Covert Kisses by Jane Godman



Title: COVERT KISSES
Author: Jane Godman
Publisher: Harlequin
Pages: 288
Genre: Romantic Suspense

Coincidence? The beauty who washes up on Mayor Cameron Delaney's private beach eerily resembles his dead girlfriend, Carla. But Laurie Carter, Carla's lookalike cousin, is actually an undercover detective. She's on the job, investigating Cameron's connection to a human-trafficking ring. Laurie knows she must keep her cover—but she's struggling to deceive the man she finds irresistible… 
When Cameron discovers why Laurie is in town, he's furious to realize he's being framed—and stunned at his sudden feelings for the lovely agent. But as they uncover the traffickers, a savage serial killer targets Laurie. Can Cameron save the life of the woman he's come to care for…and unmask the threat haunting his family and Stillwater? 

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble


Book Excerpt:
Take his breath away.
That was her one and only aim for this first encounter, and Laurie Carter had three things working in her favor as she kept the target in her sights.
First, there was the understated designer swimsuit that molded itself to her curves, while also cleverly drawing attention to the length of her legs.
Then there was the fact that she was wading ashore onto his private lakeside property. As he sprang to his feet from the rock where he had been sitting gazing out across the water, no doubt he was about to point that fact out to her. Laurie did a rapid check, reconciling this man’s physical attributes with the photographs she had carefully memorized. Dark, wavy hair, swept back from a broad brow and worn slightly long so that it curled onto his neck. Deep-set eyes above high, Slavic cheekbones. A hawk-like nose and lips that were contrastingly full. She had the right man. There was no mistaking him. Tall and powerfully built, he moved toward her with the grace of an athlete, a frown line pulling his dark eyebrows together.
Judging the distance between them to perfection, Laurie waited until he was close enough. As she fell into a pretend faint, she saw shock and something more register in the hazel depths of Cameron Delaney’s eyes. Advantage number three was always going to be the one that clinched it. As his reflexes kicked in and he scooped her up into his arms, Laurie let her head flop back, allowing him a clear view of her face.
His exhalation was an audible hiss. Mission accomplished. The fact that she was trespassing on his land had been the thing that made him notice her. The swimsuit had drawn his attention to her curves and kept him looking. Neither of those things had succeeded in driving the breath from his lungs. That had been achieved for one reason only…because she was the mirror image of his dead girlfriend.

Book Feature & Interview: The Lord of the Infield Flies by Steve Reilly


Title: THE LORD OF THE INFIELD FLIES
Author: Steve Reilly
Publisher: Strong Books
Pages: 126
Genre: Sports Memoir

The Lord of the Infield Flies will thrill readers with Coach Steve Reilly’s harrowing, challenging, and adventuresome baseball team’s trek from Connecticut to play in Maine. As a prequel to his award winning memoir, The Fat Lady Never Sings, Reilly, a high school baseball coach, narrates the true story from the beginning of his coaching career at the age of 20. In summer 1977, Reilly plans to take his high-school-age team on a weekend trip to the baseball mecca on Cape Cod to play a Massachusetts all-star team. When plans go awry, he jumps at an offer to take the players instead to the serene surroundings of southern Maine to play that state’s all-star team. Most of the team’s starters decline; their hearts had been set on “The Cape.” Determined to go through with his commitment, Reilly gathers ten players to make the four-hour trip in a cabin truck and his car on a Friday night. Will the team arrive in time to battle Maine’s best the following morning?

After his legal alcohol-age players convince him to stop at a package store on the way to buy just a “few beers” for the idyllic cabin they will be staying at in the resort area of Old Orchard Beach, they exit the package store with hand trucks filled with cases of beer. Chaos reigns. The cabin truck with its inebriated players gets separated from Reilly’s vehicle, losing half the team traveling in the opposite direction in Massachusetts! Will the team ever get to Maine? Will the team play Maine’s all-stars? And, will the players make it back to Connecticut?  

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Amazon


Book Excerpt:

March 25, 2005

T
HE PEARL WHITE DOOR opened before me. A gaunt man wearing a gray pin-striped suit and goatee held the door open with his left hand and gestured with his right hand for me to enter. As I passed through the door, nervousness came over me. The strong scent of roses reminded me where I was. A pedestal sign directed me to go left. After an elderly couple crossed my path with their heads down, another pedestal sign directed me to the right down a narrow hallway. To my surprise, the hallway was empty. At the end of the hallway stood a wooden pedestal with a gold banker’s lamp lit above an open book. I grasped the pen from the slot carved in the pedestal and signed the book like a schoolboy as I made sure my penmanship was within the lines. I picked up a small card from a slot in back of the pedestal and put it in the pocket of my dress shirt; there would be plenty of time to read the poem later. With no one in front of me, I stood alongside the doorway as if waiting for permission to enter, but none was needed. As I stood in the doorway about to enter the quiet room, I thought about the summer of 1977 and my Senior Babe Ruth baseball team’s trip to Maine the last weekend of July.


