Monday, August 24, 2015

Karina Kantas Interview















If we are to endeavor in this difficult business of writing, it behooves us all to promote other authors and pass the word about their excellent work. The world is full of people, with all sorts of tastes, likes, and dislikes.  The need I cannot satisfy with my stories, a diferent author will rock that world. This week, A Muse's Retreat showcases Karina Kantas's interview at Would You Like a Book With Your Wine Blogspot.    You may follow the link for the full interview here: Interview








Author Name:  KARINA KANTAS
Fiction or Non-Fiction:  fiction and non fiction 
Genre(s):  specialises in thrillers but I also write in the genres of fantasy, comedy, horror, sci-fi, romance, poetry, prose, non fiction
Number of books published:  Seven and around 30 non fiction pieces
Links to published work (Amazon, Smashwords, etc):

https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/karinakantas
http://www.amazon.com/Karina-Kantas/e/B0034P98EW/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1





Karina has several best-selling books covering all sorts of themes, I find her MC stories particularly intriguing.  Learn more about her on Karina Kantas Amazon Page.





Have fun reading.

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Primani Series Giveaway!



I love a party, and it's a pleasure to help a fellow author celebrate her anniversary.  The Primani Series are a fantastic read.  I highly recommend them. 













Hey, everybody, it's my friend Laurie Olerich's anniversary! To celebrate two amazing years, she's giving away Primani (Book 1) for free! Download and escape today.



AMAZON KINDLE http://amzn.to/1nT2gCV
iBOOKS http://bit.ly/1oo3TOs
SMASHWORDS http://bit.ly/1x9mz5m
BARNES&NOBLE NOOK http://bit.ly/10Yw24w

Friday, August 21, 2015

Pay it Forward Interview: Mistral Dawn Author










Follow this link to Mistral Dawn's Interview at Bethany Turner's Rave Reviews Book Club blog.  


                                                 Pay it Forward Mistral Dawn's Interview



Please be aware the book is suitable for adults only and contains elements of BDSM.  

Friday, August 14, 2015

Weekend Quotes







With the upcoming release of Destiny's Plan, promotion for the book on Social Media, and ensuring the manuscript has been formatted, approved and is ready for release, the comment:  life has been hectic, it's an understatement. Despite all that craziness, I've found some quotes I hope you will find interesting.



By the age of six, the average child will have completed the basic American education. ... From television, the child will have learned how to pick a lock, commit a fairly elaborate bank holdup, prevent wetness all day long, get the laundry twice as white, and kill people with a variety of sophisticated armaments.
~ Russell Banker

The Supreme Ethical Rule: Act so as to elicit the best in others and thereby in thyself.
~Felix Adler.

I hate with a murderous hatred those men who, having lived their youth, would send into war other youth, not lived, unfulfilled, to fight and die for them; the pride and cowardice of those old men, making wars that boys must die.
~Mary Roberts Rinehart

Every government has as much of a duty to avoid war as a ship's captain has to avoid a shipwreck.
~Guy de Maupassant

In the presence of eternity, the mountains are as transient as the clouds.
~Robert Green Ingersoll

I like the pluralism of modernity; it doesn't threaten me or my faith.  And if one's faith is dependent on being reinforced in every aspect of other people's lives, then it is a rather insecure faith, don't you thing?
~Andrew Sullivan

It's a shallow life that doesn't give a person a few scars.
~Garrison Keillor

There are none so sour as those who are sweet to order.
~Luc de Clapiers, Marquis de Vauvenargues

Ah! what a divine religion might be found out if charity were really made the principle of it instead of faith.
~Percy Bysshe Shelley

And with Shelley's admirable thought, I close the weekend quotes.  Have a blessed weekend.


Monday, August 10, 2015

And now self promotion

It's been four years since those fateful early morning hours when Matthew appeared on the road and I began the process of giving life to an idea.  Err...Matthew Buchanan's idea, thank you very much. Much has happened since, I have skinned my knees and elbows a few times, but most of all I have gained immeasurable respect for the men and women who are invested in this half-insane craft.

So, what's the big deal, you ask?

I didn't have a writer friendly job.  My desk was not on terra firma, and I did not keep the usual nine-to-five hours.

Of course not.

I flew for an international carrier, with assignments that would take me, literally, around the world. Add to the days away from husband and home, the dreaded time change, plus the residual physical effects of constant swing shifts without rhyme or reason, and I'm getting awfully close to describing the schedule from hell.

