Sunday, 14 August 2016

Book review - Lament of the Fallen, by Andy Peloquin



Andy Peloquin first came to my notice with Book 1 in this series, Blade of the Destroyer. I liked that book a lot, but in this, the second novel in the series, I see Peloquin really developing as a writer. The narrative is smooth and powerful, the action scenes exciting, but the Hunter... ah yes. The Hunter is a lovely piece of character development and Peloquin has handled him really well. I liked the first book, but with this one, I'm committed to follow the series as each new book emerges, and in fact I laid the completed book aside with disappointment that it was over.  

Lament of the Fallen is available from AMAZON both in paperback and for Kindle.

Wednesday, 10 August 2016

Introducing Mark Baynard


Lots of people get into trouble, all the time. There is a constant flow of people into the prison system. Many of those people are juveniles, and wind up as cogs in the criminal industry through poor choices or a lack of awareness of choices. We're all down with this, aren't we? In my own country, the proportion of Aboriginal people in the prison system is scandalous, and I have no doubt that the American system is the same.

However, of those people, some brave and resourceful souls manage to break the cycle, to reinvent themselves and go on to a better life. My respect for these people is boundless. 

Out of their number, an even smaller number of people, having succeeded in getting themselves right, reach out and spend their lives helping others to do the same. One of these exceptional human beings is Mark Baynard, whom I am proud to call friend. Mark spent over ten years in prison himself and is now established as a happy and productive citizen, and through his books and his advocacy work he helps to make it possible for others in that situation to do the same. 

ONE MAN'S FIGHT TO SAVE OTHERS

Due to poor decisions, Mark ended up serving more than a decade in prison on drug convictions.
After being released from prison, he was determined to be a better man. He moved to Alabama where he met his wife and they now share a nine year old together. He pursued a college education and earned an Associate Degree in Early Childhood Education from Ashford University. He then earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Criminal Justice from Faulkner University. Mark is currently pursuing a Master’s Degree while taking classes between Troy University and Auburn University Montgomery. 

Mark is now on a mission to reach our youth before they reach prison. He has been working with troubled teenagers for the past nine years. He focuses on such qualities as responsibility, accountability, and determination. Mark encourages good work ethics and reminds teenagers to think before making a bad decision.

Mark's outreach work is supported by his writing, and he has published two books, with a third soon to be released. His published work is available from AMAZON, and his new book, 100 Years II: Truth Be Told, will release on 1 September 2016.

You can contact Mark here:

Twitter:               @mark100years
Youtube:             https://www.youtube.com/c/MarkBaynard
LinkedIn:            https://www.linkedin.com/in/markbaynard
Instagram:          @mark100years
Google+:            @mark100years
Pinterest:            @mark100years







Friday, 1 July 2016

Book review - An Unwieldy Ceremony, by Ray Anselmo




Although this second instalment of the Lensoil series has as most of its characters members of the senior nobility, the book has a pleasantly domestic atmosphere. The smooth writing, relatable characters and flashes of humour we saw in the first book are continued in this one, and once again of particular note is the restrained but well-defined steampunk setting; steampunk is often overdone, but Anselmo has struck just the right note with his. 

The fictional religion that plays such a large part in the books is a masterpiece, embodying all of the essentials of Christianity while retaining an authentically alien structure. Of all the aspects of the Lensoil books, this is the one I most admire.

A final bonus for readers of An Unwieldy Ceremony - you'll learn everything you need to plan a wedding!

Friday, 24 June 2016

On Sale now - The whole Leech series by James Crawford



Who doesn't love a bargain? I know I do, and on a cold, rainy day (which is what I'm having) there's nothing better than curling up somewhere warm with a really good read.

Today you can get the whole Leech series by James Crawford for 99 cents - well it shows up for me as $1.00, but that's no doubt due to the exchange rate between our countries. In any case, it's a terrific bargain, not to be missed, especially if you like a nice, clean gay romance. 

You can read my review of the first book in the series HERE.

Buy the entire series for the promotional price HERE.

Thursday, 16 June 2016

Book review: Domechild, by Shiv Ramdas



The mysteriously intriguing opening of Domechild leads into a powerful exposition of the kind of society towards which we of the 21st century seem to be heading. I don't think I will ever view Facebook quite the same way again.

