Reddit mentions: The best paranormal romance books

We found 1,012 Reddit comments discussing the best paranormal romance books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 237 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

6. Going Bearserk: A Viking Shifter Romance

Going Bearserk: A Viking Shifter Romance
Specs:
Release dateJune 2016
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10. Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)

    Features:
  • ISBN: 9780316038379
Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)
Specs:
Height7 Inches
Length4.25 Inches
Number of items7
Weight0.57 Pounds
Width1.5 Inches
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13. Windfall

Windfall
Specs:
Release dateMarch 2016
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14. The Vampire King (The Kings Book 1)

    Features:
  • Rose Red
The Vampire King (The Kings Book 1)
Specs:
Release dateFebruary 2012
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16. Fantasy Lover

    Features:
  • PIATKUS BOOKS
Fantasy Lover
Specs:
Height6.14172 Inches
Length7.874 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0 Grams
Width0.90551 Inches
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18. A Midsummer's Magic

A Midsummer's Magic
Specs:
Release dateNovember 2013
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🎓 Reddit experts on paranormal romance books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where paranormal romance books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 46
Number of comments: 6
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Total score: 17
Number of comments: 17
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Total score: 14
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 13
Number of comments: 5
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Total score: 12
Number of comments: 7
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Total score: 12
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 8
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 5
Number of comments: 4
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Total score: 4
Number of comments: 4
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 3
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Paranormal Romance:

u/aberrantdreamer · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

YAY FOR GETTING THE JOB!! :D :D :D I'm so pleased for you!

Erm, I hope its allowed, but I'd like to suggest you get yourself a couple of things - so that it is a really big treat and celebration of your job! xD

Firstly, this mirror So you can check you look absolutely awesome before heading of to your new job!

Then, these so that you can get home and take a relaxing bath..

This candle to burn in the bathroom (and anywhere else in your new flat!) to give off a yummy smell and while you take a nice bath, help you relax! :D

Finally, a used copy (to keep things under £40) of this book to help you indulge in relaxation properly and escape in an enjoyable fashion while you celebrate! Its not a top-notch novel that will expand your mind - but he's a great author for a cheeky read in the bath :) and we all need a good romance novel now and again!

aaaaand, no gifts for me necessary! I just wanted to suggest some nice things for you to get yourself! :D

Congrats again on the job! <3

u/DrStalker · 4 pointsr/Fantasy

Right now: The Sorcerers Concubine, which I picked up expecting a trashy fantasy romance but have so far found to be very well written with very nice world building. The plot may turn out to be a standard magical-construct-girl meets travelling-sorcerer-boy job but having an author who can bring some depth to even the minor characters is a nice change in the fantasy porn supernatural romance genre.


---

Some others:

Critical Failures is probably the series I've enjoyed the most; it's got a hilarious absurdest style and I highly recommended it it to anyone that's every played tabletop RPGs with a bunch of people that seem intent on fucking around and derailing absolutely everything. The series has both novel sized "plot advancement" books and short independent stories that are the characters fucking up a specific situation.

> “I didn't say it was something good, and it depends on a lot of contingencies.”

>“What's a contingency?” asked Greely.

> “Shit that could go wrong.”

>“Yer plan depends on a lot of shit going wrong?” asked Greely. “I like them odds.”

---


The Dungeoneers is what happens when a dungeon is faced not by a party of adventurers but by a large well equipped team who systematically move through the dungeon with methods designed to minimize risk and maximize profits. Naturally things go wrong at some point. A very nice take on the invading-a-dungeon genre.

> “Made a mistake, did ye?”

> “No,” Durham said. “I solved a sheep murder.”

> Thud blew a smoke ring and took a pull on the flask, mulling that over. “Thinks ya might needs ta elaborate a bit on that, lad.”

