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Monday 31 January 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: Jabber


Jabber: -  verb talk indistinctly and quickly; chatter, prattle, gabble; make inarticulate sounds like a monkey or a bird, etc: noun- the act of talking gibberish.

'The curate would often jabber at his congregation, prattling on at length in a way that made his listeners wish they'd never bothered to attend his services.'

'I do wish you wouldn't jabber so, Mary; it makes it very difficult for me to concentrate on your much prettier and quieter sister.
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Sunday 30 January 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: I

Capital script letter IImage via Wikipedia
I: noun - 9th letter of the alphabet, roman numeral for 1, I-beam an I-shaped girder, with a shape like the capital letter; personal pronoun - used by a speaker or writer to refer to himself as the subject.

'When I speak on a divisive subject, I always intend to create a fuss amongst my listeners and incite them to discussion.' 

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Saturday 29 January 2011

Website Updated with more Information and Links

I've added a few more links to websites of interest to readers and writers. There's a review of Ten Tales for Tomorrow. And I've continued the process of tidying the site.
Come in, wander around and please, feel free to wander about and jump wherever the many links take you.

Stuart's Word Spot: Haar

Grace Horsely Darling famed for her part in th...Image via Wikipedia
Haar: noun - (Scottish & Northern English). mist or fog; especially a cold fog off the sea

'Grace Darling begged her father not to brave the treacherous seas when a haar obscured the stricken vessel, fearing he would be unable to find his way back to land after attempting the rescue.'

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Friday 28 January 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: Gab


Gab: noun – mouth (Scottish, as 'gob'), a notch or hook in a lever or rod that engages with a spindle or pin.
verb – to chatter, talk in a glib manner, prattle.

'The spindle latched onto the gab, causing it to move a short distance and impress the stamp on its end into the soft metal plate passing beneath.'  

'In a fit of anxiety, Pamela would gab incessantly on nothing at all to anyone who would give her the time of day.'

Thursday 27 January 2011

Author Interview with Wayne Zurl

Author of A NEW PROSPECT and eight other Sam Jenkins mysteries, Wayne Zurl was born shortly after World War Two in Brooklyn, New York. Although he never wanted to leave a community with such an efficient trolley system, he had little say in his parents’ decision to pick up and move to Long Island where he grew up.
Like most American males of the baby-boomer generation, he spent his adolescence wanting to be a cowboy, soldier, or policeman. All that was, of course, based on movies and later television. The Vietnam War accounted for his time as a soldier. After returning to the US and separating from active duty, the New York State Employment Service told him he possessed no marketable civilian skills. So, he became a cop. That was as close to military life as he could find. Now that he's retired from the police service, he still likes the cowboy idea.
He lives in the picturesque foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains with his wife, Barbara.


Tell us about A New Prospect in a few sentences.

A NEW PROSPECT follows Sam Jenkins, a retired New York detective, who takes the job of police chief in the fictional Smoky Mountain city of Prospect, Tennessee. Sam finds a lot on his plate to contend with: Several years of relative boredom after moving to southern Appalachia, a mid-life crisis, and on his first weekend on duty, a grisly murder at the annual British car show.

How did you come to write this particular book?

After I read Robert B. Parker’s first Jesse Stone novel—Stone is an ex-Los Angeles detective who became chief in a small Massachusetts town—I bundled up more than my share of hubris and said, “If he can do it, so can I. I used to be a cop and he wasn’t.”
I wanted to use a former New York detective and put him in Tennessee. So, I write about what I know. All the procedures, some of the storylines, and my protagonist’s personality come from my experience as a cop on Long Island.

If you have a favourite character in your novel, why that particular one?

Police Officer Bettye Lambert has a lot going against her. Her first husband, a Prospect police officer was killed by a drunk driver. To provide for her two young daughters, Bettye asked to take his spot as a cop in Prospect. (The local civil service system is not terribly formal and something like that could easily be accomplished.) But things haven’t always been easy for a female officer in that traditionally male occupation. Bettye, however, is a sharp piece of work and the new chief, my main character, Sam Jenkins, recognizes this. Being a beautiful forty-two-year-old blonde doesn’t hurt either.

Where and when is your novel set and why did you make these specific choices?

The story begins in July 2006. I needed to set a time when Vietnam veteran, Jenkins, could be old enough to have all his prior experiences, be fully involved in his mid-life crisis, and battle a mild case of post traumatic stress from his time in the war and twenty years with a busy police department. I use the backdrop of the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee because the area is beautiful and unique and it enables me to actually cast the locale as a character, much as Raymond Chandler did using Los Angeles as a central character in his Philip Marlowe novels and stories.

How can people buy your books?

A NEW PROSPECT will be available from the publisher, Black Rose Writing, at www.blackrosewritingbooks.com or, in the US, from all the usual storefront bookshops and worldwide from Amazon and the other dot-com sellers.
My earlier Sam Jenkins books were produced as audio books and published in various eBook formats by Mind Wings Audio. All those are shown at www.mindwingsaudio.com.
I’ve recently signed a contract to publish a novelette-length eBook with Echelon Press some time in 2011. Their web address is: www.echelonpress.com.

