Friday, May 22, 2009

TIps for Authors on How To Blog

TOP LINE AUTHOR TIPS:
Key Tactics: Summary
1. Search keywords on your theme (i.e. saving whales, environmental protection,
conspiracies, politics, heart health -- whatever links to your book) on
www.technorati.com (Blog search engine). Visit the top blogs that show up and
COMMENT ON THEIR POSTS (with mention of your book somewhere and a typed out link
to your book page)
2. Write your own blogs, but don't stop there. Copy past your blog and using the
same list above from Technorati (search Google too), send your blog post to
like-minded bloggers (their emails are almost always on their blogs under ABOUT
ME)-- add this at the top: "Wrote this blog. Thought it might interest you.
Please feel free to post it in your blog with a credit and link to me. Thanks").
We, serious bloggers always need NEW information and don't mind posting other
people's content.
3. Create your own thematic blogs (they're free on www.blogspot.com).
4. Post each blog post also on your Amazon blog, free Myspace blog, etc. Mention
it on your twitter (with link) -- if you don't know twitter, it's easier than
blogging -- check it out at twitter.com
5. Add tags to your blogs if there's a space for it: normally it's labeled tags.
You just pick keykwords from your article/blog post, separated by commas. For
example, this article would have these keywords: blog, blogger, blogspot,
technorati, derek, armstrong, information, content, twitter, myspace, thematic,
theme, search engine, other people's content


Almost every author has a blog. Anecdotally, it hardly seems credible to claim — as I do — that the blog is the most important marketing tool for publishers and authors. Why, if it’s so important, doesn’t a blog automatically translate into sales?

It’s not magic — or how blog marketing actually works

It’s not the willingness to blog or the act of blogging that leads to success. Authors and publishers who succeed with runaway sales on their books — as proven by dozens of our own writers — are those who take a three-pronged approach to blog success (hence Web 3.0!) The proven tactics are:

• Create multiple blogs, at a minimum twelve or more, each on separate themes
• Blog daily and power-blog weekly
• Guest blog and blog tour on high-profile blogs and on social networks (Myspace, Facebook, Goodreads, Authorsden.com, and as many as you can manage).

Blogertizing, it’s a beautiful thing—no cost (other than time) and it works

Okay, I’ll come clean and admit Blogertizing is my own trademark and a book releasing to major buzz and print run in fall 08 (Blogertize: A Leading Expert Shows How Your Blog Can Be a Money-Making Machine — http://www.kunati.com/blogertize/ .) But I’ll share, step-by-step, some important quick-start top-level tips here, and invite you to visit http://www.blogertize.com throughout the year to learn more.


First — why blog at all?

Most publishers cannot commit the time to provide blogs on behalf of authors. It’s really up to authors, to empower their own success. The most a publisher can hope to do is coach the authors to develop the daily blog habit. The key reasons to blog at all:

• No cost — other than time. Most blog services are free
• Editorial-style credibility: where a website is often viewed as an online ad, a blog is more often thought of as an “E-Zine” (online magazine, for those who don’t speak web lingo)
• Google and other search engines automatically rank blogs higher than websites (in part because they own many of the free blogging services, but mostly because blogs offer “timely” and current content)
• Blogs encourage return visits, subscribers and loyalty if the following techniques are deployed
• While it makes no sense to have multiple websites, it makes plenty of sense to create multiple blogs on various themes to mine readers from different interest groups
• Since the ultimate goal is to sell books, blogs allow hundreds or thousands of opportunities to direct traffic to book pages on online stores via “inbound links” (more on this nifty concept in a moment.) Websites might offer, at most, dozens of links.

It’s all about “inbound links”

If you haven’t heard of this nifty term, make it your mantra: inbound links drive success, inbound links drive success…

Inbound links are almost the sole driver of Google Page Ranks. Google, and most search engines, rank sites based on how many quality inbound links are offered TO your site or blog. This means I, and all your other friends, associates and supporters, have to embed a link TO your site (usually in return for likewise consideration from you.) Since links are “online referrals” they weight higher than any other consideration. People visit sites — and buy books — based on referrals.

As a goal, in your first year, focus on a minimum of 6,000 inbound links. To find out how many you have now, go to Altavista.com and type in LINK:www.yourwebsite.com (substituting your website name, of course).

Google Page Ranks — the true measure of success

To measure your success, as it stands right now, install the Google Toolbar on your browser. Once installed, you’ll see the all-important Google Page Rank on the top right after you land on a page. You can get this mandatory tool here:

• http://toolbar.google.com

If it seems like I’m plugging Google, I’m not. The reality is that Google drives the internet these days. A Google Page Rank tells you all you really need to know. Now, check out your author or publisher blog and your website.

If you see a 1/10 rank or a 2/10 rank — or the all too common 0/10 rank — you now know why your blogs haven’t translated into sales. It’s unlikely you achieve much above a 3/10 or 4/10 in one year, since the rank is incremental, but this should be your minimal goal. A 4/10 rank means you’re selling books. Any less, you’re definitely missing sales.

The 6,000 inbound links I mentioned above probably translates into a 4/10 Google Rank. And a lot of books sold.

Equity and content rules in blogs and books

You’re building equity in your blogs through inbound links and page ranks. It will take months, but as your rank climbs on your various blogs, your book sales will as well. Content rules on your blogs. Talk about yourself and your book at your own risk. People want information, news, tips, commentaries — but not a synopsis of your book.

The best way to do this — and to create more and more audience subscribers — is to have multiple blogs. Since they are free on services such as http://www.blogger.com, it costs only time. For example, most books have multiple themes, whether non-fiction or fiction. For example, my current novel, MADicine (http://www.kunati.com/madicine/) has several themes that can each be turned into interesting topical blogs:

• The dangers of genetic research
• The global power of pharmaceutical giants
• The evolving dangers of super viruses (perhaps talking about bird flu, and so on)
• The stupidity of reality television

There are four blogs, to start. Add to this an “author blog” for a more “commercial” push on the novel, and there are five. Then, drill down to the smaller topics.

Editorial content is the key to success

The critical aspect of this is to write the blogs as you would an article or and editorial for a magazine. If it’s informative, researched or helpful, readers will find you through the almighty power of Google. Since the goal is daily short blogs, and a weekly “major” piece on each blog, you have to diversify:

• How-tos are popular (something like this blog topic)
• Feature stories on any of your thematic topics. I advise you too create a Google Alert for each of your keyword topics so that you’ll have daily fodder for your stories. You can set up Google alerts here: http://www.google.com/alerts)
• Snippets of other people’s news with links to the sources
• Editorials (opinion pieces, but not usually rants)
• News — for example, on “the stupidity of reality television” theme mentioned above, I might announce and review a new reality show
• Reviews of other people’s books on the theme.

Guest blogging and touring
Without question, the above techniques — thematic blogs, many of them, editorial content — will incrementally grow your sales, audience, fans, and page rank. In the meantime, you need faster results, right?

The secret to fast results in Guest blogging and blog touring. It’s simple, free, but time-consuming. The advantages include:

• Driving immediate traffic to your blogs and book pages if you embed links in your guest blog. For instance, here’s a link to the Amazon page with my novel MADicine, mentioned above: http://www.amazon.com/MADicine-Derek-Armstrong/dp/160164017X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1204041923&sr=8-1

• The inbound links created improves your long-term page rank
• You can sell books instantly if you seek out the high-profile, high-traffic sites.

Unpaid freelance writing
To succeed in a Blog Tour — the most important type of author tour these days — you’ll need to query the blog owners as you would a magazine editor. The query must be valid, well-written and offer something to the blog owner’s audiences. Most blogs have a contact email for this purpose.

Finding candidate blogs is a little more involved. Search your theme’s keywords — for example, for MADicine, I’d search: pharmaceutical, genetic research, reality TV — on the popular blog engines:

• www.technorati.com/blogs
• www.blogsearch.google.com
• any of the dozens of other blog search sites.

It’s all in the page rank
Since query writing takes time, and your only payment will be publicity and inbound links, choose carefully. This is where the Google Toolbar comes in. Go to the sites referred on Technorati and Google Blogsearch, and view their page rank (top right of your browser if you installed the tool.) Include in your query list any blog with a page rank of 3/10 or greater. 3/10 might not sound like much, but it indicates a maturing site with a nice-sized audience. Each rank up from there is at least a “doubling” of rank, so 4/10 is twice the value of 3/10.

Guest blogging without permission
You can also be a guest of all the high profile blogs without asking. Comment on blogs, even the high profile ones on Variety Magazine, ForeWord Magazine, Entertainment Weekly and the New York Times. To avoid being “moderated” keep your comment informative, add statistics or useful tips and bury a link to your blog at the end. Mention all your important keywords in your comment: name, book name, publisher name, ISBN, web address. Most of the time, you will not be screened out unless you overtly spam. “Nice post, visit me at www.mysite.com” is spam. If you create a thoughtful comment, you’ve created an inbound link to your site on one of the biggest blogsites on the net.

Finally, some Tips
Whether you’re guest blogging or writing for your own dozen or so blogs (which soon will have GPRs of 4/10 right?), you’ll want to keep these tips in mind:

• Keep your posts informational: news and content drives traffic and links
• Write a daily post in each blog, even if they’re short
• Write personally, in the first person. Use I, you and we.
• Work hard on your headline and be sure to include all your keywords so that audiences can find you
• Provocation helps. My most popular blog title, still going strong on several sites, was:
Are Readers and Movie-Goers Addicted to Sex and God-Killing?
• Work equally hard on perfecting your first paragraph and be sure to ask a question that must be answered
• Don’t preach or proselytize
• Be truthful, honest and sincere. You hurt yourself with any form of exaggeration.
• Write your best prose. As a writer or publisher, your writing style will be evaluated based on your blog
• Link liberally to other blogs, especially your other blogs
• If you can’t break news, provide a fresh point of view on the what’s happening
• Be chatty and conversational. Blogs are editorial, but more conversational than a magazine feature article
• Tell as story
• Be useful
• If you rant, do so with good humor and provide facts. Don’t whine
• Allow commenting on your blogs to increase your page ranks and inspire audience participation. To prevent spamming go to your blog settings and turn on moderation
• You don’t have to remove negative comments (except for racist, sexist, or rude comments) as long as they are intelligently argued. Construct a reply that is equally thoughtful and you’ve created a conversation
• Only write how-tos if you’re an expert. Otherwise, be helpful and simply point people to the experts
• Write a major feature a week on your blogs, and a daily short post. Monthly, plan on a killer post that will drive new audiences
• Use your important keywords in every post.



