Thursday, August 26, 2010

It's official!! The Golden Pathway is NOW available:


It's official!! The Golden Pathway is NOW available:


Title: The Golden Pathway

Written by: Donna McDine

Illustrated by: K.C. Snider

Ages: 8-12

Publisher: Guardian Angel Publishing, Inc.

Hardcover: ISBN: 978-1-61633-081-1; 1616330813

Soft cover: ISBN: 978-1-61633-088-0; 1616330880

eBook: ISBN: 978-1-61633-082-8; 1616330821

Published: August 2010

Synopsis:

Raised in a hostile environment where abuse occurs daily, David attempts to break the mold and befriends the slave, Jenkins, owned by his Pa. Fighting against extraordinary times and beliefs, David leads Jenkins to freedom with no regard for his own safety and possible consequences dealt out by his Pa.

Author: Donna McDine http://www.donnamcdine.com/  

Artist: K. C. Snider http://www.kcsniderart.com/

Ordering information:


Guardian Angel Publishing: http://www.guardianangelpublishing.com/pathway.htm

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Golden-Pathway-Donna-M-McDIne/dp/1616330880/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1282836673&sr=1-1

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Indie-Debut 2010 Interview Feature with C. Lee McKenzie, The Write Game













M E D I A  R E L E A S E

CONTACT: Donna M. McDine

Children’s Author

Email: dmcdine@optonline.net

Phone: 845-721-7802

For Immediate Release

Indie-Debut 2010 Interview Feature with C. Lee McKenzie, The Write Game

The Write Game http://writegame.blogspot.com/ hosted by C. Lee McKenzie is your one stop place to learn about up and coming debut writers in various genres. McKenzie is quite the accomplished author with several middle grade and young adult books to her credit, coupled with her experience teaching inter-cultural English and studies in American Language at San Jose State University. This makes for the perfect visit for the authors of Indie-Debut 2010 http://indiedebut2010.blogspot.com/.

Come along for this intriguing interview on Thursday, August 19 at http://writegame.blogspot.com/ and meet:

Lori Calabrese, The Bug That Plagued the Entire Third Grade

Danika Dinsmore, Brigitta of the White Forest

Donna McDine, The Golden Pathway

Jo Ramsey, Connection

Beth Reinke, In My Bath

Be sure to leave a comment and or question, each author will check in throughout the day to field your comments and questions. Visitors participating in the contest point system please see further details within the Indie-debut 2010 interview. Don’t miss out on the chance to win a special giveaway tote bag with special treats.

Thank you in advance for your interest.

###

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Unintentional Deliverance of my Muse by Lea Schizas

http://www.museituppublishing.com

December 1999 finds me sulking, worried about the year 2000 approaching and the calamity to come that I read about. Silly and stupid as this may sound, my life’s dream becoming a writer felt as though it had no chance at that point. Then January first…second…third rolled around and nothing had happened as predicted. No turmoil and I still had my manuscripts safely in tact in my computer. This is when I woke up from my 23-year-self-induced-coma-taking-care-of-everyone-else stupor. But let me backtrack for a minute…

I kept whining to my kids that all I wanted was a set of new notebooks and a neat pen to call my own for my books needing to be penned. Come January 8th, my b-day, my kids not only bought me notebooks to use for various story ideas, and my very own expensive pen let me add, but several ‘how-to’ writing books, and Writer’s Digest magazines. These gifts on my birthday stirred my Muse back into action and within two months I wrote my first screenplay, entered and won my first short story contest, and began two new novels.

In all honesty, my marriage and birth of my kids will always have top billing. But finally, my own interests and needs pushed through the long list of things that had invaded my life: taxi driving kids everywhere, nursing booboos, cooking food that took about five minutes to munch and two hours to prepare, and playing referee to all the MOM! screams. My Muse jumped out of me and has never allowed me to wiggle her back into oblivion.