What qualities make a successful writer?

Logistically, I think tenacity is most important. It will provide the discipline necessary to set a writing schedule, the ability to mentally handle major rewrites if necessary, and persistence to pursue an agent or publisher.
You also need either a good memory to draw material from personal experiences or a great imagination to write fiction.
Possessing a thick skin is necessary to handle criticism and rejection, both things being inevitable.

How do you set about writing a piece?

I get an idea based on a personal experience. I think of how to transplant it from New York to Tennessee and then I wake up at 3 a.m. many times with assorted ideas of how to proceed. Next, I sit down with a lined pad and pen and go at it. I usually don’t outline anything first. That seems too much like work. But when a timeline is crucial, I’ll go back and list the days and events to maintain continuity.


Beginning writers make many mistakes; what do you think is the most harmful?

I made two big mistakes. I had no formal training at fiction since school and I started my first novel in a style more suited to the 1980s than the 21st century. I’d say get the basics down with competent supervision and look for what the publishing industry wants to see today and tomorrow, not yesterday. I had to jump through hoops to reconstruct what I wanted to say.

To what extent are grammar and spelling important to a writer?

Spelling is always important. It goes to your credibility as a writer. But with computerized spell-check, that’s taken care of for you.  Good grammar in narrative is essential. Editors don’t want to spend valuable time correcting your mistakes when that’s your responsibility. And they shouldn’t. Good grammar is a requisite for a serious writer—even for someone writing for other than publication. I’ve always told police officers that. Many times someone will read what you write before ever meeting you in person. Your written word is how they judge you. Make it perfect and take advantage of the halo effect.
The dialogue we write is a different story. Few people speak with perfect grammar. We get latitude there. Dialogue/dialects should be written as we hear them.

How much revision of your MS do you do before you send it off?

Revision? LOTS. After learning a vast amount of new things about writing over the last four years, I’m doing better off the blocks than I had been, but I still workshop a piece to get input from other good writers. Then I go over it countless times until I like the cadence of the voice and it’s as nit free as I can make it.

To what extent do you think genre is useful in the publishing world?

Marketing a book to agents or publishers by genre can be difficult and the industry is unforgiving if you choose the wrong genre to start. I began pushing A NEW PROSPECT as a mystery and found no one interested. After discussing it with an editor I hired to evaluate my manuscript, we decided it didn’t exactly fit the current template of a murder mystery. So, I switched to a police procedural/detective story. I didn’t sell it overnight, but I think the tactic was helpful. I certainly didn’t mind calling a dog a cat if it got me the results I wanted.

How do you know where to begin any given story?

Now that my main character is totally seated in his job as police chief, I dive right in using the writer’s maxim of “arrive late/leave early.” I try to minimize any set up. Sometimes I begin with the police standing over a body. Real police work usually starts with a cup of coffee and a doughnut, but that’s not what a reader wants. Back-story needs to be filtered in somewhere after chapter 3.
Richard Peck, a writer who won Newberry and Edgar awards, told me, “Finish your book and then throw out the first chapter. Read it again and cut out at least 10%.” I guess he likes the idea of diving right in, too.

What sort of displacement activities keep you from actually writing?

A big displacement for me is sleep. I’m serious about waking up at 3:30 with what I think is a great idea. Realistically, it’s not easy to get up, start jotting down notes, and then go back to sleep. I never could.
Then all the daily interruptions hurt: A minor emergency that needs attention, pesky things like meal preparation when I’m on a roll, and all the rest of Life’s inconveniences.

Do you have support, either from family and friends or a writing group?

My wife is great about my writing. She helps a lot. But I know when I must attend to the basic necessities and interrupt my story. I belong to an on-line writer’s workshop which I like. Writing in the mystery/crime genre limits the number of interested readers/reviewers I get. We’re almost the stepchildren of the workshop compared to those who write literary or commercial fiction. But I’ve got a bunch of comrades. We do a pretty good job of helping each other. Multiple heads are not only better than one, they’re essential.

Is presentation of the MS as important as most agents and publishers suggest?

I’d never argue against presentation of a pristine manuscript. Go back to what I said about good grammar. A clean MS is the only way an agent or editor can judge you if you’ve never met. Remember that halo effect. It’s free. Take advantage of it.
I’m not totally keen on the one page query letter as being fair to the writer. Agents and acquisitions people love them because they’d like us to think they are always overworked. However, I’ve noticed some agents tending daily and seemingly endless blogs that have few if any responses or comments from readers. Perhaps a class in time priority should be taught in Agent’s School.

How long does it normally take you to write a piece?

One of my 10,000 word novelettes may take me two days for a first fairly polished draft. Then a chapter or section a day on the workshop, and a day or two to get it into super shape. A NEW PROSPECT is 81,000 words. I wrote it in about two months, but spent a LONG time learning from it and finalizing it. My second full-length novel went much quicker. I’m ready to begin the final stage with that one now.

