I grew up in a small town and think it was the best option for schooling and a friendly, safe community.
I still live in a small town but it’s…
ContinueAdded by Stephen Brayton on January 31, 2014 at 5:11pm — 2 Comments
Okay, so the moment has arrived – it’s finally time to begin your incredible new project. The idea for this masterwork, previously a tiny, dry seed sleeping in your mind, has suddenly begun to sprout. Urgent stems have thrust their way into the sunlight and reached for the sky, buds have formed, leaves have unfurled, roots and tendrils have surged in all directions at once, and the whole thing is growing at a geometric rate. New characters are introducing themselves to you on a regular…
ContinueAdded by PJ Shann on January 31, 2014 at 5:05am — 2 Comments
Added by Jennifer Chase on January 30, 2014 at 12:35pm — No Comments
I have received so many questions, comments and emails about fingerprint evidence and crime scene investigations, so I decided to keep with the theme from one of my previous posts about fingerprints. There is so much more the fingerprint evidence from discovery to…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Chase on January 30, 2014 at 12:34pm — No Comments
This review of "Winteland" by Alan Glynn may be of interest.
http://trackofthecat.blogspot.ie/2011/01/saturdays-best-book-diary-alan-glynns.html
Added by M Buckley on January 29, 2014 at 8:12pm — No Comments
True noir is hard to find. By “true noir,” I mean the classic story of a person who is not necessarily bad, but can be nudged in that direction, either through opportunity, or forced by events. This person makes decisions that go sour, though the options at the time ranged from bad to worse; the die was cast with the first unfortunate choice. The stories are engrossing because readers can’t help but wonder what they would do in the same situation, and are relieved…
ContinueAdded by Dana King on January 28, 2014 at 5:46am — No Comments
There are a lot of people who view all sub-plots with the gravest suspicion, regarding them at best as a pointless distraction from the main business at hand, and, at worst, as a dangerously amateurish self-indulgence. Kill your darlings, they screech like dogma-drilled harpies, kill, kill, kill them all! Needless to say, I disagree.
In a general sense, I’m all in favour of sub-plots. In fact, I delight in them. They offer so many exciting possibilities to writers of…
ContinueAdded by PJ Shann on January 25, 2014 at 6:40pm — No Comments
One of the many smaller pleasures of writing fiction is the fun to be derived from choosing the names of your characters. There’s a lot of joy in nailing down the perfect name for your maverick cop/cerebral private detective/vampire overlord/super-soldier from Planet Zap, and just as much amusement in bestowing the names of people you dislike upon the seedy/degenerate/evil characters currently paddling around in the shallow end of your WIP’s gene pool. But the truth is that the more you…
ContinueAdded by PJ Shann on January 25, 2014 at 6:39pm — No Comments
Kindle readers! Get "Secrets Can't Be Kept Forever" while it's still 99 cents! Go here:
http://www.amazon.com/Secrets-Cant-Forever-Herron-Mysteries-ebook/dp/B00DEKR21I
Added by Stephen Seitz on January 25, 2014 at 1:58am — No Comments
Starting tomorrow, Jan. 23, Secrets Can't Be Kept Forever is being discounted on Kindle. From that day until the next, it'll be 99 cents, a 76 percent discount. Then, from the 24th to the 26th, the book will be $1.99, and from the 26th until 11 a.m. the 27th, 26 percent off at $2.99. Get it while it's hot!
Added by Stephen Seitz on January 23, 2014 at 1:12am — No Comments
Creating a likeable, interesting and complex main character, one the reader can have empathy with, one they want to trust, feel his/her pain and disappointments, root for throughout the story is the key to creating a successful and riveting crime novel.
Pauline Rowson author of the popular DI Andy Horton crime series explains how…
Added by Pauline Rowson on January 22, 2014 at 12:00am — No Comments
Apart from ‘Where do you get your ideas?’ (although in some cases, ‘Why do you get these ideas?’ might be the more appropriate inquiry), one of the more frequently questions writers get asked about their work involves the creation of character. Both readers and writers alike are always interested to know which came first, the story or the character. The answer is usually character. Or story. Or both. Or neither...
The truth is there is no stock answer, it’s different…
ContinueAdded by PJ Shann on January 21, 2014 at 8:33am — No Comments
Always a tricky one, isn’t it? People who love books frequently love movies, but it doesn’t always work the other way around. Filmmakers and studios know this, which is why movies of books so often disappoint their avid readers. A novel is usually the work of an auteur, a tin-pot god whose every word is law. Even in the hands of a cinematic auteur, film-making is a massively collaborative process, and very rarely is it the chief aim to painstakingly recreate the novel that only a tiny…
ContinueOf course, I've always known this. It's a rare day when I write something that works perfectly first time. More often than not, everyday stresses and concerns intrude on my writing time, meaning that my mind is never as focused as I would wish it to be. The end result is that I not only write sentences back to front, I also write paragraphs inside out, and write them in the wrong order, too. It's like my mind has all the information it needs to write the story, but because there's so…
ContinueAdded by PJ Shann on January 21, 2014 at 8:30am — No Comments
Added by Karen Long on January 20, 2014 at 8:51am — No Comments
This is my first published book, my first profile, my first blog and the the first cuppa tea since the last one.
Added by Karen Long on January 20, 2014 at 8:43am — No Comments
The Chaff is a story about a young woman caught in a time of unreasoned hatred where violence becomes the answer and the defenseless must find a way to survive or perish. The characters reflect the human condition today so that the metaphor becomes one of finding order in chaos.
Joel Chafetz is proud to announce the release of his novel The Chaff. The Chaff is a story about a young woman caught in a time of unreasoned hatred where violence becomes…
ContinueAdded by Dee Thomas on January 18, 2014 at 8:30am — No Comments
COLLEGE CRIIME: A Statistical Study of Offenses on American Campuses is now in eBook for the first time.
Written by R. Barri Flowers, an award winning criminologist and internationally bestselling author of such titles as THE DYNAMICS OF MURDER, THE SEX SLAVE MURDERS, and PROSTITUTION IN THE DIGITAL AGE, and KIDS WHO…
ContinueAdded by R. Barri Flowers on January 15, 2014 at 3:47am — No Comments
KIDS WHO COMMIT ADULT CRIMES: Serious Criminality by Juvenile Offenders, from award winning and bestselling criminologist R. Barri Flowers, now in eBook for the first time!
An examination of today’s serious, chronic, and violent youthful offender, this vital book explores the disturbing relationship between youth and serious, violent…
ContinueAdded by R. Barri Flowers on January 15, 2014 at 3:45am — No Comments
Added by R. Barri Flowers on January 15, 2014 at 3:43am — No Comments
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