Sunday, 23 March 2014
Requesting Hosts for Blog Tour of STORM anthology
The Pretoria Writers' Group is requesting hosts for a blog tour of the STORM anthology.
It is an anthology to be published in two volumes (I for fantasy/scifi/dystopia and II for contemporary stories) intended for an adult audience (no erotica).
The tour will be from 11 to 24 May 2014.
If you are interested please email your preference for hosting to blog.tour.info@gmail.com
Notes:
1. This is NOT my personal email and only messages with STORM HOST in the subject line will be attended to.
2. Please indicate which Volume of STORM you would like to host (or both)
3. Please indicate if you would like to review (either or both) of the Volumes (a limited number of ARCs in PDF will be provided before the tour commences)
4. Please indicate if you would like to interview any of the authors on your blog (please provide the name(s) of the author and your questions in the email)
5. The authors are: Linzé Brandon, Vanessa von Mollendorf, Natalie Myburgh, Carmen Botman, Charmain Lines and Richard Wheeler.
6. The covers, buy links to both volumes, short excerpts of the stories in the relevant anthology (I = 6, II = 4) and the Smashwords author profile links for all the authors will be provided by 7 May 2014.
If you have any questions please include them in the email - thank you.
Monday, 17 March 2014
Guest Post: Time, the Great Equalizer by Dale Lavely
In one currency, we are all given
the same amount; time. Rich or poor, old or young, talented or not, we
all get the same dole of time each and every day that we are alive. Once
spent, we can’t retrieve even one second of time once it is gone. It
doesn’t matter if you’re the President or a blue collar worker, you will
all be given the same precious commodity of time.
Many talented people make the most of their time and find ways to be
productive. Some wastefully squander their allotment of time. Whether
you value time or waste it, it marches on. Time ticks on and most aren’t
even aware of its passing. The problem, especially for highly
distractive, busy, or uncaring people, is that we aren’t aware of the
gift of seconds, minutes, and days. I think that’s the attraction of
sayings like, “carpe diem”, (the quote is usually translated, “seize the
day”) was taken from a poem written in the Odes in 23 BC by the Latin
poet Horace. Wikepedia also included the translation, “trusting as
little as possible in the next day”. In odes 1.11 had another saying,”
Whether Jupiter has allotted you many more winters or this one”.
None of us knows how much time we really have, so we need to find the
treasure of time and guard it. Keeping the reality of a limited resource
like time will require watch care, attention, focus, and an ability to
prioritize how we will fill our elusive container of time. Each of us
much choose what we will spend our time on. This task of time allotment,
is both the most delicious and yet daunting task any of us will have.
There are so many choices to make in our modern society. If we even
look at the possible food choices we make each day, around 200 according
to researchers at Cornell University, we can get overwhelmed. How can
we be intentional about how to use our hoard of time? One tip I learned
from Michael Hyatt is to weed out things in your life that compete with
your main priorities. There are things that don’t get us closer to our
goals and waste our time. We need to take a hard look at where we want
to spend our days. Without goals we are like a ship without a
destination. No one but ourselves can decide what is important to us. We
are all driven by different values, priorities, and expectations in
life.
As
I write this there is a PBS special on Stephen Hawking. He lived with
the specter of death for most of his life. He decided to spend his life
trying to figure out how the universe began. What makes life worth
living for you, may not make sense to me. It is a worthy use of time to
think about our goals in life. Socrates said, “The unexamined life is
not worth living”. Life in Socrates’ days was much less predictable and
probably not as long as ours. The quest to deal with time valuing issues
is timeless.
It is a
treasure that normally can’t be taken away from us. While it is in your
power to decide I hope you and I will choose well.
Author Bio
Friday, 14 March 2014
Mayhem in March: Guest Post by Khalid Muhammad
The story behind Agency Rules: Never an Easy Day at the Office
“When you are so hungry for peace
that you are blind to atrocities, you are no longer sovereign or
free.”
What’s it like to live in a country
where you live in fear every time you leave the house? To live in an
urban city under siege from criminals and gangs that operate under
the unbridled support of political parties and terrorists alike, with
police taking their share to the look the other way? Where bomb
blasts and terrorist attacks become part of the nature of the country
and people become desensitized to the blood and carnage with each
passing day? What’s it like to have 90 million people suffering
from Stockholm Syndrome believing that negotiating and agreeing to
terrorist demands, the country may become safer, while the other 90
million are screaming for military action?