About the Author

Since 1976, Steve Reilly, a practicing attorney, has coached high school baseball in Connecticut’s Lower Naugatuck Valley. He has spent the last thirty years assisting other high school coaches and is currently in his seventeenth season at Seymour High. Reilly and his wife, Suzanne, live in Seymour, Connecticut.

His latest book is the sports memoir, The Lord of the Infield Flies.     

Website & Social Links:

Interview: 



Before you started writing your book, what kind of research did you do to prepare yourself?

I researched old newspaper articles both of my hometown newspaper and newspapers in Maine where the games described in the book were played. I recalled that I actually wrote the article for the baseball games played on the weekend in question so it helped quite a bit to recall what happened in the games. 

Did you pursue publishers or did you opt to self-pub?

I opted to go with a small publisher named Strong Books where a colleague of mine at the Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association(CAPA) was involved with.  

If self-published, did you hire someone to format the ebook version for you or did you do it yourself?  Can you tell us what that was like?

I did engage someone to assist with the formatting of the book after I tried to do it myself. My attempt to do it myself was a very frustrating task. I should’ve just engaged someone from the get go. After the book was formatted and published it is just as frustrating getting the e-book formatted. But I am happy to say it will be up on Kindle soon.   

If self-published, how did you determine the price?

Since this was my second memoir, I looked at the prior memoir which did well at the price placed on it by my first publisher, so I decided that since this book was somewhat shorter to reduce the price accordingly. I also looked at other books with similar page volumes in the genre of my book and took those into consideration. 

If published by a publisher, what was your deciding factor in going with them?

My personal relationship with the person in charge of the company, Brian Jud, who I met at the Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association(CAPA). Brian is also a nationally known book marketer. 

If published by a publisher, are you happy with the price they chose?

Sure, as they allowed me to collaborate with them as to the price.

Did you purposefully choose a distinct month to release your book?  Why?

I tried to get the book out before the end of the World Series because it was a baseball book but the number of things that had to be done before it could be ready for printing made that just about impossible.  

How did you choose your cover?

I engaged the services of a book cover designing firm named damonza.com out of Australia. I answered their questions about the book. They created some concepts for the cover, then took my input and gave me two proposed covers. I liked them both so much that I bought both cover versions. I chose one for the actual printing and leave another for any future edition. I thought about using the second cover for the e-book but I was talked out of that one by the publisher. 

Did you write your book, then revise or revise as you went?

I started by cerebrating over the story for a long time and thinking about how I was going to tell it and ways I could tell it. I told the story to some of my friends, sometimes telling it a different way to get their reaction. Then I drew up an outline. Then I wrote and revised as I went along.  

Did you come up with special swag for your book and how are you using it to help get the word out about your book?

I have an oversized baseball glove made by a company named Akadema who makes such things as well as retro gloves which I used as a prop for my first book, also a baseball memoir. It went over well at sales events for the book as it always attracts attention. I am using again to market my present book. I also have created a large poster of the book’s cover at Fedex/Kinko’s.    

Did you consider making or hiring someone to make a book trailer for your book?  If so, what’s the link?

I have researched companies and am considering having a video book trailer done. Haven’t decided on which to use yet. But I would have it done more in line with companies that use stock video footage rather than just pictures in a slide show format.

What’s your opinion on giving your book away to sell other copies of your book?

If I wasn’t giving all the proceeds of the book to a local community foundation scholarship fund set up in memory of a former player of mine and character in the book I would probably be more inclined to try giving away e-book copies. I may do so at some point if it appears like I should.

What are three of the most important things you believe an author should do before their book is released?

1.Get the book edited. There is no substitute for it, even if you think you wrote well and got good grades in college in English. (But don’t forget story trumps all. Concentrate more on making the story a good one. When writing each and every first line of every paragraph and page, ask yourself “Why should anybody care?”)

2. Engage a professional book cover designer to make your book something people would want to pick up and look at further, and

3.) Get a copy of “1001 Ways to Market Your Book” by John Kremer and “How to Make Real Money Selling Books” by Brian Jud. That will get you thinking about how many ways you want might to market your book.

Obviously, if you can get a celebrity to endorse or write the forward to your book, your book, the above three suggestions might change.

What are three of the most important things you believe an author should do after their book is released?

First, get in touch with local newspapers to try and get them to interview you. If you have a local independent bookstore nearby, contact them to see if they can set up a talk for you.  Get the word out on Facebook, and any other social media you are involved in such as such twitter or Instagram. Contact the local libraries to set up talks, most will be glad to have you. Then contact all the nearby Rotary and Lions Clubs, they always want someone to speak and somebody there usually buys your books. If no one does, at least you get a free meal!       

