10 June 2014

Guest Post ~ Myriad Hues by Rachna Gupta


"The words used are simple; the language refined and yet, touching. This book brings out the author’s interpretation of things and changes them into images that stare out from the pages of the book." 

Myriad Hues is new on: Amazon US Amazon UK and Amazon.In 

About Myriad Hues

As a young girl I was always fascinated by nature. I would spend time sitting on the banks of a river, near my house, listening to the water and the birds nearby. Often I would look up and notice the habits of a few people who came there to wash their clothes or utensils. This fascination of mine never ceased, everywhere I went I noticed little things around me and then began writing them down in my notebook. As time passed by, those chosen words became poems and I finally found a way of turning my habit into a passion - poetry.

With the passing of time, I got my work published and enjoyed the fact that people appreciated my work, but since I was too young to realize what I actually wanted to do, I also ventured into other professions I was good at – Teaching and Interior Designing. It was the demise of my father that brought me back to reality, it made me give wings to my dreams and do what I was best at. These days I live in a beautiful city in India. This city, like the one I left behind is covered by mountains that beckon, waterfalls that sing and trees that dance in the wind, and all this provides me with the inspiration to write. I write because it gives me inner peace, every time I write I realize that the world is a beautiful place and that there is so much to thank God for.

Myriad Hues is about the way I think, the hues I see the world in. It is about me, and yet it is about all of us, our lives, our dreams, our fears, our struggles and the things that we find peace in.

Rachna Gupta

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About the Author

Rachna Gupta grew up in the picturesque town of Siliguri, a little haven that is surrounded by mountains and tea gardens that provided her the inspiration to write poems and stories. She has spent the last few years writing a variety of articles for buzzle.com and infojug.com. Her poems and short stories can also be found on writing.com. She has also published two of her poems in the Taj Mahal Review, December 2013 issue. When Rachna is not teaching primary children English, she is busy looking after her son and taking notes about things she notices in her surroundings. At the end of the day, when her chores are finally done and the rest of the world sleeps, these notes are transformed into poems and stories for the world to read. Rachna has a website at http://www.myriadhues.com/ and is on Twitter @GuptaRach.

9 June 2014

Guest Post ~ Gwendolyn's Sword by E. A. Haltom


Set in the midst of one of the most violent and vibrant periods of the early middle ages, Gwendolyn’s Sword answers the question, what if King Arthur had actually returned to twelfth-century England—as a woman?

New on Amazon US and Amazon UK



First I would like to thank Tony for inviting me to write a guest post. Tony is generous in his efforts to support new authors, and for that I am very grateful. Tony suggested I write about what inspires me to write and how I approach my writing, so I’ll do my best to give unvarnished, thoughtful answers.

As far as inspiration, I write all the time. I get distracted when I’m not writing; scenes, dialogue, and plot developments weave in my imagination while I’m trying to do other things. I’m not inspired to write as much as I’m compelled. But I didn’t finally decide to take myself seriously as a writer until I was much older. When I was thirty-nine, I read an interview with Stephenie Meyer, in which she described writing her debut, Twilight, during her kids’ naps, with a baby on her lap. I had a “what’s my excuse?” moment, and I got to work.

Conventional wisdom tells us to write about what we know. I know about being a woman in a world dominated—politically, professionally, economically, commercially—by men. I write what I wish was already out there for me to read: a tale of a cold-eyed woman warrior, in the best of the heroic traditions, with no romantic fluff, no soul-searching reflections or attention wasted on dress or social customs. She holds her own with a sword against the best knights. She is unapologetically capable and intelligent. She would risk her life to fulfill an oath, once given. Obviously, this woman belongs in late 12th c. England.

When I first set out to write my story, I researched the actual historical basis for many of the themes I wanted to include. I discovered a popular Welsh nationalist legend prophesying the return of Arthur to rout out all non-Britons (here the 12th c. Welsh may have set aside a generally known understanding that the Normans themselves were descended from clans of Britons that had fled to northern Gaul centuries back).