 


 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


 


NOTICE - This article is the opinion of the author and NOT INTENDED TO OFFER ADVICE. This story/article/feature may be an opinion piece — and should be treated accordingly — or reporting on the opinions of others, and should never be considered as a sole source of information or as a suggestion, instruction or prescription. For crime stories, always read the word "allegedly" in any story mentioning "suspects" or "persons of interest". For money/trade and exchange stories, this magazine and its writers accept no responsibility for accuracy -- always check with other sources for important decisions. In the case of food/health stories, these facts have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Information stated here should be NOT be considered as medical, health, psychological or behavior advice. All information in this story and on this site is provided for educational purposes ONLY. Always seek the advice of experts, including doctors for medical opinions. Only a licensed medical doctor can offer medical advice. Legal advice or other expert advice is best referred to experts in their respective fields. The publishers and editors, authors, researchers, employees, heirs and assigns accept no responsibility whatsoever for any advice, facts, opinions in this story, nor for resulting actions of readers of this information. ALL READERS ACCEPT THAT THIS INFORMATION IS PRESENTED ONLY AS EDUCATION, ENTERTAINMENT OR OPINION/INFORMATION AND AGREE IN READING THIS STORY OR THIS SITE THAT USE OF THIS INFORMATION IS SOLELY THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE READER. Copyright by the author unless otherwise indicated.











Reviewed or Featured in--


 


* Films and Books Magazine


* Deadly Prose Magazine


* Advance Magazine


* Publishers Marketplace


* Link Magazine


* Blogertize


* EDI Weekly


* Secure Network News


* Canadian Money Magazine


* Crime Report USA


* Wise Tarot Magazine


Release Picked Up In These Blogs


* Myspace


* Persona Corp Blog


Kunati Author Blogs


Myspace Blog


YouTube


Armstrong on Book Page


Blog on Book Page


Blog on Book Place


Armstrong on Author's Den


Twitter


Om Tare Tuttare Ture Svaha



Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Important links for publishing, books, authors, book trailers, videos

Some fun links.




Hot Links!


 


Blogertize—A Leading Expert Shows How Your Blog Can Be A Money-Making Machine



Films & Books Magazine — Where Films and Books Come TogetherDeadly Prose Magazine — Fiction to Die For


Films & Books Magazine — Where Films and Books Come Together


Wise Tarot Magazine —  The Authority on all things tarot.


Publishers Marketplace 


Novel Weekly — Novel News, Reviews, Links 


Blogertize.com — How To Blog for Success 


The Last Troubadour Official Site 


Official Site of Derek Armstrong, award-winning author 


 


ForeWord Magazine's Publisher Insider by Derek Armstrong


•  How to Resources for Mystery and Suspense Writers


Derek Armstrong on Blogspot 


Deadly Prose Critique Group on Blogspot


• Deadly Prose Forum for Writers, Publishers, Readers and Agents


Deadly Prose Critique Group on Yahoo


Kunati News Blog


Kunati on Publishers Page 


Kunati News 


Derek Armstrong on Deadly Prose 


Persona Corp — Image Your Success 


Derek Armstrong on MySpace Including Blogs 


Derek Armstrong on Book Place 


Derek Armstrong's Amazon Profile


•  Derek Armstrong on AuthorsDen.com


OM TARE TUTARE TURE SOHA

Brain Brunch Daily Online Blog Marketing Tips


The Trendy Blogger, Reviews, News and Trends in Blogs and Podcasts,



Book Video Review—Reviews of the Good, Bad and Ugly in Book Trailers, Book Videos and Novel Trailers




Monday, February 18, 2008

Statistics in Books Can Be Scary, But Publishers and Authors Find Hope

Latest ForeWord Magazine Publisher Insider Blog by Armstrong


Warning — May Cause Nightmares.


Book industry numbers are cold-sweat terrifying for publishers and authors alike. According to Nielsen Bookscan, 3,000 books are published per day in the United States alone (as reported on www.deadlyprose.com ). ForeWord can review at most a few thousand per year. Publishers report an average of 2,100 submissions per year, totaling 132 million submissions. Just under one percent are accepted for publication.



In the face of these staggering odds, is there any hope for authors and publishers?



The Majority of Books Sell Fewer than 99 Copies

Of the 1.2 million titles tracked by Bookscan in 2006, only 2.1% sold more than 5,000 books, 16.6% sold fewer than 1,000, and a terrifying 79.6% sold fewer than 99 copies. The 99 copies are no doubt the reason only one percent of authors’ submissions make it through the arduous publisher-review process.



This is all the stuff of wake-in-a-sweat nightmares: 63,000 publishers vie for readers with their wonderful author lists (according to Dan Poynter’s ParaPublishing.com).



The terror is no less for authors: only six conglomerate publishers publish fewer and fewer debut authors and less and less fiction. Then the real horror story commences as a book makes it into distribution. The bestseller dreams of authors and publishers are splashed with the cold water of real numbers.



Negative or Naïve?

Am I being negative or naïve? Perhaps both. The naïve part of the equation is my firm belief there are ways to break through these barriers to success. Kunati was founded with this goal in mind, and has proven it can work.



Heather Shaw touched on one important element of the success formula in her insightful Blog on book covers. When competing with 1.2 million titles, first impressions (impact) and credibility are vital. These are the twin functions of a cover.



What Works for Selling Books?

Websites, book videos and novel trailers, author critique groups, social marketing, author Blog tours, old-fashioned but still-important book signings, and publicity are the proven methods for marketing. I hope to focus on these in future Publisher Insider Blogs in a more how-to format.



Innovation begins with a study of what works. Read every Blog in the ForeWord archive and every article in the magazine. Visit the sites of successful publishers—the innovative publishers who lead with new ideas such as novel trailers, Blog touring, online publicity. (hint, hint, Kunati). Read every page on sites from innovative publishers.



Getting Noticed is the Primary Goal

My message is simple. With these horrifying numbers, being noticed is almost the only thing that matters—for both authors and publishers. Many authors are creative, even brilliant, yet if they can’t market their “author brand” no publisher is interested.



The publisher faces an epic battle analogous to a Tolkien quest to get attention in the marketplace. The publisher must build the authors’ brands, edit the manuscripts for the market, arrange distribution, obtain reviews from magazines (which choose from millions), then sell to wholesalers, retailers and finally readers.



The Retailer

How does a retailer choose which titles to carry? The average retailer chooses to stock a few thousand copies per year, far less than 1% of the titles available—similar in numbers to the reviews published annually by ForeWord. That’s not a coincidence.



Publisher and author success relies on buzz, which is a combination of review exposure, social networking, book cover designs, author activities such as Blogs and signings (the two types of touring, virtual and tangible). The last part of the equation is wonderful content.


Innovative Authors Look Beyond Good Prose... read the rest of the blog post here


Read Publisher Insider on ForeWord Magazine weekly here. 

Monday, February 11, 2008

What do librarians, book publishers, O.J. Simpson, Steve Jobs and Amazon have in common?

This week, a “close friend” of O.J. Simpson offered Kunati—a publisher focused on “controversial and provocative books”—a tell-all book project: “O.J. told me that I was the only man he was comfortable enough to talk openly with. Web of Controversy will remove the public facade of O.J. Simpson.” Nice friend. More O.J. controversy. Will it sell? Almost certainly.

Condemning Controversy?


Why are readers receptive to controversy? Judging from a report I received this week—the Library Open Access report “Tracking Challenges in Libraries: 2007 Results”—the opposite is true. Patrons are vocal in condemning anything notorious or contentious. It seems that some library patrons would bring back book-burning. So, why do Kunati’s provocative books sell so well? Why do controversial books such as The Da Vinci Code become bestsellers? How is it that publishers can turn controversy into bestsellers and provocation into opportunity when some readers seem vocally in favor of censorship?

Violence, Racism and Promoting Witchcraft


The easy answer seems to be the power of the silent majority—enlightened readers—voting for freedom and fun with their wallets. Librarians, publishers and booksellers continue to offer these books despite a vocal minority. Among the condemned titles from library patrons in the “Challenges” report were: Oliver Twist (for violence), Brer Rabbit and Tar Baby Girl (for racism), and—of course—Philip Pullman’s Golden Compass for religious viewpoints. I recall Harry Potter being on a previous list for “promoting witchcraft.” The list of 36 “patron condemned” books in the 2007 list included my favorite classics, making me wonder if this is indeed a 2007 report. Fortunately, the librarians—stewards of free thought—denied all requests to “burn” or remove books.

What’s so Controversial?

A quick analysis of this most entertaining report from librarians shows the most common reasons for requests to “pull” books off library shelves, in order of prominence, were: homosexuality, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit language, violence, offensive language. Thank goodness for librarians, otherwise all of my own novels would be burned:

* The Game: let’s see, explicit violence, offensive language—it is a thriller, after all
* The Last Troubadour: ah, religious viewpoint for its portrayal of the Cathars as heroes and the Inquisition as evil?
* MADicine: oh, probably everything on the no-no list.

I suppose I’d be in good company with nearly all of Kunati’s popular books—including a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and a NY Times bestseller. Not to mention the rest of the “challenges” list: Exit to Eden, The Monkey King, Perks of Being a Wallflower, Rainbow Boys, Fly on the Wall, and the entire religion-based bestselling Left Behind series.

Steve Jobs says, “No One Reads Anymore.”


It seems that Apple’s Steve Jobs believes “people don’t read anymore.” The computer guru declared in his keynote at MacWorld 2007 that Amazon’s new e-ink reader was “dead on arrival” with a sweeping, and inaccurate, statistic: “It doesn’t matter how good or bad the product is, the fact is that people don’t read anymore. Forty percent of the people in the U.S. read one book or less last year.” Good to know, Steve. I guess Job’s forty percent only read controversial books?

According to a landmark study of 10,800 Americans by Persona Corp in 2007: 30.6% “Can’t live without books”; 23.4% “LOVE books”; 20.9% “Read regularly”—totaling 74.9% of all Americans. I guess it depends on whether you make phone gadgets or publish books which survey you trust, although a quick look at actual book sales indicates Persona’s study is closer to the right number.

Book Sales Over 36 Billion Net in 2007http://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif

Net revenues on book sales, according to The Book Standard, were up another billion dollars to $35.69 billion net sales in 2006 and another 1% up in 2007....

READ THE REST OF THE FEATURE HERE at ForeWord Magazine...