Brainstorm the many ways to market your books outside of bookstores. The two books above will help and are not exclusive. For my first sports memoir, I visited a local sports store, a local cigar store, a local card shop, the local train station coffee shop, and the local hospital gift shop. All agreed to sell my books. Some purchased them outright, and others agreed on a consignment deal. (However, I did anticipate marketing to a few of these places beforehand and fit their names into the story. It helped a lot and caused two to sell the books and give me all the proceeds.)

What kind of pre-promotion did you do before the book came out? 

I started to renew interest in my prior book again which was well received by going on a local online newspaper’s podcast, to speak about the ten year anniversary of the book, and then talked about my new book which is a prequel to the prior one. (Like the reruns of old movies that come out on tv just before the new sequel comes out). When my new book came out I was asked to return to give another interview with the online newspaper. I am also in the process of creating a local public access television show to spotlight  local authors which may have the secondary effect of spotlighting my own status as an author.  

Do you have a long term plan with your book?

I planned on first selling the hard copies during this winter and when Spring comes to run an Amazon Kindle promotion and temporarily lower the cost of the e-book.

What would you like to say to your readers and fans about your book?

If you are a coach of high school age kids or thinking about coaching high school age kids, you’ll want to read this story. Or if you are the parent, or relative of a teenage boy involved in sports who may be(or was) difficult to handle, you’ll want to read this story. Or if you are someone who thinks perhaps you should be doing something else with your life, or just likes a good baseball story, then certainly want to read this story.



 

Silk: The Complete Trilogy by Daryl-Jarod



Title: SILK: THE COMPLETE TRILOGY
Author: Daryl-Jarod
Publisher: Daryl-Jarod Entertainment
Pages: 270
Genre: Erotica

From the vivid imagination of Daryl-Jarod, comes the long-awaited collection of the Amazon Best-Selling erotic series, Silk. Included are all 24 original jaw-dropping erotic stories, along with the brand-new tale, Pink Fortress, which reveals just how outrageously wild things become when an Uber driver falls for a sultry passenger. Sit back, relax, grab a lover and unwind, as Daryl-Jarod takes you on a wild erotic ride filled with unfaithful lovers, lustful thrills and the truly astounding power of romance and love. Caution! Erotica just got hotter!

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Mystery at Manatee Key by Nancy Stewart #childrensbooks #children #books

Title: MYSTERY AT MANATEE KEY
Author: Nancy Stewart
Publisher: Guardian Angel Publishing
Pages: 36
Genre: Children’s Picture Book

Bella and Britt love to explore along the beach and at more remote places like Manatee Key as well.  It is there that they discover a manatee smuggling ring. 

The manatees have already been netted, so the girls must act fast!  But a kidnapper snatches Bella, hustling her into their hideout.  When Britt sneaks a look in the window, she discovers that the ranger is being held, too.  Now it’s up to Britt.  But what can a single girl do?

Mystery at Manatee Key is available at Amazon


Book Excerpt:
A dark animal circled slowly in the shallow water of Manatee Key. Walking closer, Bella whispered. “A baby manatee. And it has a patch of white near its snout.” Britt frowned. “But where’s the mother? It must be hungry. We should tell the ranger.”
“Yeah,” Bella said. “This one’s too young to be without her mom. Let’s go.”
The friends worked their way through the jungle-like brush back to their bicycles. Britt took the lead. “It’s really hot, but we gotta make time.” 
After a twenty minute ride down dusty paths leading to the main road in their coastal town, they reached the ranger station. “It’s quiet in here today,” Bella said.
 The ranger’s assistant glanced up from his reading. “Hi, girls. Can I help you?”
“We need to see the ranger and report an orphaned manatee,” Bella said.
He frowned. “She hasn’t come in today, and that’s not like her. I’ve called her phones. Nobody answered. And no one’s seen her. Have you by any chance?”
“No,” they answered at the same time.
 “Well, it’s a mystery,” he said. “I won’t call the police yet. But I’m getting worried. Now, about that manatee. Can you take me to it?”
 “Sure,” Britt said. “If you can bring us back to town. We rode our bikes here.” He nodded. “Of course.”

http://www.pumpupyourbook.com

The Investment Club by Doug Cooper



Title: THE INVESTMENT CLUB
Author: Doug Cooper
Publisher: Rare Bird Books
Pages: 362
Genre: Literary/Upmarket Fiction

Forty million people visit Vegas every year but most never get past the strip. What about the people who live there? What brought them there? What keeps them there?

Told from the perspective of a seasoned blackjack dealer, The Investment Club tells the stories of a self-destructive, dwarf entrepreneur, a drug-addicted musical performer-turned-stripper, a retired, widowed New Jersey policeman, a bereaved, divorced female sportscaster, and a card-counting, former Catholic priest before and after their fateful meeting at the El Cortez Casino in downtown Vegas.