The book didn't quite sustain its early promise of humour; although it was exciting, and kept one turning the pages, it didn't really stay funny after the opening chapters, not to me, anyway. I had expected it to be a riot of laughter all the way through, based on what someone else had said, but, I hasten to add, this was not a promise held out either by the author or the publisher.

For me, Domechild's real strength lay in its portrayal of a dystopia projected upon features of our world as it now is; like Brave New World and Nineteen Eighty-Four, it offers a chilling glimpse into one possible future, and does this entertainingly.

I did have some reservations about the ending. The book seemed to me just to stop, without adequately resolving itself; whether this was done with the view to a sequel or not, it is a grave fault in a novel. All the same, well worth reading and I'll certainly look for more from this author.

Saturday, 11 June 2016

Book review: The Manson Effect, by Debra Barton



A sound and very complete exposition of all the known facts relating to the Manson murders, this is bound to be of interest to history buffs.

Written in a chatty, informal style, the book relates the events as far as they are known, with sections profiling each of the participants - the perpetrators and the victims. Links are provided to recordings of many of the actual proceedings, transcripts and parole hearings. It's a fascinating read and well worth the price for the paperback. I myself received an ebook from the author for review, but I cannot find as at the date of writing that the ebook has yet been published. No doubt it is coming soon.

For more serious students, the enormous bibliography provided is both an excellent resource for further study and a testament to the author's commitment to accuracy and completeness. Highly recommended.

Trigger warning: this writer uses 'lay' intransitively.

The Manson Effect is available from AMAZON.

Sunday, 5 June 2016

Why grammar, spelling and sentence structure really do matter in casual writing.

We've all seen it - someone slips up on his grammar in a Facebook post, someone else lands on him like a ton of bricks, three or four other people go for the someone else with flamethrowers and a massive free-for-all erupts, with undignified ranting and, depending on the forum, perhaps some really good offensive memes. It's one of the most common tropes one can see in writing groups, and yet no one ever seems to be bored with the argument.

Two camps are evident in this ongoing war. The first takes massive offence at any perceived or real imperfection in a poster's English. The second takes the view that the first group are Nazis, have sticks up their arses, and expresses various other views in progressively more vulgar terms.

Without wishing to be drawn into yet another flame war myself, I have to say that I'm with the first group, although with the caveat that this applies only to writers or would-be writers. If a person isn't very well educated, he can be expected to slip up occasionally, and there is absolutely no point in getting all bent out of shape over the spelling mistakes of such a person. Perfect English doesn't make one a better hairdresser, or cook, or brickie's mate. You might be a bit sad contemplating the amount of tax you've paid over the years for state schools, but that doesn't need to be foisted on the person.

But writers. Ah yes - writers. People who work with the written word, who build airy castles made out of words and sentences. People who sell these creations for money. If you are calling yourself a writer, whether published or not, you have, in my view, absolutely no business to be inflicting your illiteracy on anyone. The fact you are in an informal setting has no real bearing on this.

Consider table manners. When you sit down for a quick bite of lunch with your husband, when you're having a solitary breakfast before dashing off to the office - you don't require of yourself the degree of precision and formality that you would bring to, say, a gala dinner at Government House. There is hopefully, however, a minimum standard below which you don't descend, even when alone. You're not going to, for example, shovel up stew with your hands, or drink directly from the milk bottle. ARE you, Virginia? No, although if you're en famille or just with a school friend, you might speak a few words with your mouth full. 

Of course, if you were raised by wolves and don't know any better, people are almost certainly going to cut you a lot of slack about your table manners, and you will no doubt enjoy many happy evenings at Pizza Hut, although you are unlikely to be invited to Nobu any time soon.

But if you do know better, and if you behave like a pig on purpose at a formal occasion (I'm reminded of that truly disgusting scene in The Assassin) then it is deliberate ugliness, like young bogans spreading their legs and burping and farting on the tram; a kind of bullying, or perhaps a kind of vandalism, but certainly rude, uncivilised and hostile. 

Similarly, split infinitives, dangling modifiers and the egregious intransitive 'lay' are, when used by one writer to another, a sign either of overt hostility or of incompetence.

Now I am aware that many people disagree with me about this. You can read an example of the contrary view HERE, both in exposition and in a practical demonstration. Of course I do agree with Hutchinson's assertion that you should be yourself. No doubt you should; but I feel one can be oneself just as well in a clean shirt as in a filth-smeared rag.