Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Interview with Author T T Michael


Hello everyone... Today we are interviewing Author T T Michael for his book "Fire War II"So, we asked T T Michael few questions about the book and himself, below are the answers: 

  1. When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
Ans. => I realized I wanted to be a writer in junior high. I didn’t fulfil that dream until I had a great story and Fire War is my great story.

  1. How long does it take you to write this book? 
Ans. =>I usually take anywhere from 6 to 9 months to write a full book. Then there is a month or 3 of editing. 


  1. What is your work schedule like when you're writing?
Ans. =>I work about 55 hours a week as a finance manager at a car dealership. When I get home at night is when I write. My wife falls asleep while I am writing my books.


  1. What brought you to write this book?
Ans. =>I continue to read how politicians want to build a wall at or borders and shut the world off from the United States. I wrote this book to talk about what could happen if they actually get their wish.


  1. How you become a published author? Any inspiration?
Ans. =>I became a published author by choice. I wanted this story to be told because I felt it needed to be told. I will say I really enjoyed writing it and now that I am almost done with the trilogy I feel a sadness but a sense of fulfilment. My inspiration is truly the world around me. Around us. I see things and think how would that play out in my story. 


  1. Where do you get your information or ideas for your books?
Ans. =>I get my information from real life. I see and hear so much from people I deal with on a daily basis. Whether it be the news or just patrons of my dealership I am always on top of what’s happening around us all.

  1. When did you write your first book and how old were you?
Ans. =>I wrote my first book 10 years ago and I was 35. It took me so long because I didn’t have the right people around me to support my decision to put my thoughts and beliefs out there.


  1. What do you like to do when you're not writing?
Ans. =>I like to hang with my wife and 4 kids. They’re my true inspiration to succeed and they’re behind all my success!


  1. How many books have you written? Which is your favourite?
Ans. => I have written 6 books and the Fire War series is by far my favorite because it is my heart and soul on every page. 




  1. What's next for you? What are you working on now?
Ans. =>The next thing for me is TV. I am currently in talks with a TV producer about turning the Fire War series into an actual TV series.
I am currently finishing the Fire War series then I will take time off from writing to pursue the TV deal. Then I think I’ll start another new series with a different concept but I truly don’t know what that will be.


Friday, June 17, 2016

Inflamed: A Shadow Riders MC



WARNING: 

**If you are not into hardcore, filthy mouthed, misogynistic, unapologetic bikers, *please* do not read this book. If you don't like the darker/no sugarcoating MCs or novels with enough swearing to make you clutch your pearls and someone else's, do not read this book. If you are not into hardcore sexuality and even harder language (because I do not exaggerate on this), then do not read this book. There is an *abundance* of "nasty" talk between various characters throughout. If you can't get past what's in the sample, then I'd heavily advise reconsidering this book as it more than likely will not be for you. Thank you.***** 



"I'm nothin' but danger, darlin'. I'm no more than death. I'm somebody that you don't wanna f%&kin' mess with in the middle of the goddamn night or even in the daytime. I'm your worst f%&kin' nightmare – your greatest enemy. I'm every f%$kin' thing you never wished I was and every f%$kin' thing you ever wanted me to be." 



Their worlds collided like a pair of rocket ships in midair. 



Eight years ago, Mia Sullivan was known in and around her small town just outside of Crescent Beach, Florida as the 'good girl'. The 'preacher's kid'. The one who never stayed out late, always turned in her homework on time and never, ever said a word in front of anyone else that she couldn't say in front of her parent's first. She didn't drink. She didn't smoke. And sex before marriage was completely off the table. Her world was perfect. Her life plans were laid out in front of her. Everything was set in place. Until one night with the wrong man sent a girl well on her way to the top of the hill, sinking straight down to the bottom of the river like a stone. 



Eight years ago, Jacob 'River' Hawkins was just a man looking to finally catch a break in his life. Born into a world of drugs, booze, sex and bikes, he had long ago given up on his dream of winning the UFC World Championship title after snapping his opponent's neck during a staged cage fight. As a result, his mother encouraged him to finally become an official member of the only family he ever knew growing up, the Shadow Riders MC. A few years in was all it took before he was made VP and forced to help make decisions about a club that while saving him from the streets, was also draining away parts of his soul day by day. Parts he never thought he'd get back until the morning he found a girl almost half his age beaten, broken and laying half dead right outside his club. 



