We made it back! After a series of scans and tests we got the OK to go home. It was a long and challenging time but successful. I want to thank all who have sent their best wishes for our boy. He still has years of tests to go to make certain the cancer stays clear, but we are very optimistic.
I am sitting at my table in the Olympic Club for the first time in almost eight months - it is very cathartic. The work of the pub goes on all around me and I get to dissolve into its familiarity. Occasionally I even get a coffee poured ... by someone else! I was warned not to get used to that. It is good to be back. The Oly Club is recreated in my books as Le Cafe Reuban Vert (a real cafe) in Paris.
Now, to business. The Madonna Rosa went live on July 1 as planned and was included along with the rest of The Juno Letters series in the SMASHWORDS July Summer/Winter sale - the annual event which is the only time I offer production versions of my books for free. To celebrate going home I put the entire series up and the response has been great this first few days. I'll be connecting back with my publisher (California Times) and audio narrator (Gary Regal) to let them know I am now back in the game.
I am working on book 7 - and tossing ideas around to see how they interplay. Still no working title, but I have some great ideas to exploit. Something about stone age caves and "Die Glocke" - look it up and figure that one out!
For those of you who use the iPhone, the new iOS 8.4 supports the iBook version of ebooks through the iBooks app on the iPad, iMac, and iPhone. I make a version with iBooks Author and just tested it. Without a doubt it is the best ebook experience out there. If you have purchased (or downloaded) any copy in The Juno Letters series and want the iBook version, just drop me an email at junoletters@icloud.com and I'll send you a link to get a free upgrade.
I'm going to play with book 7 and just try to get adjusted to normal life. Stay tuned to the blog and have a wonderful summer.
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.
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Creating letters to use as a plot vehicle
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