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Kunati's 2008: 31 Authors Including Pulitzer Prize Winner and New York Times Bestselling Author






31 Authors - Pulitzer Prize-Winner - NY Times Bestselling Author - Sequels from Hit Authors


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - Kunati Books, "a publisher to watch" according to ALA's Booklist, promises a big year in 2008 with the addition of twenty-two titles, including a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and a soon-to-be-a-motion-picture novel release.

Passport large
"This year we're particularly excited to announce so many hot titles and authors," publisher Derek Armstrong said. "Pulitzer Prize winning NY Times bestseller John E. Mack joins our list with a commemorative illustrated edition of his Passport to the Cosmos. Joshua Corin is a most welcome addition, especially now that his amazing novel Nuclear Winter Wonderland is to be a major 2009 motion picture. Booksellers and reviewers really paid attention in 2007. But this year, Kunati's definitely the name to watch."

Spring 2008 has already seen strong advance orders for a critically-acclaimed list of unique fiction, including MADicine, the second Alban Bane thriller by satirical thriller novelist Derek Armstrong, and Hunting the King by Peter Clenott—already being favorably compared by reviewers to Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code.

Nuclear large

Libraries and chains have particularly responded to early buzz about Bathtub Admirals, a "true story" satirical novel of naval and political incompetence from retired US Navy Commander Jeff Huber. Returning from a great 2007 performance with Rabid, T K Kenyon's Callous is also hot on advance orders. Dan Ronco's UnHoly Domain has been compared by reviewers to Phillip K. Dick and earned praise from many bestselling authors.

Kunati's intelligent choices of unique voices has led to movie-option negotiations, development deals, a flurry of interest in translation rights, and:
· 31 authors
· Kunati's first Tarot deck/book set, a very unique set that combines Quantum physics and Tarot imagery in the Quantum Tarot
Quantum Tarot· Six acclaimed new thrillers, including MADicine, sequel to the 2007 hit The Game.
· Several non-fiction titles, including the much-anticipated Hide & Seek: How I Laughed at Depression, Conquered My Fears and Found Happiness, by sitcom writer Wendy Aron
· Blogertize, a breakout "How-to Make Money" book on blogging with secrets of a  twenty-year expert marketer
· The return of Armstrong's hugely popular historical-fantasy-tarot trilogy in The Last Quest, book two after last year's hit The Last Troubadour.
· An inspirational book of hope for those who have suffered sexual abuse, Courage in Patience, from Beth Fehlbaum
· Breakthrough fiction, including: The Master Planets from Donald Gallinger; A Decent Ransom, A Story of Kidnapping Gone Right from Ivana Hruba; a twice-dead crime-solver in the sensational Miracle Myx from Dave Diotalevi; a legal thriller ripped right from the headlines in Janeology by Karen Harrington; Heart of Diamonds from journalist Dave Donelson an international adventure set in the darkest Congo; and Belly of the Whale, a powerful and poignant story of a woman battling cancer who finds the will to live after confronting a murderer.

"We're fortunate to have so many fine authors to choose from," Armstrong explained. "Our authors-first philosophy led to over 8500 submissions last year. Our 2007 cloth editions were so popular, most of them are releasing in trade paper in fall of this year."

Madicine smallHunting SmallBathtub smallQuest new smallhideseeksmallSmall Heart of Diamonds
Kunati's many titles in 2007 are still selling well in cloth, including unique titles:

· Mothering Mother, the family caregiving masterpiece from Carol D. O'Dell, a popular guest on TV, with appearances on CNN and FOX TV
· The Game, Alban Bane's first thriller from Derek Armstrong, a critically acclaimed jab at reality TV
· Rabid, from T K Kenyon, described as "impressive" by Publishers Weekly and landing to strong sales and starred reviews
· Popular post-Civil War historical Women of Magdalene from Rosemary Poole-Carter
· The Last Troubadour, which caught the imagination of historical fans and Tarot fans alike
· Truth or Bare, a stylish character-driven crime thriller from Richard Cahill
· On Ice from beloved humorist Red Evans
· bang Bang: How Paula Sherman Took On the Gun Lobby and Changed America, a literary masterpiece by Lynn Hoffman
· Whale Song from Canadian Cheryl Kaye Tardif, "already a hit" according to Booklist
· Golf slapstick with Todd Sentell's Toonamint of Champions
· UK humor from Andy Tilley's sensational Recycling Jimmy
· A journey back to the hip sixties in Shadow of Innocence from Ric Wasley
· Young adult adventure in Art Tirrell's popular The Secret Ever Keeps.









About Kunati


Passport to the Cosmos cover

Kunati Books has been described as "a publisher to watch" from ALA's Booklist and "what a publisher looks like if the marketing department runs things" by Quill and Quire. With thirty-one authors, a Pulitzer Prize- winner, and movie deals for books, Kunati is a major force in independent publishing.

Kunati became an instant hit with its "authors-first approach." Founded by published authors, Kunati became an immediate focus for authors, with thousands of submissions per year. Careful selection led to critical acclaim for all published titles. Distributed internationally through Independent Publishers Group, Canadian Manda and other groups, and through all major wholesalers, Kunati quickly became popular with booksellers, and in particular the independents.

Kunati is also very loyal to its libarian friends.

Fresh, acclaimed fiction and non-fiction also makes Kunati a major target of movie-rights buyers. Nuclear Winter Wonderland, a Kunati title from Joshua Corin, is soon to be a major movie. Other titles are optioned or in negotiation.

 








About Kunati's Publisher MADicine, an Alban Bane Thriller from Derek Armstrong
Best known for historical thrillers and mystery thrillers, Derek
Armstrong is also a screenwriter, publisher and well-known marketing
guru. His defining signature style was described by Booklist as
"brilliance in which Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in
genuinely innovative ways." Armstrong is the creator of Alban Bane,
featured in the Alban Bane thrillers The Game and MADicine, a character
affectionately compared by critics to House M.D., the TV character. He
is the author of the popular Song of Montségurhistorical trilogy, including The Last Troubadour and The Last Quest.  He is also author of
two non-fiction titles: Blogertize-A Leading Expert Shows How Your Blog Can Be A Money-Making Machine and The Persona Principle: How to Succeed
in Business with Image-Marketing
. Forthcoming in 2009 is a breakthrough
Harry Potter competitor: Magick Inc.

Derek Armstrong has won many awards for advertising copywriting internationally and wrote The Persona Principle (Simon & Schuster) with co-author Kam Wai Yu, now translated to five languages.
.
 

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Unholy Domain compared by reviewers to Blade Runner, a new Kunati Books release

News Brief Kunati





NEWS RELEASE — Futuristic Thriller from Kunati Compared to Legendary SF Writer Phillip K. Dick

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: TORONTO  –  Unholy Domain, the new Kunati novel by Dan Ronco, has been compared to the works of legendary science fiction writer Philip K. Dick, author of Blade Runner and many other classics. In Unholy Domain, Ronco follows Dick’s investigations into the dark new worlds  of the near future. New York Times bestselling author Piers Anthony calls Unholy Domain “a fast-action story ... sparkling with ideas.” Anthony praised Ronco’s previous novel, PeaceMaker, as “exciting, violent and thoughtful.”






UnHoly Domain



Unholy Domain explores the age-old battle between scientific enlightenment and religious fundamentalism. Ronco takes readers into a shattered world where violent rival factions—the fanatical Church of God and the secret technological society known as The Domain— compete for supreme power. Caught in the middle is a young man who seeks to clear his father of blame for the greatest technological disaster the world has ever endured.



“The comparison to Phillip K. Dick and the praise by an author of the stature of Piers Anthony are extremely gratifying, but not surprising,” said Kunati publisher Derek Armstrong. “Dan Ronco’s writing teems with stimulating ideas about the future of the world and the human race. His storytelling is outstanding. He looks into the human heart and finds both the dark and the transcendent.”



Ronco square



Unholy Domain will release to extensive publicity in April of 2008 from Kunati Books, called a “new publisher to watch” by Booklist.



Kuanti seeks out provocative and controversial fiction, as well as non-fiction that inspires and enlightens. The spring 2008 season includes a satire of the US military by a retired Navy Commander, two new medical thrillers, an inspiring story of a woman battling cancer and terrorized by a murderer, a literary crime novel that boasts the most unique protagonist to come along in years, and a novel that explores the personality of a woman who murdered her toddler son.



For PRESS INFORMATION — press @kunati.com    Derek Armstrong, Publisher, Kunati Books



 

Monday, January 14, 2008

Humor novelist Red Evans Passed Away

Evans square



Our dear friend and Kunati Author Red Evans passed away. We will miss him. His humor and words live on in his wonderful novel ON ICE.




On Ice Small



Red Evans, author of On Ice, passed away this Sunday morning on January 13, 2008.

Thank you to everyone who wrote kind words to Red and his family during his illness.

The crowning of his long and productive life in radio, television, and public relations was becoming a published author. With a shout of "Ah Scooby Do," his lead in as the DJ “Rockin’ Redhead,” he entered the Pearly Gates conjuring up thoughts for his first heavenly novel.


Red saw humor and sparkling life in everything, evident in his writing. He never lost his humor. He joked, "now my cancer has cancer."



A now-famous scene in On Ice portrays, the Not-Forgotten Funeral Home. We will certainly NOT forget (copyright Red Evans)—





Excerpt from On Ice —



The Not Forgotten Funeral Home employee stood spellbound by the huge man with eagle feathers flickering in the afternoon breeze. Felton followed him up the stairs with his pork pie hat over his heart. At the top, he called across to me in the lawn area, “After Whistler gets his run, Eldy, you come on in. We’ll be with Mr. Tweedleman. You can’t miss him. He’s been dead since he was born.”

Felton waved the hat at the employee who was still standing by the Studebaker, mouth wide open, not knowing whether to crap or go blind. “Well come on, man. What are you standing there for? Ichthius Tweedleman’s got a lot to do to make old Tyrane here acceptable to the Gatekeeper. Close your mouth so the flies don’t get in, and come on!”

We had bought a leash for Whistler at a K-Mart, since it didn’t seem like a good idea to go to another Wal-Mart. They might have an all-store-bulletin out for a man and a greased boy who was attacked by mad pedalfiles. The leash was in a plastic case, and you pulled it out like a metal tape rule. It was real long and gave old Whistler a lot of room to roam. I tied it off on the branch of a bush and walked back to the plantation house.