> And so Durham told him. He told him of the strange ritualistic circumstances surrounding the discovery of the murdered sheep. He told him of the singular one-legged seamstress, the cryptic cipher tattoo and the secret fishmonger identity of the mysterious rogue, Harengs. He spoke of part of the evidence being eaten and another part being knitted into a lumpy sweater. And at last the reveal, when all of the seemingly disparate parts came together to show that it had been the victim’s sister Bluebell all along. By the time he was done, Mungo, Nibbly and Giblets had joined Thud in his audience.

> “The watch captain read my report,” Durham said, as he neared the tale’s end. “Laughed until he had tears running down his face then sentenced Bluebell to execution by way of being the main dish at the City Watch potluck. He at least remembers me now. Every time he sees me he asks if I have any new baaaffling cases and starts laughing again.”

---

Slammed In The Butt By My Hugo Award Nomination by hugo nominated author Chuck Tingle. He put this book out about 24 hours after he was nominated for a Hugo, and I'm not sure exactly what I was expecting but it wasn't a hilarious work of epic meta-fiction crammed into a short story. I seriously recommend this to everyone with a Kindle Unlimited membership, even if you're not into gay erotica; Chuck Tingle's massive library of work is full of satire, self referential humor and making fun of the genre conventions of indie-published erotica.

> As a fictional character, the very idea of me finding love within the lifespan of a short story is something to behold, a miracle that fills me with endless gratitude.

u/RoEdhel · 2 pointsr/TheBluePill

Oookay, I totally didn't forget, I had a lot of work, followed by surprise drive-in date and then motorcycle adventures. Anyways!

I love my anthologies, but which have the most beta heroes? The Mammoth Book of Ghost Romance wins in that category. I particularly enjoyed "Old Salt," "Hat-Trick" and "Seventeen Coppers." If you want a free read on the ghosty-beta-hero front, enjoy the short Haunted, not to be confused with the god-awful YA romance of the same name.

If you want to go more historical, A Midsummer's Magic has a charmingly oblivious sorceress at its center and the poor bugger who is head over heels for her. This was free when I picked it up...it was okay, my main nitpick is the the book takes a lot of time to establish how much the heroine doesn't want to have children/go through childbirth and yet the book still end in babies. Eeeh.

Since, like, everything is shifters, I have read a couple. I like Before Midnight because it was a good idea for a retelling of Cinderella with werewolves. The execution is a little poor, but hey, it's free. If you want something a lot more raunchy, I also like Wilder's Mate, though I don't know if it'd qualify for your quest. It's steampunk, Wild West werewolves. With ex-prostitute mad scientist ladies.

I actually have a whole bunch of new ones queued up, so I was thinking about maybe posting up a regular list on /r/getfeminine to help with content.

u/Reeeltalk · 6 pointsr/infj

Couple of things!


When I had my first kid, giving birth ain't no joke. I feel like an Olympian who completed some pro-marathon (: I was also proud of my second child but that birth experience was a scary complicated c-section where I had a real possibility of bleeding out and not getting to watch my children grow. I took a similar pic with my second but I was super drugged up lol and look out of it.


Single-mommin: This one is sad mixed with awesome. Due to a SO that just wasn't interested in reality and had lots of problems, I had to raise my kid solo. It was extremely difficult and I also became a really strong individual who didn't really care about others peoples expectations of me and my kid. (I also had a support group shoring me up mentally).


Completing my first trail Ragnar, a team race where 8 people run in shift non-stop for 112ish miles. Running out in the wild at night, pushing yourself and the bonding that goes on is amazing (: It was a proud moment to receive medals as a team.


Completing my first story and submitting it to a contest. I didn't win the contest but I won the writing game because I freakin finished something! I went on to make it prettier and publish it. It's not the most amazing story, I'd say I'm intermediate at writing, but it pushed me to be better and I got over the "will I ever put a book out there?" question. Very proud of my little novella.


