Summary
A tribe haunted by the past. Lies that threaten the future. A reason to find the truth.
Savage Land is the third trilogy about prehistoric man in the series, Man. Vs. Nature. Savage Land explores how two bands of humans survived one of the worst natural disasters in Earth's history, when volcanic eruptions darkened the sky, massive tsunamis crossed the ocean in crushing waves, and raging fires burned the land. Viral tribes of Neanderthals and early man considered themselves apex predators, but that crown belonged to Nature and she was intent on washing the two-legged blight from her lands.
In Balance
of Nature, Book Three of the trilogy, Yu’ung’s Neanderthal tribe hopes to
settle at Gibraltar but instead find unexpected threats and lethal
challenges.
Follow the courageous Yu’ung, the determined Kazeb, the mystical Shanadar, and the
pawed-and-clawed Canis as they navigate a perilous world of tribal conflict,
unexplained visions, and shifting loyalties. Their journey is a testament to the
resilience and strength of true leadership in a sweeping saga that ultimately
leads to who we are today.
Balance of Nature trailer: https://youtu.be/b6wG54fV1_0?si=qyi5V6d-DI8o6EuD
The area we now call Gibraltar
Shouts woke the brothers from their sleep.
“A boat—on the Endless Sea! Headed toward us!”
At night? How is that possible? But Kazeb didn’t ask because it didn’t matter. What mattered was that it was there.
He and Turk had waited long for this news, Kazeb with excitement, Turk with dread. Without discussion, they raced across the grassland, leapt over crevices, the width familiar even in the dark, and then scrambled up Big Rock’s knobby flank, grabbing tiny ledges with their fingers and toes with a speed mountain goats would envy. The behemoth’s height dwarfed all hills on the peninsula save the distant, towering range that separated it from others.
The brothers summited the crest and crouched behind a thick patch of scrub at the cliff’s edge. The brisk breeze atop the promontory whipped Kazeb’s hair around. He clenched his fists, gritted his teeth so tightly he should have broken a tooth, and waited for the vague elongated shadow on the water’s inky surface to reveal its intentions.
Is it them? He glanced at his brother’s square face. Turk thinks it is.
Sun’s steady arrival slowly erased the dark, made the sea shimmer in shades of blue as waves crashed against the coastline. Just below the surface, under the foam, were sharp shoals. Any boat must tediously avoid these, better yet, continue down the shore where there was no risk, unless they knew of the sole safe mooring used by natives and those they shared the location with, like they did with the Tall Ones from long ago.
Turk hissed, “It’s them, Liis.”
The Clan called him Liis, but he preferred “Kazeb,” the name awarded him when he agreed to guide the Tall One Fierce to the sea’s end. That was far beyond anywhere he had ever traveled, but Fierce claimed Kazeb’s knowledge of the area was invaluable.
“We can’t tell who is onboard, Turk,” he said, though who else knew of the hidden cove?
Kazeb rose and scanned a full circle, hoping whoever came on that craft wasn’t looking up here.
“What are you doing, Liis?”
“I need to see if they’re alone, or do more come from other directions.”
Flat grassland bordered one flank of the promontory, water the rest. Sun’s earliest rays colored the sky in pinks and blues. Birds plummeted into the crystalline water. Fish with no desire to be food dove. Farther away, pigs rooted through the stubble and a herd of deer feasted on ever-abundant fresh young shoots, protected by the range of mountains from unexpected predators.
When we finish, that’s where we will go.
He turned back to the shoreless sea. Visible on clear days, a faint brown outline shadowed the horizon, what the Tall One Fierce had called home.
Turk said, “They knew enough to stay in the calm waters when darkness arrived, to avoid the underwater shoals.”
Sun broke above the horizon, telling the boat it was safe to continue. The craft nimbly skirted the shoals, aiming for the spot a similar vessel had beached long ago. Kazeb gripped his spear tighter. Fierce had promised to return once his exploration was completed. Kazeb trusted his word, but the more time passed, the more he wondered if he had been lied to.
