My young adult historical fantasy DELUSION is released today!
It is about two teenaged stage magician girls in London at the beginning of WWII who are evacuated to the countryside – and discover a hidden college of real magicians. As they try to persuade the reclusive magicians to help their country's cause (two handsome, dashing ones in particular) they face love, betrayal, danger, and challenges to their most deeply held beliefs.
You can buy DELUSION at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, IndieBound, or your favorite local bookstore.
I like to write about the small things inside the big things – the romances, the friendships, the accidents, that have a huge (though utterly unknown) effect on history. My historicals are alternate history in that the main characters never existed, the plots they make or foil never happened. But they are set in a past that is as accurate as possible. In other words, no magicians probably ever meddled in world events in 1939, but they could have. I don't change any real historical outcomes. I just show what could have happened behind the scenes if a stage magician girl and a real magician boy happened to meet and fall in love.
I hope you read it -- and I hope you love it! Let me know what you think!
XO
Laura
A very occasional blog serving mostly as a web site for author Laura L. Sullivan, with occasional bits about nature...
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Friday, November 2, 2012
All is roses
Writers (oh how I love to generalize) are fragile, insecure creatures (who are at the same time egoistic narcissists, but they keep that on the DL) who go all to pieces at bad reviews and then start a downward spiral of sour-graping mixed with crushing self doubt.
Then they get a review like this, and all is roses again:
Bookshelves of Doom reviews Ladies in Waiting.
So thanks.
xo
Laura
Then they get a review like this, and all is roses again:
Bookshelves of Doom reviews Ladies in Waiting.
So thanks.
xo
Laura
Monday, September 24, 2012
Carbon Free Sugar
Okay, I get what they're saying. It still tickles me.
Certified Carbon Free Sugar.
Not quite as bad as the fat free spring water, but still, funny.
Because of course, sugar has carbon.
And here is a nifty little experiment you can do (if you have sulfuric acid) which rather dramatically shows exactly how much carbon sugar has:
Saturday, September 8, 2012
The Winner!
Congratulations to MIKE! You won a copy of The Crimson Petal and the White, and a signed hardcover of Ladies in Waiting. I'll contact you shortly to get your mailing address. I can't wait to hear what you think of both books!
XO
Laura
XO
Laura
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
August Historical Giveaway -- The Crimson Petal and the White
Life has been exciting lately, what with selling a house (for a rather depressing price, but hey, I got a little out of it and at least I'm not paying for a house I'm not living in any more, so I can't complain... too much) and the Little Guy starting kindergarten (he got a smiley face on his first daily report and was "respectful and curious") I got a little distracted so this month's giveaway is late. Let's run it from now until September 5 to give you two full weeks.
The Crimson Petal and the White, by Michel Faber, is one of my favorite historicals. Fierce, tender, scheming, literary whore Sugar goes from being pimped by her own mother in a Victorian slum, to being the mistress of a rich man, to... well, I won't tell you where she ends up, but it is a rich, juicy, complex, moving, completely satisfying book. It's the world of Trollope where Trollope feared to go. I love a good prostitute tale, and this is one of the best.
In the 17th century, and in the 19th, women didn't have a lot of options to get ahead that didn't involve sex. In both The Crimson Petal and the White and Ladies in Waiting, young women are surrounded by sex but trying to support themselves through their wits and talents.
This month I'll give one lucky winner a copy of The Crimson Petal and the White, and a signed hardcover of Ladies in Waiting. Just fill out the form below. Spread the word for more chances to win!
The Crimson Petal and the White, by Michel Faber, is one of my favorite historicals. Fierce, tender, scheming, literary whore Sugar goes from being pimped by her own mother in a Victorian slum, to being the mistress of a rich man, to... well, I won't tell you where she ends up, but it is a rich, juicy, complex, moving, completely satisfying book. It's the world of Trollope where Trollope feared to go. I love a good prostitute tale, and this is one of the best.
In the 17th century, and in the 19th, women didn't have a lot of options to get ahead that didn't involve sex. In both The Crimson Petal and the White and Ladies in Waiting, young women are surrounded by sex but trying to support themselves through their wits and talents.
This month I'll give one lucky winner a copy of The Crimson Petal and the White, and a signed hardcover of Ladies in Waiting. Just fill out the form below. Spread the word for more chances to win!
Thursday, July 26, 2012
There Goes My Mascara
Foolish, foolish girl! You knew the ending of Code Name Verity would make you weepy (as did several parts before the end.) Why on earth did you read it right before going out? Why did you doom yourself to a day of puffy eyes and damaged mascara when you could have just saved those last twenty pages until you were snug in bed?
I don't review, but I probably should start mentioning books I really enjoy. Code Name Verity was amazing. Though I am seriously annoyed at the author for making prominent use of Nelson's dying words “Kiss me, Hardy” – which I was using to comic effect in my work in progress, set just a few years before Code Name Verity. Curses! One might say I should keep it, since Morning Star won't come out until 2014. Everyone will forget, right? Well, not if Verity wins a Printz, which it probably will. Oh well. I can keep my character's name Hardy, and just make a Thomas Hardy joke instead.
XO
Laura
I don't review, but I probably should start mentioning books I really enjoy. Code Name Verity was amazing. Though I am seriously annoyed at the author for making prominent use of Nelson's dying words “Kiss me, Hardy” – which I was using to comic effect in my work in progress, set just a few years before Code Name Verity. Curses! One might say I should keep it, since Morning Star won't come out until 2014. Everyone will forget, right? Well, not if Verity wins a Printz, which it probably will. Oh well. I can keep my character's name Hardy, and just make a Thomas Hardy joke instead.
XO
Laura
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Home
I feed the seagulls like a tourist... |
You know you're home when the smells almost make you weep. For some, it might be mom's cookies, a lover's aftershave. For me it is dead fish. Low tide on the salt flats, the fiddlers foraging, the mangroves airing their tangled roots. Iodine and ozone and imminent rain... the stranded unfortunates on whom seagulls feast... pelican guano, seaweed, red tide, baking in a just-shy-of-tropical sun.
I've passed through my Appalachian tribulations, and emerge a born-again Floridian.
XO
Laura
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