Who or what inspires you?

Some of the damnedest things remind me of something and create the inspiration to build a story from an old remembered incident. I’ve been in the middle of a novel and get an unexplained inspiration to go write a short novelette. I usually go with the inspiration. If I don’t, what I consider good lines may be lost forever.
Recently, my workshop held a contest to write a droubble (exactly 200 words) about time travel back to a famous event. That inspired me because I’ve always wanted to write a western. But I doubt I could scribble out a Christmas card salutation in only 200 words. So, I just went with the idea and finished up with 2,600 words. The short story won’t go into the contest, but it received good reviews and I love it.

If there’s a single aspect to writing that really frustrates you, what is it?

From the beginning of my fiction writing career, I’ve tried to not duplicate, but sometimes emulate the styles of my favorite authors. In doing so, I may write in a manner not generally accepted from newer writers.
Occasionally, I’d be told, “You can’t do that.”
“Oh, really?” says I. “I saw (insert name: Robert B. Parker, Joseph Wambaugh, Nelson DeMille, whomever) do that.”
“Oh, yeah,” says they. “You’re not (reinsert chosen name).”
I hate double standards in anything. I accept it, but . . .

Is there any aspect of writing that you really enjoy?

I like creating things that please me. I’ve always done something artistic or crafty as a creative outlet. Stacking up a pile of completed manuscripts is easier than finding space to store a bunch of model airplanes or oil paintings. When I create a story I consider artwork, I’m pleased no end.

Do you think writing is a natural gift or an acquired skill?

I believe skills are inborn. Anyone can write fiction, just as anyone can paint, shoot, figure skate, etc. After competent schooling or coaching, most people can be good. Those with the natural gifts can be great.

What single piece of advice would you give to writers still hoping to be published?

If you limit me to only one piece of advice, I’d focus on marketing what you write. Learn to live with rejection and NEVER GIVE UP. Keep submitting until there’s no one left. James Lee Burke said one of his early novels received 111 rejections before he found a publisher. I went through so many agents who never requested one page of sample writing, I decided to change tactics and began to query any publisher who would accept submissions directly from an author. I had only four left on my list when I received a contract.

What are you writing now?

I’m about to do the final revision of A LEPRECHAUN’S LAMENT, chronologically the second novel in the Sam Jenkins series. It begins with a rather innocent background investigation on a civilian employee of the police department, turns to a murder investigation, and involves the FBI, CIA, British Intelligence, and the Irish Garda.

Do you have a website or a blog that readers can visit?

My website is: www.waynezurlbooks.net. I’m also on Facebook, Twitter, and recently I posted my first video trailer on YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OI63_29n9KQ.

Given unlimited resources, what would be your ideal writing environment?

We live on a five acre parcel of hilly, wooded land. There’s a hollow just west of our house that’s perfect to build a writer’s cottage. I’d want a comfortable chair, a small kitchen, and no phone.

Where do you actually write ?

In an upholstered chair in the living room next to a stained-glass Tiffany lamp.

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Stuart's Word Spot: Fab

Statue of Brigitte Bardot in Buzios, BrazilImage via Wikipedia
Stuart's Word Spot is divorced from other posts in this blog and produced in response to a request from a follower to provide just such a service.

Fab: noun – a plant for making microchips: verb – (from fabricate) to make microchips: adjective – (abbreviated form of fabulous) wonderful, very good.
'Down at the fab in Silicon Valley they were turning out chips like there was no tomorrow.'
'Once the plant was up and running, the Korean manufacturer was able to fab chips at a rate of three trillion a second.'
'Brigitte Bardot looked absolutely fab as she strutted the red carpet to the award celebration.'

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Paragraphs of Power

The opening paragrahhs of my adult fantasy are up for a competition on another blog. I'd appreciate a vote from any of you who care to visit http://paragraphsofpower.blogspot.com/ and find my contribution. It's number 9 and is titled 'The Seared Sky'.
Whether you vote or not, I'd really appreciate any comments; favourable or otherwise. Authors always need feedback.
Thanks.
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Wednesday 26 January 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: Each


Stuart's Word Spot is divorced from other posts in this blog and produced in response to a request from a follower to provide just such a service.

Each: adjective – used before a singular noun, it gives the same sense for individuals as 'all' and 'both' do for plural nouns: pronoun – an individual person or thing.
'Each morning, we awake to a new dawn and each evening, we fall asleep after a day spent.'
'The dancers were seated before their mirrors, each preparing their make-up and hair before the performance of The Rites of Spring.'

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Tuesday 25 January 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: Dab

The first major Pointillist work by Marc Richa...Image via Wikipedia
Stuart's Word Spot is divorced from other posts in this blog and produced in response to a request from a follower to provide just such a service.

Dab: noun – a gentle tap with something soft, a sight blow, a small flatfish living in coastal waters, an adept (in plural form; dabs – fingerprints): verb – to pat, press without rubbing, apply paint or other substance in this way.
'He felt the dab of spirit-cooled cotton wool on his bicep just before he fainted as the needle entered his arm.'
'The pointillist painter was seen to dab, dab, dab at the canvass as his brush constructed an image consisting of thousands of individually hued spots.'

