Weekly Flash Fiction Poll

It is time once more for IU readers to vote for their choice in our  weekly Flash Fiction Challenge.

When we left our flash fiction challenge, only part of the story was told. A handful of brave indies have stepped forward to finish the job, but they’re not out of the woods just yet.

Check out this week’s entries here. Vote for your fave then use those share buttons at the bottom of the post to spread the word that the vote is on.

 

Who deserves to be this week's flash fiction star?

  • Robert K. Blechman (29%, 19 Votes)
  • Lynne Cantwell (26%, 17 Votes)
  • Ed Drury (17%, 11 Votes)
  • Jacqueline Hopkins-Walton (12%, 8 Votes)
  • Summer Ross (9%, 6 Votes)
  • Frank Parker (5%, 3 Votes)
  • A.L. Kaplan (2%, 1 Votes)

Total Voters: 65

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Please Big Al, Stop Complaining

Sometimes I feel like my posts at Indies Unlimited help too little, or maybe that should be they help, but complain too much. Largely, I see that as a difference between my logical role as a contributor here, and the majority of IU’s other contributors. While most of IU’s posts are written by authors, Cathy Speight and I are exceptions. We’re book reviewers. Other contributors can talk about how to craft proper dialogue, their experiences with KDP Select, and various marketing techniques, and all of us can pass on our experiences with social media or (in Cathy’s case), help with punctuation usage, but there are areas Cathy and I can talk about that the other minions can’t. We see the best indie books out there (largely written by IU readers) and the worst (the authors who I’m guessing frequent those other sites instead). When we see trends in those “worst books,” we can point them out. These can be reminders or cautionary tales for those faithful IU readers and, for those other people who stumble in from elsewhere, possibly help them see the error of their ways. They’ll not only become better at their job as an author, but may eventually rise to the level of the faithful IU reader. Raising everyone’s game, helps us all. Which leads to my current criticism. Continue reading “Please Big Al, Stop Complaining”

Timothy Hurley Announces New Release

Author Timothy Hurley is pleased to announce the release of his new humorous short story, Memo to Hell.

In this funnier than a lawyer-walks-into-a-bar story, Blogger-jerk gets Cookie Monster’s color wrong and foolishly argues with Manhattan lawyers about it. And even as his dreams and writing career sink into the East River, and he vows never to blog about green cartoon characters, it’s obvious — he ain’t learned his lesson.

Memo to Hell was released on December 26, 2012 and is currently available from Amazon.com and Amazon UK.

Meet the Author: Melissa Bowersock

Melissa Bowersock is an eclectic writer who turns her hand to any story that inspires her, be it fantasy, action, romance, satire or biography, and has found success with many genres. Her romance novel, Remember Me, was chosen as a finalist in Foreword Magazine’s Best of the Year Awards for 2005, and her fantasy novel, The Blue Crystal, made the semi-finals in Amazon’s 2009 Breakthru Novel Award contest. More recently, the Military Writers Society of America awarded her book Marcia Gates: Angel of Bataan a medal for biography at their book awards conference in 2012. The book was subsequently featured in a documentary on Wisconsin military history produced by WKOW-TV in Madison, titled Our Wisconsin: The Military History of America’s Dairyland. To date, Melissa has nine novels and the one non-fiction to her credit with, of course, more to come. She lives in a small desert community in southern Arizona. Continue reading “Meet the Author: Melissa Bowersock”