This might sound lame but being a Lyft driver and doing very well at it made me very proud. It was the first job I'd had that was all me and respected(not by the wider world...hmm that is hard to explain let's just say it was nice to be making money and doing something useful and doing it well).

u/colbywolf · 2 pointsr/Fantasy

The first one is really a but clumbsy and the author was trying really hard to project all of the world building and stuff and hook and audience and stuff (the first alpha and Omega book is just awful and I hate it and I would tell peopel to skip it, except it really is important to understand where the char's coming from)

BUt for Mercy .. I'd give her, I think, 3 books? to reach her stride. There's a lot going on that takes a bit to get set up and rolling but MAN, when it goes it really gets going.

First book syndrome is a common problem I find. :)

Anyway! I recommend giving it another shot!

ah, let's see... MOre personally, my buddy wrote this stuff ... it's got one sequel, and I know she's working super hard on book 3 after having a really bad bout of The Everythings.

Hmm...

Y'know, I could recommend dozens of REALLY good Harry Potter fanfictions for you, but that's not really most people's speed ;)

Hmmm...

Okay, some other odd ones:

Watership Down and Tailchaser's song. Been a while since I've read them, but they both fall into the idea of "talking animals who are traveling across a world that is not always friendly." ... Watership is rabbits, Tailchaser is Cats. They both have the 'fantasy language' thing going on, though. I'm not sure how well ebooks manage the glossary-in-the-back. Tailchaser has a little more of a 'magic' feel to it. :)

If you have not read Jim Butcher's Codex Alera, I recommend it highly. A lot of people read book one and turn away. Book one is not representative of the whole series. Book one introduces you to characters. After that point, the characters grow and change. :) It gets a little Grim at a few points, but it's never... "Oh and what a shittastic world we live in, look at this murder and let us step over the bodies everywhere. Please ignore that rape in the alley, oh by the way, now i'm going to kill you for your loaf of bread."

Let's see, what else, what else.... Ah, Tooth and Claw by Jo Walton. Victorian drama/romance whatever, only with dragons, not people. There really aren't words for how much I loved this story. No world breaking plots or anything, but fun world building :D

If you would like 'lots and lots of books' ... and don't mind YA novels... Percy Jackson series (and the Kane Chronicals) are fun. and there are somethign like 15-20 books to read there. And more coming out soon. It's not high-intellect reading, but it's fun YA mythology stuff. :)

A few years ago when I was recovering from some stuff myself, I read through a couple of the Warrior cats books. Being a cat person myself, it made me pretty happy. but I don't know how it goes after a few, but man, if you're just wanting some popcorn, this might do. You might need more butter though. YA isn't for everyone :) Neither are books about cats.

I like books about cats, haha... I swear I read more than that, honest. :)

u/zortech · 1 pointr/furry

If you are looking for something you can find at a place like Barns and Noble, Urban Fantasy is likely what you will find most fuzzy. Lots of werewolf in the city type books.

[Kitty and the Midnight Hour (Kitty Norville Series) By Carrie Vaughn] (https://www.amazon.com/Kitty-Midnight-Hour-Norville/dp/0446616419/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1468453249&sr=8-1) - Urban Fantasy. Liked a lot of the series. It is fun and doesn't take it self too seriously. Spunky Midnight DJ (thats a werewolf) starts taking calls about things that go bump in the night and it leads to fame and adventure.

Skinwalker (Jane Yellowrock, Book 1): A Jane Yellowrock Novel - Another Urban Fantasy. Skin walker that prefers the form of a cat takes up the job of head of security for a vampire. Bit gritter then above, and can bit a bit hit or miss.


Both of the above should be available locally for almost everyone. I have a huge pile of books I could sort to find others. But on to actual furry things:

Turning Point (Sholan Alliance) Bit old, and slightly dated mass produced book from the 80s that was vary furry and it is an impressively long series. Young lady from a colony world meets a telepathic cat and bonds with him.

Off Leash (Freelance Familiars Book 1) One of the better feral books I have ever read. Main turns into a 4 pawed feline familiar and bucks the trends.

[WindFall] (https://www.amazon.com/Windfall-Tempe-OKun-ebook/dp/B01DKRP67Q/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1468454404&sr=1-1&keywords=windfall+tempe) Young Husky meets up with old friend in a town a show was made about and discover a little bit of truth exists.