It wasn’t the gifts presented to me that made my January 2000 birthday special and memorable to this day. Their combined efforts to buy the tools I needed to jumpstart my career whispered in my ear that they finally understood mom had needs, as well. To this day I am grateful and attribute everything I’ve accomplished thus far to them. My newest obstacle is to figure out how I can make them understand that writing needs peace and quiet and not, “Mom, what’s for lunch?”, “Mom, can you drive me to work?”, “Mom, Mom, Mom…”

Lea is the author of:
Bubba and Giganto: Odds Against Us 

Doorman's Creek 

Autism Epidemic: Shaking the System

Saturday, August 07, 2010

The Ten Commandments of Book Reviewing


1. Thou shall have no other gods before the reader.

The review is not about the author, nor the publisher, and especially, not about you, the reviewer. Reviews are all about the reader. Don’t try to impress with pompous words in an attempt to glorify yourself or appear scholarly. Give readers simplicity and clarity. They’ll appreciate it. If they want verbose and fancy, they can read Shakespeare.

2. Thou shall not lie.

Honesty is what defines your trade. Without it, you’re nothing but sell copy. When you give facile praise or sugar-coat a book, sooner or later readers will take you for what you are: a phony. Furthermore, if you give facile praise to a poorly written book, you are perpetuating a bad writer's career, lowering the chances that a good writer may be published instead.

3. Thou shall not offend the author.

Just as honesty is important, so is tact. There’s no need to be harsh or mean. A tactfully written, well-meant negative review should offer the author insight into what is wrong with the book. Instead of saying, “This is a terrible novel!” say, “This book didn’t work for me for the following reasons…”

4. Thou shall not eat the evaluation.

Some fledgling reviewers write a long blurb of the book and leave out the evaluation. The evaluation is the most important part of a review. A summary of the plot is not an evaluation. Saying, “I really liked this book” is not an evaluation. The evaluation tells the reader what is good and bad about the book, and whether or not it is worth buying.

5. Thou shall not reveal spoilers.

Nobody likes to be told the ending of a movie before having watched it. The same thing is valid for a book. If you give spoilers in your review, not only do you lessen the reader’s reading experience but you also risk being sued by the publisher or author.

6. Thou shall honor grammar, syntax and punctuation.

Don’t be one of those reviewers who are more in love with the idea of seeing their name online than making sure their reviews are well written and thorough. Your reviews may hang around on the internet for years to come and will reflect on your level as a writer. Run a spell check, edit, revise and polish your review as if you were posting a short story. Get a good book on grammar and punctuation, take an online course or listen regularly to podcasts such as The Grammar Girl (http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com).

7. Thou shall honor deadlines.

If you join a review site where the turnaround for reviews is 3 weeks, then you should respect that agreement. If you promise the author to have the review ready in two months, you should honor this too. Be honest and straight forward from the beginning. If you’re so busy your turnaround is six months, make sure to let the person know. If for any reasons you cannot meet the deadline, contact the person and let him know. It’s your responsibility to maintain a doable schedule.

8. Thou shall not be prejudiced against thy neighbor.

Don't assume that a self-published or small press book is poorly written. Give it a fair chance and let it speak for itself. Likewise, never assume a book published by a major NY house has to be good. You'd be surprised by the high quality of some small press books by unknown authors as opposed to those written by big name authors whose titles are often in the bestseller lists. In general, most subsidy books are mediocre, but there are always exceptions. If you've had bad experiences with subsidy books, then don't request them nor accept them for review. If you decide to review one, though, don't be biased and give it a fair chance.

9. Thou shall not become an RC addict

RC stands for Review Copy. Requesting RCs can get out of control. In fact, it can become addictive. You should be realistic about how many books you can review. If you don’t, pretty soon you’ll be drowning in more RCs that you can handle. When this happens, reading and reviewing can change from a fun, pleasurable experience into a stressful one. If you’re feeling frazzled because you have a tower of books waiting to be reviewed, learn to say NO when someone approaches you for a review and stop requesting RCs for a while. Unless you’re being paid as a staff reviewer for a newspaper or magazine, reviewing shouldn’t get in the way of your daily life.

