Author Archives: Jeanie

About Jeanie

I am President of Loiacono Literary Agency, LLC. I have been a literary agency for thirteen years and have over sixty clients and have sold over 200 books to date.

I believe God wants you to know that gratitude in advance is the most powerful creative force in the universe.

I believe God wants you to know that gratitude in advance is the most powerful creative
force in the universe.

Most people do not know this, yet it is true. Expressing thankfulness in advance is the way of all Masters. So do not wait for a thing to happen and then give thanks. Give thanks before it happens, and watch energies swirl!

To thank God before something occurs is an act of extraordinary faith. And that, of course, is where the power comes from. It’s Thanksgiving Day in the U.S. Why not make it Thanksgiving Day in the hearts of people everywhere, all the time? www.CWGPortal.com

Thank you! “At all times, in all situations, give thanks.” —The Bible

Loiacono Literary Agency welcomes Nancy King as a new agent!

 Nancy King

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Nancy King has taken on a new role, as a Loiacono Literary Agency Agent.  After several years’ experience in the entertainment industry working with musicians, actors and screenwriters, Nancy King joins LLA in facilitating authors’ dreams.

“Who doesn’t love a great success story?” she asks with a smile.

With a background in Broadcasting, Public Relations, Sales and Marketing, she has been in charge of development, production and promotion of various film, television and radio projects while securing business and media contacts. She also wrote contracts, press releases, newsletters, schedules and promotional items to be released through various communications media.

Nancy is sure to be a big asset to the agency and a blessing to her authors.

Nancy’s forte is mystery/thrillers, YA, women’s fiction and nonfiction

For speaking engagements or for submissions you may contact Nancy @ nancy.king@loiaconoliteraryagency.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nancy King has taken on a new role, as a Loiacono Literary Agency Agent.  After several years’ experience in the entertainment industry working with musicians, actors and screenwriters, Nancy King joins LLA in facilitating authors’ dreams.

“Who doesn’t love a great success story?” she asks with a smile.

With a background in Broadcasting, Public Relations, Sales and Marketing, she has been in charge of development, production and promotion of various film, television and radio projects while securing business and media contacts. She also wrote contracts, press releases, newsletters, schedules and promotional items to be released through various communications media.

Nancy is sure to be a big asset to the agency and a blessing to her authors.

Nancy’s forte is mystery/thrillers, YA, women’s fiction and nonfiction.

For speaking engagements or for submissions you may contact Nancy @ nancy.king@loiaconoliteraryagency.com

The Soul of Thanksgiving

The Weakly Post

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The Soul of Thanksgiving

“For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? “    Mark 8:35-36

The year was 1863. Abraham Lincoln was President. Strife ruled. The nation was at war with itself. The landscape by any visionary’s account was bleak and dreary. The nation seemed to have lost its bearings and its very soul. Being thankful under these conditions was seemingly impossible. The nation urgently needed to mend its fraying fabric.

Under these dire conditions Lincoln issued a proclamation establishing the last Thursday in November as a national holiday. His intent was to coalesce a nation of diverse cultures and individuals into a cohesive whole by remembering the origin of its birth. This year Americans will celebrate the 151st anniversary of Thanksgiving.

In 1620 pilgrims departed from Defts-Haven, searching for a new land with an ephemeral idea of freedom. They had no idea what they would face in the quest. As if the hardships of the voyage were not enough to deter them, what they saw at landfall must have made them question their sanity altogether.

There, looming before them in the harsh winter stood a land with a weather-beaten face. It appeared to them a country full of woods and thickets, a place full of multitudes of untamed beasts and wild men. It had an ominous and savage hew. Such is the nature of the unknown…wild, fearful but full of promise.

It was up to these pilgrims to carve out their dreams and visions.  They neither expected nor received the benefits of ease in the process.  For having left their homes, having said goodbye to their families and friends, they said goodbye to the old life and searched for a better home.

We who read this today are benefitting from the sacrifices of these visionaries. We can ask ourselves these questions: Under what tyranny would we now be living if not for the perseverance of these intrepid travelers? How would our destiny have unfolded? Fortunately, we have the answers. Living in America is a blessing of untold and incalculable dimensions. Read the news if you don’t believe this!

Yesterday we sat in a Methodist Church in the small town of my youth. We gathered there to say a final goodbye to a family member. My nephew, Preston, recalled the influence she had upon his life.  He synthesized it based on his annual visits for Thanksgiving. He recalled pulling into the driveway of his grandmother’s home. The first thing he saw was her face in the kitchen window, welcoming him with a smile.

