<data:blog.pageTitle/>

This Page

has moved to a new address:

http://myoverstuffedbookshelf.com

Sorry for the inconvenience…

Redirection provided by Blogger to WordPress Migration Service
----------------------------------------------- Blogger Template Style Name: Minima Designer: Douglas Bowman URL: www.stopdesign.com Date: 26 Feb 2004 ----------------------------------------------- */ body { background:#fff; margin:0; padding:40px 20px; font:x-small Georgia,Serif; text-align:center; color:#333; font-size/* */:/**/small; font-size: /**/small; } a:link { color:#58a; text-decoration:none; } a:visited { color:#969; text-decoration:none; } a:hover { color:#c60; text-decoration:underline; } a img { border-width:0; } /* Header ----------------------------------------------- */ @media all { #header { width:660px; margin:0 auto 10px; border:1px solid #ccc; } } @media handheld { #header { width:90%; } } #blog-title { margin:5px 5px 0; padding:20px 20px .25em; border:1px solid #eee; border-width:1px 1px 0; font-size:200%; line-height:1.2em; font-weight:normal; color:#666; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.2em; } #blog-title a { color:#666; text-decoration:none; } #blog-title a:hover { color:#c60; } #description { margin:0 5px 5px; padding:0 20px 20px; border:1px solid #eee; border-width:0 1px 1px; max-width:700px; font:78%/1.4em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.2em; color:#999; } /* Content ----------------------------------------------- */ @media all { #content { width:660px; margin:0 auto; padding:0; text-align:left; } #main { width:410px; float:left; } #sidebar { width:220px; float:right; } } @media handheld { #content { width:90%; } #main { width:100%; float:none; } #sidebar { width:100%; float:none; } } /* Headings ----------------------------------------------- */ h2 { margin:1.5em 0 .75em; font:78%/1.4em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.2em; color:#999; } /* Posts ----------------------------------------------- */ @media all { .date-header { margin:1.5em 0 .5em; } .post { margin:.5em 0 1.5em; border-bottom:1px dotted #ccc; padding-bottom:1.5em; } } @media handheld { .date-header { padding:0 1.5em 0 1.5em; } .post { padding:0 1.5em 0 1.5em; } } .post-title { margin:.25em 0 0; padding:0 0 4px; font-size:140%; font-weight:normal; line-height:1.4em; color:#c60; } .post-title a, .post-title a:visited, .post-title strong { display:block; text-decoration:none; color:#c60; font-weight:normal; } .post-title strong, .post-title a:hover { color:#333; } .post div { margin:0 0 .75em; line-height:1.6em; } p.post-footer { margin:-.25em 0 0; color:#ccc; } .post-footer em, .comment-link { font:78%/1.4em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.1em; } .post-footer em { font-style:normal; color:#999; margin-right:.6em; } .comment-link { margin-left:.6em; } .post img { padding:4px; border:1px solid #ddd; } .post blockquote { margin:1em 20px; } .post blockquote p { margin:.75em 0; } /* Comments ----------------------------------------------- */ #comments h4 { margin:1em 0; font:bold 78%/1.6em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.2em; color:#999; } #comments h4 strong { font-size:130%; } #comments-block { margin:1em 0 1.5em; line-height:1.6em; } #comments-block dt { margin:.5em 0; } #comments-block dd { margin:.25em 0 0; } #comments-block dd.comment-timestamp { margin:-.25em 0 2em; font:78%/1.4em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.1em; } #comments-block dd p { margin:0 0 .75em; } .deleted-comment { font-style:italic; color:gray; } .paging-control-container { float: right; margin: 0px 6px 0px 0px; font-size: 80%; } .unneeded-paging-control { visibility: hidden; } /* Sidebar Content ----------------------------------------------- */ #sidebar ul { margin:0 0 1.5em; padding:0 0 1.5em; border-bottom:1px dotted #ccc; list-style:none; } #sidebar li { margin:0; padding:0 0 .25em 15px; text-indent:-15px; line-height:1.5em; } #sidebar p { color:#666; line-height:1.5em; } /* Profile ----------------------------------------------- */ #profile-container { margin:0 0 1.5em; border-bottom:1px dotted #ccc; padding-bottom:1.5em; } .profile-datablock { margin:.5em 0 .5em; } .profile-img { display:inline; } .profile-img img { float:left; padding:4px; border:1px solid #ddd; margin:0 8px 3px 0; } .profile-data { margin:0; font:bold 78%/1.6em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.1em; } .profile-data strong { display:none; } .profile-textblock { margin:0 0 .5em; } .profile-link { margin:0; font:78%/1.4em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Arial,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.1em; } /* Footer ----------------------------------------------- */ #footer { width:660px; clear:both; margin:0 auto; } #footer hr { display:none; } #footer p { margin:0; padding-top:15px; font:78%/1.6em "Trebuchet MS",Trebuchet,Verdana,Sans-serif; text-transform:uppercase; letter-spacing:.1em; } /* Feeds ----------------------------------------------- */ #blogfeeds { } #postfeeds { }

