Sunday, June 25, 2017

Literary Rejections

“If the book is true, it will find an audience that is meant to read it.”
- Wally Lamb

Sometimes Traditional Publishers Get It Woefully Wrong 


Traditionally, publishing—the activity of making literature and information available to the public—refers to the distribution of printed works, which, until the eBook revolution, made publishers the veritable gatekeepers of writers’ careers. Over the years, many publishers (and even literary agents), placed in a position to play god, made and broke literary careers through the most poisonous weapon in the book publishing industry: rejection letters. How times have changed! These days, rejection slips no longer have a sting. In fact, many writers neither have the time to bother with them nor feel a need to write query letters in the first place.

The advent of electronic publishing has not only empowered writers to assume control of their work, it has also effectively robbed publishers of the power of monopoly. Today, an author can make his/her work available to the public as an e-book or as a paperback or even as a hardcover book (by way of print-on-demand technology) with the ease of a bird in flight. It is called self-publishing. And, while the author bears the cost of editing, cover design, and promotion, s/he benefits enormously from the process—complete control of the work, full profit from book sales, and incontestable freedom to determine release date, format, cover price, et al. And it goes without saying that rejection slips from publishers and/or literary agents are no longer the bane of writers’ careers. Interestingly, even some traditionally published authors have begun to go ‘the indie way.’  

There is no doubt, though, that for writers still seeking to publish their work the traditional way, rejection letters remain a concern, partially because publishers, even literary agents, at times make poor judgments, mistaking potential best-selling books for manuscripts with no literary merit. While the most magnanimous of rejection letters exhort writers not to be discouraged, some have been cruel and utterly inexplicable. For example, when John le Carre sent the manuscript of his debut novel, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, he was rejected and told “he hasn’t got any future.” Rudyard Kipling was told in one rejection letter that he “doesn’t know how to use the English language.” James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room was called “hopelessly bad,” and Richard Bach was rejected by 18 publishers who thought a book about seagull was ridiculous.

Another case in point is William Faulkner’s book, Sanctuary, which was rejected and called “unpublishable.” The novelist and literary critic, Malcolm Cowley, was said to have told Faulkner once in a letter, “In the publishing circles your name is mud. They are all convinced your books won’t ever sell.” But it wasn’t the last time publishers would consider a great book “unpublishable and unsaleable.” Jack Kerouac’s On The Road was described as “Frenetic and scrambled prose” and rejected by several publishers. As it turned out, they got it wrong. More than 50 years after its original publication, the book is still read, taught, and assigned in high schools and colleges all over the U.S., selling 100,000 copies each year in the United States and Canada and published in 32 foreign countries.

The fate of Ursula K. Le Guin wasn’t much different. Her 1969 science fiction novel, The Left Hand of Darkness, was rejected with these observations: “Ursula K. Le Guin writes extremely well, but I'm sorry to have to say that on the basis of that one highly distinguishing quality alone I cannot make you an offer for the novel. The book is so endlessly complicated by details of reference and information, the interim legends become so much of a nuisance despite their relevance, that the very action of the story seems to be to become hopelessly bogged down and the book, eventually, unreadable.” In spite of this observation, the book became immensely popular and established Le Guin’s status as a major author of science fiction.

Ten Famous Books Rejected By Publishers
Now many writers are fed up with the short-sightedness of publishers and literary agents. Though some know they may not achieve the much-desired success in today’s publishing market which is saturated with books of different kinds, they prefer to self-publish rather than endure the humiliation of rejection by publishers/literary agents whose narrow view of the industry makes them unqualified gatekeepers.

A good example of this new approach to publishing is Marie Force, a romance best-selling author, who took the leap and became a beacon of hope to many indie authors. In a 2015 blog post by Ruth Harris, an industry insider, Force was quoted as saying: “Every romance publisher in the business rejected Maid for Love (book 1 in the McCarthy Series). I am thankful for every one of them now because if even one of those NO votes had been a YES, I’d still be working for someone else and wishing for the career I have now.”   

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

FUN IN THE SUN

BLACK GOLD JOINS  
MULTI-AUTHOR EVENT




Enter here


Prizes include:
  2 Kindle Fires
$50 Amazon Gift Card
$25 Amazon Gift Card
3 - $10 Amazon Gift Card
 

   


Tuesday, May 9, 2017

The Charlatans

How Reality Blindsided Anti-globalists


“It is better to die for an idea that will live than to live for an idea that will die.”

