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Yes, if it come from your tap,in a bottle,or from reverse osmosis,because that water is acidic. Our body needs "ALKALINE" water........To be blunt,"Kangen water is radically changing the lives of so so many around the world.....Kangen means "Return To Black Orgin" and that's exactly what this water does....By no means am i trying to make money.....However, " What If Something as simple as changeing the water you drink could have a profound impact on the health of your family............ www.drinkangen.org

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A Call to Write

I've noticed since the inauguration of President Obama an uptick in therhetoric and even veiled threats to the president and our country.Fueled by talking heads like like Sean Hannity, Alan Keys and RushLimbaugh, as they argued that President Obama must be stopped at anycost, it has progressed into the formation of a political party (theTea Party), who's sole purpose seems to be to "take our country back",which sounds more like ralling cry for a coup than a tagline for apolitical movement. Many in this movement are quick to associate anyhumility or deference to the needs of the world at large, as treasonessor at a minium unpatriotic. Those who have lit this fuse appear willingto say anything, to keep their ratings up and their pockets lined onthe pretext of preserving the american way.

First, let me saythat I do not wish to exists at any cost. If I must cast off all that Iam, and myself become an abomination to myself and others, I wouldrather that I not have been born at all. And likewise for this country,if we yield to the vulgar nature of fear and loathing to continue ourexistence then we have already forsaken all those things we claim tobe, and we make a mockery of the creed "One Nation Under God".

Secondly, it seems equally clear to me that "we" must push against thecurrent of hate and rage, with all the vigor of our beings, that allthat we have worked for may not perish from the face of the earth. Yes,this country is at great risk right now, but not from anythingpresident Obama has done, but rather from the lips of those who opposefreedom when the candidate of their choice is not elected. Where werethese voices the previous eight years? With very few exceptions, thoseclamoring the loudest to that we are on the wrong track, are the verysame ones who sold and embarrassed themselves for the preivousadministration. Where was their outrage then?

Thirdly, we mustconfess that we are a country of morally dishonest people when it comesto politics. We take up truths that line up with our predeterminedposition or affiliation. Many know the truth but they are too afraid tosay it. The truth is, that President George H Bush (the father) was agood president. He corrected the fiscal policies for President Reagan,that led to the last major recession. President Reagan was a greatleader, but his policies were very flawed. President Clinton benefitedfrom President Bush's fiscal policy, but had the good sense to buildupon them. And as the years pass and the media spin wears off,President Carter will look better and better. While not right oneverything, he was right on so much, that we as a nation were just notready to hear (he called for energy independence before it was a coolthing to do).

So, the question in my mind is just how do wechange the conversation? How do we affect change, such that we speakand act upon real issues and not rhetoric and blind ideology born outof fear of those different from ourselves?

We write.

We write upon this gigantic blackboard called the Internet. We write tonewspapers large and small. We write to the radio stations thatbroadcast programs that prey upon our fears and promote incivility. Wewrite to our legislators and congress persons. We write articles,opinion pieces and letters to national and local magazines. We writeanywhere where we have the right to express ourselves and our sharedbelief of a better existence here in this life. We write the truth, nomatter how painful it may be, whether it benefits us personally or not,and whether it offends or not. We must have faith in the truth, andthat by its inherent power; we will be delivered from this currentclimate of bitterness and deceit.

Lastly, let us remember thatnothing is impossible for those who have faith in what is good andjust. Whether we see the harvest in our generation, does not matter incomparison to the preservation of the process, built upon the beliefthat all men are created equal, and that we might pass this hope alongto future generations, granting them the faith to continue on...

Sincerely,
Alan Jones
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The Lost Prince

This story has its origins in my dreams. Let us hope it inspires the makings of a wonderful narative.




Night was fast approaching and I felt compelled to go outside. I think I lived alone and I do not know why I needed to go outside.

As I came out of the building I saw on my left two people, one atop a camel, robed completely in black. Only his dark eyes were visible. The other, in a dirty white Arab outfit and a turban, looked directly at me and smiled. I walked towards him. I had instantly trusted him, almost like I knew him. And then the ground beneath me shifted, turned into sand, and it seemed like we were in a small desert heaped high with with dunes, right here in the outskirts of this lush green town. I approached the pair on unsteady feet. The one atop the camel reached into the inner folds of his black robes and retreived what looked like a black cloth wrapped around an uneven wooden stick.

"Perhaps he will do better this time," he intoned in a deep but gentle voice that gave me the sense of ages, eons, as he handed me the stick. His companion urged me to unwrap it. I did.

It was like my eyes opened for the very first time; almost like I had been asleep the whole time and new sensations were stirring in me and all around me.