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

(Blog Tour) Guest Post with author Tessa Adams

Today on My Overstuffed Bookshelf, I have the pleasure of having author Tessa Adams on the blog!! Tessa agreed to share with us her thoughts on the perfect male hero.  What can be better than talking about what we enjoy in the perfect male? So sit back, relax and enjoy the fun!  There might even be a surprise for you at the end! Take it away Tessa!


First off, I want to say how excited I am to be here today.  I love this blog and it’s a thrill to get a chance to guest here.  Plus, when Amy gave me my topic, I knew it was a match made in heaven.  She asked me to write about how I see the perfect male hero and well, let’s just say that’s a topic I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about, LOL ;)  And to sum up my feelings on this topic, I’d have to go with the famous quote from Lady Caroline Lamb in reference to George Gordon Lord Byron.  “Mad, bad and dangerous to know.”  


It’s probably been fifteen or twenty years since I first heard that quote Byron and it still has the power to send shivers up my spine.  But then, anyone who knows me will tell you that I love bad boys.  Dark, twisted, angst-ridden, vaguely psychotic—bring them on.  I love to read about these heroes and love, even more, to write about them. 


But what is it about bad boys that makes them so interesting to read about?  To study? To love? 
 
I once heard a presentation by thriller writer, Jeff Abbott, where he commented that the villain is the hero of his own story.  When I heard that, everything inside of me went aha!  Not because that was such a revelation, but because it got me thinking about my own characters—and the characters I’ve loved for years—the Gothic villain heroes, men who usually skate along the edge of right and wrong, often falling on the wrong side of the line. 


Villains, as Jeff explained, do terrible things, because they believe they are entitled to something.  Or everything, depending on the villain. Very rarely do they go around thinking, I am a terrible person and I deserve to rot.  Instead, they think, I deserve this so I’m going to take it, using any means necessary.  Sound about right? And of course, a hero is also the hero of his own story. 


What is so fascinating, then, about the true bad boy, the gothic villain-hero, is that this is not the case.  A villain-hero is the villain of his own story.  He believes he has done something or is something so terrible, so horrible, so awful that he is irredeemable.  And for much of the story, the reader wonders the exact same thing.  Can this man be redeemed?  Just the other day, in fact, a friend of mine read the synopsis for one of my new novels and  she said to me, “How are you going to do this?  That man is such a bastard that there is no way you can redeem him.  Eighteen months later?  Maybe eighteen years later, I’d be willing to talk to him.  And that’s iffy.”  


Those are your villain-heroes.  Men who live in the shadows because they belong there or think they belong there.  They’re certainly more comfortable there.  And these are the men I love to write about—and the men that lend themselves so well to Paranormal, fantasy and futuristic romance.  Villain-heroes like Anakin Skywalker, Angel, Severus Snape, Batman, Q, Terminator 2, Edward Cullen, Zsadist, Zarek.  Quinn in my new Dragon’s Heat novel, Hidden Embers.  Kona in my first paranormal YA, Tempest Rising. 


These are not your golden gods.  These are the men for whom being good is really, really difficult.  And really, really boring.  This is why so many people confuse them with villains.  Because these men don’t like being good.  And yet one of the many reasons they aren’t villains is because they have a very strong moral compass, a very rigid belief in right and wrong that is often unshakable.  Villains believe they are right—or rationalize that they are because it gets them what they want.  Villain heroes know what’s right and sometimes chose to do it and sometimes don’t, but they are very clear on what is acceptable and what isn’t.