The funeral home wasn’t anything like Harold’s Funeral Chapel, Vinyl Siding and Windows Company in Jupiter Bluff. Apparently, all the Not Forgotten Funeral Home did was bury folks. They didn’t display stuff like Harold’s does. At Harold’s, there were miniature model windows on stands outside of the chapel with prices on ‘em written neat and kind of solemn, so no one would be offended. People could slide the different windows up and down to see how smooth they worked. The day before the services, when folks visited the casket, quiet conversations were often drowned out by the scrape of windows going up and down. That probably took people’s minds off the death of a dear one, ya know.

Harold’s also covered the walls in the chapel with various types of siding, so between bereavements, one could think about redoing the house with the insurance money.

The Not Forgotten Funeral Home was like a tomb, not like at Harold’s where there was a pegboard wall of window accessories, such as locks, sashes, and frame selections. Men gathered around the display to talk about their own windows, comparing locks, panes, and window frames. It was all kind of homey.

The inside of this funeral home was graveyard silent except for an antique grandfather clock I passed in the hall that bonged at my ear, making me almost wet my pants. The place had a funny smell that I couldn’t pin down. It was like sour peaches and popcorn is the best I could think of. The carpet felt like thick mowed grass, and on the walls were huge pictures of fields and forests.

I came to a glass-fronted door that read: “Ichthius Tweedleman, III” behind which I could hear voices, including Felton’s distinctive scratchy one that arrested everybody in our living room. I could also hear that rumble from the Indian’s big chest. When I opened the door and walked in, I knew right away that we had stepped in chicken poop that I could almost feel ooze between my toes.







Red will be missed. His words and humor touched everyone. They will live forever in our memories and his writings.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

"An adventure for spiritual grownups that educates as much as it delights." writes best-selling author Lon Milo DuQuette of The Last Troubadour

"SKILLFULLY WRITTEN FOR SPIRITUAL GROWNUPS

If I didn't know better, I'd say that Derek Armstrong wrote his novel, The Last Troubadour – Song of Montségur, purely for my own amusement and pleasure. With wit, wisdom (and more than an occasional wink) he has written a novel that panders to nearly every one of my cultural, spiritual, and historical prejudices. Set in thirteen century France – that hotbed heroes, heroines, and heresy – it's a wide-screen Technicolor adventure worthy of a full Errol Flynn treatment… an adventure for spiritual grownups that educates as much as it delights. I can't wait for the next in the series."

Lon Milo DuQuette – Author of Accidental Christ ISBN-13: 978-0978959203
Review of The Last Troubadour

small troubadour

Sunday, January 06, 2008

Kunati's Burns Up 08 With Hottest Line of Books!

Sneak Peak at Fall 08!



hideseeksmallcourage smallSmall Heart of Diamonds


 

Available to Order Now


 



Alphabetical by Title with "loglines." Click cover to learn more. 




bang small



In Lynn Hoffman’s "brilliant" novel, a singing vigilante waitress crime-victim takes on America’s obsession with guns and transforms herself in the process. Read More...  View the trailer!




"Thoroughly charming and sure to enrage the NRA" Kirkus Reviews



"Starred Review. Brilliant." BookList Magazine





bellysmall

Hudson Catalina has given up on life, having lost both breasts to cancer, until the wrecked-by-life young Buddy Baker arrives, bent on murder. Linda Merlino’s harrowing, touching story of despair, abuse, murder and survival leaves you enriched by the experience. Read more...




bathtupsmall


Are the armed forces of the world’s only superpower really run by self-serving "Bathtub Admirals" and unscrupulous back-stabbers? In the brilliant tradition of Heller and Vonnegut, Bathtub Admirals is retired commander Jeff Huber's tragicomic take on America’s rise to global dominance.  Read more...


"Populated by outrageous characters and fueled with pompous outrage, Huber’s irreverent broadside will pummel the funny bone of anyone who’s served." Publishers Weekly 






Callous small



 In typical TK Kenyon genre-bending style, Callous is Our Town meets The Crucible in a paranoia-fest as neighbor suspects neighbor of being a murderer, a serial killer, or worse, and relationships spin out of control. Read more...






"Impressive." Publishers Weekly, review of TK Kenyon's Rabid





The Game Small

A "delightfully sarcastic" and "House-M.D-like"* detective takes on "creepy" reality television. In this darkly humorous thriller, reality television becomes too real when a killer with a message preys on the contestants of America's number one TV show. Read more...view the trailer!



"Armstrong is an author to watch." Booklist

"Dark tongue-in-cheek thriller" Library Journal

"Suspenseful and rich with dark humor" Foreword Reviews





Hunting Small

 

On the evening of the American invasion of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, an international cast of schemers, spies, churchmen and scientists race to claim the greatest prize the world has ever seen. Read more...



"A stunning debut thriller. More convincing than DaVinci Code." Films & Books Magazine




Janeology small

Tom is certain he is living the American dream. With twins and lovely wife Jane, and a house on the beach, life couldn't be better. Until one day in June, the police tell him the unthinkable—his wife has drowned their toddler son, while his daughter clings to life in the hospital.  Read more...




"This affecting story, with its brilliant array of genial, selfish, troubled, and plucky characters, accomplishes a wonderful feat by revealing specific and universal truths within all families." Donald Phillips, bestselling author





small troubadour



In this historical thriller set against the rich background of the 13th century Inquisition, the last living troubadour, condemned by the church as a heretic, must rescue a holy Christian relic from a crusading king. Read more...view the trailer






 "Brilliance....genuinely innovative" Booklist



 "Amusing and entertaining... recommended for all." Library Journal



 "Action-packed novel." Publishers Weekly







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What happens when an engineered virus, meant to virally "cure" psychopathically violent patients, is let loose by accident on the world? And what chance does the world have when a rescue organization named WART (World Advance Response Taskforce) is our only hope? Read more...





"In his follow-up to the excellent The Game (2007), Armstrong takes on a whole new set of challenges....Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways" Booklist




Miracle Small


Nothing escapes Myx. And he isn't the kind of kid to let murders go unsolved. Two times dead left his mind wired like no other, and he knows how to use it. Read more...

 



"What a treat it is to be in the mind of Myx Amens, the clever, capable, twice-dead, protagonist of a story that surprises and satisfies throughout. A mystery told with wry, intelligent humor. More Myx, Mr. Diotalevi, and soon." Robert Fate, Author, Baby Shark series, Academy Award Winner.




Mothering Mother small
An authentic in-the-room view of a daughter's struggle to care for an aging parent with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, a memoir told with humor and heart-breaking frankness, both inspirational and helpful.  Read more...view the trailer!

Don't miss Carol O'Dell on CNN and FOX TV.



"Beautiful. Told with humor, and much love." Booklist




On Ice Small



What do you get when you mix a corpse "on ice" in a kiddie pool in the back of a pick up truck, a wide-eyed farm boy and a flatulent dog? Don't miss this utterly charming road trip story. Read more...view the trailer!




"Evans uses offbeat humor to both entertain and move his readers." Booklist.





Recycling small

 



An outrageous romp into "suicide for profit" and the darkest aspects of human nature, told with brilliant black humor and a zest for life. Read more...View the trailer!






"Recycling Jimmy is energetic, imaginative, relentlessly and unabashedly vulgar, and at times, funny enough to make a cranky reviewer laugh out loud." Booklist 



"Darkly comic story unwinds with plenty of surprises." ForeWord Reviews





Rabid Small



A sexy, savvy, darkly funny tale of ambition, scandal, forbidden love and murder, science and religion collide with far reaching consequences. Nothing is sacred. Read more...View the trailer!



"Jealousy and anger erupt in murder, a tense jury trial and the discovery of a lethal, lab-cultivated aerosol rabies virus...impressive medical thriller." Publishers Weekly




Secret small

An aging Godfather-like billionaire tycoon regrets a decades-long life of "shady dealings" and seeks reconciliation with a granddaughter who doesn't even know he exists. Read more...View the trailer!




"A must read." Films and Books



"Riveting, rhapsodic, accomplished." Foreword



"Romance, adventure and danger on the lake." Kirkus 





Shadow Small



The oh-so-cool crime-solving McCarthy couple delve into the dark and perverse shadows of ultra-establishment Newport against a groovy sixties backdrop. The quick-witted McCarthy family face shadowy kidnappers, protective family dynasties, and mysterious assassins. Read more...View the Trailer! 




"Colorful and exciting. A lot of fun." Booklist



"Wasley brings reality to this tale." Library Journal



"A page-turner...Sit down and enjoy. You'll be glad you did." NY Times bestseller William Martin





Toonamint Small



A wickedly funny satire of the exclusive world of the private golf club tells the story of an obsessive bank teller from Mullet Luv, Georgia, and his squawking redneck fiancée achieving a lifelong dream of teeing off at the Augusta National Golf Club. Read more...View the Trailer!




"Regardless of which way your funny bone swings, Sentell’s Toonamint of Champions will give a brand new meaning to “par for the course.” ForeWord



"Over-the-top slapstick." Booklist 





truth small

A literary yet humorous crime novel about a lawyer who hates lawyers moving with the ease of a shark through the dingy bars and fantasy parlors where his clients do their dangerous dance of survival on society’s underbelly. Read more...View the trailer!




"Cahill has introduced an enticing character in Speed; he’s flawed, funny, and apparently hell-bent on making sure his life never goes completely right. Let’s hope this debut novel isn’t the last we hear from him." Booklist Magazine





Unholy Small



A fast-paced techno-thriller depicts a world of violent extremes, where religious terrorists and visionaries of technology fight for supreme power. Read more...



 "Top rate adventure sparkling with ideas." NY Times bestselling author Piers Anthony



"A chilling technothriller. . . Dan Ronco is social visionary on par with William Gibson and Robert Sawyer." Scott Nicholson, author, They Hunger




Whale small

Two cultures clash in a world where native tradition and modern law cannot co-exist. How can a young girl deal with the assisted suicide of her own mother? Whale Song is a haunting tale of change and choice. Read more...View the Trailer! 




"Whale Song is deep and true, a compelling story of love and family and the mysteries of the human heart.  Cheryl Kaye Tardif has written a beautiful, haunting novel." NY Times Bestselling novelist Luanne Rice, author of Beach Girls



"Tardif already a hit... a name to reckon with south of the border." Booklist





women small

The women of Magdalene are dying and no one seems to care, least of all the haughty Dr. Kingston, the director of the genteel Ladies’ Lunatic Asylum. A mix of historical who-dunnit and gripping historical fiction by prolific author and playwrite Rosemary Poole-Carter. Read more...View the trailer!



"Women of Magdalene is a brilliant example of the best historical fiction can do." Featured review in ForeWord



 



"A fine mix of thriller, historical fiction, and Southern Gothic." Booklist  






Click to View New 2008 Titles!

