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Monday, April 29, 2013

JACK REMICK REVIEWS ROBERT J RAY'S MURDOCK TACKLES TAOS

A Review of Murdock Tackles Taos

The Man, the Modulars, the Mystery
A review of Robert J Ray’s Murdock Tackles Taos
Invisible to all but the most astute reader, yet tools of the trade to the writer, modular scenes are the core of the mystery novel. Modular scenes are those universal elements every mystery has or it’s not a mystery. To name a few:
Crime Scene
Sleuth on Stage
Victim
Killer on Stage
First encounter—Victim and Killer
First encounter—Killer and Sleuth
Object links
Victim’s lair
Killer’s lair
Return to the crime scene
Killer confrontation.
Modular scenes are frames that contain the story. In the hands of an amateur, the modulars are clunky and obvious. In the hands of a master, such as Robert J. Ray, the modular frame dissolves leaving character, action, image, lust and desire.
Every Murdock mystery has two defining characteristics:
Good writing and control of the elements.
Good Writing: Buried in the action sequences in this novel there are, for example, subtle techniques of language that harken back to the rhetorical past:
“He drove a Humvee. Humvees smelled of money, money in her life was like manna, manna made her thighs quiver.”
In sentences such as this, Ray pays homage to Aristotle and the Trivium all in the context of a 21st Century detective novel…which, by the way, I believe Mr. Ray is in the process of reinventing by sticking with tradition while bringing a 21st Century social conscience to the genre. The writing in this novel is, in a word, stupendous. Crafted, controlled, wild and crazy when needed, the words create a world in which the rich eat the poor.
Control of the Elements: Ray defines character in just a few words but he gives us everything—whether we know it or not:
The Victim: “She wore hiking shorts with those bulbous pockets. Her skin, even in death, looked white and smooth, with a patina of sunburn starting. It was hard to estimate the height and weight of a corpse, but she was perhaps five feet five, weight around one-fifty. Her feet were bare, white, and scabby with blood. One green flip flop lay in the dirt beside her left foot.”
The key to the entire mystery in Murdock Tackles Taos  is one phrase: weight around one-fifty. You’ll have to read the novel to see why. As you read you will see that the mystery wraps itself up in that phrase which has, by the way, many transformations, all of which add up to the final revelation that will shock, enthrall, thrill, and at the same time challenge your belief in the goodness of human beings.
Object link: “Helene leaned on him as she framed the corpse in the view window of her camera. A soft click, her throat contracting. Then a quick shot of the downed bow-hunters. Without the man’s hand on her arm, without him to lean against, she would have fallen. As they started down the hill, her hip bumping his, she still didn’t know his name.”
As with all good mysteries, objects become characters as they move through the story.  The Maltese Falcon is nothing without the Black Bird. The Big Sleep  hinges on a photograph of little sister Carmen. In Murdock Tackles Taos, that camera, an object of small consequence at the beginning, lives on what Mr. Ray calls “a plot track.” The camera grows in importance as Ray unveils the mystery until, at one point, you ask yourself—Why didn’t I see that. Again, in mystery writing, the writer knows what the reader finds out, and Mr. Ray knows more than just a little bit about the craft.
I won’t tell you the story here—for that you’ll want to read the novel, and I won’t tell you who the killer is, but when you make that first encounter you might want to bring a towel to your reading to wipe off the slime.
This is a good mystery, maybe Mr. Ray’s finest although I understand that there is another in the works so will have to withhold judgment.
















Please join Marsha Casper Cook  Tuesday April 30 8:30 PM est 7:30 CST  when she welcomes a very successful author and  radio show host  Ashley Fontainne. This is going to be a great show about an author who in the last several years has been very instrumental in changing the face of a self published author to a face of success. Ashley is not afraid to try new things and take on new projects which sets her far above the standard. Ashley is in no way ordinary. Her life and her writing reflects a woman on the move and a fearless leader for others.
Also on the show is Kelly Abelle author of Paranormal Romance, Contemporary Romance and Romantic Suspense.  She also has a company Select -o- Grafix, that helps authors get their name out to the public with special services.

Romance Author Bethany Cross will be opening up the chat room and phone lines for a great discussion and a lot of fun.

link to the show
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/worldofinknetwork/2013/05/01/a-good-story-is-a-good-storyhost-marsha-casper-cook430201


  http://www.marshacaspercook.com
  http://www.worldofinknetwork.com  

www.authorstalkromance.blogspot.com - Romance Authors Blog
 www.authorsofworldofinknetwork.blogspot.com  - World Of Ink  Host's Books

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Bethany Cross Is On The Move Again!


Well things around the homefront have finally settled down and for those of you who truly know me, know how crazy it has made me to be away from my writing for this long. But thanks to the Powers that Be and the best Publisher a girl could ask for (Thanks E) I seem to be getting back on track and here we go again...My next release Principal Desire is scheduled for June 3 with Rebel Ink Press. I also have another one 'The Cowgirl Way' that I don't have a release date for yet as well as several more I am working on.
 
