Tag: reading

  • The Barriers releases today!

    The Barriers releases today!

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    I know many of you are fans, as I am, of Katie French’s dark and compelling Breeders series. Good news – book 5 is here! I’m thrilled to share the news, and a sample chapter, with you today. Give it a read, then grab your copy from Amazon.

    The Cover

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    The Blurb

    Riley hasn’t seen her boyfriend Clay or her nine-year-old brother Ethan for two months. Between violent road gangs and ongoing clashes between the Breeders and the Free Colonies, are they even still alive? But Riley will never stop looking. Her search takes her to Kirtland Air Force Base, where she finds the remains of a battle and one glimmer of hope: rumors of the boys heading toward the Free Colonies and a man who can help her get there. The only catch? He nearly murders Riley the first time they meet.

    Meanwhile, Clay, Ethan, and Betsy struggle to steer clear of bandits, thieves, and slavers. Their water is gone, along with Clay’s memory and Ethan’s patience for Betsy, who only makes things worse by trying to convince Clay they’re in love. With Clay’s mind muddy, it’s up to Ethan to keep them alive long enough for Riley to find them.

    The route back together is paved with trials—and how many more have to pay for their freedom with their lives?

    The Breeders series has over 50,000 downloads so far. More than 400 four and five star reviews. Top Ten in Free Kindle Teen & Young Adult Science Fiction Dystopian Romance.

    The Sample

    PROLOGUE

    Beetle drove up the cracked road as fast as the depleted solar car would go. Subject Seven was gaining on him.

    He’d seen flashes of Seven in the rearview, racing along the roadside behind him, ducking in and out of debris, cactus, and brush. He’d stunned it, that much he knew for sure. Zapped it good from six feet away with his Taser, a killer shot by anyone’s standards, but it had recovered so quickly. It was then Beetle realized he never should have come alone, or this late in the day. Now, with no sun to charge the solar car and no juice in the batteries, he was a few minutes away from having to run.

    And that would be a problem.

    He’d tracked the damn thing all afternoon. The crumbled city was a veritable labyrinth of places for it to hide. Every collapsed building hid dark basements and closets. Each alleyway had piles of bricks and trash, perfect hiding spots for a being as disgusting and ruthless as the one he was tracking. Then he’d found the lair. Both terrified and excited, Beetle had waded through nests of shredded fabrics, dirty sweaters, blue jeans, and kids’ blankets, all culled from the abandoned storefronts and dragged into the basement of one of the collapsed buildings on Main Street. But Subject Seven wasn’t in the nest. Satellite technology wasn’t what it used to be. That could explain the error in Dr. Washington’s calculations, but as he climbed through chunks of the abandoned town the thing called home, he had a feeling Seven was setting him up.

    The damn thing knew he was coming and had laid a false trail. One he followed until it nearly took his head off.

    It was smarter than they thought. And more brutal.

    They’d jumped him in an alley, Subjects Seven and Eight working in tandem. He hadn’t even considered Eight could be a threat. He’d nearly had his head separated from his body before he was able to get the Taser in his hands and zap them both. Once they were on their backs, he’d given Seven a swift kick, not that he would tell anyone. Then he’d grabbed Eight and ran.
    Now he glanced in the backseat at the mound beneath the blanket. Eight—unconscious and safe. If he brought Subject Eight back, he’d receive a hero’s welcome. Dr. Washington could continue her experiments and “set the world straight again.” And if he failed? He didn’t know who he was more afraid of—the other doctors or Subject Seven.

    His foot pressed the acceleration pedal to the floor, but the car continued to creep along, lurching like a drunk toward home. Only minutes left until the juice ran out. Until he was stranded.

    “Come on, you bastard,” he said through gritted teeth. He pressed his foot down until it hurt, but the car continued to slow.

    “Oh God,” he breathed, his fingers trembling as he glanced into the rearview. Where was Seven?
    The solar car meant safety, a solid steel-alloy frame with giant all-terrain tires. What would he do when it finally died? How in the hell did he think he’d get away on foot carrying the nearly seventy-pound cargo? He couldn’t leave Eight behind. Dr. Washington would banish him to the desert.

    The Taser should’ve laid Subject Seven out longer. Beetle thought a zap that powerful might’ve killed the thing. That one error might mean the end of his life.
    The car slammed to a stop. Beetle’s chest rammed into the steering wheel, shooting pain up his sternum. Eight rolled off the seat and banged into him from behind. He hoped it was okay. He pressed the accelerator once more, but nothing happened. His wheels were stuck, and the car’s battery was almost dead.

    “Sonofabitch!” he screamed, pounding the steering wheel until it hurt. Why wasn’t he paying attention to the road? Goddamn it, he was not going to die. He was not!

