We're now appearing on Linda's WordPress blog at: http://lindafaulkner.com/blog. See you there!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Author Linda Faulkner interviewed on KECI TV's Montana Today Show
Author Linda Faulkner appeared on KECI TV Friday morning on the Montana Today Show.
Host Monte Turner interviewed Linda about her newest book, Taking the Mystery Out of Business: 9 Fundamentals for Professional Success, which was released earlier this month.
To view the 3-minute interview, click here: http://bit.ly/e4uO4L
To visit Faulkner's blog for the book, which is the first in a series of business books, visit http://www.takingthemysteryout.blogspot.com/. In addition to all sorts of business advice, you'll be able to access complimentary articles and business tips.
Faulkner's non-fiction website is http://www.lindafaulkner.com/ and her mystery website is http://www.lindamfaulkner.com/. Her mystery Second Time Around was a 2010 EPIC Award nominee for Besty Mystery Suspense Fiction.
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Sunday, January 16, 2011
Thoughts from an Indie Editor
Really great post on Write to Done by guest blogger, Victoria Mason: http://writetodone.com/2011/01/11/the-7-secrets-of-an-indie-editor/
STANLEY MOVES IN by Jack Rosse
When you think of fairies, the name Stanley doesn't automatically come to mind. Come to think of it, grumpy doesn't come to mind when you think about fairies, either.
All that aside, Jack Rosse (also known as crime writer Bill Kirton) has crafted a children's story in the same fashion as the stories he's been telling his grandkids for years. Stanley lives in a wash basin in Jack's bathroom...
Wait! Why don't I let Stanley tell his own story?
Here's the book trailer, narrated by none other than Stanley himself: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Ci7qZhzKA90#!
You can find Stanley Moves In on Amazon and you can find the author's website here: http://www.bill-kirton.co.uk/
All that aside, Jack Rosse (also known as crime writer Bill Kirton) has crafted a children's story in the same fashion as the stories he's been telling his grandkids for years. Stanley lives in a wash basin in Jack's bathroom...
Wait! Why don't I let Stanley tell his own story?
Here's the book trailer, narrated by none other than Stanley himself: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Ci7qZhzKA90#!
You can find Stanley Moves In on Amazon and you can find the author's website here: http://www.bill-kirton.co.uk/
Labels:
Bill Kirton,
children's books,
fairies,
Jack Rosse,
Stanley Moves In
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Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Writer's Digest - a terrific writer's resource
I read every issue of Writer's Digest from cover to cover the very same day I receive it.
Each month, the magazine has a theme and even if I'm not interested in a particular month's theme (like when it was about writing memoirs), I never walk away from the issue disappointed. Doesn't matter what you write--fiction, nonfiction, magazine, technical tomes, screenplays--you'll find something helpful, informative, and entertaining.
The theme of the February 2011 issue is "Write Better" and includes the following articles:
- How to Hook Readers With Just One Line
- 5 Essentials for an Unforgettable Plot
- The Surprising Key to Compelling Nonfiction
- Secrets for Writing Stories Kids & Teens Will Love
- Write Better
- 25 Ways to Improve Your Writing in 30 Minutes a Day
My favorite article was the 5 Essentials for an Unforgettable Plot. Author Steven James explains that you only need 5 things to create a spectacular story - and NONE of them is an outline. Music to my ears...
If you subscribe to Writer's Digest's free e-letter, you'll be able to download the 12th annual Best 101 Websites for Writers. Here are some of the pages you'll find on the WD website:- Get Published,
- Write Better (lots more articles than contained in just the Feb 2011 issue),
- Get Creative,
- Conferences and Events,
- Blogs,
- Hot Markets (the top 100 markets for magazine and book writers),
- Online Workshops, and
- Services for Writers.
Feel free to share an writer's resources you can't live without.
Labels:
craft tips,
research,
Writer's Digest,
writer's resources
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Sunday, January 9, 2011
What's Your Advice About How to Find an Agent?
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One online site I've heard of is Agent Query. By inserting certain criteria into its search engine, a writer can narrow a search by the genre of fiction or nonfiction he or see writes. The site also contains a great deal of information about literary agents, how to submit to them, how to write a query, and a truckload of other information.
Literary Marketplace, both online and in print, also contains similar information.
But what about some real, live input from you writers out there who HAVE agents?
Labels:
finding an agent,
literary agents
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Saturday, January 8, 2011
Linda Faulkner interviewed on Writer's in Business
Labels:
interview,
Linda Faulkner,
Writers in Business
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Friday, January 7, 2011
Author Mike Angley on U.S. Air Force VOICES
Mike Angley, award-winning author of the Child Finder trilogy, was recently spotlighted on TogetherWeServed.com in U.S. Air Force VOICES.
Mike writes thrillers with a paranormal twist. His protagonist is a man whose deep faith guides him through his page-turning perils. The Child Finder Trilogy is a hot thriller series with a light, somewhat edgy spiritual theme…it is not typical Christian fiction. But fans of that genre as well as suspense and thriller enthusiasts thoroughly enjoy it!
You can learn more about Mike and his writing by visiting him at http://www.mikeangley.com/.
