Z.A. Maxfield

Happily. Ever. After.

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Terrific Review

June 18, 2010 by Z.A. Maxfield

I got a terrific review for Jacob’s Ladder from Jenre on Reviews By Jessewave! She had these kind word to say:

For those of you who, like me, have fallen in love with this series, Jacob’s Ladder is an absolute must. For those who haven’t read any of the books in this series yet, it is possible to read this book as a stand-a-lone, although you will probably want to read the rest of the series once you read this one! I highly recommend Jacob’s Ladder and I’m greatly looking forward to the next book in the series, as the two men who I’m assuming are going to be the heroes, already intrigue me.

You can read the rest of the review here.

It’s a tremendous rush to get a review like this! My thanks to Jenre and of course, Wave, for her wonderful site.

Filed Under: Books, Jacob's Ladder Tagged With: Jacob's Ladder, reviews

And the winner is

June 14, 2010 by Z.A. Maxfield

Rain! Congratulations, I’ll be getting in touch.

Thanks for playing everyone, there will be another chance soon!

Filed Under: Books, Jacob's Ladder, St. Nacho's Tagged With: contest, Jacob's Ladder, SN3

SN3 Excerpt

June 7, 2010 by Z.A. Maxfield

Because some of you asked…

It surprised me when I awoke and didn’t hear the bus’s engines. I’d coughed a little, taking care to turn my head and press the cough into my shoulder, the very model of good, ethical hygiene. When I dragged my puffy eyes open, I realized that the older gentleman who had been sitting next to me had left for parts unknown. So had the girls who sat in front of me. The pain meds had long since worn off, leaving me achy and febrile.

I focused my eyes and saw the face of the bus driver, angry and supercilious at the same time, floating above me. She was a thirtysomething Latina with a pretty face, but the kind of makeup I found theatrical: heavily lined eyes and eyebrows that didn’t look natural. She had a hard look, and she was glaring at me, which exacerbated it.

“Sir?” she demanded. I squinted at her. Apparently I was late for a party I didn’t know about. The light of day was gone, and rain sheeted down the closed windows of the bus. The air inside the vehicle was squalid.

“Yes?”

“Are you sick?”

“I have a cold, yes.”

Her eyes narrowed.

“I just need to take some Tylenol, and I’ll be fine. How much farther to Santa Cruz?”

“You won’t be going to Santa Cruz.” She crossed her arms. “You need to leave this bus right now.”

“Excuse me?”

Her dark eyes flashed. “I have thirty passengers on this bus, Mister, and none of them want whatever you got.”

“Is this because of that flu thing? I was in the hospital this morning, and they let me go.”

“Did you bring a medical release?”

I shook my head. “No.”

“Then you need to get off this bus.”

I turned to look at the other passengers. None would meet my eyes except for the man who’d sat next to me earlier. He looked at me sadly, then glanced away as though something had caught his eye in the darkness outside.

The driver tapped her foot on the nonskid flooring. “I don’t want to have to say it again, but I will. I don’t want to have to ask the passengers to help you off, but I will do that too. Please. Get. Off. The. Bus.”

I stood and edged into the aisle, enjoying the fear that showed in her eyes when I rose to my full height. Nobody knew better than I did what a mess I was. I took a step toward the driver, and she flinched.

“Where the hell are we?” I asked. I could see lights past the window, but they didn’t seem like anything I’d recognize. A sign for a convenience store maybe. An off-brand gas station. It wasn’t exactly familiar. The water rippling down the window glass distorted and obscured whatever the other sign said.

“We’re on Highway 101 in Santo Ignacio,” the driver told me. “This is the SeaView Motel. We wouldn’t strand you in the middle of nowhere, but I’m telling you to get off my bus.”

“I’m going,” I said, walking past her. “Are you going to open the cargo hold of this barge so I can get my duffel bag?”

“I am. I’ll be down in a minute.” She reached under her seat for a container of bleach wipes and handed them off to the old man who’d been my seat partner. He took them from her but held them in his hands as if he didn’t know what to do with them. Or maybe he just didn’t want to do it in front of me.

