Johnnie Bernhard to speak at Prepare to Present Yourself to Agents and Publishers Workshop

Johnnie Bernhard to speak at

Prepare to Present Yourself to Agents and Publishers Workshop

Bernhard photo curteosy of Judi Altman

When:  March 19, 2016

Where:  McGovern-Stella Link Community Center at 7405 Stella Link, Houston, TX 77025

12:30 pm – 2:45 pm – Johnnie Bernhard, Agent with Loiacono Literary Agency Presents:  Query Letters and Working with an Agent

Goals of the afternoon presentation:

  1. Participant understands the relationship between literary agent and writer.
  2. Participant understands the difference between a query letter and a synopsis.
  3. Participant understands the importance of professionalism.
  4. Participant understands the value of editing, beta readers, and critique groups.
    Fee:  $45 Members – $55 Nonmembers

http://us7.campaign-archive1.com/?u=8c7f242f256a7fca2a6500bd2&id=b582147424&e=3e78b123c1

 

Trail of Deceit, has been nominated for the 52nd Georgia Author of the Year Award (GAYA) in the Literary Fiction category!

Trail of Deceit, has been nominated for the 52nd Georgia Author of the Year Award (GAYA) in the Literary Fiction category!

Trail of Deceit

Trail of Deceit

Four college students set out to hike a section of the Appalachian Trail. The hike turns to terror when a stranger brutally attacks the group. Having wandered off the main AT, a simple adventure turns into a test of survival – from the elements as well as two and four-legged predators. Nothing is as it seems and all is worse than could ever be imagined.

John use this one

www.johnhouseauthor.com Published by Limitless Publishing www.limitlesspublishing.com  Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency https://loiaconoliteraryagency.com/authors/john-house-md

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To Look on Death No More by Leta Serafim is now available!

To Look on Death No More by Leta Serafim is now available!

To Look On Death No More 300 dpi

Set in Greece during WWII, it is a story that will pull at your heartstrings.

Brendan O’Malley was an Irishman with heroic ideals who joined His Majesty’s army to rid the world of tyrannous rulers—specifically Hitler. His former dispatches were in Cairo, challenging Rommel in the desert; his last in Greece the autumn of 1943, with the stated objective ‘to make contact with partisan forces and build airstrips.’ Parachuting in, he is wounded and is found by Danae, a seventeen-year-old Greek girl, and her brother, Stefanos. Although they confiscate all he has upon his discovery, they hide him in a cave for weeks saving his life. He, in turn, helps Danae’s family and joins the rebel forces to fight the Germans.

A true love story, as well as an expose` of what occurred in a remote part of Greece close to the end of the war, you feel as if you are there; so hungry your insides ache; so cold you shiver, bracing against the slicing winds of the mountains. Yet so in love, you are afraid to acknowledge your heart; knowing neither of you may exist tomorrow.

Thoroughly researched, Serafim’s documentation and pictures give breath to those who lived and those who were lost. Most WWII stories are written with Italy, Germany, Great Britain and the United States as the focal points, but who has read of the atrocities committed against the Greeks? Who has been satisfied with their meager atonements?

Serafim was a journalist at the Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau before moving to Greece, where she taught art and illustrated books. Upon her return to the United States, she wrote feature stories for the Boston Globe before trying her hand a fiction. She continues to spend her summers in Greece, researching her next novel. Her first two in the Greek Mystery Series, The Devil Takes Half and When the Devil’s Idle are also available. She is currently working on the third, From the Devil’s Farm. All are published by Camel Press www.camelpress.com Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com/authors/leta-serafim/

 

“A painful but engrossing story…. What saves the novel from a feeling of complete despair is O’Malley’s love for Danae and his growing love of her country. This aspect of the war was unknown to me before this book. It’s as important as the Blitz and the occupation of Paris, and Serafim makes me want to learn more.”

—Historical Novel Society

https://historicalnovelsociety.org/reviews/to-look-on-death-no-more/

 

To Look on Death No More, by Leta Serafim: An Irishman joins the Greek Resistance in WWII

http://coffeetownpress.com/to-look-on-death-no-more-by-leta-serafim-an-irishman-joins-the-greek-resistance-in-wwii/

 

Before I read To Look On Death No More, I knew nothing of the atrocities of Greece. Nothing is taught of this in American high schools. If so, it is so flightily mentioned that it is not recalled. Horrific. I found this site in my research after I finished reading it. Kalavyrta Massacre  The visions are embedded in my mind. Serafim’s writing is so descriptive you feel like you are witnessing it yourself. I would recommend this be read by every teen and above as an educational addition to world history in a land rarely mentioned as desecrated by Nazis. Thank you for enlightening all of us!

BTW, I have read her first two, The Devil Takes Half and When the Devil’s Idle, and they are both fabulous! All her books take place in Greece. It makes me want to go there, to those very places, especially Patmos.

  • CJ Loiacono

 

Loiacono Literary Agency takes on Affinity’s Window by Doug Wilson!

Doug Wilson headshot

Affinity’s Window, a horror/thriller equal to Poltergeist, it will have you afraid to turn the light off!