So, Thanks to all those out there still reading my stories and waiting for the next one; and to all those amazing Authors out there pounding on their keyboards everyday to give us these wonderful stories to read; and a special Thank You to my partner in crime for being there for me and continually telling me everything would be OK...Marsha Cook (who writes as Madison Montgomery). And don't forget to stop over at AuthorsTalkRomance where we talk about everything romance from sweet to heat.
 
 
Follow me on Twitter at www.twitter.com/bethanycross_
Facebook at Bethany Cross
My Author page: AuthorBethanyCross
Pinterest at http://pinterest.com/bethanycross
ARe:allromanceebooks/AuthorBethanyCross
Amazon: amazon.com/Bethany-Cross
BookStrand: bookstrand.com/bethany-cross
Barnes & Noble: barnesandnoble.com/bethany-cross

 


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Posted By BethanyCross to Romance Erotic Style at 4/23/2013 12:00:00 AM

Monday, April 22, 2013





 

Marsha Casper Cook welcomes TIFERET Journal publisher Donna Baier Stein, editor Melissa Stud­dard and associate editor and World of Ink show host R “Jeff” Jeffreys.


Marsha will speak with Donna, Melissa and Jeff about the just published, “The Tiferet Talk Interviews” book and TIFFERET Journal’s community of writers, poets and influential and spiritual thinkers of today.


Donna Baier Stein is the publisher of TIFERET Journal, a writer, editor and producer of Tiferet Talk radio interviews. Her writing has appeared in New York Quarterly, Virginia Quarterly Review, Prairie Schooner and many other journals and anthologies. She has received a Fellowship from Johns Hopkins University Writing Seminars, the PEN/New England Discovery Award, Honorable Mention in Allen Ginsberg Poetry Awards, four Pushcart nominations, a New Jersey Council for the Arts grant, awards from the Poetry Societies of Virginia and NH, and more.
Melissa Stud­dard is the editor for TIFFERET Journal and author of the best­selling novel, Six Weeks to Yehi­dah (recipient of the For­ward National Lit­er­a­ture Award and Pinnacle Book Achievement Award). Her writings have appeared in dozens of jour­nals and antholo­gies. She is a reviewer-at-large for The National Poetry Review, a college pro­fes­sor, a teach­ing artist for The Rooster Moans Poetry Coop­er­a­tive, host of TIFFERET Talk interviews and much more.

 link to the show
Purchase "The Tiferet Talk Interviews": http://tinyurl.com/ccyov9m
Tags:
The Tiferet Talk Interviews book
Donna Baier Stein
Melissa Studdard
The Write Step with R Jeffreys
Six Weeks to Yehidah
Broadcast in Writing

A GOOD STORY IS A GOOD STORY



Please join Marsha Casper Cook on April 23 at 9 PM EST 8PM CST 7 PM MT 6PM PST on A GOOD STORY IS A GOOD STORY when she welcomes Lauren Carr and Kelly Abell as her special guests. This is going to be both entertaining and informative. These two women are not only successful authors they have companies that help publish, format and promote authors. They’re great at marketing and helping writers get noticed and have successful careers as authors. Also Cindy McDonald, an author with Acorn will be joning us.

This is going to be a great show so don’t forget to listen live or listen later on demand right after the show is over.

Bethany Cross will be there to open the phone lines and chat rooms.

Please join Marsha Casper Cook on April 23 at 9 PM EST 8PM CST 7 PM MT 6PM PST on A GOOD STORY IS A GOOD STORY when she welcomes Lauren Carr and Kelly Abell as her special guests. This is going to be both entertaining and informative. These two women are not only successful authors they have companies that help publish, format and promote authors. They’re great at marketing and helping writers get noticed and have successful careers as authors. Also Cindy McDonald, an author with Acorn will be joning us.

This is going to be a great show so don’t forget to listen live or listen later on demand right after the show is over.

Bethany Cross will be there to open the phone lines and chat rooms.


show's link http://www.blogtalkradio.com/worldofinknetwork/2013/04/24/a-good-story-is-a-good-storyhost-marsha-casper-cook423201

For more info
http://www.authorsofworldofinknetwork.blogspot.com
http://www.worldofinknetwork.com
http://www.authortalkromance.blogspot.com
http://www.marshacaspercook.com
http://www.booksbymadisonmontgomery.com
















Sunday, April 7, 2013

A GOOD STORY IS A GOOD STORY - APRIL 9 - 4PM EST 3PM CST






Please join Marsha Casper Cook on Tuesday April 9 at 3 PM CST 4 PM EST 2PM MT 1 PM PST when she welcomes several very successful children’s authors, Agy Wilson, Allyn Stotz and Bobbie Schafer. It’s going to be as lot of fun but they will be talking about some very important issues and if you are children’s author or reader and have any comments the chat room will be open. This is one market that needs to be discussed. The co
nversation is going to be both entertaining and helpful so save the date.
Together authors can change the market and hope that libraries, book stores and schools will join us and start promoting  children’s events for self –published and traditional authors.  Let’s do it for the kids!  They are missing out on so many great books!


