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In Her Name: Chapter 2 Excerpt – Nicole Carré

Chapter 2 of In Her Name introduces one of the main supporting characters, Nicole Carré:

Reza turned his attention to the girl, who still lay on the ground, weeping.
Three of the biggest boys from his own team stood around her like guards, waiting
for his orders.

“It’s all right,” he told them. “You guys get back to work, but keep your eyes
open. I’ll take care of her.” Kneeling next to the girl, Reza said softly, “How bad are
you hurt?”

Almost unwillingly, she turned over, and Reza helped her to sit up. His face
flushed with anger at the sight of the scratches and bruises that were already rising

against her porcelain skin. She said nothing, but shook her head. Since hardly
anything was left of her pretty blouse, Reza took off his shirt and offered it to her,
careful not to touch her. She had already been touched enough for one day.
“Here,” he said gently, “put this on.”

She looked at him with her dark eyes, brown like a doe’s, but with the spirit of a
leopard’s. There were tears there, but Reza saw no weakness.

“Merci,” she said, wincing in pain as she reached for the shirt. He caught a quick
glimpse of her exposed breasts and quickly averted his gaze, blushing with
embarrassment at seeing that part of her body and anger at the mottled bruises he
saw there. He turned his back to her as she stripped off the torn blouse and put on
his shirt.

“Sorry it’s so dirty,” he said about the shirt, suddenly ashamed that he did not
have something clean to offer her. “It probably doesn’t smell too good, either.”
“It is fine,” she said, her voice quivering only slightly. “Thank you. You’re very
kind.” He felt a light touch on his shoulder. “You may turn around, now.”

He found himself looking at a girl whose skin was a flawless ivory that he knew
from long experience would have a hard time under Hallmark’s brutal sun. Her
aristocratic face was framed by auburn hair that fell well below her shoulders,
untrimmed bangs blowing across her eyes. Reza felt his throat tighten for no reason
he could explain, other than that he thought she was the most beautiful girl he had
ever seen.

“I’m Reza,” he said, fighting through the sudden rasp that had invaded his voice,
“Reza Gard.” He held out his hand to her.

Smiling tentatively, she took it, and Reza was relieved to note that her grip was
strong. This one, he could tell from long experience, was tough. A survivor.
“I am Nicole,” she said, her voice carrying a thick accent that Reza had never
heard before, “Nicole Carré…”

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In Her Name: Chapter 1 Excerpt – The Priestess

This excerpt is from In Her Name, chapter 1:

The sky was black as pitch, black as death, as the priestess walked alone over the arena this planet had become. Her sandaled feet touched the earth but left no sound, no footprint. She looked up toward where the stars should be, yearning for the great moon that shone over the Homeworld. But the only sight to be had was the glowing red smears of the fires that were reflected by the wafting smoke and dust.

As she made her way across the field of carnage, she touched the bodies of the fallen children to honor them as they had honored their Empress. They had sacrificed their lives to show their love for Her. She grieved for them all, that they had died this day, never again to feel the flame that drove them to battle, the thrill of sword and claw, never again to serve the Empress through their flesh. Now they basked in the quiet sunset of the Afterlife, someday perhaps to join the ranks of the Ancient Ones, the warriors of the spirit.

She moved on toward her destination. It had once been a human dwelling, but now was a mound of ashen rubble. It squatted impetuously in the wasteland created by weapons the Kreela disdained to use. The humans had never realized that the destruction of their worlds was caused by their own predilection for such weaponry, to which the Kreela sometimes had to respond in kind. The warriors of the Empress sought battles of the mind, body, and spirit, of sword and claw, and not of brute destruction.

Watching the battles rage here for several cycles of the sun across the sky, she had become increasingly curious about these particular humans who fought so well, and at last had decided that perhaps they were worthy of her personal attention. She bade the young warriors to rest, to wait for her return, before setting out on her own journey of discovery.

She paused when she reached the back of the crumbled structure that hid the humans that had piqued her curiosity. She listened for their heartbeats, smelled their pungent body odor, felt for their strange, alien spirit with her mind. After a moment she had a picture of them, where they sat and stood within.

Silent as the dead around her, she moved to a specific point along the wall. Her breathing and heart stilled, she concealed everything about herself that made her presence real. Unless one of them looked directly at her, she would be utterly invisible.

Then she stepped through the wall, her flesh and armor melding with the essence of the barrier as she passed through without so much as a whisper.

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In Her Name Makes Reviewer’s Top Ten List for 2008

If you happened to read the BookLoons review of In Her Name, you might have noticed that the reviewer was Elizabeth Schulenberg, who also has her own blog. I hadn’t realized it at the time (and only did after she had commented on the BookLoons review post), but Elizabeth did a wrapup of the top ten books she’d read in 2008.