I disembarked slowly. I was going to feel this day’s adventure for a long time. When the rain hit my skin, it began to dawn on me that I was being thrown off a Greyhound bus. How rich. If I’d thought for a second that finding my lover in bed with three men and then being beaten half to death by his ’roid-sucking, faithless ass had been rock bottom, being thrown off a Greyhound bus had to be below it somewhere. My very lowest ebb’s deeper, fouler, and more craptastic cellar.

I got my duffel out of the locker and watched as the driver boarded the bus. Soon the distinctive growl of the engine ripped through the silence. It rumbled for a minute, and then the bus’s pneumatic doors closed with a psssshhhht, and the bus roared off down the highway. Without me.

Crazy.

Fucking swine flu. If I’d had it, they wouldn’t have let me leave the hospital, would they? I counted myself lucky I’d only been on a bus. If I’d been with that same crew midflight aboard a plane, I’d be making a spectacularly wet, unscheduled thud on the ground right about then.

I turned to the motel. There was a flickering lighted sign on a pole that read SEAVIEW MOTEL. The V and the I in SeaView remained unlit. A red VACANCY sign welcomed travelers.

In you go, Jacob.

The doorknob on the motel’s small office turned easily in my hand, but the door was stuck. I gave it a tug and then pulled harder when I realized it was probably because of the humidity. Rain continued to spatter down intermittently. The old man behind the desk was reading USA TODAY and kept me waiting for a minute.

I cleared my throat delicately, afraid to cough in front of someone else that night, lest I have to sleep on the street like I had the plague.

Bring out your dead.

“I see you. Just a sec,” the man said, not unkindly, from behind the paper.

I waited until the pages rustled and came down to reveal an average face, about sixty years old, with half-moon glasses.

“Holy cow,” the clerk whispered when he saw my face.

Okay, that was going to get old. “That bad?”

“Worse,” the manager drawled. “What can I do for you?”

“I need a room for” — I realized I’d have to call Daniel, who might or might not choose to come and get me — “a while maybe.”

“Okay.” The clerk got out a registration form and handed it over. “Our rooms are all nonsmoking.”

“That’s fine.”

“I’ll take it personally if whoever did that to your face blows up my motel.”

I got out my wallet. “It was domestic, so that’s highly unlikely.”

“All right.” The man didn’t bat an eye. “The little woman box professionally?”

“High-fashion runway model.”

“Oh.” The old man’s lips twitched. “Those are deadly; that’s why they hobble them in those spiny high heels.”

I laughed and glanced up. “I’d shake your hand, but I have a cold.”

“I have hand sanitizer.” The man held out his hand. “Carl Lents. I own this place.”

“Jacob Livingston. I…” I stopped talking when I felt a tickle in my throat. I coughed into my shoulder and then took his hand and shook it. “I just got thrown off the Greyhound for coughing.”

“I hope that’s not the high point of your life so far.” Carl’s lively eyes crinkled at the corners.

“Maybe it is.”

The man grinned while he checked my identification and ran my credit card. “Upstairs or down.”

I looked out the window into the motel courtyard, empty and slick with rain. At either side of the parking lot the two-story buildings had long galleries and stairs at the far end. Stairs. Shit. “First floor.”

“There’s an acute-care clinic in town, and it’ll be open at eight tomorrow morning.”

“I saw a doctor this morning at the ER.” Was that only this morning? “I have a cold, and I’m spectacularly beat to hell. Nothing a little Vicodin and some rest won’t cure.”

“If you say so.”

I bent to pick up my bag. “I appreciate your concern.”

“Yeah. Well. Dead people stink real bad.”

I shook my head. “I’ll try not to let it get that far.”

Carl frowned. “Look. If you need something, it’s okay to ask, all right? Call the office if you need…”

I paused at the door. “It’s fine. I’ll be fine, thank you. Really.”

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Jacob's Ladder

Contest For SN3

June 6, 2010 by Z.A. Maxfield

Coming Soon

Jacob’s Ladder, St. Nacho’s 3

So, anyway, I thought we’d have a contest. How about Y’all send me a note at zamaxfield@yahoo.com and put SN3 Contest in the Subject Line, and then, on June 15th (unless for some reason they change the release date) I’ll draw names out of a hat, and the lucky winner will get a copy of the book, whichever format they like, hot off the presses.

