Monday, August 31, 2009

Our Guest: Furry Friends Everywhere!



To follow Bella's progress please visit: http://helpbella.wordpress.com/
Learn about the amazing care Healing Pets Sanctuary gives: http://www.healingheartsanctuary.org/  
2nd Chance for Pets, please visit:  http://www.2ndchance4pets.org/


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Usually, Monday on Authors Promoting Authors is Our Guest, a feature that has been well-received. However, we have a shortage of guest-bloggers. 
Our Guest is open to authors, writers, readers and those with words of wisdom or creative messages to share. apasuggestions@gmail.com
Given the shortage, when I came across Bella's story today and learned about these two amazing organizations that work hard on behalf of furry friends, I had to share. 
 Most of you know how I feel about my pups....

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Singing in the Dawn, Carol Ann Cook


Peregrine is a traveler, seeking a certain man.  In the village of Chaos, he finds a young boy and girl: Rescuer (13) and Abettor (10).  
Peregrine is impressed with their ability to release ravenous beasts from a magic spell, and invites them to join him in his travels.  
Abettor wants to go, but Rescuer does not trust Peregrine.  
To protect Abettor, Rescuer joins them on their journey.  Things go well until they reach the village of Shelter.  There, an old holy man named Abiel, challenges Peregrine and the power Peregrine seeks through the two youths.
Buy This Book from Amazon or Publish America



Carol Ann Cook, the author, was born and raised in beautiful Ohio.  Carol teaches high school students with behavioral issues, and greatly enjoys her students and colleagues.  Although most of her students do not like to read, they encouraged her in her writing endeavors, asking for the latest chapters as they were produced.  After reading the book, her students demanded a sequel.  Carol appreciates a wide variety of genres when she reads.  Being a history teacher, she especially enjoys reading history and historical fiction.  Carol has traveled extensively throughout the United States.  She has also been to Canada; on a singing tour of Europe with the American Youth Symphony and Orchestra; and spent a month in China through a cultural exchange program between Beijing Normal College and Wright State University.  Carol resides in west-central Ohio, USA.

To Learn More About Carol Ann Cook, please visit her blog at:
http://cookscreations-author.blogspot.com/ 

Singing in the Dawn Book Give Away Contest 

The first two people who email Carol Ann Cook at singinginthedawn.cookATgmail.com
with the title of the book in the subject line will win a book! 
 

Friday, August 28, 2009

Great Authors, Great Reads!


B,K Walker is the author of Near Suicide 
Janie Robinson is a troubled teenager living with her abusive and alcoholic Uncle. Following closely in his footsteps, she finds herself facing trials and tribulations no teenager should ever have to face. From getting pregnant to almost being killed by a psychotic lover, Janie finds herself looking for the strength to survive in life. Will she find the happiness she desires in the end?
To learn more about B.K. Walker and her books please visit: http://bkwalkerbooks.weebly.com/ 








Curse of the Tahiera by Wendy Gillissen
A journey through haunted forests, through dreams and time.
A story of love, magic and the power of forgiveness.
A Tzanatzi outcast and an Einache shaman are on the trail of an ancient curse.
Will they save their people from destruction?
To learn more about Wendy Gillissen please visit: http://devloekvandetahiera.blogspot.com/



 Leysa Henko immigrates to America from Russia with her family in 1917, with all the optimism of a four-year-old. Leysa’s world begins to crumble when her abusive alcoholic father, Devak, opens a pub in Tallenook, Pennsylvania, during Prohibition. When her adoring mother Ionna dies of tuberculosis, Leysa and her older sister Maryska are left at the mercy of Devak and his abusive bar cronies—the Monstermen. Devak presses them into service to save his tavern by delivering vodka door-to-door—alone—to Tallenook’s horrific alcoholic “shut-ins.”
To learn more about Kenneth James Kirsch, please visit: http://www.kennethjameskirsch.blogspot.com/
 

April Godbout has been writing for over sixteen years. She is a proud wife, mother of three boys, and a grandmother to a wonderful baby girl. She has two books, several articles, book reviews and four blogs published under one of her pen names, April May Godbout, and Wittywriter.
She has missed the writing world and plans on coming back full swing after a three year sabbatical. She is working on a new book and short story. She also wishes to pick back up on freelance writing work. Currently, she has been writing content for hubpages.com, the Manchester examiner (Manchester Plus Size Style Examiner), Total Fashion blog (www.totalfashion.net) and other sites.



Sarah Butland is an  author of a children’s book titled Sending You Sammy and Brain Tales Volume One.
To learn more about Sarah and her books please visit:  http://sarahbutland.com/blog/


A.F. Stewart is author of Chronicles of the Undead and Inside Realms. To learn more about this fantasy author please visit: http://afallon.bravehost.com/

Robin Cain is a novelist and also writes on matters of the heart, whose wonderful articles can be found:
https://www.examiner.com/x-16469-Scottsdale-Relationships-Examiner

D.VonThaer has come on board Authors Promoting Authors with a flourish! And I'm so glad she is and did. Did you know her book, Tuatha and the Seven Sisters Moon is being released on Halloween of this year?
Visit her website at: http://www.dvonthaer.com/ to read an excerpt. She also has a blog which can be found here: http://basedpress.blogspot.com/






I'd like to extend heartfelt thanks to the authors who took the Book Blitz forColor Me Jazzmyne by Marian L. Thomas and reposted it on their blogs. This is the eptomie of Authors Promoting Authors. 
   Thank-you to everyone who twittered and Facebooked it as well. 
When I first made mention of this book blitz, right away a handful of authors asked me if they could repost it on their blogs which led me to asking everyone if they would like to do the same. 
Those handful of authors asked me to keep their reposting anyonomous, even though I have done that, I'd like to extend a huge THANK-YOU to them. 
If you would like to repost future Book Blitzs on your blog please send an email to apasuggestions@gmail.com

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Authors Promoting Authors is now considering books for review. For further details on this, please click the Our Features tab.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Thoughtful Thursday: Tea Time


You can never get a cup of tea large enough or a book long enough to suit me.
C.S. Lewis