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Monday 24 January 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: Cab

The iconic Hackney carriage or black cab.Image via Wikipedia
Stuart's Word Spot is divorced from other posts in this blog and produced in response to a request from a follower to provide just such a service.

Cab: noun – originally, a Hackney carriage, which was a horse-drawn taxi. Now a modern taxi, or a shelter on a vehicle to house the driver and the controls.
'When Robert de Nero called Jodie Foster a cab, to take her home, it was an appropriate gesture, since they were both starring in Taxi Driver at the time.'
'The hitch-hiker climbed out of the wet and into the cab, grateful the truck driver had stopped for him.'

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Sunday 23 January 2011

Website updated with more links

There are now over 310 links on the website to other websites and blogs of interest to readers and writers. Have a look, browse around, see what you can find. And, please, let me know if there's a website I haven't yet linked to that you think would interest my visitors here or to the website. Thank you.
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Stuart's Word Spot: Baal

Temple of Baal ShaminImage via Wikipedia
Stuart's Word Spot is divorced from other posts in this blog and produced in response to a request from a follower to provide just such a service.

Baal: noun – a Canaanite deity, usually, but not always, in the form of a calf. Associated with storms and rain, initially, he was later a vegetation god involved with fertility. Latterly, Baal has been associated with idolatry.
'Whether you worship Baal or some other divine being, you are probably bowing down to a myth initially designed to explain the inexplicable.'

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Saturday 22 January 2011

Aquill Relle - online magazine

The online magazine, Aquill Relle, has featured one of my blog posts. The link for the title of this post takes you there.  To visit the magazine itself, please follow this link. http://www.aquillrelle.com/magazine.htm#sec1 
This magazine will be of particular interest to poets. Have a look and see what you think.


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Stuart's Word Spot: Abandon

Photograph of a Female Demonstrator Offering a...Image via Wikipedia
Stuart's Word Spot is divorced from other posts in this blog and produced in response to a request from a follower to provide just such a service.

Abandon: noun – freedom from conventional ties: verb – relinquish control, desert, give up.
'The children of flower power, in wild abandon, often discarded their clothes along with conventional attitudes.'
'Sharon stifled a cry of despair when she was forced to abandon her half-eaten chocolate dessert as the train was about to leave.'

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Thursday 20 January 2011

Author Interview with Sylvia L. Ramsey

Writing has always been a passion for Sylvia L Ramsey. She began writing news and feature articles for a small town newspaper in Southeast Missouri at the age of nine. Because of the nurturing and encouragement by the news editor, she developed a love of writing and a need to write.

By the time she was working on her graduate degree, several of her poems, short stories and feature articles had been published. Since then, over a hundred of her short stories and poems have found their way into literary magazines. She has been a featured poet in several literary journals over the years. Later, her writing extended into the realm of research in the field of Human Communication and her work has been published in journals such as The Arkansas Speech Association Journal, and The Speech Teachers Association of Missouri Journal.

Poetry has always been a very special and personal experience for Sylvia whether she is writing her own, or reading works of another poet. She feels that writing poetry over the years has provided her with insight and understanding of how to navigate the many peaks and valleys that are traveled along life's pathway. She was especially delighted after her book of poetry, Pulse Points of a Woman's World, was published, and was nominated for the Georgia 41st. Annual Author of the Year Award.

Growing up in a rural area of Missouri and being the child of a father born in 1898, she feels that her interpretation of life spans several generations. This influence can be recognized in both her poetry and her short stories. She has experienced life at many levels. One of her most prized possessions is a personal letter, written to her by Rosemary A. Thurber, giving her permission to adapt her father's short story "The Last Clock" to be used for Readers Theatre.

She is presently a Communications professor and the Academic Resource Center Coordinator at GMC Community College in Martinez, GA. She describes herself as a determined scrapper who will wrench all the very best from life that she is capable of conquering. Her philosophy of life is reflected in her poems, "Armor For Survival" and "A Tired Vagabond."

More about the author can be found on her website or on the authors den website.

She is a 16yr. survivor of bladder cancer, and looks at the experience as another learning peak in life. She is very much aware that even though this is the fifth most common cancer in the United States, it is very much underserved. She serves as the Vice-President of the American Bladder Cancer Society because she knows how important it is to provide support to those who have experienced this cancer, and how important it is to create more awareness around the world. That is why all of her royalties go to the American Bladder Cancer Society.  If you want to buy her books, please do so via their website,  www.bladdercancersupport.org or her own, as that way all money raised goes to the charity.

Where do your ideas for stories come from?

