Browse, sample and discover hundreds of ebooks for the Sony ebook Reader. Click to Smashwords to make your purchase.
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"Alone" | by Rolly A. Chabot Oct. 08, 2011 | $6.25 | 19871 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: The writer has lived throughout the Canadian north. My travels have taken me into some of the most remote and isolated regions a man can find himself. I have a great respect for nature and all she offers. I have many pastimes and they all centre around the outdoors. Fly fishing, hiking, photography or simply sitting alone in a place where a man can be surrounded with the quiet. I have written a series of seven books called "Quiet Reflections" in an ebook format available at Amazon under my name. |
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"Brotherhood of the Rejected Screenplay" | by Chris Braun May 16, 2011 | $3.99 | 34876 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: NYU, Writer, US Navy, Advertising Sales, Chris Braun Creative Ad Agency |
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"Hill Fires" | by Rolly A. Chabot Oct. 08, 2011 | $6.25 | 31093 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: The writer has lived throughout the Canadian north. My travels have taken me into some of the most remote and isolated regions a man can find himself. I have a great respect for nature and all she offers. I have many pastimes and they all centre around the outdoors. Fly fishing, hiking, photography or simply sitting alone in a place where a man can be surrounded with the quiet. I have written a series of seven books called "Quiet Reflections" in an ebook format available at Amazon under my name. |
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"Normal" MAYDAY | by Ron Berger Dec. 28, 2009 | $9.95 | 23565 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: I was an air traffic controller in the USAF. Spent 41 years in the construction industry. Ended up as an Architect. Authored twelve books - "The House That Ron Built", "Are You Being Served Yet?", "P-NUT, The Love of a Dog","Normal' MAYDAY","Time for TEA", "Growing Old is a FULL-TIME JOB", "Time for MORE TEA" and "Time for STILL MORE TEA". "One Candle at a Timeâ€, “Looking @ things in generalâ€, “The Real Changeâ€, and “Back to Basicsâ€. |
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"So, Why Have You Never Been Married?": A Memoir of Love, Loss and Lunacy | by Alan Stransman Jan. 21, 2012 | $8.97 | 153406 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: Alan Stransman is the author of two book: "Don't Let Your Dream Business Turn Into a Nightmare: A Cautionary Tale for Would-Be Entrepreneurs" and "So, Why Have You Never Been Married?: A Memoir of Love, Loss and Lunacy", the former of which has been taught in entrepreneurship programs at the university level. Alan Stransman is a former television writer/producer/director, the creator of the television series "Spectacular Spas", which was broadcast in over 50 countries worldwide, and the Founder of one of the first day spas in the world for men, called The Men's PowerSpa. |
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"The Other Side of Alzheimer's, a caregiver's story" | by Marietta Harris Oct. 31, 2011 | $2.99 | 40679 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: An accomplished musician, vocalist, composer, author and an outstanding motivational speaker Marietta A. Harris is a native San Franciscan who has traveled the globe. She has lived in Europe but now resides back in the Bay Area. Most recently, Ms. Harris returned from a European tour where the Alzheimer’s Association in Carpi, Italy invited her to share her story with families who are now care givers. Her message was well received. You will be encouraged as you read her story. After working for 37 years she is now retired. Now she is devoting her time to writing and helping others. Her book is currently available at Google, Amazon.com,Amazon UK, kindle, Lulu.com and through her website at: www.mariettaharris.com. The audio version of this book will be available in December 2011. |
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"The Quiet" | by Rolly A. Chabot Oct. 07, 2011 | $6.25 | 20769 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: The writer has lived throughout the Canadian north. My travels have taken me into some of the most remote and isolated regions a man can find himself. I have a great respect for nature and all she offers. I have many pastimes and they all centre around the outdoors. Fly fishing, hiking, photography or simply sitting alone in a place where a man can be surrounded with the quiet. I have written a series of seven books called "Quiet Reflections" in an ebook format available at Amazon under my name. |
