Skip to main content

Love to read Romantic Suspense? Share these bestsellers and WIN an Amazon Gift Card!



Amazon just sent me money for sharing book suggestions... Silly people...don't they know I'd do that anyway? So, as always, I take the opportunity to meet new friends by enlisting my current friends to share the news about my FREE books, hoping of course, that you'll want to read more. Consider my free books as my gift to you, like a cup of coffee so we can get acquainted. Andafter you download your free book, share this post and send some of your friends to the site for both of you to register for the giveaway! Simply put, the more friends you send, the more chances both of you have to win. To me, 'Word of Mouth' will always be my favorite way of meeting new peeps! I still look to my friends for reading suggestions.

The first free story I offer is truly an appetizer, as it takes only one hour to read. If you like a touch of paranormal mixed in with your mystery, download The Depot absolutely FREE. 

At 106,000 words, my next FREE book is a full course. She Belongs to Me is a romantic-suspense whodunit. It is a complete novel, no cliffhanger.


So, now that you have your door prizes, here's how to win the Amazon gift card. You have two ways to win, but there will be THREE winners!

One, tell me who referred you for a chance to win a gift card for you AND your friend!

Two, simply share this post via the Raffle Copter for another entryreminding readers to tell me who referred them, so you'll get another entry, and you can do that once a day.

Easy, right? I thought so. Have fun, and as always, happy reading!

Carmen

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Comments

  1. Your Awesome!��������

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Kim! Just love to spread the word..and I appreciate all my friends who help. :)

      Delete
  2. Hi Carmen, I downloaded She Belongs to Me. I'm looking forward to reading it. It'll be the first one of yours that I read. Thanks. I'm from the March Book Frenzy Hop.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much, Lisa! 'She Belongs to Me' was my first born, so it'll always hold a special place in my heart. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I loved writing it. And, good luck on the giveaway! :)

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

"As in any fairytale, everything good must come to an end." ENTANGLED DREAMS:

Now, if you’ve read any of my novels or excerpts, you know I don’t do happy-go-lucky beginnings; and as in any fairytale, a little rain must fall, or in the case of my stories, I prefer a monsoon. This week’s excerpt: But alas, as in any good fairytale, everything good and wonderful must come to an end. After the tragic accident that snatched her mother away from Alexandra, her father moved them away from the beaches of Destin to another beach in Florida. Cocoa Beach. Cocoa Beach was loud, the water murky, and there were no weekend adventures as there had been in Destin. Her father married her evil stepmother, Lilith, who Alexandra was certain was a witch with her long, black as midnight hair and pale-white skin as if she’d never seen sunlight. Her father had admitted he wasn’t in love with Cruella, as she had come to think of the witchy woman, but that he’d wanted Alexandra to have a mother and siblings. Well, she definitely got that. The k

To prologue or not to prologue, that is the question. Readers, please weigh in!

Personally, I love prologues. They get you right into the action whether it was in the past or something exciting that is to come. But that’s exactly why most agents’ blogs I’ve read say not to use them. Paraphrasing…“If you need a prologue, then your story must not be strong enough…” Hmm … well, I like them, and I use them. But I’m curious what readers think, and I’d love you to weigh in. AND, if you have some great examples, please leave the title in the comment section. Now … here’s what I’ve noticed. Plenty of bestselling books have used them, even though they aren’t always called prologues . Same diff in my opinion. My biggest example is ‘Twilight’. If that little blurb wasn’t in the beginning, I don’t think I would have made it through the first chapter. How about movies? I don’t watch a lot. But I’ve started to notice how many have “prologues”. I also don’t have cable, but I have NetFlix, and hubby has just started watching ‘Breaking Bad’. Okay … I

The rule of thirds: No matter what you do, someone will hate you. Get over it and Write On!

No matter what you do in life, a third of the people will love you, a third will hate you, and the rest will be indifferent. Get over it and Write On! Yes, I'm talking to myself. If you're listening, GREAT! It's good advice! Is it easy advice? Heck No! For some reason, even though that percentage is rather low on my books--the percentage of people who hate my books runs about 4.6%--it still hurts.  Note: I only averaged the 'firsts' in my books, the books I actively promote. Because if I go to the second, third, and fourth books in my series, those numbers drop drastically. Obviously, if readers don't like my first book, they don't go on to the rest of my books in a series, so those books receive little to zero one-star reviews. So...if the number of one-star reviews we receive is less than five percent--Thank God ALL of the 33 1/3% of the haters don't write reviews--why do we get so depressed when we receive a one-star review