I was shocked – and incredibly pleased! – to learn that of the 144 books she read that year, she placed In Her Name at number 4! Wow!

Here was her list (although she has more details for each book):

  1. The Lions of Al – Rassan by Guy Gavriel Kay
  2. Bikeman by Thomas Flynn
  3. The White Mary by Kira Salak
  4. In Her Name by Michael R. Hicks
  5. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne
  6. Zoe’s Tale by John Scalzi
  7. Run by Ann Patchett
  8. Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn
  9. The Ruins of Gorlan by John Flanagan
  10. The Host by Stephenie Meyer

Any time I might find my work compared favorably with any of these authors – particularly John Scalzi – I have to humbly whisper, “Wow…”

But check out Elizabeth’s site and all the other great book-related information she has there!

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In Her Name Reviewed by The Book Smugglers: Wow!

When I woke up the other day, I headed straight downstairs to my Mac with one purpose: to see the review of In Her Name that was scheduled to be published by The Book Smugglers. This site is run by two book-obsessed women, Ana and Thea, and they do some of the most in-depth reviews – particularly of speculative fiction and romance – that you’ll find anywhere on the web. Like the other reviewers I had submitted the book to, they looked to be fair but tough. And since they frequently do joint reviews, it was even more of a challenge.

I wasn’t disappointed. In fact, I was totally blown away. Here are excerpts of their first impressions:

I wish I had read In Her Name as soon as we got it because once I got past the first few chapters , I got sucked into the story and couldn’t stop reading it until I was done. And there is only one work I can think of using to describe it right now: Awesome. [Ana]

In Her Name is a stunner of a novel: an Epic blend of space opera and fantasy, with impressive world building, a beautifully conceived plot, and wonderfully alive characters. One of the most enjoyable books I have read in a while. What Ana said: Awesome. [Thea]

When discussing the plot, here are a few words I pulled from the review that I think hit their bottom-line impressions:

The first few chapters do not give a measure of the scope that the story will have and it’s not until Reza is taken into the heart of the Kreelan Empire that the book really got me by the guts. That was when the story truly became alive and riveting and utterly unlike any other hero journey because of the choice Reza ultimately makes. [Ana]

The best thing is–the plot is wonderful from beginning to end. The dramatic ending to this operatic journey is perfect, not a cop out and feels like the only way that serves the Kreelans and Humans justice. I loved it. [Thea]

They both rated the book an “8 out of 10 – Excellent!” And Thea noted that she likely would have given it a 9 or 10 had the book been broken down into a trilogy (which I’ve been considering for some time – I guess it’s time to do that!).

So, please take a look at the review and see what you think!

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POD Book Reviews and More Reviews In Her Name

Another review of In Her Name is in, this time from POD Book Reviews and More (PODBRAM)! This review was done by Dr. Al Past, one of PODBRAM’s regular reviewers, as well as an author himself.

Not to put too fine a point on it, he liked it, just a bit!

One of my good friends, a literate, book-reading friend, says he likes his movies tightly edited and concise, but he prefers his books by the pound. If that friend enjoys the occasional science fiction/fantasy adventure as well, then do I have a book for him! Michael R. Hicks’ In Her Name is a monster of a paperback and an absolute steal for the price. (It’s also available in Amazon’s Kindle edition at a budget price.) I estimate In Her Name to be at least two pounds of solid entertainment.

Dr. Past goes over a synopsis of the plot (without giving out much in the way of spoilers), before he gets to his impressions of the novel:

That was what I liked best about the book: the author’s complete and convincing rendering of a non-human culture, to the point that the reader comes to understand and respect it, honor it, and even root for it! That is no mean feat of imagination, and it makes what could have been a purple-prose space opera into a delightful recreation…The bottom line is that In Her Name is highly recommended to those who love the sci-fi/fantasy genres, or are even tempted to try them.

So, a big thanks to PODBRAM and Dr. Past for the kind words! To read the complete review, click here!

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How To Be Successful

I apologize for the rather sensational title of this post, but I got to thinking the other day about my own struggles to get where I am now and thought that it might help someone with their own life journey.

I’m sure you know that you can drop a fortune at Amazon or anywhere else on books and other stuff to help you learn how to “be successful.” I’m not saying that stuff doesn’t work – it very well may – but I’ve never responded well to that sort of thing. I mean, let’s face it: how many of us confess to ourselves that we’re not successful? On top of that, how many of us really have a clue about what being successful means for us as individuals?