When I looked up, the black-clad man was gone. So was the sand. His white-clad companion, however, remained. He asked me what to do. His name came to me-Andreshan-was this a memory? Or was it the scroll? He lifted his hand and pointed. I followed it and spotted a little girl who was beckoning to me. She was sitting on the veranda of a nearby house, regarding me expectantly as I approached. Something above the house distracted me. Night had now fallen, save for slight silver splashes on the clouds now illuminated by the moon. A small chubby dragon flapped its wings and flew towards us. I looked at Andreshan who smiled still, nodding.

"Can everyone see this?" I asked, feeling as though I was rapidly losing my grip on reality.
Andreshan shook his head. The dragon hovered in the air in front of me, smiling as it stretched out its hand.

"Hello, Henry," the dragon said, as I took its hand for a firm handshake. Then it was gone. My attention once more returned to the little girl. It seemed not at all unusual to her to be talking to an imaginary being.

She pointed at the sky,covered with scattered clouds. It seemed to be bigger. The moon, peeping from behind a cloud, was now grander and more magnificent than I had ever imagined. "I saw it yesterday." She was pointing at a constellation of three bright stars. "Right there, I saw the comet." But I could not see it.

The clouds had almost completely obscured the constellation when the three stars formed a triangle with more glittering stars. It then began an acrobatic dance in the sky, drawing multiple white rays of light. Then the rays of light changed, seemed to be emanating from a rotating house floating in the sky. Again it seemed that only I and my new companion saw this.

Angreshan urged me toward this unreal wonder. Our flight of sand would have to wait.
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Creating Your Own Book Trailer

The moment I responded to a comment about one of my book trailers, I knew I had to follow through and write about how to create your own. So I'm going to put it down recipe style and start with the things you need to make it happen.

Tools:
Movie editing software (Windows Movie Maker WMM, Wax, imovie [I think that's what the Apple version is called]). I list these options, because they are free, easy to use and with a little creativity can give good results.

A picture of your book cover

You may want to include a picture of yourself if you like.

The blurb from the back of your book

Royalty free images and music

Time patience and practice!


I'm just going to imagine that some of us are clueless about computers here and explain the process using WMM. Go to Start > Programs > WMM.

When the program opens you will see at the bottom of the window, a Timeline. At the upper right, a screen. At the upper left a Task panel and in the center, a section where you will be see your images/music that you will be working with. This middle pane can also show the different options offered in Effects/Transitions found under the Edit section of the Task panel.

I would recommend that you start off with playing around with the options so as to get a general idea of what everything does. From the Import section of the Task panel, click on pictures, find the ones you want to use. When you have made your choice (press and hold the Ctrl key to select more than one at a time), they will become visible on your center panel, same for any other media you import. Bear in mind if you are going to use a film clip (say of yourself speaking about your book), WMM only caters for wmv and avi formats. Any other formats will have to be converted. I use the free version of Any Video Converter to do this (Google it).

Click and drag your pictures onto the Timeline, do the same with your audio/music files. You might want to juggle them around a bit, make the duration of a particular picture longer than another, trim down the music etc. Try right-clicking on your files in the Timeline to see other options, like fade in/out. Click on an image that you have dragged into the timeline and select Effects from the Edit section. Have a go at applying each one and seeing how it works, and which is best for to highlight on the story you are trying to tell with that image. Do the same with Transitions.

Like anything it might take a little practice to get things the way you want it, but simple works best. Also bear in mind that a good trailer lasts about 60-90 seconds. You don't want your audience to zone out before you get your message across. Think of the way tv commercials work.

Things to consider:
Copyright. You don't want to shoot yourself in the foot before you even get anywhere. Using a track from 50cent or any other artist without prior (written) permission will get you in trouble.

Use royalty free music and pictures. Images can be found for free using advanced search options on google. Being that our genre is predominantly sci-fi, bear in mind many of NASA's image stock are under creative commons license (free to use), but do cross check to make absolutely sure.

Most of my images are my own personal photos that I took myself. Even if you don't have much to work with, the fonts used can make your trailer eye catching. Notice in the book trailer for my second novel (Let Sleeping Gods Lie), at times I have used capitals to give the sentence a different visual appeal and break the monotony of it.

I get royalty free music from a site called Incompetech - http://incompetech.com/m/c/royalty-free
You are invited to make a donation, but if nothing else the owner of the tracks Kevin Macleod appreciates if you give his name a mention or add a link back to his site.
For sounds, like the shots heard at the end of my most LSGL trailer, I go to soungle.com they have hundreds on offer, all free to use.

Its a good idea to watch as many trailers as you can, both for books and movies. Learn from other peoples mistakes, how would you improve on my trailer for example? Too long, okay make yours shorter and snappier. Boring music? Choose something lively, but be sure it compliments your story line.

When choosing music, I try to keep it neutral, I love RnB, but I don't use it on my main trailer. If I really think something fits, I might do a second trailer so it appeals more to the market of readers who would benefit from knowing my book has a soulful vibe to it.

