Archive for the ‘Book Promotion’ Category

How Fast is Fast?

February 24, 2016

long-exposure-lights
 
I passed an interesting milestone recently, and it’s made me do some serious thinking.

The milestone?

The thirty-ninth anniversary of my twenty-ninth birthday.

If you’re young enough to wonder what that means (or why I would use that phrase to describe my age) … well … the 1960s was the decade of my “coming of age.”

Those of you who are close to my age should certainly remember one of the prevailing mantras of the time …

“Don’t trust anybody over thirty.”

For those of you too young to have heard it … in my day, in the age of Selective Service numbers and the military draft for the Vietnam War debacle, every teenager and early twenty-something knew it.

When I turned thirty I started using the phrase to represent my birthday, in a silly attempt to forestall time.

But this year may have been the last time I ever do that. Saying it that way sounds a whole lot older than just saying my age.

For my latest “anniversary” one of my sons sent me a nice hardcover edition of Stephen King’s excellent treatise ON WRITING and, although I’ve read my dog-eared paperback version of it many times, I sat right down and read it again.

It’s that good.

When writers are told “write what you know” … the best way to do that is exactly the way Stephen King mentions – as broadly and inclusively as possible. I’ve always tried to do that.

Take my first novel, REICHOLD STREET. I grew up in the Vietnam era, so I know a lot of the sentiment of the time. The story made readers feel the things I was talking about, and won a Readers Favorite Gold Medal.

The ghost I talked about in my short story, “Forgiven” didn’t really exist … at least I don’t think so. I’ve never seen it, anyway. But it didn’t stop me from writing about it.

I’ve never seen the devil, either, but I wrote about an encounter with the Beast in my short story, “The Devil and Charlie Barrow.”

Likewise, I’ve never met a talking rock, but I wrote about one in my flash fiction story, “Conversation With a Lonely Island God.

Those short stories must have struck a chord, because the collection that contains them, ZEBULON, was a 2013 Readers Favorite Silver Medal Winner.

I’m trying to do it again in my new book, BLOOD LAKE, due out early this summer. It’s a historical fantasy/horror story based around a real event from the early nineteenth century … the forced migration of the Cherokee Nation … known as The Trail of Tears.

I wasn’t around in 1838 (although there have been some days in the dead of winter lately when I feel like I could be that old). I was never forced at gunpoint from my home either, but I can write about it because I can understand hardship and fear.

I’m still writing what I know, because I can also read, learn and use my imagination to apply facts to new storytelling.

That’s what I hope you’re doing in your writing, too.

Now, about that “thinking” I said I was doing …

Writing can be hard work. It can take a lot of time. I don’t want to miss out on family and friends … and I won’t.

But passing the thirty-ninth anniversary of my twenty-ninth birthday makes me wonder if I have enough time to tell all the stories that are still in my head.

I’m obviously going to have to write faster.

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My books have all garnered some terrific reviews, and you can see the ones I have available by using the Amazon link below.

buy now amazon

You’re invited to visit my web site, BROKEN GLASS, or
like my Book of Face page. You can find me on Goodreads, or follow
some of my shorter ramblings on The Twitter.

Should Writers Make New Year Resolutions?

December 30, 2015

Winter-Landscape
What’s on Your Writing Horizon in 2016?

If you’ve been around here a while, you know I quit making New Year resolutions a long, long time ago. I never managed to keep them anyway (particularly those related to exercise and weight loss), despite my best intentions.

The only resolution I’ve ever come close to keeping was my promise to go on writing stories, as long as I could.

I’m happy to say I’m approaching another significant birthday number (at my age, every birthday number is significant) … and my storytelling muse is still going strong.

Thankfully, no special equipment is needed beyond the ability to use words … and a whole lot of imagination, and my long-suffering bride tells me I’m still doing well in both of those departments. She can tell just by the way I answer her when she has chores for me to do.