This is today’s Pakistan and the
place that I call home. What I have just described to you is not all
of what Pakistan is today. It is a nation that is fighting for its
existence in the community of nations, but it is also a nation full
of hard-working, educated, honest people that want to see peace
returned to their country. And there lies the rub…
Over the years, Pakistan has been
infiltrated by traitors to the nation, more interested in bolstering
their offshore bank accounts and assets, than they are in building a
better country. The repercussions are felt like shockwaves throughout
the country every day - an economy in tatters, education non-existent
for those without wealth and employment opportunities unavailable for
those without approach. It’s the same Pakistan that the religious
extremists use to recruit more followers into their holy wars.
Agency
Rules – Never an Easy Day at the Office, rather
than picking up from today, stumbles
backwards to the 1990s, right
after the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan and the
beginnings of the extremist/terrorist camps within the tribal areas.
Fresh from a successful war with a superpower, the Mujahideen
fighters that had traveled from Pakistan returned home. A segment of
these fighters with more militant leanings looked to change the
country that had neglected them and their religious beliefs in favor
of a liberal agenda that allowed women to attend schools, men to
dress in Western clothing and Islam to be sequestered to Friday
prayers and religious holidays.
The book will take you through the 90s
and the networks that were created within the country’s madrassahs
(religious schools) that today funnel fighters into the al-Qaeda and
the fight against the NATO forces in Afghanistan. It will give you a
picture of Pakistan through one man’s eyes as he fights for his own
identity and place in society. He is the embodiment of the Pakistani
that the world doesn’t see in the headlines or the evening news. As
the honorable soldier, the precision sniper, the intelligence
operative and the conflicted man, Kamal Khan takes you through one of
the greatest adventures before the War on Terror started to a
Pakistan that is at war with itself.
Shrouded in political expediency,
hampered by internal power struggles, international espionage and
doublespeak that makes Washington’s spin doctors proud, Kamal’s
mission is a nightmare of rampant militant fundamentalism that
threatens to choke and take Pakistan hostage. For him, the fight is
not just for freedom, but the survival of a nation.
Thursday, 13 March 2014
Mayhem in March: Agency Rules by Khalid Muhammad
Find it on Amazon Smashwords Kobo Barnes and Noble
Synopsis
Celebrated as a ragtag force that defeated and broke the Soviet Union, no one predicted the
Mujahideen would bring with them a plague that would spread like wildfire through Pakistan in the years to follow. When the battle-worn fighters returned with no enemy or war to fight, they turned their sights on the country that had been their creator and benefactor.
From the same battlegrounds that birthed the Mujahideen, a young Kamal Khan emerges as a different breed of warrior. Discarding his wealthy family comforts, Kamal becomes a precision sniper, an invincible commando and a clandestine operative bringing intimidation, dominance and death with him to the battlefield. Ending the plague is his prime directive.
Shrouded in political expediency, hampered by internal power struggles, international espionage and doublespeak that makes Washington’s spin doctors proud, Kamal’s mission is a nightmare of rampant militant fundamentalism that threatens to choke and take Pakistan hostage. For him, the fight is not just for freedom, but the survival of a nation.
Excerpt
Nine months ago, the Muslim League government had won a surprising mandate across Pakistan on a manifesto that was full of promises that would be difficult, if not impossible, to deliver. One of their core promises was returning Karachi, Pakistan’s largest metropolis and economic hub, back to a peaceful existence.
Since his party’s election victory, Prime Minister Azam Shah had struggled with difficult questions on the actual implementation of his manifesto that had gotten them elected, but had never seemed to provide any clear or direct answers. One thing he had clearly demonstrated was his intense love for the cameras and media spotlight during his political events. As the opposition leader in the previous government, he had taken great pleasure in highlighting the failings and bad decisions of the sitting government. Today, however, was a different story as his government was now in power and he was regularly in the hot seat. During a tour of a children’s hospital in his native Multan, the Prime Minister was again posturing for the media. As the visit drew to a close, the newly minted Prime Minister sauntered to the podium as if he had won an award, unserious and jovial, until a staunch critic of the government posed a difficult question.
