leader and narcotic trafficker, Tim Thompson. The only thing that sustains her through the pain is the image of a certain Captain’s handsome face. Now that she is broken in body and spirit, she has no future with any man, including Barnaby.

As cursed Indebted killer, Barnaby has spent several of his immortal years searching for the fierce and beautiful woman who had unlocked hope in his cold, hard soul. When he finds her near death in a hospital, he uses his Indebted strength to help her escape, but in the process attracts the attention of a maniac who is intent on revenge. To save Jane, he must reveal his deepest secret and risk her rejection.

 

Review

Flame’s Dawn by Jillian David is a prequel to her Hell to Pay series.
I have read the whole series, and loved it, so I inhaled the next chapter of this series.

This is about Barnaby. Having read this series so far, I know how this ends. And it’s a great story. We hear so much about Barnaby through the other books in the series, and how he interacts with the other characters, it was great to read his story. Only downside …… It wasn’t long enough 😉

For those who haven’t read the series (boy you need to read the series) indebted are immortal killers for their master Jerahmeel (like the devil) they kill using a special knife, it absorbs their soul and it feeds their master. They start as humans, but after an injustice, Jerahmeel may or may not hear their cries, he gets them to sign a contract, and they are eternally his. They can only escape once they have completed the special kill. No one knows how to end their contract.

We start Barnaby and Jane’s story in war torn Vietnam. Both have noticed each other for a while, but neither have acted on it.  This is where you think the story ends, but it doesn’t.

We jump to the future, Jane is now working for the DEA, going deep undercover to break a drug and cult ring, she is soon in over her head. Being forced to take drugs, poor Jane is broken, and to keep her quiet, she is placed in an asylum.

Barnaby is now sick of his life as an indebted, he searches for a loophole, a way to release himself and others from their servitude, but he has never forgotten Jane; always wondering where she ended up.

The couple are reunited when he finds her in the asylum, breaking her free, as they attempt to hide from the cult/drugs leader. As the drugs begin to leave Janes system, she begins to notice things. Barnaby heals really fast, can do things that shouldn’t be possible. And when confronting him, will she believe the things he will say to her ?

If you’ve read the other books, then this is a must, if you haven’t, then this is a good place to start.  It’s a prequel, but really, you can read it at the start of the series, or at the end. But I’m going to read it again, then go back to the other stories.

Reviewed by Julie B

Copy provided by Author

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Heating Up the Pages

Steam factor. Swoon. Heat level. The tingly good feels.

Maybe it’s that moment when the hero and heroine’s eyes meet. Or the zing of sensation when a hand brushes against an arm or a shoulder. The way her mouth moves when she tells a story. The way he intently watches her walk across a room. Maybe it’s a simple smile. Or maybe it’s that promise to fulfill all those dark fantasies.

We all love some level of heat in our romances. Some readers enjoy just enough heat to make the tummy flutter and the heart skip a beat. Some readers want so much that they need supplemental oxygen and nitroglycerin tablets to make it through certain scenes.

On a scale, if you figure handholding falls at a 1 and wild monkey sex with whips and chains in zero gravity falls in at about a 10, then I like to write a heat level around a 6-8. Where my characters fall within this scale depends on their past, their belief systems, their fears, and how they respond to their partner.

I like to write to a heat level that’s enough to spice up the night and makes the encounter oh-so-satisfying, but still leaves some…depths…uncharted. But is the heat all about the act of sex itself – upping the kinkiness or sexual ante to creative heights? Or is heating up the pages about much, much more?

Gentle reader, you know the answer to that question. Heat levels totally depend on what comes before the actual sex. Chapters and pages well before the actual sex, in fact.

It’s really fun to write about the kind of heat builds and builds until it combusts like a match to a gasoline spill. I like the sexiness and steamy hot connection simmering for a long time before going into a full boil. Because when that flash point is reached. Wow.

Creating the heat is about everything BUT sex. Ok, it’s somewhat about sex, but the not-sex part is the most important part. How the fuel is mixed, how the accelerant is added, how the tinder is stacked, and finally, finally…striking that match. Giving that one tiny spark that – boom – flashes into Earth-shattering passion.

