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THE DISCOUNTS
Use discount code EZINE1021 for 10% off your next order.
REVIEW ROUND UP
Congratulations to all our authors on your great reviews this month!
Bonfire Bright (Elvenswood Tales 3) by Alexa Piper
https://www.changelingpress.com/bonfire-bright-elvenswood-tales-3-b-3189
"…smokin' hot sex scenes! These three are lusty to the max, and hot for each other--which manifests itself in frequent steamy encounters that will convince you that maybe, just maybe, it really IS possible for a triad to be successful. Now where can I find me a vampire and elf to make MY dreams come true?"
-- 4 Stars from Fiona, The TBR Pile
http://thetbrpile.weebly.com/reviews/review-bonfire-bright-by-alexa-piper
Read more...
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NEW ADULT
When Zoe Xavier goes to the Lear family to help her brother, she finds more trouble with Quint Lear.
Held prisoner in a high tower, he is invisible, yet he awakens her sensuality and captures her heart...
Death and destruction stalk Jason and Aaron. Will their love give them the strength to persevere?
USELESS INFORMATION
How did the custom of trick-or-treating begin?
There are a number of plausible theories about the origin of trick-or-treating. Most date back to around 800 B.C. when Britain was occupied by the Celts. At the end of summer, near our month
of October, the Celts held a festival called Samhain, meaning "summers end." To celebrate the festival, the Celts gave food offerings to the Gods. Younger Celts would ask residents for gifts of kindling to keep the Samhain bonfire burning throughout the festival.
Other authorities believe that in 370 B.C. the Celts,
who were a farming people, had a "night of mischief"
around the time of the Samhain festival. During that
night, after a rendezvous at some predetermined spot,
groups of boys would rush toward farmhouses, racing
to see who would be first to open the kitchen door latch.
The people in the house would hand them white bread
or money as a levy through half-opened doors.
Another theory is that during medieval times costumed
celebrants would sing and dance as they paraded through
the streets, stopping at each house to ask for drink and
food to reward them for their performance.
Whether the custom trick-or-treating originated in 800
B.C. or in medieval times, it is certainly an ancient custom
and one that shows no sign of disappearing today.
Borrowed by Daheap from Do Fish Drink Water?; Bill McClain
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