The soul of an American Thanksgiving has a face.  It’s seen in the Rockwell-blended faces of families, merged together into a national tapestry. Each face represents a precious memory, of a home and a secure place where families can thrive.

The blessings of national unity are too broad to enumerate. But the collective voice of Thanksgiving blends them together at every table where food is served, laughter is heard and love is shared. The soul of being American is once again revived on this memorable day.

Today, the world is a dangerous place. It’s fractious, filled with secular pursuits, religious divisions and seethes with national rivalries. Our country has its own fractured diversity, revealed by recent events in Missouri that have prompted protests nationwide.

Yet in spite of this, America continues to stand, strong in the collective unity under which it was founded…established by a beneficent God for the purpose of freedom. A continuous remembrance of this fact is what Thanksgiving is all about.

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Today here began bleak and dreary, consequences of the passing storms. In the front yard a squirrel sat on its hind quarters, gnawing on acorns. It seemed to smile as it feasted on the prodigious crop furnished by the oak trees.

America has endured many storms. It will weather more. But, like the squirrel, we can take comfort in the fact that a gracious Almighty God desires to furnish us with untold blessings. Our collective soul will continue to flourish as long as we remember the Source of these blessings.

Thank you, Abraham Lincoln, for the gift of this holiday. Thank you, God, for blessing the soul of America. Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family.

Bud Hearn

November 26, 2014

Sketches courtesy of Leslie Hearn

 

Chuck Walsh, author of Shadows on Iron Mountain and A Month of Tomorrows has two up-coming events!

Chuck Walsh, author of Shadows on Iron Mountain and A Month of Tomorrows has two up-coming events!

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  • Friday, Dec 12th 4:00 – 9:00pm Cockaboose Rail Car book signing and Christmas Party at Williams-Brice football stadium. 1125 George Rogers Blvd., Columbia, South Carolina

 

What a treat! The rail car is eighty feet long and has been converted into a party wagon on wheels. There are about thirty of these cars on tracks next to the stadium. They are worth upwards of $300K, and this one has leather couches, a full bar with granite top and large screen TV’s. Refreshments will be provided.

 

  • Saturday, Dec 13 from 11:00 – 1:00pm Richland County Public Library Local Author Event — 1431 Assembly St in Columbia — meet Chuck Walsh and get autographed copies of both books! Makes fantastic one-of-a-kind Christmas presents!

Shadows on Iron Mountain (Champagne Books www.champagnebooks.com) and A Month of Tomorrows (Vinspire Publishing www.vinspirepublishing.com)

 

Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com www.chuckwalshwriter.com

 

 

I believe God wants you to know that holding a grudge does no one any good, and rarely achieves the result of hurting or damaging the one you cannot forgive.

I believe God wants you to know that holding a grudge does no one any good, and rarely achieves the result of hurting or damaging the one you cannot forgive.

The only one who gets hurt or damaged by your holding a grudge is you. Now I know that you already know this. So why hold a grudge?

Many people say, “It is to protect my own dignity. I will not speak to that person unless he or she speaks
to me first — and says they are sorry, and asks forgiveness.” Yet is this the way to retain one’s dignity? www.CWGPortal.com

On Saturday, November 22nd, Tom Simmons had a monumental book signing for Forgotten Heroes of World War II: Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers Land, Sea and Air.

On Saturday, November 22nd, Tom Simmons had a monumental book signing for Forgotten Heroes of World War II: Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers Land, Sea and Air. This was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity as the remaining three contributors, an infantryman, a fighter pilot and a sailor were there and signed every copy purchased.

Best one

Pictured: Thomas E. Simmons, Harry Bell, Jeanie Loiacono, Jerry O’Keefe, and Oscar Russell. This is a ‘must have’ book. Available everywhere books are sold.

Oscar Russell of “The Amphib Sailor,” story #7, was one of the very few who served in both the landings on D-day at Omaha Beach, Normandy, France and then in the Pacific for support of landings on Okinawa and anti-Kamikaze picket duty.

