Could use a tighter ending. Otherwise, lots of fun!
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Limited Time Book Freebie Offer
If anyone here enjoys MG/YA fantasy adventure novels and would like a complimentary digital copy of any (or all) of my three books - in exchange for an honest review, - then let me know either through this website or by emailing me directly at sillyroger@gmail.com.
I've attached the link to my Amazon author page so you can read the descriptions and decide which one(s) interest you. The two picture books are unavailable (pre-digital) as is the multi-author anthology. Thanks!
http://www.amazon.com/Roger-Eschbach…/e/…/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Littlest Pet Shop: Two Peas in a Podcast
The second half of the final season of "Littlest Pet Shop" kicked off today with back-to-back episodes. My particular episode was called "Two Peas in a Podcast" and you can watch the entire dingety-dangety thing right here. Ooooh, those Biskits!!! Enjoy!
Littlest Pet Shop 415 - Two Peas in a Podcast by spazzdh
Littlest Pet Shop 415 - Two Peas in a Podcast by spazzdh
Monday, February 29, 2016
Littlest Pet Shop Promo - Season 4 Returns March 26th!
For those interested (and who isn't?), the second half of the final season starts on March 26th! Yay!
Saturday, February 27, 2016
Book Launch: "Under the Nazi Heel" by Scott Bury
I'm proud to join the blog tour for Scott Bury's new book, Under the Nazi Heel. The sequel to his successful Army of Worn Souls, the new book promises to be a true page-turner. Be sure to check out the excerpt at the bottom of this post...
Under the Nazi Heel
Walking Out of War, Book 2
For Ukrainians in 1942,
the occupying Germans were not the only enemy.
Maurice Bury was drafted
into the Red Army just in time to be thrown against the invading Germans in
1941. Captured and starved in a POW camp, he escaped and made his way home to
western Ukraine, where the Nazi occupiers pursued a policy of starving the
locals to make more “living space” for Germans.
To protect his family,
Maurice joins the secret resistance. He soon finds the Germans are not the only
enemy. Maurice and his men are up against Soviet spies, the Polish Home Army
and enemies even closer to home.
Experience this seldom
seen phase of World War 2 through the eyes of a man who fought and survived
Under the Nazi Heel.
About the author
Scott Bury just cannot
stay in one genre.
After a three-decade
career in journalism, his first published fiction was a children’s story,
followed by an occult spy thriller. The Bones of the Earth, his first novel,
crossed the boundaries between historical fiction and magic realism. He has
also published spy thrillers and two police procedurals set in Hawaii.
Under the Nazi Heel is the sequel to Army of Worn Soles. They describe the real life experiences of Maurice Bury, a Canadian living in Ukraine during World War 2.
You can find all of Scott’s books and other writings at his website, The Written Word.
Read his blog, Written Words
Find him on Facebook at Scott Bury Author
Visit his Amazon Author page
Or follow him on Twitter @ScottTheWriter.
Under the Nazi Heel is the sequel to Army of Worn Soles. They describe the real life experiences of Maurice Bury, a Canadian living in Ukraine during World War 2.
You can find all of Scott’s books and other writings at his website, The Written Word.
Read his blog, Written Words
Find him on Facebook at Scott Bury Author
Visit his Amazon Author page
Or follow him on Twitter @ScottTheWriter.
Under the Nazi Heel
Excerpt 1: From Prologue – Attack on the Train
Down the train, doors opened in every passenger
car and soldiers and officers climbed out. Men asked “What happened? Why did
the train derail? What happened to the engineer?” Officers asked “Any injuries?
No? Weapons ready?” Soldiers formed a defensive line, weapons pointed into the
forest or toward the lake, but they had trouble holding their rifles and
machine guns over the top of the snow.
At the engine, the first two soldiers to come out of the train began to climb the ladder to the engineer’s compartment. The first soldier knocked on the door.
He was answered by a rifle shot from the forest. He arched his back and fell into the snow, knocking the man below him down.
More rifle shots came from the forest, hitting the officers first, then the soldiers with submachine guns. The Germans returned fire blindly. They could not see their attackers and their bullets went uselessly into the trees.
Fire came at the Germans from all sides. Some of the men in the snow tried to climb back into the train but they were cut down, shot in the back. The moonlight turned the blood black on the snow.
At the engine, the first two soldiers to come out of the train began to climb the ladder to the engineer’s compartment. The first soldier knocked on the door.
He was answered by a rifle shot from the forest. He arched his back and fell into the snow, knocking the man below him down.