“Prime Minister, you have occupied the most powerful seat in the country for almost nine months now. Do you not see it as a failure that your government has not drafted any policy to address the violence in Karachi?”
It was not the first time it has been asked, but it was the first time the word ‘failure’ had been introduced into the public debate. As he looked around the gaggle of journalists, each thrusting forward to capture his next words on their recorders, he knew this would be the lead headline for the rest of the day, opening the door for opposition and coalition parties to criticize his inaction.
He measured his response, almost rehearsing the words in his mind before speaking. “I think it’s too early to use words like failure. When we were not the ruling party, our information was limited to what the previous government wanted us to know. Now, we have more intelligence about the situation, and I am briefed daily.”
Journalists started firing follow-up questions at him before he could complete his response. He held up his hands to try to bring the situation back under control.
“Just a minute, may I finish my response before you start your follow-ups?” he asked, trying to assert his position, but even he knew he had less than thirty seconds to finish and get away before he was cornered by the wolves stalking their prey.
“The government has had several meetings with all the stakeholders, both collectively and individually, over the past few months to ascertain the best course of action,” he continued hesitantly, knowing he had been repeating this for months now. He knew he wouldn’t win any favors by repeating himself. Just then, he felt a hand on his side and saw a note placed before him on the podium. Quickly scanning the note, he flashed a semi-smile. “Next week, we will bring everyone together to decide the final course of action.”
About the Author
When people talk about Khalid Muhammad, they talk about an entrepreneur who has helped others build their dreams and businesses. They talk about a teacher, who is dedicated to his students, both inside and outside the classroom, and they return the dedication tenfold.
Now, they talk about the author, who has written a fast-paced, action-packed spy thriller
about Pakistan, the politics, the Army and terrorism.
Born in Pakistan's troubled Swat Valley, educated and raised in the United States, Khalid returned to Pakistan almost 17 years ago and fell in love with his country. His debut novel, Agency Rules - Never an Easy Day at the Office, is a journey behind the headlines about Pakistan, the world's most dangerous place, to deliver an intense story that will challenge the reader to question what they have been told.
Connect with Khalid online
Website - http://agencyrules.com
Facebook http://facebook.com/AgencyRulesPK
Twitter http://twitter.com/AgencyRulesPK
A note from Linzé: Come back tomorrow for a guest post from Khalid on the story behind Agency Rules.
Thursday, 6 March 2014
Mayhem in March: Twisted by Vanessa Wright
Find it on Smashwords
Synopsis
A collection of 22
short stories from the bizarre to the truly chilling as the author
takes you along for a roller coaster ride, welcoming you to the
darker side of humanity. She delves into the shadowy world of
obsessions, addictions, death and the loss of innocence and
imagination. She takes an
honest, in depth look at things that happen
all around us, yet we tend to ignore.
Here we are forced to look at
the pain of what it means to be human in all its various facets and
to truly explore the face that looks back at us in the mirror. No one
is truly good or truly evil; nothing is exclusively beautiful or
ugly, we are a sublime mix of the two, walking the tightrope median
between the two opposites. The author expects the reader to think
about what he has just read and to question the so called normalcy of
everyday life. She peels back the layers to reveal the hidden
skeletons in the closet. Fear, doubt, depression, loneliness, bulimia
are only some of the elements which are open for discussion.
As a
society we have shied away from the darker aspects that are certainly
part and parcel of who we are. Surely the path to true wisdom and
resolution of these issues is in the enlightenment thereof, the
dusting off of the cobwebs in the cupboard.
Excerpt:
2. Bright
Lines
The pain was so
excruciating that the primitive, instinctual mind swept in and
strangled her hold on the cold, metal object in her hand; survival
being paramount. She endured a few agonizing seconds before euphoria
washed her away and out to a sea of peace.
She could feel her
mind escaping the confines of her body; the binding chains were
thrown off, liberating her imprisoned soul. With a sigh of relief
she became a light, downy feather abreast the rising air currents.
She bobbed rhythmically to the deep internal breathing of the earth.
