M.K. Theodoratus's Blog
December 8, 2021
From Vampire Hunter to Vampire Queen
Biff... Bam... Boom... Vampire Ash
Action is the first and last word for Faith Hunter's Jane Yellowrock novels.
First heard about Jane Yellowrock in another paranormal mystery series about a lady who uses a plant to channel her magic. Forgot what it was, but it mentioned Jane Yellowrock several times in a couple books
Whatever. I looked up the Jane Yellowrock book to discover it's a popular, long running series. I decided to compare first and later mass paperback in the series because so many series lose their energy after a few books. Jane Yellowrock, a vampire hunter, stars in fourteen books and is still going strong, if you believe the reviews.
[I'm betting if you start the series, you'll continue reading the series.]
The first book in the series, Skinwalker, starts with Yellowrock's arrival in New Orleans. Her first encounter with her vampire employers doesn't go smoothly. The action just escalates as she hunts for a rogue vampire who is a danger to human and vampire, alike.
Skinwalkerprovides a great launching pad for the series. Great secondary characters. Plot twists. And, did I mention action with plenty of mayhem?
Dark Queen is the twelfth book in the series. The action is still there, but the character development seems to have disappeared. Oh, the characters still have problems but, to me, they didn't grow like the characters in the first book, especially the secondary ones.
Yellowrock is threatened by more than "death by vampire". She uses her ability to manipulate time while changing the odds of winning a fight in her favor. The cost is a fast-eating cancer that trreatens her life. She lives, obviously because there a subsequent books.
The problem with Dark Queen is all the backstory. Too many scenes just start with lists of who the players are and why they are important to the contest for who will rule the New Orleans seethe and Europe, combined. It slows down the read tremendously.
Still, I'm betting if you start the series, you'll continue reading the series. The reviews say the odds are in my favor of winning.I'd give Skinwalker 5*, Dark Queen only 3.5* because it was so slow in comparison. Read what others say on:
Amazon Barnes and Noble Rakuten kobo
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My Writing Rut
Have been watching a lot of pig videos lately as a relief from marketing. It's nice to see that some pigs get to roam free again. Watch a video here -- if you want to look at happy, crate free pigs.If you a deep into regenerative farming, you can watch pigs raised in "forests" in a similar way as the pigs The Pig Wars were.
As for marketing, I'm doing better than I did with either There Be Demons or Running from Demons, but the ROI still leaves a lot to be desired. Sales for The Pig Wars isn't doing too badly. [It's ranking 89 in one category at regular price.]
When I advertise, it bounces regularly above 100,000 on the overall Amazon rankings, and above 100 in category rankings. Not bad for a hobby writer. Also, have eleven reviews in two months. You can check out the medieval fantasy novel here.
"The Last Battle to Save Magic", the prequel to The Pig Wars, is progressing. I sent the draft to my editor for its second round of content edits. Now I'm grumbling over the blurb which is confused since Mariah was appointed commander of the reinforcements, while Renna is the POV character. The initial prologue is now a seventy page novella.
Guess, I'll start with something like: Renna didn't mind when her friend, Mariah, was appointed leader of the magic-wielding reinforcements of the Half-Elven eastern defenses. She was going home and would see her father again.
Yeah, you just got a cover reveal.
November 7, 2021
Satan Changed My Mind
Started reading To Date an Immortal by Stephanie Rowe as a light palate cleanser after reading a couple serious books. Was thinking the book a nice solid 4* effort.
An attractive male hero, Derek LaValle, wants to survive a curse that kills the men in his family. He has an ancestral document that says he need to kill the Guardian of some goblet, and his relatives think he's nuts. The Guardian, Justine, is now protecting an espresso machine and is bored with her duties, except she has to perform them because Satan is interested in laying her mother. When the two meet, all bets are off. Sound familiar? The irresistible force meets the immovable object...except things begin to shift when the two meet each other. The book hits all the elements of an acceptable paranormal romance... except the characters aren't normal.
Humor saves the book. I didn't LOL so much, but I did smile and chuckle a lot. Rowe has a knack of taking a cliché and turning it on its ear. When Satan appears on the scene, he steals the show, the devilish creature, by raising the level of humor. But he is in good company. All the main and secondary characters are twisted out of their mundane tropes. More important, Rowe develops the multiple characters in her sub-plots rather than having them stand around to help in convenient moments.
This book met my standard of pushing myself to read "one more chapter". Yeah, I had to change my mind and give it 5*s. Truth be told, I am a coffee addict.