The ideas for stories all come from my life experiences and knowledge I have gained along the way.  The book, An Underground Jewell, spawned from a short story that was written about a Christmas Eve in the distant future when life on earth had changed drastically.  That story was written in 1989.  The idea to create a novel originated because I let imagination loose to wonder about the possibilities of this story.
I first began by creating a character who would write the story, and the reason why she wrote it.  At that point, I began to develop other characters and a plot.  I finally began writing the book.  At one point, I had to stop writing because my husband became very ill, and I became his caregiver.  At the same time, I was diagnosed with T3 bladder cancer.  To add to the delay, my computer crashed and I had to start over.  I was lucky that I had part of it printed out.  After my husband died, I began writing again.  Finally, 20 years later, it was finished and published. 

I am currently working on two books; one is a collection of short stories that may be titled, Squirrel Tales and Other Stories.  The other book is a fantasy book that is a more adult story that was more or less spawned by the children’s book.


What is your most recent published book?

Merchild Land is a newly released children’s picture book by Sylvia L. Ramsey.  It is a perfect bedtime book for small ones that is illustrated with soft pastel illustrations of the ocean, seabed, beach, and merchildren.   They explore the sea, clean the seabed, gather shells to put on the beach for children to find, and when evening comes they sail on moonbeams in the sky to visit magical places while they dream.

How did the book originate?

Sylvia explains how the idea for this book originated, “In my earlier years of teaching, my eldest granddaughter rode to her school with me, and she always wanted me to tell her stories about mermaids.  Later, I wrote a poem about childhood and mermaids (which I have included in the back of the book), and that was the beginning of the book.  I wrote it for my granddaughter, who is now grown, but I wanted her to have something to share with her children.  The color scheme is related to my childhood, and a book that I had as a child that has been kept and cherished over the years.  My wish is that this book will be one that some other children will want to keep and cherish.”

What experiences have you had since the book was published?

Recently, I visited the Cancer Center at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, GA,  and I discovered that several of my children’s books had been placed in the children’s section of the center.  What an honor!  Maybe, for just a few moments when the book is read to them, they will escape the nightmare in which they live.

Do you have any other published books?

She has two other books published.  One is a book of poetry, Pulse Points of a Woman’s World, that evolved over the years.  Many of the poems in the book had previously been published in literary magazines.  The book is divided into four-sections which are:  Youth, Love, Reality, and Wisdom. The poems in the book are illustrated. 
One reader said, “I didn't know quite what to expect, but the title called to me, and I answered. Being an older woman, I was not sure I wanted to surrender myself to poetry that might expose emotions long hidden from myself and my world. I dared to enter into the author's world, and it was as if I had entered a time capsule of my own life. Cautiously, I proceeded only to find old tears still flowed, laughter rang out from hidden caverns of my memories, and once again, I shared the merriment of happy days spent long ago. Ms. Ramsey's poetry enticed me down avenues long deserted, and once again, they throbbed with life. Each line flowed like a life-giving river refreshing memories and giving them a burst of life for a fleeting moment. I want to thank the author of this poetic collection for taking me where I had not dared to go on my own. Nor would I have been able to stir these ashes without her gifted pen. Thank you for this nostalgia. For indeed emotions that die when we forget, come to life when we remember. Thank you for helping me remember beauty and sorrow that I had forgotten. I hope many woman will find and dare to read this treasure that you, Sylvia Ramsey, have put into our 'woman's world'.”
The other book, An Underground Jewell, is espionage, mystery novel set in a possible
near- future.  The story revolves around the power of language and how it can change the way a society thinks and acts.  One reader's review said:  "An excellent read for all. Though a fiction it smacks with a lot of truth of what the future may bring. As one reads, it becomes rather apparent that this could all happen, and the last page says it all. I enjoyed reading and had a hard time putting it down. Hooray for the new writer on the block.
The story is set in the near future when man is living as much underground as above.  All things are controlled by a central computer system.  There is no such thing as "printed" material, it is all digital.  The main character in the story, Elizabeth Jewell a sage and well-known author, finds herself caught up in a plot of intrigue.  She decides to become her own sleuth to clear herself of all accusations, and in the process discovers there are multitudes of mysteries to solve.
One reader said, “I just read a newly release book, An Underground Jewell by Sylvia L. Ramsey. I found this book on Amazon. Once I started reading it, I couldn't put it down until I finished. It is an espionage novel set in the near future. The plot kept me intrigued, there were other mysteries along the way to be solved, and the main character was fascinating. I recommend this as a good read for anyone who likes mystery, espionage or even just a good novel. I usually read Clive Clustler(adventure, Michael Connely (Detective stories), and John Gardner(spy),WEB Griffith( War and Spy).This novel also reflects what William Lutz, a Professor of English at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey, talks about in his book, New Doublespeak: Why No One Knows What Anyone's Saying Anymore. The novel takes this current trend to manipulate language, and projects it into a future that provides a scenario where a group of terrorists realize that they can use language as a weapon to take control of our nation.”
Another reader said, "This is an excellent book. It would interest people from 13-100 years of age. Although it is fiction, so much of it could actually happen. Considering all the problems within our governing bodies, it could be happening right now! I would recommend this book to anybody."