[Exiles Return] (https://www.amazon.com/Exiles-Return-Rebecca-Mickley-ebook/dp/B00K3XSF4W/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1468454490&sr=8-1) Bunny who retired to a uncolonized rim world is called back to represent Earth.

In Wilder Lands: The Fall of Eldvar Kind of an game/RPG style series. A homeless ringtale (of all things) ends up assisting a fox and eventually falling in love. Did I mention undead are slowly covering the world?

Mindtouch - This book is fairly intresting and one of the few books that I have ever read that features a almost romantic platonic relationship.

Bait and Switch - While I don't think this book is everyones cup of tea, it tackles identity issues in a interesting way.

Portals of Infinity (Series) - While I wouldn't call the series great books. Its fun furry action. Human stumbles in to a portal ends up becoming a champion of a fuzzy god, gets the girl and saves the day.



Some stuff that you can find for free:

[Ted R. Blasingame] (http://trblasingame.com/library.html) Writes a number of books worth checking out. Namely: Sunset of Furmankind and its available for free.

[Fel (James Galloway)] (http://www.weavespinner.net/worlds_of_fel.htm) Has tried vary had not write furry fiction but almost everything he writes has something fuzzy or a lot of fuzzy. Check out: Spirit Walker, Earth Bond and Kit. All 3 are free.






u/KristaDBall · 10 pointsr/Fantasy

Ok let's talk Spirit Caller. Why didn't this series sell?

Spirits Rising came out in Jan 2012. It's a 23,000 word novella. This was before Select, Prime lending, and KU. There was no market for novellas in fantasy.

The series isn't a romance, so I didn't want to promote it as one. I have a distinct style for them, inspired by the Fever series cover (the old ones).

Spirits Rising didn't make back my money. I wrote Dark Whispers. It didn't make back my money. I was in the hole by a grand at that stage. If I had my time back, I would have gotten 1 cover, different colours, numbers and the titles on it, as opposed to individuals covers at $200 USD a pop. I love those covers, but...I love eating, too.

Kobo opened up to direct selfpublishing and I went with them, as opposed to using Smashwords. The series did significantly better on Kobo and the series finally broke even. I made Spirits Rising free, in hopes of bringing readers to the series. That failed on Amazon. Wow. Just...wow. It didn't fail on Kobo. I made enough money to pay for Knight Shift.

By this stage, I'm putting one out a year. I realized this was bad business for a novella serial, but it wasn't making any money. Grief started making me a bunch of money; I needed to finish Fury to capitalize on that! First Wrong Impressions was winding down at this stage, but it was still making me $100-200ish a month.

I wrote Mystery Night knowing it would take a year to break even. Then I put it aside, because I had to get everything else done.

I decided to wrap up the series at 6 books like I'd planned. I decided to combine what was going to be a surprise novella into Book 6, and move Book 6 into Book 5 (Dead Living). Dead Living is what I'm working on now.

I decided to repackage the entire series as paranormal romance because, and let's be super fucking open here, people weren't buying the series as urban fantasy. I had resisted the romance label for a long time because I was afraid it would end up labeling me or pigeon holing me, and reduce my readership potential further. But somewhere along the way, I just said fuck this fucking shit, I have a Jeep to pay for.

So the slow rebrand as HEA-ending, PNR reader safe began. I was asked to open the box set for Spells and Spirits, with Charles de Lint. Then Janny Wurts posted here for everyone to go read it. Then, de Lint reviewed the first 3 books in Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. Then all of a sudden, people were freaking picking up the series in all different ways possible.

And I'm so confused. I'd given up completely on the series. I was writing it for the love by the end, and as a "thanks" to the few readers the series had who were crazy loyal, even though I could only put one out a year (because they were such losses).

I open my sales report and I'm just staring at it. I can tell which readers came from the box set (because they pick up #3 in the series). But what about all of these Books 1-3 bundle sales? Where are they coming from? What about all of the Book 2 sales? (so clearly they are reading Book 1 for free). How did this happen?