- Steve Biko 


Anti-globalization sentiments once had a voice, a bold, logical voice that was easy to relate to. That voice pinpointed the hardships inflicted on those who had been abandoned, ignored, or forgotten by the so-called principle of openness and internationalism. It identified the millions seared by unfair global trade deals that favor multinational corporations who evade taxes, close factories, and siphon jobs to places where labor is cheap and exploitation is overlooked. 

But this backlash, propelled by a rampant batch of populist politicians lost its way when they transformed the sentiments into a hate movement. So, anti-globalization became anti-immigration, anti-minority, anti-Islam, anti-LGBT, and blind, sometimes senseless, opposition to the Status quo. And now, it has lost its voice.


President Trump
Perhaps no other individual has aided the rise, and ultimately, the flop of such sentiments than the 45th President of the United States, Donald Trump. As a candidate, he railed against free trade, immigration, and foreign intervention. He promised to block illegal immigration from Mexico by building a wall, to call out China as a currency manipulator, to drain the swamp in Washington, to repeal and replace Obamacare with a cheaper healthcare system, and to put America first.

Geert Wilders
His victory at the polls gave impetus to populist politicians across Europe. In the Netherlands, the far-right politician, Geert Wilders, pledged to ‘de-Islamise’ the country by closing its borders, ban Islamic headscarves, close mosques, and ban the Koran. He also promised to take the Netherlands out of the European Union and stop public money going towards development aid, windmills, the arts, and innovation.

Marine Le Pen
In France, Marine Le Pen, daughter of the openly racist and anti-Semitic founder of the far-right National Front, Jean-Marie Le Pen, made similar pronouncements. Using traditional language to mask her ideas for a radical shift in France’s role in the world, she emphasized nationalism and a protectionist economy, promising to fight terrorism by closing the borders. She too promised to pull France out of the European Union.  

And in Italy, two populist politicians, Matteo Salvini of the Northern League and Beppe Grillo of the 5-star Movement, joined the bandwagon.

Matteo Salvini
Beppe Grillo
Then Trump’s presidency started, and it became immediately clear that he had fooled the world with his veneer of populism. Through hastily drafted executive orders, nonsensical actions, and remarks, he soon revealed himself to be a buffoon president. 

President Trump 
He did not drain the swamp; he filled it. He did not call out China as a currency manipulator; he embraced the country’s leader (and his Son-in-Law, Jared Kushner, has strong business ties there.) He shrank away from his non-interventionist position and bombed Syria. Though he bungled his first major legislative effort, he subsequently repealed Obamacare but replaced it with a nightmare of a health care plan, nothing near what he promised. He claimed the presidency was more complicated than he had imagined. 

His unrealistic budget plan almost caused a government shutdown, forcing him to withdraw his proposal to build the wall with Mexico (estimated cost: $67 billion). What’s more, in his first 100 days in office, he has spent nearly every weekend at his Mar-a-Lago estate, playing golf, which cost taxpayers an estimated $20 million. (In comparison, Obama’s cost $97 million in 8 years). 

Le Pen & Wilders
These flip-flops alerted voters elsewhere to the dangers of bogus populism. Just as in the aftermath of the Brexit vote, many people took another look at themselves in the mirror and the sight wasn’t pretty. On March 15, this year, voters in the Netherlands turned their backs on the populist Geert Wilders and voted for prime minister Mark Rutte

Last week, in the UK council elections, British voters obliterated
Nigel Farage
the UK Independence Party, UKIP, whose former leader, Nigel Farage, misled many into voting for Brexit. By the time the dust settled, the party had lost all but one of its 145 seats to the Tories. And last Sunday, France came to its senses too, when voters, even those who didn’t support Emmanuel Macron, voted for him to keep Marine Le Pen out of the presidential palace.

At long last, these populist politicians, exposed as charlatans and blindsided by reality, have lost their voice. And they didn’t see it coming.

Saturday, April 1, 2017

Tale of a Thriller !!!


From the Editors' Choice Award Winning poet & Book Awards Finalist: 

A "HYPNOTIC" POLITICAL THRILLER WITH AN EPIC COURTROOM SHOWDOWN.


