Friday, May 14, 2010
My Brother's Keeper Available For Kindle
My mystery novel, My Brother's Keeper is now available in Amazon's Kindle Store. To obtain a copy go to the Kindle Store and search on Hardacker. Or you can use the following URL: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=node%3D154606011&field-keywords=Hardacker&x=17&y=19
The novel is a mystery thriller and the first in my Ed Traynor series. Ed is confused when he's called to a murder scene on a remote road in New Hampshire's Rockingham County. Shortly after arriving on site his long-time friend, Sheriff 'Buck' Buchanan, asks him to identify the victim--Ed's brother John. Ed vows to find the killer and his investigation will lead him to a vicious drug lord and into the world of strip clubs. If that isn't enough, Ed must deal with his turbulent relationship with his brother, who was a suspect in a multi-million dollar rip-off of a drug dealer.
My Brother's Keeper is also available for PC and other platforms through Smashword.com. Follow the link: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/13886
Thursday, May 6, 2010
AT THE END OF THE DAY
It's my pleasure to post a guest blogger today. Stephen D. Rogers has published over 500 short stories and articles, his anthology Shot To Death is available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and the publisher, Mainly Murder Press.
I've been speaking at libraries about SHOT TO DEATH, my new collection of mystery short stories, and my writing "career" in general.
One of the most asked questions from the library audiences is how I deal with the frustrations: the slow response times, the non-responses, the acceptances that turn to rejections when a publication folds.
I'm not going to lie and say that dealing with setbacks is easy. Being at the receiving end of slings and arrows isn't exactly fun, and sometimes the irritations and disappointments slide into despair.
That's when it's most important to rediscover the spark. While everyone who sets pen to paper or finger to keyboard thinks of publication, the initial spark is the love of telling a story or crafting a sentence.
If I knew for certain that I would never publish again, would I still write? You bet. I wrote for mumble-mumble years before I was published, and I can't imagine ever wanting to stop.
At the end of the day, I'm a writer not because of the book or the six hundred other publications but because I write.
And sometimes that's enough.
Stephen D. Rogers