FREE Give-A-Way & 20 Copies!!

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I’m giving away 20 copies of our Best Selling, Multi Award Winning memoir, When Angels Fly! What a FREE bargain! FREE Book Link follows a few excerpts below.  

“This is a powerful and moving story! I laughed a few times, got angry more than once, cringed a lot, and my eyes got sweaty quite a few times.” ~ Mark Schultz

“This was a heart-wrenching story! The protagonist suffered abuse first, from her mother, who seemed to be a mother from hell, and then her husband, who was a maniac, a sociopath, a psychopath and any other “path” I could find to throw at him! As if that was not enough, life threw Sarah an ugly curve with the scourge of cancer that ravaged her son Eli for several months. I just wanted to know what happened with Eli, and how things ended between Sarah and Henry. I also wanted to know what happened to her mother. I was glued to the story until the end.” ~ Joy Nwosu Lo-Bamijoko, Author

“Memoirs that deal with tragedy often turn out to be the most life-affirming and give a hope of resilience and strength. Kudos to you, Mary, for finding the tender words to tell Eli’s story and your own journey.” ~ Jan Hawke, Author

“What a lot to have come through, and what a brave story to write. I am sure your words will help many.” ~ Harmony Kent, Author

“I loved, cried, was saddened, and strengthened by reading When Angels Fly. You both are wonderful and inspirational role models. We each have challenges to face in this lifetime, and I believe they are opportunities to grow and be stronger.” ~ Karen R. Ingalls, Author

“When Angels Fly does exactly what it sets out to do I believe – it reminds us that… There but for the grace of God, go I. I recommend this book to all… it will make you cry, but it will also uplift you. Well done! ~ Grant Leishman, Author

The link is right here so grab your copy now! 

This entry was posted on May 6, 2017. 2 Comments

13 Things To Do After Publishing Your Next Book – Guest Post by, Toni Pike…

Chris The Story Reading Ape's avatarChris The Story Reading Ape's Blog

You have already published your first book. As part of that process, you set up your author pages on Amazon and other distribution sites such as Smashwords. You also established your own website, Facebook author page, Goodreads Author page, Twitter account and accounts on other social media platforms.

Now the time has come to publish your next book. You upload it and, hey presto, a short time later your precious creation goes live. Here is a list of thirteen housekeeping jobs to attend to before beginning the hard work of post-publication marketing.

1. Assemble your Buyer Links

Assemble a list of the new buyer links for adding to your website, signatures and posts.

2. Your Amazon Author Pages

Update your author pages on Amazon USA, UK, France, Germany and Japan: claim the new book and modify your biography.

3. The Author Page on other distribution sites, such as Smashwords

Modify…

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This entry was posted on May 6, 2017. 4 Comments

Cancer; healthy gut

rhythminlife's avatarRhythm In Life

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After my own journey with cancer or liver cancer to be exact, I have sought to stay as healthy as I can and the biggest factor to that has been food thus keeping a healthy gut.

Usually when we look at a fruit or vegetable, we tend to quickly think of ways to transform it into different flavors by either cooking it or adding other ingredients. That can be a good thing but can also take away from our beautiful “star”. With that being said, I have come to a personal conclusion to always try and eat my fruits and vegetables without transforming them. Do I fail at that sometimes? Yes; I do but that doesn’t keep me from trying over and over to keep that healthy habit. Does that mean that my family and I depend on a raw diet? Nope, not at all but most of our fruit…

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Publicity Tips for Book Authors

@SylviaHubbard1's avatarHow To Ebook

What Do You Do for People?|

 

For Media?

Below is an excerpt from a long-ago issue of Paul Hartunian’s Million Dollar Publicity Strategies ezine.

I just read a brochure produced by an interior decorator. I now see why most of these people are starving. Here are the first two sentences I read in that brochure:

“Hello Everyone, Welcome to my world.”

What do I possibly care about her world?

What do I really care about? What’s the *only* thing I care about? If you said the only thing I care about is what she can do for me, you are right on target.

So many people approach the media people the same way. They actually think reporters, editors, talk show hosts, etc. really care about their book, their product, their service or their whatever.

They don’t care. Nobody cares.

The only thing people care about is what you…

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Writing a Substantive Book Review

Staci Troilo's avatarStaci Troilo

book reviewsAh, the book review. The bane of authors everywhere. Unknown authors want more of them, well-known authors want reviewers to be nicer.

There is a formula for writing book reviews—ones that help readers make a decision and, positive or negative, help authors know what works in the work and what doesn’t.

Check out this post at AIW Press to learn the four-step process to writing a substantive review, and read through to the end for some helpful tips.

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This entry was posted on May 4, 2017. 2 Comments

Framing Your Story – Book Formatting Basics: The End – Guest Post by Allie Potts…

Chris The Story Reading Ape's avatarChris The Story Reading Ape's Blog

You’ve been toiling for hours upon hours. Edited to a glossy shine, your manuscript is finally complete.

Unfortunately, a complete manuscript is not the same thing as a book interior. The difference is formatting.

If a complete manuscript is your masterpiece, consider formatting the frame in which your masterpiece is viewed. Proper framing enhances the work, while improper framing detracts. Even worse, nothing screams amateur quite as loudly as improper framing.

So how does one ensure proper framing?

For one, start sweating the details.

This example shows basic text written left justified on 8×11 paper. It is readable, but there is nothing to pull the eye to the page, let alone, a reader into a story.

  1. Adjust your page size

When setting your book up for publishing you will be asked to specify a trim size, which is a fancy way of saying set your page length and width. You…

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This entry was posted on May 4, 2017. 2 Comments

Things to Never Say to a Writer

theryanlanz's avatarRyan Lanz

by Elisabeth Wong

Alright, there’s just no denying it: we’re crazy. We just… we’re… I mean, yeah, everyone’s crazy to a certain extent, but being a writer is like the legal, non-institutionalized way of actually being insane.

Look at us. We talk about characters like they’re real or something. (Which they are, just… just by the way.)

Chances are, you’ve got a friend/ex-friend(?) who loves/loved to write. And you’re not exactly sure how to deal with this social recluse, this person who feels like they live more in a novel than in the actual world.

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