MADicine 2008 titles

Monday, December 31, 2007

MADicine releasing soon for Bane Fans

  The Game



Thank you, dear readers, for your support, and your patience as you await the sequels to The Game and The Last Troubadour. I haven't had time to reply to everyone who has written -- I promise to be in touch soon! Very busy with the publisher's last minute proofs for MADicine (sequel to The Game -- MADicine is now on its way to the press!) and The Last Quest (sequel to The Last Troubadour, due out in Fall 08. I beg you to be patient!



  The Last Troubadour: Song of Montsegur 



Meanwhile for Bane fans, here's a sneak peak at MADicine. Bane is at his satirical and sarcastic best as he heads up a new UN agency with the unfortunate acronym of WART. Think of it as The Bourne Identity meets House M.D., as Bane saves the world with his new "angels" -- a satirical nod to Charlie's Angels of course. MADicine is already buzzing:



"In his follow-up to the excellent The Game (2007), Armstrong takes on a whole new set of challenges....Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways. An ambitious attempt from a writer of abundant talent."Booklist



  MADicine




"Escaping a facility in California, a virus intended to help cure the world of violence unleashes an epidemic of rage infecting every nation on earth. A relief organization with the unfortunate acronym W.A.R.T. is the world's only hope of salvation. Enter Alban Bane, an acerbic, outrageous detective, and his new partner, Dr. Ada Kenner of the Center for Disease Control, who detects a pattern in the mysterious pockets of rage. The unlikely duo chase the virus from Los Angeles to France, Hong Kong, and Africa in a global race against time in the company of a ragtag cast of allies and enemies. This robust adventure satirizes medical thrillers and zombie stories in one suspenseful sweep, delivering equal measures of satire, thrills, suspense, and comedy."
IPG



HAPPY NEW YEAR!




Saturday, December 29, 2007

Hot Fiction for Winter from Kunati Books

Click on any cover to learn more or on the heading to see more features!



Critics Picks

small troubadour Mothering Mother smallwomen








Critics Love Our Spring 08



Miracle SmallBathtub smallUnholy Small

"A Treat" "Hilarious." "Visionary"





Critically Acclaimed Thrillers





Madicine smallHunting SmallThe Game Small



"Innovative" "Stunning" "Hugely cinematic"



Popular Fiction

bang small secret smallWhale small

"Brilliant" "Adventure" "A hit"





Starred Crime and Mystery



truth small Rabid smallshadow small


"Enticing" "Starred Review" "Page-turner!"







Reviewers say "Hilarious!"



Recycling small On Ice small Toonamint small


"Relentlessly Funny" "Infectious" "Slapstick fun"



More Spring 08

Janeology smallBelly SmallMadicine small


Monday, November 26, 2007

Gun Crime— View Guest Crime Writer Richard Cahill

The Crime Line: A writer of crime novels blogs on real crime. Why not? Fiction is merely the tribute art pays to the ineffably fissured weirdness of reality.



The developing story here in Pennsylvania is that the Philadelphia police force is getting shot up like the French Navy. Five cops shot since September, with one fatality, but that being a particularly gruesome one caught on security tape.

    Spates of gun violence in Philly are nothing new…the town had the highest murder rate among big cities in the nation in 2006 and is on a pace to outdo that this year, but since most of that violence is what local quarterback Donovan McNabb would describe as "black on black crime," the Pennsylvania Legislature, dominated by representatives from white, upstate PA (sometimes described as "Baja West Virginia") are not inclined to do much about it, being much more concerned about the National Rifle Association's election endorsements than they are about bullets flying around the hood.

    With cops getting shot, however, the politicians are being galvanized into action. Four bills were introduced that might have an effect on gun violence in the Big Cheesesteak. One would force people to report lost or stolen handguns, another would allow local municipalities to enact their own gun laws, a third would prohibit Pennsylvanians from purchasing more than one handgun a month, and the final one would impose a mandatory twenty-year sentence on anyone who shoots at a police officer.

    Our own beloved Governor Ed Rendell, a former mayor in Philly and the nation's most popular slightly obese state politician (Actual observed bumper sticker-"Our Governor Can Eat More Than Your Governor") went to the Legislature himself to plead for these bills to be released from committee, with mixed results. PA's politicos wrapped themselves in the Second Amendment and declared that:



    Forcing people to actually report lost or stolen handguns would place an unconstitutional burden on them, so that when a gun you bought turns up in a crack house in North Philly, you can still declare comfortably "Jeez, Your Honor, I must have misplaced that gol-durn thing."



    Letting Philadelphia enact its own gun legislation, so that Philadelphia police could actually start confiscating the thousands of illegal handguns in the city would be an impermissible intrusion on the rights of state politicians to not pass such laws.



    Limiting Pennsylvanians to the purchase of one handgun each month, or twelve per year, or six for each hand, if you want to put it that way, would seriously infringe on the self-defense rights of the citizens of the state, which can only apparently be assured by unrestricted handgun purchases on every day of the year except Christmas and the Fourth of July.



The last bill, mandating a twenty-year sentence for anyone shooting at a cop, assumes that someone pointing a weapon at a police officer, an individual in what could minimally be described as a high-stress mindset, will  (1) pause to think about the extra twenty years in prison shooting at the cop will earn him and (2) plan to miss, in order to just get the twenty years instead of the life sentence hitting the cop will get him. It doesn't take a psychic to predict that this law will not prevent a single cop from being shot at. It will however, someday earn a twenty-year sentence for some guy whose door gets broken down in the middle of the night by a SWAT team with the wrong address and who is dumb or disoriented enough to take a shot at them, and lucky enough to live afterwards.

    

This useless legislation will be passed with alacrity. Big Ed will sign it (what other choice does he have? To be in favor of shooting cops?) and the members of the Legislature will congratulate themselves for addressing the problem of cop shootings with such fervor that an impartial observer might think that prior to their acting, it was legal to shoot at police officers in Pennsylvania.



Richard Cahill is the  author of the extraordinarily fresh new "crime novel" Truth or Bare, from Kunati Books (9781601640161).

 


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"Cahill has introduced an enticing character in Speed; he’s flawed, funny, and apparently hell-bent on making sure his life never goes completely right. Let’s hope this debut novel isn’t the last we hear from him." — Booklist Magazine, Mary Frances Wilkens


Copyright, Richard Cahill.


Guest Posted by Derek Armstrong, Author of The Game and The Last Troubadour. 


Friday, November 23, 2007

Kunati Featured in Quill and Quire Magazine

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketQuill & Quire Features Kunati

"Thinking Big — Kunati Books offers a commercial edge — and strong ambitions... What would a publishing house be like if the marketing department ran the company? Kunati Books isn't exactly that, but it's close.... all good numbers for a small press, even for a medium-sized press..." More here...





Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketThree more reviews for Armstrong's The Last Troubadour, one more for The Game



"The 13th-century French inquisition...provide a backdrop for Armstrong's action-packed second novel..."— Publishers Weekly



"...brings symbols of the Tarot to life through medieval characters to create a richly textured historical fantasy that is suspenseful, humorous, and tragic."— Tampa Bay Magazine



"...blends history and fantasy to create a rollicking good tale of love and intrigue...." — In The Hills

Read Full Reviews here.






Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketBestselling author Piers Anthony endorses Dan Ronco's new book Unholy Domain



"Another fast-action story of vicious extremes, as a powerful religious cult takes on a sophisticated tech outfit. Each means to destroy the other and rule the world, and neither is scrupulous about the means. The protagonist is caught precariously between the two. Top rate adventure sparkling with ideas."



Piers Anthony — author of dozens upon dozens of fantastic sci-fi fiction.




Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket Author Cheryl Kaye Tardif sponsors Love of Reading!



"The Love of Reading.com Online Book Fair is off to a great start. Join me, plus other authors, avid readers, publishers, publicists, media contacts and more at: Love of Reading.

Read about her sponsorship on CNN.com


Whale Song was also recently reviewed at But You Don't Look Sick? magazine. Reviewer Christine Miserandino says, "I love books that are a quick read, but don't feel "short"...The story keeps you interested and turning pages." Review here.






Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketCarol "Tells All" on CNN


Carol O'Dell, popular author of Mothering Mother, brings refreshing humor, expertise and hope to the issue of caregiving for elders and chronically ill on CNN and Fox TV. Read more on Films and Books Magazine. Download a PDF press kit, complete with interview and excerpt of her book here.







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Art Tirrell's "The Secret Ever Keeps" a Hit on Book Channel




"Fantastic book. You won't be sorry." Lake Ontario Sailing

"Brilliant underwater scenes. Tremendous suspense."

"Mysteries unfurl with grace."

"Intriguing and complex."

Read more here.





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"Women of Magdalene" Featured Cover Story Review




Women of Magdalene was chosen as the "lead review" and featured review in Foreword: "...a brilliant example of the best historical fiction can do: illuminate the past not as it really, truly was, but as we imagine it to be, in order to better understand our own motives, desires, and prejudices."



At the same time, The Houston Chronicle profiled Rosemary Poole-Carter as an author "who sheds light on women's issues." The News Star reviewed her magnificent historical novel as "La Perfect Historical. Read more reviews....






Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketLibrary Journal on The Last Troubadour "Recommended for all."


The Last Troubadour is a "bestseller" in various library systems, listed as number one with several public libraries for "bookings" after this marvelous Library Journal Review



"Tales about the Inquisition are not supposed to be amusing and entertaining, but Armstrong (The Game) manages to make them just that while keeping historical integrity... recommended for all." — Library Journal Review


Read More Reviews.

Friday, November 09, 2007

Publishers Weekly Reviews The Last Troubadour; "Action-packed"

From Publishers Weekly:

The Last Troubadour: Song of Montsegur
Derek Armstrong. Kunati, $24.95 (384p) ISBN 9781601640109

The 13th-century French inquisition that targeted the heretical Cathar sect provides the backdrop for Armstrong’'s action-packed second novel (after The Game), the first in a planned trilogy. Ramon, “last of the Occitan’s famous heretical troubadours,” and his motley band of allies take on the forces of evil as personified in the witch-hunter known as the Diableteur, whose scarred and burnt face strikes terror in those who behold him. The Diableteur was responsible for the burning at the stake of Ramon’s mother decades earlier, and the minstrel’s desire for revenge remains strong.