Affinity Bell, a lonely child whose only companion is the threadbare doll she’s christened Mr. Moppet, roams the empty halls of Bell Manor attempting to escape the evil that pursues her. The Others, the horrifying creatures only she can see, attack young Affinity at every opportunity. But Mr. Moppet will protect her, he’s told her so, and Mr. Moppet knows magic.

Tanner Dann, a world-weary writer searching for proof that ghosts actually do exist, is being called by an unknown force to Bell Manor. Will the two powerful psychics he’s hired help him to discover the proof for which he’s been searching, or will they too be dragged down into the noxious pit that is Bell Manor?

Evil flows through the heart of Bell Manor, pulsing and ebbing like some hideous tide. Will it drag Tanner and his friends down into its gaping maw, or will they battle back at Affinity’s Window?

Along with Carolyn, his wife of twenty-six years, and their two cats Clancy and Tyler, he lives and writes in Northern Virginia.

“Having a passion for writing that goes back as far as I can remember, I can’t describe how liberating it feels to finally be doing it full time. I spent my entire adult life working as a mechanical contractor, almost thirty-seven years in the trade, but I was forced by health issues to leave that demanding life. It was a blessing in disguise. Devoting myself to writing the horror suspense novels I’ve jealously devoured since childhood, immersing myself in the process, I’ve finally been able to put down on paper what’s been trapped inside me for years.”

Affinity’s Window is his third novel written, but first novel represented. He is currently honing the first two books in this series: Angel Rising Parts I and 2.

“It is my intent to entertain with suspense and horror anyone that reads my books. In other words, I plan to scare the crap out of you.” https://loiaconoliteraryagency.com/authors/doug-wilson

 

 

Character Study—Rabbi Shimon and Miriam Cohen—Please Say Kaddish For Me by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

Character Study—Rabbi Shimon and Miriam Cohen—Please Say Kaddish For Me by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

Miriam Cohen 2

Miriam CohenRabbi Shimon Cohen

Rabbi Shimon Cohen

Out of the corner of her eye she [Havah] saw her mother creep through the doorway and inch toward the bed with a wooden rolling pin high over her head. She slammed it down on the back of the man’s head. With a sudden jerk and a grunt he released Havah. He rolled off her and fell to the floor unconscious.

She sat up, clutching a pillow and stared down at him. Blood pooled under his head and seeped into the cracks between the floor boards. This had to be a dream. In the morning Papa would wink at her over breakfast and assure her it had all been a horrendous nightmare.

Her mother yanked her hand, dragged her from the bed and held her for a moment, her tears hot on Havah’s neck.

“Hurry, Havah. May the God of Israel go with you.” Taking Havah’s face between her hands her mother kissed her forehead.

“But Mama—”

Tugging Havah’s arm, her mother dragged her to the back door of the house and shoved her out. “No arguing. Go!”

Heart thumping, she ran. Thick smoke stung her eyes and burned her throat. She stopped and turned to look one last time. The blazing synagogue crumbled to the ground.

“No, Havah, don’t look back!”

~~Taken from Please Say Kaddish for Me by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

 

The Heder teacher’s face turned crimson. He narrowed his eyes and glared at five-year-old Havah as if she were a piglet about to be dumped on his doorstep. Then he clenched his tobacco-stained teeth and spat a brown glob on the doorstep.

Up until this moment she had been excited to learn to read the Torah, the words that came from Adoshem’s own mouth. Huddled against Papa’s shoulder she hid her eyes in his coat folds.

“You can’t be serious, Rabbi Shimon. She’s a girl.”

“So she is.” Papa’s arm tightened around her. “My daughter’s mind is every whit as keen as her brother Mendel’s.”

“To be certain she’s a bright one, and one day she’ll be a most excellent wife and mother. Perhaps she’ll even marry a rabbi herself but, Rebbe, to come to Heder with boys? It’s not right.”

“Where does the Torah say it’s wrong for a girl to learn?”

“Rabbi Ben Hyrcanus clearly stated in the Talmud that to teach a daughter Torah is tiflut, obscenity. And did he not also say that the words of the Torah should be burned rather than be entrusted to a woman? Rabbi, you of all people should know this.”

“As far as I’m concerned it’s opinion and rubbish! Didn’t the prophet Yo’el write ‘your sons and daughters shall prophecy’? Miriam and Deborah—were they not judges in Israel?”

“You win, Rebbe.” “I always do.”

~~Taken from From Silt and Ashes by Rochelle Wisoff-Fields

 

Until the pogrom that took them from her, Havah’s parents, Rabbi Shimon and Miriam Cohen were the two most important people her life.

Not one to be bound by law and traditions, Rabbi Cohen relied more on Torah than Midrash, the rabbinic commentaries.  When questioned, he was quick to argue that the former was the irrefutable word of God while the latter was merely opinion and conjecture.  He encouraged his daughter and his wife, if they so desired, to study the Holy Word.

Miriam was a gentle and loving wife who kept a clean, Kosher home. Her greatest treasures were her husband, her two sons and her daughter.

Havah adored her parents and her memories of them are a constant thread throughout the series. Even though she was only sixteen when they died, their words of wisdom are always there to guide her.

www.rochellewordart.com

Published by Argus Publishing 

Represented by Loiacono Literary Agency