I hope this helps, feel free to ask questions if you find yourself needing further clarification on anything.
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The eBook

Over the weekend I finished work on the ebook version of my novel and submitted to Smashwords and Amazon. The Smashwords link is up (http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/14829), but at the moment both sites have me in "pending" mode. I like Smashwords because I have the opportunity to register an ISBN number under my own publishing imprint!

The formal publication launch is set for Memorial Day. The eBook is priced at $4.95. Here's the updated cover:


The next step in this literary experiment will be daunting indeed - marketing the ebook as if it were an already printed self-published novel while searching for an agent and / or traditional publishing company to make that Herculean goal a reality. This is exciting!
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Listen to In Like Flynn on internet talk radio


Your favorite Soul Train Era 70's, 80's or 90's?! Back up your choice with your favorite Soul Train performances! Conquering the Yips...How to get beyond those career stuttters that paralyse your progress. And How dumb can people be? When a scam or con is right in front of their faces...Why can't people see it?! The 100% grown folks weekly update by Penelope & Otto on all you need to know to competently discuss what's news in entertainment politics, current events and finance.


From Politics, to relationships to Jobs we'll help you get through it!

Saturday 5/15/2010 9:30pm CST 90 Minutes CLICK ON THE LINK or call 718/508-9683 and TELL US WHAT'S ON YOUR MIND!

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Greetings,

This is a new concept to me, but in light of the last seven years of my life, I feel compelled to post this. I am a 38 year old author, musician, educator, entreprenuer with hundreds of creative concepts that I am positive would net millions of dollars in revenue for anyone willing to invest in me. I am not skilled in marketing myself or managing my creativity because it flows out of me so fast I don't have time to grab a hold of it.

I have written eight books (seven can be found at www.lulu.com/karaam and my first work, The Human Race Bible can be found anywhere online). I write about what inspires me from within the Human perspective with an emphasis on what affects Nubian/African-American people. I do inspirational speaking for youth and am currently working on a newsletter for children (interested investors can get more info).

I started a cultural/private learning center for children in 2004 and am currently working on an online aspect of the school so that children globally can partcipate in the curriculum which developed myself. I currently teach and administrate and am looking to establish my center in a suitable location.

I created three card games for children and adults, two of which I am working on trademarking so they can be presented to casinos.

I created a musical group with members of my family (my wife and seven children) and we released a double cd in 2007 completely in an ancient African language, which my family and I speak amongst each other (language is culture and I am all about culture).

I am working on an outdoor game for children and adults that I will be unveiling in June of this year (2010).

I have a ton of other ideas and concepts that pop into my head on a daily basis and basically...

I NEED HELP!!!

What I am looking for is someone to assist me in managing and marketing my ideas, concepts and potential. I am also looking for investors who are looking for a gold mine of creative ideas that have a global span (I haven't given you any of my ideas).

But here's a teaser...

In 1996 when the Olympics came to Atlanta, I came up with a commercal concept for Coca Cola while walking to work. Having no idea where and how to submit a commercial idea, I called Coca Cola in California who told me that they get their ideas from an advertisement company but asked me to give them my idea (yeah, right!) I dropped it but about two years later, an ice tea company came out with a commercal similar (but not exactlyI) to mine. To bad for Coca Cola...

Here was my idea...

A cut-away shot of a mountain (probably Stone Mountain in Atlanta, GA) is shown with a man or woman climbing to the top. The camera focuses on his hands, his backpack and maybe his shoes. When he reaches the top of the mountain, he takes off his back pack and reaches in. He pulls out a small tape recorder, a microphone and a can of something (you can't see what it is yet). He sets the recorder down and presses the REC and PLAY buttons and holds the microphone out from the mountain. The camera zooms to an elderly gentlemen who is working in his yard who begins to hum the Coca Cola song. The camera zooms to another part of the world where some schoolgirls are on their way to school and they are humming the tune as well, but in harmony with the first gentleman. Camera zooms again to a shopowner sweeping the front of his shop and singing in harmony. The camera zooms to maybe two or three more places and goes back and forth as the crescendo of the song picks up. As the song reaches its climax you see people heading to the Olympic parks in Atlanta and as the song finishes, the camera zooms back to the microphone. The person clicks the recorder off and takes a drink from his can, which of course is Coca Cola. On the screen, you see, "Coca Cola, uniting the world in Atlanta, GA, Olympics 1996) or something to that effect and...fini

...and that's just one idea!!

if you are an investor or someone who feels you can assist me please contact me through email first at drkaraam@yahoo.com. We can take it from there.

I thank you in advance and look forward to much success and prosperity.

Dr. Karaam

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I am over at my other favorite site, Blacks In Technology http://www.socialbit.net/home, in the forum a discussion is brewing about folks who don't believe we Blacks can be expert computer technicians and engineers, especially other Blacks. The image of the Black geek ie computer enthusiast and/or professional is hammered in mind and reality. I know we have made image strides in the movies but on the ground there seems to still be a disconnect of unbelief and much ridicule. Smart Blacks are seen as an alien threat by normal folk and the baddies. Blacks with displays of discipline and intellect are seen as having given in and sold out to the "other" culture.