Eight years ago changed the course of two lives forever, connecting two souls that never believed in needing someone else until they had a need for each other. Neither of them knew just how much that need would eventually turn to lust, followed by love. Neither of them knew just how much that kind of love would almost destroy them both. 



***"Inflamed" is a complete story told in first and third person POVs. It is around 180k words, meaning YES, it is VERY, VERY LONG. This is an IR (BWWM) romance and I can in fact guarantee an HEA. HOWEVER, you need to know that the road to that HEA will not be paved with pretty flowers along the way. At all. As stated above, due to some *serious* hardcore language and deeply intense sexual situations, this book should **NOT** be read by anyone under 18 years of age or those easily offended by coarse language. Again, please read the warning via the 'Look Inside' prior to purchase and read/download sample pages.****



Monday, June 13, 2016

Interview with Author P.M. Thomas


Hello everyone, this is an interview time and today P.M. Thomas is with us...


When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
Ans. => When I was a teenager, I developed a taste for writing at 16 when I wrote my first ever screenplay, a sequel to the 1987 cult horror “Hellraiser”, it was a terrible script and my youth showed in the style, format and the plot. But it was a start and it laid the groundwork for me to shape up my writing skills to what they are now. Writing is like a journey, and you grow wiser to yourself and the art of crafting a story as you go along. 

How long did it take you to write this book?
Ans. => It took me a few months to write it out, I was adapting the book from one of my old un published screenplays I wrote several years back, it helped the writing process of the novel flow much smoother and with the combination of old ideas from the script and new ideas for the book, it was a quick book to write and very fun, it was an enjoyable experience expanding on the screenplay and turning it into a novel, fleshing out the scenario and the characters.

What is your work schedule like when you're writing?
Ans. => I'm a workaholic, I try to get as much work done as possible. I write as much as I can in the morning, have a break in the afternoon, then carry on writing from late at evening to the night. 

What brought you to write this book? 

Ans. => Much like “The Woman and The Boy”, I owe the creation of “Love Struck” to my eternal muse, Margie Newton. She starred in an Italian romantic comedy back in 1986 called “Una tenera follia”, which means “A fine madness” in English, interestingly enough in some territories, it was released as “Lovestruck”. I enjoyed the sunny locations and the crazy love triangle between the three main characters, one of them Margie who was as beautiful and alluring as ever in the movie, and I wanted to do a homage to the film and a love letter to her, and her acting career. The location and the love triangle in the book are inspired by the film, everything else that happens in the story is its own original thing, I took the concept of a holiday on a island paraise between two lovers who get torn apart when the guy falls in love with a new guest at the resort and made it my own.  My book is a romantic epic, a fairy tale for the modern age full of love, tenderness and madness. Just sit back and immerse yourself in the passion, the heartbreak and the humour along the journey of the three characters. And to add even more madness and complications for the love story, there is in fact a fourth man, which further adds to the comedy and the tragedy at the same time.

And the other book, “The Author”, that was inspired by a French new wave director I admire very much, and his many great works over the years, from 1958 all the way to 2011. His films are works of art, thrillers that have great character studies with plenty of family drama, domestic conflicts, personal turmoil, romance, passion, murder, and of course, a satire on the Bourgeois lifestyle. My book doesn't have the satire, but it does have all the other boxes ticked as a loving homage to a great legend of a filmmaker. It is a deep character study on how society can break someone down, turning them from a loving soul to a bitter shell, the book centers on a woman who has given everything to her husband, stood by him through the darkest of times, hoping some day for the light to come back, but with each day, she realizes that it will never happen, she loses faith in her abusive husband who falls deeper into an inescapable pit of despair and is dragging her down with him. She is forced to make the hardest decision, to escape from him and when she does, she begins seeing the world in a new light with a romantic, loving author who has dedicated his life to his work, but never to himself, until he meets her, and discovers the true joy of living and the real romance of love. But the love story doesn't last forever, her romance is brought to a halt in a tense ending, when the husband tracks her down with the intentions of taking her back, and she is forced to make the ultimate sacrifice to be with the man she now loves. It has everything: drama, romance, passion, love, dilemmas and thrills, enough to hook any reader from beginning to end.

