Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Awkward Moments Not Found In Your Average Children’s Bible

 

Friday, November 8, 2013

Erotic werewolf romance writer bites hand that feeds

Werewolf creator from from Nebraska sues Siren:
Cass
County author Erin R. Flynn, who writes “gay erotic paranormal romance” under the pen name Joyee Flynn, is suing her Texas-based publisher in a contract dispute... The stories feature amorous encounters involving shapeshifters and werewolves, among other plot turns.

In an answering brief, Siren [Publishing] said Flynn's lawsuit is premature because her contracts require arbitration as the first step to settle a dispute. Siren has filed a separate lawsuit against Flynn in Texas.

Flynn started writing fiction in 2002 and has written 89 books for Siren since 2010, according to the lawsuit. She said she typically writes 15,000 words a day and can finish a book in a week or two.

Flynn submitted a manuscript for “Gideon” on June 1, but an editor at Siren wanted to market the book under a different imprint, so she withdrew it from consideration. On June 30, Flynn shipped the manuscript for “Trapped and Boiled.” But she objected to changes proposed by her editor, so she withdrew that one, too. Flynn said she never signed a contract for either book. Instead, she self-published the books on Amazon.com.

Siren's lawyers sent Flynn a notice that she had breached her contract. Then, after Flynn filed her lawsuit, Siren Publisher Diana DeBalko, who goes by Amanda Hilton, sent a takedown notice to Amazon.com asserting copyright over the books. The titles are no longer available online.

At issue is whether the two books are sequels to existing works that Flynn wrote under contract to Siren — in which case the publisher has the first right of refusal — or original works that stand alone in a series.
Siren's slogan is 'quality erotic romance for the sophisticated reader.' Here's the synopsis of Flynn's book, 'Two Wiggles and Some Fur: Unmated at Midnight:'
Jensen has wanted a mate for a long, long time. Picked on for his size and growing up in a time when being gay could get him killed, happiness was always out of reach for him. But then he found a role in a pack he was made for… Beta. Ever since, all he's done is protect people and keep his pack safe, and he is good at it. So when he meets two men eating out of the garbage, all his instincts kick in to help them.

Kyd and Redley have been on the run, and they’re tired, hurt, and desperate. When a huge wolf shifter shows up and offers help, they don’t know whether to trust him or run because he might eat them. As salamander shifters they have a few special gifts and realize they can trust him. But when they begin having trouble with the pack, who will Jensen listen to?
 Sounds scary.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Was Britain’s great flood of 1607 a tsunami?

A one-off tsunami unleashing an irresistible force that left 2,000 dead or a powerful storm surge that caused a trail of devastating destruction around a coastline left vulnerable by inadequate defences?

That’s the question which has surrounded recent research on the Great Flood that was described as moving 'faster than a greyhound can run' when it hit Stuart Britain in 1607. Author Mike Hall revisits the conundrum in his new book The Severn Tsunami? The Story of Britain’s Greatest Natural Disaster. The book recounts how the brutal wave, over seven metres high, swept up the River Severn and flooded the lowland areas of South Wales, Gloucestershire, Somerset, and north Devon, killing thousands.

For centuries, those who survived called it an act of God, before modern scientific research began to delve into whether it was Britain’s first recorded tsunami. In order for a tsunami to occur, an earthquake has to happen below the seabed.

But if it was a tsunami, places including Brittany, Spain, Portugal and the west of Ireland should also have been affected, says Mr Hall. And though the evidence is not conclusive, Mr Hall believes the 1607 event was “probably” a storm surge...

But Mr Hall, from Redwick, Monmouthshire, admits that evidence that continues to support those who believe it was a tsunami comes from the 17th century chronicles and other written sources that tell of a “bright, sunny, cloudless day”. Conditions very far removed from those we would associate with a storm...

Professor Simon Haslett, of the University of Wales...believes the damage was caused by a tsunami, rather than high tides and severe storms.

The professor of physical geography has said descriptions in 17th century pamphlets of “huge and mighty hills of water” are more in keeping with a tsunami. He maintains there is evidence salt marshes were torn out of the Severn estuary in the early 17th century and only a tsunami would have the power to erode the coastline in this way. 
Source: Wales Online