Clarissa Johal

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Guest Author: Peek into the Diary of a Vampire Stripper with Cinsearae S.

It's Author Week in my blog. All week long, I'll be featuring my fellow authors.


DIARY OF A VAMPIRE STRIPPER


CreateSpace (Print) and Available for Kindle on Amazon.com

ISBN: 146995916X ISBN-13: 978-1469959160
1st printing
Printed in the United States of America

Blurb

Her best friend is a werewolf. Her boyfriend is a ghoul. And she really, REALLY, can’t stand her vampire husband.

Trying to juggle college tuition and rent, young Audra Perez seeks a fast fix to her financial woes by auditioning as a stripper for the Hoochie Coochie Club. What she didn’t expect was to actually be chosen. Barely a few months into her new job, she becomes acquainted with a mysterious, distinguished gentleman by the name of Darren Von Eldon, and they secretly begin dating against club rules. Then one passionate night at his beach house changes Audra’s life forever.

Now as a newly-awakened vampire, this only adds to her day-to-day mundane burdens. Refusing to drain humans, she hunts birds for nourishment, and finagles a way to avoid going to classes during the day. But bigger problems loom ahead. Radical cops that know about her kind roam the night, seeking to destroy any and all ‘monsters’, and her best friend’s family has a bone to pick with Audra’s. Headless human bodies are turning up on vamp and were turf, each side blaming the other for the murders. It’s up to Audra and her friend Lu to figure out who’s doing the killings before an all-out war happens between their families, their search leading them beneath the city streets to encounter an abomination neither one of them will ever forget. And the relationship issues? Well, it’s not easy dealing with a boyfriend and a vampire husband, so let’s not even go there…

Life's a bitch, and then you DON'T die.

Excerpt

I can definitely tell you I’ve had some real jackasses for boyfriends. In my newfound profession, that situation got a bit worse. But I’ll digress for now.
I call myself Claudia, after that cute, little kid in the Interview with the Vampire movie. It’s my stage name, complete with that same kind of persona for my character -- for that’s exactly what I portray when I’m out on the stage, and ironically, keeps my secret well hidden. Plus, the guys seem to love it.
My boss strongly advised against us girls dating the clientele. Most of us do it anyway, and if our boss catches on, we either get a warning or fired. I never quite understood his policy, but thinking from a boss’s point of view, it kinda made sense. If the relationship ended badly, it meant a loss of customers, a.k.a. revenue. Loose lips sink ships, and word of mouth still travels faster than any kind of online social networking. A bad date or relationship gone wrong with a stripper from the Hoochie Coochie Club would make the entire venue look bad.
Are you laughing at the name? I don’t blame you; I share your sentiments. I hated the name of that place… it sounded so stupid. I would have loved to have known who made up that moniker just so I could slap them silly.

I was never big on dating; the young college guys who often came in the club were pretty stupid and easy to manipulate. They came to have their fantasies fulfilled, nothing more. But every now and then, there was some moron with an even bigger fantasy tumbling around in his twisted brain, and that’s when the troubles would start. Some of the girls actually believed the guys were truly in love with them –or vice versa, which would spark a relationship in the first place. But I’m guessing that once the guys saw that their stripper girlfriends were actually human, things went downhill. What, did you think that we’re not supposed to eat, poop or pee? That those dark, lush, extra-long eyelashes, wild eye colors and hair extensions are actually real? That we pranced around wearing corsets, garters, G-strings and stilettos 24-7? Hate to burst your bubble, guys. We exist as your temporary escape only. Key word… temporary. Engrave that on your brain with a hot poker so you don’t forget, please.

So, I’m guessing you want to know more about me. I’m your average Jane, honest. Well, at least I was. This stripper gig is just a means to fund my way through college and pay the rent. I take evening classes now, naturally. I don’t miss the daylight much, but I wouldn’t be able to stay up to see the sun even if I tried. The moment those first rays of light hit the horizon, I simply drop like a puppet whose strings have been cut. My only saving grace is when there’s an overcast or rainy morning, so I look forward to those days.

