Showing posts with label blog book tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog book tour. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2009

Day 5 - The Resqueth Revolution Blog Tour

Today we conclude our European leg of the tour with a trip to Book Talk Corner. Mayra Calvani, author of The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing, interviews Mark about the book writing process, advice from others, and what personal passions find their ways into his novels.


Previous stops on the tour:



Check out the full tour schedule at Char's Book Reviews.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Day 3 - The Resqueth Revolution Blog Tour

If you missed the lively discussions yesterday on writing action scenes, it's not too late. Just hop on over to Write First, Clean Later to read the original post and the comments. We'll revisit the topic of writing action scenes tomorrow at The Dark Phantom.

Today, we switch gears. Katy Hines, author of Guardian (which my neice and I both loved), interviews Mark at her blog, Walking on Water.

The tour continues tomorrow with the conclusion of "How to Write Exciting Action Scenes" at The Dark Phantom.



Previous stops on the tour:


March 16 - The first review of The Resqueth Revolution at the Unwriter
blog site and Chapter 1 of The Resqueth Revolution at Char's Book Reviews

March 17 - How
to Write Exciting Action Scenes, part 1 at Write First, Clean Later

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Day 2 - The Resqueth Revolution Blog Tour

Today The Resqueth Revolution blog tour continues over at Write First, Clean Later where editor and author L. J. Sellers introduces part one of a two-part article on writing action scenes. L. J.'s site is always full of good advice for writers so I was both honored and pleased when she accepted my article for a guest post.

If you read the reviews for both Hacksaw and The Resqueth Revolution, you'll find they are full of complimentary remarks about the cinematic action scenes. Mark says he thoroughly enjoys writing over-the-top action, but his scenes would be less believable if not for the sharp eye of editors like L. J. Sellers who never allow the body count to exceed the number of combatants.

Because of the response to the action scenes, Mark Phillips has been asked to speak on the topic of writing action and has gathered his thoughts on action and violence into a series of guest posts for this tour. Mark says there are many different schools of thought on the topics. His articles describe his unique perpsective. Read part 1 of "How to Write Exciting Action Scenes" today at
Write First, Clean Later.

The tour continues tomorrow with an interview from Katy Hines at Walking on Water.



Previous stops on the tour:

Check out the full tour schedule at Char's Book Reviews.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The Resqueth Revolution 2009 Blog Tour

Char's Book Reviews and Writing News is proud to announce: for the next two weeks, we will serve as the base of operations for the virtual book tour of a new science fiction novel, The Resqueth Revolution!

What is a blog tour?
A blog, or virtual, tour is a way for more readers to have access to authors on tour and for authors to meet more readers than is possible in a traditional tour. Instead of traveling from one book store to another, the author travels from one blog site to another.

In a traditional tour, the author might spend two to four hours at each store before being bustled off to the next stop. Readers hoping to see the most popular authors might wait in line for hours and then be limitted to a few precious seconds of verbal exchange with the person they've waited so long to meet. Newer authors don't have the same travel budget as established authors, so only fans in large, metropolitan areas are likely to have an opportunity to meet new authors whose work they admire.

In a virtual tour, the author spends an entire day at a blog stop and interacts with readers through the blog's comments. Readers and authors are not limitted by time or distance. Because some readers and fans will follow the entire tour, each stop on the tour is designed to provide a different experience for the readers.


The Resqueth Revolution Tour offers the following tour stops:

Followers of the 2009 Resqueth Revolution blog tour will have two opportunities to win a signed copy of The Resqueth Revolution.

  • Everyone who leaves a comment on the tour will receive one drawing entry per comment per blog site. At the end of the tour, two entries will be drawn at random and the winners will receive their very own, signed copy of The Resqueth Revolution.
  • Everyone who answers all quiz questions correctly will be enterred into a drawing for the grand prize – a signed copy of The Resqueth Revolution, a Resqueth pen, magnet and calendar, and a signed copy of Hacksaw, First in the Eva Baum Detective Series.

    Other web appearances:
    The Military Science Fiction site interviewed Mark a few weeks ago. His interview will be published soon.

    The Bluestocking blog interviewed Mark for their participation in the Ultimate Blog Party 2009, March 20-27

    Carolina Conspiracyinterviewed Mark on Feb. 25, 2009

    Suite 101 interviewed Mark as part of their Writer's Rituals series

The Resqueth Revolution can be ordered from your favorite bookstore, purchased at bn.com , Amazon.com, or any e-bookstore.

Friday, December 12, 2008

The Burgeoning eBook Market

Today's post is from guest author Jean Henry Mead who began her writing career as a journalist, became a magazine editor and an award-winning photo-journalist before branching into full-length books. Her novels include a Wyoming historical novel titled Escape, and her new Logan & Cafferty mystery, A Village Shattered.




I first heard about the e-book market in 1999 when small electronic publishers sprang up like weeds in a flower garden. Many of their products were substandard and unedited, which gave the market a bad name. Now, the standards have not only improved dramatically, their quality is nearly, if not equal to that of the larger publishing houses.

Since the year 2000, Japanese ebook sales have reached ten billion yen. Reported sales in the U.S. from fifteen e-publishers total some $14 million for the first three quarters of this year, which doesn’t include library and discounted sales that may double the number.

I served as a judge for the recently held 2009 Eppie Awards competition, the "Oscars" of ebook publishing, and was amazed at the quality of writing. Some of the books I judged were from the British Isles and I will definitely look for additional work by those authors as well as our own domestic writers.

I signed with a small publisher for my last two books, and both have come out in print as well as ebook editions. I now have more control over the final product and there’s never a long wait between acceptance and publication. Now that promoting your book online has become so much easier than road touring, in less than a week of publication, my mystery novel, A Village Shattered, reached the number one spot in sales at the Fictionwise-ePress site. It’s a good feeling to know that your book can reach bestseller status in a worldwide market from a small publisher.

I’ve heard disparaging remarks on a couple of forums about “writers of that ilk,” meaning published in ebook form. I seriously doubt the writers who made the remarks have read ebooks lately. In my opinion, they’re first rate from most publishers. I’ve been writing professionally for forty years and have learned something about quality.


I’m also a bibliophile. I love books and have thousands of them in bookcases in every room in my house. In fact, we’ve run out of space. It’s gotten to the point where we’ll either have to build on another room to serve as a library, or make the transition to ebooks. I bought my husband and myself ebook readers for Christmas. My husband loves to read in bed and the reader is backlighted so he can read in the dark while I sleep. Most of the readers can store from 60 to 120 books in their small cases so they’re perfect for airline flights or long trips by car.


This year new marketing models have been developed to standardize ebook readers, and because they’ve achieved global distribution, and electronics manufactures are producing more e-readers for general consumption, the market is increasing dramatically. Amazon.com has its Kindle model, endorsed recently by Whoopi Goldberg on “The View.” She takes the Kindle with her wherever she travels, and loves the fact that over a hundred books are available in her palm-sized reader. There are a number of other e-readers just as capable of satisfying their owners, and hopefully will all soon be standardized so that every multi format book can be read on each one.

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Ms. Mead will be here all day to answer any questions you have about her books, the e-book business, or any other questions you may have (like how many books you read when you judge contests like the EPPIE). Please use the comments link below to ask your questions and check back later today to read Ms. Mead's responses.


Tommorrow, Ms. Mead takes her virtual book tour to Holly Jahangiri's blog. The full tour schedule is at MyBlogTour. At the end of the tour, three lucky winners will be selected to receive one copy each of A Village Shattered.