    Glancing out the windows and seeing nothing but buttes and scraggly cactus, Beetle swung open the door and stepped out. The concrete in front of him had fallen away, tumbling into a broken pile on the bottom of a three-foot crevice that cut jaggedly across the road. It had probably been created by those earthquakes they’d felt a few months ago. His front wheel had gotten lodged in the crack. If he had seen it, he probably could’ve dodged it, but he was preoccupied with looking in the rearview. He leaned down and considered his predicament. The tire dangled into the open space, and the car was resting on its frame. If the batteries weren’t on their last legs, he could gun it in reverse and probably get free, but the car had given up the ghost.

    “Shit! Shit, shit, shit!” he yelled, and then regretted it, swinging around to look for Seven. So far, nothing. Dear Christman Jesus, he had to hurry.

    God, how far was he from the base? In the distance, he could see the dip in the road that led home. Why had Dr. Washington sent him alone? Why wasn’t the team watching on the satellite and sending help? Maybe they were watching and didn’t care. This could all be part of Washington’s plan. To see what Subject Seven would do when provoked. As sweat poured down Beetle’s face, he decided to hell with Subject Eight. To hell with Dr. Washington. He didn’t want to be torn to pieces and left on the pavement for birds to pick at his guts.

    He heard heavy breathing behind him. The hairs stood up on the back of his neck.

    From his periphery, he saw the huge shape just before it clobbered him.

    He fell hard. His head jarred against the pavement with a smack that radiated through his body. Blackness.

    When he came to, everything was blurry, fuzzy shapes in brown, yellow, and green. He couldn’t remember… Subject Seven. When he turned, pain shot up into his head sharp enough for his consciousness to fade. He blinked his eyes into focus.

    Subject Seven was tearing the solar car apart in a frenzy. Beetle heard the creak of complaining metal as the door was bent back.

    “Ssstop,” Beetle slurred. Where was the Taser? His trembling hands crept down his sides, searching for pockets that seemed miles away. The pulsing pain at the back of his skull threatened to end him, but he couldn’t take his eyes off Dr. Washington’s greatest achievement. And her worst.

    “Don’t take it,” he managed.

    Subject Seven turned and pounced.

    Beetle’s breath chuffed away as Seven slammed both hands into his chest. He gulped for oxygen, but there was none to be found. His eyes opened to see Seven’s face above his, evaluating, calculating. There was no mercy in that gaze.

    The last thing he felt was the blow to his skull.

    The Author

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    Katie French is an Amazon best-selling author in Young Adult dystopian romance. Her book, The Breeders, has had nearly 50,000 downloads and counting and was a semi-finalist in the 2014 Kindle Book Awards. It’s currently free on Amazon. She also has a kids’ series starting with Portia Parrott and the Great Kitten Rescue for ages 5-9.

    She works as a high school English teacher, a job that she loves even when it exhausts her. In her free time she writes manically, reads great books, and takes care of her two beautiful and crazy children. She aspires to spend as much time in yoga pants as possible. You can join her mailing list at www.katiefrenchbooks.com and receive two free full-length novels. Contact her at katie@katiefrenchbooks.com.

  • Happy 4th of July

    Happy 4th of July

    Happy 4th to all of my U.S. readers! I hope you enjoy a lazy holiday spent with the summer sun, family and friends, something cold to drink, and of course, a book.

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    My family and I had a chance to visit Charlottesville, Virginia, home of the University of Virginia and Thomas Jefferson’s masterpiece, Monticello, this past week. Touring his home again—one of the settings of my latest published story, Untimely—offered a fascinating overview of the controversial third U.S. president’s varied interests, quirks, and abiding loves, such as architecture, science, gardening, data collection, government, odd timepieces, and family. I’m not sure my family found his home as compelling as I, thanks to 90 degree heat and liquifying humidity, but they were good sports and humored me.

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    When writing Untimely last fall, I used online resources to research the settingsrelying heavily on Google Earth and Monticello’s excellent, informative website. Although I was surprised at how often my imagination got things right when I had to fill in gaps, there’s nothing like the real thing, baby. Next time, I’ll try to do in situ research before writing the story : )

    Here are a few other pics of real places around Charlottesville that inspired settings in the story. Take a peek, then get back to that book you were reading…

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  • What I’m Reading Now

    A few years ago I had a book recommendation series on my blog, but I got away from it to do more actual writing. Because you want new books, yes? So do I.

    But… I love to read, as I know many of you do, and I love to share the books I’m enjoying, as I know you do. If you didn’t, no one outside my immediate circle would have read the Brilliant Darkness series. (Thank you for that!) With that in mind, I thought I’d post once in a while when I read books I want to share with the world. Here are a few.

    Nonfiction:

    The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing by Marie Kondo

    This book was a massive bestseller, and for good reason. It was magic to read while packing and moving homes recently. I loved Kondo’s simple writing style, and her easy plan for how best to declutter. I really responded to her idea of considering each item in your home with only one criteria: Does it give me joy? If yes, you keep it. If no, you donate or throw it out.