All true tea lovers not only like their tea strong, but like it a little stronger with each year that passes.
George Orwell


Tea is drunk to forget the din of the world.
T'ien Yiheng


"Talk and tea is his specialty," said Giles. "He has Come along inside... We'll see if tea and buns can make the world a better place."
The Wind in the Willows


A Proper Tea is much nicer than a Very Nearly Tea, which is one you forget about afterwards.
A.A. Milne


Drink your tea slowly and reverently, as if it is the axis on which the world earth revolves - slowly, evenly, without rushing toward the future.
Thich Nat Hahn


There is no trouble so great or grave that cannot be much diminished by a nice cup of tea.
Bernard-Paul Heroux
 

May you always have walls for the winds,
A roof for the rain,
Tea beside the fire, laughter to cheer you,
Those you love near you and
All your heart might desire.
Irish Blessing

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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

FEATURED BOOKS

FEATURED BOOKS ARE POSTED MONTHLY.
HOW DO YOU HAVE YOUR BOOK FEATURED? WATCH OUR ANNOUNCEMENTS ON FACEBOOK.


FEATURED BOOKS FOR JULY 2010 



An outcast by her kind, Trinity Ford has learned how to live on her own. And it isn't easy doing so, considering she is a Vampire. Once a fragile girl, taken by a powerful vampire prince, Trinity had relied on Basil for support. But finding him in the arms of another woman was more than she could take. On her own, she has decided to protect her city from the predators of her kind that prey on the innocent. Another tough thing to do when you're heart is broken.  She's had to learn fast, how to be tough, how to survive, how to stay alive. And she's doing a pretty damn good job of it. Until Basil walks back into her life.
Basil Hawthorn has been the reigning prince of vampires since banishing his father to the Realm of Darkness decades earlier. When his father comes to him in a dream, threatening Trinity’s life, he knows the only way to save her is to push her away. Doing so is not easy, especially when she is the only woman he will ever love.
Rumors in the underworld talk of raising the vampire King and blotting out the sun.  Basil knows that if his father rises, he will be put to death for his betrayal. Trinity knows that if the King returns, no human would ever be safe again. Despite the betrayal and the threat, neither can stay away from the other. But can the two work together to stop the Ritual before the King is resurrected?
Or will the darkness capture them both?




  


Mason Witt, a skateboarding American teenager, catapults himself into the greatest adventure of his life after reading the plight of a new Cyber Writer from Africa. Lutalo knew he would come so he sent Mason an urgent plea for help. His village has lost its precious Zebra of Life — and his father has gone missing in the pursuit of the evil men who stole it. Here begins this thrilling adventure of two boys, a smart-talking panther, and an amazing zebra that sustains life. Come and join Mason and Lutalo on this fantasy adventure.

To learn more visit:





The attacks strike like lightning, a murder blitz targeting America’s most ultra-secret organization, the Army’s clandestine assassination arm known as the Dog Team. Without warning, Dog Team operatives are being systematically slaughtered, decimating the republic’s last, best hope against those who would destroy our freedom.

http://williamjohnstone.net/DogTeam.html










Summer is officially here. Go to www.mereally.com and buy yourself a copy today for $ 16.95 an get a second copy for only $8.50. Need a beach read, need a perfect getaway, let "Broken Life - A Fight for Forever- Book 1 !!!

Follow the beautiful and intelligent Marguerite along on a treacherous but love-filled adventure across 1800’s America. Upon reaching the shore of America, this young and innocent woman of both French and African blood falls madly in love with wealthy landowner, Thomas Burnett. But will an African curse that followed her maternal ancestors for 12 generations – a curse that is too horrible to imagine and one that no one wants to believe – destroy their dreams? This novel presents an historical and steamy tale of love, faith and hope amid unconceivable odds in a land fraught with bigotry and hate.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Book Blitz for COLOR ME JAZZMYNE, Marian L. Thomas

 Buy COLOR ME JAZZMYNE  Here!

Anyone who purchases COLOR ME JAZZMYNE on August 25th receives an eco-friendly 
"I Was Part of Something Special" tote bag
  Child abuse, rape, struggling to live are all things women go through at least once in their lifetime. 
  
  In this tale, Naya Mona takes readers on a journey through her crayon box of life, and shows us what her true colors are as she recounts her past to her son whom she is meeting for the first time. 
  
  How do you tell your son that your father is his? 
The spiral of events that fill Naya's life provides each reader an intimate look at the drama, romance and struggles that become her voice. 
  
  On stage, she must become Jazzmyne-the jazz singer. Naya no doubt commands the attention of its readers and takes them on a rollercoaster ride that is filled with the melodious tones that makes COLOR ME JAZZMYNE a true reading pleasure.

To learn more about Author Marian L. Thomas, please visit her website: http://www.marianlthomas.com

Visit the publisher's website: http://www.lbpublishingco.com/
                                                 

10 Reasons & More to Buy COLOR ME JAZZMYNE
by Marian L. Thomas
  1. You enjoy being engrossed in the thick of a really good story
  2. You enjoy reading how one woman is able to push past her pain and live
  3. You enjoy reading books that motivate and inspire
  4. You enjoy reading books that show that we all can overcome trials and tribulations
  5. You believe that every woman deserves a "lifetime" type of husband
  6. If you have ever been raped
  7. If you have ever struggled to find your voice
  8. If you have ever had to relive your past
  9. If you have ever suffered from child abuse
  10. If you have ever had to face your "real" parents because of adoption
  11. You like to support new Authors.
  12. You believe that rape has become the new "hush" word in our society





Thank-You For Supporting the Book Blitz for COLOR ME JAZZMYNE!

