Showing posts with label BestSelling Read. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BestSelling Read. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2013

Doing Max Vinyl: An independent book review

A fun thriller


Some books are just plain fun to read — like Frederick Lee Brooke’s Doing Max Vinyl.

This is a book that succeeds on several levels. First, it’s a perfectly crafted crime-thriller with a believable, sympathetic protagonist in Annie Ogden and a watertight plot. Second, all the characters are drawn from real life. Third, the writing is flawless, the style smooth and professional. And it’s full of observational humour. The laughs come from recognition — you know people like this, you’ve heard people say these things and you can easily picture them in the situations that Fred Brooke creates.


The plot

Max Vinyl is the owner of Tri-State Recylcing (TSR) in Chicago; on the day that he sells 20 percent of his company to Korean investors, his general manager fires the receptionist for spying on the company. The trouble is, the receptionist, Tris, is also Max’s girlfriend.

Tris, it turns out, is a “tree-hugger” according to the general manager, Manny Rodriguez. Manny had caught Tris snooping through some sensitive files and suspected she was going to blow the whistle on TSR’s less-than-environmentally friendly activities.

Those questionable practices? TSR recycles computers and other electronics. The law requires that companies dispose of their obsolete electronic equipment in such a way that harmful chemicals do not leak into soil, water or air. As a result, businesses pay recycling companies to dispose of their old computers, monitors, printers and other equipment properly. TSR charges to haul away the old equipment, then makes more money by reselling the best items. Any that it cannot sell, it disassembles, recycles, reuses or disposes of in an environmentally responsible manner.


Waste electronics represent two percent of the USA’s trash in landfills,
but 70 percent of overall toxic waste, according to e-waste workshop.
Image: Creative Commons.
 That’s what it tells the world on its website. What it really does, though, is pick the best, most sellable items from its incoming stream of used equipment — truckloads every day — and sell them through its website. TSR then dups eight to ten dumpsters into Lake Michigan every night.

Max has hired a number of ex-cons for the heavy work. Two in particular pilot the barge and dump the trash: Ike and Tranny. These two have the funniest antics in the book, especially the way that Tranny will say the opposite of what he means, then insist that’s not what he said.

“I get tired of always having to come up with the ideas, and you just say no to everything. How about you try saying no for a change and I get to have some ideas?”

“You mean I should come up with the ideas, and you can get to say no?”

“That’s what I said, stupid. Don’t try and turn things around that I say. I don’t go correcting you all the time.”

Every plot has to have a coincidence, or there’s no story. The skilled writer makes the coincidence seem unavoidable.

In Doing Max Vinyl, four very believable events occur on the same day:

• Max and the Korean investors agree to the $3 million sale

• Manny fires Max’s snoopy, tree-hugging ex-girlfriend

• a new laptop with very sensitive personal information accidentally enters TSR’s stream of trash

• and Ike and Tranny lose a global positioning system (GPS) device that shows them where to steer the barge and dump the garbage.

A waitress, Alison Ogden, find the GPS and takes it home because she thinks it’s a phone and her boyfriend collects old cell phones. When the boyfriend, Todd, tells her it’s not a phone, Alison gives it to her sister, Annie, who has just finished three combat tours in Iraq. Ike and Tranny track down Alison, break into her apartment and when they cannot find the GPS, take all of Todd’s 100-plus cell phones instead.

At this point, combat-trained Annie takes the fight to the bad guys to protect her sister. She infiltrates TSR and discovers its rotten foundation.

The characters

I could immediately picture Max Vinyl, the kind of sleazeball who convinces himself he’s a good guy while he’s cheating you, his wife, his employees, his business partners, the government and society at large. He overcharges his customers with rigged weigh-scales on his trucks, then dumps tonnes of garbage into the lake. He proudly proclaims he pays 25 percent above minimum wage. He’s chronically late on alimony payments and then pays his arrears with a cheque that bounces. Customers who have problems with items purchased off the website have to pay 90 cents a minute for telephone support. No wonder I laughed aloud when he falls face-first into a 10-dozen bouquet of roses after his ex-girlfriend pepper-sprays him.

