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frozbie

Dragon Lake Events – Murder, Mystery and More…

July 28, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

Cumbernauld Library meet the author

I’ve added an Events page to the website to have one place to promote upcoming events and list any media from previous events. You can just click on the Events option from the above menu.

The big news is of course that Wendy H Jones and Caroline Johnston will be joining me at Cumbernauld Library on 16th September 2017 from 2 till 4 pm for a Meet The Author event. We’re titling the event: Murder, Mystery and More… and it looks to be a fun afternoon.

We’ll have readings from our latest novels: the latest in Wendy’s Crime series – Killer’s Crypt; Caroline’s young adult novel – What If?; and my Christian thriller – Fallen Warriors.

Also, I’ve added links on the Events page to radio interviews I’ve done in recent years along with recordings when I’ve been teaching at my local church.

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Fallen Warriors Tagged With: 100X100, crime, murder, mystery, thriller, YA, young adult

A print ready PDF

July 27, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

When you want to get a physical copy of your book printed there are a number of terms to get your head round: CMYK, spine width, bleed, gutter size, embedded fonts, print ready PDF…

Printers ask for files in certain formats to ensure that what they end up printing is exactly what you wanted.

I’ve avoided this last one for book interiors until today, but decided to do a little digging and find out more.

In case you’re wondering…

CMYK stands for Cyan Magenta Yellow and Black – the colours traditionally used by printers to produce full colour images. Most screen images will be RGB (Red, Green, Blue) and if you send an RGB image to a printer, you might not get a physical image that looks like you expected. Fortunately most image editing software allows you to set the image as either RGB or CMYK and you should always use CMYK for images that are going to be printed.

Spine width won’t require you to visit your doctor – this is the width of your book and you need to know this if producing your own book cover as it will change if you add or remove pages. If you want the book title to be centred on the spine, you need to calculate the spine width when working out the size of your cover image.

Bleed – starting to sound like a murder/mystery right here! Bleed is also related to cover images. Once your book is printed and bound, it will be trimmed to a nice and neat edge. Your image should extend past the Bleed area of the cover (between 3 and 5 mm from each edge – including the spine!) so that if the trim is less than expected, there is no unexpected white space at the edge.

Gutter size. Nope, nothing to do with the amount of water your drains can take advantge of, gutter size is an extra buffer on the spine edge of each page that ensures that the reader can see the whole page easily. Some printers don’t require this, but others do. It is important to check as otherwise your text may look offset on the page.

Embedded Fonts and print ready PDF. I’ve not previously had to worry about this as I used Amazon Createspace to produce Print On Demand (POD) physical copies of The Great Scottish Land Grab, and was able to send them a word document for the book’s interior. (The cover image was designed for me) For my first run of Fallen Warriors I used Book Printing UK who also accepted word documents for the interior.

Ordering my first batch of 100 copies of The Great Scottish Land Grab from Book Printing UK, I hesitated when I saw they initially ask for print ready PDF files.

I use Microsoft Word 10 on a Windows 10 OS and while I frequently use Word to export documents as PDF, I wasn’t sure whether it could produce a “print ready” PDF.

As I wrote above, I decided to do some digging and quickly found this helpful guide: http://www.bookprinting.co.uk/helpinghand.html. At the bottom of the page there is a helpful section: How to create print ready PDF files in Microsoft Word.

Turns out it is fairly simple, ensuring that Options are set to save as ISO 190051 compliant (PDF/A)

And the best thing about it, Book Printing UK gave me a small discount when I ordered my next batch of books as they didn’t have to spend time converting the interior to PDF!

Self-publishing your own books does take time and has a learning curve, but if you’re willing to learn and have the time, it is very rewarding.

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Writing Tagged With: 100X100, bleed, CMYK, embedded fonts, gutter size, paperback book, print ready PDF, printing, self-publishing, spine width

Fallen Warriors is now available in paperback format!

July 26, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

Three boxes arrived today, delivered by a friendly UPS guy. Each containing bundles of carefully wrapped paperback copies of Fallen Warriors!

I’ve been checking online daily, sometimes several times a day, waiting for them to arrive.

It’s been a long road, first getting the ebook version released and then going through another round of formatting and proofing copies – almost four months since the ebook was published till the physical copies arrived.