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From Library Journal:

A handsome troubadour with a beguiling voice leads an astonishing escape heist aided by a witch, a saint, and a couple of knights, monks, and other assorted characters both great and humble. The setting is southern France, the year, 1241. Tales about the Inquisition are not supposed to be amusing and entertaining, but Armstrong (The Game) manages to make them just that while keeping historical integrity mostly intact, if making free use of real and folkloric events alike. The fortified city of Carcassonne-also the location for Kate Mosse's Labyrinth-is held by bickering secular and religious authority much aggravated by the capture of The Jewel, a symbolic leader of the Cathar heresy. Readers will encounter a surprising amount of detail on medieval life that unfolds at a steady pace until the impossible rescue of the Silver Dame at a May Day festival. Two more volumes are on the way, ending at the siege of Montségur. Readers who enjoyed James Patterson and Andrew Gross's The Jester are bound to like this straightforward narrative, and, it should be mentioned, these historical events are a backstory in The Da Vinci Code. Recommended for all public libraries.-

Mary-Kay Bird-Guilliams, Wichita P.L., KS. Copyright Library Journal.
Armstrong, Derek. The Last Troubadour. Kunati, dist. by Independent Publishers Group. (Song of Montségur, Bk. 1). Oct. 2007. c.384p. ISBN 978-1-60164-010-9. $24.95.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

New Forum for Writers, Readers, Publishers, Agents

Deady Prose Magazine — a popular magazine with thousands of subscribers — launched Deadly Prose Forum. I'm so delighted to see the Deadly Prose name growing in popularity. Years ago I started Deadly Prose Critique Group, an online private critique group for published or "soon-to-be-published" authors. Many of the members have gone on to publication and writing careers and although I'm no longer "moderating" the group, I'm so happy the original critique group remains a goldmine of talent and productive critiquing.

The forum was a natural extension. The editor at Deadly Prose Magazine suggested the community and I ended up volunteering to "moderate" until a replacement can be found. It's new, but already it's already a wonderful community. It is open for all fans of commercial fiction, especially readers, writers, publishers, agents, critics and journalists. I hope you'll check out the group and join as one of the "founding members" Please remember it's new. Help to make it a great place for readers to meet writers, writers to meet publishers and agents and all of us to get to know each other.

Check out Deadly Prose Forum!

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Library Journal: "Recommended for all public libraries."

Library Journal Review of The Last Troubadour
"A handsome troubadour with a beguiling voice leads an astonishing escape heist aided by a witch, a saint, and a couple of knights, monks, and other assorted characters both great and humble. The setting is southern France, the year, 1241. Tales about the Inquisition are not supposed to be amusing and entertaining, but Armstrong (The Game) manages to make them just that while keeping historical integrity mostly intact, if making free use of real and folkloric events alike. The fortified city of Carcassonne-also the location for Kate Mosse's Labyrinth-is held by bickering secular and religious authority much aggravated by the capture of The Jewel, a symbolic leader of the Cathar heresy. Readers will encounter a surprising amount of detail on medieval life that unfolds at a steady pace until the impossible rescue of the Silver Dame at a May Day festival. Two more volumes are on the way, ending at the siege of Montségur. Readers who enjoyed James Patterson and Andrew Gross's The Jester are bound to like this straightforward narrative, and, it should be mentioned, these historical events are a backstory in The Da Vinci Code. Recommended for all public libraries."-

Mary-Kay Bird-Guilliams, Wichita P.L., KS

Armstrong, Derek. The Last Troubadour. Kunati, dist. by Independent Publishers Group. (Song of Montségur, Bk. 1). Oct. 2007. c.384p. ISBN 978-1-60164-010-9. $24.95.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Tarot Connections podcast features Derek Armstrong speaking on Tarot Cards and The Last Troubadour novel

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Pictured: Left, Derek Armstrong with his horses Skugga and Bjarta, who became Izzy and Wizzy in The Last Troubadour novel (shown right)


"You were full of juicy tarot information," said Leisa ReFalo, host of the popular podcast on tarotconnection.net and professional Tarot Reader.
What fun. I chatted with Leisa for an hour about my love of Tarot, and — according to Leisa, anyway — I had "no terrible speech habits. I thought you sounded great." Okay, I feel a little better. I'm not Mr. Radio. There's a reason I became an author.

In that quick hour, Leisa squeezed in a lot of Tarot history, a reading from the novel, a bio of all the characters and how they relate to Tarot card trumps, and a whole lot of funky history. I'll just quote from her page, found at : http://tarotconnection.net/episode-59/ (I guess I'm episode 59!) —

"So, is this a clever gimmick? Just an author who thought one day, Hey, this hasn’t been done before? Does he even own a Tarot deck?I did not undertake The Last Troubadour lightly. The entire trilogy was a journey of some 18 years. Carcassonne and the south of France are my old haunts, where I explored the history in depth. An important history.

Nor is Tarot a passing fancy for me. My first deck was a Pixie, bought with part-timer earnings after school back in 1972. I’m obviously much older now, and I still have my Pixie, and some 112 other decks. Current favorites include Thoth (bought in 1974), Kat Black’s Golden, Place’s Buddha Tarot, Carol Herzer’s Illuminated, and a dozen others. I actually almost always have a deck in my pocket.

Why do I weave the mystical and legend with history? Well, why not? It’s fun, isn’t it? But more important, it’s a way of conveying important events that is entertaining and at the same time “real.” What better way for me to personally explore Tarot cards and archetypes and to convey some of what I’ve learned. The journey of the Fool is my favorite aspect of Tarot. It’s actually the plotline of all great epic fiction.

So, one day, two decades ago, I meditated on The FOOL in my very old Pixie (Rider Waite Smith) deck and he came to life. He became Ramon Troubadour. His journey became a novel-journey through the tarot major arcana. I actually named him Ramon, after researching Doctor Illuminatus, otherwise known as Ramon Lull, author of 320 books written at the time of my novel (the thirteenth century). He even had a character in his most famous book, Blanquerna, name Ramon the Fool. Wow.

All of my books have Tarot themes in them, some dark, some light. The Game, my hit thriller features a humorous “fool” character in the always-joking Alban Bane character. He was so popular, fans demanded a sequel, which comes out spring 08 as MADicine. This series is a blend of satire, comedy and thriller – bloody fun, quite literally.

The Last Troubadour and the other two books of the series, The Last Quest and The Last Stand, are “dripping with Tarot themes.” Most of the early fans are tarot-enthusiasts. Nevara, my Magician character, is my “fictional” inventor of Tarot. Each character is a major arcane archetype. And, of course, the epic journey is the archetypal journey of The Fool. To which, I added real history, substantial satire (targeting in particular the latest craze for Holy Grail themes), comedy and adventure – shaken not stirred.

Next year, with any good fortune, you’ll start to see these characters in Troubadour-style imagery as famed artist Kam Wai Yu illustrates the Troubadour Tarot, a dream of mine, to be published by Kunati. I hope you’ll take the journey with me."

Leisa explored why some characters are disfigured and had me read from the most "tarot-oriented" chapter in the book, a scene with my Magician, Nevara, reading from her invented Tarot cards and using them to help the main character Ramon with her magick. What fun.

Here's the synopsis of the book from Leisa's page:

"Ramon Troubadour returns to his devastated home city of Carcassonne to rescue the holy Dame of the Cathars from the flames of the Inquisition. His famous voice and sense of humor help him make new allies in his quest to prevent a bloody crusade.

Only the Dame knows the secret of the holy relic of Montségur. A king will go to war for the relic. A dying pope will kill for it.

Helped by a nameless one-eyed knight, a fighting damsel, a witch and a circus of colorful entertainers on dancing horses, Ramon must stand against a terrifying army led by Death incarnate, complete with archetypal scythe.

Based on the true history of the Inquisition and the legend of the Tarot, The Last Troubadour assembles a magnificent cast right out of the Tarot deck: the Fool, the Magician, The Emperor, The Pope, Death and even The Devil. Don’t miss this tale of knightly valor, Tarot symbolism, tragic history and exciting quests."

A bit of cool history on her page as well. She put up the original 1980's book trailer — the first trailer ever created, by the famous artist Kam Wai Yu — along side my publisher Kunati's latest version 2007. The original one was more Monty Python — I do so love humor — and the new one is more Tarot. I'd be interested in knowing which one people liked better (drop me an email at my website http://www.lasttroubadour.com).

Check it the podcast at http://tarotconnection.net/episode-59/

Saturday, September 29, 2007

TV LESS popular than BOOKS! in Research

Of course, nothing beats the Internet, a fact we've argued for years.

As always, Persona leads in new innovations in these areas, and Internet marketing via our proprietary Blogertize methods have built entire companies on low-cost internet marketing. So, here are some high level findings from a National Persona Syndicated Study covering all states.

Model — Online by invitation, randomized email invitation, sample size 10,800

Accruacy — plus or minus 0.2%, 9 times out of 10

Some High Level Findings

  • BOOKS — 30.6% "Can't live without books" — 23.4% "LOVE books" — 20.9% "Read regularly" totalling 74.9%
  • TV — Only 18.4% "Can't live without TV" — 29% "LOVE TV" — 30.5% "Watch regularly totalling 77.9% but somewhat "less enthusiastic" than the book lovers
  • INTERNET — 36.4% "Can't live without internet" — 23.7% "LOVE Internet surfing" — 22.5% "regularly Internet surf" totalling 82.6%

Good news for Publishers, and for Internet advertisers. It would seem that the Internet is the best way to get the word out on books (perhaps TV programers should advertise on the Internet as well!)

Looking only at the "Can't live without it" ratings:

  • 36.4% for Internet
  • 30.6% for Books
  • 18.4% for TV

Reality Television is not as popular as pundits would have us believe, with only 13.8% responding "Can't live without it."

Popular Online Destinations

  • Amazon.com — 16.3% go often, 13.4% regularly, 44.4% sometimes — again supporting the popularity of books
  • Ebay scores similarly with 18.9% often, 13.5% regularly and 44.8% sometimes
  • Facebook scored lower than expected at 4.5% often, 2.7% regularly and 14.3% sometimes
  • Myspace scored better at 12.3% often, 7.5% regularly, 28.1% sometimes
  • YouTube held on at 8.9% often, 10.8% regularly, 41.4% sometimes
  • Google scored highest, of course, at 39.6% often, 17.8% regularly and 34.5% sometimes
Watch for more on this landmark study in future posts or at Persona Corp's Persona Think Tank Page.