Merchild Land and other books authored by her are also available at:
http://www.amazon.com/Sylvia-L-Ramsey/e/B002BMJ5NI/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0


Thank you very much Stuart.
One thing I didn't add is that I am also a public speaker, and have a list of topics that I can present.  Of course, one of my favorites is on bladder cancer.  I have a great presentation with a slide show on How to Derail Your Presentation with Power Point.  I presented it at the National College Learning Center Association conference this past October, and everyone loved it. 

Before my first book was published, I set up my website, www.sylvialramsey.com , and a message board so people who needed to find information or support on bladder cancer could at least find me.  There was so little at that time.  Through the message board, I met Cynthia Kinsella and Karen Green. My dream had always been to establish a bladder cancer foundation, to create awareness of bladder cancer, provide information to newly diagnosed and caregivers, and a place where survivors could meet and give support to each other.  I did not have the money to create a 501k non profit, because of my husband's illness, and my cancer.  However, these two ladies shared the same vision.  Cynthia did have money to launch the foundation.  I contributed as I could, I have always given my royalties to support bladder cancer.  At the college where I teach, the students organized an advocacy group, and have had bake sales plus other things to help create and continue to support the American Bladder Cancer Society.  We have several members who live in Europe.  I am the Vice-President of this organization.  You can find us at www.bladdercancersupport.org.  I must say it is a dream come true, and I want to keep the dream alive for all.

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The Time Traveller's Wife, Reviewed.

The Time Traveler's WifeImage via Wikipedia
Occasionally, though by no means often, I finish a book and think, 'I wish I'd written that!'  Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveller's Wife is one such book. As a major movie has been adapted from the novel, it came with the baggage of exaggerated claims from the movie industry publicity machines. But I have not seen the film and was, in fact, initially introduced to the novel via that excellent readers' website, Goodreads.
I was interested from the opening paragraph, intrigued by the end of the first chapter, mildly concerned it might be too long somewhere around the middle, revived very shortly afterwards, and then compelled to read to the end.
The story is different, clever, fascinating, well-told and satisfying. I will give no clues (most are in the title) to those who have neither read the book nor seen the film) but simply suggest you read this book.
The characters are wonderfully drawn; real people who live extraordinary lives against a landscape which is superbly described.
The relationships are crafted with empathy and understanding so that I read on an emotional roller-coaster (if you'll forgive the slip into cliché).
Rarely do I come across a book in which all the elements are good. In this one, I discovered them to be as near to perfect as you can hope for.
And, rather sneakily (though in line with the need for authors and publishers to promote their wares in this world of too many books) the publishers have included a taster of this writer's next book, Her Perfect Symmetry, and this has now been added to my 'to read' list. But, unfortunately, it will have to wait until I have re-acquainted myself with the set texts my daughter is studying for her upcoming A level exams, as that is time sensitive.
As for The Time Traveller's Wife, I hope I've made it clear I not only enjoyed this book but admire the writer's craft and artistry. If anyone reading this has both read the book and seen the film, I'd appreciate your comments so I can decide whether the film is worth viewing. I recommend the book without qualification.

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Website Updated

For some time, I've been unable to get into my website to bring it up to date. The host changed server and I lost my password to make changes. Then a really minor technical glitch prevented further work from me. However, that's all sorted now.
Please have a look http://www.stuartaken.co.uk/index.php and see if any of the new stuff is of interest/use to you as either reader or writer. As always, I'd appreciate any comments, suggestions, criticisms so I can improve my site for my readers.
There are new links to a number of sites, some new story availability, and some different books. Enjoy.
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Thursday 13 January 2011

What's Your Favourite Genre, And Why?

Books in the Douglasville, Georgia Borders store.Image via Wikipedia
The thorny subject of genre is contentious for writers, but readers generally have a more positive attitude, since it helps them decide which books they might like to read.
I asked the question, What does genre mean? in a previous blog, so I won't go back into that one (though you may revisit and comment on that as you wish). Here, I'm more interested to know which particular genre gets your vote and why this is the case. Of course, many of you will like variety, and I'd love to hear from you on this. Is there a particular genre that definitely gets your 'no' vote? It's an odd fact that a lot of writers don't read the sort of books they actually write, though many do, of course. I tend not to read crime fiction, largely because I often find it depressing. But, having said that, I've read some very good crime novels, so I don't completely ignore it.
My own favourites include, literary, science fiction, fantasy, romance (not the Mills & Boon type), and good quality thrillers. But, in fact, I read a great deal of fiction and non-fiction in many different genres, ( a quick glance at my listed books on the Goodreads site will illustrate my wide tastes) so I suppose I'm not a typical reader. Or am I? You tell me.
Just as a quick aside, here: if you're a reader, you might like Goodreads as a site which gives reviews on all sorts of books from a huge variety of readers.

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Tuesday 11 January 2011

Win an iPad: the Launch of the Laina Turner iPhone app and blog tour !

