Showing posts with label free book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free book. Show all posts

Sunday, June 2, 2013

How to Improve your Work




                                                           Free todoay on Amazon & Amazon UK
I'm convinced you can't write well unless you read books by writers who have figured it out and learn from them. Classic writers like Hemingway and Faulkner and Wolfe and Steinbeck. Present day writers like Michael Connelly, Nelson DeMille, C.J. Box, Lee Child, Stephen King and Robert Crais. All very different. All highly accomplished. All able to touch something human in us that goes beyond adventure and trouble and crime and spies and bad guys and good guys and all that.

I'm a big fan of James Lee Burke. I've read all of his Dave Robicheaux novels. I just finished Feast Day of Fools, Burke's latest in a series featuring an aging, small town Texas sheriff named Hackberry Holland.

So, what's so great about Burke's writing? The plots are certainly excellent, but that's not it. Many writers can lay down a good plot. What makes Burke's writing sing for me is his characters. What can I (and maybe you) learn from reading a book about dysfunctional, psychopathic characters who consistently carry out brutal and heinous acts as a routine day's work? Why would we want to read about people like this?

Burke is much more than a creative writer with the required skill sets of crafted scenes, powerful dialogue and twisting plots. He's a master at revealing the human heart and the demons that reside within all of us. He's a genius when it comes to natural description, immersing the reader in the desert harshness of Mexico and Texas or the lush coast of Louisiana or the hard streets of New Orleans. He's learned the secret of revealing the depths of a character in a simple paragraph, of choosing exactly the right words.

Here's an example from Feast Day of Fools. Hackberry Holland, Burke's protagonist, is watching his deputy Pam Tibbs at a crime scene.

In moments like these, when she was totally unguarded and unmindful of herself, Hackberry knew in a private place in the back of his mind that Pam Tibbs belonged to that category of exceptional women whose beauty radiated outward through their skin and had little to do with the physical attributes of their birth. In these moments he felt an undefined longing in his heart that he refused to recognize.

The paragraph paints an instant picture of Pam Tibbs. From prior parts of the book we know she's not beautiful in the conventional sense. Burke could have just said she wasn't particularly pretty, not that her beauty "had little to do with the physical attributes of her birth." I think the ability to describe a character with a phrase like this is as good as it gets for a writer. The paragraph tells us even more about Hackberry. It reveals the essence of who he is. Hackberry longs for connection he cannot define. More, he refuses to acknowledge it's there. By implication, he must control his emotions or things might turn bad for him. He fears their power.

Two characters defined. All in seventy words.

Hackberry, over seventy years old, struggles with unresolved feelings about Pam, who is half his age. Along with the dangerous and evil characters Burke spreads across the pages, we find ourselves engaged with a protagonist aware that he is long past his prime, taking it one day at a time, struggling with unexpressed and powerful emotions and doing the best he can to see that justice is done.

Dave Robicheaux is another character any aspiring writer can learn from. He is a violent and dysfunctional man who is gentle and full of love for his wives (they get killed every now and then) and his adopted daughter, Alafair. He's full of destructive anger that comes raging out past the walls of polite manners he's built to contain it. He's from a nightmare of a poor, southern working-class family and a background laced with brutality, love, sex and alcohol. He believes in traditional values of honor and friendship. He's driven by demons many of us might find familiar. He's a Vietnam Vet. He's an alcoholic who struggles to stay sober and sometimes slips. He has deep integrity. He cares. He seeks and lives and believes in social justice. He sees Confederate ghosts slipping through the mists of the Bayou.

One hell of a character. Read James Lee Burke and learn.
Alex Lukeman

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Exceptional Announcement


Bullying Book by Florida Author to be Offered Free on Kindle



Manatee County FL – (May 10th 2012) – The Bully Vaccine, written by Florida author Jennifer Hancock, will be given away free to Kindle owners on May 14th and 15th 2012. This book is designed to help parents vaccinate their kids against bullies and other obnoxious petty people. By preparing for them in advance you can effectively inoculate yourself against the worst of their behavior.

In the book, Jen teaches parents practical ways they can protect their kids from bullying. Using techniques she learned from her mother as well as from her experience as a dolphin trainer in Hawaii. The skills taught in this book are based on operant conditioning techniques that really do work. But don’t let the fancy name fool you, these skills are so easy to learn even a kindergartner can understand them.

As a mother herself, Jen taught these skills to her son this past year while he was in kindergarten and he was easily able to put them into practice the very next day. And, yes, they worked; he even publically endorsed her book.

This is a great opportunity to get a book on an important topic for free and it will help a local author out as well. According to Jennifer, “The more people that know about the book and the more people who can get a copy of it for free, the more children who will be helped.”

About the author:
Jen Hancock – Humanistic Parenting expert: Jen helps parents focus on the real purpose of parenting: which is to teach our kids the skills they need to succeed in life. Whether the topic is bullying, choosing friends, being financially responsible, or simply why not to cheat, she makes difficult topics seem easy. Her advice is so practical it will leave you thinking, “Why didn’t I think of that?”  

Jen Hancock 
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