There was also a protracted campaign of propaganda by the Plantagenets to counter the Welsh prophecy, highlighted most notably by Richard the Lionheart’s sanctioning of Glastonbury Abbey’s claim to have discovered the tomb of Arthur and Guinevere on the abbey’s grounds (bearing no relation, of course, to the abbey’s desperate need to raise funds to rebuild after a devastating fire). The Plantagenets found further assistance in the writings of Chretien de Troyes, Gerald of Wales, and Geoffrey of Monmouth, to co-opt the legend of Arthur from the Welsh and make him their own. Delightfully, I even discovered a Ph.D. dissertation analyzing the Plantagenets’ treatment of Arthurian legend as an early example of political propaganda.

I am embarrassed to admit that none of this was known to me at the time that I initially conjured my tale of a woman heir to King Arthur, in England during the turmoil of Richard I’s reign. Happy coincidence followed happy coincidence as I began my research. And yet, the story that I eventually published is actually the second iteration of my tale. I benefitted from the criticism and feedback of an excellent reader and fan of the genre. He felt that I had taken more license than the genre will support with the historical facts of the time.

He also pointed out tactical combat errors my characters were making that, as seasoned warriors, they would have known to avoid. Fans of the genre would have spotted the inconsistencies immediately, and they would have been perhaps so put off as to not have been able to finish the story. So I dug quite a bit deeper into my research, and while I preserved the essential arc of the characters and the plot, in all other respects the story was completely rewritten. The geography of the tale was flipped, the politics of the time were brought into sharp relief, and fictional characters and locations were replaced by actual as much as possible. This is, I believe, a reverse engineering of the “proper” way to write historical fiction.

In my own experience, I found that having a writer’s group held me back. The criticisms were more to my voice (I remember one member saying, “I just don’t get it. I never think of tears as ‘hot.’”) than to my craft. Feedback from good readers is a must, but be selective. Your voice is crucial. It is what makes your writing unique. It gives your prose life. It gives your characters dimension. Find your voice. Fight for your voice. And be prepared to weather a lot of hard work and a lot of rejection.

There is a difference between “voice” and what I’ll call “fluffery.” The best advice on writing that I have received so far came from a journalist. He said that when he had written a sentence or turn of phrase that he was especially proud of, he knew that it had to come out. At the time that he told me this, I was flabbergasted by what he was saying. I was clinging to every clever turn of phrase in my manuscript like my life depended on it. But he told me that the emotional attachment was the signal that he had become enamored of his own deft style, and had departed from simply telling the story. In time I have come to recognize this flag for myself. Many distracting bits of “fluffery” that were more the product of my ego than the story have been axed—for the better.

If you have written but you are unsure if your writing is “good enough,” keep going. I don’t know that I’ll ever consider myself a “good” writer. I’m not even sure what that means. Even though Gwendolyn’s Sword won the Writers’ League of Texas Manuscript Contest for Historical Fiction, I could not get an agent to sign me. Maybe the story of a sword-wielding woman with no steamy romance thrown in didn’t fit anyone’s idea of marketability. Maybe by writing a story that would normally have had a male lead with a woman lead instead, the professionals figured I’d also left behind any potential male audience. Thankfully, I haven’t found that to be true. I hired my own editor, hired an artist for the book cover, and I published myself. Most days I feel rather foolhardy to be now working on the sequel to a book that’s only been out a month. Blind persistence like this is necessary.

Best of luck with your own writing. 

E. A. Haltom

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About the Author

E. A. Haltom lives in Austin, Texas, with her husband and kids and a minor menagerie of animals. Gwendolyn’s Sword is her debut novel. Before becoming a writer, E. A. Haltom was a prosecutor, a grocery clerk, a massage therapist, and a technology transactions lawyer. Visit her blog at http://smittenbythewords.blogspot.com and find her on Twitter at @eahaltomauthor and Facebook 
(FB page likes greatly appreciated!).

6 June 2014

First Chosen By M. Todd Gallowglas @MGallowglas


FREE on Smashwords until Midnight 10th June 
Using Special Coupon code: TV78N  

An epic fantasy about a young woman who frees a dark god of vengeance from a thousand year prison and he names her his high priest, unfortunately for her, it's illegal for her people to worship this god, punishable by death and the destruction of her soul.

“This is really great stuff! The characters seem real, three dimensional people, not typical fantasy types.” - James Rollins, Author of THE DEVIL COLONY and MAP OF BONES.