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'Buddhish': The Unfeeling Doctor's Freefall into Buddhism, Grief and Grace | by Melissa Yuan-Innes Dec. 09, 2011 | $5.99 | 40340 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Melissa Yuan-Innes is an emergency room doctor and writer who lives with her husband, one son, one daughter, two cows, and too many mosquitoes outside of Montreal, Canada. She writes thrillers and science fiction/fantasy under Melissa Yuan-Innes, mysteries under the name Melissa Yi, romance under Melissa Yin, and children's/YA under Melissa Yuan. "Mixing mystery in with sheer humanity and splendid characterization, Yuan-Innes's story is a delight." --Alicia Curtis, A&E Editor, The Stormy Petrel "Melissa Yuan-Innes delivers a Bradburyian shocker" --Paul Di Filippo, Asimov's "Yuan-Innes employs a fresh use of language to spin a storyline that is at once universally familiar and intriguingly original." --Brian Agincourt Massey, judge of the 2008 Innermoonlit Award for Best First Chapter of a Novel, in awarding first prize to _The Popcorn Girl Meets Darwin Jones_ |
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(2004/11: Phil Duse versus the Tyranny of DoD/DOJ) and its Intelligence and Investigative Agencies | by Phillip Duse Sr. Dec. 30, 2010 | $9.99 | 92702 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: The author is a native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and a U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer (CW2) Retired. He traveled extensively throughout the U.S. Europe and Asia, and attended five universities during off duty hours State side and during overseas assignments. The effort earned in excess of 100 credit hours resulting in the award of an AA degree from the "University of Maryland" European Division. After retiring from the US Army, his initial civilian employment was as a logistical supervisor with "Bendix Field Engineering" outside of Baltimore Md. Then he held a Government position, Property Administrator with the Defense Logistics Agency's Contract Management Command, Silver Springs, Md. Next assignment was with the US Navy's Naval Air Systems Command, VA, where he served as the senior Property Manager. Then he returned to the Defense Logistics Agency's Contract Management Command employed in the "Special contract [Black Box] office, retiring from Government employment in 1997. He continued his writing education through completion of courses offered by the "Institute of Children's Literature" and a Free Lance Writing Course offered by "Hardcourt Learning Direct" before publishing his first book "Phil Duse Versus the Tyranny of DOD/DOJ and its Intelligence and Investigative Agencies". He has written or contributed to authorship of several logistics related manuals, published by the Department of Defense. He is also the author of "EEOC: The Real Deal" (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) and "New Short Stories and Three Hand Pinochle" before authoring this book "False Color of Authority" all published by Xlibris. Phillip Duse is the author of "EEOC: The Real Deal - Do They Really Support Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act?, "False Color of Authority - Government Hit Men" and "US Government Quacks and Dolts - Engaging in Defamation/Entrapment Strategies to Get Phil Duse." |
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(Re)MAKING LOVE: a sex after sixty story | by Mary L. Tabor July 13, 2011 | $7.99 | 59527 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Mary L. Tabor is the author of The Woman Who Never Cooked, which won Mid-List Press’s First Series Award and was published when she was 60. Her short stories have won numerous literary awards. Her experience spans the worlds of journalism, business, education, fiction and memoir writing. She was a high school English teacher who joined the business world, leaving her corporate job when she was 50 to earn an MFA degree. She teaches at George Washington University, works with less-privileged populations at the D.C. library on how to get started writing, and is a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow. She lives in the Penn Quarter in downtown D.C. |
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.... And There Were Cracks ... | by Alice B. Frieh June 14, 2011 | Free! | 17560 words | Read a sample |
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.... at last! | by Tim Roux April 24, 2010 | $0.99 | 41884 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: Born near Hull in the UK in 1954, Tim Roux was called to the Bar as a lawyer before working for over 20 years in business strategy and strategic brand marketing for a major multinational corporation. With degrees in both law and social sciences/psychology, and having worked as a volunteer for Amnesty International for several years, he is fascinated by the complex issues surrounding personal rights (human, civil and animal), and much of his writing is centred on these themes. |