As the five learn the greatest return comes from investing in one another, their lives stabilize and take on new, positive directions. But their love and support for each other can take them only so far before they must determine the meaning and value of their own lives.

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble


First Chapter:

Chapter 1

Date: Friday, January 17, 2014                                                        Dow Jones Open: 16,408.02
           Never split tens.                                                                                    
           The words flashed in their eyes and formed on their lips. Nervous fingering of chips followed. Except for third base, the last, and most important, seat at the table. He controlled the fates of the other players, a role he seemed to enjoy. His stout digits remained steadfast, cupped over the stack of ten black chips measured to split the hand. Never had a doubt. Once he saw the house had a five of hearts, he knew his play.
My left hand slid to the shoe, eyes directed toward first base. “Twelve.”
The brim of her faded green military cap angled downward, concealing her eyes and half of her tawny face. Her hat more fashion than function, this girl had never served, at least in the armed forces. Her body, though, was all function. Lean and mean. Definitely put on this earth to move. It was just a question of if that was in the vertical or the horizontal.
She waved her hand over the cards, never lifting her gaze from the table. “I’ll stay. You’re going to bust.” She was there for one purpose: to make money. Played every night. Never for less than $25 per hand and often as high as $200 when she really got rolling. I wouldn’t say she was unfriendly or mean. Just had an edge to her. Wanted to be left alone and not have to talk to anyone.
Next to her in seat two, a burly man, about six foot two or three—somewhere in his late sixties— nodded approvingly. He had a half-inch gray flattop that with each tilt of his head revealed a thinning patch on top. “Good girl,” he said. “You don’t have to have great cards; just need the dealer to have worse ones.“ He plucked a red five-dollar chip off his stack and placed it next to his bet. Holding up his index finger, he said, “One card, down please.”
Sliding the card from the shoe without revealing the value, I said, “Down and dirty.” Directing my attention to his neighbor, I nodded at the seventeen in front of the surgically enhanced Barbie doll in seat three. “The ol’ mother-in-law’s hand.”
She furrowed her brow, barely wrinkling her taut forehead. “What does that mean?” It was obvious she didn’t know the game, but she wasn’t stupid either. Everything she did had a purpose. What she revealed at the table was exactly what she wanted the others to see to elicit the reaction she desired.
“It’s a seventeen,” I said, about to drop one of my standard lines, good at least a few times a night. “It’s like your mother-in-law. You want to hit it, but you can’t.”
“Well, I don’t have to worry about one of those.” Her eyes sank to her cards. “So do I hit or not?”
The burly, elderly man to her right said, “Always assume the dealer has a ten as the down card, sweetie. With the dealer showing five, you don’t want to hit because the house probably has fifteen and is going to bust.”
“Just let her play her hand, gramps,” the guy at third base said. Diminutive in stature—oh hell, I’ll just say it. He was a little person or dwarf or whatever the politically correct term is these days. He played with aggression and anger. Winning wasn’t enough. He wanted more. Acted like he deserved it. Like the world owed it to him. He banged back the remainder of his third cognac and motioned for the cocktail waitress to bring another one.
Nip-Tuck Barbie pushed her puffy lips out in a pout, waving her perfectly manicured fingers over her cards. “I’ll hold then.”
Seat four was all business. He was around fifty, black and distinguished, with a wiry frame. He had short salt-and-pepper hair on the sides and back that connected into a beard the same length but much thicker than the rest. Too methodical to be a pro, but he knew the game. He was firm and decisive. It was obvious he liked the strategy and analysis. My guess was accountant. His face was too kind to be a broker or a banker. Wasting no time, he pushed his fingers outward from his clenched fist over the cards. “I’m good with eighteen.”
The waitress delivered another cognac to the little guy at third base. He took a green twenty-five-dollar chip from his growing stack, which was almost as high as the one on his shoulder. He downed the drink in one gulp. “Bring me another,” he said. His eyes were drooping with each drink. He ran his hand through his wavy, reddish-brown hair and pushed the thousand-dollar black stack next to his bet. With his index and pinky fingers extended like a two-pronged fork, he said, “Split ’em.”
I tilted my head to alert the pit boss. “Checks play. Splitting tens.”
Gramps said, “Come on, junior. You’re going to take the bust card and screw the table.”
The pit boss walked over. “Splitting tens. Go ahead.”
I pulled the first card from the shoe, hesitating before revealing its identity. “You sure about this?”
He pressed his index finger repeatedly into the felt. “Flip the damn card.”
It was an ace. “Twenty-one.”
He pointed at the second ten. “Paint it.”
I pulled a queen from the shoe. “Split again?”
“Nah, I’m good with twenty,” he said. “I don’t want to be greedy.”
“Too late for that,” the Accountant in seat four said.
I knew what was going to happen before I even played my hand. I had seen it too many times before. One asshole screwing it up for everyone else. I revealed my down card. A king of spades. “Dealer has fifteen.”
The Accountant rubbed the bald patch on the crown of his head and shifted back in his chair. “Would’ve busted if you hadn’t split.”
“Come on, need a big one,” Lean and Mean at first base sneered.
I flipped the next card to add to my fifteen. An ace of clubs. “Sixteen,” I said, “Not going down easy.”
“Six or higher, six or higher,” Gramps said, standing from his chair.
I pulled the next card, peeking under the corner to delay their unfortunate fate before flipping a three of hearts. “House has nineteen.”
I scooped Lean and Mean’s last four green chips from the bet circle.
She ripped her hat off in disgust, her thick black hair and crescent eyes now visible, and glared at Junior. “You’re such a dick.”
I placed my hand on Gramps’s down card.
He pleaded for a ten. “Monkey, monkey, monkey.”
