Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Writer’s block, my ass. I simply don’t have time to write.

Writer’s block, my ass. I simply don’t have time to write.
God, how many times have I said that?
If you’re a writer, it’s very important to accomplish writing a book whether you have a writer’s block or not. You can accomplish that by simply setting a time to write and sticking to it.
I also didn’t have time, yet I am the proud, bestselling author of “Glow in the Dark.” It hit me one day like a ton of bricks, I was always saying I wish I had time to write, but I didn’t. Yet, every single day from 2pm to 3pm, I was at that TV with baited breath and a fattening snack. I stayed there rain or shine, life or death until that days episode of General Hospital was completed.  Then one day like I said it just hit me, what if I could spend my lunch hour writing instead of basking in my favorite soap? So, I spent that hour a day, five days week, writing instead. Well that went so well, I have since found more hours in the day. But the point was I could accomplish writing a book in less than six months by just spending five hours a week on it. Everybody has a quiet hour they can find somewhere, if writing is truly what they desire. My book is 80,000 words and I have never gone back to soaps. I do hear they are coming off the air, though.

This is a ten part series regarding the prevention of and the handling of writers block. Come back next week for implementing a writing schedule. There are prizes for being involved in the ten week Tuesday editor course, you have to be here 8weeks out of ten to qualify for the grand prize.
There are prizes for being involved in the ten week Tuesday editor course, you have to be there 8 weeks and out of ten to qualify for the grand prize. However anyone that leaves a comment will qualify for the other prizes.
3rd prize- an eBook of your choosing from our hot reads collection
2nd Prize- Two eBooks of your choosing from our hot reads collection
1st Prize- Two eBooks of your choosing from Hellfire Publishing
Grand Prize: Two eBooks of your choosing from Hellfire Publishing and a live video chat with Hellfire Publishing’s executive editor Dawn Binkley.
Prizes deliverable after Ten week course is completed. There are also Prizes available at www.askapublishedauthor.org, free help for writers.
For Readers: Hellfire Publishing book buyers from April 30- June 14th get a chance to win & 50.00 cash and two eBooks of their choosing. Those winners will be announced June 15th
Dawn Binkley
Executive editor
Hellfire Publishing

Also known as:
Keira Kroft, Romantic Suspense

Monday, May 30, 2011

Would they?

                                                   Would they?
                                                                   By: Keira Kroft

Memorial Day May 27: 1991
Jordy Smith sat on the edge of his bed on an insanely hot and humid morning, clutching his silver star. His dad was firing up the coals on the barbeque. Jordy loved the smell of lighter fluid splattered across the charcoal. He could see his mom scurrying around the kitchen, she started chopping up onions and fresh garlic and gathering her other ingredients.
His family had a Memorial Day barbeque, rain or shine since Jordy was Five years old. He couldn’t help but wonder… If people really knew what happened when you went away to war, they wouldn’t barbeque and drink beer in memory of the soldiers, would they? If they only understood...
He rubbed the smooth metal between his fingers.
“Jordy could you take out the garbage? People will be here in about an hour,” his mother spewed quickly in her southern twang. He missed life being as simple as, being too lazy to take out the garbage. In war, lazy meant...dead.While he was away in Kuwait he was asked to do things…despicable things.