Blogertize Creates Fans and Sells Books
Kunati Books has long been an advocate of Blog publicity, Blogertizing as Persona Corp. calls in in their trademarked system.
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An excellent case study from Kunati: the recent release The Last Troubadour. By carefully speaking to particular audiences — in this case historical novel fans and Tarot fans (estimated at 50 million in North America) — and using only blogs, journals, forums and online trailers (see bottom) to promote the book, author Derek Armstrong turned the epic into a hit, with foreign rights and movie rights pending, and an amazingly loyal fan club:

FAN MAIL:


"I'm a big fan!" C. Gerus

"This is the best book I've read. I mean the best ever." Jenine

"I sat down to savor. I gobbled it up in one weekend. Amazing." D. Carus

"Magnificent. Wise. Bawdy. Funny. Exciting. Tarot. What more could anyone ask?" Wise Tarot Magazine

"Don't miss this book! Derek Armstrong, get writing!! I'm ready for the sequels to this book. Very well written, engrossing, and just enough humor to balance the rather graphic description of people burning at the stake. I heartily concur with the jacket: "An author to watch"... and worth waiting for, although I want them NOW!! Great history, wonderful characterizations. So, Derek, are you ready to publish the next two books yet? This avid fan is very eagerly, but not so patiently, waiting." S Otis

"Wow!" S Fastow

"My only regret, next fall is a long time to wait for the sequel! I'm telling everyone to read!" E. McGee

"My only complaint is the ending. I didn't want it to end." B Cunningham

"I can't wait for the second book." M. Ross

"The Last Troubadour was amazing!" Ana

"Life is myth and archetypes and Armstrong depicts both with brilliance." K Harrington

"I love The Last Troubadour. It's thrilling!" S. Francis

"The Inquisition, a crusade, tarot, Cathars? I'm in! As soon as I found there was a quest for a holy relic, I was hooked, and stayed hooked until the conclusion." D. Diotalevi

"I really enjoyed it! More, please." Leslie

"if you're smart you'll get it. And love it." T Sentell

"Is it historical fiction, thriller, epic, romance, adventure, biting satire? All of the above." R Carter

"All the colors of humanity into his characters, among them duty, compassion, and humor." K Harrington

"This novel is like a house on fire. This story moves!" R. Metcalf

"Intriguing!" C Hawkes

"I have just had the enormous luck of having "The Last Troubadour - Song of Montsegur", by Derek Armstrong, cross my path. The key to this book ... at least in the eyes of most Tarotists, is that Armstrong has chosen to model his major characters after Tarot archetypes. His writing is superb, and his characters full blooded people, not two dimensional works of art on paper.

The setting for the novel is 13th century Europe, in the city of Carcassonne. The plot is one of cunning and intrigue. Part humor, history, part mystery, this rowdy, bawdy book is a marvelous read! "Bonnie

Comments from one of the biggest Tarot Forums online:
"Put this on your wish list for Christmas!"
"I loved your book!"
"My favorite character is Death. It helped me visualize the card. The whole novel is like a journey through the Tarot. Thank you."
"My only criticism is your Devil character. I have to wait for book two for the Devil? I loved it."
"Reading your book helped me overcome a block in designing my own deck. Your archetypes are perfect!"

Oh, from the mainstream reviewers:

• "...brilliance in which Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways."

— David Pitt, Booklist Magazine

• "The Last Troubadour is a must read, a sizzling blend of satire, adventure, historical romance and comedy. The tarot-based characters are inspired. This is definitely an author to watch."

Films & Books Magazine

• "Kudos to Derek Armstrong ... this is a wonderful work of art, and I highly recommend it to all who are interested in the Tarot, in the history of the 13th century, and in a mystery that crosses many boundaries!"

–Bonnie Cehovet, TE, Aeclectic Tarot Book Review

Kunati's famous novel trailers (invented by Kunati's creative director in the 1980s) is another online tactic that drives massive traffic, sales and fans. Here's The trailer for The last Troubadour:

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Hey, The Last Troubadour has a Fan Club!

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Part one of The Last Troubadour Fan Club!
Way to go, Ramon Troubadour!

"I'm a big fan!" C. Gerus

"This is the best book I've read. I mean the best ever." Jenine

"I sat down to savor. I gobbled it up in one weekend. Amazing." D. Carus

"Magnificent. Wise. Bawdy. Funny. Exciting. Tarot. What more could anyone ask?" Wise Tarot Magazine

"Don't miss this book! Derek Armstrong, get writing!! I'm ready for the sequels to this book. Very well written, engrossing, and just enough humor to balance the rather graphic description of people burning at the stake. I heartily concur with the jacket: "An author to watch"... and worth waiting for, although I want them NOW!! Great history, wonderful characterizations. So, Derek, are you ready to publish the next two books yet? This avid fan is very eagerly, but not so patiently, waiting." S Otis

"Wow!" S Fastow

"My only regret, next fall is a long time to wait for the sequel! I'm telling everyone to read!" E. McGee

"My only complaint is the ending. I didn't want it to end." B Cunningham

"I can't wait for the second book." M. Ross

"The Last Troubadour was amazing!" Ana

"Life is myth and archetypes and Armstrong depicts both with brilliance." K Harrington

"I love The Last Troubadour. It's thrilling!" S. Francis

"The Inquisition, a crusade, tarot, Cathars? I'm in! As soon as I found there was a quest for a holy relic, I was hooked, and stayed hooked until the conclusion." D. Diotalevi

"I really enjoyed it! More, please." Leslie

"if you're smart you'll get it. And love it." T Sentell

"Is it historical fiction, thriller, epic, romance, adventure, biting satire? All of the above." R Carter

"All the colors of humanity into his characters, among them duty, compassion, and humor." K Harrington

"This novel is like a house on fire. This story moves!" R. Metcalf

"Intriguing!" C Hawkes

"I have just had the emormous luck of having "The Last Troubadour - Song of Montsegur", by Derek Armstrong, cross my path. The key to this book ... at least in the eyes of most Tarotists, is that Armstrong has chosen to model his major characters after Tarot archetypes. His writing is superb, and his characters full blooded people, not two dimensional works of art on paper.

The setting for the novel is 13th century Europe, in the city of Carcassonne. The plot is one of cunning and intrigue. Part humor, history, part mystery, this rowdy, bawdy book is a marvelous read! "Bonnie

Comments from one of the biggest Tarot Forums online:
"Put this on your wish list for Christmas!"
"I loved your book!"
"My favorite character is Death. It helped me visualize the card. The whole novel is like a journey through the Tarot. Thank you."
"My only criticism is your Devil character. I have to wait for book two for the Devil? I loved it."
"Reading your book helped me overcome a block in designing my own deck. Your archetypes are perfect!"

Oh, from the mainstream reviewers:

• "...brilliance in which Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways."

— David Pitt, Booklist Magazine

• "The Last Troubadour is a must read, a sizzling blend of satire, adventure, historical romance and comedy. The tarot-based characters are inspired. This is definitely an author to watch."

Films & Books Magazine

• "Kudos to Derek Armstrong ... this is a wonderful work of art, and I highly recommend it to all who are interested in the Tarot, in the history of the 13th century, and in a mystery that crosses many boundaries!"

–Bonnie Cehovet, TE, Aeclectic Tarot Book Review

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Publishing Industry Syndicated Study Online, See Data

One in a series of publication industry syndicated studies, the new Tarot Publishing Survey is an online survey by four publishers including Kunati Books. It's about 20 mutliple choice questions, with some interesting data on entertainment choices and websites. Participants who provide emails gain access to the final data in charted form and ten respondents win $24.95 in books. I think the main reason to go in is it is short and sweet, and the data we get to see at the end.

Anyway, I posted a link to the survey on my own website at the top right under the search box.

Best, Derek Armstrong
Author The Last Troubadour
http://www.lasttroubadour.com
"...brilliance in which Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways."
— David Pitt, Booklist Magazine

"The Last Troubadour is a must read, a sizzling blend of satire, adventure, historical romance and comedy. The tarot-based characters are inspired. This is definitely an author to watch."
— Films & Books Magazine

"Kudos to Derek Armstrong ... this is a wonderful work of art, and I highly recommend it to all who are interested in the Tarot, in the history of the 13th century, and in a mystery that crosses many boundaries!"
–Bonnie Cehovet, TE
Aeclectic Tarot Book Review

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Deadly Prose Author "Brilliance" Write Critics

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My latest novel is generating quite a sensation both in literary circles and in the "Tarot" community. This was somewhat deliberate on my part. I've been a "Tarot journeyer" for 35 years, since I picked up my first deck, a Waite-Smith Pixie deck in 1972. The Tarot is, perhaps, the richest source of visual archetypes, and appeals to creative people, generally, although I was never sure if a mainstream novel would appeal to broad audiences if deliberately flouting its Tarot-roots. Films and Books review seems to put that doubt to rest:

"The tarot-themed characters are inspired. An author to watch."Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Statistics were on my side as well:
• 1.7 million tarot decks sold in the last year (Nielsen Bookscan stats)
• 50 million (estimated) Tarot fans worldwide (Wise Tarot Magazine)

My novel, The Last Troubadour is the first in a trilogy of historical epics focused on the founding of the Inquisition, a quest for a Holy Relic, the Cathar Crusades, and the history of the Tarot. Reviews have been stunning:

"Brilliance in which Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways. A writer of abundant talent."
Booklist, David Pit

"Derek Armstrong is good." Michael Korda, editor in chief emeritus, Simon & Schuster

Ultimately, I wrote The Last Troubadour out of my thirty-five year passion for all things Medieval, Cathars -- and the Tarot. The Last Troubadour is first and foremost an epic fiction adventure and the quest of the hero.

"Kudos to Derek Armstrong ... this is a wonderful work of art, and I highly recommend it to all who are interested in the Tarot, in the history of the 13th century, and in a mystery that crosses many boundaries!" Bonnie Cehovet, Aeclectic Tarot Reviewer

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Although The Last Troubadour is certainly mainstream as an adventure — an epic story based on real history that reshaped our entire world in the Middle Ages — I'm focusing most of my "reach-out" to the Tarot Community. Although there have been books focused on tarot-themes, they've been sporadic and certainly not enough to fulfill my own "lust" for Tarot fiction. The sequels to The Last TroubadourThe Last Quest due out Fall 08 from Kunati and The Last Stand in 09 — will continue my Tarot themes.

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My new thriller, a sequel to the popular The Game — a satirical comedic thriller that "bashed reality TV" — has Bane partnered up with a new character who reads Tarot cards to help solve crimes, due out in March 08. The book, MADicine, should satisfy fans who crave more of the sarcastic and funny Alban Bane (modeled on my real-life Scot mother Anna Kane) with more Tarot adventuring. I suppose I've found my two niches:

"Armstrong blends comedy, parody, and adventure in genuinely innovative ways." Booklist
"The Tarot-themed characters are inspired." Films and Books.