We are not anomalies as suggested by todays media and we are not having lost our "Blackness" just because we are techno smart. What I have found is that among us there are a lot of late bloomers because we have believed the "BS" ourselves. When we discover we are smarter than we've been told all our lives, we instantly start making up for lost time. Because we've needed lawyers in our civil-rights struggles and needed doctors for our specific health demands, we see them but we are not sure about needing computer techs and also how many Black architects can you recall? If Black scientist, architects and computer technologist are science fiction to them, it is ten times still strange to us.

Also most times we are so busy proving ourselves and our skills over and over to people that we posthumously make a name for ourselves. Give'em hell while their breath'n, thank'em at their funeral.

As you all write into the world's story, you are also writing us into the future, at least that is how I see it. When you visualize it in fiction, we might actualize it in hardware/software.

Here's what I saw on the BIT site, a Black man wearing a dashiki, He is a Christian, a Computer professional. This is not possible if you stereotype it all out. There are over a hundred different persona's on this site alone that don't match the white media geek stereotype, which is a rouse to deflect us. We watch lots of media, we don't want to appear stupid as that, we avoid that. Simplistic? Yes. True, you judge.
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Greetings fellow film buffs. I can’t count the number of films I’ve watched over the years in which I’ve thought to myself, “hey that was a great film, but the ending just killed it”. (Yeah, I’m talking to you, M Night Shyamalan.) I’ve started this blog because I’ve just discovered a remedy to this problem. A friend of mine who has had her movies screened at prestigious film festivals such as Sundance and Cannes led me to www.imadeamovie.com. I am so stoked about this website that I’ve created this blog solely for the purpose of documenting my experience with imadeamovie.com.
Ok, so here’s how it works: $50 makes you an associate producer on any of the movies on imadeamovie.com. As an associate producer you’re entitled to give your input to the executive producer, thereby affecting the outcome of the film. You vote on casting, location, music, style (you all know I prefer Noir), and other important decisions, like choosing the appropriate ending! You also have the option to communicate directly with the crew via video. During the process, you learn the roles of the important, but often overlooked behind-the-scenes crew (who knows what a key grip does?). As an added bonus, they send you a bunch of schwag: hats, t-shirts, and, when the movie is completed, a DVD with your name in the credits.
Imadeamovie.com also provides an awesome opportunity for up-and-coming actors/actresses to break into a virtually impenetrable industry. All an aspiring actor needs to do to be considered for a part in a film is upload their audition video to the website. The “big break” which once consisted of headshots, an agent, and flying to LA, has been reduced to a digital camera, your bathroom, and a computer.
So what have I done so far, you ask. Without divulging too much information about the film, we’ve chosen the lead actress, the set, and the script. We’re still collaborating on the style, music, and a couple other aspects of the film. However, the ball is rolling, and we’re on schedule to begin filming at the end of this month. I’d have to say that I’m pretty active on this project… let’s just say the director hears my input on a daily basis.
Overall, this is turning out to be a pretty interesting experience. I mean, short of joining the film industry (no easy feat!), how else could a guy, far-removed from the glitz of Hollywood, affect the outcome of a film?
Stay tuned, I’ll be sure to keep you all updated on my movie...
Oh, and if you have film fanatic friends, a membership at imadeamovie.com makes a unique gift for movie lovers. $50 to be a part of the movie making experience, an experience that spans months + lots of goodies to boot = not a bad deal.

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By Mikki Kendall -- Publishers Weekly, 4/12/2010 12:00:00 AM

Nnedi Okorafor’s gentle demeanor is so disarming that it’s impossible not to relax in her company. The Chicago State University professor has a sweet smile, three graduate degrees, numerous awards and prize nominations for her writing, and a razor-sharp mind that is changing the face of speculative fiction. The latter soon becomes apparent when the discussion turns to genocide, rape, female circumcision, fantasy, and Nigerian culture.

Born in the U.S. to Nigerian immigrants, Okorafor, 36, grew up in the same suburb of Chicago where she now resides with her own daughter. As a child, she was mostly interested in sports and the sciences, dreaming of becoming an entomologist, but she was always fond of reading, and by age 12, she found her mind had been “corrupted by genius white male storytellers” like Stephen King and Clive Barker. “I was working my way through the library reading whatever caught my eye,” Okorafor recalls fondly. “I read a lot of books that I definitely had no business reading at that age.” A writing class in college sparked her creativity and while obtaining an M.A. in journalism and an M.A. and Ph.D. in English, Okorafor began to write the stories she always wanted to read.