“Liis!” Turk interrupted his reverie. “There is another boat, behind the first!”
Now Kazeb saw it. Both prows plowed through the water, their shapes clear in the sunlight. Shivers ran through Kazeb.
These aren’t like Fierce’s craft … but we have seen no one from that direction either by sea or foot.
Kazeb studied the gaggle of Uprights, their bold stripes, the confident stance of the slender male in the bow of the front boat. All fit his recollections of the Tall One band. His gaze drifted to the back boat, a shorter stockier figure at the prow.
Is he Fierce’s guide? My replacement? But why would he be behind Fierce?
Legs wide for balance, sunlight glinting off flame-red hair, the sturdy figure scanned the Big Rock. To Kazeb’s surprise, his gaze paused at the clump of brush where the brothers hid. He couldn’t see them, of course. Both had mudded their skin and squinted to keep Sun’s glare off their eyes. Still, the figure shouted to One-who-might-be-Fierce and pointed.
Turk gurgled, “Are they looking for us? But why come back here, considering what they did?”
“We don’t know for sure—”
“Who else would it be?” Turk’s voice a strangled yelp.
They argued this question often. The Clan Healer originally thought the deadly illness had been caused by insects or a toxin in the air, but before he died, he admitted an individual could have poisoned the members’ food and water. Who could say?
Kazeb didn’t bother to reply, busy admiring the vessel’s sleek profile, so unlike the Clan’s flatter, smaller ones. The sailors effortlessly beached it at the base of the monstrous rock where the brothers hid.
Voice fiery, Turk hissed, “Our destiny has arrived, why we survive and the rest died.”
Book information:
Print, digital, audio soon available: http://a-fwd.com/asin=B0G45MFBWW
Genre: Prehistoric fiction
Editor: Anneli Purchase
Author bio:
Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular prehistoric fiction saga, Man vs. Nature which explores seminal events in man’s evolution one trilogy at a time. She is also author of the Rowe-Delamagente thrillers and Building a Midshipman , the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. Her non-fiction includes 100+ books on tech into education, and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics.
Social Media contacts:
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Jacqui-Murray/e/B002E78CQQ/
Blog: https://worddreams.wordpress.com
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/askatechteacher
X: http://twitter.com/worddreams
Website: https://jacquimurray.net
Jacqui has been kind enough to sharing marketing ideas with us:
34+ Ways to Market Your Book
At a recent #IWSG confab, I was whining to online friends about the difficulty of marketing my books. I shared a list of recent efforts I’d made to market both my fiction and non-fiction, to no avail. Ideas included:
· all sorts of SEO on the website to increase traffic, both paid and free
· a ridiculous amount of money spent on Google’s Adwords
· Amazon’s version of Adwords
· Months spent uploading to and fine-tuning Google Play–I thought it would easily compete with Amazon
· a wide variety of ‘list your books for free on our marketplace’ sort of sites
· all sorts of changes to my social media platforms
I got a long list of great comments, curated them, and started saving other ideas fellow writers had for promoting their work. Often, colleagues said it worked well, but they also noted efforts that got them nowhere except a decrease in their bank account.
Here’s the list. Out of these 34+, I hope a few seem interesting!