Harry Bell of “Present and Accounted For,” story #9, fought in the Battle of the Bulge. He was taken prisoner by the Germans and marched sixty miles, without food, in freezing weather, to a rail junction. Men who fell out were shot. When liberated by U. S. troops, he weighed just ninety pounds, but had nursed his prison squad through the ordeal making sure meager rations were shared and blankets loaned to the sick. Too weak to walk, Harry crawled out to the U.S. tank commander who knocked down the prison gate, was helped to his feet, saluted, and proudly reported his entire prison squad, “All present and accounted for.”

Jeremiah J. O’Keefe of “A Long Way to Okinawa,” story #15, wanted to fly fighters. He enlisted in the Marines and was finally accepted for flight training, only to be assigned to transports. Risking a court martial, he used every trick in the book to finally get assigned to fighters, first to Wild Cats for training and then worked his way into a new Corsair squadron. He was sent to the Pacific in time to participate in the invasion of Okinawa. Nothing was easy on the long path to becoming a fighter pilot, but Jerry proved his worth in being a Marine Fighter Ace.

Thomas E. Simmons, author, entrepreneur, pilot, sailor, soldier, sales engineer, and world traveler said of the men whose stories are in this his fifth book, “It was an honor and a privilege to be in the presence of these men. You will understand that when you read their stories on the pages of Forgotten Heroes of World War II: Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers Land, Sea, and Air. I had to persuade them to tell their stories, stories they had never told even to their families. These men, quiet heroes every one, endured more than we can ever imagine for us who walk in the freedom they, and so many like them, secured for us. Victory by the Allies in World War II was a close thing. Freedom is not free. The men who fought for freedom against Axis tyranny paid a heavy price for the liberation of every foot of ground, every island, every ocean, every patch of sky. That is why America is called the land of the free and the home of the brave.

“Let’s each of us remember to thank all the men and women who have ever served and those who are protecting the world now who stood and today stand ready to defend you with their last full measure if necessary. God bless them and God bless America!”

 

Published by Taylor Trade Publishing www.rowman.com/TaylorTrade Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com  Thomas E. Simmons www.thomasesimmons.net

 

I believe God wants you to know that it could seem like you are losing something right now, but do not be fooled. This is simply a turnaround orchestrated by your soul.

I believe God wants you to know that it could seem like you are losing something right now, but do not be fooled.  This is simply a turnaround orchestrated by your soul.

Even before this, you were. And even after all this passes away, you shall be. All the Rest Of It is stuff and nonsense. The accoutrement. The flora and fauna. Pretty, perhaps. Shiny and sparkling, perhaps. But having nothing to do with anything.

Let it go. Release it. If it was not supposed to be removing itself from you now, it would not be doing so.  It will never return to you in this exact form, and it is not intended to. If it returns at all, it will be in a higher form. That is the purpose of its leaving.

All of life only improves itself.  It can’t do anything else. This is called evolution.  Trust it. And now, smile.  Tomorrow is coming! Tomorrow is coming! www.CWGPortal.com

The book launch for Forgotten Heroes of World War II: Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers Land, Sea and Air is tomorrow!

The book launch for Forgotten Heroes of World War II: Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers Land, Sea and Air is tomorrow!

Water For The Wounded

Forgotten Heroes of World War II: Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers Land, Sea and Air by Thomas E. Simmons, published by Taylor Trade, will have its book launch at Barnes & Nobel, Saturday, November 22, 2014 at 2 pm, 15246 Crossroads Parkway, Gulfport, MS 39503.

Meet Tom Simmons and three of the contributors who will be signing books with Tom! Harry Bell, Chapter 9; Oscar Russell, Chapter 7; Jerry O’Keefe, Chapter 15 What a privilege! I cannot wait!!!

“If you only read one book of the 11,000 plus books about WW II, this is the one you should read.  It takes you up close, maybe closer than you want to be, to the fight on land, sea and air, close to individuals representing the thousands or ordinary boys in all services who stood their post, gave their best, and kept us free.  They are heroes every one.”

Forgotten heroes, they truly are. Men of honor, integrity, and perseverance, love of God, country, and family who fought on many fronts and survived to tell their stories— stories of horrors seen which live on forever in their minds and hearts. These veterans are slowly “crossing to the other side” to be greeted by those who have long been there, welcomed with open arms. Men and women you share combat and service time with, you never forget, especially those you see take their last breath. These are the personal accounts that will live with you till the end of time.

Republished as a second edition with enhanced and added stories by Taylor Trade/Rowman and Littlefield www.rowman.com  www.TaylorTrade.com  Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com Thomas E. Simmons www.thomasesimmons.net