Okorafor’s books feature the cultural and social touchstones of her youth: Nigeria, strong girls and women, and the strange, beautiful lives of plants and insects. The YA novel Zahrah the Windseeker (Houghton Mifflin, 2005), which won the Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature, is a classic magical quest set in a world in which Earth is a legend and everything from clothing to computers grows from seeds. In the Parallax Award–winning The Shadow Speaker, her second YA, a Muslim teen in West Africa must avert interplanetary war.

Okorafor’s first adult novel, Who Fears Death, which will be published in June by DAW Books, combines science fiction and fantasy in the story of Onyesonwu, a young sorceress making her way in a postapocalyptic future Saharan Africa where men use rape as a tool to eradicate a culture on the genetic level. “Who Fears Death addresses the push and pull in African culture that powerful women face when their culture has certain duties and beliefs that can stifle them,” Okorafor says.

As she channels the past, present, and future into one complex tale, Okorafor walks a fine line between sincere respect and unstinting examination of tradition: mixing futuristic technology with magic rooted in the beliefs of Nigerian, Tanzanian, and other African cultures, exploring why many women willingly practice female circumcision and see it as a necessary rite of passage even as others find it horrific. These somber themes seem a drastic departure from her previous work, but Okorafor refuses to gloss over the realities on which she builds her fiction.

“What initially brought me Onyesonwu’s character,” she explains, “was reading a Washington Post news story: ' “We Want to Make a Light Baby”: Arab Militiamen in Sudan Said to Use Rape as Weapon of Ethnic Cleansing.’ I wondered what these children would be like, what would their struggles be, how would they survive, who would they grow up to be. And that’s when Onyesonwu came to me to tell her story.” Okorafor adds, “I am not trying to be shocking or exceedingly graphic. Onyesonwu’s story was told to me in just this way and she is not one to tell lies, embellish, or mince words.”

Okorafor’s upcoming projects include a YA novel that Penguin will publish in 2011, Akata Witch, with a focus on the tension between African-Americans and Africans as well as “deep, deep Nigerian witchcraft”; two screenplays in collaboration with award-winning Nigerian film director Tchidi Chikere; and a science fiction novella set in Nigeria. She also has plans for another adult novel. “I’ll know what that one is about when I start writing it,” Okorafor says. “When it comes, it’ll come like a tidal wave.”

Author Information
Mikki Kendall is an occasional adult and constant writer.
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Wonderdark: The Awakening of Zuza

A young Vegan wise beyond her years. A futuristic city. And a doorway just outside the edge of reality. Brilliantly imaginative and exquisitely written Dazjae Zoem’s Wonderdark: The Awakening of Zuza, blends the fantastic and mundane in a mosaic that grabs you and holds tight as you slowly enter worlds upon worlds that are not quite what they seem to be -- peopled by vengeful elves, high-minders, faeries and other magical creatures. The Awakening of Zuza is a hip, high-fantasy journey and I recommend it to travelers not faint of heart who yearn for a taste of Afro Steampunk. Trust me you’ll enjoy the ride!

Valjeanne Jeffers author of Immortal & Immortal II: The Time of Legend

http://immortalfantasynovels.com

Check out: Wonderdark: The Awakening of Zuza (to be released)

& The Books of Zambarau Maji Omnibus by Dazjae Zoem at

http://www.purplemag.com

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Valjeanne Jeffers Interview

 

Valjeanne Jeffers is a Spelman graduate and a member of the Carolina African American Writers' Collective. Her poems have appeared In Revelry 2006, Pembroke Magazine 2007, Drumvoices 2007 & 2008, and the anthologies: The Ringing Ear: Black Poets Lean South, Making Sense of the Madness, Little Black Book Vol II: Bedtime Stories for Lovers, and Liberated Muse Vol I: How I Freed my Soul 2009, the featured anthology for the Capital City Soul Fest and PurpleMag #7

 

She also writes under the pen name Valjeanne Jeffers-Thompson. Valjeanne is the author of Immortal 2nd edition and Immortal II: The Time of Legend. She is also an active member of RIM.

 

 

1. Introduce yourself to our readers. 

 

I’m Valjeanne Jeffers poet, SF author and artist. I’m also the author of Immortal and Immortal II: The Time of Legend. Sister Moon is my wolf totem sprit and muse and I gladly embrace her. I believe that we should love God, ourselves and our world. One of the ways we can do this is by changing something to make our planet better in any way that we can no matter how small.

 

I’ve been published in Revelry, Drumvoices, The Ringing Ear, How I Freed my Soul Volume I, Pembroke Magazine and PurpleMag.

 

2. Tell us about your books. And the world of Immortal that you created.

 

In the year 3075, Tundra has been at peace for 400 years. There is no poverty or racism. Yet the planet is threatened by an ancient evil. Karla, a young Black woman, is a recovering addict working as a drug counselor. Intelligent and capable, she knows exactly where she’s going and what she wants.

Until she closes her eyes at night and enters a seductive and dangerous world.

 

To save Tundra Karla must find Joseph -- the one man who can unravel the mystery of her dreams -- and unleash the werewolf sleeping inside her.