Ike and Tranny kept me laughing, too, especially when Ike has to walk around with a table leg dangling from his forehead. The funniest part: he likes it!

Probably the most sensitively drawn character is Bob Olson, a square but straightforward good guy forced to bend his own moral code.

Brooke personifies the environment and Lake Michigan, too, in an original way that also evokes his humour. Bravo!

And Annie Ogden is precisely what I had hoped for in a female action hero. A former schoolteacher, she enlists in the Army and serves three tours in Iraq. She comes home with a new, confident attitude, a disdain for conventionality and a lot of fighting and survival skills. She’s small and fit, but not as young as she used to be. Brooke portrays her as very attractive, even beautiful in a diminutive way, but doesn’t take the beauty over the top like too many authors of female action heros. Conscious that she’s older than she used to be, she’s worried about the size of her butt — like every woman in the western world. When she takes on the bad guys, it’s absolutely believable.


The writing

Brooke is a pro. His skill with writing bears out his experience as an English teacher. The plot is airtight, the characters are likeable or hateable and recognizable. The style is spare and easy to read. I caught a few typos, but no more than I typically find in a commercially published book).

I found only two structural flaws:

• Two of the main characters, the catalysts of the action, Annie and Tris, never meet. While this makes sense in the context of this novel, I am sure that some putative expert will shake a figurative finger over this, calling it a major plot hole. It’s not.

• Somehow, the banner hanging over the work area at TSR that reads “MINIMUM WAGE PLUS 25% — TSR POLICY” gets replaced with the wording “Tris. TRS. Without.I.” Brooke never explains who did this (Tris, presumably), nor how. (Unless I missed it. If so, my apologies, Fred!)

The verdict

Doing Max Vinyl is a hoot, as well as a finely crafted thriller and a portrait of some real characters. I fully recommend this book!

5*

Visit Frederick Lee Brooke's website.

Check out Doing Max Vinyl on Amazon.

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

Christine Nolfi: a professional writer confident about her style

In my pursuit of the meaning and importance of writing style, this week I am turning to veteran Christine Nolfi, best-selling author of Second-Chance Grill, The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge and Treasure Me. Christine is also a founder of BestSelling Reads, a cooperative promotional group of writers of "new fiction."

Christine has definite views on the writer's style.

How would you describe your own writing style?

A combination of short, staccato sentences blended with longer, closer-to-literary passages. The combination is wholly intentional, a surefire way to evoke emotion in the reader.

Are there any authors whose style you admire? Do you try to emulate them?

I’m particularly fond of Ann Patchett’s style, but I don’t emulate her or other authors. I’ve been writing for many years. My literary voice is well established.

Are there authors whose writing style you dislike?

I dislike any prose that’s choppy, disjointed or poorly edited.

How important is your writing style to you? Are you happy with your style, or are there aspects of it you try to change during rewriting or editing?

After years of study, trial and error, critique groups, literary agents and much revision, I’m very happy with my writing style. Now when I sit down to begin a story, the entire process feels organic.

What are the important elements of your style? What are you trying to achieve?

An author receives the incalculable gift of the reader’s attention. Add in the modern world, with all the distractions and thrills of mass media, television, film — even the texting feature on your cell phone. Given all of that, I strive to create visual images on every page. Conflict rises, chapter by chapter. And I never forget to pack emotion into every sentence, and the novel’s essential structure.

Your style uses a lot of dialogue. What do you do to ensure your writing is authentic and believable?

I rehearse each scene out loud, becoming the different characters at different turns. This used to frighten my children. They’d arrive home from school to find Mom staring at the Mac and babbling dialogue. Now they’re grown and take my eccentricities in stride.

How can readers identify your writing style? Are there particular words or kinds of words that you tend to favor? Sentence structures? Or is it more in the story, the pacing or the characters?