Monday, August 24, 2009

Our Guest: Kris Saknussemm, Write What You Know and Be Damned

Write What You Know and Be Damned
by Kris Saknussemm, e-mail: krisATvardoger.com


To a life without shooting stars that carry strange life forms, talking animals, sentient machines, mysterious strangers, sudden revelations, words you’ve never heard before—and the thoughts in other people’s minds. You may have to forfeit forever the music of a close range gunshot on a cool morning or the clash of battle-axes at the gates of Mordor (although you may not miss the hiss of the demon who’s taken over your spouse’s body).
But still you stand to lose much more than you gain. In fact, the list is so very long of what you stand to lose by following this stale and unexamined bit of advice (which is offered with relentless frequency in writing programs, workshops, conferences, articles, etc.), it forms a curious index of precisely what so many of us might well consider to be what literature and therefore good writing actually is about.
Yet it seems like such innocent and practical advice, doesn’t it? So, perhaps we should both unpack it and consider a counter-strategy, for the issue at the core is peculiar to writing and separates it decisively from the other arts—and also applies, I’d maintain, to all forms of writing, from fiction and poetry to expository and rhetorical writing as well.
1. Flawed from the Start
The first reason to seriously prosecute this advice, as I’ve already suggested, is that it doesn’t address or apply to some of the most significant and loved works of literary art in the history of civilization, which is one of the reasons why there is such a profound disconnect between literature and the teaching of writing fiction in all but specific genre contexts, such as Fantasy and Science Fiction. Writing of this kind is seen by some highbrow people as somehow “common” and less than literary—and the immense popularity and commercial success of much of this kind of writing only strengthens their certainty. Surely, it can’t be “great” writing if a lot of people like it. That’s an emotionally deadly point of view to have—and these same people often have difficulty with the whole field of Children’s Literature.
But I would more simply say that if you’re going to have a working principle to guide you, than it had better work. Really helpful principles have a reverse-engineering capability whereby they illuminate other examples rather than having to exclude or dodge them.
2. Knowledge Must Be Discovered
To paraphrase the poet Charles Merrill, “I don’t actually know what I think until I write it.” Writing is a process of discovery. If you set out with the proposition that somehow what you have to write about pre-exists and is separate from your writing, you make a ghost of your work from the start and paradoxically also unhaunt it. The magic doesn’t arise, it must be imposed—and it doesn’t like that much.
More dangerously perhaps, you can also imagine you’ve done more actual labor than you have. Writing can fail on the page, but it’s not even born unless it rises up from the page. Every piece of writing is a bootstrap affair whereby you use the crisis of the next sentence to get to the one beyond. When things are really flowing a subconscious process has taken over—best experience in the world many people say. What’s really happening is that you’re allowing yourself to discover what you really do know—what you can prove by what’s on the page. The only way characters and scenes come to life for readers is if there’s a true (and sometimes even worrying) sense of discovery and animation for the writer. When you yourself wonder, where did this come from?…then things are happening.
Interestingly, this sense of writing being not just an iteration of what you know has also been solidly embraced in the expository writing field. The leading rhetoric and composition texts present the nexus of critical thinking and persuasive writing as a unified whole, with the tools of writing being tools to analyze arguments and to identify and refine a position rather than merely advance one. This is a huge evolution from where things were at when I was in school, when the assumption was everyone had to start with a thesis and then deploy arguments in support. Now the concept of an argument is seen first as a means of identifying and refining a thesis. If this can be valid in the context of non-fiction, how much more crucial to a story finder?
3. No One Knows Enough
As Coleridge once said, “I should not think of devoting less than 20 years to an Epic Poem. Ten to collect materials and warm my mind with universal science. I would be a tolerable Mathematician, I would thoroughly know Mechanics, Hydrostatics, Optics, and Astronomy, Botany, Metallurgy, Fossilism, Chemistry, Geology, Anatomy, Medicine—then the mind of man—then the minds of men—in all Travels, Voyages and Histories.” Of course, once he’d accumulated such knowledge, Coleridge would’ve been the first one to argue for the need for integration and dramatization of it through the esemplastic power of the imagination. (Cf. Ecclesiastes 12:12)
There is also the matter of what you may feel compelled to write about lying outside the bounds of acceptable knowledge and experience. For instance sex with large luminous amphibians, or more mundanely, cold-blooded murder. “Knowing” about such things as these is contraindicated.

4. What You Do Know May be Wrong
Whether you ask the cognitive scientists or you go to the courtrooms and police stations, you’ll hear a consistent message. People’s perceptions and memories are suspect. Eyewitness testimony, once so valued, isn’t trusted anymore like it used to be. Hard forensic evidence earns convictions and psychological experimentation continuously shows how fragile what we think we “know” is. The emerging model of cognition is as a sustained act of imagination, and therefore continuously active participation in the consensual hallucination of reality.
5. The Plague of Reality
It’s no coincidence that we live in an era rife with “reality TV” and “memoirs”…while in the world of speculative fiction and film one of the biggest recurring subjects is the very nature of reality—the fact that it may be literally an hallucination, a simulation, a game, a set-up.
Anyone who reads heard of the bust up over James Frey’s memoir A Million Little Pieces. But didn’t memoirs used to be things Winston Churchill would leave behind after half a century of public life? All of the hoopla was in my view a total distortion of the actual issue. It was the death-of-the-imagination people who got that work published in the first place. Why green light a work like that? Oh, because it’s “true.” Oops. Meanwhile, some exceptional voices and minds on the genuinely non-fiction front—from more popular writers like Lawrence Weschler to serious multilingual scholars like Frances Yates, are very open about the imaginative leaps that make their work work
The final reason to take the “write what you know” advice with a huge grain of salt is that very grain. It’s a metaphor, a conceptual-linguistic hierogram and that’s finally the inescapable essence of writing. Painters and visual artists have been on to this for a long time, and Maurice Denis formalized the principle forcibly: “A picture is essentially a surface covered with colors arranged in a certain order.”
Somehow, writers often forget how this applies to the page. And that’s OK. But it’s a question of in what way you forget.
Of course there’s some truth in the expression “You can’t get to it if you haven’t gone through it.” But thousands of men went to sea in mid-19th century America. Only Herman Melville wrote Moby-Dick—and while that story benefits enormously from his in-depth knowledge of the whaling industry of the day, many would also say this is what drags the story down. It’s when Ahab is solemnly passing the chalice around and pointing to the doubloon nailed to the mast, with all the rigging glowing with St. Elmo’s fire and every last man on-board knows, as does the reader, that that ship has sailed clean off all the charts and everyone is in new territory—or very old territory—that’s why people keep finding this story. No 1850’s whaling captain would’ve spoken like a mix of the Shakespearean kings, the King James Bible and a dash of Zoroaster. Writing has always been about magic, illusion, persuasion, circus, trickery, the scam, dreams and nightmares. If you want an honest, sober calling, lay bricks. I say embrace the flim-flam and bamboozle. Seduction. Discovery. Invention. Risk. As Jack London, who had a vast amount of life experience despite a short life said, “I’m merely pretending to be writer. I just pretend very hard.”