I turned over a six of diamonds. “Seventeen.” I snagged the two red chips from his failed double and redeposited them into the house bank. Returning to Nip-Tuck Barbie, in one motion I collected her chips and also seat four’s. “Another seventeen and eighteen, not enough to beat the nineteen.”
Greedily rubbing his hands together, Junior said, “But my twenty-one and twenty are. Daddy about to get paid!”
I pushed two stacks of one thousand to match his bets. “Twenty black going out.”
The pit boss approved the payout.
“That’s it for me,” Lean and Mean said. “I’m not wasting any more money playing with this jackoff.”
“Me, too,” Gramps said and pushed his thirty-eight fifty to the center to cash in. “I’m done.”
“Quit your bitching,” Junior said, tipping the waitress fifty for the new cognac.
“But we all would’ve won if you hadn’t split,” Gramps said.
Junior tossed two of the blacks back to me. “Give me some green.”
I measured two stacks of four green chips. “Check change. Two black coming in.”
He combined the stacks and tossed four green at Lean and Mean and one each at the other three players, giving the last one to me. “That ought to cover it, you bunch of cry babies. That’s why they call it gambling.”
Lean and Mean flipped the chips back to him. “I don’t need your charity.”
He pushed them to the middle of the table. “Well somebody take them because I don’t want them.” His eyes scanned the players, stopping on Lean and Mean. She put her hat back on and pulled the brim low again. He said, “Heeey, wait a second. I know you. You work down at OGs, don’t you? You and your girlfriend soaked me for about five grand one night.”
OGs was Olympic Gardens, a midlevel strip club on Las Vegas Boulevard between downtown and the strip. Midlevel because it’s not as swanky as the upper-tier places like Spearmint Rhino or Sapphire, but it’s also not the bottom rung like you walked into a methadone clinic the day after New Year’s. OGs biggest advantages are the location right on LV Boulevard and having male and female dancers to cater to both genders. The men perform upstairs and the women downstairs, which was obviously set up by a man, because that’s how most men want to operate in their relationships as well. If patrons want some seediness without feeling the need to bathe in hand sanitizer after leaving, then OGs is the place.
Lean and Mean snatched her purse off the back of her chair and slung it over her shoulder. “I don’t know you.”
“Well, you should. We spent about four hours in the VIP room. Your name’s, um…Faith, and your girlfriend, oh, what was her name? She was a real rock climber, that one. She had that chalk bag of coke in her underwear and kept bumping me up while she was dancing. Damn, what was her name? I kept calling her Dora the Explorer.”
Gramps said, “Just drop it. The lady said she don’t know you.”
“What are you, her pimp?” Junior gulped more cognac.
“That’s OK,” she said. “I was just leaving.” She turned and angled toward the door. Gramps followed her.
Nip-Tuck Barbie squirmed in her chair. “Geez, I never knew blackjack had so much drama.”
Junior picked up the hundred dollars in green that he had tried to give Lean and Mean from the middle of the table. “For someone who works for tips, you’d think she’d be more appreciative.” He tossed them to me. “I’m sure you’ll put these to good use.”
And that was how I met these five broken people—a drug-addict singer-turned-stripper; a widowed, retired New Jersey police officer; an alcoholic, divorced sportscaster; a card-counting, ex–Catholic priest; and a self-destructive, dwarf entrepreneur—who all somehow managed to wander into the El Cortez and sit at my table on a random Tuesday night.
I haven’t always been a blackjack dealer, but I have always lived in Vegas—fifty-seven years. Have held just about every hospitality job this town has to offer, from parking cars to cooking food to serving drinks. What I’ve never done is been a big winner. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve had my share of winnings, but they don’t even come close to the losses. For every night in the black, there were two or three in the red, and the red numbers always seem to be higher than the black ones. Don’t let anyone tell you different. They might say they’re even, but they’re well south of even; it’s just a question of how far. That’s why I gave it up years ago and switched to this side of the table. I can guarantee you I walk out of the casino up every night.
I’ve tried dealing other games, but there’s just something about blackjack. I like how communal the game is. I like how strangers sit down and in no time will be fist-bumping and high-fiving. Of course there are a fair share of squabbles as well, like the one I just told you about. You see, a lot of players think they’re just playing their individual hands, that they should trust their guts. But the good ones know there are rules and every decision at the table affects everyone else. I know the math says different, that each play is an independent event and will help others just as often as it hurts. But I’m talking about the bigger play, the energy at the table, the stuff that flows through and carries us all.
Yeah, I’ve seen a lot in my years flipping cards. Seen players win fifteen hands in a row and lose just as many; be down to their last ten dollars and walk away up a thousand; win five grand and slink away with their pockets turned inside out. Won’t say I’ve seen it all, though. Just when I think I have, a night like that Tuesday happens, and a story like I’m about to tell you unfolds.
Now I’ll admit I wasn’t present for all the stuff I’m about to share. Some of it I was and some of it was told to me, and, well, some of it I just filled in the blanks, and you’re going to have to trust me because in this job I’ve learned how to read people and recognize problems before they happen: the colleagues headed for an affair, the social drinker on the road to alcoholism, and the newlyweds who won’t make it to their fifth anniversary. Amazing what people will reveal across three feet of felt. They think they’re in control, but putting a stack of their hard-earned money on the table loosens up more than their wallets. It triggers their vulnerability, and that opens up the vault to all their secrets. I just have to watch and listen, like reading an open ledger. Most tell more than I ever care to know, as much by what they don’t say as what they do.
                                                                                                            Dow Jones Close: 16,458.56

