Artigos

curious about how to use a book, facts, safety?

Curious about how to use a book, facts, safety? If you are, buy one. If you can’t buy a book you don’t need to steal; you can always ask for someone to borrowed one or, yes… fascinating, you can go to a library.

I know someone that can give you some advice and tips: Poppet.

  1. If you really really want to read a novel and can’t afford it, ask the author for a review copy. This a trade where you review the novel when you’ve read it.
    To review a novel, post a review on Goodreads, or where you would normally buy it, Amazon / B&N / Kobo / iTunes / bookstores with websites which allow reviews – and if you have a blog review it there too, or share it with your Facebook friends, letting them know about the book and why you needed to read it.
  2. You don’t have to give it 5 stars and say you loved it, if you didn’t. Just be honest, but leave a review as payment to the author for the novel
  3. You can get free books on Amazon every day of the week, hundreds of them. *don’t steal books*.
  4. Amazon have a lending library, join the lending library, or even better, ask your local library to stock it – they stock eBooks too!
  5. Leave a review  Authors love that shit.

You can find more about her at Poppet’s Imagination Captivation.

unlikely interview to poppet

From “Moonshine Express” I already wrote…

A story, told in two hands, full of wonderful words, where each sentence is packed with poetry. The narration in the first person brings another taste to the story and the ending is not an ending, but the beginning of all – wonderful.

… it was my first contact with this writer and what contact – it burns!

Since then I’ve read other works and it has always been an enjoyable read; although I recognize that some of her stories are for a more feminine public. Is the woman inside me who is talking.

1. Do you have a specific writing style?

Yes. My style is very much an internal private monologue whilst the characters interact with the cameo and other characters. Because of this my novels are almost always written in first person.

2. What books have most influenced your life?

Horror writing has probably had the biggest impact on me. It’s odd that, because I found a medical case study on how we form memories (doing research into what I consider a form of lunacy), and the memories we don’t forget are the traumatic ones, we hardly ever remember the good times because we’re hard wired to remember the worst times. As such the fact that I can recall almost every horror novel I’ve ever read, tells me it’s the best way to influence a world. People will remember you if you’re horrific. From an early age I loved horror novels (and movies. Books like The Amityville Horror (based on a true story), then older I found Dean Koontz and Stephen King. I loved Koontz’s Phantoms, and Night Chills. However I also enjoyed action novels and the dystopian kind (like 1984 by George Orwell), I fell in love with novels like Cujo (Stephen King), The Freedom Trap (Desmond Bagley), The Omen (David Seltzer), Ninja (Eric Van Lustbader).

You can tell how old I am by the books I’ve listed here as being influential on me. At that time Jilly Cooper, Jackie Collins, Danielle Steel, and Shirley Conran, were all the rage for women to be reading (and things like Valley of the Dolls) – yet I read those books and they left zero impact. I always found books written by men, for men, far more action packed, intelligent, and engaging. I’m not dissing those other authors, they write excellent stories, but the love/scandal genre was something I only dabbled in once I hit my thirties. I found I could only write love stories in a paranormal setting, with a hint of horror in each and every one.

3. If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

I haven’t had personal dealings with any author who ended up being a mentor, but I can say that Charles De Lint’s combining Urban Fantasy with Legend and folklore really gave me the courage to write in this genre myself. Never before had I come across an author doing what he was doing, and subsequently he became my favourite author.

4. What are your current projects?

Too many to list. Having a day job means I rarely have the time to write all the stories already begun and waiting on my computer.

poppet

5. How much research do you do?

Probably too much. I take research to the nth degree.

6. Do you write full-time or part-time?

I used to write full time and loved it, it made me so very happy, but now I only write part time as I have other responsibilities now.

7. Where do your ideas come from?

Everywhere. Anything can spark an idea, even a song. But mostly my inspiration comes from dreams. IE last night I dream I was distracting a serial killer away from my best friend and a work colleague of hers, so she could get away, and it was like being in a murder mystery because I overheard him on the phone, he’d set the whole thing up, he never wanted her after all. This was his experiment.

8. How can readers discover more about you and you work?

I have audiobooks available now, with a horror due out in March (audiobook), you can find my work in paperback and ebook format, or you can peruse my websites or my publishers websites (Wild Wolf Publishing, Thorstruck Press, Eibonvale Press). You can also follow me on Facebook for snippets from upcoming novels and new releases

https://authorpoppet.wordpress.com
http://authorpoppet.weebly.com

http://www.thorstruckpress.com
http://www.eibonvalepress.co.uk
http://wildwolfpublishing.com

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Poppet/197111090356326

moonshine express

This time I will start by the publisher.

Eibonvale Press has been a surprise at all levels. Graphically has offered books without taints, everything is designed in detail – attractive and seductive. The stuffing, composed of the words is better than any liqueur. Eibonvale Press has transformed the book into a work of art. Another interesting detail is the opportunity of providing the reader with numbered editions and other pearls.

In the case of the book Moonshine Express by Poppet have, we have not only a numbered book, but also a letter and a pin; this is more than awesome.

moonshine express, the letter

And as for the book?
A story, told in two hands, full of wonderful words, where each sentence is packed with poetry. The narration in the first person brings another taste to the story and the ending is not an ending, but the beginning of all – wonderful.

moonshine express, the letter