So how do you get to the kaboom? (Euphemistically speaking, of course!) It’s all about the little things.

The big O moment (whether that means Orgasm or Oh let’s be together forever) doesn’t happen without a bunch of little moments leading up to it – and I don’t mean foreplay in the bedroom beforehand. They say the woman’s erogenous zone is her mind, and I believe it. The intense gaze, the way he focuses on what she’s saying, his little touch in the small of her back – each action turns up the heat another few degrees. The way she brushes past his arm, or gets him to open up about his life, or tells a joke. Click, click, click – turn that knob. Increase the heat.

So heat isn’t about “Tab A into Slot B” details. Well, okay, maybe it is a >little< about the mechanics of kissing or petting or sex. But true heat is when there is meaning and history and longing infused into every movement of passion. That’s at least how I try to write the scenes. Turning up the heat is all about what got your characters to this moment that makes the moment mind-blowingly amazing. It’s about the things in the character’s past that has made him or her so vulnerable in the moment.

So, when that spark hits the fuel —

It bursts into flame.

 

Giveaway beige

Jillian is offering 2 e-copies of Immortal Flame (Book #1  of Hell to Pay series) to TWO (2) lucky commenters at The Reading Cafe

1. If you have not previously registered at The Reading Cafe, please register by using the log-in at the top of the page (side bar) or by using one of the social log-ins.

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2. If you are using a social log-in, please post your email address with your comment.

3. Please LIKE us on FACEBOOK and click GET NOTIFICATIONS

4. Please FOLLOW us on Twitter for an additional entry.

5. Please FOLLOW us on GOODREADS for an additional entry.

6. Please LIKE us on TSU for an additional entry.

7. Giveaway is open to Internationally.

8. Giveaway runs from February 28 to March 3, 2016

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Flame Unleashed by Jillian David – a Review

Flame Unleashed by Jillian David – a Review

 

Flame UnleashedAmazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / BAM

Description:
When Civil War nurse Ruth Blackstone sacrificed her soul to save her husband’s life, he utterly betrayed her trust. Now, 150 years later, she’s still stuck killing depraved souls to feed her devil of a boss, Jerahmeel. She’s never been one for hair-brained schemes or sweet-talking flirts. That is, until she meets Cajun rogue Odie Pierre-Noir.

Odie has the research and the war plan to overthrow Jerahmeel and win freedom for all Indebteds. There’s just one hitch: he needs Ruth to act as bait. With charm on his side, he shows Ruth an intense passion she’s never experienced before.

Now Ruth must make the hardest decision of her long, damned life: continue in relative safety as an Indebted with Odie as her lover, or risk their eternal souls for one chance to break the curse. Will she choose the lesser evil?

Review:

I loved the first two books in this series, I didn’t think it would get any better……
Flame Unleashed is the third and final book in the Hell To Pay trilogy by Jillian David.  To be honest you could read it as a stand alone, but as we meet both the couples from the previous books, it would probably help. I enjoyed reading all three together. 

We first met Ruth in the previous book. She was playing a part of a nurse, we don’t get much on her character, she seemed a quiet person, but I also got the impression that she was a very caring person. But Ruth isn’t an ordinary person, she is an indebted.  An immortal assassin, chained by the devil, she kills evil with her specially given dagger, hoping one day to repay the debt and be free. 

(An indebted is someone that has signed a contract and given their soul over to Jerahmeel who is Satan in human form. When an indebted kills someone evil, their evil essence is drawn in to the knife and feeds Jerahmeel, and an indebted cannot fight the need to kill.)

As the story evolves, we find out how Ruth became an indebted, it’s a sad tale of betrayal and deceit.  When she is given a task, Ruth wears a disguise, she becomes a totally different person, is this to help her, or does it shield the real Ruth, if her soul is a caring person, wouldn’t this slowly destroy her? Does Ruth even know the real person anymore? 

The first time Odie and Ruth meet, the attraction is there, there spark of electricity when they touched. But Ruth cannot allow herself to ever trust a man again after the betrayal of her husband, so she does all she can to convince Odie she doesn’t like him. 