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100 Days of Fantasy | by Ty Johnston Oct. 04, 2011 | $0.99 | 40082 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Ty Johnston is a fiction author and former newspaper journalist. Most of his writing is in the fantasy and horror genres, but he has been known to dip his pen into the literary fountains from time to time. When not busy writing or reading, he enjoys spending time with his wife, their beagle and house rabbits on their crazy travels across the U.S. |
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12 Months of Trying: My Submissions for a Calendar Year | by Gayle Francis Moffet Aug. 25, 2011 | $2.99 | 11002 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Gayle Francis Moffet writes essays, short stories, plays, novels, and poetry. She is currently writing her second novel, which she thinks was supposed to be her first novel. Recently, she and her husband moved to Portland, Oregon, which is a whole new experience from Yellville, Arkansas (where she grew up) and Springfield, Missouri (where she went to college). She is currently working on a Master's Degree in Professional/Technical Writing. She has been published at DailyLove.net and WeirdYear.com. She has also been published in The Battered Suitcase and The Hobble Creek Review. |
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2001: A Big Nutter Oddity | by Mike Sharpe Oct. 21, 2009 | Free! | 12875 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: Rookie Writer, Podcaster, wanna Be Novelist. At least here is a step in the right direction. |
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2009's Hot Authors: Interviews by Aggie Villanueva | by Aggie Villanueva Dec. 08, 2009 | $7.97 | 32189 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Visual Arts Junction: http://www.visualartsjunction.com Writing since the late 70', Aggie Villanueva’s first novel, Chase the Wind, Thomas Nelson 1983, was published before she was 30 and her second, Rightfully Mine, from Thomas Nelson in 1986. Rightfully Mine has been republished. Villanueva freelanced throughout the 80s, also writing three craft columns and three software review columns for national magazines. She was featured on the cover of The Christian Writer Magazine October 1983. After teaching at writers conferences throughout the Midwest, she founded/directed the 3-day Mid-America Fellowship of Christian Writers conferences for four years until 1990. Photographic art entered by 2007, and within two years Villanueva was dubbed the Grandma Moses of the American Southwest by her artistic peers, and is represented in several online and walk-in art galleries across the nation. Critically acclaimed in the June 19, 2008 issue of the Rio Grande Sun: …Villanueva is one of those rare individuals who uses new technology…to take a digital image to a new and exciting level….With some photographers this digitizing and manipulation are evident and stumbling...not so with Villanueva's work, which is sophisticated and well thought out….She has a knack for transferring her impression of a scene to the viewer that is remarkable and almost magical. As Aggie states; The Fairy Trail is real, folks. Welcome To My Path.†|
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2010 Hindsight: A Year of Personal Growth, In Spite of Myself | by Sharon E. Cathcart Jan. 25, 2011 | $0.99 | 19501 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Books by internationally published author Sharon E. Cathcart provide discerning readers of essays, fiction and non-fiction with a powerful, truthful literary experience. A former journalist and newspaper editor, Sharon has written for as long as she can remember and generally has at least one work in progress. Sharon lives with her husband and an assortment of pets in the Silicon Valley, California. |
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250 Anecdotes About Religion | by David Bruce Nov. 20, 2011 | $1.00 | 23714 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: David Bruce is an anecdote columnist at "The Athens News" in Athens, Ohio. |
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250 Anecdotes About Religion: Volume 2 | by David Bruce Nov. 20, 2011 | $1.00 | 23434 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: David Bruce is an anecdote columnist at "The Athens News" in Athens, Ohio. |
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27 Views of Chapel Hill | by Daniel Wallace Aug. 02, 2011 | $7.95 | 58908 words | Sample 20% |
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2Years 12Months: so here we go... | by Daniel James Moore Aug. 05, 2011 | $1.99 | 12834 words | Sample 28% |