Learn more about the book and read other reviews at
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My Writing Rut
This blog is courtesy of BookBub which nagged me to review a book I bought through
them. I've another blog waiting to share with the people who signed up for may newsletter on my website...if I ever figure out how to do it. Which is dependent on if I ever find the energy. One of the negatives of being a cranky old lady.On the other hand, I've bee getting lots done...for me, anyway. The Pig Wars has been published a month now. I've made some sales. Not enough to recoup what I spent promoting it, but enough to have a much more successful launch than my other two book. [The free short stories and novellas don't count.]
The reviews are gratifying. On Amazon I have six ratings to date with 60% of them 5*. Also have reviews on GoodReads which aren't quite as good as they rate at 4.16 or 7. [I'm not going to go back and look.] Who knows what future reviews will be like. I find reader interpretations interesting.
All in all, the new book is doing quite nicely for a pipsqueak writer. I can't wait for the book to get off of Kindle Unlimited or Kindle Select or ???? I'm getting a new cover which I like much better when I expand the vendors and publish the paperback.
But, my writing is progressing best of all. I'm almost finished with the first edits of "The Battle to Save Magic", the prequel to The Pig Wars. Why the book first? My editor wanted a prequel to explain the backstory, and it ended fifty pages long. It's now a little over sixty. It's been suggested I add another forty words to turn it into a "book". Yeah, I'll admit it. I kind of do things backward.
When I moved, I discovered the first edits of "Dark Solstice", the book I started writing when I switched to writing fantasy. It first opened with Marian standing on a cliff over the ocean with her hair streaming behind her. Vengeance, the name the resulting book's prequel was given, was first publish by Wolfsinger Press. "Dark Solstice" is set four hundred years in the future of The Pig Wars. Readers of The Pig Wars might like to know that Renna and Mariah are still friends. Just download Vengeance to learn more.
PS: Wolfsinger Press has some entertaining reads.
August 6, 2021
Changes Upset Some Readers
Are Two Heads Better Than One?
More Important to Mystery Readers: Are Two Childs Better Than One?
Does having two authors create a better book? It's a valid question with Lee Child's brother, Andrew, becoming a Jack Reacher co-author for The Sentinel, the latest paperback Jack Reacher novel. James Patterson thinks they're better as a duo in his review quote on the cover. Some fans don't.
Me? I'm pondering. All too often Lee Child has tended to get over-formulistic in his writing over time, though late in the series,
The Midnight Road
is a favorite of mine because it was set in my neck of the woods. I know the territory. Okay. Many prominent writer's do have formulas for writing their books. I'd even go so far to say those with the most books tend to have more habits/formulas on how they present their story lines. One of my peeves is writers who cut and paste repetitious descriptions of people or places in book after book. It limits the growth of their characters. Maybe I'm just democratic enough to say that even tertiary characters should have a chance to grow.
The Killing Floor, the first book in the Jack Reacher saga, hooked me. I don't have all the books, but I do have two large stacks of paperbacks. So, it's no wonder I grabbed The Sentinel when I saw it. Must say, the Team of Child did reward me with an entertaining read.
Yeah. The voice is different from The Midnight Road, the last Reacher novel I read and reread. While this Reacher doesn't feel mushy, he just isn't the same taciturn guy. He explains himself instead of just wading in to take care of the bad guys. This upset a good segment of the reviews. So Reacher's depicted differently. This is a stylistic thing. I liked it. I also liked the way the timelines of the bad guys and good guys were juxtaposed in the book. All in all, I was entertained enough to "read one more chapter" before taking my blurry eyes to bed.
Just what genre Reacher is still puzzles me. He's high in the rankings of military adventures, but Reacher hasn't been in the military for a long time. In fact, his lack of coping with the computerized-age might make this a historical novel, though he tries to learn how a cell phone works.
Reacher supports my idea of mysteries being a form of fantasy. Can you imagine someone existing with only an expired passport, cash, toothbrush, and ATM card? Can you imagine a bank giving him a debit card without an address? More important for reality: Where do you think the IRS is in all this? The military pension fund?
All in all, the Childs put together a suspenseful novel plucked from current events. If future Reacher novels measure up to The Sentinel, the books will stay on the best seller lists because they are fun. You can find out more about The Sentinel at
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My Writing Rut
I went on vacation, escaping from my covid confines into the real world with the help of my kids. It was really nice not to have to haul my walker into and out of the car by myself. Also, I'll give a five star review to Santa Fe. We always learn some surprising new thing as we explore the city, including good Greek food. I won't get into the Chili Wars between New Mexico and Colorado.