I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around the fact that I'd said good bye to this series ever earning me money. I'd made peace with it. I'd decided I was going to keep my promise to my readers and give me 6 books. And now...I got nothing.

Book selling is basically magic. It makes no fucking sense sometimes.

u/PrincessTypeyType · 3 pointsr/writing

You asked for examples:

Bella Forest (7 million copies sold of the first book in her "Shade of Vampire" series): https://www.amazon.com/Shade-Vampire-Bella-Forrest/dp/1481280767

Meredith Wild (1.4 million copies sold digitally and in print, she now runs her own publishing imprint). Here's an article about her in the New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/31/business/media/meredith-wild-a-self-publisher-making-an-imprint.html?mcubz=1

Hugh Howey (Began in 2011, by summer 2012 was earning $150,000 a month, and is still going strong. He's also an advocate for self-publishing... you should check out his blog.): http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/how-hugh-howey-turned-his-self-published-story-wool-into-a-success-a-book-deal

Check out the Creative Penn podcast for information and inspiration on self-publishing. Here's an article from Joanna Penn on the advantages and disadvantages of indie versus traditional publishing: https://www.thecreativepenn.com/self-publishing-vs-traditional/

None of this means that it is easy or that success is guaranteed, of course. But there are opportunities in indie publishing, and some folks make the argument that there's never been a better time to do it.

I encourage you to research further! Have fun!

u/holybatjunk · 5 pointsr/EDC

This is my dedicated writer-on-the-go kit, separate from my daily pocket/purse carry, which I'll post eventually because, yes, I carry a knife. Someone mentioned more hobby EDCs a while back, so...

  • Alphasmart 3000
  • Blueberry Larabar
  • Altoid tin (with skullcandy headphones inside)
  • Blank ReWrite Notebook, hidden under
  • Planner by Poketo for Target, 2013 Collection
  • Purple bic ballpoint pen
  • Aladdin Recycled and Recyclable Thermos, with coffee

    The alphasmart is the dorkiest but most useful thing in the fucking world. It's super light, durable, and fast. On that ancient baby I have written countless short stories, a book about a gaybro werewolf, and about a dozen scripts for short shitty horror movies that never get made. :) The ReWrite notebooks are great, too--all recycled materials and the perfect travel size, with paper that has just enough tooth to make writing smooth but enjoyable.
u/TheRubyRedPirate · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon
  • my favorite book is The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane. The main character is writing her doctorate thesis on the Salem Witch Trials. She's trying to revisit the reasoning behind the mania. She also has family that date back to the trials. I love the history and how deep her research went for the book. You can tell how hard she worked on it. The book also has a pretty cool twist and I love the new views on the trial as she tries to figure it out using modern logic.

  • my least favorite book is Drink, Slay Love. The main characters had no redeeming qualities, the writing style felt like a 14 year old, and the plot twist was so preposterous. I was embarrassed to have read it.

    The Abandoned

    Dead Suite

    Drop Dead Beauty

    Coming Home

    A Shade of Blood

    I love talking about books!!! Thanks for the contest!!!


u/Neville_Lynwood · 1 pointr/eFreebies

Ping-Pong is Not a Strategy: How to Create an Awesome Organizational Culture

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07YF4GB7N

FREE until October 4th

> Ping-Pong Is Not A Strategy is so much more than a book about creating an environment where people are excited to work.

>This book is a manual that will provide you with the resources, strategies, and techniques needed to take action today so you can make an impact on your business culture tomorrow.

---

The Litter: A Paranormal Teen Pregnancy Thriller with a Literary Feel

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07TFB3HLT

FREE until October 4th

> She became pregnant as a teenager ...
And now she's alone ...
With seven children who aren't quite human ...

>And that's when her problems really begin.

u/PaganPirate · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Her book if anyone is interested - it's gay werewolf erotica (let me throw that out first) - I bought it in January and was glad I did because it's very sweet and well written.