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3 Pennies | by Rev. Lawrence Gray Sr. June 14, 2011 | $9.99 | 149535 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I am a Minister preaching and teaching the gospel for the past fifteen years; I have three children and three grandchildren. I enjoy reading, playing chess and singing. |
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30 Failures by Age 30 | by Katharine Miller Jan. 17, 2011 | $1.99 | 25792 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Katharine Miller is a writer and designer. She is the author of The Curable Romantic: Advice for the Romance-Impaired and 30 Failures by Age 30. She is also working on a graphic novel series, Robot of Leisure (www.robotofleisure.com). View more of her work at katharinemiller.com |
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33 Days: Touring In A Van. Sleeping On Floors. Chasing A Dream | by Bill See March 19, 2011 | $0.99 | 81739 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Bill See was the lead singer for critically acclaimed Los Angeles band Divine Weeks for the duration of the band’s lifespan from 1984-1992. Divine Weeks was signed to the Dream Syndicate’s Steve Wynn’s Down There label in 1987 and released their debut Through & Through that May before embarking on their first national tour that summer. The journals Bill kept on tour are the source of the majority of 33 Days. Divine Weeks released one more full length album on First Warning Records called Never Get Used To It released in September 1991. “When we left on that tour, we set out to have our own Kerouac ‘On The Road’ experience, and when I wrote 33 Days my motive was to write a book you’d go searching for after finishing ‘On The Road’. The book’s less about making it, and more about how crucial it is to seize your moment and the perils of sitting on your dreams. It’s about liberation, giving yourself the gift of opportunity and ultimately defining your own idea of success. It’s for anybody who ever stood at their crossroads with a dream screaming inside wondering whether to choose the road that goes off the map or fold up their tent and head back home.†|
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3:14 am | by Allen Hancock Nov. 18, 2010 | Free! | 3349 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: Allen Hancock was born in Adelaide, South Australia in 1952. He joined the Australian Regular Army in 1970 and spent the next 21 years moving around most areas of Australia. He left the Army in 1992 and has been working as a professional records manager since then. Allen has more than 40 years association with the records industry working with Federal and State Government agencies as well as in higher education and private enterprise. |
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4.5 Years | by Jean Gill March 11, 2011 | $3.99 | 24212 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: To find about more about Jean Gill or contact her, visit http://www.jeangill.com She is also a photographer with a portfolio at http://www.istockphoto.com/jeangill Jean Gill is a prize-winning author and member of the Welsh Academi. Her publications include two books of poetry, two military histories, four novels, non-fiction on goat cheese and a translated work on training dogs. She has lived in the South of France since 2003 and her articles on French life, cheese and plumbing have appeared in 'France' magazine. She lives with her husband and a big white dog, and is mother or stepmother to five children and three grandchildren. Her own childhood was nomadic, following her Scottish soldier father from one posting to another, and her current nationality is Welsh Provencal of Scottish provenance. This allows her to support the winning team on most European sporting occasions. Before moving to France, Jean Gill was the first woman to be a Secondary Headteacher in the Welsh county of Carmarthenshire. She is a specialist in English and literacy who worked in South Wales for over 20 years with 4-19 year olds, and as adviser to their teachers. As a consultant, she trained teachers throughout the UK and mainland Europe. |
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596 Switch: The Improbable Journey From The Palouse to Pasadena | by Crimson Oak Publishing Oct. 13, 2011 | $12.99 | 71360 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Crimson Oak publishes books with possitive messages of hope, possibility and determination . . . |