In Immortal II the journey continues as Karla and Joseph fight to save their planet -- and their love. More characters are introduced each with their own set of personal issues which must be resolved before they can grow. So you see there are layered struggles taking place in Immortal: the struggle between the characters and themselves, and the struggle to save their world.

I strive to make my art imitate life and there are no totally “good” or “evil” characters in the Immortal series. All of my good guys and gals have a little “evil” in them -- and my villains a little “good.”

 

3. Why did you become a writer?

 

Writing is not what I do it’s who I am. I write because I don’t have a choice: creating new characters and worlds is as vital to me as my next breath. I am in love with writing.

 

4. Tell us about your publishing journey.

 

I began my journey the way I believe a lot of authors have: trying to break into the traditional industry with an agent who would help me get published. Even as I did I knew, as a Black science fiction author, that the odds were stacked against me. Back in 2004 when I began writing Immortal, I knew of only four published Black SF authors. Years later I would find a whole community of them at

http://www.blacksciencefictionsociety.com but still many of them are still, like myself, self-published.

 

I had a lot of doors slammed in my face and it made me mad -- I know writing and I knew my novels were phenomenal! I’d also seen trash, more times than I can count, sitting on library shelves. So I decided to self-publish. It hasn’t been easy, but I found a supportive niche online and I’ve never regretted my decision. I’m doing my thing and I love it.

 

5. Has your work touched anyone? How?

 

Honestly I believe it has. I’ve had readers tell me that Karla, Joseph and my other characters are realistic and likable. I’ve also been told that my writing projects true hope for the future and optimism.

 

6. What's on the horizon?

 

I’ve finished my third novel Immortal III: Stealer of Souls, the third novel in the Immortal series which I plan to release this summer (2010). In Stealer of Souls, new characters, like Annabelle, are born and old friends are reunited. Stealer is fast-paced, imaginative, very sexy and blurs the lines between SF and horror.

An excerpt from Immortal III has been published in Pembroke Magazine and another excerpt will appear in the Black Science Fiction Society anthology, Future Passage (2010).

 

I’ve also had three stories, The Visitor, Grandmere’s Secret, and Awakening published in anthologies.

 

7. Encouraging words for aspiring authors.

 

If you chose to write, do so because you love it and you can’t imagine not being an author. Second of all, be stubborn. Don’t listen to anyone who tells you don’t have what it takes. And finally, find a supportive, loving writing group that meets at least once a month where you can share ideas and have your work critiqued. Don’t give up!

 

8. Morning Rituals?

 

Each morning I smoke my first cigarette of the day -- a bad habit I know, but the last one I have -- start my coffee pot and check my emails. This is usually the time of the day that I get my best ideas too. I’m sure this is because mornings are the time of day when our minds are least cluttered, so our creative spirit can whisper to us without interfering noise. In the AM dialogue and plots often leap into my head and I mentally bookmark them until I have a chance to write.

 

9. Describe your perfect writing environment.

 

For me this is a room with a computer and a notebook, and with no one awake but me. I like to write from 12AM on, because by then everyone is asleep. A full moon makes this “space” even more stimulating.  

 

10. Who are some of your favorite authors and why?

 

I love Octavia Butler. She has the ability to say so much with so few words -- like conjuring a room from thin air. I’m also a big fan of Charles Saunders. His writing is like water -- fluid and beautiful. Charles takes African myths and history, both very difficult subjects to work with, and weaves magic in a genre he created called Sword and Soul.

 

Milton Davis is also one of my favorites -- he can write anything. But Sword and Soul is also his specialty. Brother Davis make his characters come to life and walk across the page, and his Afro-mythic battle scenes make the hair on the back of my neck stand up.

 

Edward Uzzle is one of the most imaginative authors I’ve had the pleasure to read. When I read him he blows me away -- one of those writers that make you wonder: “How did he come up with this?” I always get a militant, pro-black buzz from his novels too.

 

I also enjoy erotica and I feel that sexuality when written about should caress the ear like the brush of lips and evoke delicious imagery (e.g., juicy mangos, billowing silk etc.) So for writing that sizzles my picks would definitely be B. Sharise Moore and Quinton Veal.

 

I ’m also a big fan of Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, Audre Lorde, Tananarive Due, Steven Barnes, Stephen King, Dean Kootz, Tad Williams and too many others to name.

 

11. Favorite books?

 

Some of my favorite novels are:

 

Wild Seed

(Octavia Butler)

 

Neters: Issue O and RETRO-KM (Edward Uzzle)

Taste (B. Sharise Moore)

 

Imaro I & II

(Charles Saunders)

 

Meji I & II

(Milton Davis)

 

The Friday House

(DK Gaston)

 

Banjo Strings

(Larry Winfield)

 

Their Eyes were watching God

(Zora Neale Hurston)

 

My Soul to Keep & The Good House

(Tananarive Due)

 

IT (Stephen King)

The Talisman

 

(Stephen King & Peter Straub)

Invisible Man

 

(Ralph Ellison)

I could go on and on!