I’m going to be primarily promoting the paperback edition to bookshops, but if you want to buy a copy directly from me, you can use the contact form to get in touch.

The retail price is £9.99. If you want to order from your bookshop, quote them this ISBN: 978-0-9929883-8-8

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Fallen Warriors, Writing Tagged With: paperback, printing, self-publishing

My first bookshop orders

July 25, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

Ever since I’ve wanted to be a writer, I’ve wanted to see my books for sale in book shops. When I self-published The Great Scottish Land Grab I ran out of money and opted to release it as a physical book through Print On Demand (POD). The main problem with that was the price per unit was way too high to allow me to sell to book shops.

With Fallen Warriors I’ve ordered 100 paperback copies at a price that’s low enough I can make a small profit on each sale, including the book shops discount and postage. I’m not going to get rich from selling physical copies, but it allows me to reach a wider readership than I would otherwise.

I’ve offered Fallen Warriors to three bookshops now and two have so far said they’ll take copies with the other taking a proof copy to review. One of those bookshops – The Shetland Times Bookshop in Lerwick, Shetland – took one copy each of Fallen Warriors and The Great Scottish Land Grab last week when I was up in Shetland so if you want to buy the first paperback copy of Fallen Warriors on sale anywhere, or a copy of The Great Scottish Land Grab, you can do so in Lerwick! And they’ve even ordered more copies of The Great Scottish Land Grab so I now need to urgently order copies to send them. It’s all quite exciting!

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Fallen Warriors, The Great Scottish Land Grab Tagged With: 100X100, book shops, books, self-publishing

Lydia’s Song – an interview with author Katherine Blessan

July 24, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

Just over a week ago I reviewed Lydia’s Song by Katherine Blessan. Today I’m interviewing the author…

Katherine, thanks for joining me here today! What sparked the idea for the novel?

The first time I went to Cambodia in 2006 I was staying with a family in Ratanakiri province and while there, I was resting on a hammock on their porch. A servant was sweeping underneath me and I remember feeling embarrassed by this. Suddenly the essential idea for the plot for Lydia’s Song hit me, almost like divine inspiration. I started the novel at that time, although it was just the beginning and needed a lot of fleshing out from my own experiences in Cambodia together with the research I had to do in order to make it authentic.

I found the NGO descriptions believable and entirely consistent with my own experience. Did you work for an NGO while in Cambodia?

Yes, both times I did. I went to Cambodia initially for 6 months with the organization Cambodia Action to work as a TEFL teacher, and the second time I went for two years and worked for an international school called Logos International under the wing of a Christian NGO called Asian Hope.

I found parts of the story, Song’s experiences as a sex slave, harrowing. How were you able to write this?

It was emotionally difficult, but strangely, this was the part of the novel that I was able to write most quickly as the narrative force of the story was highest at this point so drove me forward.

One of the things that really struck me while reading about Song’s experiences was the banality of the life as a prostitute, that once initially traumatised, it became almost normal. Is this what it is really like for young girls and women?

Whilst I don’t know this for a fact, I can imagine that this is true as psychologically humans do adapt to the most difficult of situations.

I don’t want to give the story away, but there is a point where Song has a chance to escape and she fights against it… Do some girls or women choose to stay where they are if they are offered a chance to escape?

Prostitution is almost always a result of violence or abuse at some point. If women ‘choose’ to remain prostitutes it would usually because financially they see no other way, or if young girls, then because they’re being coerced or manipulated in some way. According to NGO Soroptomist.org “90 percent of prostituted women have been physically abused as children, 74 percent have been sexually abused by a family member, 50 percent have been sexually abused by a non-family member, and 75 percent have drug problems, damaging factors that further remove the “choice” from the equation.” (http://www.soroptimist.org/trafficking/prostitution_faq.html)

Why write a novel about child sex trafficking?

Good question! Because this is the idea that I felt compelled to write. Secondly, to highlight the injustices of this endemic problem.

How much time have you spent in Cambodia?

I was there for 2 and a half years altogether, first with one organization and then, after completing a PGCE in the UK, with the other.

And finally, are you writing another book?