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7 Temples to Bill Gates | by Lenny Everson June 22, 2011 | Free! | 6210 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: List of Completed Works by Lenny Everson Novels • Death On a Small, Dark Lake. 67,700 words. Our hero snags a body in a remote lake. • Death on a Rocky Little Island 71,500 words. Our hero convinces a friend to take a canoeing trip to the 30,000 islands. • Mount Moriah 50,000 words. A strange sequence events involves a priest, a poet, a CSIS agent, a space alien, four horny teens, among others. My most fun fiction. • Last Exit to Pine Lake. 45,000 words. A dying writer goes back into the bush to off himself. Grimly literary. My best fiction. Novelettes • Granite and Dry Blood. 9,700 words. Our hero wants to write a book on Massassauga Park. Various people would prefer that he didn’t. • Death on a Foggy Spring Portage. 11,800 words. One member of a paddling group is found dead on a muddy portage. Screenplays • Murder on a Foggy Spring Portage. One member of a paddling group is found dead on a muddy portage. Plays • Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont. Ghosts of the two Métis leaders meet in today’s world to remember their lives. A short (20-minute) play for two actors. Full-Length Poetry Books • The Minor Odyssey of Lollie Heronfeathers Singer. A middle-aged woman tries to connect with her aboriginal ancestry. • In The Tavern of Lost Souls. Four poets meet at a grungy bar once a month to give their poetic answers to random questions. • Love in a Canoe. A set of five chapbooks and a songbook about the love of canoeing. With illustrations. • Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont are Dead. Ghosts of the two Métis leaders meet in today’s world to remember their lives. Includes the play. Poetry Chapbooks • Encounter in a Small, Old Cemetery. Autumn. Midnight. Poet visits a small, old private graveyard. Best poem I ever wrote. • Fire and Ashes. Poems about life’s flames and regrets. • The Empty Tarmac of a Long-Abandoned Airport. Poems about having a midlife crisis. • Love Poems A compilation • Pray for Me: 22 Poems Probably Slandering God and Jesus • Ballads from an Unlucky Fisherman: Poems from a fisherman • Tweetable Limericks. 60 limericks small enough to be tweets • Hiking Poems. Co-Authored Poetry Chapbooks • Who Would Be a God? Susan Ioannou and Lenny debate the merits of being a god. • How to Dance Naked in the Moonlight. Katherine L. Gordon (Celtic pagan) and Lenny (skeptic) confront the ceremony. • Cats and Dogs. With I. B. Iskov • For Ko Aye Aung: A Plea for His Release from Prison. For Amnesty International, with other poets. Non-Fiction Chapbooks • If You Condemn Gays: The Bible on Homosexuality and Other Items. • The Architecture of Suburban West Kitchener. A light look at house styles. • The Architecture of The University of Waterloo. A light look at the campus buildings. • Making Tourist Attractions for Towns and Small Cities. Advice. • Technological Solutions to Global Warming. • Hyphens: A Guide for the Early Twenty-First Century. • Colons and Semicolons: A Guide for the Early Twenty-First Century. • How to Review Draft Technical Writings • Rebecca’s Trail (Grand River Trail) in Winter • 7 Temples to Bill Gates: a modern mystery • The Great God Pan - or Not • Two in a Tent: Camping Humor. • Why Haven't Aliens Contacted us? Songbooks • Dance Songs for Weddings Available on Smashwords • Canoe Songs. part of a set of six chapbooks about the love of canoeing. With illustrations.. Available on Smashwords • 18 Dingbat Songs for Kids Available on Smashwords |
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A 40-year-old Midget in a Little Girl's Suit | by Bette Nunn July 28, 2010 | $4.99 | 15761 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Bette Nunn lives in Martinsville, Indiana, is married and has three grown children. Her other published work is a book titled “Burn, Judy, Burn†about mass murderer Steven T. Judy and the young mother of three children that he killed in 1979. She has also written a small book about the Morgan County Courthouse and articles that have been published in detective and other national magazines. Mrs. Nunn was a reporter, assistant editor and managing editor at The Reporter and Reporter-Times, a newspaper in Martinsville, Indiana, from 1963 to July 2003. Her career covered nearly 41 years and she continues to write news, feature stories and columns for the newspaper from her home. Her main interests have been her family, working for the good of Martinsville High School, Morgan Hospital and Medical Center, Morgan County Fair and US veterans. She enjoys writing and history and also plans to continue to write some children’s books. “The Yo-Yo String†is her first attempt at a fictional story. She thanked her daughter Shelley for allowing use of her pictures on the cover to portray what Annie could have looked like. |
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A Book of Dreams | by Peter Reich Feb. 08, 2011 | $9.99 | 57421 words | Sample 15% |
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A Borrowed Anorak (Dad I'm on the run) | by Francoise Jewell Dec. 02, 2011 | $2.99 | 105336 words | Sample 15% |