She held her own breath, afraid of disturbing the feeling of inner
peace and warmth that suffused her body. It broke through barriers
and walls that were cemented into her soul by time; shattered her
strongholds and allayed age old fears of insecurity and
worthlessness. In this second, now, she was more than worthy.
Colours appeared
brighter as if life had been washed back into them. The bleach had
leeched out and leaves on the elm trees outside ran green with the
sap of life. The sky seemed to bleed blue into the day. She exhaled
slowly, carefully and watched her breath become kaleidoscopic reds,
greens, yellows and shiny purples. Tentatively she reached out and
touched the brittle clouds of vapour and dissipated them into
slithering ribbons of light. Their beautiful reflections made her
eyes hurt and her heart contract with sadness and loss.
Her body became
weightless, tethered to the earth by a gossamer spider’s thread.
Threadbare she had come into this earth and threadbare she would
escape its confines. Her thoughts scattered and twisted, undulating
lazily around the idea of living and surviving. Perhaps and perhaps
not she thought, giggling giddily. Control was hers to keep or to
release. How easy it would be to allow her life to slip silently
away. Allow it to be carried away on sea breezes and on the white
feathers of barn owls.
Her outer shell
could then become one with the earth, decomposed and nutrient rich.
Her bits and pieces gnawed at, secreted away by chipmunks and field
mice; becoming part of a shelter here and the lining of a cosy nest
there. Scattered and mindlessly free she would roam the earth, and
her life’s circle would close, ending where it had begun…..dust
to dust. At this thought a lazy self-indulgent smile curled at the
corners of her wide mouth.
Author Bio
couldn’t
stop. I have been published in two anthologies: My kort vir jou sop
as well as Write for light
Currently in the process of putting the finishing chapters to a crime thriller called Artifacts.
Find me on Twitter: @Artysoul1966
My blog where you can enjoy various
short stories: http://iread1966.wordpress.com
Pinterest:
http://pinterest.com/artysoul1966/boards/
Story board for Artifacts:
http://pinterest.com/artysoul1966/artifacts-crime-novel-coming-soon/
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
Guest Post: Using Your Free time for Your Passion by Marcio Coelho
I was always interested in doing more things than my free time allowed. Surely having a job with something that does not make me truly happy, increases my anxiety to seek satisfaction outside of the company. But it’s been like this since I was a child. I remember that after I came home from school and ate lunch, I used to spend the day involved in some kind of activity, in most cases, related to music.
So I got some theoretical knowledge about music, rock bands, and national and international artists. Moreover, I myself have become a musician. Unfortunately I still don’t work in this business; I have music only as a hobby, and also part of a bigger dream to be realized, but distant for now.
But why am I talking about music, since the idea is to talk about time management?
Because I used the free time I had with something that I really liked: a passion. If you do not spend your spare time with your true passion, at least a portion of it, you are probably managing your time in the wrong way. And over time, not so good consequences will come.
Today I work as the only software developer for a small company . The workload, some times, is absurd for just one person. A few years ago, when I still did not have this notion of having a possibly inhumane job, I used to yell and struggle with my coworkers , take those bad feelings out of the company, and transfer it to my family and friends.
Anxiety took over my life – until very recently. Then gradually I began to educate myself to do only what was possible, and not worry about what I can not accomplish that day at work. No matter whether customers would complain, or if my boss would yell at me - we all had to understand the fact that I was alone. If the company did not want or could not hire other programmers to help me, fine, but I could not harm my physical and mental health because of a job. Areas like design, web design and software development have a motto in Portuguese that sounds like "our company is not a pastry" (where you ask for a pie and the clerk would delivers it to you right away).
Everything needs time and the customer must wait, like it or not.
If this is happening to you, it's time to stop and consider whether it is worth.
By the time you start to notice things like peeling skin, spinal pain, unexplained stomach aches and headaches, and so on, you need to stop and think about it. I have seen people going to the hospital because of accumulated stress at work. I myself have felt pain in the kidney that I could not explain very well how it happened. On another occasion, a sharp pain in the middle of my chest made me think that something serious was happening to me, some kind of heart problem, but in the end all the doctors found nothing and said "it would have been gas" (a little funny and kind of ridiculous, but rather that than a heart issue).