PUYB Virtual Book Club Chats with 'Big & Fabulous: The Life and Times of Brenda Cankles' Randi Sherman



Randi M Sherman is the award winning author of humorous fiction books.
With an eye for detail, an ear for well-tuned dialogue and an incredible grasp of the obvious, all honed while performing stand-up comedy in Los Angeles and improvisational theater in San Francisco, Sherman adds just enough bawdiness to deliver character-driven contemporary novels that will have the reader laughing, thinking and connecting with the characters in her books.

A native Californian, Randi makes her home in California's wine country. Trying her hand at country living Randi describes herself the Eva Gabor of the Sonoma/Napa area.

Randi earned a Bachelor of Science Degree from Chapman University.

WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

WEBSITE | TWITTER | FACEBOOK


About the Book:

The time for BIG & Fabulous, The Life and Times of Brenda Cankles is now! The emphasis is on positive body image, Big & Fabulous is a truly entertaining story that’s strongly written, funny, insightful and bitingly smart. Inside it’s covers, readers will find no shortage of acidly hilarious accounts of the highs and lows of living life inside a big and fabulous body.

Imperfect, impervious and improving Brenda Cankles is an unlikely heroine. Unfazed by the enduring censure of society, she is determined to realize the fabulous life that she has always believed is her destiny.

Brenda’s story – written in unflinching first person – is utterly unvarnished. Here, find a fantastically real person, sometimes struggling to fit in, but mostly giving the rest of the world the mother-lovin’ bird. From her clunky childhood, through her stumbling yet optimistic adolescence to her full figured and unapologetic emergence into adulthood. Brenda is a special brand of warrior. She is big, bold and beautiful. While the quirky cast of characters who surround her is eternally insistent that Brenda live her life in the background and fit into society’s mold, she will have none of it.

Author, Randi Sherman’s experience as a stand-up comedienne is evident as she delivers, BIG & Fabulous, The Life and Times of Brenda Cankles, the hilarious, often laugh-out-loud novel about the inner most thoughts Brenda Cankles, a very real character who is confident and brave enough to expect the world to accept her on her terms.

BIG & Fabulous, The Life and Times of Brenda Cankles is Sherman’s fifth novel, her fourth THE LOBBY has won 17 Awards for Humor and General Fiction.

Watch the book trailer at YouTube.

FOR MORE INFORMATION:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble


Before you started writing your book, what kind of research did you do to prepare yourself?

Coffee. I start with coffee. 

Another book of mine, The Lobby, had just been released and someone asked me what I was going to work on next. When I said that I had always wanted to write a book called, Yes, You Butt Does Look Big, she asked what I was waiting for. Although, I wasn’t sure what the book was going to be about, I started writing it that same day. Non-preparation is my preparation. You see, I let my books and characters evolve. I let them tell me what direction to take as they develop. The name also evolved as Brenda Cankles came to life and voila, Big & Fabulous, The Life and Times of Brenda Cankles was created.

Did you pursue publishers or did you opt to self-pub?

I have chosen to publish independently for three reasons.