The Laina Turner iPhone app lets fans, read about the author, find where she’s appearing, read the blog, see video clips, and more.
The iPhone app gives Laina a platform for promoting and selling books, publicizing appearances, streaming podcasts or other content, and creating a brand.
As a Laina Turner iPhone app user you can get 25% off on any of her books for the month of January. In addition, once you purchase a book or books you'll be entered into a draw for an iPad.
Bottom of Form
Not ready for a book purchase? You can also be entered to win by participating in the blog tour.
See lainaturner.com for more details

Who am I?
 It kind of depends on the day. I am a human compendium of unrelated things. I used to think I was just weird, had shiny ball syndrome and couldn’t focus, scattered, you name it. Then I decided it was OK to be all over the place as long as each avenue I wanted to explore had meaning and purpose or was fun. So I embrace the fact I am a college professor (Go Capella), a writer of fiction and non-fiction,
promoter of other authors, human resource professional,
business consultant, and all around interesting person (according to my closest friends). 

Presley Thurman, a sassy, thirty-something red-head, was looking to reinvent herself. She didn’t allow the fact she was recently fired to bother her - she was ready to pursue her lifelong dream of becoming a writer. Not looking back on corporate America, Presley decided to follow her dream. When her friend Trevor offered her a job with his online magazine to interview public figures, she jumped at the chance.
However, the new job turned into something unexpected when the U.S. Senator she was slated to write about was murdered - in her home town! 
Presley was able to discover the Senator’s wife, Helen, had been having an affair… with her best friend’s boyfriend! Did Helen kill the Senator? Or was it the Senator’s  love of gambling that got him killed? And what was Cooper’s secret tie to the mob boss Garrison Palazzo?
Presley was betting her favorite pair of Manolo’s she will find the killer… but would time run out?


A necessary business owners’ field guide to avoiding the common pitfalls of owning and running a business, this book is filled with real stories relevant to any business owner. But It's My Business takes a practical, upbeat and candid look at why, as a business owner, you need to follow some rules but others are made to be broken. It also discusses how to get the biggest bang for your buck in areas such as your employees, your online presence, creating a brand, and leveraging your finances.






Many of us women drive ourselves crazy, intentionally, by trying to be all we can be. I firmly believe we can have it all. A great relationship, be a great mom, keep a good house, be a career woman, follow our dreams, work out and eat right. But somewhere while trying to accomplish all this we tend to go a little nuts. Some more than others and some longer than others. I used to think I was normal.
Being a woman is difficult and is a constant journey and evolution of self discovery. It is not always an easy journey and through the process you realize everyone has their own issues. This book looks at a journey of self discovery on what happens when the women you are and the women you want to be doesn’t always match.

As a strong woman who embraces your own kind of crazy, we’re inviting you to join Chiczofrenic movement at www.chiczofrenic.com. There will be “specialty chics” working in a channel: Writing blogs / updates on their channel, encouraging other women to embrace the craziness of their lives. Offering advice and tips and insight to how you deal with your craziness in order to help others and make others feel part of a sisterhood. 








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Monday 10 January 2011

This Blog Reviews Indie Authors.

No, not this one! (I'm deliberately picky about my reviews, as I have limited reading time) But Podpeep does offer this service, and for free.
They lay down strict rules for any review and you ignore these at your peril. Visit them at http://podpeep.blogspot.com/ and seek out the post from 6 January 2010 - Thoughts on Reveiwing to Start the New Year. Read this first and then decide whether it's for you before you inundate them with unsuitable material. These are busy people and we do them no service by ignoring their requirements.
If you're a reader, this is an excellent resource for finding independently published books and I recommend it.
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Saturday 8 January 2011

Author Interview With Wayne Gerard Trotman

Wayne Gerard Trotman is a British writer, filmmaker, artist, photographer, composer and producer of electronic music. Born in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, Trotman immigrated to England in 1984, where he lives with his wife and two young sons.
A martial arts enthusiast, he wrote and directed ‘Ashes to Ashes’, Britain’s first martial arts feature-film. He has a cosmopolitan and multi-cultural approach to all his artistic work, which has received recognition internationally. His epic science-fiction novel, ‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’, is the first of a proposed ‘Psychic Wars’ series.

Tell us about ‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’.

‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’ is an epic science fiction story that takes the reader from London, England, to a distant galaxy known as the Cosmic Sea. There, Baron Seti Aljyk has instigated a Second Psychic War by seizing Najura, the last of the ancient swords of power, and usurping the imperial throne from Sakara Rey, the True Emperor.
Protagonist Roman Doyle emigrated from Trinidad to England. He is a happily married, twenty-five-year-old schoolteacher, anticipating becoming a father. What Roman does not know, is that he is really Armon Sakara, heir apparent of the True Emperor. That is, until he encounters Chi-Ro Jin, a Veteran of the Psychic Wars.
Chi-Ro’s mission is to return Roman to the True Emperor, but Roman believes that Chi-Ro is crazy. When Roman’s wife, Soraya, is abducted by the Baron’s assassins, Roman is forced to make the epic journey to the Cosmic Sea. However he does not go alone. He is joined by his shamira Chi-Ro, Nuri Nemsys a beautiful secret agent, Anah Sadaka the mysterious captain of the Starglider Sanura and Roman’s friend, Zachary Silverman, a quantum physicist.
With his dormant psychic and astral abilities awakened by an alien drug and pursued by the Baron’s assassins, Roman, his friend, and the Veterans of the Psychic Wars face evil and danger in uncharted space and on alien worlds. Roman must overcome his fears, master the martial art of Hatari Ikou, and learn the secrets of astral projection, in order to rescue his wife, retrieve the sword of power, and bring the Psychic Wars to an end.

