Giveaway + Blog Tour: Dalí by E.M. Hamill


Welcome E.M. Hamill and Indigo Promotions who have combined forces to promote Dalí, a space opera romance. See the exclusive excerpt and be sure to enter to win a Ninestar Press ebook of your choice below!

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Title:  Dali
Author: E.M. Hamill
Publisher:  NineStar Press
Release Date: 8/7/17
Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 85200
Genre: science fiction, space travel, third gender, interspecies sex, kidnapping, genderfluid, space opera

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Synopsis


Dalí Tamareia has everything—a young
family and a promising career as an Ambassador in the Sol Fed Diplomatic Corps.
Dalí’s path as a peacemaker seems clear, but when their loved ones are killed
in a terrorist attack, grief sends the genderfluid changeling into a spiral of
self-destruction.

Fragile Sol Fed balances on the brink of
war with a plundering alien race. Their skills with galactic relations are
desperately needed to broker a protective alliance, but in mourning, Dalí no
longer cares, seeking oblivion at the bottom of a bottle, in the arms of a
faceless lover, or at the end of a knife.

The New Puritan Movement is rising to
power within the government, preaching strict genetic counseling and galactic
isolation to ensure survival of the endangered human race. Third gender
citizens like Dalí don’t fit the mold of this perfect plan, and the NPM will
stop at nothing to make their vision become reality. When Dalí stumbles into a
plot threatening changelings like them, a shadow organization called the
Penumbra recruits them for a rescue mission full of danger, sex, and intrigue,
giving Dalí purpose again.

Risky liaisons with a sexy, charismatic
pirate lord could be Dalí’s undoing—and the only way to prevent another deadly
act of domestic terrorism.

Exclusive Excerpt


Dalí
E.M. Hamill © 2017
All Rights Reserved



I had to pass the terminal’s arrival gate to reach my assigned quarters in the lodgings district—nothing but a tiny room with a bunk and a desk. More than I needed. I hunched my shoulders and pulled the collar of my coat up. It wasn’t enough to evade electronic eyes.
Goddamned media bots. The week after the bombing, they descended upon me every time I stepped outside my door, wanting tears, statements, something juicy to regale the holo viewers at home. Charges of destruction of the networks’ property got dropped after I was diagnosed with PTSD. But no one else could verify what I’d seen the media bot do in Luna Terminal. They were all dead.
Six months later, the things still recognized me whether I leaned toward male or female, but followed me at a safer distance. This one hovered outside the gate to spy for any late celebrities who might sneak in after the championship game began. It buzzed and floated in my wake.
“Ambassador Tamareia? Would you care to make a statement on the latest developments in the Senate regarding the Remoliad negotiations?”
“No. I’m on bereavement leave.” I didn’t turn around.
“How about a statement regarding Sol Fed’s stance on third-gender reproductive rights?”
This was a human voice and made me pause. I turned slowly. “Kiran Singh. Waiting for the next big human tragedy?”
His answering smile was brilliant and manufactured for holo audiences, white teeth blinding against dark-brown skin. Tall and slender, Singh’s features shared the same androgyny as mine, the kind of facial structure that earned a double take. His plum-colored kurta glittered with embroidery, the tips of shiny black boots visible beneath its folds. I hadn’t seen Singh since the memorial service on Luna, but I’d been barely cognizant of anything in those first days of mourning. Except when I punched Singh in the face. I remember that.
“Yours?” I jabbed a thumb at the patient, hovering bot.
“It’s my network’s.”
“Make it go away or it’s scrap.”
“Stand down, Geraldo.” The globular bot obeyed and floated back to the gate.
Singh stood in front of me. The smile faded. “You look like shit.”
“Thanks. Good to see you too.” I wanted nothing more but to go back to my room and surround myself with a cloud of illegal vaping chems. I turned away.
“Seriously, Dalí. What the hell?”
“What do you want, Kiran?” I kept walking.
“Stop and talk to me. We used to be friends at university.”
“We were never friends. Is this off the record?”
“Give me a statement against the New Puritan Movement. The NPM’s stance on our reproductive rights is nothing less than selective genocide under the guise of recovering our species. Your opinion still matters to Luna. You can help us make a difference.”
“I don’t agree with your form of journalism or your tactics. Gresh’s opinions were the ones that mattered.”
“Gresh was the judicial heart of the equal rights movement, but he wasn’t a third. You were the voice. You still could be.”
“Not for you and the Third Front.” Kiran and his activist friends played along the borders of extremism, where Gresh and I had preferred reason and legislation.
“Dalí. Listen to me.” Singh grabbed my arm. I wrenched it away but stopped walking. He moved closer. “I know the bastards got you ousted from your appointment to the Remoliad. The NPM is poison, and it’s gaining momentum in the Senate. Do you even watch the news?”
“Not if I can help it.”
“So you’ve given up.”
“What do you want from me?”
“You do know that isolationist prick Hyatt won the nomination, don’t you?”
“What nomination?”
“To be Head of the Senate, Dalí! Where have you been?”
“In hell.”
“Okay.” Singh’s voice quieted. “I understand. But you need to wake up. Our rights to be treated as the equal of every other Sol Fed citizen are being threatened. Europa introduced new bills into Senate deliberation. With Hyatt’s election, they’re going to pass and make parthenogenesis mandatory for our reproduction. Guess whose research they’re using to fuel the hysteria?”
“Dr. Atassi’s, I presume.”
“The witch has been busy. They’re going to use the law to eliminate the entire third gender.”
I blinked at Singh with disbelief, even in my still-numbed state. “That isn’t legal under galactic statutes. It’ll never pass.”
“Wake up! Sol Fed isn’t Remoliad yet, and if the NPM gets its way, we never will be.” Kiran stepped closer to me. “Changelings are disappearing from the Colonies, and nobody is investigating. They’re ignoring hate crimes. In our government’s eyes, we don’t serve any greater good to further the human race if we can’t reproduce.”
“Maybe they just wanted to disappear.”

Singh’s expression grew ugly, and his disgust pricked my empathic senses with needle-sharp derision. “You never did get it. You think more like a galactic than a human being. You were never one of us.”


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Meet the Author

E.M. Hamill is a nurse by day, sci fi and fantasy novelist by night. She lives in eastern Kansas with her family, where they fend off flying monkey attacks and prep for the zombie apocalypse. She also writes young adult material under the name Elisabeth Hamill. Her first novel, SONG MAGICK, won first place for YA fantasy in the 2014 Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction.


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Tour Schedule

8/7      MM Good Book Reviews
8/8      Love Bytes reviews    
8/8      Boy Meets Boy Reviews        
8/9      Bayou Book Junkie    
8/9      Divine Magazine       
8/10    MillsyLovesBooks      
8/10    The Novel Approach  
8/11    My Fiction Nook        
8/11    Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words           

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