It is this darkness in them that so often draws heroines—and romance readers— to them.  So how about you?  What do you think of the bad boy who revels in being bad?  Do you like to read those stories or do you prefer a different kind of hero? 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Tracy Wolff/Tessa Adams/Tracy Deebs collects books, English degrees and lipsticks and has been known to forget where—and sometimes who—she is when immersed in a great novel. At six she wrote her first short story—something with a rainbow and a prince—and at seven she forayed into the wonderful world of girls lit with her first Judy Blume novel. By ten she’d read everything in the young adult and classics sections of her local bookstore, so in desperation her mom started her on romance novels. And from the first page of the first book, Tracy knew she’d found her life-long love.  Her first novel, A Christmas Wedding, appeared on the scene in November of 2008 and since then she has sold twenty-one novels—including Erotic Suspense and Paranormal to New American Library, Contemporary Superromance to Harlequin, and Paranormal Young Adult Romance and Contemporary Young Adult Romance to Walker Books.  Now an English professor at her local community college, Tracy lives in Austin with her husband and three sons.  She was a 2010 Rita nominee.





Hidden Embers—available April 5, 2011 
Deep in the New Mexico desert there is a secret race on the brink of extinction—the pure-blood shapeshifters of the Dragonstar clan. And they have one last, desperate hope for survival…  


Quinn Maguire is a powerful Dragonstar healer at a tragic loss, unable to cure the insidious disease killing off his people. Yet even in such dire circumstances the conservative Quinn is secretly disapproving of the alternative: Dr. Jasmine Kane, enlisted by the head of the Dragonstar clan to help abort the virus. She is a wild card.  She is an outsider. She is human.  


Decked out in black leather and a tough attitude, Jasmine clashes with Quinn in more ways than one. And when destiny chooses her for his Mate, he doesn't know whether to rejoice or rebel.  Because while Jasmine makes him burn hotter than any woman--dragon or human-- ever has, their differences make a relationship impossible.   
But when a rival infiltrates the clan and attacks Jasmine, Quinn becomes desperate. Jasmine is now the first human to be infected with the disease—and Quinn must do everything he can to find a cure, and save the woman he has grown to love.


----------------------------------------------------------------
CONTEST CLOSED:
Thanks to author Tessa Adams, I have ONE copy of Dark Embers which is the first book in the series!
Plus, the author even mentioned that there possibly could be some swag thrown in to the package as well!

SUMMARY:
King Dylan MacLeod is one of the last pure-bred dragon shapeshifters in existence—and ruler of a dying race, the Dragonstar clan. It falls to him to protect his people—and their ancient magic. He has one more duty: to provide an heir.

Like all dragons, Dylan can only procreate with his destined mate—for whom he’s searched for five hundred years. His dark, rampant sexual appetite has earned him quite the reputation, all in the pursuit of his one true match.

But his search is delayed when a deadly disease sweeps through the Dragonstars, and Dylan must venture to the human world to find a cure. He tracks down renowned biochemist Phoebe Quillum, never imagining the beautiful scientist will be the mate he’s been seeking for centuries. But no sooner do they meet then Phoebe and Dylan are besieged by an obsessive, overpowering sexual desire.
Their passion turns to something truer—and they know in their souls and bodies that they’re in too deep to get out. And when Phoebe is kidnapped by Dylan’s oldest enemy, he must risk everything to reclaim the only woman he’s ever loved, or his clan will be wiped out forever.

 -----------------------------------------------------------------

RULES:

1. This contest is open to the USA only.
2. No need to be a follower, but I would love it if you would!
3. Leave a comment with an email address to contact you with if you win. 
BE SURE TO ANSWER THE QUESTION IN RED ABOVE!
4. Contest will end on 4/2/2011.
 
GOOD LUCK!!!

Labels: ,

21 Comments:

Blogger Juana said...

I love Bad Boys I think they make life way more interesting.

jmesparza821@gmail.com

March 29, 2011 at 9:39 AM  
Blogger Tracy Wolff/Tessa Adams said...

What's not to love, Juana, LOL? And yes, life is always more interesting when there's a bad boy around.

March 29, 2011 at 12:24 PM  
Blogger Bookish Brunette said...

Bad boys who revel in being bad? YUM.

thebookishbrunette@gmail.com

March 29, 2011 at 3:18 PM  
Blogger Barbara E. said...

I love the thoroughly bad boy, who loves being his bad self. Of course, there's always that woman who brings him to his knees, and that's all the more fun with a really bad boy.