I plan to continue my "tradition" of blending satire, comedy, adventure, suspense and Tarot in most of my future projects. In fact, Kunati Books plans to published a tie-in Troubadour Tarot Deck in 2008 to celebrate. It will be illustrated by famous illustrator Kam Wai Yu who designs all of Kunati's incredible book covers and has hundreds of International Creative Awards to his credit.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

The Last Troubadour Wows Critics

Eighteen years in the making, The Last Troubadour is already earning wow's from critics. Booklist described the prose as "near brilliance, in which Armstrong blends comedy, parody and adventure in genuinely innovative ways." Films and Books magazine described it as a "must read." Some readers have described it as a cross-genre blend of The Lord of the Rings with a modern-day thriller. Others take away a high sense of satire and "parody." All agree, as described by Booklist, "immensely readable" and "genuinely innovative."

Critics are focusing on Armstrong's unique prose style, which they first identified in reviews of his 07 "reality TV" thriller-satire-mystery-comedy The Game. Booklist called him an "author to watch" and Publishers Weekly as "promising." All agree Armstrong is unique.

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In The Last Troubadour, Ramon Troubadour returns to his devastated home city of Carcassonne to rescue the holy Dame of the Cathars from the flames of the Inquisition. At stake is the entire future of the Catholic Church. His famous voice and sense of humor help him make new allies in his quest to prevent a bloody crusade that will devastate Europe. Only the Dame knows the secret of the holy relic of Montségur. A king will go to war for the relic. A dying pope will kill for it.

Helped by a nameless one-eyed knight, a fighting damsel, a witch and a circus of colorful entertainers on dancing horses, Ramon must stand against a terrifying army led by Death incarnate, complete with archetypal scythe. The characters are "over-the-top wonderful" and "comic, sometimes comic book" and the dialogue is comedic, complimenting a "complex story" (Booklist)

Based on the true history of the Inquisition and the legend of the Tarot, The Last Troubadour assembles a magnificent cast right out of the Tarot deck: the Fool, the Magician, The Emperor, The Pope, Death and even The Devil. Don’t miss this tale of knightly valor, Tarot symbolism, tragic history and exciting quests.

Advance sales have been extraordinary, due in large measure to fans of The Game and buzz in the tarot community. "Finally, a book based on tarot imagery," one member of the a 100,000 member tarot forum wrote.

The Last Troubadour
will appeal to all ages, from youth to adult, a blend of "comedy, adventure and satire." (Booklist)



Saturday, July 28, 2007

Tarot History in An Historical Epic Adventure?

My historical epic historical adventure, three books in the Song of Montségur epic—book one THE LAST TROUBADOUR--finally releases this fall from Kunati after 18 years of research, multiple publisher offers and a considerable buzz. Song of Montségur has history, too. Kam Wai Yu invented the animated novel trailer, the first book video (click here to play the eighties original -- then here to play the revised 2007 version!), back in the eighties for this epic adventure. It's a classic!

Play the "haunting" trailer:


Why the buzz? Well, aside from grand adventure, knights templars, Holy relics, holy wars, burning pagans and heretics, genuine acts of heroism and historical treasures, we have — perhaps for the first time in this fun format — a history of the Tarot told through colorful characters and events. Since I posted this on various tarot forums, advance orders of The Last Troubadour have skyrocketed. (Please, advance orders yours now!)

This is an excerpt from the introduction to The Last Troubadour, first of the books in the trilogy:

Song of Montségur recalls the rise of the brutal monastic Inquisition in the South of France, an epic story of heroes and villains of the 13th century. Rather than spin a dark tale of glory and death, I fancifully retell these momentous
vents with your reading pleasure as my goal: two cups adventure, a pound of real history, a large dollop of humor, a dash of tragedy and hopefully enough mystical juice to create a buzz, roasted over a fire of heretics and witches. Enjoy!

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From The Silver Dame of Montségur to the terrible witchhunter Diableteur, all of my larger-than-life characters are drawn from history. Many legends (and half-baked histories) associate the development of the Tarot cards with the Cathar heresies and this period in history. In The Last Troubadour, you will meet my “inventor” of the first tarot deck, Nevara of the Baug Balar “circus” and the characters from history that inspired her deck. Although we know the full decks appeared around this time—the four-suited Turuq came earlier—associating Nevara with major trumps of the Tarot is pure imagination. All major characters and events are historical, fancifully dressed up here with Tarot attributions:

The Fool
Ramon, last of the Occitan’s famous heretical troubadours

The Magus
Nevara, the albino pagan sorceress of the Baug Balar “circus”

The Priestess

Dame Esclarmonde de Foix, the High Lady of the Cathar Christians


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The Empress
Magba, the ever-pregnant mother of the Baug Balar entertainers

The Emperor

Hugh d’Arcis, conquering Viscount of Carcassonne

The Hierophant (Pope)
Cardinal Sinibaldo Fiesco, the future Pope Innocent IV

The Lovers

The Grand Duo, the famous rebels Doré the bastard and Osric the hammer

The Chariot

Arnot, the disenfranchised Templar

Justice (Adjustment)

Perce de Mendes, too-loyal squire of the famous Cyclops Seigneur

The Hermit

Guilhem d’Alions, the ancient Perfectus of the Cathars

Fortune

Adelais, the rebellious daughter of the conquering Viscount of Carcassonne

Strength (Lust)

Seigneur, the “Cyclops” one-eyed crusader

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The Hanged Man
The suicidal Dominican monk, Brother Jaie

Death

The Diableteur, feared witch-hunter

The Devil


Archbishop Peter Amiel of Narbonne, worldly leader of the crusaders


Find out more!
Advance orders, please.

Friday, December 29, 2006

Don't miss the new Deadly Prose Community

Deadly Prose Community at www.deadlyprose.com
Deadly Prose remains unique in its unique pursuit of growing a social community of novelists and their readers. In the Deadly Prose Community novelists work with other novelists in our private critiques. Our international magazine connects readers, reviewers, publishers, agents and their novelists. We focus exclusively on commercial. Navigate the links below...

A magazine with a unique focus on commercial novels and speaking to all novel fans: authors, readers, fans, agents, publishers, reviewers.
Novelists working with other novelists: expert authors critiquing fellow authors in exchange for goodwill, support and community
Novelists working with their readers: what do readers want to read next, what interests them? Here, our novel members listen.
Readers meeting readers: the next big read, what's hip and controversial and provocative.
Full novel critiques in total privacy for exchanged credits with other novelists who are either published or ready-to-be-published.
• Novelists meeting agents and publishers in a forum environment.
Readers, novelists, agents and publishers writing peer reviews.
Blogs and profiles of our critique members to help them connect with readers, agents, publishers and reviewers

Enjoy Deadly Prose

Our members include published novelists, readers, reviewers, editors of other magazines, editors of book publishing companies, publishers, agents. Deadly Prose is where it all comes together.

Fiction to die for. TM


Friday, April 14, 2006

Deadly Prose Authors Release Novels

Deadly Prose critique group members released multiple titles with various publishers this month. Mystery writer Pat Brown released L.A. Heat from Alyson Books. Vicki Delany released a new mystery from Poisoned Pen Press and a paperback of her previous title! Derek Armstrong's The Last Troubadour is announced as forthcoming from Kunati Books (www.kunati.com). Congratulations to very talented authors -- just three of the many talented author voices in the Deadly Prose Group!

Vicki Delany, Burden of Memory (Poisoned Pen Press)
Elaine Benson – divorced, broke, out of work – arrives at Muskoka’s Millionaires’ Row to help elderly Moira Madison write her memoirs, most specifically of her years with the Canadian Army Nursing Sisters in World War II. Settling into the family “cottage” and the remains of a lifestyle long gone, Elaine reconnects with her love of researching the past. But the past is to be found in more than old boxes and musty letters, and Elaine discovers that memories can kill. “One of Canada’s most promising new practitioners of the crime genre.” – Dick Adler, Chicago Tribune

P.A. Brown, L.A. Heat (Alyson)
When LAPD detective David Laine first encounters hunky party boy Chris Bellamere, it is to interrogate him about the murder of one of Chris’s many sexual conquests. When Chris’s efforts to prove his own innocence mark him as a victim, David steps in to save him, and finds himself falling in love with a man who might be a brutal murderer. P.A. Brown’s debut is a gritty mystery set in LA’s edgy, less glamorous East Side, where gangs co-mingle with gays, gunfire is heard after dark, and a gay cop like David Laine can live undetected…at least until now.

Vicki Delany, Scare the Light Away (Poisoned Pen Press)
A complex novel interweaving two generations of strong women – an English war bride and her Canadian daughter – into a quilt of old betrayals, modern mystery, and contemporary redemption. “Well-crafted storytelling and an evocative setting make for a rewarding debut from Canadian newcomer Delany.” – Publishers Weekly. “One of Canada’s most promising new practitioners of the crime genre.” – Dick Adler, Chicago Tribune

Derek Armstrong, The Last Troubadour (Kunati.com)
First Song of Montségur
February 2007
In a time of dark despair, in a land of infinite beauty, legend meets history at Montségur. The Last Troubadour is the first book of the Song of Montségur trilogy, the true adentures of Ramon, the last of the troubadours, who uses the magic of his song to rescue the Dame, hope of the Cathars, from the flames of inquisition.

What is the secret of Deadly Prose Critique Circle's success. We are published authors critiqued other authors. Or aspiring authors soon to be published. We critique novels in total, rather than scene or chapters. We work to a very detailed template of topics. And we are a supportive group of very talented people.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/deadlyprose/

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Deadly Prose Novel Critique Circle for serious Mystery Suspense and Thriller Novelists

Modeled on the best of "complete novel" critique groups, Deadly Prose will be a tight group of professional or aspiring professional writers (must have a completed novel and samples of a current novel project to join). Prospective members should be in drafting mode on a publishable work and be willing to exchange critques privately in an Listserv email private group (to facilitate private exchange and help protect ideas and copyright).

Deadly Prose is founded by a best selling author at his own expense to facilitate an exchange of constructive critiques in any category of mystery, suspense or thriller novel length fiction. This is for serious novelists only. The group will view your sample chapter 1 and final chapter of your current work and ask you to critique a sample chapter.

Information will be posted, soon, at www.deadlyprose.com, and on this Blog. Information on the founder is available at www.derekarmstrong.com.