When you're at home and storm warnings arise, you know where to go. You're with your family or at least are aware of where they are. Whatever happens, you'll deal with it from experience and prior planning.
On the road, however, it's a different experience. You're in a strange place. You have no idea where people are supposed to go for cover, no idea what the warning system is, and sometimes no one to ask. It's a different feeling, a sort of alone-ness that arises when it's too late…
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Added by Peg Herring on June 13, 2008 at 9:58pm —
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I'd like to extend a warm invitation to everyone to view my new webpage at Books In Sync
Theodocia Mc Lean runs a great service whereby she will create a superb page that features an author's work and is a great marketing and promo tool. She has taken information from all of my other websites and incorporated it into one awesome piece of work.
To view the site, please go to
http://www.booksinsync.com/authorsandbooks/porterbrianl.html
Brian…
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Added by Brian L Porter on June 13, 2008 at 6:08pm —
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Last February, Patti Abbott, Gerald So and Mystery Dawg hosted a Flash Fiction Blog Challenge with a Love/Crime theme. About twenty writers participated with some good results.
They’re doing it again and this time I’m chipping in.
The theme is “Shifting Gears” and all of the stories have to incorporate the following sentence into a flash story of around 750 words:
“With gas prices rising, their plans had to change.”
All of the stories will be posted…
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Added by John Weagly on June 13, 2008 at 5:12am —
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When I first started writing Body Trace, the first book in the Madison Cross series, I was somewhat intimidated at the idea of writing from the point of view of a female protagonist. I had written parts of novels from the points of view of female…
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Added by Jon McGoran as D. H. Dublin on June 13, 2008 at 1:28am —
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This week on
Crime Always Pays: Andrew Taylor and Declan Burke report on Bristol’s Crime Fest 2008; free copies of Adrian McKinty’s THE BLOOMSDAY DEAD; Sebastian Faulks’ DEVIL MAY CARE reviewed; Paul Nagle’s new cover art for IRONIC; Adrian McKinty reconsiders the English detective; John Connolly asks the big philosophical question about crime fiction; Ruth Dudley Edwards wins the Last Laugh Award; and the latest instalment – wait for it! – of…
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Added by Declan Burke on June 13, 2008 at 1:17am —
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Chris Ewan - THE GOOD THIEF'S GUIDE TO AMSTERDAM
Published: May 2007
Setting: Amsterdam
Protagonist: Charlie Howard
Series?: 1st
First Lines: "I want you to steal something for me."
Chris Ewan writes books about a thief who writes books about a thief who solves crimes. Ewan's protagonist Charlie Howard is a successful crime fiction author and a very good thief, who takes nice lucrative jobs on the side to supplement his income. When he's asked to steal two…
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Added by Donna Moore on June 12, 2008 at 11:30pm —
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Believe it or not, not everyone loves a good mystery novel. Some
people prefer science fiction books. Still others like horror novels.
Can you imagine a book that would satisfy all those readers?
Well, you don't have to. Just get into the series Mario Acevedo is
writing about vampire private eye Felix Gomez. Yes, I know there's a
vampire private detective on TV right now, but so far he hasn't
encountered any aliens, and that's just what happens in…
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Added by Austin S. Camacho on June 12, 2008 at 10:17pm —
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Much as I love my family and my friends here in this small town, I find it difficult being at a distance from those who write, if not for a living, at least for sustenance. I'm sure my circle of everyday folk get tired of me throwing plot knots at them or rambling on about marketing. It's like hearing your plumber talk about U-joints and plastic pipe versus copper.
When writers get together they open up, even wallow, in their writing problems, the niceties of the craft, and the…
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Added by Peg Herring on June 12, 2008 at 10:10pm —
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Just finished Robbie's Wife by Russell Hill, a Hard Case Crime book. Quick review. A man's obsession turns to murder. The first half of the book nothing happens. The reader soon realizes that the American man in the story is actually English, but this has nothing to do with the book. Then, BAM! His slow descent into hell. Just the way I like it. 3 out of 5 bullets!
I just got a copy of The Hackman's Blues by Ken Bruen. Purchased on eBay from a seller in the U.K. called Fairandfast…
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Added by Paul Greenberg on June 12, 2008 at 11:23am —
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Please listen to an audio podcast of my latest novel The Friday House.
Visit:
http://podcast.dkgaston.com/
Let me know what you think.
To purchase a copy, just click the title here>
The Friday… Continue
Added by D K Gaston on June 12, 2008 at 10:30am —
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As I wait for the October release in the US for Small Crimes, I keep getting only good reviews in the UK. Here's an excerpt from David Connett's June 8th review in the Sunday Express:
"Zeltserman creates an intense atmospheric maze for readers to observe Denton's twisting and turning between his rocks and hard places.