I didn’t really think I’d fall headfirst into the nighttime lifestyle. I loved the darkness, but being a creature of one I did not foresee. I chose the stripper gig out of sheer desperation, trying out for the hell of it. I didn’t know Jack or Squat about wrapping my legs around a pole, and the cattle call for ‘new blood’ was the absolute worst. Just waiting for my turn made me want to crawl away in embarrassment. Our tryouts involved dancing in front of an actual crowd, and whoever got the loudest-sounding claps would be chosen. There were seven of us that particular night, including one tranny who knew exactly what the hell he was doing, too. But, as this was a club for ‘normies’, the fact that he was on a more alternative level already exed him out. But no matter where he went afterwards, I was sure an LBGT venue would snatch him up in a heartbeat.

At six feet tall with mocha colored skin and sporting a blonde, bobbed-cut wig, he wore a white bra with matching panties, garters, stockings and heels. He had a dancer’s body; wiry and muscular. I watched him work the pole as if he’d been doing it all his life, and envied him. It amazed me how anybody could climb up those things and twist and contort themselves around it as fluidly as a snake, with such grace and sensuality, not to mention total confidence. Already, I was feeling inadequate, and prayed someone else was inept as me.

I performed a few dinky moves, my sexuality having taken a backseat. I was wearing a two-piece, black, lace negligee with black heels that I was dying to take off after fifteen minutes. Why in hell did I try out for this crap? Oh yeah, I needed the money for school.

Ever see a kid swing themselves around a pole with one arm until they got themselves dizzy? That’s pretty much what I did, minus the getting dizzy part. I focused more on doing what I considered sexy moves without the use of a pole. And thank goodness there were two others that followed my lead. I didn’t feel as bad. As we waited around for the other girls to finish with their auditions, I looked around the darkened warehouse-turned-strip joint, slash dive bar. Disco lights, mirror balls, multi-colored spotlights, and all the typical club junk was everywhere. The only difference was that there were tables all over the place for the patrons to sit at and watch the show. The stage had a catwalk, and the pole itself was at the end of it. Most of the tables surrounded the catwalk, and I got the creepy-crawlies knowing that so many eyes were on me. You can kinda ignore it, or not, depending on how nervous you actually are. I’m always nervous before I get on a stage, but once I’m on it, I ignore everything and focus on what I’m doing. At least the stuff I learned in high-school drama club was good for something.
I almost gawked at one chick that had a little extra meat on her bones, shaking her ass at the guys, who whistled and made lewd calls at her. Her dress was skin tight and completely sheer, and I wondered where in hell she found that outfit. When she squatted and spread her legs, the dress raised itself up over her butt. Not only was she not wearing underwear, but she hadn’t shaved down there, either. She’d put Sasquatch to shame with that matted muff. Hello, ever heard of a razor? Nair? Electrolysis? Something?! Naturally, the guys whooped and hollered again. How guys could love a crotch-tarantula was beyond my comprehension.

Oh dear Lord, remind me again… what the hell am I doing in here? That’s right. School. Need the money for school…

When it was all over, I was among the ones not chosen, of course. In a way, I was glad, but again, I was screwed out of fast cash. We all were given twenty-five bucks apiece, so I surmised it was some sort of stipend for performing that night. Whatever. It would buy me dinner, probably for two nights, depending on where I went, so it wasn’t a total loss.

Back in the dressing room, I couldn’t change into my street clothes fast enough. Feeling like a piece a meat for eight hours a night I could do without. When I passed by the office of this hole-in-the-wall, I noticed Little Miss Hairy Cooch sitting in the office talking to the bossman, along with the others that were picked by the crowd. Funny, but I knew she wasn’t one of the ‘official’ chosen. Oh well, not my concern. She glanced at me as I kept going. As I left out of a side entrance and headed for the bus stop…

“Hey, wait a sec,” a skinny, middle-aged woman called to me, trotting up to the stop. “Cal wants to see you.”

I raised my eyebrow. Cal was the proprietor of the HCC. The woman, whose name I had forgotten five minutes after she first mentioned it, was like his second-in-command, or secretary, or whatever.

“Ohhhkay…” I started, looking unsure.
“C’mon.” She waved me back, so reluctantly, I followed. Did I really need the money that badly?

Back in the office, I noticed the girls were now gone.
“Here she is,” the woman said to Cal with a half-smile.

He folded his hands on his desk, resting them on top of my application. I swallowed. “Why’d you run off?” he asked me.

I tightened my grip on my messenger bag. “The auditions were over, and I knew I wasn’t picked. No sense in hanging around, right?” I didn’t need to be bounced out of there by a, well… bouncer. I noticed that they quickly escorted one girl out after she started whining and complaining about why she wasn’t chosen. I didn’t need that to be me as well.

