351

(0 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Just saw this category. When was it added? And when you say scripts, do you me plays, whether stage or screen?

352

(5 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Ceridwen wrote:

Think you might have asked me at another time - can't remember, but if you would like an acknowledgement, I'd be happy to provide one. You have my email address, and I have yours!

Every email I've sent you lately has come back. Do you have a new email? I'm not looking for the blurb yet. How do you want me to acknowledge you?

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(5 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

I'm getting this ready to go to print. Anyone who reviewed, please tell me how you'd like to be acknowledged. If you haven't finished, get busy. It won't be up much longer.

354

(0 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

http://www.nycmidnight.com/Competitions … llenge.htm

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(17 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Glad to be in such great company! It's amazing at the totally different kinds of stories here. I have read 4 of them. I am honored to be in the same category. All of you rock!

356

(7 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Charles, King Satin's Realm and two sequels were the first books I wrote. Satin was started in 2000 just after my spouse gave me the "I don't love you and never have" routine. I just started writing basically day and night. I might have slept three hours every night for a while. The first draft took 2 months. The sequel over a year. The third in the series about 7 months, and the fourth I wrote ten years after the first one.

The Raiford Chronicles have the springboard of students throwing books at me & being extremely disrespected. I just had thoughts and even dream sequences that had to get put on paper. It started as only one novel--Lucky Thirteen. I was going to be an exploration into multiple personalities. My daughter literally threw the first three printed chapters across the room saying, "Momma, if you make Ray a killer, I'll never read another thing you write." Thus, a detour and four books.

I confess that everything I write has been catalyzed but some life event.

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(7 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

King Satin's Realm got another 5 star review!

The author has created an entire world of talking animals (former humans), complete with a good wizard, dragons and an evil witch. I didn't want to put it down! As soon as you think the story is over, there is a new twist. I can't wait to read Part II!

If it's well written, I'd say the author has skills. What difference does gender make?

359

(4 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

I think A.T. is referencing that erotica is not an option when stating your genre. Neither is just romantic-suspense So, I choose the closest thing to it when I denote the genre I'm posting and note in the opening comments what it actually is. So, I guess, one could call their  story romance and note that it is erotica AND post a warning for young readers or that some might find it offensive. Just my suggestion. Either that or offer more genres and/or start a group as Sol suggested.

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(10 replies, posted in Cop Shop)

I had a fairly slow 4th. Did a fish fry.

Hope yours was bombs bursting in air.

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(10 replies, posted in Cop Shop)

1.    A child--The Lovely Bones
2.    An explosion--Speed
3.    A faked death--Gone Girl
4.    Mental illness--One Flew over the Cuckoos Nest
5.    A lost item--Raiders of the Lost Ark
6.    A carnival--An American Crime
7.    Mistaken identity--Face Off
8.    A storm--The Shining (Ok, horror, but a guy hacking his family to death is a crime.)
9.    A hijacking--The Taking of Pellum 123
10.    A relative--The Godfather

362

(4 replies, posted in Romance Inc.)

Karin Rita Gastreich wrote:

Hey Everyone,
Life has kept me away from tNBW for several weeks now. Please accept my apologies. I have a back log of reviews that are waiting for reciprocation, and I will start whittling away at those over the coming month. I'll be repeating this message in the Medieval Fantasy group, so don't be surprised if you experience a little dejavu. I'm really looking forward to getting back into people's stories (or getting started on your new projects, whatever the case may be.)

Pura Vida.

I've had real life encroach on me too. I feel your pain. Welcome back. I have a lot of reviewing to catch up on, also; so, feel free to commiserate with me.

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(0 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Since King Satin's Realm came out April 14, I've been trying to decide which way to go next. I'm not ready for its sequel--Spirits' Desire, which is on site. So, after much deliberation, I am putting Wilted Magnolias out in the fall. I am going through all the reviews from my wonderful folks on here. If you haven't finished it yet, get busy because once I get through all the comments and reviews and begin final edits, it'll be coming down.