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A Boy Called Lwazi | by Lwazi Nkiwane Sep. 06, 2009 | Free! | 18524 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: Lwazi Nkiwane is one of the brightest upcoming young talent in the world of fiction and music. He has penned three screenplays 'Waiting In Vain', 'Life Lessons' and 'Everything's Not Lost' and dozens of songs. He's currently working on his own music album and studying in TVU in Reading in Berkshire in the UK. He lives in a house that shares with Herman, Dan and Julian in Reading, Berkshire in the UK. |
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A Brief History Of Pink Floyd | by Andrew Means Oct. 10, 2011 | $1.99 | 29624 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Andrew Means grew up in Britain and lives in Arizona, on the outskirts of Phoenix. As a journalist he has written about musicians and entertainment for local and national media. |
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A Brief Moment in Time | by William Wayne "Bill" Dicksion March 05, 2011 | $2.99 | 46106 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: William Wayne "Bill" Dicksion writes historical adventure novels with authenticity. He has published six novels and a memoir. Bill, as he is called by his friends, is a prolific writer, and he doesn't pull punches; he tells it like it is, or was, as the case may be. If you like high adventure with a touch of romance, you will like his stories. |
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A Broad Abroad | by Ron Bryan Aug. 16, 2011 | $2.99 | 52139 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Some of my primary interests include martial arts, firearms, UFOs, life after death, psychology and ancient cultures Noteworthy trivia: My brother joined the National Geographic Genealogy DNA Project. He discovered that we are direct descendants of Genghis Kahn. Lots of American families claim ancestry to him, but ours is among the first to have this verified. |
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A Bumpy Ride | by Ronjon May 06, 2010 | $5.99 | 183668 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: A Note from Ronjon: I was born in Virginia and raised in Washington D.C. and Prince Georges County, Maryland. This story is based on my life. I am sixty years old now, and I have done more than my fair share of drugs and hard-core partying, and kicking ass. Most of the names, times and places have been changed for obvious reasons. I slept on army cots most of my life, whether they were in my aunt’s basement laundry room, my cousin’s back porch way down in the boonies of Virginia, or whatever institution I was in at the time. I was in and out of institutions from the beginning of my early life. I guess I was hardheaded or at least as they say, “Hard to train,†or maybe it was because of someone else beside my family was raising me, who knows? In this story, you will read what a living hell is all about, and what evolves from having no control over your children and letting them basically run loose and raise themselves because,, of no parental control, or love. When you read this story, you will sit back and probably say that there is no way that anybody in the world has been through this much in just sixty years of life. This is the first time that I have decided to sit down, write, and share my life with anyone! It is far from what I am proud of; believe this. I am ashamed, as well as embarrassed! I can only hope that these stories will help some young man to realize that this kind of life, brings nothing but misery, and despair! These events have often been so very painful to recall, events, or nightmares if you will; that I have tried all of my life to forget. I continue to fine-tune this story, which only reaches my twenty-one years of life |
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A Cafe in Space: The Anais Nin Literary Journal--Complete Set | by Anais Nin Sep. 30, 2011 | $9.99 | 518489 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: Anais Nin (1903-1977) was born in Neuilly-Sur-Seine, near Paris, and was the daughter of a renowned pianist and composer, Joaquin Nin. Abandoned by her father in 1913, she and her family traveled to New York, where she began her now famous diary, comprised of some 35,000 pages over a period of six decades. When the first volume of 'The Diary of Anais Nin' was published in 1966, it began Nin's meteoric surge to fame. However, often overlooked are the works of fiction she created, beginning with 'The House of Incest' in 1936, which was followed by a then-banned edition of a collection of novellas under the title 'The Winter of Artifice.' This original edition has been republished for the first time in 2007. Perhaps Nin's most acclaimed fiction is the series of short stories in 'Under a Glass Bell,' which she self-published in New York during the 1940s when no commercial publisher would take the risk. She then began a series of novels that were interconnected and finally collected into one volume entitled 'Cities of the Interior.' Her final novel was 'Collages,' about which Henry Miller said, "Even the finest collages fall apart with time; these will not." Anais Nin was one of the 20th century's most innovative and compelling artist, and now her works are finally appearing in digital format. |