    I flitted around our home while packing, proclaiming, “This gives me joy!” or “This does not give me joy!” and putting things in the appropriate piles. (Getting my husband and kids on board? Not so easy.) Still, it made unpacking SO much easier to know that I’d already made those decisions. Now, I’m happy to report, our home is filled (mostly) with things we love. Give it a try yourself!

    Fiction:

    Black Rabbit Hall by Eve Chase

    I’m reading this now for my book club and really enjoying it. It’s well written and suspenseful, with an intriguing premise about a home where time might stand still, a crumbling estate that harbors disturbing family secrets. The structure and interesting characters drew me in right away. It’s set on the stormy Cornish coast of England, and it’s the sort of book where the setting is its own character, maybe even the main character, as the title suggests. Good so far!

    I’d love to hear what you’re reading and enjoying (or not, as the case may be.) Let me know in the comments!

     

  • Book Signing Tonight at The Book Bar

    Book Signing Tonight at The Book Bar

    If you’re in Denver tonight, I’d love to see you at the Book Bar from 7-9pm. I’ll be there with my fellow Wicked Ink Book authors to sign copies of Tick Tock: Seven Tales of Time. Here we are with our cool Tick Tock banner…

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    Get your copy, get it signed, meet the authors, grab a libation – what could be better on a Friday night in May? Come on out!

  • Are you Wicked?

    Are you Wicked?

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    PREORDER my brand new novella and enter for a chance to win an awesome prize pack from Wicked Ink Books.

    My new time-travel novella, Untimely, is coming March 28th in an anthology published by Wicked Ink Books. This publishing venture was conceived by a group of Denver-based authors over a few glasses of wine during a writing retreat in Breckenridge, Colorado. We figured, we all write speculative fiction, so why not write a series of themed anthologies together?

    Today, I’m thrilled to share the cover of our 2016 anthology, TICK TOCK: SEVEN TALES OF TIMEfeaturing stories of adventure, mystery, horror and romance.

    A serial killer returns years later to finish what was started, by Corinne O’Flynn.
    A coffee shop offers a respite for the cursed, by Kristi Helvig.
    A hangover masks the horrors of the previous night, by Rebecca Taylor.
    A princess’s wedding gift comes with a price, by Sue Duff.
    A locked apartment door hides a chilling secret, by Shawn McGuire.
    A girl wakes up in an asylum and must survive and escape, by Wendy Terrien.
    A young woman must protect the past to thwart a thief from the future, by A.G. Henley.

    All it takes is a second… a minute… an hour for everything to change.

    Untimely is a fun, faced-paced time-travel story set at the University of Virginia where I attended summer camp as a teen. I LOVED the history, architecture, and mystery of the place, and I enjoyed weaving my memories of the campus and the town of Charlottesville through the story.

    I hope you’ll support this new venture and preorder a copy. If you like what you read, let me know. It could be the start of a new series!

    PREORDER HERE

    GIVEAWAY:
    Click below to head over to the Wicked Ink Books website and read more about the anthology and the Wicked authors, sign up for our newsletter, and enter to win the prize pack! Giveaway ends on March 28th, 2016.

     

    WHAT I’M WORKING ON:
    I’m rewriting Beyond the Mist, a YA science fiction thriller that I wrote a few years ago, between The Defiance and The Fire Sisters. Act I is drafted and Act II is shaping up. I’ll keep you posted on my progress!

  • Book Signings!

    Book Signings!

    Signing Party Invite

    Two book signing events coming up this month in Denver!


    EVENT #1

    WHAT: Signing Party

    WHENSunday, November 15th from 12-2pm

    WHERELowry Beer Garden 7577 East Academy Blvd. Denver, CO 80230

    Come celebrate the completion of the Brilliant Darkness series. I’ll be signing all three novels from the series, and there will be swag, sweet treats, and a few giveaways. The venue has alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages and food to purchase, along with ping pong tables, games, and a place for kids to run around. Families are welcome! If you’re local, I’d love to see you there! (Broncos game will be on after the party – 2:25pm kickoff)

    RSVP to aimee AT aghenley DOT com if you’re planning to stop by


    EVENT #2

    WHATSmall Business Saturday local author event

    WHEN: Saturday, November 28th from 2-4pm

    WHERE: The Bookies Bookstore 4315 E. Mississippi Ave. Denver, CO 80246

    Join me and several other local authors to sign books, chat about books, and be surrounded by books! If you haven’t been to The Bookies, you MUST come check it out. It’s a children’s book lover’s dream, and they have adult books, as well. Take a break from the leftover turkey sandwiches, stock up on bookish gifts for the holidays, and support Colorado authors! No need to RSVP for this one.


    Hope to see you at one or both events in November.