364

(4 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

It's a good feeling, topped only by holding that first printed one in your hands. Congrats. Bask a moment before the REAL work starts.

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(6 replies, posted in Literary Fiction)

I believe I've also seen Stephen King use <thought>

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(6 replies, posted in Literary Fiction)

If you get worried about word count, you can always put direct thought in italics.

367

(12 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Yes, Simon, face-to-face would be great. However, some of us don't have the means to make those personal pitches. But maybe with the handful of positive responses, I can make arrangements to go see all of them over the next year.

368

(12 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

njc wrote:

So one person was painfully honest, and the others were polite?

No. Like I said, it was the hypocrisy. She was upset that I had an Amazon link on my webpage when she, herself, has an Amazon link on her store page. As of this morning, I now have had 10 positive responses and am making arrangements to ship books north, south, east, and west. Oh, and overseas. I've had a few saying they only carry local indie authors or that they're a used bookstore--but guess what! They, too, have Amazon links.

Trying to "sabotage" her store? I was sent an invitation to like her page. I did and then asked how I could get my books to her & gave her my webpage link so she could look at what I had to offer. I had no clue she had deleted anything. I can only share what she sent me because she deleted my post. There was no ill will intended. I just thought this lady overreacted.

And I have no desire for this post to become a hotbed of dissent among our members. I got my system clear and took several deep breaths. Now, I need to know how to close a thread. I don't do threads often because they usually end up having two or three site members arguing and tearing one another down.

BTW, FYI, I also have links to TNBW, Twitter, Facebook, southernstories.com and a number of others, including area indie bookstores. I'm now working on dedicating one page to each book with links and reviews.  My website is a work in progress.

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(12 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

jack the knife wrote:

NJC's post has given me an idea. Janet, why don't you tell indie bookstores that you'll put their links on your website's book page(s) if they agree to stock your books? They get advertising, and you get outlets for your books.

That was the plan once I got a conversation going. And this is the only person who's responded like this. I have several who have agreed to sale my books on consignment. I will gladly add their webpage as a link from my page.

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(12 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Norm d'Plume wrote:
Janet Taylor-Perry wrote:

However, I'm looking at how to revamp the first page of my website. I have had several other bookstores invite me to send them books and they will sell on consignment.

Janet, how did the bookstores find you?

I've been sending messages to indie book stores to check my webpage and asking how I can get my books in their stores?

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(12 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

njc wrote:

I don't do Facebook, so I don't know what the message looked like, but I have to sympathize with the storeowner.  Even if it wasn't your intent, if The Big Market-Eater's link did end up on her page, it was not to her advantage.

Her reaction might have been more measured ... but we don't know what she would have *liked* to say.

And if she'd just deleted the link and not sent the message, it would have been no favor to you.  Next time, you can send the book info without the link that could take someone to Godzilla Retail.

At least once a lesson, someone would find an error in the monstrous formulae that Professor Knapp copied onto the blackboard.  His response, unfailing and sincere, was 'Oh ... Thank you.'  That seemed to me the right answer then, and it still does.

It wouldn't have bothered me if she'd just have said NO THANKS. The hypocrisy that my website has an Amazon link and that being her reason when her own page is linked to Amazon is what bothered me.

However, I'm looking at how to revamp the first page of my website. I have had several other bookstores invite me to send them books and they will sell on consignment.

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(12 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

http://www.squirreledawaybooks.com/Welcome.html

The above link takes you to a bookstore called Squirreled Away Books. The below is the message I received from them on Facebook when I queried about how to get my books on their shelves. I gave them my website link. Please note that they, themselves, are linked to Amazon.

How do you get me interesting in carrying your books?  You don't post a link on my store's page directing people to buy your books off Amazon.  It makes me rather tetchy.  You also don't repost after I've deleted the information that your friend posted.

If you want a better response, you could have sent me a message without links to Amazon, or an email (info@squirreledawaybooks.com).