How you become a published author? Any inspiration? 
Ans. => I became a published author thanks to a fellow author Davie Graham, writer of the popular “Silent Blade Chronicles” fantasy series on Amazon, if I hadn’t met him, I would have never have got in touch with publishing house Ecanus who released by first professional novel “Humanity Lost” last year and got the ball rolling, I am very grateful to him and Ecanus for that, 

Where do you get your information or ideas for your books?
Ans. => A vareity of different things, sometimes things in the world gives me ideas, sometimes it's a film or a book, sometimes it's from my own imagination in overdrive creating a possible new idea to delve into. There are endless sources to create ideas, many times they come to you when you least expect it. 

When did you write your first book and how old were you?
Ans. => This story is becoming quite famous with my origin. I've said itn so many times now, I know it off by heart. I wrote my first book at 16 after dropping out of college, an awful experience that was (college, not writing the book). It was a gritty urban splatterpunk novel called “Warriors of the Night”. Looking back at it now, it’s evident how inexperienced I was as a writer then, I still cringe at it. The book is a crazy, gonzo mess of different genres all thrown into a blender to make one insane story. It would be nice to have it published just as a curiosity, but I think the outlandish gore puts publishers off, Ecanus included. Maybe one day it might be possible for authors to see the origin of a budding young author and see the difference between it and my later work as an adult. It would probably make an entertaining read, one of those books in the style of a cult b-movie that would’ve been shown on BBC’s moviedrome with Alex Cox. A privilege that would be. This will be the fifth time I spoke about this now, (laughs) and I'm sure not the last. 

What do you like to do when you're not writing?
Ans. => I usually try to unwind and take my mind off writing for a little bit, I sit back, listen to some music to relax, play a videogame to keep my fingers busy or watch a film to get my creative juices flowing for any possible future ideas. 

How many books have you written? Which is your favourite? 
Ans. => I have written 15 at the moment. Like director Robert Altman, I tend to favourite each and every one, especially the recent one I've just completed. So right now, “Love Struck” and “The Author”, my most two recent published books are my favourites, it's a satisfying feeling to have written them and have them available for the the public.

What's next for you? What are you working on now?
Ans. => I recently finished another book, a novelization of a screenplay, I can't say more than that at the moment. Now that the manuscript is completed, it's just a matter of waiting now to see if the rights can be secured for it to be published. Fingers crossed it can. If not, well, it was a fun writing project to work on.



Saturday, June 4, 2016

Interview with Author R.J. Jerome



Hello everyone, it’s time to take an author interview and today Author R.J. Jerome is with us.


  1. When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
Ans. => I never wanted to be a writer. I wanted to be a musician, but as fate has it, in 2009 a story came to me and I needed to get it on paper.

  1. How long does it take you to write a book? 
Ans. =>My first two books in the Pelagius Game series were written in about 18 months. My third book, September Son, will have taken 2 years to complete.

  1. What is your work schedule like when you're writing?
Ans. => I have to be in the mood to write any more. Back in the day I would just put down whatever thoughts came to mind and worked out the details later. These days, I’ve become a bit more cautious and critical.

  1. What brought you to write The Pelagius Gameseries?
Ans. =>My books are based off of fantasy, paranormal and religious themes. So when I was invited to a Cathedral in England, I witnessed two priests in what seemed to be a heated discussion and my imagination led me to believe that they were hiding something supernatural.

  1. How did you become a published author? Any inspiration?
Ans. =>I was very lucky. I had a good story in my head, but my writing was terrible. I sent a copy to eTreasures Publishing and they brought me on board. The first book was a top seller and so I was forced to up my game for the second book. Inspirations? It’s weird, but when I see a painting/picture I love I get inspired to write. 

  1. Where do you get your information or ideas for your books?
Ans. =>I don’t know. Sometimes they come in dreams, voices in my head or alcoholic hallucinations. I really can’t say. I use to just auto write.

  1. What do you find is the most difficult part about being a writer?
Ans. =>What I’ve noticed is that Authors and Artists all have God complexes and yet we are all scared of rejection and failure. Yes, even the pretty ones with all the right answers. We are creators of worlds and art. So dealing with my mood swings, fears, anxieties, the voices, that is the hardest part. Finding someone who’s in my tree would be a relief. 

  1. Who are your favourite Authors and Artists?
Ans. =>Being a terrible dyslexic makes it hard for me to comprehend what I read. So I don’t do it much. But if I had to pick and author, I’d go with R.A. Salvatore. My favourite artists are Rene Magritte, for his brilliance, and K.M.Cheh, for her purity. I need to get Cheh to draw my next book cover. 