Good LUCK! Notes without SN3 Contest in the subject line might not get in, BTW, I’ve only just figured out how to collect all the contest entries into one gorgeous pile, so please do that and nothing will hit my spam folder, hopefully… 😀

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Jacob's Ladder, St. Nacho's 3

Stirring Up Change

May 31, 2010 by Z.A. Maxfield

Things don’t always go as you plan, do they? MLR Press and I planned to have my foodie novella, Stirring Up Trouble, out by middle to late May and it doesn’t look like that is going to be possible. Since I always like to take my time in the figurative kitchen of my imagination, making sure that everything is Done To Perfection (Ooh, I smell a sequel) and served up piping hot for my readers it makes sense to wait till it’s fully cooked and ready to go…

Next month, I’m expecting the release of Jacob’s Ladder, which is the third in the St. Nacho’s series. So forgive a little shuffling, both are going to be delicious, but Jacob’s Ladder is going to be first, then expect Stirring Up Trouble in July.

In the meantime, let me tease you with the cover art for Stirring and a little bit of an excerpt, just as a tiny taste of what you can expect. Stirring Up Trouble should be added to anyone’s summer reading, it’s a light, delicate blend of humor and mayhem, served up with a heaping helping of love on a bed of family loyalty drizzled with hot sweaty work in the kitchen.

Toby broached the subject that was uppermost on his mind. “Right now, we’re playing restaurant with our friends. What you own is a diner, a family place that you can run as is, essentially, with no further need for someone like me.”

Evan nodded and kept on walking. “I know. And it’s working. You’ve begun building up a regular, loyal customer base for us.” Wryly he added, “Plus, your imaginative use of babies as a commodity has paid off like crazy.”

Toby grinned. “That’s common sense. You direct the bull by the horns, not the tail, my man-skirt wearing friend. Moms will go where their babies are happy.” Toby laughed. “You could keep going along like that indefinitely. People seem to like having children. You could fire up a toddler menu, a boxed lunch school alternative menu, Saturday and Sunday brunch for Mom’s Day Out. Camp Chocolate, a dessert-only service with champagne at midnight when there’s a full moon…”

Evan only shook his head. “You are fucking amazing.”

Toby’s ears heated when he heard it. He shrugged off Evan’s praise.

Evan caught his arm to stop him and pulled him to the side so that people could move around them on the busy sidewalk. “No, really. The very things that made Dom despise that place are the things you’re already cashing in on. You’ve done more for Le Potiron in a week than he did in months and months.”

“You probably didn’t get the memo but as chef/owner it’s your job to keep me on completely uneven ground. I’m supposed to feel like I have one foot on a banana peel and the other in the deep fryer at all times.”

Evan’s eyes softened and he trotted out his dimples. They flexed and preened on his face like traveling sideshow strongmen.

Oh, no fair.

“Maybe that’s not how I work. Maybe I carrot-and-stick my employees.”

Toby slipped a hand surreptitiously around Evan’s waist and up under his jacket, stroking the wiry man’s back through his shirt and finding lean, strong muscles there. “Can we just skip the carrot?” Toby asked without giving himself a chance to think. “Can we get to the stick already?”

Evan looked around and licked his lips. “Has anyone ever told you that you have impulse control issues?”

“Yeah, everyone.” Toby grabbed Evan’s hand and started heading back toward Le Potiron at a ground eating pace. “At least once.”

Filed Under: Books, New Release, Stirring Up Trouble Tagged With: Stirring Up Trouble

Dreams Do Come True!

April 28, 2010 by Z.A. Maxfield

When I met Jim Bowie I discovered he has the best voice ever. I remember thinking at the time that I had a kind of a jones for accents like his, which is sort of Scotland and Actor and *sighs*… I’d pay him to read the phone book. Don’t get me wrong. I love my husband’s midwestern accent, he’s all about cheeseheads and Wis-cahn-sin and beer and braaaahts, and I like the sound of it, it’s homey. Seriously, only one guy is allowed to whisper in my ear at night, but I can fantasize right?

So here’s the deal. Jim Bowie is the voice that narrates the BRAND NEW audiobook version of Notturno! If you liked Notturno, and you like audiobooks… Well. PERFECT! You can let Jim Bowie whisper in your ear too!

Here’s the video because I like it:

Uncategorized

And here’s the link to get your own AUDIOBOOK copy of Notturno!

CLICK HERE

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Notturno

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