I suspect readers first recognize my characters as something arising from Nolfi novel. Then the dialogue, which can veer from comedic to poignant in the blink of an eye. Writing style? The combination of short sentences and long passages are a dead giveaway.

Do you think your genre imposes certain restrictions on writing style?

Not at all. I write contemporary fiction, which covers the gamut of human experience. No, you’ll never find horror or erotica in my books. But you will find elements from many other genres — romance, mystery and suspense especially.

Do you think your audience responds to your writing style, consciously or unconsciously?


If fan mail carries proof, I’m sure of it. No doubt the response is both conscious and subconscious.

Why did you add discussion questions to the end of Second Chance Grill? Is this something you do with other books?


Book clubs welcome ready-made questions and I’ll probably supply them in each new release. The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge also has a discussion section. I’ll tell you, devising the right mix of questions for each book was arduous. I worried about missing important issues, or placing too much emphasis on others.

How important do you think writing style is to an author's commercial success?

I think readers in every genre have certain expectations. As an author, you must meet those expectations for any hope of success. In the case of contemporary fiction, readers demand a writing style rich in emotion, with striking visuals and deep symbolism. They don’t want a surface read. If they aren’t quickly immersed in the story and the conflict, they’ll move on to another novel.

Do you think your style will change in the future? Is there something different you would like to do in terms of style in a future book?

With each new book written, I sense my style veering closer to literary. Readers will decide if I’m making a wise decision. Someday I would like to try my hand at something different — a fantasy, perhaps, or science fiction. Or something gritty. Presently I’m editing my next two contemporary fiction releases, and will write the third installment of the Liberty Series over the summer. Perhaps I’ll find time in 2014 to try something new.

Christine Nolfi owned a small public relations firm in Cleveland, Ohio. She closed the firm after traveling to the Philippines to adopt a sibling group of four children. She has been writing novels full-time since 2004. Her debut Treasure Me is a 2012 Next Generation Indie Awards finalist. Her most recent book, Second Chance Grill was released in October 2012. Her works continue to earn high marks on GoodReads and Amazon.

You can find out more about Christine, her books and her blog at www.christinenolfi.com.

Follow Christine on Twitter @christinenolfi

Check out her GoodReads Author Pageher FaceBook Author page, and her Amazon Author page.

And don't forget to check out her books!

Second Chance Grill:
on Amazon.com 
on Amazon.ca
at Barnes & Noble
on
GoodReads.

Treasure Me — 2012 Next Generation Indie Awards Finalist
on Amazon 
at Barnes & Noble

The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge
on Amazon.com
on Amazon UK
on Barnes & Noble


Thursday, February 21, 2013

You know you want the best in new fiction


Get it now:

  • Authors defying commercial publishers and literary convention
  • leaping genre boundaries
  • and breaking rules.

Now get these hot new works — free.


BestSelling Reads brings together the best in new fiction — and gives you the chance to win a big honkin’ bunch FREE on a brand new iPad Mini!

Enter BSR’s great February Giveaway for a chance at a brand-new iPad Mini pre-loaded with an e-book from every BestSelling Reads member.

DON’T DELAY – THIS OFFER ENDS ON FEBRUARY 28, 2014.

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Take a look at a few of the cutting-edge books you could win:


VIGILANTE by Claude Bouchard: Because sometimes, criminals have to pay...


JAGUAR SUN (Jaguar Sun Book 1) by
Martha Bourke: A teenage shape-shifter discovers she is meant to ease the world's transition to a New Age as the Mayan calendar ends and a new world begins.

DOING MAX VINYL by Fred Brooke: Recycling fraud Max Vinyl suffers the worst week of his life when his environmentalist girlfriend, Tris, and returned Iraq War vet Annie Ogden team up to take him down.


THE BONES OF THE EARTH by Scott Bury: It’s the Dark Age, the earth has determined to erase human civilization with earthquakes, floods and plagues — and a young disabled must solve the riddle of the bones of the earth to save the woman he loves.