Odie has been researching and planning for his entire existence to find a way to end Jerahmeel and to free himself and other indebted. When he meets Ruth, he knows that he needs her to help him to carry out his plan. 

I wasn’t too keen on our hero at first, I got the impression that he was out to use Ruth. He notices that his boss Jerahmeel has a fascination for Ruth, if she’s on a mission, he will pop up and make her uncomfortable. He seems fascinated with her; does he have feelings for her ?  Odie sees this, as the perfect way to use Ruth as bait to finally kill Jerahmeel.

But he happily proved me wrong.  When they FINALLY decide to be together, the connection they have to each other was great to read. They care about each other deeply. The chemistry was sizzling between Odie and Ruth. 

We also get to spend time with Peter and Allie and their beautiful new baby, (hero and heroine from book one) and Dante and Hannah (they were the main characters from the second book.) 

And the build up to the final showdown was intense and crazy. I’m not going to give anything away, but it could go either way. Does Odie’s plan work? Will their boss discover their plan and make them pay?

I’m sad that the series has ended, but I’ve enjoyed the ride. 

Reviewed by Julie B

Copy provided by Author

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Relentless Flame by Jillian David – Review, Guest Post & Giveaway

Relentless Flame by Jillian David – Review, Guest Post  & Giveaway

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Relentless FlameAmazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo

Description:
Immortal. Colossal. Suave. Indebted killer Dante Blackstone has the world at his feet. Every vice, any desire, is his for the asking—until he finds the one person he cannot have: one sweet, diminutive woman who could bring about Dante’s destruction. 

Despite her supernatural ability to heal others, a devastating act of evil has left Hannah Miller broken in body and spirit. As she rebuilds her life while on the lam, a not-so-chance meeting with Dante chips away at the walls surrounding her fragile heart. But before their fledgling love can take flight, Dante’s boss sends an evil minion with one mandate: Eliminate Dante’s new reason to break his eternal contract.

As they fight to survive, Hannah’s amazing gift gives Dante one chance to save them both from the vicious minion. How can any love survive eternal hell and annihilation? 

The answer lies in Dante’s inferno.


Review.  

Wow !!! Relentless Flame by Jillian David was a great second book in her Hell to Pay series.

You don’t need to read the first book, but a few of the previous characters are in this book. So it helps to have a little background. I was extremely lucky to read the first book, and liked Dante straight away, cold killer, but loyal to a fault, oh and a total hound dog !!!! 

He’s in a little town searching for someone, as he has a message to deliver. Dante is an indebted …. An immortal assassin, chained by the devil, he kills evil with his dagger, hoping one day to repay the debt and be free. 

Dante is not use to being told NO, men and women flirt and offer phone numbers and favours, so when a mousy librarian says no, Dante makes it his mission to have her. 

Hannah is hiding, after escaping from an abusive father. Hannah and her brother have escaped, and now they live their lives on the edge. She has a talent; she takes people aches, pains and injuries into herself. But, after something at home goes wrong, Hannah flees for her life. 

The attraction between Dante and Hannah is very heartfelt. I love how Hannah puts Dante’s ego in it place, and how Dante is never sure about how Hannah feels about him. I loved how Hannah’s character grew under Dante’s care and attention. 

Dante’s boss sends out other assassins to end Hannah (he is worried after losing Peter to a woman, he wants to keep his indebted), so they end up on the run together. Dante can think of nothing else but keeping her safe and protected. He realizes how much she had come to mean to him. 

They end up in the woods in a small cabin hidden away where Dante finally risks everything and tells Hannah the truth about what he really is. Will he also tell her the real reason he is there ? What will Hannah think of Dante? Will she believe him ? 

I loved getting a glimpse of Peter and Allie from the first book and seeing how they are doing. I also love Barnaby, and hope he appears in the next book. I have to admit I didn’t connect with Dante and Hannah as much as Peter and Allie, but I did enjoy their story more !! 

Relentless Flame and the Hell to Pay series is fantastic, and I highly recommend it. I can’t wait to see where Jillian David takes us next. 