SO I'll promote for her!! Just in case anyone is interested. <3 <3

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I'm Number One!

This from brandnewgoodsus (in new tab) for $9.38 + $3.99 shipping on my Movies wish list.

Two ain't so bad

This from goHastings (in new tab) for $5.39 + $3.99 shipping on my Physical Books wishlist.

This for $3.99 on my ebook wish list.

Three's a crowd

This for $1.99 on my ebook wish list.

This from Colleen Roxas (in new tab) for $2.90 + $3.99 shipping on my Physical Books wish list.

This from shawnek (in new tab) for $0.50 + $3.99 shipping on my Physical Books wish list.

u/Divergent99 · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Have you read Nicky Charles Mating series? Bonus: I believe they are all free and they are paranormal romance.. Seriously I love them they are probably one of my favorite series! If you haven't read them yet you absolutely must immediately!

Edit: Shoot- I seriously always forget the phrase: /u/Morthy you shall be now dubbed Dr. Morthy-o. Let's play a pill version of Tetris.

u/Spiderveins · 0 pointsr/WTF

Yes. Mostly. The stereotype helps reinforce a worldview where certain behaviors are seen as gender signifiers. In identifying with the gender one can come to adopt the signifier. A depressing part of growing up is becoming what everyone else expected us to be. If you grow up wanting to be feminine, and you are told that a kind of 'cute' dumbness is desirable you may end up simply adopting it, your natural talent left to die on the vine.

Think of teen girls who think it's cute to end every bloody sentence with that interrogative upward inflection, as if they were unsure of what they were trying to say. Girls get like that because they notice when boys respond to it. It becomes a habit. Boys respond to it because it makes them feel more dominant, and this drives a cultural norm where weirdly submissive conversational posturing is somehow sexually desirable. See here for a more in-depth look at this.

There was a recent study on gender differences in spacial reasoning tasks where they found that the performance differences evaporated when women were given some manner of confidence boost.

tl,dr, yes. yes it does.

u/CourtneySchafer · 2 pointsr/Fantasy

Among pure-indie authors, I've enjoyed Krista D. Ball and Tim Marquitz. Oh, and SPFBO winner Michael McClung, although his "The Thief Who..." series was picked up by Ragnarok, so I suppose he's no longer indie.

Among the growing crowd of authors that publish both ways, some of my favorite self-pubbed books are Rachel Aaron's Nice Dragons Finish Last, Brad Beaulieu's Flames of Shadam Khoreh, and Judith Tarr's Forgotten Suns. Plenty more great stuff out there, too.

u/Accomplished_Wolf · 2 pointsr/suggestmeabook

Not His Dragon by Annie Nicholas fits the bill for a cheesy supernatural romance. The ebook for Not His Dragon is free right now, and the other books in the series (they're loosely connected, but each book can be read as a stand-alone) are in Kindle Unlimited (and the others are reasonably priced if you don't use KU).

For sci-fi, you could try Dark Horse by Michelle Diener, if you like space operas. It's not super lighthearted, but it's not dark either, and it's got a bit of romance too.

u/hagne · 1 pointr/selfpublish

I'm a new author! My first book, Going Bearserk, was just released!

It's only 99 cents/Free in Kindle Unlimited!

Blurb for Going Bearserk: A Viking Shifter Romance

Lana:

I never believed in scary stories. Now I know better.

Now I’m on the run, looking for a new life. One where I can be free from my family’s expectations and safe from the darkness I discovered.

Enter Iohan, the mysterious and sexy stranger who rescues me from a mishap in the mountains. He’s a bit odd, sure, but he’s over six feet of jaw-dropping, muscular handsomeness. He also seems determined to protect me. Surely I can’t have found my new life already—and not with this man. After all, I’m beginning to suspect Iohan has a secret of his own…

Iohan:

I am a warrior with no battles to fight. Ripped from my time by a mysterious curse, I am destined to wait out the rest of my days alone. I have no faith, no family, no home.