|
Idea |
How |
Website |
Free/Fee |
|
Amazon KDP |
readers pay monthly fee; free to you |
Amazon |
FREE |
|
Author page |
set up an info page with details about your background, books, more |
Goodreads, Amazon, your blog, more |
FREE |
|
Blog Tour |
Arrange a series of blogs to host your book |
blogs |
FREE |
|
Bookmarks |
print bookmarks to give away as promotional pieces |
from Vista Printing, Canva, others |
FEE |
|
Book Promos |
work with online sites to share your book info |
BookBub; Rosies |
FEE |
|
Book Signings |
Arrange with local libraries or clubs; bring books to sell |
NA |
FREE |
|
Brochures |
create digital and print brochures to promote books |
Canva, LucidPress, Publisher |
FEE |
|
Contests |
run a contest where readers share their email to win free books |
on your blog, SM, website |
FREE/FEE |
|
Cover Reveal |
share cover for an upcoming book or recovered older book |
on blogs, SM |
FREE |
|
Email lists |
gather email list of interested readers |
platform like MailChimp, AWeber |
FEE |
|
Forms |
sign up form for street team help, newsletter, and more |
Google Forms; more |
FREE |
|
Give-aways |
Online or at bazaars |
NA |
FREE |
|
Guest Posts |
Appear on blogs, SM of literary bloggers |
usually blogs; could be websites |
FREE |
|
Influencers |
hire a SM personality to spread the word about your books on places like BookTok |
find them online |
FEE |
|
Interviews |
arrange with bloggers, vloggers, podcasters, similar |
blogs, podcasts, YT, Rumble, more |
FREE |
|
Kindle |
Sell digital/print/audio books |
Amazon |
FREE |
|
Magazine |
create a multipage magazine about your books |
Publisher; Canva, others |
FREE/FEE |
|
Meet the Author |
book signings, online events |
libraries, SM |
FREE |
|
Newsletter |
collect emails; send updates on your writing |
MailChimp; AWeber, more |
FEE |
|
Polls |
post poll on interesting topic to collect emails |
Google Forms, blog, more |
FREE |
|
Post free chapters |
publish a free chapter of your book to generate interest |
to blogs, SM, website, more |
FREE |
|
Postcards |
print info on one side, add personal note to the other side |
useful for in-person events |
FEE |
|
PR expert |
hire an expert in the writing field to help with marketing |
find these online or word of mouth |
FEE |
|
Radio shows |
guest interview on recent books or writerly topics |
eradio, podcasts |
FREE |
|
Social Media |
ads on FB, X, other SM platforms |
any SM–FB, X, Instagram, etc. |
FEE |
|
Teasers |
add teaser to blog posts, email, any place you write about writing |
blogs, SM, newsletters |
FREE |
|
Trailer |
create a book video trailer to build excitement for your book |
Canva, PowerPoint |
FREE |
|
Whiteboard |
show how to write a story by sketching on a virtual whiteboard; individual or collaborative |
AWW, more |
FREE |
|
Workshops |
run topical workshops on your area of expertise |
through local clubs |
FREE to you |
|
Word-of-mouth |
chatter among readers/writers to spread the word for each other |
NA |
FREE |
|
YouTube channel |
Videos–long or short form–to promote your books |
YT, Vimeo |
FREE |
Any ideas to add? Post them in the comments.
READ MY 5 ⭐REVIEW of BALANCE OF NATURE HERE


39 comments:
Another excellent post in the launch series Sandra and Jacqui and excellent suggestions with regard to book promotion...I had an email the other day from a prolific author asking why I felt he didn't receive many reviews for his books or shares on social media... I took a look at his various accounts and the one thing that stuck out was he didn't review other author's books nor did he promote them on his social media. It seemed he didn't acknowledge the reviews he did receive on Goodreads either.. I remember receiving a thank you from Wilbur Smith's wife for a review I posted on my blog, and the usual places including Facebook. At that time he was close to the end of his life but he still considered it the right thing to respond. I was a life long fan anyway but if that had been the first book I had read of his... I would certainly have read and reviewed more. Sorry to be a bit long-winded.. ♥
Big congratulations to Jacqui!
Thanks for giving us an overview of Jackie's book!
Terrific suggestions on how to market books. Thanks, Sandra for hosting Jacqui today. Best wishes, Jacqui.
I wonder when those in our prehistory discovered boating? Thanks for hosting Jacqui. Sandra, with your interest in Western history, I just posted a blog about my visits to Bodie.