10. Thou shall not steal.

Remember that the books you request are being sent to you in exchange for a review. Requesting review copies and not writing the reviews is, in one word: stealing. You'd be surprised at the number of 'reviewers' who, after having requested several books, suddenly 'disappear.' These people are not legitimate; they're crooks, plain and simple. If you have a valid reason for not reviewing a book, let the review site editor, author, publisher or publicist know.

The same goes for piracy. Do not risk being arrested or fined for posting a full ebook you have received on any site whether for free downloads or resale. This is theft and the law is quite specific. When you receive an ebook it is meant to give you the right to read it only, but it does not imply that you have the right to rob the author of future sales by your actions. This labels you as a thief. Using electronic transmission is only another way to send a book, like getting one in the mail which would not give you the right to reprint it for sale or distribution.

Integrity is part of the code of honor of a legitimate reviewer.

The author of 12 books, Mayra Calvani writes fiction and nonfiction for children and adults. Her nonfiction work, The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing, co-authored with Anne K. Edwards, was a ForeWord Best Book of the Year Award winner. She’s had over 300 stories, articles, interviews and reviews published. She reviews for The New York Journal of Books and SimplySharly.com. Visit her website at www.MayraCalvani.com. For her children’s books, visit www.MayrasSecretBookcase.com.

Monday, August 02, 2010

Caves, Cannons, and Crinolines Virtual Book Tour

Today, I'd like you to meet the main characters in my new young adult historical fiction story, Caves, Cannons, and Crinolines. I'm turning the post over to them now.

Greetings, friends. My name is Elizabeth Stamford. My family and friends call me Lizzie. I like it better because it’s less formal, and heaven knows there are enough rules Mama expects me as a young lady to follow, without fretting over my long name. I’m fourteen and live in Vicksburg, Mississippi, a once lovely, quiet town. Then the Federals came and our lives have not been the same since.

It seems the Mississippi River is very important to General Ulysses S. Grant. The Union army hopes to control the Mississippi. If they conquer Vicksburg they will succeed. I do not comprehend why men cannot get along with one another. Why they must fight constantly. Mama fears for Nat (my younger brother Nathan) and me. And do you know what Papa did? I scarcely believe it even as I speak. But he hired a cave dug in the hillside behind our home and expects us to live in it while the Yankee ships on the river bombard us with cannon shot.

Can you imagine cowering in a hole in the ground, choking on dust, hiding like cowards? I cannot. And so I’ve made my plans. I shall not reveal them to you here because nothing must stop me. Even though Nat appears to be quiet and a bit slow, he is smart and has big ears. He hears every word spoken and mulls them over in his mind.

“May I speak, Lizzie?

See what I’m saying. Nat can appear to be in his own world of stars and flying machines, (whoever heard of such silliness?) but his real self is firmly planted next to me, hanging onto everything I say or do. Papa, who is a doctor, has told Nat he must look after me and Mama while he attends the sick and wounded. Nat takes responsibility quite seriously. “What is it, Nat?” I ask him.

“We’ve not heard from Joseph or Willie for a while. We should write them a letter.”

Nat is almost always right, as he is now. Our older brothers, Willie and Joseph, are in the army at Virginia, and weeks have passed since they last wrote to us. I am concerned about them. “We shall do that, Nat. Fetch paper and pencil.

I do not know what I would do if my brothers did not return home. But I shan’t think of that. One day the ships on the river will leave, the army will go away, and we’ll be a family again. We can repair our homes and our lives. You can read more about the Stamfords of Vicksburg in our book, Caves, Cannons, and Crinolines, by Beverly Stowe McClure, published by Twilight Times Books. It is a story of fear, courage, and understanding that people, no matter where they live, have the same needs: love, peace and security.


Caves, Cannons, and Crinolines
Twilight Times Books
Young Adult Historical Fiction
Trade Paperback, 152 pages
ISBN:  1-60619-112-8
$14.95
The book is available at Amazon: http://amzn.to/9Zdw2U or the publisher http://www.twilighttimesbooks.com or your favorite book store can order it for you.



We will return to tell you more about our town and what is happening to it. Thank you for listening.

Beverly adds: Please leave a comment and be entered in a drawing for a signed copy of Caves, Cannons, and Crinolines. We look forward to hearing from you.