Kris Saknussemm is the author of the novels ZANESVILLE and the psychoerotic thriller PRIVATE MIDNIGHT.
www.saknussemm.com
www.myspace.com/saknussemm
www.myspace.com/privatemidnight
www.privatemidnight.com
*** 
Would you like to be Our Guest on Authors Promoting Authors? 
Open to both Authors and Readers, we would love to have you. 
Please email: apasuggestionsATgmail.com

Friday, August 21, 2009

Author Interviews: Terry Odell, author of When Danger Calls

By: D. VonThaer



This week I had the pleasure to sit down with Florida native Terry Odell for my first author interview for the APA. Terry is a suspense/romance writer with quite a collection under her belt. Her collection of works is growing; with four novels, three publishers, and a collection of short stories, there was a lot of ground to cover. I was fortunate enough to snatch a sliver of time with her for a chat, as well as a formal series of questions. During our one-on-one, we talked about the publishing industry, writing, inspiration, and PR.

I was thankful to find Terry, like myself, hates to give things away as much as she dislikes writing jacket copy and blurbs, as well as those pesky thing known as the query letter. It’s refreshing to know that even for someone whose been through the process a few times, some things never get easier. I think some of us can take refuge in that piece of knowledge, and find comfort knowing it’s not just us!

Our focus was on her latest book, When Danger Calls, by Five Star Press. WDC is an action-adventure (with a twist of romance!) about Frankie, a single mother who’s gone home to Montana to care for her ailing mother. Insert Ryan Harper, a government co-op agent on the bad side of his former employer, who’s been thrown into a tug-of-war with Frankie over the life of her daughter and national security, with millions of lives at stake. (One might suggest a little mystery-romance hides beneath the action-packed pages.)

Terry is currently working on a sequel to When Danger Calls, expressing a feeling many writers experience, but not everyone truly understands, “The characters demanded their stories be told, and who am I to argue?” That gave me an immediate feeling of kinship with someone who understands the innate desire to write, not for profit, or for fame, but because the story held within just will not rest until it has been told.

Terry’s words to the wise when it comes to writing and publishing? Separate! Take the ‘me’ feeling from the book and understand it’s also a business. I find this to be not only excellent advise, but advise not often given. So often we’re immersed in the craft of writing, that when it’s all said and done, it feels like giving birth, and the whole world is commenting on your infant. Remembering that it’s indeed a business enforces Terry’s wisdom: “A thick skin is a requirement of the job.”

Ms. Odell’s final words for aspiring writers? “Persistence. If you're a writer, you'll write because you love it. Because you have to. Publication is the cherry on the whipped cream on the sundae.” I’ll have what she’s having, thanks.

Terry Odell’s novel, When Danger Calls is available through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, as well as other retailers and Terry‘s website. Please ask your local library for a copy! It costs you nothing, but helps get the book out to audiences. Her other novels include What’s in a Name, Finding Sarah, and Hidden Fire all by Cerridwen Press. Her short stories are with The Wild Rose Press, and you can find out more by visiting her website at www.terryodell.com where she's compiled sources for helping other writers, workshops, and finding inspiration.

Want to win a signed copy of Terry Odell's novel, When Danger Calls? Go to your local library to request a copy of the book. Snap a photo of something in the library; books, shelves, the librarian, whatever! Just make sure I can tell it was taken in a library, and not your basement. Send the picture to dayna@dvonthaer.com before September 30 to enter.

What Books Have Influenced You?





I am a book addict.

I read four (during hockey season) to six (in the off season) books a week and I am known for going to great lengths to find, track down and collect reads that are off beat and those that have come under the radar of mainstream.

As I am sure most supporters and readers of this blog believe, words are powerful. Books are powerful and a single book can greatly influence or even change someone's life.

The first time I read, The Diary of Anne Frank, I was ten. My experience with that book opened my eyes to how wrongly people are capable of treating other people and added to my growing belief that we should all just learn to play fair.

Since then, I have come across some pretty amazing books. Not only are the books great reads but the story and the author behind the book is pretty incredible.
Such as 2 Girls by Perihan Magden.
How can you not make note of an author who chooses to stand-up and speak out?


Time and time again, I come across powerful reads. Like "Color Me Jazzmyne" by Marian L. Thomas. In my opinion it is a book that could change and greatly influence someone's life.



What book have you read that has influenced you?

What book has had an amazing impact in your life?


Come out to the Book Blitz for Color Me Jazzmyne and show your support for this powerful book and Author Marian L. Thomas.
Buy Color Me Jazzmyne here.

***



Thursday, August 20, 2009

Thoughtful Thursday: Inspiration For All Writers

Artwork courtesy of Christopher Chamberlain, all rights reserved, come see his new blog here!