"First Chosen isn't just a book - it is a window into another world." - Merelan Jones of Renaissance Productions.

FIRST CHOSEN is the story of Julianna, a noble from the conquered kingdom of Koma. In her moment of greatest need, she frees an ancient god, Grandfather Shadow, from his thousand-year prison. In his "gratitude," the god names her his high priest and commands Julianna to lead his people to greatness once again. Unfortunately, it is a capital crime for any of Julianna's people to worship one of the five ancient gods - the punishment is not just execution but also the destruction of the soul. While evading Inquisitors of All Father Sun and the followers of the god of death, Julianna must learn to use the vast power that Grandfather Shadow has given her in order to survive long enough to unite Grandfather Shadow's fractured people.

And so begins, TEARS OF RAGE a dark, epic fantasy about the power of faith and belief, where even though the gods can inspire these qualities in mortals, it is those same mortals that truly control the religions that form from any god’s divine inspiration. It is also a swashbuckling tale of political intrigue where men scheme against each other and the gods, and how friendship, loyalty, and faith can help people persevere through the darkest times. Fans of George RR Martin's A GAME OF THRONES and Steven Erickson's THE MALAZAN BOOK OF THE FALLEN with find themselves right at home with the TEARS OF RAGE sequence.

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About the Author

M Todd Gallowglas is the bestselling author of the Tears of Rage and Halloween Jack series. After graduating, Todd returned to his career as professional storyteller at Renaissance faires and Celtic festivals. His first professional sale was to Fantasy Flight Games, and he has a run of stories for their Call of Chthulu game line. Nearly all of his eBooks have been Amazon bestsellers, and First Chosen spent most of 2012 on Amazon’s Dark Fantasy and Fantasy Series lists. He lives in California with his wife, three children, and more pets than they need. Find out more at http://www.mtoddgallowglas.com/

5 June 2014

Guest Post: Confessions of a Mystery Addict by Kate Ellis, Author of 'The Shroud Maker'


A grisly find . . . and a faceless enemy . . .

Could there be a link between two women? One missing, one brutally murdered? Is there a connection to a fantasy website called Shipworld which features a supernatural hero with a sinister, faceless nemesis called 
The Shroud Maker?

Will history repeat itself once again?

Now in Paperback on Amazon UK and Amazon US 

Looking back I guess I’ve always been a writer, scribbling away in secret; poems, short stories; even a couple of very bad and rapidly abandoned novels in my student years.  I always had a vague dream of being published but it wasn’t until my youngest child went to nursery and I had empty hours to fill that I realised that it was what I wanted to do for the rest of my life.

Ever since childhood I’ve been addicted to mysteries, starting with Enid Blyton’s mystery stories then graduating to Agatha Christie and all the other greats of crime fiction’s golden age.  I always had my nose in some tale of murder and mayhem so when the time came for me to begin writing seriously, I suppose it was inevitable that I’d turn to crime.

Writing became something I felt I had to do; a compulsion if you like.  I needed to get words down on that page and I needed to tell a story that would intrigue people and keep them guessing to the end.  I loved creating suspense and laying false trails.  In short, when I began to write crime fiction I felt as if I was coming home.

The Lure of the Past

I wanted to write about contemporary crime and examine present day preoccupations and people. But I also had a passion for history and a deep interest in archaeology (I’m often to be found in some muddy trench or other) so I couldn’t decide whether to give my first book a purely historical setting or go for a modern day police procedural. 

However, my dilemma was soon solved when I hit of the idea of combining a modern day mystery with one from the past.  This worked so well that in each of my Wesley Peterson books since, a parallel historical mystery runs alongside the present day investigation.  I make life hard for myself by choosing a different historical period in each book but I confess that research is one of my favourite parts of writing.  The only problem is that once I become engrossed in a period, it takes a lot of discipline to put those history books down and start writing.

Waiting for Inspiration

Every book is different.  Sometimes it’s the historical story that comes to me first and sometimes the modern day narrative.  There’s usually something that triggers the idea for a story, such as a chance remark, a newspaper story or the discovery of an intriguing event in history. 

