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Old 01-23-2012, 10:25 PM   #7
ATDrake
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Posts: 11,517
Karma: 33048258
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Roundworld
Device: Kindle 2 International, Sony PRS-T1, BlackBerry PlayBook, Acer Iconia
Thanks all for pointing out the expired stuff and broken links.

Now that I'm finally back at a real computer, corrected and some minor additions:

Geralyn Dawson offers a small-town Texas set reunion romance originally published by Pocket in 1999: The Kissing Stars

Previously-featured Doranna Durgin offers an originally Baen-published (now yanked from catalogue) Celtic contemporary fantasy bordering on paranormal romance free to all via Smashwords (and hence to price-matching outlets): A Feral Darkness

Previously-featured Amber D. Sistla (ISFDB entry) offers what looks like a novel length fantasy: Obligations of a Cobalt Hue She also makes two of her previously-published short stories available to all via Smashwords.

Adams Media/Tyrus-published Craig McDonald offers the 2nd in his 1930s-50s period amateur sleuth crime novelist Hector Lassiter series, originally small-press published by Bleak House Books. This one's got guest appearances by Ernest Hemingway, Rita Hayworth, Salvador Dali, and a host of other period celebrities and looks fun, according to the Publisher's Weekly review on it: Toros & Torsos

Bram Stoker award-winner Kealan Patrick Burke (ISFDB entry) offers a suspense/maybe-horror short story: The Grief Frequency

Carole Gill (ISFDB entry) offers what looks like a collection of horror shorts (or it may just be one creepy single story): Hush Don't Die

Miette Korda says that her novel was an Amazon Breakthrough Quarter Finalist. I'm not sure exactly how this ranking works out, but if you'd like to try a possibly quality-vetted indie with a mystery/thriller maybe-romantic suspense involving Hungarian Jews and possible Nazis, she offers: Dead Man's Tattoo

China-born London-educated Netherlands resident Julie O'Yang says that her stories and poetry and articles have appeared in magazines and newspapers worldwide. I'm not bothering to check, but her historical novel set during the Sino-Japanese War looks interesting, so: Butterfly, A novel (With classic fan-shape illustrations)
RL]

Beijing-born Minnesota-educated Lisa Zhang Wharton says she has published a few short stories in various literary magazines. She offers a 1989-set coming of age novel which looks like it might be interesting: Last Kiss in Tiananmen Square

Some of you may find this useful. The Instructables.com people offer a guidebook on how to make: Office Weapons to enliven your cubicle warfare, complete with 13 projects full of helpful DIY pictures.

If you happened to pick up that kid's picture book with the skateboarding dragon featured earlier and would like to practice your Indonesian, author/artist Scott Gordon with the help of translator Dian Pitaloka offers: Naga Kecil Peliharaanku (My Little Pet Dragon) (Indonesian Edition)
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