  1. How many books have you written? Which is your favourite?
Ans. =>I have 2 book published so far in the Pelagius Game series, Valstain and Born Villain. My third book, September Son, is due out by the end of the year and it is by far my favourite. 

  1. What's next for you? What are you working on now?
Ans. =>Finishing September Son and then going back to Salem Massachusetts for inspiration for my fourth book. I may also write a poetry book under the name Gemini. In closing I want to thank you for taking the time to interview me. It was a blast.








Thursday, May 5, 2016

Book Of The Month


Hello everyone... Time to feature a book which can be the best book to read in this month and we have decided to feature a children book this month. You just need to pick the book from amazon and enjoy with your kids. 


Cooper: A Rescue Dog's Tale coloring and activity book is a heartwarming and fun story. It follows Cooper, a rescue pup on his quest for a forever home. The rhyming story, beautiful illustrations, and fun-filled activities will help educate people on how to aid in the rescue of pets. Cooper: A Rescue Dog's Tale is based on a true story and brought to life by the talented folks at Helping Tales Publishers. The goal is to help educate and inspire people to get involved in helping animals in need. Helping Tales' motto is "Helping those in need, one story at a time." To that end, they donate a percentage of all book sales to select charities. This is the sixth original title by the award-winning Helping Tales team. 

For more information about Helping Tales please visit www.HelpingTales.com

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Interview with Author Tal Klein


Hello everyone, it’s time to take an author interview and today Author Tal Klein is with us. 

  1. When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer? 
Ans. => I think pretty much as soon as I was able to write. My parents tell me I preferred writing stories to watching TV. I was a strange kid.

  1. How long does it take you to write this book?
Ans. =>I had mulled and researched the topic for about four years before I “put pen to paper,” but once I actually began writing it took almost exactly one year from start to finish.


  1. What is your work schedule like when you're writing?
Ans. => It’s very chaotic and opportunistic. I have a full time job and a young family, so every single word is written on stolen time. Late nights, early mornings, airplanes, hotels – Whenever I could sneak a second, it went to writing.


  1. What brought you to write this book
Ans. =>There were a couple of catalysts for writing this book. First, about five or six years ago, I had one of those non-sequitur water cooler chats with the CEO of the company I was working for at the time. We discussed teleportation and he explained that teleportation was actually an asynchronous replication technology, not a transportation technology. That blew my mind. Then, a few years later, my daughter Iris became a published author when she turned five. She wrote a kids’ book called “I’m A Bunch Of Dinosaurs.” One day she asked me, “Daddy, when are you going to write your book?”


  1. How you become a published author? Any inspiration?
Ans. =>I’m not published yet! But hopefully with the support of your readers, The Punch Escrow will see the light of day. Like many first time authors I struggled with the best publishing path for my book. I have friends who are publishers and published authors, and everyone seemed to have their own spin on things. I had recently supported a friend’s successful Inkshares campaign, and the process seemed incredibly positive. I was approached by a publisher, but the terms they were offering were not that great, and they were not willing to compromise on things like creative control and editor selection. I’ve been very happy with Inkshares. It’s a great platform and a very supportive community of authors.


  1. Where do you get your information or ideas for your books?
Ans. =>I’m very fortunate in that I have some very smart friends in the fields of physics, biology, politics, law, religion, and philosophy. Since you asked about science, I’ll give you an example: I have a friend who’s a physicist. In the book, humanity solves for air pollution by genetically modifying mosquitoes into steam reformers (devices that convert one toxic fumes to air). So I needed to know how to turn a mosquito into a flying steam reformer. I called my friend and he explained that it’s possible, but would require a wake transducer that would reclaim the kinetic energy generated by the mosquito’s wings. Then it was up to me to take that information and make it readable and enjoyable to someone who wasn’t a professional physicist.

  1. When did you write your first book and how old were you?
Ans. =>The Punch Escrow is actually my second manuscript. I nearly published my first at the age of 22. It was a collection of satirical essays titled “Confessions of Ron Jeremy’s Hypothetical Love Child.” I had a book deal with a well known publishing house but they wanted me to convert the book from a collection of essays into a first person narrative and it didn’t work out. Fast forward a decade and change, I read Ernie Cline’s Ready Player One and Andy Weir’s The Martian back to back and thought to myself, this is my voice, these are the type of guys I would hang out with, and their books are best sellers, so maybe the world is ready for my voice. Also, my young author daughter, who I mentioned before, kept prodding me to publish something because in her mind it was “my turn.”