In my latest book The Shroud Maker my trigger was the sight of a young woman walking down a wooden jetty and clambering aboard a sleek white yacht moored on the River Dart in Devon.  An unremarkable event you might think, apart from the fact that she was wearing a long flowing skirt and carrying a violin case.  I began to wonder what she was doing there.  And then my mind wove a whole story around her fictional counterpart and the result was a disturbing tale of murder and obsession.  Add to this Devon’s medieval past, a festival celebrating a privateer from the middle ages (with connections to Chaucer) and a sinister fantasy website and The Shroud Maker came into being.


That’s it really.  Inspiration can be anywhere.  It’s just a case of being ready when it appears!

Kate Ellis

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About the Author

Kate Ellis was born and raised in Liverpool and now lives in north Cheshire. Keenly interested in history and archaeology, she is the author of a crime series featuring DI Wesley Peterson, the latest of which is The Shroud Maker. Her novel, The Plague Maiden was nominated for the Theakstons Crime Novel of the Year in 2005 and she has twice been shortlisted for the CWA Short Story Dagger and for a Barry Award in the USA. To learn more about Kate and her books visit Kate's website www.kateellis.co.uk and find her on Twitter @kateellisauthor

4 June 2014

Every Little Thing by Ash Omurah


New on Amazon US and Amazon UK

Every Little Thing is a collection of interrelated short stories that begins with a young boy who walks into an insect shop and decides to buy a stag beetle missing a leg, rather than a “normal” six-legged beetle as the shopkeeper recommends. When the boy divulges his reason, the shopkeeper is initially surprised, but gains a new outlook on life and is inspired to do something he would not have considered before.“defected” stag beetle, an incident that serves as a springboard for various other interconnections that ripple through the lives of the book’s characters.

They include a junior high school girl who is secretly ashamed that she lives a much less privileged life than her best friend; a pair of shy high school students trying to improve their image in the eyes of their classmates; a college student who works nights as a bartender and finds herself at a crossroads in life; and a career-driven woman who is beginning to question the professional choices she has made.

In this life-affirming book, there are no characters with unfortunate lives, only characters with unfortunate outlooks. Personal handicaps—such as relative poverty, cripplingly introverted personalities, and physical disabilities—are not obstacles that need to be overcome, but qualities that give each character their unique identity. As each character grows through the pages of this book, you will realize that their stories are interwoven with each other and find yourself delving more deeply into the world of Every Little Thing.

Every Little Thing was first published in May 2007 in Japan. Since then, the book has sold over 400,000 copies. The first story in the book, “The Boy and the Beetles,” was featured in official textbooks for ethics classes in schools, and some college entrance exams featured questions related to Every Little Thing.

As a result, the book was translated into Korean and Chinese and published in South Korea, China, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao, and was turned into a stage play that ran in both 2008 and 2009. Both versions starred two of Japan’s top actresses in the lead role. 

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About the Author

Ash Omurah is a best-selling fiction writer in Asia and lives in Fuji-City, Shizuoka, Japan. He has published more than 40 books on IT-related topics. In 2004 alone, he managed to place nine books among the top 14 VBA books on Amazon.co.jp, and was introduced on a TV show as “Japan’s top IT writer.” After publishing a business management book and a self-help book (which was also a bestseller), Ash debuted as a fiction writer with Every Little Thing. He has been referred to as “a magician of the unexpected” thanks to his intricately woven plots. You can find Ash on Facebook and on Twitter @ash_omurah  

2 June 2014

J. R. R. Tolkien’s Writing Habits

J. R. R. Tolkien in 1968
(BBC Archive)
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, English writer, poet  and Professor of English Language and Literature at Oxford, is best known as the author of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.

It is hard to be certain of the exact figures, due to the proliferation of ebook versions, but The Lord of the Rings is the biggest-selling single genre novel of all time and possibly the best-selling single novel of all time.

Surviving the horrors of the Somme as a second lieutenant in the Lancashire Fusiliers , when his battalion was almost completely wiped out, Tolkien began writing to help his recovery from trench fever. His first work, The Book of Lost Tales, was a collection of short stories, where he developed the ideas for his later work, with the subtitle ‘The History of Middle Earth’.

One hot summer day he was bored marking endless examination papers and found that one candidate had left an entire page of an answer-book blank. On this page, Tolkien wrote “In a hole in the ground there lived a Hobbit“. (See interview below.) It took Tolkien seven years to turn that sentence into The Hobbit and he struggled to get the manuscript finished because of his teaching commitments at Oxford College.