She stuck her head in his room, “Sweetie are you okay?” she asked wiping her hands on her apron.
He looked up at her warm eyes and chocolate brown hair. “Yeah, I just need a minute. It is a memorial day, after all.”
“Oh, of course you left friends behind.”
So many ghosts. He clutched the star tighter. “Yeah, I did.”
She disappeared from the doorway. His mind went to the beginning. There were no jobs, of course he got into a little trouble and barely finished high school. The military gave him a way out and money. He never thought a war would break out, never in a million years.
Even with news of the war he was still so proud of himself, he came through his training with flying colors, he was in good shape and he grew up a little too. He had just been coming into his own with the ladies, when he had been called to serve in another country.
His pride never left him on the trip there or even when his mama wailed in anguish, because he was leaving. He promised Mama, he would be back in one piece and by God, he would. He Promised.
The first few days, where just hot. He hadn’t ever wanted water so much in his life as he did out there in that hot dessert, it was a deep thirst that ached from the depths of his belly. The equipment he carried around was extremely heavy. I’m hot tired and hungry and I can’t stand this heat. He cracked open the container and sucked out the last few drops of water, but it wasn’t enough. He shared a bunk with several other men. They were just as miserable as he was, but at least that had each other and they had their pride.
Ripped from a sound sleep, his heart raced, his palms sweated, his gut churned, he shook. Up and dressed with a rifle in his hand before he knew it; he was a true soldier now. His instincts took over. As the first one awake, he ran outside their hut, there was fire in the sky and bullets reigning down on him. He got in position, pulling on the trigger, shooting one person after another like a video game, only it wasn’t, these were real people. Their lives where ending and Jordy was in hell.
Later, he would be rewarded with a silver star for bravery. After all he did, it didn’t matter, his friends died when a rocket hit their hut, blowing it into tiny pieces of flesh and bone. He was the only one left, maybe the only one in the entire village. Had he not gone outside, he would have been killed. They all died and he survived and was considered a hero. He was not brave; piss in the pants scared was what he was.
His trip down memory lane ended and reality was sinking in. He was really home in his bed on Memorial Day asking himself again, if regular folk really knew what war was like, would they still eat, drink beer and raise their glasses in the air to the bravery of the military? Yes. If they really understood, they would be so grateful for the men and woman that step into battle so that they don’t have to be ripped from their beds at night, by shouting, gunfire and explosions. So thankful in fact, that they would dance in the streets every day in celebration.
Jordy’s mind couldn’t imagine anymore, complete and total reality was set in, now. There was no holiday barbeque like he imagined or guests, just his father pacing back and forth and his mother sobbing. “Mama it’s time,” he tried to turn his head but the pain from the cancer was too excruciating, the drugs weren’t helping anymore. Jordy was exposed to a chemical in Kuwait, that turned into pancreatic cancer that spread through his body like wildfire, the only reason he was home in in own bed, was to die. He would have much preferred to stay and fight and die the quick soothing death of a bullet to his head, not feeling his gut being eaten away. His mom grabbed his hand, feeling the metal star. She gently pinned it to the collar of his pajamas. “You’re the bravest man I have ever known, son.” Reduced to a puddle of tears, she gripped his hand tightly.
“Don’t, die son, fight, you’re a fighter, don’t…” his mother pleaded.
He wished he could answer, but his soul was now gone from his body.
                                                                                                                 The end.
Jordy Smith is a figment of the author’s imagination, mixed with research and knowledge from friends who served in the gulf war.

To soldiers everywhere, from the depths of my heart, I thank you!
Dawn

The following poem was written about Sergeant Franklin Dennis Winters by his mother and is a real life depiction from a broken hearted woman.

                                                       Memorial Day - 1991
                                                                              By Susan Winters

As the sun rises, so do I,
to prepare to do what I have traveled so far to do.
What I love to do... but at the same time hating it.
To enter those hallowed grounds in search of you my son.
Walking alone among the pathways worn brown from those other mother before me.
I search for that small black section marker that means.....
I'm getting closer............ and closer.......................
as I turn..........................
and walk to the hill where I've been before.
All around me, on all sides,
as far as I can see is the sameness,
the quiet beauty of hillside graves
marked with stones of granet:
Flags.......unending flags waving in the morning breeze.

On I walk, hurrying to this place of pain and pride where I'm compelled to go.
Following this path to the end of your life...
my life too son, at least in my heart.
For when you died, so did I.
The tears begin to run down my face as I'm there....
standing there looking at your name....
I touch it and run my fingers across it.
I'm with you again if only for a short while.
Then without thinking I sit down with you....
Thru my tears I pick a clover off your grave and save it.
The red rose I've carried I place on the green grass around the stone that claims you as mine. 