Bethany Cross will be there to open up the chat room.


For more info
http://www.worldofinknetwork.com

WOI - AUTHOR'S BOOKS
http://www.authorsofworldofinknetwork.blogspot.com

For more info -http://www.michiganavenuemedia.com

Allyn Stotz --- A GOOD STORY IS A GOOD STORY APRIL 9 - 4PM EST 3PM CST

Dream A World
1. When did you start writing and what inspired you to start?
I wrote a little bit when I was a child  but I never really thought of becoming a writer until I was an adult. What inspired me was really strange. One day I was reading my brothers blog. He was just playing around and making up a fantasy story. I thought he was really good and thought ”Hey, I could do that!” So I sat down, started writing a fantasy story about something we used to play as kids and I haven’t stopped writing since.
2. How do you choose the topics for your books?  What’s your age range?
The age range that I find the most enjoyable to write for is 4-8 yrs. old. They are still so imaginative at that age and in love with learning new things. They also say some of the funniest things! As far as how do I choose topics for my book, it’s all up to how I’m feeling on any given day. If something inspires me, then I write about it.
3. What kinds of things inspire you to write?
All sorts of things inspire me. If I hear a child say something funny, I’m inspired. If a co-worker tells me something hysterical or unusual that their child did, I’m inspired. If I see a movie or TV show where something amazing happens, that inspires me as well. Reading other books also inspires me. The world is full of inspiration; you just have to be open to it!
4. Have any of your stories been inspired by real people or events?  What inspires you to write?
Yes, A lot of my stories do contain something about a person I knew or an event that happened in my past. I once wrote a story about two little old ladies who lived next door to us when I was growing up. They were very sweet ladies but a little on the unusual side because they had never been married, lived in a little white house, and had hundreds of salt-n-pepper shakers all over the place. They left a great memory in my mind so I just had to include them in my story writing.
I’ve also written quite a few stories about pets I’ve had or currently have.
5. Do you work on more than one book at a time?
Oh yes. I don’t know how smart or good that is, but I’m usually working on at least four or five stories at a time. Sometimes it gets a little overwhelming but I find that I am constantly coming up with new ideas and just have to get them on paper. However, when you are working on so many stories at one time, it tends to prevent you from completing any one item, therefore it slows you down from getting things completed and out the door. I need to work on focusing on one story at a time!
6. Are you signed exclusively with a publisher?  Are you self -published and how does that work for you?
I am signed with FutureWord Publishing for my book The Pea In Peanut Butter.
7. Do you write every day and do you have set hours that you work?  Where do you write?
Yes, I write or do something with my writing every single day. There is so much involved with writing that it’s nearly impossible not to be involved in it every day. However, sometimes I spend more time marketing, blogging, and doing administrative things that my total time in a week actually writing is probably only four hours. It just depends on what I have going on and what deadlines I have.
I don’t have set hours to write because I also work a full-time job elsewhere. I have to fit my writing time in around that.
I do some of my writing at work in between busy times, and at home on my laptop in the evenings and weekends. I have a designated room to do that.

8 .Has anyone ever written you a fan letter that you’d like to share?
My book has only been published since June 2011 so the word is still getting out about it. However, I once received an email from someone whose children read my book. She said it’s their favorite book at present and they keep trying to memorize the beginning of the book which reads:
I love the super duper, gummy yummy, sticky lickin’, and belly rubbin’ taste of peanut butter. If Mommy would let me, I’d spread it on hot dogs, fish sticks, chips, and pancakes. I’d eat it on bananas, grapes, apples, and frosted flakes.
And to me, that is what it’s all about for me. Knowing that a child smiled and enjoyed my story!
9.  Who was the first character you ever created and why?
I don’t remember the first character I ever created because it was back in grade school. However, I do remember the first PLACE I created. It was a land of nothing but peanut butter. And surprisingly, my first published picture book, is about peanut butter as well! Hmmm, guess it’s a no-brainer that I love peanut butter!
10. Is there anything about yourself that you’d like to share – hobbies,where you were born, special talents other than writing/illustrating?
I was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan but was raised in Edgerton, Ohio. When I turned 22 or so, I moved to St. Louis with my husband. From there his job has transferred us to Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi and back to Louisiana where we currently reside. I have many other hobbies. I read a lot, dabble around with stained glass, do interior decorating, and at work I do a lot of graphic design type things.


Find out more about The Pea In Peanut Butter on Amazon.com!  Or visit Allyn at www.allynstotz.blogspot.com