A real "wow" factor! What's really scary about this story is that it's probably the kind of stuff that's happening right now and we don't know a thing about it. Fantastic read 

- READERS' FAVORITE

--------------------

This firecracker female lead--Rita Spencer--is a force of nature who drives her powerful enemies to their knees. She's smart, she's brave. She's sexy as hell.” 

- Tracy Edingfield, author of The Law Firm of Psycho & Satan

--------------------

 If you are looking for a good mystery/thriller, with an incredibly strong  female character, this is definitely the book for you!” 

- Teresa Kander - Freelance writer, poet, reviewer

--------------------

THE CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE 

A depiction of the life-and-death struggle of a young female lawyer who goes to great lengths to outwit a diabolical trio in order to save her lover from a murder rap

--------------------

 The character of Rita Spencer is crafted with astute perfection. A woman with  high self-respect, smartness, brilliance, style, compassion, impetuous and  sincerity; she grabs the spotlight from numerous characters hovering around the storyline.” 
- Rakhi Jayashankar, Outset Blog - http://ow.ly/TySDK 

--------------------

CHARACTER PROFILE 

Rita Spencer - An introverted young lawyer is thrust into the spotlight she's dreaded all her life by an unexpected murder for which her lover is accused...

Quote

I believe I’m more equipped than you to take the risk. You are a respected attorney and I’m an orphan, twice for that matter, I lost my biological father while still a kid and my stepdad just when I was getting to know him. Now, I’ve lost my home with everything in it, including an innocent life. Can you understand now? There’s only one thing left and that’s the man I love, who is being framed for a murder he did not commit—whatever else his shortcomings are—and for that, Marty, I’m willing to die.

--------------------

 “Rita is a surprise element and her character has been well shaped. She is the embodiment of a modern woman - beautiful, stylish, independent, career oriented, intelligent, intuitive, loving and thoughtful.” 

- Sheryl - Book reviewer, Texas


--------------------

  What lengths would you go through to save the man you love? That's what Augustine Sam shows us in The Conspiracy of Silence. I like to read a good mystery novel every now and then, and this one did not disappoint.

    - T. L. Coulter - author  


Book Description

The conscience of a town steeped in sexism, vanity and hypocrisy is pricked by the brutal murder of a mysterious woman in a park in Los Angeles. But the shock is transformed into a steamy, seductive scandal when the body turns out to be that of Susan Whitaker, the flamboyant wife of the governor of California.

Soon, a dazzlingly intricate shuffle of volatile links leads the police to the delicate theory of a secret lover/blackmailer, and to the indictment of Benjamin Carlton, Hollywood’s most influential black celebrity.

Then curious things begin to happen when Carlton’s ambitious girlfriend, Rita Spencer suddenly unearths the shocking secret that Susan Whitaker, in fact, did not exist. She little realizes that her discovery of this colossal fraud is a mere curtain raiser to a chilling world of ugly skeletons dating back to the assassination of a U.S. senator in a Washington hotel sauna, skeletons connected to riveting sex scandals in high places, skeletons the FBI and political kingmakers will kill for…

THE CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE 

Book Excerpt








A RenAfrique Feature

"An exposé on the murky world of high-stakes politics and its attendant scandals..."




The Book Adventures of Emily Blogspot



    

Friday, March 3, 2017

From the Romance Community...

3 kindle Fires 4 Amazon Gift Cards in prizes 

 “Art is a marriage of the conscious and the unconscious.”

– Jean Cocteau

Enter here for a chance to win...


Sunday, February 12, 2017

Words of Wisdom

Actions, they say, speak louder than words. That is quite true as far as judging people by what they do rather than by what they say, is concerned. But the power of words can’t be over-emphasized. Words can save lives, erase doubts, and alter perspectives. Here are some words of wisdom to live by.

“It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.”

            - Aristotle

“It is possible to store the mind with a million facts & still be entirely uneducated”

- Alec Bourne



“I hope you live a life you’re proud of. If you find that you’re not, I hope you have the strength to start all over again.” 

F. Scott Fitzgerald









“You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view...until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it...” 
                                                     
        - Harper Lee

“If you are depressed, you are living in the past.

If you are anxious, you are living in the future.

If you are at peace, you are living in the present.”
                              - Lao Tzu

Winston Churchill

“The pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity. The optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.”                         

“We are masters of the unsaid words, but slaves of those we let slip out.”                    

An idea can turn to dust or magic, depending on the talent that rubs against it. 

- Bill Bernbach