How did you come to write this particular book?

The inspiration for this book came from a conversation I had with my mother when I was quite young. I was nine or ten years old when I complained that I felt that I didn’t belong.
            I said, “I think I’m an alien.”
            My mother replied, “Yes, you’re an alien.”
We both laughed and the conversation moved to other things, but I always thought about what she said. I didn’t actually believe I was alien (at least I would never admit to that publicly) but I started thinking: what if a young man grew up believing he was a normal human being, only to find out one day that he was actually an alien from another galaxy? Wouldn’t that explain his feelings of alienation? Wouldn’t that make an interesting story?

If you have a favourite character in your novel, why that particular one?

I love all the characters. It was a joy watching them all develop over the years (yes years). But my favourite character is Chi-Ro Jin, the Veteran of the Psychic Wars. Chi-Ro is the mentor who delivers Roman’s call to adventure. The trait I admire most in him is his unshakeable loyalty. His no-nonsense logic is also a source of amusement.
  
Where and when is your novel set and why did you make these specific choices?

Veterans of the Psychic Wars begins in present-day England – the ordinary world. After a call to adventure, the main characters travel to a distant galaxy – a special world of advanced technology, psychics and hidden dangers. My aim was to use contemporary UFO sightings and conspiracy theories as a means of preparing the reader for the fantastic occurrences later on in the story. Many people find it difficult to relate to science fiction because it is set in an imagined future. I think people could relate to the struggle some of the characters have accepting shape-shifters, psychics, clones and androids.

How can people buy your book?

‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’ is currently available on Amazon’s Kindle both in the US and the UK. Other eBook formats are available from Smashwords. The paperback edition is due for a January 2011 release and will be available from most outlets.

What qualities make a successful writer?

I believe that passion, determination, dedication, attention to detail, intelligence, flair and talent are all required for success.

Beginning writers make many mistakes; what do you think is the most harmful?

A lack of research; it is one of the easiest ways to identify a novice. Poor research can rob written work of any credibility.

To what extent are grammar and spelling important to a writer?

Perfection is elusive; nevertheless I believe that a writer who deliberately ignores spelling and grammar is being disrespectful to readers. I generally cringe when I find grammar and spelling mistakes. I have a nagging insecurity about writing poor grammar and therefore I am constantly trying to improve.

How much revision of your MS do you do before you send it off?

In the case of ‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’ - as much as humanly possible. It’s an on-going process up until the manuscript is finally sent off. I am never completely satisfied. There is always an opportunity for improvement. I feel it is worthwhile to put a book down, without reading it, for at least a couple months before doing a final revision. It’s amazing what you might discover if you do.

To what extent do you think genre is useful in the publishing world?

To a certain extent it is quite useful. We live in a world of impatience. Unless we are happy to write as a hobby, a novel is a product, which we hope to sell to customers. Customers usually have a very clear idea of what they want. Genres are meant to match a book, or any other artistic expression, with the expectations of customers. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than trying to define artistic work without any reference to genre.

How do you know where to begin any given story?

My stories tend to start just before the mundane becomes the extraordinary. In the case of ‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’, Roman is on his way to withdraw cash from a cashpoint/ATM machine when something unexpected occurs.


What sort of displacement activities keep you from actually writing?

Sleep. I can only go two days without any sleep. I have two young boys, so I tend to do most of my writing between 10:00 PM and 7:00 AM, when it’s quiet. Family commitments, networking, marketing, other creative activities and life in general all bite into writing time. Nobody ever said it would be easy.

Is presentation of the MS as important as most agents and publishers suggest?

Yes. Agents and publishers tend to look for ways of separating professional writers from novices. Presentation is one of these ways.

How long does it normally take you to write a piece?

It varies depending on how much research is required. I did a lot of research for ‘Veterans of the Psychic Wars’ and, as a result, it took me over three years to write.

Who or what inspires you?

Everyone and everything can inspire me. Photographers and painters tend to be very observant. I generally notice everything. I get a lot of great ideas for dialogue just listening to shoppers in the supermarket.

Do you think writing is a natural gift or an acquired skill?

Some people seem more predisposed to storytelling than others; but even these gifted people tend to hone their skills through practice, dedication and education.

What single piece of advice would you give to writers still hoping to be published?

Do not give up.

What are you writing now?

Another science fiction novel; this time it is set in Trinidad and Tobago and aimed at a young adult audience.

Do you have a website or a blog that readers can visit?

Several:


My Facebook page.

My Smashwords page.

Follow me on Twitter.

Where do you write?

In my study/studio.

Thank you Stuart, for granting me the opportunity to share my thoughts.

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