Writing a book is an adventure. To begin with, it is a toy and an amusement; then it becomes a mistress, and then it becomes a master, and then a tyrant. The last phase is that just as you are about to be reconciled to your servitude, you kill the monster, and fling him out to the public.
Winston Churchill


I put all my genius into my life; I put only my talent into my works.
Oscar Wilde


And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.
Sylvia Plath


Writing, I think, is not apart from living. Writing is a kind of double living The writer experiences everything twice. Once in reality and once in that mirror which waits always before or behind.
Catherine Drinker Bowen



The good writer, the great writer, has what I have called the three S's: the power to see, to sense, and to say. That is, he is perceptive, he is feeling, and he has the power to express in language what he observes and reacts to.
Lawrence Powell

A writer's problem does not change. It is always how to write truly and having found out what is true to project it in such a way that it becomes part of the experience of the person who reads it.
Hemingway

I perceived that to express those impressions, to write that essential book, which is the only true one, a great writer does not, in the current meaning of the word, invent it, but, since it exists already in each one of us, interprets it. The duty and the task of a writer are those of an interpreter.
Marcel Proust


Talent alone cannot make a writer. There must be a man behind the book; a personality which, by birth and quality, is pledged to the doctrines there set forth, and which exists to see and state things so, and not otherwise.
Ralph Waldo Emerson



The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say.
Anaïs Nin



Writing is a solitary occupation. Family, friends, and society are the natural enemies of the writer. He must be alone, uninterrupted, and slightly savage if he is to sustain and complete an undertaking.
Anon.


***

It is Thursday, the day of Muskil Gusha. Muskil Gusha is the remover of all obstacles and difficulties.
The tale of Muskil Gusha has to do with sharing what you have, passing on your blessings and the resaurance that when your need is truly greater than your want, obstacles will be removed.
The story can be found here: http://www.nasruddin.de/_NET/Stories/gusha_en.htm


Come to the Book Blitz for COLOR ME JAZZMYNE by Marian L. Thomas more info. here

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Weekly Something: Awarded Inspiration

Authors Promoting Authors has been nominated for THREE Book Blogger Appreciation Week Award(s).
This is very exciting, as APA is just a year old.

I am really happy with the changes made over the course of the summer and I am excited to be heading into another year of chaotic bliss that so often running this blog becomes.

Alongside the addition of the features, the layout and design and adding a new face to the team, I have decided to actually offering marketing and research services for authors. This wasn't as an easy decision as you might think. There is less risk when you privately offer service or skills.
I even wondered if doing such a thing, would hurt me when it came to my own writing goals.
Why is what we imagine, often more fearful than the reality?

This year, I have realized that I can no longer stay quiet about instances such as this.
At least, I will try my best to put it out in the open and from there people can decide what they want to do about it.

I love hearing about new books and books and what people are doing with their lives, how they are striving to reach their dreams and this is what has been such a blessing about running Authors Promoting Authors and this is why I am so passionate about promoting and marketing books and authors.
Here are a handful of examples that have inspired me:

How can you read about Gail Barker's new podcast and resist going to listen?

Maybe you feel the same way I do about Hope's Vengeance by Ricki Thomas and want the book to fly off the shelves, knowing a little of where the book sprung from?

Does romance speak to you? Keta Diablo has just a few.

Dennis Gelbaum spent three years researching for his book Beyond Reasonable Doubt

Would you have the strength to write about the Twin Towers in such a real way? J.E. Braun did in his book, Paranoia

Each book that Authors Promoting Authors features or gets the chance to do something with, is inspiring and I think readers of the blog are really catching on to this.

How can you not feel inspired by Marian L. Thomas' Our Guest post? And if you were inspired by that you will love her book COLOR ME JAZZMYNE

Authors Promoting Authors will be hosting a Book Blitz for COLOR ME JAZZMYNE on August 25th.

I have had a lot of requests to repost this book so if you are an author, reader or blogger who would like to do so, please drop me a line at : apasuggestions@gmail.com

There is so much inspiration and support in the APA community and I for one, will continue to be inspired by it all.


Monday, August 17, 2009

Our Guest: Marian L. Thomas, Spending Our Nights...Eyes Wide Open

So what is the million dollar question that keeps us up late at night? It's probably not the same one we thought long and hard about a year ago. My how things change and quickly! Yesterday, as we crept under our sheets and tried our best to close our eyes, our minds began to wander off into the land of worrying, denial and/or the land of "I just don't care." Here's a speck of reality...you really do care. We all do.

Let's face it, the economy has most of us spending our nights, eyes wide open. So many questions play out like a movie scene inside our heads. Even in our sleep. We wonder if we will still have a job when our eyes finally open and see the sun, although not shining as bright as it did once before. We wonder if we'll still be able to pay our bills as our employers send us emails and tell us that "yes, you still have a job" but guess what..."we are not going to pay you for a few days each month." It's an unfavorite reality that we must face. A moment that becomes a living thing at the very minute our bodies take a deep breath. Yes, things are tough.

So how do you survive this economy? The answer is neither complicated or complex. In fact, it's not based off rocket science or some textbook. Rather, it's simply and easy but only if we allow the very idea of "change" to flow through the cracks of our brains that hasn't been occupied by the thoughts of worrying. Here's the secret ingredient to the survival receipe of life... find a way to live out your dreams! Don't say "that's easier said than done." Rather, allow the concept to sink into that dream spot that has been hanging around over the years. Waiting as if in the distance for something to push it into the spotlight. Here is your spotlight! Don't go back and turn the light off but continue reading this article.


A few suggestions of dreams that might have been in the dark for you, until now:

Write a book...I did. It's called "Color Me Jazzmyne"


Find a new field that you've always wanted to get into and get into it.


Call a friend and ask them what have you always talked about doing but never did and then take that conversation and act upon it.

If none of the above get's you going, try this....

Ask yourself what will happen if you do nothing? How will the bills get paid if all you engage your mind on is worrying....the last time I checked the utility company doesn't take "worrying" as a payment.


Reality is something that can either move us or scare us into doing nothing. How will you face reality? Spend your nights....eyes wide open or focused on living out your dream!


***


Marian L. Thomas is the author of the recently debuted title Color Me Jazzmyne which was released by L. B Publishing. She received her Bachelors of Arts in Business Communications with honors: Summa Cum Laude. Was featured as one of Atlanta's 9to5 Women of Business in the Media Industry and CrossRoadsNews, a East Metro Atlanta paper graced the author with a feature story. "I really enjoy blogging, it allows me to put words into emotions rather than just putting them to paper."