I try to support local authors and small publishers where I can, but I expect that they will not attempt to sabotage my business.  In the future, you can send independent bookstores information about your books with info about how they can order your books, which distributors you use, or other wholesale information.

Regards,
Carolyn Sweeney
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I had no idea that she had deleted anything from anyone. Kind of two-faced if you ask me. Maybe she's discriminating because I'm from the evil state of Mississippi.

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(0 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Share a memory or pic or both.

This is my father, Jesse Edward Taylor. I never got to know him.but I'm so glad he named me. Mary Oleene would have made me a nutcase. We had the same initials (Janet Elaine Taylor).
(1961) Trolls Live under a Bridge
I have no real recollection of living under a bridge or the troll that was there with me. However, I've heard the story so often, it seems like a memory, the kind that is so not funny I want to laugh. But this time the laughter is not mirthful or even sarcastic. No, this laughter would have to be hysterical.
I've always been precocious, or so I've been told by more than one person. And my mother was way overprotective. Now that I'm a mother, I can understand her need to keep me safe, especially after the incident with the troll.
Precocious—yes. At nine months old, I was already walking. The problem was that I had no smooth floors to walk upon.
My father was an abusive alcoholic. He could not keep a job. In January of 1961, he was out of work, and we were without a home. We literally lived under a bridge over a creek in Jones County, Mississippi. My mother cooked what small amount of food she could scrounge over an open campfire.
Though my dad had no money for food or lodging, he seemed to find dollars for liquor. I've often been told that when he was sober, he was a wonderful, loving man; but booze made him a demon. On this cold winter's night, he got his alcohol and when he returned to the "home," things got very ugly.
Drunk, he decided that I could not be his child. First, I was a girl. He would have had a boy. Second, I was a redhead. Both my parents had dark hair, my mother's so black it reflected blue highlights. Still, genetics passed on a recessive gene to me. My maternal grandmother was a redhead. Nonetheless, in his inebriated state, my father unreasonably decided I belonged to someone else. As such, he didn't want me. There upon, he lifted me and threw me into the creek.
My mother, who could not swim, jumped into the icy water after me. Obviously, the water must have been shallow enough for her to stand, and she rescued me.
I'm told she walked away that night and travelled miles in frigid temperatures to get to her mother, who, of course, took us in. I'm also told that I did not take another step for over a year.
Was my father a troll? Yes, at that time he was. But the troll was redeemable, and was redeemed many years later, though I never knew. I saw my father only twice as I grew up—once at age two where I'm told I hid behind a social worker and screamed, "Mean man," over and over; and again at age twelve in the grocery store by accident. I have a vague memory of hiding behind a lady with a broad rear and a vivid recall of my mother running over my heels with her shopping cart trying to get away from my father and him calling after her to wait.
I don't consciously remember my father trying to drown me, but those psychological scars must have imprinted on me if I called him a mean man at the age of two. And those wounds still ooze after all these years when I think about that time. Oh, it's so not funny I want to laugh. But…I just can't laugh this time.

https://www.facebook.com/29969895006130 … mp;theater

https://www.facebook.com/29969895006130 … mp;theater

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(7 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

Another 5 star review

5.0 out of 5 starsPhenomenal!!!
By Nidia B. Hernandez on June 13, 2016
Format: Paperback
I was privileged to have read this way before I thought Janet Taylor-Perry would publish this. I have read most of her books and have loved each and every one of them. I am not a "fantasy" reader but this book kept me interested from the very first page. What a lovely world Ms. Perry has created! It is delightful yet dark at times. The cast of characters will become your best friends and you will laugh and cry throughout this well written book. Didn't want it to end!

http://goo.gl/wf7UbM

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(7 replies, posted in TheNextBigWriter Premium)

max keanu wrote:

Great! But Dragons? I thought you wrote Crime & Mystery. Many talents!  Go girl!

Max, the first thing I ever posted on here was King Satin's Realm. It's actually the first novel I ever wrote. I write across genres. Stories come to me, I put them on paper.