Before we left, I printed out a copy of
The Pig Wars
for another edit. Now I'm back at the grindstone, as slow as ever. But, I'm finding I didn't make too many mistakes transferring the changes suggested by my editor. The way I'm deleting unnecessary phrases, it's going to be a much shorter novel. 84,000 pages, anyone?Also, got the first edit for the first draft of The Last Battle to Save Magic, the prequel to The Pig Wars back. Got my work cut out for me. Didn't get the fact that the characters were ditzie teens [striplings] across. Editor wondered why they weren't acting like they did in the book.
The story is the prequel, the editor wanted me to add to the story line. [Another form became the first chapter.] The first version metastasized into a 70 page novella by the time I finished the first draft. The story line is about the defining moment in Renna's life when her father dies as a result of the magic she and Mariah [of Vengeance] unleash in a battle against their Suthron attackers.
July 1, 2021
Usurping Cats
Have been thinking about my late kitties recently. Know so because I've been watching old cat videos and longing for the days when I had two cats on my lap. But I'm also thinking about how smart cats are...or aren't.
Discovered Leighann Dobb's cat/ghost mystery,
Ghostly Paws
. It seemed a purrfect read for my mood. Dobbs is a prolific writer with good reviews and even awards. I'm missing my cats, and I love ghost stories, right? What's bothered me about the book was the cats being smarter than humans. Chauvinistic of me? I don't think so, even when considering a paranormal mystery.
Oh, I found the book an acceptable, light-weight entertainment of the conventional kind. The mystery contains all the crucial parts, even was book one in the series. The problem is that the cat made the better detective than the human...even if it didn't talk.
Willa, the protagonist, moves to Mystic Notch where her sister is sheriff to take over her grandmother's book store and house after a car accident ended her journalism career. Willa took over her grandmother's cat. too. Actually, the cat took over Willa in the sense it goaded her into the finding of the clues to the murder
What I missed the most in the book was the lack of tension. Oh, Willa gets yelled at as she's also pushed by the ghost of the fussy librarian to find her murderer. She even pukes on the developing love interest.
Still, I finished the book. But, it didn't hold my interest or keep me up. The gauge: I found I reread two of Tamora Pierce's Tortell quartets while reading Ghostly Paws. It's not unusual for me to read two books in tandem according to my mood, but I felt real reluctance in returning to Willa's problems.
The ghost didn't do much for me, either. Thought she was one dimensional. Granted I think I'd like to think I'd goad someone who could see me to solve my murder, too. But the victim never gets beyond the fussy librarian trope.
Bottom line: Ghostly Paws is a nice beach book or a book to read when you know you'll be interrupted a lot. You can learn more about the book on
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My Writing Rut
You're reading book reviews from me again because I trying to project a more professional writing presence for the book I've almost finished: The Pig Wars. My website and blog have been upgraded. I've also gone and commissioned another cover for The Pig Wars which is
now in copy edits. I really think I'll meet my Fall publishing date. The prequel to the book is also in edits. I may have to decided which I'll publish first. One funny thing. When I sent my manuscript back to the editor for copy edits, I expected to add a few more pages to my total. Then, I got them back for me to make the changes. They are mostly deletions. The manuscript will still be above 80,000 words. But the editor has been right for the first four chapters. The manuscript is littered with superfluous phrases.
I have a semi-mystery of my own hanging out on my desktop: The Ghostly Killing Fields or some such title, featuring Dumdie Swartz of The Ghost in the Closetand The Ghostcrow. I'm hoping it'll be close to 100 pages. I sporadically add to the current chapter. The draft needs major work, but I'm trying to get an ending on the piece before I revise.
Only I have another Half-Elven novel with first edits not transferred/rewritten that I found when I moved chewing on me...Dark Solstice, featuring Mariah discovering she has a granddaughter some 400 years after The Pig Wars.
Decisions. Decisions.
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My Reading Pile
Finally broke down and bought the hardcover of Patricia Brigg's Wild Sign, part of her werewolf universe as in her Mercy Thompson and Alpha and Omega series. I won't be reviewing it. But I've been sneaking peeks as I copy edit The Pig Wars. If you haven't tuned into Brigg's worlds, you should go haunt some used book stores...or new ones too.
May 30, 2021
Dragons, Tigers, and Elves, Oh My!