Monday, August 10, 2009

Our Guest: Ricki Thomas: Past and Future of Hope's Vengeance


I first started writing professionally nine years ago, giving up a successful job for the poverty-filled life of a writer. At first I was, like most writing lambs, fairly blasé and over-confident, but over the next couple of years of collecting rejection letters, I realised how difficult the business was, and if I wanted any form of credibility, I was going to have to change the four novels I’d written drastically, and grow up.
The idea of Hope’s Vengeance was from a personal level: my life, as most peoples, hadn’t been entirely smooth, and for a period I had to see a counsellor to address the resulting problems. My counsellor was a tremendous lady, she made a point of trying to understand who I was and from there counselled me on a level that suited me, and my personality.
Having finished with counselling and feeling able to write again (not easy when your head’s in turmoil!) I thought about the intimate bond that I’d shared during counselling, about how much she’d felt like the closest friend in the world for a long time, and the issues we’d discussed. So I thought a book raising awareness of the unspoken topics, which need addressing, and the huge way talking about problems to a friendly ear could make life so much better.
So Hope, the much-troubled , yet still strong, lady who seeks a counsellor, and Dawn, the lady who changes Hope’s life, were born. It’s a fast-paced tale, Hope’s Vengeance, starting in counselling, and gradually spreading to snapshots of both women’s external lives, with a whole array of emotions coming into play. The plot gets deeper and more mysterious over the weekly counselling sessions, and when people begin to go missing Dawn seriously doubts her own mind: could Hope be capable of murder?
When I was offered a publishing deal in February my first thought … oh no, that was elation … okay, second thought, was how the book could HELP women rather than just be a, in my opinion, good read. Having debated for a while as to whether it would be a good idea or not, I finally asked my publishers if they would mind putting details of a few charities and their help-lines at the end of the book, so if anybody reading had suffered any of the painful events involved in the counselling sessions, there would be a number of an organisation who may be able to help them.
The publisher agreed this was a good idea, so I contacted charities to ask their permission, and when the book is released on 28th September, the pages at the back will be stuffed with help-lines!
On a personal level, I find it amazing, the statistics which show how many women have suffered abuse of all kinds. I won’t use statistics here because they vary from study to study, but whichever research you read, domestic violence, sexual abuse, and rape, in particular, are way too common in our society, yet nobody (except the charities who try their best with little funding) seems to want to vocalise these issues as they are deemed ‘uncomfortable’. Well. I do. And will.
Hope’s Vengeance brings these issues, and more, to the fore, and I very much hope that, although the book is a fictional novel, it will open doors where we can somehow raise awareness, and subsequently make changes, for women who have been forced to be victims.
Hope’s Vengeance will be followed by Return from Paradise, another sardonically funny yet harrowing tale, and in the meantime I shall be entering into a signing tour throughout England in October, and hope to see you all there!

© Ricki Thomas

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Book Blitz: No Shadows Left Behind


Terrorizing dreams, panic attacks, and everyday interactions bring back a past eighth-grade teacher, Melissa Bates believed to be buried for good.
As the school year wears on, she sees signs of an all too familiar situation in one of her students, Christy Kade.

Christy hopes that school will be different this year with the arrival of a brand new friendship.
Her adventures with Beth take her mind off what lies at home. Still she lives in silent fear, dreading her father's "secret, special games."
When everything is going well-finally-she is pulled back into herself by the horrific pain that never seems to end.

As our heroines open themselves up to the lessons taught to them by their loved ones, they grow in ways they’d never thought possible.


Ugly things do happen behind closed doors, but help—and hope—exist.


Excerpts from NO SHADOWS LEFT BEHIND:

Once the class members have all settled in their seats after lunch, Miss Bates asks, "Does everyone know what an autobiography is?"

Christy knows what an autobiography is; she has read several of them about her favourite artists. Christy wonders, Where is she going with this?

Miss Bates waits a couple of moments. "Just to be sure: An autobiography is a story written by you, about you—about your life, where you were born, your hobbies, your interests." She writes "Autobiography" on the whiteboard. "I would like each of you to write one. Include major events that have happened in your lives, up to this point. I also want you to include your ambitions and what you want to do in the future."

This could be fun, Christy thinks, writing down the assignment in her notebook.

"Minimum is eight pages. This is due two weeks from Friday." Miss Bates goes on talking about rough copies, how she wants it to be typed, what to put on the cover page, and other various instructions about the assignment.

Christy's mind drifts away from the classroom and she finds herself thinking of her father. What am I going to do when he comes back? I don't want to play his games any more… But he’ll hurt me if I don’t. Maybe I can hide at Mrs. Collier's… It hurts too much to play Daddy's games anymore. I can't… I'm way too old for this, to pretend like I believe it’s all a game.

"Christy!"

Startled, Christy looks up. Beth is standing at her desk, wearing a concerned look.

"Are you all right? You've been staring into space for a while. It’s time to go."

Christy blinks and looks around her. Kids are packing up and Miss Bates is erasing the whiteboard.

"The first day of school is over. Come on."

"I guess I was lost in thought," Christy says, hurriedly packing up her bag.

"Yeah, you were…"


***

So, did you always want to be a teacher?"

"Pretty much," Melissa replies. "I was very blessed to have some good teachers along the way. I loved to study and I loved school; it made sense."

Darren nods. "I think you're the first person I’ve met… who actually wanted to be a teacher. The rest of them, like me, fell into it accidentally. Maybe that's why we all ended up at the Collegiate, someplace where we could exercise our creative muscles and have more freedom. Maybe that's what’s also made you…"

"An outcast?" Melissa supplies.

The waiter returns, placing their plates in front of them.

"Oh, I wouldn’t say that. Just aloof. You just seemed… really hard to talk to," Darren says diplomatically. He looks despairingly at the measly salad in front of him.

Melissa arranges her hearty meal on her plate. "I can talk in front of a class of thirteen-year-olds, but generally speaking, social interaction isn't my strong suit. This year, I decided to try. That's due, in part, to your coaxing."

Darren waves his hand dismissively at her comment. "I just thought you were the quiet type, and if one of us went and approached you, invited you in, you'd feel more welcome. Although it took five years to figure that out."

