Complaint Department discussion
Authors & Others Self-Promotion
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Roger Kean and his Books
Roger's most recent novel, the 145,000 word Gregory's Story was published as an ebook today on Smashwords and is also available on Amazon in Kindle format and momentarily in paperback. This is a good place to discuss it, make comments and perhaps ask Roger questions.
As of 08:14 GMT+1 "momentarily" is, according to CreateSpace 5–7 working days, but past experience suggests the paperback edition should appear sooner, maybe just two days. I approved the proof even thug, I'm editorially ashamed to say, there are still 5 widow-orphans which escaped me (one is impossible to correct), but I thought they're not worth holding up things for another two days, and many mainstream publishers don't seem to care about them any more.
Roger wrote: "The paperback at exorbitant price is now available at AMZ."That was close to momentarily. Almost as fast as Zaki and Gregory lost their carefree childhood and ended up in the military.
The Complaint Department is holding a contest to win a free ebook of Roger Kean's most recent novel Gregory's Story. It is a stand alone story so it is not required that you read A Life Apart first but it is highly recommended to increase your enjoyment of [book:Gregory's Story|18169210 which also takes place during the British Mahdist Wars in the Sudan. The contest is being held from July 15th through July 26th 2013. If you are like me you cannot wait to read it so buy a copy now (I did!) and if you win the book give it to a deserving person to read.
As is our custom here the winner will be selected from a random drawing.
As of July 18th at 7:13 pm GMT people have a 25 percent chance of winning. Go to this link to enter:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...
Yay! Just received the paperback edition of
and it feels like weighty humdinger! And how much better the maps come out in print rather than on an e-reader screen.
Just found out Roger has posted as a guest post on Thorny, Not Prickly. Also contains another chance to win a copy of Gregory's Story! Here is the link: http://thornysterling.com/2013/07/19/...
Tj wrote: "Just found out Roger has posted as a guest post on Thorny, Not Prickly. Also contains another chance to win a copy of Gregory's Story! Here is the link: http://thornysterling.com/2013/07/19/......"Winning a book is good but reading what Roger Kean has to say about Gregory's Story is worth a trip to the Thorny Not Prickly blog at:
http://thornysterling.com/2013/07/19/...
I am greatly dismayed that there are only two days left to enter the contest to wing an copy of Roger Kean's amazing new 145,000 word novel Gregory's Story. Right now contestants have a 1 in 7 chance of winning. Change the odds. Enter the contest at:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...
Alright. I wasn't going to post this since I tend to be kinda private on my reading but I do review for a blog. I reviewed Felixitations. You can see it here http://reviewroses.wordpress.com/2013...Wonderful book:)
Hey, thanks so much, Tj. I really appreciate it, and that you speak your mind. I always knew Felix couldn't appeal to everyone, or even be an easy read. So I am glad it came out all right in the end. However, I promise the other novels are much more straightforward! :)A few people have asked me which segment I'm most proud of—always a difficult answer, but in fact I think "Two Little Boys" does it for me.
Yes, "Two Little Boys" was quite well done - you should be proud of that one. I don't know if it was my favorite, but it was certainly memorable, powerful and poignant.
Oh, that was such a good one! Those two boys really were sweet during such a troublesome era for biracial couples, won't even mention the danger of being a gay couple. Since I married outside my race it reminds me how, what I take for granted, couldn't always be.
"Knowing Felix" is my favorite Felixitations story because it has a sense of realism I liked. Very real indeed. Felix is a snot but things work out for the best which is my favorite kind of felicitous outcome . Also it's Ludlovian.
I still remember exiting that Cottage Hospital in front of St. Laurence's like it was 1am yesterday…"Two Little Boys" came about because Oliver chided me for not including something set in America and wanting something based on Two Little Boys (Rolf Harris version…) and so it pleases me because I sat down and wrote it and the follow-up "Dust-off Vung Tau" in four days after two days immersing myself in Stift's Station and Little Rock, and then reading hundreds of Vietnam accounts. My editor friend Charles Edward admitted being of little use in the Arkansaw vernacular, as he lives in Tennessee, but he had an aunt, or some relative, from the area, so that helped with a couple of tricky phonetics (particularly "Ant-eat-’em, a place no Englishman knows how to say properly, let alone how a 5-year-old might).
What no Auntie Em in the UK? Is the Wizard of Oz unknown there? Or is this referring to the Civil War Battle of Antietam where 22,000 soldiers died in one day?
Finished Thunderbolt:Torn Enemy of Rome the other day. Fantastic! I was balling like a baby during the last couple of chapters. Absolutely heart-wrenching. Loved every page of it!
Rick wrote: "Finished Thunderbolt:Torn Enemy of Rome the other day. Fantastic! I was balling like a baby during the last couple of chapters. Absolutely heart-wrenching. Loved every page of it
All those online appear in the column window to the right. The type entry line is at the bottom. Usual suspects apply : ☺ ☹ :p :D etc.
I would be delighted for you to join in, so please keep the spot free:
Saturday 26 October, 3–5pm (15:00–17:00) U.K. / 10:00–Noon EST
Cheers!
Roger
You will have to present yourself at the headmaster's door for chastisement at the first opportunity.
Hmm. Funny how those lockers look a bit like a TARDIS... Doesn't seem to make me fearful in the slightest. ;)As soon as I'm in England I'll do just that.
Eric wrote: "Uh, what's a TARDIS?I suspect it's a Whoville thingie, but haven't the foggiest, really.
>g<
Eric"
It's a sad day in Whoville when someone doesn't know that the TARDIS is a blue police call box. Clearly you're not a Whovian. ;)
Roger wrote: "Eric: Time and Relative Dimension in Space"
TARDIS outside:
TARDIS inside:
(Note: has gone through a number of remodeling/redecorating jobs over though the years.)
The time and space I'm interested in is 1880-90s in the Afghan/Pakistan borderlands so I can find out what (and who) Harry is into. I want to read about the world's longest happy trail and whose belly it leads to!
I'm deep in research. Simply saying, "oh, he's a wily Pathan," or "Ah, here comes a Pashtun speaking Pashto" doesn't cut it. There are Tajiks, subdivided into Badakhshi, Panjshiri, Shomali, and Salangi; the Hazars; Uzbeks and Turkmen, then the Aimaq, who are sub-divided into the Jamshidi, Firozkohi, Taimani, and Taimuri…It's all very complicated, but worry not, Harry will find one of them sympathetic :)
Yay! Both A Life Apart and Gregorys Story have been nominated in the Best Historical category of the 2013 M/M Romance Member Choice Awards.
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Also, he's really fun as a player here in our Games Section and we want to keep him playing the games.