Enjoyed this post for the book tour for Balance of Nature and the “34 Ways to Market Your Book” was helpful. Also, I recall an earlier Murray post reviewing a Cox western and it reminded me to try and read a book from Cox this year!
a) Balance of Nature is a great book, b) thank you for all the promotion tips, Jacqui! 🙂
Sounds good
Thank you so much for hosting me, Sandra! I'm looking forward to chatting with your efriends.
Thank you for hosting Jacqui; she's one of our favorite writers and hope this book tour is very successful for her.
Still waiting to meet that author who says, "Writing? Meh. It's this marketing stuff I live for!"
Hi Sallly, That was lovely that Wilbur Smith's wife responded. And you are excellent at all of the above. Jacqui's launched another wonderful book and her suggestions on promo are much appreciated.
@Sally What a great point about the TY. I too have received several TYs from prominent authors (Ben Coes comes to mind) who understood the importance of building community. I love Wilbur Smith's books, read almost all of them
@Alex--Thank you! I feel well ready for the next endeavor thanks to Sandra et al
@Jeanie I appreciate your visit. I peeked in on your blog--Cork Poppers!? That's an interesting event. And it appears we share similar reading tastes (Ann Cleeves is a favorite of mine, too).
@John Thanks for following along. I know those two furballs keep you busy!
@Jeff Boating is a subject I researched quite a bit more than I expected. I would have said 10-20,000 ya is when it started. Turns out the Philippino balangai boats were way ahead of that--40,000 ya to manage their island habitat. Who knew?
@Yvette You won't be sorry if you read any of Sandra's books, especially the Westerns. She has tough characters with morals that don't quit. My kind of folk!
@Christine Thanks for visiting!
@Thanks for visiting, Monika; love the furball stories on your blog!
@Pete Ha! Said no one ever!
Lol! I'd like to find and partner with that person.
Thanks for Jacqui's well wishes, Alex. It's another winner.
It was my reading pleasure, Jeanie:)
Aren't those great suggestions, John? Thanks so much for stopping by and supporting Jacqui.
Hey Jeff, I just visited your blog. Fascinating info. Thanks for sharing. One of my characters, in my latest, is named Bodie:) I wasn't able to comment, probably on my end. Thanks so much for stopping by and supporting Jacqui.
Great post and fantastic read, Jacqui! Loved rhe marketing g tips, there is always more we can do :) Thanks for hosting Sandra. Xo
Thank you, Priorhouse:) How kind. And thanks so much for stopping by and supporting Jacqui. We both appreciate it:)
@Denise It's amazing how many avenues we-all attempt to get the good word out.
A big thanks to Jacqui for compiling the marketing suggestions. I do about half of them, and I'm happy with that. Sharing!
Gracias por la reseña. Te mando un beso
Hi Priscilla, So glad you stopped by to support Jacqui. Totally agree about Balance of Nature being a great book and the promotion tips.
It is for sure, Christine. Jacqui does a wonderful job of blending fiction and prehistory.
My reading pleasure, Jacqui:)
Hosting Jacqui is a pleasure. She's one of my favorites too:) Thanks so much for stopping by and supporting her.
LOL
Thankee, Jacqui:)
My reading pleasure. Jacqui's posts are always informative, aren't they, Denise? xo
They were helpful, weren't they, Liz? Thanks for sharing.
My reading pleasure, JP. Sending you hugs
Happy Valentines Day and Happy Weekend.
All the best Jan
Thanks, Jan. Hope yours was and is:)
It's wonderful to catch a bit of Jacqui's tour here, Sandra. This book was a wonderful conclusion to the trilogy, and I look forward to see what Jacqui has coming up next! Have a great day and Happy Reading.
Congratulations, Jacqui! I love your book launch and this is a very nice post about your book. I can't wait to read it!
Thank you, Kymber! I am happy how it all worked out. I do hope you're feeling well. You are always on my mind.
I'm so happy to see Jacqui's book doing so well, Sandra. Thanks for spreading the news! xx
@Cindy Thanks for dropping by. This is always a fun stop.
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