Imagination and Words
Powerful stuff. I continue to practice my storytelling because well-used words are like magic … and meaningful communication is an art. Besides, it makes me feel good.

About this time last year I was mired in another spell of writers’ block but, by summertime I had finished my novel STREET LIGHT. I’m delighted to say it received a 5-Star review from Readers Favorite, who said “… it was hard to put down …”

There was even more excitement in my house last month (from me, anyway), when the online review site Shelf Unbound made STREET LIGHT one of its Notable 100 Books for 2015.

I honestly thought STREET LIGHT finished the story I began years ago with my novels REICHOLD STREET and ONE WAY STREET but, you know, a funny thing happened.

A few weeks ago when I sat down to write, as I usually do every day, some of the trilogy characters appeared and decided they had more they wanted me to say.

They were so insistent I couldn’t tell them no. So, I’m about 8,700 words into a new book right now based on what they were telling me.

A book I didn’t think was going to happen.

New Work Coming
I’d be further along with it but, at the same time, I’m also more than 22,000 words into a completely new novel.

This one will have a strong touch of fantasy, but it also draws a lot on real American history. I got the idea while researching my family tree.

Look for it next summer.

Advice
For every writer and soon-to-be writer out there, there is a great piece of advice I discovered a long time ago that is still relevant, and worth passing along again.

Keep reading and keep writing … and, by all means, have fun.

I know I will. Call it a resolution, if you like. It’s one I intend to keep. Someday I may even get it right.

 

Best Wishes to Everyone for the New Year.

**********

My books have all garnered some terrific reviews, and you can see the ones I have available by using the Amazon link below.

buy now amazon

You’re invited to visit my web site, BROKEN GLASS, or like my Book of Face page. You can also follow some of my shorter ramblings on The Twitter.

The Official Book Trailer for “Street Light”

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Comments posted below will be read, greatly appreciated and perhaps even answered.

Why Writers Help Writers

December 15, 2015

fastest-writer-on-the-world
If Only My Fingers Would Move That Fast.

Writers tend to stick together. I think it’s got something to do with the craft we’ve chosen to pursue. For the most part, it tends to be a rather solitary business, and to a lot of people it looks easy.

“After all,” they say, “all you have to do is write down words.”

Sure. Don’t I wish it was that simple?

Any writer worth his salt (pardon the cliché, but at the moment I’m working on two different novels … plus, it’s the holiday season … who has time to be overly creative?) …

Most of those writers certainly know that good writing (ah, there’s the disclaimer I was looking for … good writing) doesn’t just happen. It takes extraordinary effort.

“It ain’t whatcha write, it’s the way atcha write it.”
   ~ Jack Kerouac

“It’s none of their business that you have to learn to write. Let them think you were born that way.”
   ~ Ernest Hemingway

“Making people believe the unbelievable is no trick; it’s work.”
   ~ Stephen King

* * * * * * * *

evans bissonette3

A friend of mine, Evans Bissonette (above), a fellow writer, mentioned a couple of writing groups he attends in the area that are looking for a few new members and, since they provide that writerly help I’m talking about, I told him I’d put his flyer in my next blog.

I’m not normally a fan of critique groups, but I appreciate the idea of writers helping other writers so much that I might be intrigued enough to attend a couple of these sessions myself … because I’m certain I can use the help … not just because Evans is such a nice guy.

Here’s his flyer:

sunset scribes
The email link above, which doesn’t work in the jpeg image of his flyer, is typefont@gmail.com. If you’re interested in either group (or both), be sure to contact them before the end of January.

**********

My books have all garnered some terrific reviews, and you can see the books I have available by using the Amazon link below.

buy now amazon

You’re invited to visit my web site, BROKEN GLASS, or like my Book of Face page. You can also follow my shorter ramblings on The Twitter.

Street Light was just selected by Shelf Unbound as 1 of 100 Notable Books for 2015

The Official Book Trailer for “Street Light”

**********

Comments posted below will be read, greatly appreciated and perhaps even answered.