Reviewed by Julie B.

Copy provided by Author

 

Guest Post
Writing Romance and Fiction

A naked person on an exam table is a heck of a lot different than a naked person in a romance novel.

Here’s my life. It’s like, if you went to a nudist beach, thinking you’re going to see all these good looking, hot bodies in provocative poses, all sprawled on the sand. But all you see are…rolls of pudge and loose skin, body hair and strange, blotchy rashes. Or even some body fungus. Yuck, reality.

For me, writing romance after a day in the trenches (e.g. office visits, doing skin lesion removals and PAP smears, and examining places that shall remain nameless) is a little like that beach. Sigh. It’s not pretty.

But then I realized something important: As the author, I have the power of the pen to make every single person on my fictional beach oiled, toned, and sporting an ideal body-mass index.

Like most authors, the inspiration for writing comes from everything and everyone around me. Holy smokes, the stories patients tell me cannot be true. But they are. I’ve done the unpleasant (funky, smelly) exams and have the proof.

But writing romance? It’s fiction, right? So it needs to be crazier and bigger than life.

That’s where paranormal comes in. All of those unlikely scenarios and ideas from real life become HUGE plotlines when you introduce something supernatural to the mix.

Take Hannah and Dante, the main characters in my second novel, Relentless Flame. How many times did I wish, as a physician, that I could put my hands on a patient and take away their pain? Lots. Now enter my heroine Hannah, who can do exactly that. (The act of removing others’ pain hurts her badly, but she does it because it’s the right thing to do.)

Now let’s go back to our nude beach and find a likely candidate as Hannah’s love interest. Not the hirsute beached whale sipping Coors and eating beef jerky like cows might never reproduce again. But the guy doing pushups. With one arm. Naked. Without a care in the world. Yup. He’ll do.

See, that’s where fiction can take you. Now we’ve got a tormented heroine (who is cute and sweet, of course), plus a swaggering mountain of a man (who, once you get to know him, you’ll see has a sensitive and tormented side as well). And there we have it: STORY TIME.

What about the action and bad things happening to all of the characters in my books? Again, I draw on real life. In my work in rural hospitals, I’ve seen about a thousand ways humans can be damaged, maimed, and killed. After patching folks up, shipping them off to trauma centers, or crying with families, I realized that those stories and those injuries made for some realistic scenarios.

So what do we have now?

#1) Heroine with a skill I wish I had

#2) Hotter than hell hero, so obviously someone I will never see/treat

#3) Scenario of injury/pain/suffering that is seemingly insurmountable

Stir in one overworked physician/writer and BOOM, there’s a story!

And that, my friends, is how the Hell to Pay series came about, start to finish.

My weird experiences + “what if” questions + a vivid imagination = Hell to Pay series.

I love creating something beautiful out of pain. I love giving voice to the experiences of my patients. And I love being able to go to that nudie beach and turn everyone there into over-the-top hotties — not wrinkled and sunburnt vacationers.

So in a word, completely escape reality.

But isn’t that what fiction is about?

 

About The AuthorJillian David lives near the end of the Earth with her nut of a husband and two bossy cats. To escape the sometimes-stressful world of the rural physician, she writes while on call and in her free time. She enjoys taking realistic settings and adding a twist of “what if.” Running or hiking on local trails often promotes plot development.

You can learn more about Jillian David at the following links:
Website / Twitter / Email

 

giveaway
Jillian is offering ecopies of IMMORTAL FLAME (First book in series) to THREE (3) lucky commenters at The Reading Cafe

1. If you have not previously registered at The Reading Cafe, please register by using the log-in at the top of the page (side bar) or by using one of the social log-ins.

2. If you are using a social log-in, please post your email address with your comment.

3. Please LIKE us on FACEBOOK and click GET NOTIFICATIONS

4. Please FOLLOW us on Twitter for an additional entry.

5. Please FOLLOW us on GOODREADS for an additional entry.

6. Please LIKE us on TSU for an additional entry.

7. Giveaway is open Internationally.

8. Giveaway runs from May 3 to May 8  2015

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