Thanks are due to all of you out there. The Jack Scott books are selling well on Kindle, which is indeed heartening. Still don't know when the next (the fourth in the series) will be available for publication as an e-book, but as soon as it is it will be up there with the other three. In case you're wondering, the title is Deathly Suspense. And if you're really impatient, well, the hardback edition is still available from Amazon or Robert Hale.
Just sent off the latest Western - The Hanging of Red Cavanagh - so now it's full steam ahead on the 7th Jack Scott.
Talk soon.
Monday, 14 November 2011
Monday, 31 October 2011
Oops
Just looked back down my posts, and I see I've put my books out of order. They go like this: Confusion of Murders (first); A Bewilderment of Crooks (second); and The Clutches of Death (third). Doesn't make much difference, I know, although a lot of people like to read books in a mystery series in the right sequence. As a matter of interest, Rock to Death is the sixth, but so far it's only available as a physical hardback from Robert Hale (and elsewhere on Amazon). A hardback large-print edition will soon be available from Ulverscroft (Thorpe).
Keep reading.
Keep reading.
Saturday, 29 October 2011
Elation
The Kindle edition of A Confusion of Murders has been reviewed on Amazon! Wow. Somebody who bought it and downloaded it actually enjoyed it, thoroughly - and the review is five star. I'm not surprised, of course, because like most authors I believe that what I write is pretty good. Well, no, actually very good. I'll stop there, because I can feel my deerstalker getting a bit tight. And you say, what crazy sort of a mystery writer is this who sits at his laptop with a Sherlock Holmes hat on? Well, the truth is, I don't. But I'm an author, and I write fiction. Why say I could feel my head swelling, when I could paint a better word picture in a more imaginative way. Imaginative as in completely untrue.
And, as you'll have gathered by now, I'm beginning to ramble. Time for bed, I think, where I'll read the James Bond book written by Jeffery Deaver, Carte Blanche. Or perhaps an Agatha Christie. Or...
Talk to you again soon...
And, as you'll have gathered by now, I'm beginning to ramble. Time for bed, I think, where I'll read the James Bond book written by Jeffery Deaver, Carte Blanche. Or perhaps an Agatha Christie. Or...
Talk to you again soon...
Monday, 10 October 2011
Reading without Kindle
If you want to read my Jack Scott mysteries without buying a Kindle e-reader, there's another way.
Log on to Amazon, and download the free programme Kindle for PC. That enables you to read the books on a PC or laptop. Once you've bought the books (£1.14 each) they are archived, which means if accidents happen and they're lost you can always download them again, free.
Have fun.
Log on to Amazon, and download the free programme Kindle for PC. That enables you to read the books on a PC or laptop. Once you've bought the books (£1.14 each) they are archived, which means if accidents happen and they're lost you can always download them again, free.
Have fun.
Saturday, 24 September 2011
Another E-Book
Yes, just looked on Kindle Direct Publishing and A Bewilderment of Crooks is being published. As I mentioned before, this, the third in the Jack Scott series, is graced with another cover by John Carlton. For your delectation, this is it. Moody. Brooding. Menacing. Lots of adjectives, choose your own because this cover cries out for comment!
Friday, 23 September 2011
E-Books
Back again, doing some promoting. The crime books now on Kindle were originally published hardback by Robert Hale, then as large print by Thorpe (Ulverscroft). I've got all the rights back, but am using my own cover images. These are the first two. The Confusion cover is by John Carlton, and if you'd like him to do some work for you he can be reached at john.art@hotmail.co.uk.
The second image, the Clutches book, is one of the many photographs I submit to on-line stock libraries.
I'll put the third cover in a blog when it's published on Kindle. It's another of John Carlton's images.
More soon.
Thursday, 22 September 2011
My fictional characters
It occurred to me that I've told you my books are on Kindle, given you the titles, yet done all that assuming you know what I'm talking about. Perhaps you don't, so let's change that.
I write light-hearted crime books, and the main character is Jack Scott. Ex-army, ex-drunk, then a maker of excellent toy soldiers - which is still how he earns his living - and now an amateur private eye. He lives in a stone farmhouse in North Wales, loves Gibraltar.
He has a girl friend, Sian Laidlaw. Sian is also ex-army, a karate expert, used to teach on survival courses for top executives. She and Jack are... well, on and off, if I can put it that way. No sign of marriage yet, but I think I'll eventually force them into it!
The third person in the team is Calum Wick. Calum is a Scot who paints toy soldiers for Jack and makes money in other undisclosed ways (probably illegal). Bearded, wears glasses, and he and Jack often argue. They met when Jack saved Calum from getting badly beaten up in Brixton, and have been colleagues ever since.
There's another man who's not quite part of the team but always helps out. A middle-aged Liverpool scallie called Stan Jones who, because of Welsh connections and his favourite transport, is known as Jones the Van
Cops? Yes, there are three regulars. One is a Welsh DI, Alun Morgan, who works out of Bethesda, the others are DI Mike Haggard and DS Willie Vine of the Merseyside police.
There are just two more regulars in the books. Eleanor, who is Jack Scott's widowed mother, and Reg Fitz-Norton, an ex-diplomat who lives in Gibraltar and with whom Eleanor is now living. No, actually, she's not. They have their own houses but are definitely together in every other sense.
And there we are. An interesting bunch, even in that brief telling. They're fun, and fun to write about. I enjoy it tremendously.
Talk again soon.
I write light-hearted crime books, and the main character is Jack Scott. Ex-army, ex-drunk, then a maker of excellent toy soldiers - which is still how he earns his living - and now an amateur private eye. He lives in a stone farmhouse in North Wales, loves Gibraltar.
He has a girl friend, Sian Laidlaw. Sian is also ex-army, a karate expert, used to teach on survival courses for top executives. She and Jack are... well, on and off, if I can put it that way. No sign of marriage yet, but I think I'll eventually force them into it!
The third person in the team is Calum Wick. Calum is a Scot who paints toy soldiers for Jack and makes money in other undisclosed ways (probably illegal). Bearded, wears glasses, and he and Jack often argue. They met when Jack saved Calum from getting badly beaten up in Brixton, and have been colleagues ever since.
There's another man who's not quite part of the team but always helps out. A middle-aged Liverpool scallie called Stan Jones who, because of Welsh connections and his favourite transport, is known as Jones the Van
Cops? Yes, there are three regulars. One is a Welsh DI, Alun Morgan, who works out of Bethesda, the others are DI Mike Haggard and DS Willie Vine of the Merseyside police.
There are just two more regulars in the books. Eleanor, who is Jack Scott's widowed mother, and Reg Fitz-Norton, an ex-diplomat who lives in Gibraltar and with whom Eleanor is now living. No, actually, she's not. They have their own houses but are definitely together in every other sense.
And there we are. An interesting bunch, even in that brief telling. They're fun, and fun to write about. I enjoy it tremendously.
Talk again soon.
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