When Lana appears in my mountains, she unlocks something inside of me. Something that I thought I could never feel again. She is running, and I am drawn to protect her. To make her mine. I can only hope that I will not become more dangerous to her than what she is running from…

Going Bearserk is a standalone novella (25k+) with a HEA

Read it here

u/amazon-converter-bot · 1 pointr/FreeEBOOKS

Here are all the local Amazon links I could find:


amazon.co.uk

amazon.ca

amazon.com.au

amazon.in

amazon.com.mx

amazon.de

amazon.it

amazon.es

amazon.com.br

amazon.nl

amazon.co.jp

Beep bloop. I'm a bot to convert Amazon ebook links to local Amazon sites.
I currently look here: amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.ca, amazon.com.au, amazon.in, amazon.com.mx, amazon.de, amazon.it, amazon.es, amazon.com.br, amazon.nl, amazon.co.jp, if you would like your local version of Amazon adding please contact my creator.

u/jlgra · 2 pointsr/suggestmeabook

So I thought this book was totally the most sweet and romantic. It's a werewolf book. I'm female and straight (and so is the author as far as I can tell), so I'm not actually sure how someone in the community will view it. It's a gay-for-you theme, but I thought in a believable, coming-out way. And funny. All that to say:

Winter Wolf, by S.P. Wayne

It's a trilogy.

u/Val-Shir · 1 pointr/childfree

Not all of them are YA (some even flirt with erotica). Not all are romance/love stories and vampires are not in all of them, but they usually have something to do with paranormal things. Werewolves, fae, witches, zombies or fairy tales.

I joined about a year ago and I have bought about a half dozen things (usually collections for $1-3) but I have gotten over 300 books (a few shown above). They are usually independent authors and some are not well written but I love to read.

u/ColossalKnight · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Is it sad that I immediately saw the cover of a book that I could tell, "Hey, this looks like my kind of book" as something about it stood out to me immediately. Reading about it, yep, right again.

Adds Dante Valentine: The Complete Series to wishlist

I used to half-jokingly say how I should become a bounty hunter (mind you all, I did major in Criminal Justice/Social Justice and Criminology in college so...not really the same thing, but it relates. Sort of, a little...), but beyond that I like paranormal related stuff like this. Somewhat reminds me of another book I read once called Demon Knight or something where it dealt with a guy doing a somewhat similar line of work, but trying to prevent the end of the world if I recall correctly.

So, paperclip is it. It's not the annoying one from Microsoft, I assume.

u/goingbearserk · 1 pointr/eroticauthors

Hi!

I post here sometimes, but I'm using a different username today.

I published THIS for my first book. It's a time travel paranormal romance. Now I'm wondering if the cover/blurb are awful, as I'm working on a second book in the same world (not a series, but a set of standalones.)

For the book in the same world, I've mocked up a cover that needs work, but maybe has some direction: here.

I'd appreciate advice on either one of these. Thanks so much!

u/RushofBlood52 · 6 pointsr/Fantasy

> (Or your books, I'm game for that)

The first books of two or her series are free on Kindle. And I've heard nothing but good things about her newest series (I'll get to reading it eventually). Good variety, too.

u/lobo68 · 15 pointsr/funny

Pretty sure you're a writer if you make money doing it, regardless of skill.

Which, for those keeping score back home, is what a "profession," is: a something you make money doing.

u/MsMina · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I just finished watching The Best Man Holiday which was way sadder than I thought it'd be.

Yay cocktails!

u/CaptainCoral · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

OMG I know. When the Harry Potter books were coming out, I'd read whatever the new one was, and then turn around and re-read it imeediately because I didn't want it to end.
I wish there were series that just went on forever!
This is the first book, right?

u/casual__t · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

This book would be awesome. I like supernatural books for light reading and just taking some time off and I like Lilith St.Crow too. Do you need a paper clip? If you let me know because I have a freaking ton of paper clips.