 

12. How did you come up with the title?

 

I didn’t have to think about, the title just jumped in my head -- like the story itself. There was no question in my mind that Immortal was it and would always be it. Later I was amazed that the title I chosen (well before I was anywhere close to being finished) fit so wonderfully with the main characters that grew to people my books: all of them immortal.

 

13. If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

 

I’d have to say Octavia Butler, not just because she’s an awesome writer but because she opened the gate for so many of us. Before I read Wild Seed, I didn’t even know that Black folks wrote SF, and I’d been reading authors like Stephen King for years. Octavia made me believe that I could conquer this genre -- that I could be a SF/fantasy author. I’ve also been told that our writing styles are similar which I consider a huge compliment.

 

14. Parting words.

 

I’d like to thank Brother DK for taking the time to interview me and for his support. And to all my creative brothers and sisters: peace and strength to your writing hands!

 

Visit me at: http://immortalfantasynovels.com/

 

I like to personally thank Valljeanne Jeffers for taking the time to interview with me.

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SUPERHEROES AS EXPRESSED SPIRITUALITY.

I've always felt profound spiritual joy when experiencing the superhero ( fictional and REAL ) in society.
This isn't meant to offend anyones faith nor the institution of organized religion. Quite the contrary. Superheroes also are a celebration of the same values. They just do it a bit differently.
Speaking only for myself I become transcendent while encountering superhero print and other content. This transcendence can only be called spiritual. I've read great text from religions great and small. While not saying comic books and pulp novels are on the same plane I know what they do to quicken my spirit.
Superheroes are a non-denominational, non-sectarian way to apply timeless lessons from the Bible; Torah; Quran and other holy books in a colorfully contemporary fashion. As a creative concerned citizen I'm always on the look out for inspiration and with superheroes I find it.
In a real world where one faith beats the other over the head it's rewarding to find a secular form promoting doing good because it's the right thing to do. Period!
Superheroes have been a creative " church " for me all my life. They are infinitely more than escapism or, in the case of real life superheroes ( RLSH ), delusion.
I hope I haven't stepped on anybody's religious toes but to me, superheroes are expressed spirituality, minus preaching or places of worship. They speak loudly about what the One Super Power ( however you do or don't term God ) offers anyone caring enough to become more.
NADRA ENZI AKA CAPT. BLACK promotes crime prevention and self-development. (912) 272-2898 NADRACAPTBLACK@YMAIL.COM ( Pay Pal address ) and http://reallifesuperheroes.org/wiki/index.php?title=Captain_Black

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RENPET CHAPTER 3

.......Now he knew that she never meant him any harm and
that she held a passion for him that was both wild and
earnest. She closed her eyes slowly as if she was offering
him her life.
She kissed him softer and deeper than she did before.
His head got hot, he could feel his chest about to explode
and she picked up on it. She tore his shirt off and
motioned them over to the bed.
On the way over, they both kicked their sneakers off
their feet tumbling over furniture in the process. Mike
embraced her with his gift and levitated her over the bed.
He motioned his hand and all her outer garment was torn
off from her body. She gasped deeply and blushed as much
as her complexion would allow. He let her go onto the bed
gently and climbed on top of her. He felt her breasts. They
were soft and supple to his touch. He started to suck on
her nipples and they became erect in his mouth.
She grabbed his left hand and began to suck on his
ring finger. Mike became erect. With her other hand she
unzipped his pants and pulled them off with her feet.
Mike was impressed. She held his manhood between her
thighs and brought it closer to her.
"ARRRGH," he growled.
She bit deep into the flesh of his finger causing blood
to flow steadily. With his finger still in her mouth, she
started to swallow the blood that flowed out from the
puncture she made.
"Damn it! How much more do I have to bleed today,"
he said in partial pleasure and agony.
"Just a little bit more. Now bite into me," she said in
an erotic voice as she grabbed his head and teasingly
brushed her finger across his lips.
Puzzled and caught up in the moment, Mike found
himself doing just as she asked. He bit her finger until she
bled the same as he and sucked out blood feverishly.
Michelle groaned out loud in ecstasy.
Although Mike didn’t know whether he was possessed
or not, he did know that somehow this was right. They
were both intoxicated by each other’s excitement. He felt
as though he was going to lose consciousness and he could
see the same in her eyes. After a few moments they passed
out in each others' arms. These Terrans are very odd and
interesting beings.

renpet331.blogspot.com
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Who is Djadja N. Medjay


Djadja N Medjay is an author, a student of martial sciences, spiritual sciences and an Ohashiatsu Instructor. His first novel is called, Renpet.

Synopsis of Renpet:

RENPET is the ancient Kemet feminine cosmic principle who personified fertility, spring and youth. She was often known as the "Mistress of Eternity" and her name was used to express the term "year"........