Writing habits

Tolkien once said his typical response on reading a medieval work was not to make a critical study of it, but instead to write a modern work in the same tradition. A prolific letter-writer, Tolkien suffered from severe rheumatism and would apologise for not handwriting his correspondence. “I usually type,” he wrote in one letter, “since my ‘hand’ tends to start fair and rapidly fall into picturesque inscrutability.”

Tolkien's favourite typewriter was an expensive American Hammond Varitype, made in 1927.  Insead of conventional typebars, it had a replaceable C-shaped curved rubber type-plate (which anticipated the IBM "golf ball" by fifty years). Tolkien could therefore change the typewriter "font" which included italics, which he used a great deal, as well as the small font he called ‘midget type’.  The Hammond Varitype was the most advanced ‘word processor’ of its day and produced such fine work that they were used as "cold typesetting" devices, to prepare camera-ready copy for printing.

Later in life, Tolkien found the Hammond too heavy and turned to more portable typewriters. Despite the pain it caused, he often wrote detailed notes about Middle Earth in longhand with a pen, before switching to his typewriter. He typed the entire manuscript of The Lord of the Rings twice in his favourite writing space - on his bed in an attic. In a letter written in 1964, he wrote to a friend: “I like typewriters; and my dream is of suddenly finding myself rich enough to have an electric typewriter built to my specifications, to type the Fëanorian script.”

The manuscripts, typescripts and proofs for The Hobbit survive in the Memorial Library Archives at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and give a useful insight into Tolkien’s writing methods.  The collection includes a working draft of the first twelve pages, typed on Tolkien's Hammond typewriter. The rest of the pages are handwritten and numbered consecutively from 13 to 167, and Tolkien changes the type of paper and uses a different pen near the beginning of Chapter 5.

The next stage of development is a full typescript done on the Hammond typewriter, with the songs typed in italics and the only changes being to the names of characters. (Interestingly, to modern writers with the benefit of word processing, there is also a second full typescript, which seems to have been abandoned due to the significant number of typographical mistakes). 

Tolkien later recalled, “I wrote the first chapter first, then forgot about it, then I wrote another part. I myself can still see the gaps. There is a very big gap after they reach the eyrie of the Eagles. After that I really didn't know how to go on. I just spun a yarn out of any elements in my head. I don't remember organizing the thing at all."

Always modest about his work, Tolkien wrote in a letter about The Lord of the Rings in July 1947, “I certainly hope to leave behind me the whole thing revised and in final form, for the world to throw into the waste-paper basket.  All books come there in the end, in this world, anyway.”  He was surprised by the success of his first book and also of the others, and felt his best-selling success was a complete accident.


Other posts about the habits of famous writers:


31 May 2014

Book Launch: Atonement for Emily Adams by Susan Lawrence


New on Amazon US and Amazon UK

When Emily Adams hits and kills ten-year-old Isaiah Nelson with her car, she is overwhelmed with remorse. Knowing she cannot undo this tragedy, Emily hopes to atone for Isaiah’s death with good deeds and community service. 

However, the more she does, the more her life falls apart. With her job on the line, her volunteer efforts fruitless, and her marriage in jeopardy, the final blow comes when Isaiah’s grieving parents file a wrongful death suit. For them, this will be justice and closure, but for Emily this is final proof she will never be forgiven. Not by Isaiah’s parents—not by God. Where do you turn when “I’m sorry” isn’t enough? 

All author's proceeds go to Pour International, a non-profit agency, for the building of an abandoned baby home in Swaziland.  For more information about Pour International go to www.pourinternational.org.

This story will wring your heart, but the satisfying resolution will leave you smiling. Yvonne Anderson, Author of The Story in the Stars, 2012 ACFW Carol Award Finalist

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About the Author

Susan Lawrence taught elementary school for 26 years before hanging up her chalkboard to write and speak. Atonement for Emily Adams is her first novel. Susan lives in the woods of Iowa with her husband and yellow Lab, Annie E.  Susan has 3 children and 7 grandchildren who love to hear her stories. You can find out more on her website at http://www.susanrlawrence.com/ and on Twitter @susanrlawrence

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