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A Candle Burned | by Jerry Guibor Jan. 19, 2009 | $16.00 | 52955 words | Sample 50% |
| Author bio: Jerry Guibor, a native of California, was graduated from then-San Jose State College with a bachelor's degree in journalism. Over the next 40-plus years, he worked as a photographer, reporter, page designer and editor at newspapers in California, Arizona and Oregon. In 1994, he moved to Rostov-on-Don, Russia, where he served one year as a missionary. After several subsequent short-term mission trips to Russia and Ukraine, he moved to Kiev, Ukraine, in 2004 and lived there for 13 months, working again as a missionary. The stories in this book were told to him by his friends from those two countries. Jerry is retired from the newspaper business but continues to travel to Ukraine as a missionary. He has two married children and four grandchildren, all of whom live in Arizona. He resides in Fresno, California, where he operates a photography business, JG Photography. |
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A Candle in the Dark | by Lisa Engle Escobar Jan. 09, 2010 | $6.95 | 90770 words | Sample 20% |
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A Ceiling of Stars | by James Carron Oct. 15, 2010 | $4.99 | 34751 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Freelance writer |
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A Changing World | by Terence Kearey Jan. 28, 2012 | $6.95 | 62021 words | Sample 5% |
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A Checkered Past | by William Van Poyck May 24, 2011 | $2.99 | 118167 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I am a single dad of 5 children from 21 to 12. I am the CEO of a private 132-bed work release center for men who are transitioning from prison back into society. I spent a total of 18 + years of my life before being paroled in 1984. Ten years later I was given a full pardon from Florida Governor Lawton Chiles. Today I run my own minimum security prison/work-release center. God is good! I am also the State Chairman for the Constitution Party of Florida www.cpflorida.com. I ran for the U.S. Senate in 2010. |
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A Child in Translation | by Maria K. Oct. 03, 2010 | $2.99 | 72497 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: Maria K. is a pen name of a first-generation Russian-Ukrainian immigrant Maria Igorevna Kuroshchepova. An engineer by education, an analyst by trade, as well as a writer, photographer, artist and amateur model, Maria brings her talent for weaving an engaging narrative to stories of life, fashion and style advice, book and movie reviews, and common-sense and to-the-point essays on politics and economy. |
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A Child's View Of World War II | by Dan Summerfield April 23, 2011 | $2.99 | 13096 words | Sample 40% |
| Author bio: A retired broadcaster, Dan Summerfield lives quietly in West Michigan with a friend. The friend is a cat named Dollar whose greatest wish is to use the symbol $ in place of his name. That way it will become the symbol of a feline formerly named Dollar. |
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A Cowboy Named Emmet: A Death Song of a Son Who Missed the West | by Sam Edwards Jan. 03, 2012 | $4.99 | 3960 words | Sample 20% |
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A Day of Drowning | by Glenn Gordon Aug. 08, 2011 | Free! | 4748 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: Author Glenn Gordon grew up with three brothers in So Cal, Seattle, and the Turks and Caicos Islands, where his parents owned a small destination inn and restaurant. They had a lot of adventures. Some involved big fish, and deep water grottos, and broken bones, and cute tourist girls. Lots of stories to tell. He schooled at the University of Washington, studying Norwegian and comparative religion (not kidding), dropped out, got married, sold shoes, re-upped at the U-Dub, got a degree in English and a license to teach. He did that for a chunk of years in coastal Westport and farmy Wenatchee, had two daughters - Meghan and Kylene - then resettled just east of Seattle. He odd-jobbed, got divorced, found out he had an older half-sister, then began a career in textbooks with a couple of huge publishers. For the past 15 years he's been training K-8 teachers how to be better K-8 teachers through the judicious use of his company's materials. He's