"Did you draw straws, then?" Melissa asks, the words coming out colder-sounding than she meant them to.

"No, nothing like that," Darren says, spearing a forkful of his salad. "It was just my own thinking, not a group discussion. Honestly, I found you—and find you—kind of captivating."

Melissa nearly chokes on a fry. "Why?"

"Well, honestly, you barely spoke a word to any of us. It wasn't that you weren't friendly, but you seemed so timid and withdrawn. I thought: how could this woman possibly teach? And then word started going around about your classes and the after-school stuff you headed up, how fun and interesting they were. So I thought maybe you didn't like interacting with the other staff, or you just didn't like socializing… But if you suffer from anxiety attacks, you're probably not overly fond of crowds…"

Melissa momentarily freezes at the conclusion Darren has drawn.

Darren, seeing her tense, reaches out and puts his hand over her arm. "Hey, I didn't mean anything by that; it’s just an observation."

Melissa smiles tensely. "Sorry. For a moment there, I forgot I had told you."

"Well, you did and that's all right. It’s not a big deal… So why does it seem like it’s a big deal to you?"

Melissa looks up at the ceiling, noticing how dirty it is. She looks around at the other tables in her favourite restaurant, and realizes they are mostly occupied by single people. After a couple of moments, she says, "Because of what they're related to… I don't trust people easily, nor do I let them in often."

Darren nods. "Are you going to eat that?" he asks, pointing at her burger.

Melissa smiles, feeling herself relax. She cuts the burger in half. "Here."


**********************



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Saturday, August 8, 2009

Blog Tour: Cafe Tempest, Barbara Bonfigli




About Café Tempest: Adventures on a Small Greek Island

What is it about Greece that makes it so exotic, so romantic, so tantalizing that it’s right at the top of everybody’s bucket list – the one foreign land they’re longing to visit? Our dreams are made on Never on Sunday, Zorba the Greek, and more recently My Big Fat Greek Wedding and Mama Mia.
Café Tempest: Adventures on a Small Greek Island is a witty, evocative, beautifully written novel that puts you right in the heart of Greek island life. It’s so alive with the sights and smells and tastes and characters of Greece that you can pick it up and start your Mediterranean vacation on page one. On a deeper level, the book is filled with the kinds of observations, reflections, and arc of self-discovery that make Eat, Pray, Love so compelling.
“Welcome to Pharos. Laugh and dance in the hammock—not the cradle—of Western civilization,” says author, lyricist, and theatrical producer Barbara Bonfigli. “I’ve been falling in love with Greece since I was old enough to drink retsina. But if Sarah hadn’t captured my imagination you’d never know how I feel about friendship, feta, and the abundance of grace that turns friends into lovers and fishermen into kings.”

Excerpt From Cafe Tempest:


Chapter 20 [Sarah, the novel’s main character, is an American theatre producer spending several weeks on Pharos, a rustic idyllic Greek island. She’s been asked by Theo, the island’s doctor, to direct the local island inhabitants –fishermen, sponge divers, cab drivers, postmen --in their summer play, and she’s picked Shakespeare’s “The Tempest.” Everyone want to be in it; they’re pursuing her wherever she goes. She and her friend Alexandra (Alex) are hiding out in an unlikely taverna as they review the audition they’ve just held in Theo’s office.]


“A villain who picks his ear? And a princess who giggles and lisps! Didn’t you ever notice that?” Alex and I are sitting under a plane tree at La Venezia. It’s a romantic beachside taverna with dreadful Italian food. The trunk is painted with polka dots and Christmas lights are strung between the branches. No one would ever look for me here.
Alex puts down her menu. “Did you tell them it’s a comedy by any chance?”
“Of course not. They’re just nervous.”
“Offstage fright.”
“I guess so.”
“And what about Maria, the postman’s wife? They don’t have Chihuahuas on desert islands.”
“I’m sure we can get her a sitter.”
“And for the dog?”
“Yasoo, Sarah,” says our waiter Peros, plainly amazed to see me. “Yiati eise edho?”
“What does that mean?” Alex asks.
“Why are you here?”
“Ahh . . . what a nice omen.”
“Good to see you. Pero.” He works days at the boatyard and has never seen me in clean clothes. He puts an unripe tomato salad on the table along with a basket of cement bread.
“Efharisto.—thank you”
“What makes this place Italian? Is the chef from Italy?”
“The chef, Alex? The name.” I close my eyes for inspiration. “We’ll have lasagna, please.”
“I’m ravenous,” she says. She stabs at a tomato and nods sadly. “How do they do this—here in the land of tomatoes?”
“It’s a mystery. As is Manoli’s German accent. But Tino makes a great Caliban doesn’t he? as Caliban is really good, isn’t he? His voice is perfect and he looks positively slimy.” I pour olive oil on my plate and try to revive a piece of bread.
“Isn’t he the one who can’t be in it? Rich Tino, who never leaves his taxi?”
“That’s right.” I stare at my soggy bread.
“Ariel’s great,” she offers.
“The Pharos Players . . . How did Theo ever pull this off?”
We pause to consider.
“Lots of patience.” Alex cracks herself up.
“That’s the worst pun I . . .”
“Sorry, couldn’t help it.” She wipes her mascara.
“I think I’ll tell Theo I’m resigning.”
She blots. “Why don’t you set up the hospital and let him direct the play.”
“That’s a great idea!”
We drink thoughtfully. The retsina in the tin pitcher is mercifully cold. I’m trying to remember what disease tin causes . . . is it memory loss?
“Priftis makes a pretty good Prospero. Can he double as Caliban?”
“Impossible, Alex. They’ve got several major scenes together.”
“You could always rewrite the play,” she says cheerfully.
“Great idea!”
Peros rushes over. “Problem, Saraki?”
“Oxi--no. The lasagna?”
“Amesos.” (In India they say, “Just now coming.” Greeks say Amesos. They both mean “No one knows when.”)
“Manolis makes a pretty convincing duke of Milan with that squint and that great head of hair. I wonder if he blow-dries it.” She holds up two tomato slices. “I could use these as earrings.”
“Except they’ll rot.”
Peros sets down the lasagna. I wave dismissively over Alex’s salad but he’s reluctant to take it away.
“You don’t want?”
“Oxi.”
He looks bewildered as he retreats. An actor?
I dissect the plate before me. Something white is peeking out under lots of gelatinous red and brown. “We still don’t know if Manolis can memorize lines. He never charges the same fare for two identical trips.” I move some sauce around. “It’s the duke who has all the expository monologues in the first act and who sums up the play at the end.”
“Our revels now are ended? I thought that was Prospero. You’re playing with your food.”
“That is Prospero. It’s considered Shakespeare’s retirement speech. Everything before that. And I think you’re right about Manolis’s hair.”
“His retirement speech?” Alex stabs at a noodle. “How old was he?”
“Thirty-something.” I push something green around my plate. “I do believe this is canned basil. Can we never come here again?”
“We’re hiding, remember?”
“Right. And we’re starving.” I drink deeply. “A condition we may take to bed.”
Alex holds up a dripping wad of spinach. “Seaweed? Where are we?”
“Venezia.”
“Oh no, that’s a sacrilege. We’ve got to rename this place.”
“Mmm . . .” I’m wrestling with a mushroom.
“Was he sick?” Alex looks worried.
“Shakespeare? Oh, no; he inherited his father’s land and settled down as a gentleman farmer.”
“He settled down?” (Ordinarily we’d be using some of this time to chew, but under the circumstances . . .) “Do you think he got writer’s block?”
“No,” I say evenly. “I don’t think a person who writes forty plays and hundreds of poems before he’s thirty-five can be considered blocked.”
“No, he certainly can’t.” She smiles.
Peros passes by with plates for another table.
“Look,” he says. The full moon has risen over the mountain sheltering the left side of the bay and thrown a copper ribbon from the horizon to the small dock below us. It falls in reckless calligraphy between the warped boards that reach over the water and wind above the sand, until it breaks up on the splintered steps to the taverna.
Moonstruck and pasta-worn, we chew on.
“Vendetta!” I break the spell.
“What?”
“The name for this place. Ecce!” I hold up my glass.
“Ah! Perfetto.” We click.