Dragons can be annoying.
So if you don't like those preternaturals,
How about vampires, trolls, shifters, and half-breeds galore?
Lessons from My Reading
This year I've been working my way through Lindsay Buroker's laugh-out-loud dragon series, featuring Val, a middle-aged, half-elf loose cannon assassin and Zav, a powerful, pompous dragon lord who wears interesting shoes, like yellow crocs.
Oh, the fantasy elements are there in abundance, as is action, magic, and shifting around multi-dimensional worlds. Humans, goblins, dragons, fairies, elves, vampires, shifters, trolls, half-breeds of all kinds, both friend and foe, abound. The wondrous part is that Buroker manages to make even the clichés her own. [Example: Buroker uses caramel chocolates to distract a pissy fae queen.]
Mostly, I enjoy the wicked first person point of view Buroker uses to make the most of a wise-cracking middle-aged protagonist. Her take on our modern world--Seattle in particular--often makes me pause even when I'm not laughing.
Buroker is also strong on drawing secondary characters. I enjoyed the fact that her human characters are almost as diverse as the preternaturals. All are well drawn and distinct. Her boss, Colonel Willard,is even more snappy than Val plus the more intimidating woman. [Val has an insecure streak as wide as a fun house mirror.] Basically, Buroker makes Val's band of friends a crucial part of the stories.
Oh, I forgot the tiger companion. He's the i-beam that makes the series with his dry, snarky advice to Val.
Bottom line on the nine books in this series: They're action-oriented urban fantasy. By definition that means that the books are basically light and move fast without much introspection from the characters. Yet they have endless charm...and laughs. More important, well-done humor is rare and a great treat.
All I can do is look on with envy. I'll never write as funny...or as fast. There's still one more book for me to read in this series which I think is complete. Buroker does have other series...though I haven't read them.
You can find the Death by Dragons books on Amazon, and Barnes & Noble
You can find her other many novels on iBooks and kobo.
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My Writing Rut
My book The Pig Wars, a Half-Elven novel set after the Rebellion created a safe-haven for them in the Far Isles, is coming along nicely, complete with a romantic ending. [I don't know where that came from, but it's there.] Renna isn't quite as snarly as she is in Vengeance, set 400 years later.-- I'd think I'd be cantankerous, too, if my hair was white and I needed a walking stick when my childhood friend still looked like a sexy young woman.
My editor is going through the third content edits...slightly delayed by the death of her dog. After I transfer her suggestions/comments, come the copy edits and formatting. I really think the book will be published in Fall, 2021...in spite of how slow I am.
Perhaps, my eye troubles haven't be able to keep a good book down. At least, my editor thinks it's good. Said I should try a traditional publisher. My ego would like me to try. But I'm a realist. At my age, I'd probably be dead before the agent/publisher-finding-process ran its course. Yeah, it'd probably take five years and umpteen "not for us" rejections before I even found an agent...if I found an agent.
Heads up. This is my first blog in awhile, and I don't seem to be working it too well. I can't find the links or buttons I want.
March 11, 2020
Cute is as Cutesy Does: Describing a Villain
Guessing who the villain is is the fun part of reading mysteries...in all genres. Dare I say, I like a mystery with my romance or fantasy or any other type of fiction. And, villains are the key ingredient in a mystery. Good villain almost always equals good story.
We all know a villain signals. Basically, they are unattractive with small eyes and large noses or other unsavory characteristics. Just came across a couple of them, aka hulking bullies, last night in the trilogy I'm rereading.But what if a writer wants to conceal the identity of their perp? I'd guess they go for cute.Maybe "cute" is stretching it a bit. Maybe attractive is a better word? After all, Ted Bundy, a infamous serial killer, had large eyes and a small nose and smiled a lot. I suspect many of his victims didn't grow suspicious of him...until the end.
Science has proven that our brains are wired to like cute. Some scientists say cute led to us becoming human by learn to cooperate. But writers use attractive traits to fool their readers. No, serial killers don't need to look like Hello Kitty, the ultimate cute fad product. But they aren't necessarily on the rat end of the feature spectrum either. Even Mickey Mouse has evolved over the years to look more and more like a baby.
It's the writer's job to keep their readers in suspense, but readers have their own tools to solve the "mysteries". The exceptions often prove the rule.
