Letters discovered in a tin box hidden in the foundation of a small cottage in Normandy reveal a terrible secret. Antoine's world was collapsing. His beautiful wife Marianne, his precious daughter Ariele, missing. The lives of hundreds - perhaps thousands - of Allied soldiers preparing to storm Juno Beach on D-Day literally are in his hands. The Gestapo hunt him as a traitor - the French resistance as a collaborator.
Friday, April 11, 2014
Signing with a Publishing Company
TodToday I signed a contract with California Times Publishing, a new book publishing company that supports the independent writing community. Like many writers, I lose a lot of creative time when I have to promote my books, so it is helpful to partner with others to achieve our mutual goals. Sure, you give up some degree of control, but no venture is ever successful doing everything by oneself.
I look forward to seeing how this works out. Another chapter, another set of good stories, another adventure. What a job!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Creating letters to use as a plot vehicle
The Juno Letters uses two conventions throughout the stories - letters and journals. These are the text-messages and voice-mail of the era. ...
-
Many of you already know that I have spent the last several weeks, since before Thanksgiving, in relative seclusion in Seattle living for th...
-
The Juno Letters uses two conventions throughout the stories - letters and journals. These are the text-messages and voice-mail of the era. ...
-
Working with ePUB files is hazardous to your mental health. I have been struggling getting the various eBOOK devices to display correctly. ...
No comments:
Post a Comment