Ciar Cullen’s Collapsing Universe

Entries from October 2009

October 28, 2009 · 1 Comment

The Forbidden Chamber, from Samhain Publishing, Available today.

“Your life is forfeit if you open that door.”

All her life, Lady Isabel Colven has followed the path laid out for her, content to look neither left nor right for excitement. Her future holds a dutiful, passionless marriage to some nice young man, and she’s content…until the exotic and compelling Lord Rukh Hayle threatens her maidenly reserve. Rumor paints him as a wife-murderer; desire tempts her to look past his aura of danger.

Rukh refuses to let his family’s curse kill a third bride, but Isabel awakens the Raven within him, compels him to take her to wife—and to bed—despite the secrets that live under his skin. That lie is locked in the darkest corners of the manor, waiting to be unleashed. Their lusty union arouses the curse, entangling Isabel in an erotic tug of war that can only end in her destruction. There is no escape for either of them. Not from his family’s shadowy history. Not from demons imagined and real. And not from the choice Rukh faces to save his bride from a fate worse than death…

Warning: This gothic contains heady kisses that lead to ruin, passionate sex on a desk chair, a mysterious husband who may be a murderer, a cursed family of raven shifters, and an unspeakable evil hidden in the closet.

Read the excerpt.
The Forbidden Chamber is available from Samhain at MBaM.

Categories: On writing

Love’s Alchemy Giveaway!

October 19, 2009 · 5 Comments

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I’m delighted that Love’s Alchemy will be available on November 6 at Samhain. To celebrate, I’m giving away two electronic copies the day before the release! Entering is easy! Just click on the book title in this post, read the excerpt (link at the bottom of the Samhain page, not the blurb), and tell me anything about Van and Sidra’s first meeting. IMPORTANT! DO NOT LEAVE YOUR COMMENT HERE! Email your answer to ciarcullen@gmail.com.

She holds the key to unlock his past—or unleash hell.

Sidra Patmos has the ability to see the real underbelly of lower Manhattan—a horrifying world where wraiths, demons and a few quirky mortals battle for supremacy. Desperate, she seeks out a paranormal researcher to tell her why her life is a waking nightmare.

Instead of answers, her meeting with the dark and irresistible Van Barlowe unleashes a chain of events far more dangerous than her blackest visions. And a desire she can barely manage to hold at arm’s length.

After three desperate centuries, Van has finally found the Alchemist—Sidra. Somewhere locked deep inside her lies the knowledge that will rescue his family from ruin. The only way to reawaken her abilities is to hold his enemies at bay long enough to convince her to step through the mists of time.

Redemption waits there, and a timeless bond ignited by the undeniable pull between them. The missing ingredient: Sidra’s willingness to risk that Van’s attraction runs deeper than sexual chemistry…

Categories: On writing

Caveat Scriptor–Quitting the day job

October 16, 2009 · 4 Comments

I know, I’m not a famous writer type and probably not the best qualified to write this. Nevertheless, I’m alarmed by some posts I’ve seen recently on writers’ forums about quitting the day job to “write full time.” Especially from those who don’t already have an agent, a track record, or even a contract in hand.

Of course this doesn’t apply to those of you with second homes in Bimini and Maddoff-proof portfolios. But if you’re the average bear, like me, please think things through.

There are only a few spots and a few authors who openly discuss their earnings from writing, especially at small presses. I was struck this past month by my royalty checks. I don’t write “hot stuff” and I’m not particularly a great seller, but I was able to make my final car payment and pay the phone and internet bill with my royalties. Oh, and bought groceries. That is with a new release, several books out, and I’ll admit, minimal promotion. And as I said, many, many authors do much better than I do.

Still–ask yourself these questions before you decide you must quit your job to write:
1. Do you have several months’ funds in the bank to fall back on if you must reenter the workforce during this terrible economic downturn?
2. Do you understand that it could take months, even years before you turn a profit (you’ll be spending money on prizes, organizations, advertising…)?
3. Do you know that if you are lucky enough to land that “big NY contract” it will be ages before the full royalties come your way. You’ll get your advance (hey, if it’s $200K, go for it), but how long will that last you?
4. Do you think you need to write full time to be a writer? Do you know that most writers have day jobs (including those who are caregivers for their own children)? That most writers write an hour here and an hour there? Some fairly well known ones?
5. Are you the sort of person who has the discipline to write all day long? Would you be better in a more social environment for at least part of the day?
6. Do you have an alternate source of health benefits, 401K contributions from an employer, life insurance, etc?

I don’t mean to be a downer, honestly. And sure, it’s none of my business. But the “I made a sale of my novella to small epub! squee! time to quit the day job!” makes my heart sink. Please, can you add anything for or against my warnings here? Have you made it work? How long did it take? Have you tried writing full time and failed? Succeeded? Please share your experiences.retrodow_1952_plastic_0

Categories: On writing

Roaring Twenties Prize Winners!

October 1, 2009 · 7 Comments

roaring_twenties
Thanks to everyone who entered this contest and left messages about finding new authors and having fun! We hope you found some new great authors along with your favorites. Authors will be contacting the winners within a week. Some of the entries have only first names, so don’t get too excited–but we have your email on file, so the right person will get their prize. If you haven’t heard about your prize by October 10, feel free to email ciar@ciarcullen.com and I’ll crack the whip ;o)
xoxo
Ciar

THE WINNERS
Sandie wins Vivian Arend (eBook winner’s choice of backlist)
Jane Lavigne wins Juniper Bell (Ebook The Extremist)
Charlene Coyle wins Ciar Cullen (Ebook winner’s choice)
Bella wins Debbie Mumford (Ebook The Silver Casket)
Jane Fahrney wins Renee Wildes (Paperback Duality)
Wanda Flanagan wins Leslie Dicken (Ebook Beauty Tempts the Beast)
Janet H. wins Mychael Black (Ebook Blood & Fire)
Dina Stornello wins Carolan Ivey (A Ghost of a Chance: Legends, Book 2)
April Strength wins Eliza Gayle (Ebook Rope Dreams)
Mindy wins Eliza Gayle (Ebook Watch Me Hide)
A. Muller wins Skylar Kade (Ebook Maison Domine)
Patricia Cochran wins Janna Lee Hayes (Ebook Drive Me Crazy)
Dawn Murphy wins Sydney Somers (Winner’s choice download from backlist)
Susan Pertierra wins Ella Drake (Ebook Scent of Cin)
Judy Cox wins Pamela Fryer (Punch Studio Tiny Book)
Peggy Gorman wins Meg Benjamin (Ebook Wedding Bell Blues)
Linda Nicholas wins Pam Champagne (winner’s choice ebooks)
Teresa Smith wins Pam Champagne (winner’s choice ebooks)
Jen wins Michelle Pillow (Ebook Divinity Warriors: Lilith Enraptured)
Karin Theisen wins Imogen Howsen (Ebook Heart of the Volcano)
Ashley Loos wins Shelley Munro (Winner’s choice of download)
Robinson Mason wins Catherine Wade (Another Time Around)
Betti Obrian wins Debra Parmley (Ebook A Desperate Journey)
Amy wins Sharon Cullen (Ebook Obsession)

Categories: On writing