Denton is one of the best realised characters I have read in this genre, and the powerfully noir-ish, uncompromising plot, which truly keeps one guessing…
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Added by Dave Zeltserman on June 12, 2008 at 7:08am —
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Well, I had a wonderful weekend at CrimeFest in Bristol and am now recovering (not from the carousing and partying - although there was plenty of that - but from the injury I inflicted on myself stepping off a curb. Apparently, according to the hospital, "it will get worse before it gets better". How reassuring. Luckily, I still have the crutches and the stick from when I broke a bone in my ankle last year stepping off a bus...)
So, CrimeFest. Well, it was lovely to meet up with old…
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Added by Donna Moore on June 12, 2008 at 6:24am —
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I have a few things coming up this week:
On Thursday June 12 my play
“Why Abominable Snowmen Don’t Like Fast Food”
is being done at the GONE IN 60 SECONDS Festival in Leeds, England.
Here are the details:
Thursday June 12th
7.30pm
Stage One @ University Of Leeds
Leeds University Campus
Leeds, England
0113 3438730 £6 (£4conc)
On Friday June 13 and Saturday June 14 my plays
“A Bullet for Every Brain”…
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Added by John Weagly on June 12, 2008 at 4:35am —
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(Cross Posted on
Working Stiffs)
After fifteen weeks of Citizens’ Police Academy, it’s over. We graduated this week and are now Citizens’ Police Academy alumni.
The ceremony was quite nice. Not the pomp and circumstance of some graduations, which is a good thing. We were allowed to bring guests, so my hubby tagged along. (He heard there would…
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Added by Annette Dashofy on June 12, 2008 at 12:28am —
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It dawned on me tonight that in January okay , it was New Years Eve. I vowed and declared I would spend more time writing and much less time cleaning, washing, etc you know all that fun stuff. But here we are in June and I haven't as yet achieved as much writing as I wanted to. So consequently, I have decided to make a Half Years Resolution to write, write, write and write. Perhaps the lack of alcohol involved tonight will help me keep this one : ) Here's to hoping. Will let you know about my…
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Added by realmum on June 12, 2008 at 12:00am —
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My latest book,
Autographs, Abductions, and A-List Authors, is out just in time for the conference season. It kicks off my "Fatal Writers' Conferences" series -- the heroine is an up-and-coming author who goes to a writing conference and WHAM, a best-selling author dies while autographing a book for the heroine.
I had a lot of fun writing this and having the heroine (and other characters) express opinions about agents, editors, publishing, and publishing houses. And to be…
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Added by J L Wilson on June 11, 2008 at 10:48pm —
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Thirty years in education was great preparation for authoring, because no one multi-tasks like a teacher (except maybe the school secretary). These days it's marketing stuff, speaking engagements, editing, and when there's time, writing. The cool part is, just as when I was a teacher, I love it all. Yes, it gets overwhelming at times when the printer is running (ever so slowly) and the phone is ringing and there's email to be answered but my latest protag is ready to tell her story NOW. And…
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Added by Peg Herring on June 11, 2008 at 9:45pm —
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I often get these obsessions, like a crush on a certain topic, whenever I’m working on something new. My latest crush: Chronic traumatic encephalopathy, also known as dementia pugilistica or “Punch Drunk Syndrome.” I’m particularly intrigued by the more subtle, esoteric cognitive effects such as irrational jealousy, poor impulse control, and deterioration of social inhibitions. Now that a microscopic autopsy has been performed on…
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Added by Christa Faust on June 11, 2008 at 7:22am —
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My mother, in the last days of her life, became concerned with how she would look laid out at the funeral home. It was macabre but understandable. She had nothing else to look forward to, so being a life-long planner and arranger, she turned to doing what she could to prepare for the inevitable. There was a shopping trip to buy a suit, so she wouldn't be wearing something anyone had seen her in before. Yes, it was weird. Even weirder when the sales clerk told her, "This suit will last you for…
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Added by Peg Herring on June 10, 2008 at 10:53pm —
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I love a good, snappy comeback.
In one of the bookstores recently I observed two coworkers who were not working together very well. The younger fellow seemed to be thwarting the more mature woman at every turn, although it was clearly unintentional. At one point he tried to help her stack books on an end cap and somehow managed to spill books across an entire aisle. Trembling with frustration she said, "You were sent here by the devil himself just to destroy me, weren't…
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Added by Austin S. Camacho on June 10, 2008 at 10:18pm —
2 Comments