More rifle shots came from the forest, hitting the officers first, then the soldiers with submachine guns. The Germans returned fire blindly. They could not see their attackers and their bullets went uselessly into the trees.
Fire came at the Germans from all sides. Some of the men in the snow tried to climb back into the train but they were cut down, shot in the back. The moonlight turned the blood black on the snow.
A burning torch flew out of the forest, turning
end over end to land on top of the first passenger car. Made of steel, it did
not burn. But more torches flew, aimed toward the open doors. Most bounced off
the sides of the cars and fell into the snow, snuffed.
Then an explosion blew off the rear of the last car and the Germans knew their attackers had grenades. They tried to hide between the cars or under the snow, but one by one they fell. More explosions came from under the train, and then someone managed to pitch a grenade into one of the doors. Smoke followed the muffled bang. Within a minute the men outside could see flames, and they knew they were dead.
One soldier fired his submachine gun in controlled bursts from a hiding spot between two of the cars, but bullets found him. Before his body hit the snow, a comrade took the gun from him and fired a continuous volley into the woods until he was hit three times from different directions.
Beside him, the junior officer who had tried to warm his hands fell with a bullet in his upper thigh. Blood gushing into his long coat, he raised his pistol to his head and blew his brains out before the partisans could take him.
The whole train was ablaze by then. Soldiers jumped out through windows and doors to be killed by more bullets. Within minutes, it was over. All the men outside the train lay dead in the snow, while those in the train screamed as they burned.
Under the trees, men in black uniforms watched carefully. One man shot a German body, just to be sure he was dead, and then the insurgents stood up. In twos and threes, they got into sleighs hidden in the woods, slapped the reins and returned along the paths they had made when they had arrived, hours earlier.
The only sound was the muffled steps of their horses in the snow and the soft roar of the fire, and soon only the fire was left.
The Ukrainian Insurgent Army had begun operations against the occupying Germans.
Then an explosion blew off the rear of the last car and the Germans knew their attackers had grenades. They tried to hide between the cars or under the snow, but one by one they fell. More explosions came from under the train, and then someone managed to pitch a grenade into one of the doors. Smoke followed the muffled bang. Within a minute the men outside could see flames, and they knew they were dead.
One soldier fired his submachine gun in controlled bursts from a hiding spot between two of the cars, but bullets found him. Before his body hit the snow, a comrade took the gun from him and fired a continuous volley into the woods until he was hit three times from different directions.
Beside him, the junior officer who had tried to warm his hands fell with a bullet in his upper thigh. Blood gushing into his long coat, he raised his pistol to his head and blew his brains out before the partisans could take him.
The whole train was ablaze by then. Soldiers jumped out through windows and doors to be killed by more bullets. Within minutes, it was over. All the men outside the train lay dead in the snow, while those in the train screamed as they burned.
Under the trees, men in black uniforms watched carefully. One man shot a German body, just to be sure he was dead, and then the insurgents stood up. In twos and threes, they got into sleighs hidden in the woods, slapped the reins and returned along the paths they had made when they had arrived, hours earlier.
The only sound was the muffled steps of their horses in the snow and the soft roar of the fire, and soon only the fire was left.
The Ukrainian Insurgent Army had begun operations against the occupying Germans.
Saturday, February 6, 2016
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Tenacity Pie: A Guest Post by Danika Dinsmore
I'm pleased to share a guest post from author Danika Dinsmore, author of the Faerie Tales from the White Forest series. The fourth book Narine of Noe was published in December, 2015. Danika talks about the importance of tenacity in an author's life. I agree with her. I would say tenacity is almost as important as writing books that people want to read. ;)
She writes about the creative life and posts exercises on her blog: danikadinsmore.com and hangs around Twitter @danika_dinsmore
Take it away Danika...
TENACITY PIE
on becoming a more successful (and happier) writer
on becoming a more successful (and happier) writer
I used to teach at Vancouver Film School, and I always
opened the first day of my class with a talk about the writing life. Learning
to write is one thing. Learning to exist and make a living in the world of
writing (or filmmaking) is another. I'd show my students the following pie
chart on the board, and only partially tongue-in-cheek:
Have you ever wondered why certain books, movies,
plays, songs, etc are so successful? First off, unless you are the writer of
the next Game of Thrones book or have
a great established fan base, there really is no predicting the outcome of any
artistic project. But secondly, as John Gardner tells us in his book The Art of Fiction, most of what we do anyway is generally
mediocre.