In order to accomplish my goal, I had to steal moments to compose my very first, ultra-wordy draft. I had researched high and low, read several books on the era, taken unending notes, and wanted to be so accurate, that unknowingly, I had begun my version of the Bible, circa 1960's.  No one explained I wasn't supposed to torture my readers with endless research minutiae. All that information was my protective barrier against using embarrassing, incorrect details. Period.

Ah, but my mind was a beehive of activity, the inspired thoughts would pop in the middle of a flight, sometimes during lengthy sit times—airline lingo for connecting times in-between flights—or during a full service.  Without wasting a second, I would eagerly jot down the thought in a napkin, the back of my printed schedule, or even a leftover menu so I wouldn't forget.  The minute I dragged my exhausted body through the door, I'd toss the bags aside, kissed my sleeping husband, and rushed to the computer to type my brilliant, Pulitzer prize-winning idea.

Right.

The following morning, the outstanding paragraph read like gibberish.  First lesson learned, never write anything while your brain is in Teflon mode, which is its normal state after long hours of flying.  I know renowned authors in the past have written masterpieces while under the effects of drugs and other mind-altering substances. Coleridge, Kerouac, and Kesey to name a few, but I'm not one of them.  To my dismay, I had to backtrack, try to understand the previous night's hieroglyphics and fix them so they made a bit more sense.

Second lesson learned, The End translates to = you're just getting started.

By the way, the RWA's local chapters are a wealth of information.  No kidding.  Whenever possible, they bring to their meetings special speakers who can enlighten the members with the latest craft trends.  This is how I found my first editor.  I had struck gold.  She was affordable and excited to work with my project.  Alas, is was not to be (insert frown here).  An unexpected illness forced her to back out and I was left with a new search.  Once again, the RWA came to the rescue — I don't want to give the impression the RWA is as powerful as Mighty Mouse — but they have resources.  Through one of their on-line seminars, I found a wonderful new editor.  However, the poor woman was appointed with the unenviable task of explaining I had entered re-writing territory.

Ouch!

There is a world of difference between writing cute essays and stories that will never see the light of day, versus writing a manuscript with dreams of publication.  Here I lost my writing innocence, part one. We worked on and off over three months, slashing, editing out the excess, verifying dates and historical events, polishing dialog tags, and superfluous commentary.  Finally, we crafted a svelte manuscript of 125,000 words.  In my less than expert opinion, this size 8 beauty, would be easier to sell.  My editor liked it, I liked it, my beta readers liked it, even my pickiest beta reader was happy...then everything came to a screeching halt.

Third lesson learned, the "ideal" manuscript size for a newbie is 85,000 words. That is the magic number, people.

What happened to that writers' axiom: tell your story, forget the market?

I had visions of The Devil Wears Prada, when is thin, thin enough?  The rejections piled, one after another, the language had changed from, no thank you, to encouraging letters, nevertheless, no is still no.  Once your agents' spread sheet fills with red ink, you begin to lose hope, and you have no remaining knee and elbow skin untouched.

End of the road.

Wait! There's one avenue still available: go indie.  Sounds easy?  Not so fast.  This is where I am. Here I've lost my writing innocence part two while gaining illumination. Yes folks, the light is upon me, in fact, it's so bright I'm half blind, but now I understand. I finally comprehend why so many outstanding writers sit in the dark, linger in the world of unknown oblivion, while they wait for that elusive and fickle opportunity.  The heavenly call from the literary agent who will open the golden doors to a contract and publication.

I used to think it was fear of the indie stigma that stopped them. "Ugh, you're a self-published author."  Nope, they fear something greater, a bigger evil, far more difficult than writing a book, two books, three books back to back. A monster that requires all the energy you can muster to defeat it, because if you don't you'll never write another word again.  I guarantee it.

I give you: self-promotion.

Wish me good luck.









Friday, July 31, 2015

Weekend Quotes










The trip to the RWA convention in New York was rewarding, unforgettable, and worth every exhausting minute despite the nonstop activity.  The hectic pace began as soon as the featured morning speaker uttered her last word.  In the typical behavior of the Big Apple, and quite similar to anxious thoroughbreds waiting for the gates to lift we took off toward the escalators, hoping to maintain a graceful and dignified exterior as we took two steps at a time.