He grinned. “Well, despite not being chosen, I see some potential in you. You have a nice figure, not too much here.” He patted his hips and I raised my eyebrow again. That totally contradicted the fact that Little Miss Hairy Cooch was in this same office not too long ago, but I didn’t pry. Again, none of my business. “But… don’t gain any more weight,” he continued. If there was a glass of water on his desk, I might have thrown it in his face and ran the hell out of there. Damn society to hell with their ‘everyone-should-be-skinny-as-a-stick’ warning they constantly shoved down the public’s throat. Body-image freaks. Didn’t young girls have enough problems concerning that as it was?!

“You could take pole dancing classes, and be up to standard in a couple of weeks. What do you say?” Cal gave me a bit of an oily grin.

I almost laughed out loud. They actually had pole dancing classes? Well, I guess you had to learn somewhere…

My attitude became stoic. “I don’t have the extra money to pay for--”

“You can take classes right here, taught by one of our retired dancers. It’s what Maggie does for a living now. If you take the gig, your classes will be free.”

I paused. My sub-conscious was screaming at me in my head to just walk out anyway, but my logical (albeit somewhat desperate) side was thinking that this was probably some twisted blessing in disguise.

I took a deep breath before nodding. “Alright.”

Cal extended his hand, so I shook it. “Great. We’ll see you back here on Thursday at noon, and we’ll finish up with the paperwork.”

“Okay,” I mumbled, feeling far away. I had officially stepped into the Devil’s den.

On the bus ride home, I was seriously conflicted about this new job. One thing was for sure, I’d never do something ‘just for the hell of it’ again. I tried to think about the positives. One, I wouldn’t have to get up at the butt-crack of dawn to rush to some zombified corporate job that would bore the hell out of me forty hours a week. Two, the pay was awesome. I’d make three to four times as much here in a day than I would a week at a corporate job. Three, I wouldn’t have to worry about money for school. I tried hard to think of a fourth, and couldn’t. Then my mind immediately thought of the negatives.

Guys would stare at me every night, some of them one can short of a six-pack. I still wasn’t comfortable with being half-naked on a stage, showcased like a ham in a butcher’s window. This was a job that had to be done at night, and I’d get home around two in the morning. Who knew what kinds of wackos were wandering around during that time? Maybe I’d have to start carrying a knife with me. Or pepper spray. Or a gun. I didn’t like guns. Never fired one, never held one. Also, I’d need some skanky outfits, so that meant having to shop around in the red light district, which already looked like skid row as it was. Hmm, I’d be checking out Frederick’s or Victoria’s Secret online instead. It’d be a hell of a lot safer.

I sighed. I knew the cons would outweigh the pros….

***

Visit BLOOD TOUCH - Website of Author/Artist Cinsearae S. for more details, see the trailer, reviews, take a fun character quiz, keep in touch with the author, and more!

DIARY OF A VAMPIRE STRIPPER AVAILABLE NOW FOR KINDLE ON Amazon.com, OR GET THE PRINT VERSION AT CreateSpace

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Guest Author & Giveaway: A #Steampunk Journey with Daniel Ausema

It's Author Week in my blog. All week long, I'll be featuring my fellow authors.

Spire City is a serial fiction project published by Musa Publishing, with a new episode released every three weeks. Season One: Infected ran from November 2013-August 2014 and is now collected in two bundles, Contagion and Epidemic. Season Two: Pursued is now active. The most recent episode is number three, "A Crisis in Leadership." Season Three: Unwoven will follow.


Spire City, Season 1: Contagion

Contagion 
(Spire City Season One, Book 1)

Targeted by a mad scientist's deadly serum, these outcasts join together to uncover the truth, and to fight back.

Spire City is home to mighty machines of steam power and clockwork, and giant beetles pull picturesque carriages over cobbled streets, but there is a darker secret behind these wonders. A deadly infection, created by a mad scientist, is spreading through the city, targeting the poor and powerless, turning them slowly into animals. A group of those infected by the serum join together to survive, to trick the wealthy out of their money, and to fight back.