I am indeed, although my second novel has been on hold for a year whilst I’ve been writing a feature length screenplay of Lydia’s Song! – watch this space for developments there. I also write a few short stories in response to competitions and try submitting them to various places – an interesting but not always fruitful task!

Thank you Katherine! Lydia’s Song is available from all good bookshops and also from Amazon on Kindle and in paperback. If you would like to read a sample, you can do so below.

If you enjoy stories that give you insight into another culture, that contain real characters and deliver an emotional kick, then I recommend Lydia’s Song.

About the Author

Katherine tweets @kathblessan
Check out her website at: http://www.katherineblessan.com/

As well as writing, Katherine works as an English and Creative Writing tutor and an Examiner, together with juggling parenting and volunteering in the community. She is married to Blessan – yes, her surname is his first name! – and they travel widely and love to meet new people. Katherine lives with her family in Sheffield, UK.

Other stories by Katherine Blessan include:
• ‘A Heart on Fire’ – a love story inspired by Chariots of Fire. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Heart-Fire-Katherine-Blessan-ebook/dp/B06XD2D2FV
• ‘Travels by Wheelchair’ was shortlisted in a Patrician Press competition in 2016 and published in an anthology. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Refugees-Peacekeepers-Patrician-Press-Anthology-ebook/dp/B01MUG2YIV/
• ‘Beyond her Scream’ – a story of a mother-daughter relationship strained by the effects of FGM. Short Story Beyond Her Scream from cutalongstory.com

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Book Review Tagged With: Cambodia, child sex slavery, Katherine Blessan, Khmer, Lydia's Song, prostitution

Obedience and Reverence

July 23, 2017 by frozbie Leave a Comment

There is a scene [SPOILERS] at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark where the lost Ark of the Covenant is opened. Everyone who looks into it dies in – if I remember correctly – a fairly grotesque manner. Only Indiana Jones has the sense to warn his companion to close their eyes, they both look away and are saved.

A fictional story based on history. As I’ve been reading the first book of Samuel recently, I came across this passage again:

“But God struck down some of the inhabitants of Beth Shemesh, putting seventy of them to death because they looked into the ark of the Lord.” from 1 Samuel 6 NIV

I can imagine many people today reading this for the first time and questioning how a loving God could slaughter seventy “innocent” people, just for looking in a box…

Well, what if the box contained plutonium? What if every person who even touched that radioactive substance contracted cancer and died? Whose fault would it be that those people died? The people who disobeyed a simple command to keep clear of the box, or the God who lovingly warned them to stay away?

Every person in Israel knew what the Ark was – the very throne of God on Earth. They knew they were to stay away, that the punishment for touching the Ark was death, that only the priests had permission to approach the Ark and even they were to be very careful when they did so. There’s a useful summary of the laws surrounding the Ark on Rational Christianity

It seems clear to me that God has given us certain commands for our own protection, but hasn’t always given us reasons why those commands exist. The God who created the universe and designed every living creature on our planet has to be more intelligent and have far more knowledge than we are yet able to comprehend. Quite often, even the most intelligent among us are nothing more than simple infants who have been told: don’t play with fire. We can either choose to be obedient to this command, or we can face the consequences of disobedience.

Yet I don’t think simple obedience is enough when dealing with God. Our curiosity, our doubts, our questions may get the better of us if all we rely on is obedience. I also think we need to develop reverence. The root of reverence appears to be “stand in awe of”

You were created by God. Every cell in your body was designed by him. You are a miracle of creation. One day you will stand before God and will be judged for your actions on this Earth. If you have followed his commands, if you have shown love to the poor and helpless, if you are sealed with God’s Holy Spirit, you will be welcomed into a second life on a renewed Earth where “There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain”. Or you will be cast outside into darkness…

Your creator has the power to offer you life or death. I think he deserves our respect, our obedience, our reverence.

Filed Under: 100 Words 100 Days, Jesus Tagged With: 100X100, creation, Indiana Jones, second life, The Raiders of the Lost Ark

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My 100 Goals Blog

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    February 22, 2025
  • Q2 Halfway point

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    The 12 Week Year – a first quarter review

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    Double Your Salary …Without losing your soul!

    June 25, 2019
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    40K

    June 15, 2019

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