Through it all we moved at high speed, busy little bees, from one floor to the next, crowding the stairs and elevators, hoping to catch an empty chair at a popular, super-crowded workshop and losing our adult poise when forced to sit on the floor like a ten-year-old. Then, at the end of the day the rush resumed as we fought the throngs in Times Square to reach the haven of our hotel rooms.

For the visually stimulated folks, I will post a couple of photos of TS in the peaceful early morning hours. No one in their right mind would try to take photos in the midst of hundreds of tourists.

Despite the exhilaration, chapter festivities, and information overload —and believe me we did receive tons of valuable information — I missed posting the weekend entry of thought provoking quotes.

Really.

 Every Friday, a strange phenomenon occurs.  As I search, select and type the quotes for the blog, it becomes a personal experience.  I dwell in the message and enjoy the motivation, the essence of what created the notion in the thinker, twice.

Today I feel  the Universe in motion, I have no way to quantify this statement or prove it in any way. But in order to stay true to my feelings I must open the blog a bit differently, not with a quote but two words of Hebrew origin that evoke— at least in me—visions of monumental, mythical creatures, and hellish events. Words I used in two critical times in Destiny's Plan.  

Leviathan Something large and powerful.  Via Latin from Hebrew liwyathan (whale).  Earliest documented use: 1382

Gehenna: Hell.  Any place of extreme torture or suffering.

*

Trust is the first step to love.  ~Munshi Premchand  

A happy marriage is the union of two good forgivers.  ~Robert Quillen

I have forced myself to contradict myself in order to avoid conforming to my own taste.
~Marcel Duchamp

Euphemism is a euphemism for lying.  ~Bobbie Gentry

Language is like money, without which specific relative values may well exist and be felt, but cannot be reduced to a common denominator.
 ~George Santayana

Courage is the price that life exacts for granting peace.  The soul that knows it not, knows no release from little things.
~Amelia Earhart.

There are two kinds of truth: the truth that lights the way and the truth that warms the heart.  The first of these is science and the second is art. Neither is independent of the other or more important than the other.  Without art, science would be as useless as a pair of high forceps in the hands of a plumber. Without science, art would become a crude mess of folklore and emotional quackery.  The truth of art keeps science from becoming inhuman, and the truth of science keeps art from becoming ridiculous.
~Raymond Thornton Chandler

What is done to children, they will do to society.
~Karl A. Menninger.


From my humble point of view, we would all do well to remember the last quote.


*



A mostly peaceful Times Square in the early morning hours. 















  

Monday, July 27, 2015

Slow Down The Frenzy

I'm fully aware the post is short and the title is cryptic, however, it was done in hopes of gaining some attention or curiosity—I'll take either one.  I just returned from the 2015 RWA Convention in New York, and before I forget, I wish to pass on the general advice from several best-selling authors. It is an important message, and since it affects our craft and livelihood, I thought I'd share it with any writer who might meander his/her way around my blog.  Consider me your friendly, recorded thumb drive.

The "word" was communicated by the keynote speaker on Thursday, Barbara Freethy. For those who don't know, Barbara is an extremely successful, conventional and independently published author.  By her own admission, she's had to invent and re-invent herself and her trademark repeatedly, always in an effort to keep up with the fluctuations of an ever-changing industry.

  


Sorry about the long distance photo, but I promise that is Barbara. 

It appears authors are engaging in strange writing frenzies, where the habit is to connect and challenge each other in word sprints with a possible end-goal to crank out one book a month.  Barbara, along with other well-respected authors, believe the trend is worrisome.  They would like to encourage all of us to slow down and take a deep breath.  

This doesn't mean we should shut down our computers and ignore the keyboard for weeks at a time.  Not at all, we should be focused on creating and publishing several titles, close together if possible. This is the golden formula, the one we all want, where the real readership and success begin.  But we're not going to achieve our writing goals if we emulate the same pace of a Daytona 500 race.

Her message was clear:  Slow down and pay attention to every detail— story line, editing, proofing, book cover, the nuts and bolts of the craft, otherwise quality may suffer.  If the quality of our stories suffers, we know the sad end result.  We may end up disappointing our readers for the sake of speed, and once you betray your readers they may never return.  I am one of those, frustrated by a favorite author, I have turned away and refuse to look back.  

So now that you've read the scoop, please don't shoot the messenger.  Take it easy—don't rush as I did with this poorly written/edited post.  Pay attention to your characters and your story.  Put forth the best book you can, and your readers will follow wherever you take them.