Most grown-up behavior, when you come right down to
it, is decidedly second-class. People don’t drive their cars as well, or wash
their ears as well, or eat as well, or even play the harmonica as well as they
would if they had sense. This is not to say people are terrible and should be
replaced by machines; people are excellent and admirable creatures; efficiency
isn’t everything. But for the serious young writer who wants to get published,
it is encouraging that most of the professional writers out there are
pushovers.
~John Gardner, The Art of Fiction
~John Gardner, The Art of Fiction
I've seen extremely brilliant and talented people never
realize their dreams. At the same time, I've seen decidedly mediocre writers
find fame and fortune, or at least a decent publishing contract. So, what
gives? Determination, that’s what.
I love the word tenacity
(the quality of being very determined) and I love tenacious people. Tenacity
goes a very long way. To put it another way: If you have not gotten the thing
you want most in life, then you haven’t done what it takes to get the thing you
want most in life. If what you want it to make a living as a writer (or actor,
filmmaker, etc, etc, etc), and you are not, then you haven’t done what it takes
to make a living as a writer.
If this statement sounds harsh to you, just think
about it. Yes, I absolutely guarantee there will be major challenges, setbacks,
disappointments, unsupportive people, rejections, time management issues, and
self-doubt. But there’s always one more thing you can do to move forward.
I once met a man at a conference who said he really
wanted an agent, but after fourteen rejections, he decided agents just “didn’t
get him” so he gave up. I was shocked.
Gave up? Did he really want an agent? What if it would take 20 queries? 30
queries? 60 queries?
What if after 60 queries there were still no bites
from agents? Maybe you need someone to edit your query letter? Maybe it will
take 160 queries. Maybe the book actually needs another rewrite? Maybe you need
to take a writing class before you attempt a rewrite? Maybe that book needs to
be set aside and a new one needs to be written? Who knows?
I have no idea what path you will need to take, but I
do know if you do anything long enough, if you are tenacious, things happen. So,
if nothing else, think this: if I continue to write, I'm going to become a
better writer. If I stay open and pay attention to feedback, I will learn and
become a better writer. If I read, critique, review, workshop, write, write,
and write, I will become a better writer.
If I go to places where writers gather, I will learn
from them. If I acquire a few new marketing skills, I will be able to promote
myself more effectively. If I become part of a community and give back to that community, I will have
a support system. If I join Toastmasters
or take a speaking workshop, I will become a better public speaker.
But wait, you don’t want to promote yourself? Don’t
want to speak at conferences? Don’t want to deal with social media? This is
absolutely your choice. But if you truly want to make a living as a writer,
you’ll probably need to try (and fail) at any number of things. That’s called
doing what it takes. That’s tenacity.
(If you don’t really care about making a living as a
writer – you just want to be able to write, then that’s terrific. Go for it!
Feed your soul! And if you want to be an indie author, go for it! That takes a
ton of determination to get it right.)
And as you’re working that day job, working your way toward the thing you want most in life
in your spare time, I believe the key is to do a little bit every day. Small
steps are still steps. And tenacious people never stop taking those steps.
Tenacity
Tools:
1) Make time and commit
to it (20 mins per day of writing is 20 more mins than none)*
2) Challenge yourself to keep putting yourself out
there (if you are shy, when you go to a conference, give yourself a goal to
meet X number of new people each day; sign up to be on a panel; send in a
proposal to teach what you know)
3) Dare to be bad (no write = no book; no feedback =
nothing learned)
4) Listen, learn, and apply what you learn (i.e. entertain the possibility that other
books, authors, editors, agents can teach you something)
5) Once you have a saleable piece, start something new
(writers who make a living writing have one thing in common: they write)
6) Focus and finish what you start (even when it gets
sloggy and difficult, there is no way but through – see #3)
7) ENJOY the journey. All of it. Celebrate every small
success. (i.e. have a good time)
And as Christine Comaford-Lynch, the “renegade entrepreneur” once said
about rejections: Some will, some won’t, so what, someone’s waiting.
*While working another job, I once got up at 5:30 AM
every morning in order to finish a book.
Danika
Dinsmore
is an award-winning author, performance artist, and educator.
Over the past 25 years she has developed content for the page,
stage, screen, and web. Danika currently works and plays in
speculative fiction with an emphasis on juvenile & young
adult literature. Author of children’s fantasy adventure series Faerie Tales from the White Forest, she often takes her
interactive Imaginary Worlds Tour on the road, performing and
teaching world-building & creative writing at schools,
conferences, and festivals across North America.
She writes about the creative life and posts exercises on her blog: danikadinsmore.com and hangs around Twitter @danika_dinsmore
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