good at it and he travels a lot. He married a way cool and cute woman named Nancy. He has a dozen friends that he's known more than 30 years. He drinks spectacular NW craft beers and he likes to grill. His grandkids are named Jaxon and Ava. They're amazing people, though small. He reads insatiably. Lee Child, Barry Eisler, Jeffrey Deaver, Robert B. Parker, John Sanford, Randy Wayne White, Greg Rucka, Robert Ferrigno, James Lee Burke. South African novelist Wilbur Smith. And lots of others. And he writes. Has his whole life. Pages and pages, chapters and chapters. And a few complete books that don't really count. The books that DO count are his Mack Fraser suspense thrillers, debuting with Brother's Keeper, and continuing soon with The Ferryman's Wake. Well, relatively soon. They're set in Seattle, and according to his loyal readership, they portray the city as only a long time resident could. And his characters are wicked awesome. Seriously. At least that's what people tell him. And for that we'll give him two thumbs up. |
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A Deadly Path To Treasure | by Robert C. Moran Oct. 20, 2011 | $6.99 | 66129 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Robert C. “Bob†Moran worked with famed treasure hunter Mel Fisher for over 20 years. He was the Exec. V. P. and sea-borne operations manager in the early 1980's prior to the discovery of the rich Spanish shipwrecks Atocha and Santa Margarita. Captain Moran did the electronic magnetometer and side scan sonar search with his boat the "Plus Ultra" and flew his Grumman Widgeon amphibian seaplane and Piper Twin Comanche in air support for the search and recovery operations. Bob is now retired and living in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. |
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A Decade of Fear | by Norma McCluskie Dec. 21, 2010 | $4.99 | 59225 words | Sample 20% |
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A Difficult Passage | by Ray Wiseman Feb. 04, 2012 | $4.95 | 56674 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Ray Wiseman's early memory--being pushed up a rope ladder and over the side of a tramp steamer at age two--set the tone for his life. He has spent much time travelling, and most of his life looking from the hilltop of one adventure to the beginning of the next. Born in England, Ray has lived in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, and South Africa. He has traveled in Africa and Asia. Ray counts writing as his fourth career. He began his working life as an electronics technician, then returned to school to study for the Christian ministry. He spent time in the pastorate and overseas with a missionary society. He returned to electronics, working as a video systems engineer. In 1993, he took early retirement to pursue a career as a writer and speaker. Ray graduated from Radio College of Canada (now RCC Schools) in 1952. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Waterloo and a Bachelor of General and Biblical Studies from Briercrest College. He has also studied at the Toronto Institute of Linguistics and The International Institute of Christian Communications (Daystar University College) in Nairobi. Ray is a member of The Word Guild, an association of Canadian authors and writers who are Christian. |
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A Fan Comes To Visit | by Julie Jensen March 11, 2009 | $2.95 | 6859 words | Sample 25% |
| Author bio: Julie Jensen is a middle-aged wife and mother who has been happily married to the same man for more than thirty years. She has always been a family-oriented person and remains very close to her two, now grown up, children and enjoys doting on her grandchildren. With a degree in marketing, Julie has had a long and varied career in business, over the years holding positions in marketing, sales, management, customer service, and recruiting. Although dedicated to success in her professional life, marriage and family has always been a personal priority. Exploring the erotic side of life has always been a spare-time passion for Julie and she considers herself and her marriage to be a very positive example of the outcome of a sexually liberated lifestyle. She firmly believes that positive and thoughtful approaches to sexually and eroticism, along with the discouragement and suppression of selfishness, jealousy, and possessiveness, are key ingredients to marital happiness and success. Now semi-retired from her business career, Julie is enjoying the extra time to work on her memoirs, her personal website, and her other writings and projects. As always, she enjoys exploring new erotic adventures, although not quite at the pace that she used to. Julie currently resides with her husband, Mike, in a large city in eastern Canada. |
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