Excerpt 

With a nudge from her, Tinnesz and Semesz pulled her down the hallway toward the storeroom where they slept with their mom. Before they pushed aside the hanging blanket over the doorway, Semesz tugged on Chels’s sleeve, and she bent down. He rarely spoke above a whisper. “Did you hear about Rani?”

“He’s that neighborhood boy you’ve played with, right? Sleeps down in the Colvern place?”

Semesz nodded, his eyes wide and fastened on hers. Tinnesz filled in the story breathlessly, as if he didn’t fully understand but knew it was something important to older people. “He completed today. A mouse. Right, Semesz, a mouse?”

Complete. What an awful word for an infected people, that final, animal stage that was the future of all of them. Chels swallowed, unsure what to say. “That’s…sad. I didn’t even know he was infected.”

Semesz whispered, “He was just infected yesterday. We saw him last night, and he already had mouse whiskers and a tail.”

The serum was supposed to work that way, the police infecting the urchins and criminals who, from their perspective, overran the city. Turn them into literal pests, the thinking went, that no one could object to having exterminated. Who would notice when the rat-catchers suddenly had increased business? But it so rarely brought such a quick change. Usually the transformation progressed for a time and then halted, as it had with Marrel years earlier. For others, the changes were gradual but constant. Either way, though, there was never any knowing when some latent bit of serum might suddenly trigger the final changes. Then the infected would complete.

“I’m…I'm sorry to hear it. He was a nice boy, and you had fun together.”

Neither said anything, and Chels was sure they were thinking of their mother. The boys weren’t infected, but Pemisza had been infected for years, and in her, the infection was already well advanced. When would they have to say goodbye to her? When would they wake to find her either gone or completed in her sleep?

Without answering, Semesz pulled Chels through the doorway. Pemisza rested on a pile of scavenged blankets. Chels hesitated, but Pemisza waved a half-feline arm for her to enter.

***

Spire City, Season Two: Pursued

A Crisis in Leadership (Spire City Season 2, Book 3) 

Targeted by a mad scientist's deadly serum, these outcasts join together to uncover the truth, and to fight back.

When Zoken meets an old friend from his home city, he's thrilled to catch up and saddened to see that his friend is also infected. It doesn't even occur to him to do anything besides bring Mendat straight to the Weave. Marrel is not pleased to have a stranger come in without her permission, and the words they each speak could tear the band of outcasts apart.

Excerpt

A still life of the Weave:

The sitting room in the first basement, lit by four kerosene lanterns. The lanterns give each object in the room four uneven shadows.

Zoken stands in the middle of the room, feet planted as if trying to push their way deeper into the stone floor. The scales on his neck are a painful red, bright and pulsing with his heartbeat. They are a warning. It isn’t necessary to be an animal to recognize that fact, to know one should step away. His hair is red, too, but a calmer shade. His face is drained of color, as if to feed the chameleon scales, leaving his skin an ashen grayish-brown. His jaw is clenched. His clothes are smudged with ash, but he has no smell of charred wood, as if the ash is as old as the building itself. The light from an uneven wick in one lantern flickers, stutters across his face, makes the shadow opposite jerk in convulsions.

A brimless smoking cap lies on the floor behind his feet, as if cast down in anger.

In his hand, a gear gun, cocked and aimed.

***

Musa Publishing Buy Links:


Amazon Buy Links:



Author Bio:

In addition to writing the Spire City series, Daniel Ausema is the author of The Electro-Addictive Moth-Flame, the second title in Musa's shared world series The Darkside Codex. His short stories and poems have appeared and are forthcoming in Penumbra, Daily Science Fiction, The Journal of Unlikely Stories, Strange Horizons, and many other places. He has worked as a journalist and educator and is currently a stay-at-home dad. He lives in Colorado, at the foot of the Rocky Mountains.
Twitter: @ausema


Like Steampunk novels? 
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Monday, January 12, 2015

Guest Author: Ann Gimpel Welcomes You Into a Soul Storm

It's Author Week in my blog. All week long, I'll be featuring my fellow authors. 


Dark Pursuit

Soul Storm, Book 2

By Ann Gimpel
Dream Shadow Press


Available on:
Amazon
B&N
ARe
Kobo
iTunes

Genre: Urban Fantasy

Old blood and ancient power pit themselves against evil so dark, deep, and menacing it changes everyone who comes into contact with it. And not for the better.