People come and go all around me, but I'm undisturbed.
I belong here........with you !


Written in loving memory of Sergeant Franklin Dennis Winters by his mother.
May we never forget the sacrifices made by our military forces, whether in be in war or in peace.

Dawn Binkley
Executive editor
Hellfire Publishing

Also known as:
Keira Kroft, Romantic Suspense

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Edward McKeown

Edward McKeown is a writer and editor specializing in science fiction and fantasy with forays into literary and nonfiction on the visual arts.  He has written for: the Pastel Journal, Watercolor Magazine, as well as International artist.  Ed wrote the screenplay for “Last Clean Chance” a medical education film done by Charlotte Mecklenburg
and has over fifty published works of fiction to his credit.  He enjoys a wide variety of interests from ballroom dance to the martial arts. Ed is represented by the Swetky Literary Agency for the book length works. For more, visit or http://www.sfreader.com/authors/edward-mcKeown or

Ed escaped from NY, but his old hometown supplies much of the background to his humorous “Lair of the Lesbian Love Goddess” shorts, as his new hometown in Charlotte, North Carolina does for his “Templar” fantasy series. He enjoys a wide variety of interests from ballroom dance to the martial arts and has the good fortune to be married to the talented artist, Schelly Keefer. Ed is represented by the Swetky Literary Agency for the book length works. He has also edited the Sha’Daa anthologies of wry tales of the apocalypse. For more, visit http://www.sfwa.org/members/mckeown or  http://www.sfreader.com/authors/edward-mcKeown or find him on Facebook.


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Consistency is the key

Consistency is the key
#2 Implement a Writing Schedule.
This will not only help avoid writer’s block, it will also help you finish your story quicker. Consistency is the key to tackling any big project.
I compare a writing schedule to weight loss. If you exercise and watch what you eat on a daily basis without fail, you will lose weight. Same with novel writing, chip away at it no matter what and you will have a finished book in no time.
Carve out a time to write and then ignore the writer's block. Show up to write, even if nothing comes right away. When your body shows up to the page at the same time and place every day, eventually your mind—and your muse—will do the same.
What kind of writing schedule do you plan to implement?


This is a ten part series regarding the prevention of and the handling of writers block. Come back next week for implementing a writing schedule. There are prizes for being involved in the ten week Tuesday editor course, you have to be here 8weeks out of ten to qualify for the grand prize.

There are prizes for being involved in the ten week Tuesday editor course, you have to be there 8 weeks and out of ten to qualify for the grand prize. However anyone that leaves a comment will qualify for the other prizes.
3rd prize- an eBook of your choosing from our hot reads collection
2nd Prize- Two eBooks of your choosing from our hot reads collection
1st Prize- Two eBooks of your choosing from Hellfire Publishing
Grand Prize: Two eBooks of your choosing from Hellfire Publishing and a live video chat with Hellfire Publishing’s executive editor Dawn Binkley.
Prizes deliverable after Ten week course is completed. There are also Prizes available at www.askapublishedauthor.org, free help for writers.
For Readers: Hellfire Publishing book buyers from April 30- June 14th get a chance to win & 50.00 cash and two eBooks of their choosing. Those winners will be announced June 15th
Dawn Binkley
Executive editor
Hellfire Publishing

Also known as:
Keira Kroft, Romantic Suspense

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Writer’s Block! How to avoid it. Part one.

Writer’s Block! How to avoid it. Part one.
We are here to talk about the most feared phenomenon in all of writing…Writer’s Block
#1 The first thing I do when I feel that I have any kind of concentration problems, I simply walk way. Just for three minutes.
What can you do in three minutes?
Take a breath, refill your coffee, get a fresh drink, do some stretches, mediate, pet the cat,                                                  walk the dog...
Now your turn. What can you do in three minutes?
Whatever you do and I can’t stress this enough do not think about your work or anything at all, just be…

This is a ten part series regarding the prevention of and the handling of writers block. Come back next week for implementing a writing schedule. There are prizes for being involved in the ten week Tuesday editor course, you have to be here 8weeks out of ten to qualify for the grand prize.