Barbed1951 at aol dot com

March 29, 2011 at 5:22 PM  
Blogger Stephanie M said...

I like bad boys who have redeeming qualities.

smccar1 at hotmail dot com

March 29, 2011 at 5:51 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

If the character is a bad boy I say EMBRACE IT! GO all out and make me gasp for all kinds of reasons *winks*.

robin [at] intensewhisper [dot] com

March 29, 2011 at 6:42 PM  
Blogger Tracy Wolff/Tessa Adams said...

It's so nice to see that I'm not the only one who likes all kinds of bad boys ;) Logan's book, Forbidden Embers, is about a Lost soul and the book I'm plotting now (Blank Embers for lack of a better title, LOL, features Dash, a warrior, and while I love both of those guys, Quinn and his bad self have a special place in my heart :)

March 29, 2011 at 6:59 PM  
Blogger Kristen - Seeing Night said...

I have to say Im all for bad boys that can redeem himself or in the end have good intensions. I just like boys with a bit of attitude, can't have a wimpy boy lol. But as everyone else sad there are so many different kids of bad boys to like.

seeingnightreviews@gmail.com

March 29, 2011 at 7:23 PM  
Blogger JenM said...

I like nice guys, but I've always had a soft spot for bad boys. For example, I love assassin heros like the one in Linda Howard's book Death Angel. In a romance, the badder they are, the harder they fall it seems like.

jen at delux dot com

March 29, 2011 at 9:25 PM  
Blogger donnas said...

I do love bad boys who revel in their badness. But I really do love the good guy too.

bacchus76 at myself dot com

March 29, 2011 at 9:54 PM  
Blogger lulilut said...

I like the bad boys that are bad but not evil. I enjoy reading about why they may do something that society says is wrong but our villian-hero understands that to get the job done right, he may have to do wrong.

d.septer at insightbb.com

March 30, 2011 at 12:20 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

I love bad boys also. What's not to love? They love being bad and they are very handsome. There is always a woman who brings them to their knees. They tend to fall in love with women who they feel they shouldn't be with.Please enter me in contest. I would to read your series. It sounds very good. Tore923@aol.com

March 30, 2011 at 4:19 AM  
Blogger Bookwyrm369 said...

Not in every story but occasionally it is fun to read about a really bad boy :-) Makes the story and HEA so much more interesting!

smaccall @ comcast.net

March 30, 2011 at 9:25 AM  
Blogger Megan said...

I love reading about bad boys and how their women make them love. I think every girls wants to be the one to change the bad boy so they make stories to read.

March 30, 2011 at 9:34 AM  
Blogger Candace said...

I like a bad boy who can't seem to help it. They try to be good but trouble finds them. It helps if they carry a sword too...

candace_redinger at yahoo dot com

March 30, 2011 at 10:06 AM  
Blogger Library Lady said...

When I'm reading a story, I always prefer a bad guy. I love watching the bad guy give in to love. I'd love to win this book. The cover is gorgeous!

I am GFC follower Library Lady and I subscribe via email.

adsanders77 at gmail dot com

March 30, 2011 at 3:01 PM  
Blogger Marlene said...

I love love me some bad boys. They just make a story so much more interesting and most osf the time adds the hotness tp it.
fah218@yahoo.com

March 30, 2011 at 3:02 PM  
Blogger Liz @ Cleverly Inked said...

I don't know, I think the reason they are appealing is that women think they can help them.

March 31, 2011 at 7:48 AM  
Blogger ChiKittie said...

Thank you so much for this awesome giveaway.

Q. So how about you? What do you think of the bad boy who revels in being bad? Do you like to read those stories or do you prefer a different kind of hero?

A. I rather have a bad boy being bad but having a good heart and still feels love for the woman in the story. I do like to read these stories, maybe sometimes even feel A good woman could chance the bad boy in the man she loves.

ChiKittie(at)gmail(dot)com

March 31, 2011 at 4:49 PM  
Blogger Anita Yancey said...

I really like a bad boy hero that changes to good by the end of the novel, afer falling in love with the heroine. Please enter me. Thanks!

ayancey(at)dishmail(dot)net

March 31, 2011 at 4:50 PM  
Blogger Pamk said...

ooh yummy I love bad boys who are unapologetically bad. I would love to win this book. This series is on my wish list.
scrtsbpal at yahoo dot com

March 31, 2011 at 7:29 PM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home