Blurb:

Widespread rioting, plus shortages of fuel, food, and electricity lure demons across the veil to invade Earth. Drawn by anarchy, they’re out of control, drunk on their own power, and growing stronger by the day.

With her life crumbling around her, Dr. Lara McInnis is reluctantly roped into channeling her unpredictable psychic talents to help a detective who saved her from a psychopathic killer. Problem is, she’s still quite the neophyte in terms of either summoning her magic, or bending it to do much of anything. Her lack of skill strands her in the murky underbelly of a world inhabited by dark forces.

Trevor Denoble may not be psychic, but his old blood gives him gifts as well. After years of uncertainty, Lara is really and truly finally his. He’s determined to keep her by his side, but she refuses to cooperate. The detective’s daughter is trapped in darkness, and Lara insists on going after her—to a place barred to Trevor. Not to be denied, he latches onto his Celtic blood and uncovers latent power. No stranger to violence, more blood on his hands is a small price to pay to keep the woman he loves safe.

Excerpt:

…Fingers hesitant on the keypad—the last thing she needed was another snag in a life that already felt way too complicated—Lara entered the number. Seconds later, Detective Brad Archer’s familiar voice answered, “Archer here. That you, Lara?”
“Yes,” she replied. Normally, she’d have asked what he needed, but a part of her didn’t want to know. Detective Archer had shot and wounded Ken Beauchamp, setting a string of events into play that led to the man’s eventual capture. Since Beauchamp was dead, Lara assumed Archer must want something from her—and pretty badly to call at such an ungodly hour.
There was a pause, typical of what law enforcement officers did when they thought they might have a reluctant recruit on the other end of the phone. Lara’s stomach tightened, and she relaxed her grip on the phone because her hand was cramping.
“I—I’m calling to ask a favor, Dr. McInnis,” he began formally.
She girded herself for whatever the request might be. Trev and I owe him big time. If it’s a favor, I’ll have to at least try to help, even though I’m so overwhelmed with everything else I’m drowning.
“It’s my daughter, Adriana,” Brad choked out, anguish blasting through the phone lines. “Lara—she’s missing.”
“That’s terrible! What happened?” Shocked by his revelation, she sat up straighter in bed. More than that, though, she was confused why he was calling her. “Don’t you have an entire fleet of officers who hunt for missing persons?”
“Yes, we do. Even a couple psychics. That’s the problem, Doctor, uh, Lara. Even with all that, they’ve been hunting for her for almost a week and haven’t found a single lead.”
“How old is she?” Lara asked. Warnings rained from her psychic side, but she ignored them.
“Seventeen.” Archer’s voice was about an octave too high and strained.
“Maybe it’s not as bad as you think,” Lara suggested gently. “After all, teenagers are notorious for this sort of thing. Are you certain she didn’t run off with some boy? Or that she’s not holed up with a girlfriend? Did you or your wife have a fight with her?”
“No fights, but I’m not sure about either of the other two,” Brad admitted. “Look, Lara, I know you’re busy, but I could really use your, ah, special abilities to help me.” He sighed heavily, and his breath whistled from between what sounded like clenched teeth. “There’s not even a fucking clue, Doctor. Not one. My men have worked this thing to within an inch of its life.”
Tormented words tore out of him. “Her car’s disappeared, which isn’t all that unusual in kidnapping cases, but so have her motor vehicle and school records. Whatever happened to her, it wiped her off the face of the Earth. Christ, her hospital birth records don’t even exist anymore. And my wife…” He stopped, obviously struggling for control. “She’s been sedated for the past three days. When she wakes up, she starts screaming. Adriana was…is our only child.”
Lara closed her eyes. The amulet hanging around her neck pricked unpleasantly. So there’s magic involved here.
“Doctor?”
“Yes, I’m still here. I’m thinking.”
“Please.” The single word held all the angst of a man caught in an ever-tightening web.
“Okay, I’ll meet you wherever you want around noon.”
“I’ll come to you,” he said quickly. “Your office?”
“Yes,” she replied. “If you brought lunch, we could eat while we work.”
“No problem,” Archer replied. “Thanks, Lara.” Before he rang off, she heard him crying, sobbing actually, in great, gulping gasps. More than anything, that gave her pause. He was tough, a twenty year veteran of the police force. Her fears about what she’d just agreed to skyrocketed when the amulet—with its uncanny sensitivity to psychic events—radiated disapproval by sending waves of bitter cold against her skin…

 ***


Author Bio:

Ann Gimpel is a national bestselling author. She’s also a clinical psychologist, with a Jungian bent. Avocations include mountaineering, skiing, wilderness photography and, of course, writing. A lifelong aficionado of the unusual, she began writing speculative fiction a few years ago. Since then her short fiction has appeared in a number of webzines and anthologies. Her longer books run the gamut from urban fantasy to paranormal romance. She’s published over 20 books to date, with several more contracted for 2015 and beyond.