There are prizes for being involved in the ten week Tuesday editor course, you have to be there 8 weeks and out of ten to qualify for the grand prize. However anyone that leaves a comment will qualify for the other prizes.
3rd prize- an eBook of your choosing from our hot reads collection
2nd Prize- Two eBooks of your choosing from our hot reads collection
1st Prize- Two eBooks of your choosing from Hellfire Publishing
Grand Prize: Two eBooks of your choosing from Hellfire Publishing and a live video chat with Hellfire Publishing’s executive editor Dawn Binkley.
Prizes deliverable after Ten week course is completed. There are also Prizes available at www.askapublishedauthor.org, free help for writers.
For Readers: Hellfire Publishing book buyers from April 30- June 14th get a chance to win & 50.00 cash and two eBooks of their choosing. Those winners will be announced June 15th
Dawn Binkley
Executive editor
Hellfire Publishing

Also known as:
Keira Kroft, Romantic Suspense

Monday, May 2, 2011

WHAT A TIME TO WRITE HORROR!


                       
WHAT A TIME TO WRITE HORROR!
           
            How lucky we are to come to the market at this point in our writing careers. There has never been a better time to write dark fiction in all its forms. We’re smack in the middle of a true horror renaissance (Twilight, Harry Potter, screen adaptations of comic book heroes) combined with the new publishing model provided by the Internet. Entrepreneurs such as the CEO of Hellfire Publishing have provided a respected platform by which to offer our product to readers worldwide. Consumers are buying Kindles and Nooks like crazy. E-readers are the latest ‘must have’ technical device and extensive advertising has made the public aware of the joy of owning them.
            E-readers are now mainstream. They’re cool. The new impulse purchase of books is one friend telling another about a fantastic read they downloaded to their Kindle. The price is right, cheaper than buying a hard print copy in a store. You not only save on gas (a horror in itself), but readers can feed their fix at midnight after visiting a horror web site and seeing a review that piques their interest. Perhaps the cover art grabs them. Maybe they finally found that short story they always wished somebody would write, a story on Vampire Gladiators, a period of history that always interested them but the big publishers ignore. The vampire angle gives those muscle boys so much more ‘oomph’.
            The reader thinks, I must have it … now!
            Voila, because of online publishing, horror fans can connect with their deepest desires and nightmares. Writers of such fiction can make money, especially if they continue to produce and their names become known. (We all know the story of the female author who built her fan base and made a million dollars from relatively cheap downloads.) Authors that have polished their efforts for years have suddenly found a writing home, a place where they deserve to be due to their intense dedication to their craft. Consumers don’t have to buy an entire printed magazine to get the one story they really want. They can buy said story for a reasonable price and keep it on their e-reader, where it will never mold or get inadvertently pitched out.
            When a curious friend sees us pull out our e-reader and asks, “What kind of shit do you download, anyway?” we can proudly say, “I’ll show you my latest release from Hellfire.” We can explain that people are actually downloading our books and paying money for the privilege. Wow! What an age we live in. So let’s straighten our shoulders and not let any other writer try to convince us that e-publishing is an inferior market. Let’s invite as many others as possible to ‘Take a Tunnel to the Dark Side’ and explore urban legends, myths and ghost stories, vampires and shape shifters and killer priests. After all, it’s a scary society out there. When I turned on the computer today, a big popup ad screamed, “If you died today, who would take care of your family?”
            Like I said, scary. The world is waiting to shock us. Let’s shock it back, kick it where it hurts and give ‘em the best fiction we can produce. Carpe diem!   By Cheryl Elaine Williams writing as Sharlana Williams