After what I have lived and suffered for not knowing how to manage well my time, I can say that if you feel some kind of imbalance in your life, or cannot do everything you would like, remember to stop for a few minutes, close your eyes, breathe, and try to search deep in your consciousness for what you can change, and be more free to do what you love, even if it is not in your current working time.
Exit the office, even if your job is not perfect, and make time to have fun with those you love, doing what you love. If you have an awesome job, it’s even better, but still don’t let it dominate your schedule. It`s you who command your calendar, and not the contrary!
Author Bio
Marcio CS is a Brazilian musician, blogger and writer, 39 years old, who also works in IT. He`s happily married to another writer, Marcia Tondello. They have a daughter, Lara, who is also growing into an artist.
I use the nickname "Marcio CS", that is my artist nickname :)
My current blog is at http://www.marciocs.com.br (which it`s redirecting to http://eumarciocs.wordpress.com).
So I got some theoretical knowledge about music, rock bands, and national and international artists. Moreover, I myself have become a musician. Unfortunately I still don’t work in this business; I have music only as a hobby, and also part of a bigger dream to be realized, but distant for now.
But why am I talking about music, since the idea is to talk about time management?
Because I used the free time I had with something that I really liked: a passion. If you do not spend your spare time with your true passion, at least a portion of it, you are probably managing your time in the wrong way. And over time, not so good consequences will come.
Today I work as the only software developer for a small company . The workload, some times, is absurd for just one person. A few years ago, when I still did not have this notion of having a possibly inhumane job, I used to yell and struggle with my coworkers , take those bad feelings out of the company, and transfer it to my family and friends.
Anxiety took over my life – until very recently. Then gradually I began to educate myself to do only what was possible, and not worry about what I can not accomplish that day at work. No matter whether customers would complain, or if my boss would yell at me - we all had to understand the fact that I was alone. If the company did not want or could not hire other programmers to help me, fine, but I could not harm my physical and mental health because of a job. Areas like design, web design and software development have a motto in Portuguese that sounds like "our company is not a pastry" (where you ask for a pie and the clerk would delivers it to you right away).
Everything needs time and the customer must wait, like it or not.
If this is happening to you, it's time to stop and consider whether it is worth.
By the time you start to notice things like peeling skin, spinal pain, unexplained stomach aches and headaches, and so on, you need to stop and think about it. I have seen people going to the hospital because of accumulated stress at work. I myself have felt pain in the kidney that I could not explain very well how it happened. On another occasion, a sharp pain in the middle of my chest made me think that something serious was happening to me, some kind of heart problem, but in the end all the doctors found nothing and said "it would have been gas" (a little funny and kind of ridiculous, but rather that than a heart issue).
After what I have lived and suffered for not knowing how to manage well my time, I can say that if you feel some kind of imbalance in your life, or cannot do everything you would like, remember to stop for a few minutes, close your eyes, breathe, and try to search deep in your consciousness for what you can change, and be more free to do what you love, even if it is not in your current working time.
Exit the office, even if your job is not perfect, and make time to have fun with those you love, doing what you love. If you have an awesome job, it’s even better, but still don’t let it dominate your schedule. It`s you who command your calendar, and not the contrary!
Author Bio
Marcio CS is a Brazilian musician, blogger and writer, 39 years old, who also works in IT. He`s happily married to another writer, Marcia Tondello. They have a daughter, Lara, who is also growing into an artist.
I use the nickname "Marcio CS", that is my artist nickname :)
My current blog is at http://www.marciocs.com.br (which it`s redirecting to http://eumarciocs.wordpress.com).
Sunday, 2 March 2014
Read an eBook this week
It is eBook week on Smashwords and as a participating author I am discounting THREE of my books just for you this week
Click the title of the book and voila!
Géra's Gift is now $ 1.50 (50% off) use code REW50 to get the discount
Keeper of the Dragon Sword is $ 1.50 (75% off) use code REW75 to get the discount
Their +1 is $ 1.50 (50% off) use code REW50 to get the discount
Their +1 is $ 1.50 (50% off) use code REW50 to get the discount
ENJOY!
♥ ♥ ♥
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