One: After years of query letters and the great intention of being published by one of the well-known publishing behemoths - I realized I was not getting their attention. I could be because they don’t publish humorous fiction written by a author who is unknown to them. Or, perhaps they employ people who possess the magical power to judge an entire book based on four hundred word letter. Or, maybe their query letter email address is just an enormous trash can. Two: I also learned that large publishing firms have set budgets for promotion and it is reasonable that they allocate most of it to known money making entities such as like Patterson or J.K. Rowling - leaving the expense and effort of promotions on my shoulders. So, had to ask myself if I wanted to pay a percentage to them for that honor? And Three: My books are contemporary and I do not have the time or patience to wait while my manuscripts sit in a queue for six months, a year or longer.

If self-published, did you hire someone to format the ebook version for you or did you do it yourself?  Can you tell us what that was like?

I partner with Friesen Press in Canada. Through them, I can contract with editors and designers and all sorts of book professionals and services.

If self-published, how did you determine the price?

Hold onto your hat and get a calculator because this is how I do it.

At this point in my career, I am more focused on having my books read than browsing through brochures for yachts. Truthfully, one or two dollars will not make a difference today. As far as determining pricing: I figure out my book development costs, and the cost for planned promotions. With that I determine the realistic and expected sales (based on my past book releases and my promotional reach). My goal is to cover my outlaid costs and pay myself for the time it took to write and promote the book. I determine the cost for print on demand - and then add the amount necessary to repay myself in a one to two year period. I keep my book prices below bestselling authors so readers take a chance with an author who may be unknown to them.

Did you purposefully choose a distinct month to release your book?  Why?

I choose late winter or early Spring because my books are light and considered great Beach-Reads. It gives me time to promote them.

How did you choose your cover?

I usually have an idea of what I’m looking for and what mood I want set with the cover. I spend a lot of time looking through iStock photos and illustrations. I narrow down my selections by pulling up pictures based on my book’s theme. Then I work with a professional cover designer.

Did you write your book, then revise or revise as you went?

Both. After I started writing Big & Fabulous, I wasn’t convinced that it would be entertaining or have a message. My main character was a victim, sarcastic and negative, struggling against an unfair society. Ahem, it was a story that has been told a million times.  I put my manuscript aside for a while and thought about it. I thought about whether I wanted to work on something that wasn’t enjoying and if I wanted to put out another book with the same tired story we’ve read over and over. I determined that I needed to make my main character positive, funny and inspirational and I couldn’t do it as a narrative. So I switched things up and wrote the story in the first person, as Brenda Cankles, and stripped away the negativity and made her a positive, and strong. I also flip back and forth updating the manuscript as I write - to be certain that there is enough foreshadowing and covers some additions I make later in the story. When I’m done, I go thru the entire manuscript paragraph by paragraph to be sure that it clearly tells the story exactly as I intend.

Did you come up with special swag for your book and how are you using it to help get the word out about your book?  

In the past, I used swag, including T-shirts, book marks, personalized jelly bellies and a couple of secret weapons. However, I haven’t found a lot of return on the investment and I find that book giveaways are more effective.

Did you consider making or hiring someone to make a book trailer for your book?  If so, what’s the link?

I make my own trailers https://youtu.be/y2ubdgvOXBY


What’s your opinion on giving your book away to sell other copies of your book?

Initially (with my first books) I didn’t want to give away the books. I dug in my heels. After all, people should BUY it and support my efforts, shouldn’t they? Now, things have changed. I giveaway hundreds of copies at book fairs, I set up online giveaways and if I know someone has supported me in the past, or someone shows a lot of interest but can’t really afford to make a purchase, I send them free copies.

What are three of the most important things you believe an author should do before their book is released?

Come up with an elevator pitch. Complete promotions planning A to Z, And, put his/her ego on a shelf.

What are three of the most important things you believe an author should do after their book is released?

Promote and promote some more. Be proud of yourself, enjoy your accomplishment and be humble. And promote some more.

What kind of pre-promotion did you do before the book came out?   

 Social media, FB ad blasts, press releases, build my audience

Do you have a long term plan with your book?

Yes, I do. I have a several step plan that takes me through a calendar year.

What would you like to say to your readers and fans about your book?

I created Brenda to be a new brand of warrior. She is a big, strong, bold and beautiful character. I fell in love with her. I hope you do too. So, sit back, open, enjoy.

PUYB Virtual Book Club Chats with 'Alan 2' Bruce Forciea



Bruce Forciea is known for taking complex scientific concepts and making them easy to understand through engaging stories and simple explanations. He is an Amazon Best Selling Author and author of several books on healing and biology, along with science fiction thriller novels. His fiction writing draws on a diverse and eclectic background that includes touring and performing with a professional show, designing digital circuits, treating thousands of patients, and teaching. His stories include complex plots with unexpected twists and turns, quirky characters, and a reality very similar to our own. Dr. Forciea lives in Wisconsin and loves writing during the solitude of the long Northern winters. 