To learn about Barbara Bonfigli and Café Tempest, feel free to visit any of these sites.


Order Café Tempest directly from the publisher - http://www.tellmepress.com/pub_ct.php or from Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Café-Tempest-Adventures-Small-Island/dp/0981645313

To see the complete tour schedule visit http://virtualblogtour.blogspot.com/2009/05/cafe-tempest-by-barbara-bonfigli-summer.html

Barbara Bonfigli’s website – www.cafetempest.com



Friday, August 7, 2009

Weekly Something: Finding Warmth in the Cold Winds of Writing Rejections


A dear author friend of mine, told me over the weekend that she has had it with rejection letters, with working so hard on promoting her books, with the editing and rewriting, that it is all too much for her, so for awhile she thinks she's just going to hunker down and pick up writing again once she felt she could rebound from the rejections.

Through running Authors Promoting Authors, I hear this scenario often.
I hear about authors who are going to pull their self-published or small press books.

I’m not going to go into a tirade about how hard the whole writing business can be or the statistics of books-there is a great post here that covers those topics well.

I have sent query letters out, only to be rejected and my own book (even though it has sold over 300 copies, with no backing and not much publicity) has had its struggles in the last few months.
How does an author keep going?

I think of it as finding warmth in the cold wind.

In my life, I have had some pretty big rejections, with schools, with jobs I really wanted, a job I really loved and lost, with house and home.
All of them can cause your cosmology to get shifted and jostled till you've lost sight of your purpose, your meaning, or even what you want to do.
Some of these can even cause your "Will" to shut down. The thing that tells you, "I CAN", and its also the thing, some new-agers say, that helps manifest your dreams into reality.
If your personal will, the centre that tells you how you relate to the world and where you are going, shuts down, life can seem pretty sluggish.

My solution to keeping all of this at bay, is just to continue on.
I know its cliche and I know its easier said than done but really, what else is there to do?

That's when I haven't lost sight of what I want and still believe I have what it takes to get there.
The few times that I've lost all sense and became sluggish…. well it took time.

The biggest help to me, I think, is looking back at all the times in my life, where someone said, "you can't" and comparing that with everything I have done.

For me, what most people take for granted, did not come easily, so I kind of have a big, "So There!" to stick out to the world.
And I bet you do, too. All of us have a "so what" story.
You know, the story that goes: "my father left me when I was six.....my mother didn't take me to piano lessons....I was abused/addicted....they said I wouldn't survive the year..."

And that pales in comparison to the rejection letters and the struggle with my book.
Or your rejection letters and your struggles with your book.

In the next couple of months, my book will have a relaunch and I am looking forward to what might come from it now.

How did you find your warmth in the wind? What helps you to keep on going despite it all?

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Thoughtful Thursday: That Time and Space

Artwork Courtesy of Christopher Chamberlain. All Rights Reserved.


The sky is the daily bread of the eyes.
Emerson



Many a trip continues long after movement in time and space have ceased.
John Steinbeck

Life is perpetually creative because it contains in itself that surplus which ever overflows the boundaries of the immediate time and space, restlessly pursuing its adventure of expression in the varied forms of self-realization.
Tagore



The true scientific mind is not to be tied down by its own conditions of time and space. It builds itself an observatory erected upon the border line of present, which separates the infinite past from the infinite future. From this sure post it makes its sallies even to the beginning and to the end of all things.
Sir Conan Doyle


For a moment of night we have a glimpse of ourselves and of our world island in a stream of stars - pilgrims of mortality, voyaging between horizons across the eternal seas of space and time
Beston


A human being is part of a whole, called by us the Universe, a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separated from the rest a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circles of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.
Albert Einstein



The sun, with all those planets revolving around it and dependent on it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as if it had nothing else in the universe to do.
Galileo



Be humble for you are made of earth.
Be noble for you are made of stars.
Proverb


********

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