LICENCED TO THRILL, VOLUME 4 by Diane Capri: Four smart thrillers where justice rules!

  
SHADOW CAY by Leona DeRosa Bodie: Someone wants to make sure the Nesbitts never make it out of paradise alive.

THE NINTH DISTRICT by Doug Dorow: the Federal Reserve has never been robbed and FBI Special Agent Jack Miller means to keep it that way.


GONE AT ZERO HUNDRED by CR Hiatt: Two 18-year-old sleuths take on the perilous underworld in a club called The Devil's Door.

RED MOJO MAMA by Kathy Lynn Hall: Lydia "Red" Talbot has lost her mojo and getting it back means having to change a few things in her life.


3 LIES by Helen Hanson: Can a corporate dropout rescue his girlfriend before her kidneys fail or a CIA mission spins out of control? 

SHADES OF GRAY by Andy Holloman: Combine Breaking Bad with a dark remake of The Love Boat and you have all the colors in Shades of Gray.

LEAH'S WAKE by Terri Giuliano Long: This award-winning novel explores the struggle of teenagers coming of age, and coming to terms with the overwhelming feelings that rule them and the demanding world that challenges them.


PRICELESS by Shannon Mayer: A missing child, a werewolf for a pet, and the FBI on her tail — what could go wrong?
BLOOD ORCHIDS by Toby Neal: A fast-paced crime novel with a twist of romance, set on Hawaii.

SECOND CHANCE GRILL by Christine Nolfi: When Dr. Mary Chance inherits a restaurant in Liberty, Ohio, she can't resist falling for precocious Blossom Perini — or the girl's father. The bond they forge will transform all their lives and set in motion an outpouring of love that spreads across America.



 
THE SOCIETY OF SINNERS by Charity Parkerson: Evil lives in the dark.

MOONLIGHT ON THE NANTAHALA by Micheal Rivers: A story of dedicated friendship and undying love that will haunt your soul.

ARCADIA'S GIFT by Jesi Lea Ryan: Most people only experience death once. Arcadia Day is not most people.



CASSIDY JONES AND THE SECRET FORMULA by Elise Stokes: Discover how Cassidy Jones gains superpowers in her first action-adventure — an positive esteem-builder for teens, boys and girls. 


BROKEN PIECES by Rachel Thompson: It is rare when a writer puts so much of him or herself on the paper that you can see them bleed, but Rachel Thompson boldly steps out of the shadows and puts herself in the light that shows her wounds, her flaws, her heart and you can't help but be moved.

AMELIA'S STORY by D.G. Torrens: A life of pain and rejection — the powerful true story of one young girl’s struggle to survive the state care system in the 70s and 80s.

SAY MY NAME by Rebecca Tsaros-Dickson: A tale of two lovers in their 40s coming to terms with their true feelings after decades of unrequited passion. Anyone who has ever loved, lost and held out hope in spite of it all will see a piece of themselves in this novella — and it may not be easy to face.


POST-APOCALYPTIC NOMADIC WARRIORS by Ben Wallace: A fast-paced action and adventure novel set in a horrific future that doesn’t take itself too seriously.


NOTHING STAYS IN VEGAS by Elena Welch-Aitken: When Lexi is confronted with the past, she can no longer deny the truth to anyone because as she now knows, what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas — except when it doesn't.

  

MILL PEOPLE by Alle Wells: Jesse Finney's story captures the life of a Southern mill town from the late 1800s to the mid-twentieth century.
LAST ONE CHOSEN by Stephen Woodfin: How do you neutralize the most dangerous man on the planet?

 

 

 

 

 

Plus more action-adventure, thriller, romance, humour, science-fiction and non-fiction from

Natasha Brown

David C. Cassidy

John-Paul Davis


David Leadbeater

Kirkus MacGowan

Alan McDermott

Caleb Pirtle

Mohanalakshmi Rajakumar

Raine Thomas

And David Vinjamuri 

CONTEST CLOSES FEBRUARY 28.


Enter now: BestSelling Reads’ February Deal