My Daily Rut
My rut has changed. I no longer live in my house but an apartment. The move is mostly done, and it's basically comfortable...given all the things I don't have to think about anymore, especially climbing stairs.Now I'm writing again...sort of. Editing is the better word. While moving, I discovered the content edits for a Half-Elven sequel. I pulled an old manuscript of Troublesome Neighbors out of my computer to combine the two novellas into a novel. At the moment, I'm slowly rewriting it, like adding mostly back story, a couple new chapter from the villain's point of view, and more sharply defined motivations. I've got about 50,000 words in the file now, from about 44,000.
My Reading Pile
I've been mostly rereading...though I've been visiting a couple bookstores in town. Am almost finished reading the Carson Springs trilogy of Eileen Gouge The books are set in Neverland, but the characterizations are deep and three dimensional. All except one major relationship among the main people are heart-warming. I reread the series every couple of years just to remind myself that there's possible warmth still left in the world. Of course, the books were written in the early 2000's.The books are worth digging up, though.Gouge's description of the southern California landscape, before the forest fires, is lush, and for me, nostalgic...like before the orange grooves were replaced by urbanization.
January 15, 2019
Can Writers Convey Interesting, Simple Work-a-Day Worlds?
Every writer creates a fantasy world...even those writing contemporary fiction. It all happens by how the author picks which details to illustrate the protagonist's world. Characters can't move in a vaccum. They need a stage where the action needed to move the plot forwards has to happen.The problem? In too many books I've tried to read lately, the characters act out in front of a green screen. They aren't anchored. They motivations aren't complex and contradictary. Chute opens; characters gallop towards a resolution without any internal sweat. Or, they dither, not doing much of anything interesting while the author lathers details upon similar details. So what if the "bad guys" or society is out to get the good guys.
Yeah. Interactions take place but there is no realistic setting, no grounding in a physical place. Nothing coming out of left field to upset the assumptions made by the reader. Oh, there are generic sops thrown at the reader, but nothing that anchors the characters in a unique place that is their's and no others'.
The pattern mirrors much of the political discussion in the US where broad slogans are thrown out without any indication on how they interact with the complexities of people's lives. Or, maybe it's just that the media write from data gleaned from simplistic polls that concentrate on two factors when most problems contain fifty.
The result too many writers limit the reader to primary-colored worlds, no shades to create a sense of wonder.
The writers I enjoy most work in four-dimensional worlds. The best are spare with words. One example Lee Child. His iconic character, Reacher, now travels with only his toothbrush and, I assume, a mysterious credit card which never runs out of money as constant companions. Yet, Child evokes the semi-deserted byways of the US like few writers I've read.
Granted this abstract rant describes my own biases. But, I demand a sense of people living in realistic places when I read a book. I want enough details that I can construct a world chugging along with or without the novel's characters.
How do you do that? I don't know. I'm a pantser when I write. Yet many of my reviews mention the amount of detail in my stories, details that most don't think slow down the action.
When you have your reading cap on, what do you want the world in the background to feel like?
~~~~~~My Writing Run
Christmas, eye problems. and a staph infection have been cluttering my life the last few months...and may still be chasing me. Still, I play at writing. I'm still working on Rendezvous with Demons. Added several thousand words to the existing draft. Still, haven't gotten my characters over the hump, north out of Pacifica [aka California]. They confront the new demon invasion in Cascadia [Washington/Oregon].
Big note to myself, at this point in this perhaps first half of the novel: increase Gillen's role. Yeah. He reappears when he flees Beatifica. Talk about adding texture to a novel without getting off track.
None of this make sense? You can check out the first book in the Andor Demon Wars, There Be Demons , on kindle or at other vendors. Yeah. My whole crew reappears in Rendezvous: Britt, Cahal, and Gillen plus Pillar and Nate. The demons are represented by Vetis and Grylerrrque along with their new set of minions. It all setting up to be the demons last stand. I'm still writing notes about how Pillar reacts to Britt.
Gee, that description almost has me wanting to get back to the manuscript.
Rendezvous won't be published in 2019, though. I 've decided to go ahead and polish Dark Solstice Turning Point, a book about shifting political allianaces in a world of humans, hybrid elves, and scattered full elves to intensify the mischief. Yeah. I'm going to play with my Half-Elven for a while.
January 1, 2019
Ahhh, the unreliable narrator. Paula Hawkins gives you pl...