The key, my friend, is in goals. Let me give you an example from my efforts as an aspiring (starving) author:

Back in 1991, for various reasons best left unsaid, I decided to do something rash: to write a novel. I had set myself an extremely challenging goal – in part, I must confess, because to that point I felt I’d achieved very little in many ways – although I never really considered it as such. I spent the next four years (part-time) writing In Her Name, then probably another six months editing and revising it. I didn’t really praise myself at that point like I should have – hey, you deserve to pat yourself on the back if you do something like that! – but I did manage to finish it. But that’s where my goal-setting – and success – ended: I shopped it around to a number of publishers at that point, and got the customary rejection notices. But there were other things going on in my life at the time, and without a firm goal I just shoved it aside for about a dozen years.

Then the Amazon Kindle came out, and I finally decided to give publishing In Her Name another go, this time on my own. But this time, I set a conscious, stated goal. If you don’t have any goals set, you have no way of measuring your success; you have no benchmark. And believe me, I am not a big goal-setter! This was totally alien to my way of thinking. I normally just bumble along in life, but publishing a book – being an author – was a dream I’d had since at least high school. Hell, I’d written the book already – that part was done! All I had to do was get it out there where somebody might trip over it and maybe even buy it.

So, with that firm goal in mind, I did all the stuff necessary to put it out in the Amazon Kindle store and Mobipocket (and later into print), and it started pulling in some sales. It was exciting: people were buying my book! But then I started to notice that I was checking the sales figures all the time, and would really get bummed when there were dry spells. When the first reader review was posted on Amazon, it really made the week for me. And then more reviews were posted – all of them four and five stars (so far) – and I got psyched. But I would still get into this funk about where it all was going. Would the book be a success? Would I be a success as an author?

That’s when I had a bit of an epiphany: what exactly did it mean – to me – to be a successful author? How was I going to really measure that? What was my goal now that I had published a book?

I think all authors have the same dreams: wind up on the NY Times bestseller list, have your book appear on Oprah, have it made into a blockbuster movie, make a bazillion bucks, and so on. I certainly have those dreams, but after I thought about it a while, I came to the startling conclusion that the best indicator of my success as an author was that people enjoyed reading what I’d written. And I don’t mean just members of my family who wanted to humor me, but people I didn’t know, who didn’t know me, but who checked out the blurb on my book and liked it enough to plunk down their money to buy it, then came back and spent their precious time writing a review of it. Will I sell a bazillion copies and chalk up some of those dreams I mentioned to you? The statistics are against me, but I don’t really care now, because in writing that book I’ve actually achieved three major goals – successes – in my life:

  • Writing In Her Name in the first place. And it’s actually three novels in one, so technically I should give myself triple credit!
  • Getting the book published. This was a particular achievement because, taking the self-publishing route, I had to do every bit of it myself, from cover art to promotion.
  • Learning that I’d written a story that people enjoyed. This was, by far, the most rewarding of the three things I’d achieved in writing this book. The money from sales is always welcome – and Oprah, I’ll be happy to be on your show, anytime! – but the inner satisfaction I get at hearing what people have to say about In Her Name is a very precious reward.

Anyway, while this example was about a guy (me) writing and publishing a book, the underlying key is the same for anything: you have to make goals for yourself, both to help guide your life and give you some feedback on how the heck you’re doing. And then you have to focus on them and follow through. If you find that every day you’re just doing the same old crap and don’t seem to be going anywhere, it’s because you haven’t set any goals! You’re not working toward anything, so your just spinning on the ol’ hamster wheel. Yes, you don’t want to aim the bar too high: just aim for something you think you could do, then work to achieve it!

And forget about excuses (particularly that you don’t have time): part of giving yourself the gift of success is prioritizing and making some changes in your life. Just as an example, if you’re really out of shape, set yourself a goal of run/walking a 5K race this year (that was the goal my wife and I set for ourselves fitness-wise last year). That’s three miles, and there are tons of places that hold 5K events. Even if you’re a total couch potato, if you started now you could at least walk three miles by mid spring – think of how good it would feel to cross that finish line, even just walking! So, instead of sitting on your widening rear end and watching TV for that sixth hour of the evening, why don’t you take the first hour of TV time and just go for a walk? Take the entire family!

Another example (and this is dedicated to a good friend of mine): if you’re stuck in a job that you hate, look around for other opportunities. Even in this crappy economy right now, opportunites can be found. But only if you look! Maybe you’ll find something soon, maybe it’ll take a while. But if you set that goal you’ll have a benchmark to measure your success. There are times when my own job drives me nuts, but all in all it’s great. And I firmly believe that people shouldn’t have to work at jobs they hate: you spend a third (or more) of your life at work. Even if you don’t really enjoy your job, it shouldn’t totally suck.

So, think about that and see if it helps you. Think about some things you’d like to accomplish in your life, then – as Chalene Johnson says – write them down. Tape them up on the refrigerator if you need to, then work toward them. Every day. If I can find success in my life, with as much of a bumble as I normally am, you can, too!

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