  1. What do you like to do when you're not writing?
Ans. =>I love hanging out with my family and composing music. 


  1. How many books have you written? Which is your favourite?
Ans. =>Technically I’ve written two books, but I’ve abandoned the first, which would make The Punch Escrow my favorite.
 

  1. What's next for you? What are you working on now?
Ans. =>Right now I’m just trying to get The Punch Escrow published. The book is intended to be self-contained. There are like three “big questions” at the end of the book, each of them would be great nuclei for a book, but I’m not counting my chickens before they hatch.





Saturday, April 9, 2016

An Interview with Author L. Davyd Pollack


Hello everyone, this is an interview time and today Author L. Davyd Pollack is with us... 


1.         Davyd - when did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?

Ans. => It happened twice. First in my mid thirties. The second time was in my mid forties.


2.         How long did it take you to write ‘Positives & Negatives, Tricycles & Pancakes’?

Ans. => That depends on what you mean by write. It took ten years to write the first manuscript. It took two more years of rewriting before I felt confident enough to show it to anyone.


3.         What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

Ans. => I wake up between 4:30 and 5:30am. I don’t use an alarm when I’m writing; the alarm is only when I have to work for a living. When I’m writing, I can’t wait to wake up. Once out of bed, I fix my breakfast, something light; I’m not a big breakfast eater.

With breakfast done it’s just a few steps to my office. I go in and close the door. Four, six, maybe even twelve hours later, I come out. I do this every day.


4.   What inspired you to write this book? 


Ans. => The simple one word answer—God. By the way, I’m not a very religious person. Yes, I believe in God but I don’t want people to think that my fiction is religious based. It’s not. It is however, inspired. How else do you think an air conditioning salesman sits down to write a novel without any prior writing experience whatsoever?


5.  How did you become a published author? Any inspiration?

Ans. => Well, after receiving literally hundreds of rejection letters (for inspiration), I decide to take the leap and self-publish. Otherwise, it would have been ten more years and still, no one would have read Positives & Negatives, Tricycles & Pancakes.


6.         Where do ideas for your books?

Ans. => Are you asking me where do ideas for my books come from? Anywhere and everywhere. Usually, it happens through completely random things. I’ll read something, or hear something, or see something, or any combination of the three, and then I say to myself, yeah . . . but what if?


7.         When did you write your first book and how old were you?

Ans. => Mid forties.


8.         What do you like to do when you're not writing?

Ans. => I ride motorcycles but even the joy that comes from tearing down the open road with the wind in your face and your troubles far behind, takes second place to spending the day writing.


9.         How many books have you written? Which is your favourite?

Ans. => I’ve actually written two more that are completed. One is ready for post production. I also have more than a dozen novels in various stages of completion. If I didn’t have to work for a living, I would be even busier than I am now, and I’d be working harder too, but loving every minute of it.

As for my favorite? I guess you could say that it’s the one I’m working on at any given time. But that wouldn’t be entirely true, just easy. The truth is this. They are all my favorite, but the one’s I look forward to reading most are the ones I haven’t written yet.


10.       What's next for you? What are you working on now?

Ans. => My original plan was to write a good book like Positives & Negatives, Tricycles & Pancakes, publish it, and sell enough copies to finance the next book. Since then, I’ve had to expand my options a little to include things like winning the lottery, or working real hard and saving as much money as I can so that I can get back to writing. You see for me, writing isn’t a job, and I won’t ever let it become one.

Don’t get me wrong, it’s a lot of work. It’s even more work if you intend to do it well. And for me, doing it well means doing it full time, all the time. This is going to sound like I’m pulling your leg but I write even when I’m not writing. What I mean by that is this. If I’m not at the moment physically writing, then I’m preparing to. I’m a writer 24/7/365. It doesn’t leave a lot of time for things like bosses, meetings, customers, etc. I either work, or I write, but I can’t do both at the same time.

I have to be able to sit down and write what I want, when I want, and how I want, without having to worry about where the money is coming from.

When I can do that, writing is a dream—and so is life.


Visit to the Author Website => www.ldavydpollack.com