A husband, grown children, grandchildren and three wolf hybrids round out her family.

Author Website
Author Blog
Author Amazon Page
Author Facebook
Twitter @AnnGimpel

Friday, January 9, 2015

Vote for STRUCK in the Preditors and Editors Reader's Poll 2014

STRUCK has been nominated for the Preditors and Editors Reader's Poll 2014 in the "All Other Genre" category.

If you've read STRUCK and liked it, I would love a vote!

Voting closes January 14th

VOTE HERE







**UPDATE: Thank you to all who voted--STRUCK came in second! 

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Thoughtful Thursday-Do the Dead Affect the Living?

Photo courtesy of Matt Harris via Flickr
I've heard of ghosts affecting the living in ways that manifest as sickness, paranoia, anxiety and depression. I've even heard of ghosts affecting the living in ways that make them fight, drink and (in extreme cases) commit crimes. On the flip side of the negative, ghosts have been said to offer guidance, comfort and help people make life-saving decisions (ie. taking a different route to work--thereby avoiding an unforeseen car accident).

So...do the dead affect the living?


There are three categories of thought when it comes to this topic.

Self-fulfilling Prophesies: The negative: if you live in constant fear of ghosts=negative entities; then that fear can affect your health in many different ways.
The positive: if you have the outlook that the dead are here to help and guide us, positive influences are experienced as well.

"Out of the Blue" Feelings: "Out of the blue" feelings such as anger, depression or elation have been attributed to the influence of spirits. Sensitive people are said to be especially affected.

Spiritual Residue: While house-shopping--have you ever experienced feelings of anger or anxiety upon entering the house? If there was a great deal of fighting, physical, emotional, drug or alcohol abuse, it is said to leave behind spiritual residue. Until the "residue" is cleansed, the house will hold onto those feelings, which in turn, affect the living. (Likewise, experiencing feelings of peace and happiness would be the same kind of residue.)

What do you believe?

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

#Paranormal Wednesday-My #Giveabook Picks

I was lucky enough to receive books for Christmas. Books make excellent gifts year-round. The next holiday is Valentine's Day and personally, I'd rather a book than chocolate, flowers or any of the other "standard" gifts. Here are a few books/authors on my shelf that I've enjoyed and would recommend. 

Horror-Mythology

&
by BROM






Fantasy Horror

&
by Keith Donohue

Gothic Horror-Romance

The Haunting of Maddy Clare
&
by Simone St. James




Dark Fantasy 

by Graham Joyce







Thriller-Suspense

by S.J Watson







Fantasy-Mythology

by Robert Holdstock








Paranormal-Suspense-Dark Fantasy

by Melissa Marr








Paranormal-Suspense-Romance 

by Amanda Stevens

*Four books in this series






And don't forget mine!

Paranormal-Gothic Horror

Musa Publishing

*Indie Book of the Day 2014





Paranormal

Musa Publishing
Amazon
Barnes and Noble

*Second place in the Preditors & Editors Readers Poll 2012





Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Tangled Tuesday-Sometimes, I Make Stuff...but not these

Photo courtesy of  The Kitschy Cuocake
I bought myself a pair of Ouija earrings for Christmas. As you may or may not know, I collect Ouija things and had been scouring the internet trying to find earrings in a particular glass bead style. I discovered a shop on Etsy by the name of The Kitschy Cupcake. She makes some cute things-you should definitely check her shop out. The earrings pictured are exactly what I bought--I love them!

So, sometimes a little light goes on in my writerly head. I started to wonder how difficult it would be to make earrings like this. Turns out, it's not! I learned the style is called glass cabochon and went from there. You can find simple video tutorials, if you are so inclined.

If you don't have the time or inclination, please check out Etsy. They boast some awesome shops and most likely, you'll be getting one-of-a-kinds. My earrings were a deal at $8.00