Friday, 14 December 2018

The next few deals

Checkout these cool stories. Most of these books are free to read on Kindle Unlimited all the way to January 6th. Featured books for a great Christmas read (all FREE on KU)

And here's the big picture:
Make a note of the free dates for the books you are interested in, and log in every week to discover the latest links for your FREE, Free on Kindle Unlimited or 99c/99p books.

Merry Christmas everyone.

P.S. BR is Bryant Rockwell (YA Contemporary Romance) NT is Nature's Tribe (Medieval Romance)

Dec 14: FREE - Young Men Gone West - Ro Green
            99c/99p - 3 Handfastings and a Burial (NT #1) - Jacky Gray   *Deal continues till 26th*
             FREE - Fox Among Wolves (Hostage #1) - Ro Green    *Only a few more days left*

Dec 15: FREE - Young Men Gone West - Ro Green
             FREE - Death Wishes (Gentle Angel Story) - Ro Green
           99c/99p - Wolf in Sheep's Clothing (Hostage #1) - Ro Green    *Deal continues till 26th*

Dec 16: FREE - Triple Jeopardy (Jeopardy #1) - Ro Green
              FREE - Don't Stop Believing (Juke Box Musical) - Ro Green
              FREE - Stand By Me (BR #5) - Jacky Gray
          99c/99p - Archer (Hengist #1) - Jacky Gray    *Deal continues till 26th December*

Dec 17: FREE - More Jeopardy (Jeopardy #2) - Ro Green
             FREE - New Kid in Town (BR #1) - Jacky Gray
             FREE on KU - 12 Days of Yule (NT #2) - Jacky Gray
            99c/99p - Rory (Hengist #2) - Jacky Gray    *Deal continues till 26th December*

Dec 18: FREE - Final Jeopardy (Jeopardy #3) - Ro Green
             FREE - Show Must Go On (BR #2) - Jacky Gray
             FREE on KU - Young Men Gone West (Juke Box Musical) - Ro Green

Dec 19: FREE - Leader of the Pack (BR #3) - Jacky Gray
             FREE on KU - Death Wishes - Ro Green

And finally, a plug for the prequel series to Hengist: People of the Horse. Check it out here.
I cannot tell you how much fun I'm having with Senna, my sassy medieval midwife and her love triangle with two cousins, Lyran and Jarl that has world-changing ramifications.
Or how tricky it is to find convincing 14th Century equivalents for all the modern idioms I habitually use. Anyone here speak medieval?

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