Ahhh, the unreliable narrator. Paula Hawkins gives you plenty of point of views to puzzle over in her new book
Into the Water
. Her multiple narrators almost give you too many characters to keep track of. But then, instead of a who-dun-it, this book is a why-dun-it.While I felt the book got tedious at times, it wasn't for the usual reasons. I thought her character development tended to be shallow. Lots of good stuff was hinted at, but all too often, interesting developments and/or insights were glossed over. This is especially true of the perp who moved from the periphery to front and center in a lackadaisical manner. Oh, the motivation was there, but I didn't feel like the potential conflict was well developed.
The troubled sort-of primary character returns to her childhood home when her sister commits suicide by jumping off a cliff. Like some villages have Saxon churches as their claim to fame, Beckford has deaths by drowning. The book describes a troubled village's attempts to confront two interrelated drownings, the most recent of many deaths haunting the village. While I appreciate the exercise in viewpoint, I think Hawkins spread her writing too thin.
More confusing, the "death pool" is also a teen hang-out. The book is filled with factoids rather than an insights into human nature. Comments are thrown on the table but I thought were never fleshed out. Did enjoy the book, though. You can check it out on
Amazon Barnes & Noble kobo/Rakuten
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My Writing Rut
Which do you like?
?????
Email: kkaytheod at yahoo com
Am getting ready to start the new year on a slightly different tack than the old one. I decided
to switch to my Far Isles Half-Elven for my next published book: Dark Stoltice Turning Point. Have my slot reserved with my content editor. Still working on Rendezvous with Demons, mostly adding character complications to the chapters I've drafted.
Soon I will be publishing an updated free short story, Cavern Between Worlds. Haven't decided on a cover yet. Do you have a preference?
There Be Demons was on a 99c special last month. Even sold some though didn't make much money at the discount. The fun promo was the one I did for Recognizing Jamilla , a free Andor story. It reached #1 in its category for a couple days. The story is probably the first, chronologically, in The Demon Wars series. The others are Showdown at Crossings , There Be Demons , and Running from Demons.
October 9, 2018
Whooper Dooper Super-Author Hack to Produce More Books
Picked up the first book in an older Nora Roberts trilogy,
Key of Light
. I don't read much of Robert's body of work, but I like her paranormals when I know I'm going to be interrupted a lot. Why? Because I always know I'll get a competant read no matter how distracted I get.This time the light bulb exploded. I understood how she works the cliche to produce the volume she does. She takes a problem, sets up three couples, an oily villain, and gets three books in writing one story by chopping up the verbage. I know lots of other writers use the pattern. They just haven't mastered the character development and discriptive chops. In short, she works the paradigm but adds warm, three dimensional characters.
Didn't care much for this set of people. Oh, the female characters were all interesting, even amusing. But the match in this book was way to "alpha" and felt like a hundred other characters I've read. There was nothing there to make him seem different than the result of cookie cutter characterization. The projected suiters for the other two books also didn't push beyond their cliche.
You can read a sample for yourself and look at the reviews on
Amazon B&N Nook kobo/Rakuten
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My Writing Rut
Not getting much done. Just toying with scenes that I've already written in Rendezvous with Demons.
I'm also waiting for the contracts returning the rights to republish There Be Demons while I take care of my old man. He's out of the dangerous part of the woods. Now comes the stuggle to keep him in his recliner as long as the doctors want him there.
For the heck of it, here's my latest 5* review:M.K. Theodoratus has a great ability for description. She really makes the reader understand the ins and outs of Running from Demons by giving such in depth descriptions.
"I loved the spin that Theodoratus used in her writing. I was shocked with how much I connected to the characters.
Overall, I really enjoyed this. There is plenty going on and its a very quick yet satisfying read."
You can read a sample at various vendors by clicking this link.
As usual, I've been a slow learner in getting the book up and running. I'm still trying to figure out the print-on-demand bit. Wish me luck.
September 21, 2018
Hey, sorry to say I'm in the "Twilight Zone".My husband h...
On the other hand, my new book Running from Demons has been published in e-form. I haven't had time to get the Print-on-Demand set up. Think it has something about me being an old lady and there being only so many hours in the day. For some reason, my body thinks it has to sleep.
But, I have made sales and have reviews, mostly 5 stars. But, I like the one I used in the banner. I thought going through a teen's learning moments might be dull, Other reviews have said the same thing as the one below. So, I'll heave a sigh of relief.
You can see for yourself at this universal link which will direct you to a universal link to a venue you can use.
Of course, if you happen to buy the book, I would appreciate a short review.
Should also say, I'm doing a GoodReads Giveaway until 13 October 2018.