Website & Social Links:

WEBSITE | TWITTER | FACEBOOK


About the Book:

A brilliant artificial intelligence (AI) scientist, Dr. Alan Boyd, develops a new program that integrates part of his brain with a computer’s operating system. The program, Alan 2, can anticipate a user’s needs and automatically perform many tasks. A large software company, International Microsystems
(IM) desperately wants the program and tempts Dr. Boyd with huge sums of money, but when Dr. Boyd refuses their offer, IM sabotages his job, leaving him in a difficult financial situation.

Dr. Boyd turns to Alan 2 for an answer to his financial problems, and Alan 2 develops plan Alpha, which is a cyber robin hood scheme to rob from rich corporations via a credit card scam.

Alan and his girlfriend Kaitlin travel to Mexico where they live the good life funded by plan Alpha, but the FBI cybercrime division has discovered part of Alan 2’s cyber escapades, and two agents, Rachel and Stu, trace the crime through the TOR network and Bitcoin.

Alan 2 discovers the FBI is on to them and advises Alan and Kaitlin to change locations. A dramatic chase ensues taking them to St. Thomas, a cruise ship bound for Spain, and finally to Morocco. 

Will they escape detection? They will if Alan 2's Plan Beta can be implemented in time. Or is 'Plan B' something altogether different than it appears to be, something wholly sinister that will affect the entire population of the world?
Watch the trailer at YouTube!

Purchase Information:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Publisher


Before you started writing your book, what kind of research did you do to prepare yourself?

I typically conduct research on characters and technical aspects of the story before I begin writing. I create character sheets with pictures of how I think the characters should look and include information about their personalities, likes and dislikes, and anything else I can think of.

For Alan 2, I had to do a good deal of research on cybercrime, the TOR network, artificial intelligence, nuclear weapons, our nuclear defense system, as well as locations in the book (Morocco, Brooklyn, Chicago).

Did you pursue publishers or did you opt to self-pub?

Alan 2 was published by Open Books, who published my first fiction work, The X-Cure. I submitted the manuscript for The X-Cure to a number of publishers and Open Books was interested. They then accepted the manuscript for Alan 2 as well.

If published by a publisher, what was your deciding factor in going with them?

I had been with another publisher for a non-fiction book I wrote about ten years ago and then tried my hand at self-publishing some other non-fiction books. I thought Open Books had a good system for helping authors and getting the book published quickly with some marketing.

If published by a publisher, are you happy with the price they chose?

Yes, I think it is important to hold the value of your work.

Did you purposefully choose a distinct month to release your book?  Why?

The release of Alan 2 was chosen based on the timeline for editing. My publisher only has so many spots per year and each book is put into one of these.

How did you choose your cover?

Open Books chose the cover. I think it’s great!

Did you write your book, then revise or revise as you went?

After the research, I write the first draft. This is followed by a number of revisions. I will read the book for pace, then again for character development, then again for dialogue, and so on until I feel it is ready for submission.

Did you come up with special swag for your book and how are you using it to help get the word out about your book?

I had some book marks for The X-Cure, and will be getting some for Alan 2. I might get some hats or T-shirts as well. I had an Unlocking the Healing Code cap (my very first non-fiction book) and I wore that thing out.

Did you consider making or hiring someone to make a book trailer for your book?  If so, what’s the link?

I had a book trailer made for Alan 2. It turned out really, really (did I say really?) great:



What’s your opinion on giving your book away to sell other copies of your book?

I usually plan on putting some copies aside for reviews and marketing.

What are three of the most important things you believe an author should do before their book is released?

Get a social media platform going. I had done this, but I’m much better than I was a year ago. 

Plan some kind of promotional strategy. This can be face-face (events, appearances) or online, or a combination of both.

Use your media platform to pre-promote your book.

What are three of the most important things you believe an author should do after their book is released?

Continue promoting via social media and other channels.

Continue working your day job.

Tell everyone you know about your book.

What kind of pre-promotion did you do before the book came out?

I’ve been using Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn to pre-promote Alan 2. I wrote a series of short stories and made them available for free on my site. I also added the book trailer to my YouTube channel, posted pre-ordering information on my website (https://www.drbruceforciea.com) and made arrangements for a blog tour.

Do you have a long term plan with your book?

Yes, all of my books have long-term plans. I believe it takes time to develop a following and I am here to stay for the long run. In addition to the usual channels, my books are available from links on my website, Twitter posts, Facebook, and so on and will be for years to come.

What would you like to say to your readers and fans about your book?

I would like to say thank you for taking an interest in my work. I really hope you find my stories entertaining and relevant to what is going on in the world today.