Labels:
Child Finder,
medical thriller,
Mike Angley,
Paranormal,
TogetherWeServed.com,
U.S. Air Force
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Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Book Review: GHOSTING by David Poyer
Ghosting, a November 2010 release from St. Martin's Press, is the most gripping novel I've read in a long time. I stayed up until the wee hours of the morning reading it--I simply couldn't put it down.
Dr. Jack Scales, a prominent neurosurgeon, convinces his reluctant family to sail to Bermuda aboard his brand new yacht, Slow Dance, for an overdue family holiday. Unfortunately, Jack's confidence as a sailor isn't matched by his skills at seamanship. In addition, his wife, Arlen, harbors great resentment ... and a secret; his twenty year-old son, Ric, battles the Voices he hears and a schizoaffective disorder; and his teenage daughter, Haley, who is a champion swimmer, misses her boyfriend and her swimming.
The family copes with emotional struggles, life-threatening storms, lightning strikes, and their rescue of a castaway who ultimately brings unspeakable violence to Slow Dance. As the members of the Scales family fight among themselves--and against Mother Nature and the band of men brought aboard by the castaway--they find the internal strength and fortitude to do whatever it takes to survive.
Although I've never been aboard a yacht and was unfamiliar with some of the terms and language used, my lack of knowledge and sailing experience did not in any way detract from my enormous enjoyment of this book. Poyer paints vivid word pictures with his narrative, sucking the reader right into the Slow Dance and the awesome majesty of the open Atlantic Ocean. His characterization is superb: each member of the Scales family is both heroic and flawed; the castaway and his band of unspeakably vile cohorts are realistic and well-motivated; other secondary characters are used perfectly to enhance the story and play counterpoint to each member of the Scales family.
One technique Poyer used throughout the book that I found supremely effective was to have Jack Scales view the other characters through his filter as a medical professional. Jack noticed body language and interpreted it within a medical framework to help himself, and the reader, understand the true nature of the other characters: his mentally ill son, his troubled wife, his emotionally volatile teenage; and the sociopathic castaway.
I enthusiastically recommend that you add Ghosting to your To Be Read List. I will definitely be picking up some of this other books, which number over a dozen.
Ghosting, St. Martin's Press
Release Date: November 9, 2010
Hardcover, $24.99
ISBN 978-0-312-61302-0
Publicist: rachel.ekstrom@stmartins.com
http://www.poyer.com/
Dr. Jack Scales, a prominent neurosurgeon, convinces his reluctant family to sail to Bermuda aboard his brand new yacht, Slow Dance, for an overdue family holiday. Unfortunately, Jack's confidence as a sailor isn't matched by his skills at seamanship. In addition, his wife, Arlen, harbors great resentment ... and a secret; his twenty year-old son, Ric, battles the Voices he hears and a schizoaffective disorder; and his teenage daughter, Haley, who is a champion swimmer, misses her boyfriend and her swimming.
The family copes with emotional struggles, life-threatening storms, lightning strikes, and their rescue of a castaway who ultimately brings unspeakable violence to Slow Dance. As the members of the Scales family fight among themselves--and against Mother Nature and the band of men brought aboard by the castaway--they find the internal strength and fortitude to do whatever it takes to survive.
Although I've never been aboard a yacht and was unfamiliar with some of the terms and language used, my lack of knowledge and sailing experience did not in any way detract from my enormous enjoyment of this book. Poyer paints vivid word pictures with his narrative, sucking the reader right into the Slow Dance and the awesome majesty of the open Atlantic Ocean. His characterization is superb: each member of the Scales family is both heroic and flawed; the castaway and his band of unspeakably vile cohorts are realistic and well-motivated; other secondary characters are used perfectly to enhance the story and play counterpoint to each member of the Scales family.
One technique Poyer used throughout the book that I found supremely effective was to have Jack Scales view the other characters through his filter as a medical professional. Jack noticed body language and interpreted it within a medical framework to help himself, and the reader, understand the true nature of the other characters: his mentally ill son, his troubled wife, his emotionally volatile teenage; and the sociopathic castaway.
I enthusiastically recommend that you add Ghosting to your To Be Read List. I will definitely be picking up some of this other books, which number over a dozen.
Ghosting, St. Martin's Press
Release Date: November 9, 2010
Hardcover, $24.99
ISBN 978-0-312-61302-0
Publicist: rachel.ekstrom@stmartins.com
http://www.poyer.com/
Labels:
book review,
David Poyer,
Ghosting,
medical thriller,
nautical novels
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Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Have You Considered a Small Publisher?
Many writers are finding truly wonderful homes at small publishers.
I ran across this article recently and, if you've been finding yourself rejected by the big boys (and girls) in New York, you should investigate your other options.
Victoria Allman's post on Write on the Water shares her viewpoints of selling and publishing her first two books in partnership with a small publisher, NorLights Press.
I ran across this article recently and, if you've been finding yourself rejected by the big boys (and girls) in New York, you should investigate your other options.
Victoria Allman's post on Write on the Water shares her viewpoints of selling and publishing her first two books in partnership with a small publisher, NorLights Press.
Labels:
NorLights Press,
small publishers
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