The world after Renpet, The Year, takes place after the planet earth passes through a photon field. This takes place during the solar system's complete orbit around the central sun of the Pleiades constellation known as Alcione. Following this event, the earth goes through strong continental shifts, dramatic weather pattern changes, intense exposure to ultraviolet rays and the transition of half of the world's population either into the next world or into a higher form.
It is comparable to an organism like an amoeba springing forth in evolution to become a bird. The survivors on the planet gain an increased amount of pigmentation and the adolescents receive enhanced abilities. The earth is in a state of rebirth and regeneration, its population is in a state of challenge adjusting to their new environment. Due to the extreme jump in evolution, many of the inhabitants suffer psychological trauma which causes conflict in the midst of the restoration of the planet.

Enter the world after Renpet, the year, where all that was unknown is being re-discovered. Follow the journey of Serqet, who is of an advanced race of humans from the future. She is given the task of guiding a group of youths through their growth in the new world. Of course, any youth finds it difficult adjusting to adolescence, and it must be near impossible after you survived the upheaval of an entire planet. Imagine everything you knew was turned upside down...the attachment to the trials of politics, racism, and human injustice pales in comparison....

You can learn more about Djadja and purchase RENPET at RENPET331.BLOGSPOT.COM

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Free day:

http://readwritepoem.org/blog/2010/04/30/napowrimo-prompt-30-american-sentence-ala-collaboration/



So I used


http://readwritepoem.org/blog/2010/04/29/napowrimo-29-front-page-news/




Wedding Blessing



“Greece can not devalue their currency,”
the newscaster says
“now that they are part of the European Union;
now that they are on the Euro.”
A seemingly sorrowful state of affairs.
But that is my toast to you on this special day.
Now that you are united,
know that never again will your price fall.
You are each other’s surety and
your love will only appreciate with time. 






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RENPET

GREETINGS COSMIC BEINGS!!!!!

JUST WANT TO SPREAD LOVE AND PROSPERITY FOR US ALL!!!!!!

IN THE EVENT YOU ARE IN NYC ON MAY 15TH AROUND 4PM, STOP BY MY BOOK SIGNING AT THE UPTOWN SISTA BOOKSTORE LOCATE 156TH ST. 1942 AMSTERDAM AVE.

OTHERWISE, VISIT RENPET331.BLOGSPOT.COM AND ORDER YOUR COPY OF RENPET.
YOU MAY EMAIL ME DIRECTLY, IN CASE YOU WANT A PERSONAL DELIVERY IN THE NYC AREA TO AVOID SHIPPING/HANDLING CHARGES.


LIFE VITALITY HEALTH,

DJADJA N MEDJAY

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Listen to In Like Flynn on internet talk radio


Join us tonight for the 100% grown folks weekly update by Penelope & Otto on all you need to know in news, entertainment politics, current events and finance.

In 2008, while the banking system was sinking some SEC bigwigs were having all-day binges on porn! Rothlisberger v. Vick - And justice for all? Immigration - Who has the right to say who stays and who goes? And Getting Back to Work - tips on "What to do after the job Interview - the follow-up",

Saturday 4/10/2010 9:30pm CST 90 Minutes CLICK ON THE LINK or call 718/508-9683 and TELL US WHAT'S ON YOUR MIND!

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Clare Dargin Interview


Clare Dargin is a writer who loves science fiction, fantasy, romance and the military. She enjoys weaving those worlds together. Her first novel Cold Warriors was published with Aspen Mountain Press. Her second novel is entitled Speculative Sky which will be published July 2010 by Red Rose Publishing.

About Cold Warrior

When Caitlin Driskoll is awakened from a cryogenic stasis, she's got a lot of adjusting to do. It's a new century and the planet is at war. Once married to a Navy JAG, she now experiences life from the viewpoint of a Jarhead, and the view isn't pleasant. Colonel Medoro Keegan lost the two most important things in his life during his Marine career: his wife to friendly fire, and his ability to fly combat missions. Now, he's stuck aboard the Blanchard as the XO. The Corps is the only family he has left and he's not about to lose the last thing he values. Until he meets Caitlin, who isn't shy about telling Medoro what she thinks about his Marines. How can such beauty wrapped in an icy body have so much fire? It's the future, and a new kind of prejudice has replaced the racial prejudice Caitlin experienced in the last century. After all, when you've been given a second chance at life, you are expendable.

About Speculative Sky

A star gazer her entire life, April Mullen jumped at the opportunity to be an astronomer on a far away planet. Finally she had the chance to live out her dream--to discover intelligent life among the stars. However when her dream starts to become a reality, things are not as they seem.

She is working on a few more projects. If you'd like to check out her work, you can visit: The Haven at http://www.thescifihaven.bravehost.com or Cold Warriors at http://www.coldwarriors.bravehost.com

What inspired you to write your first book?

Well, ever since I was a child I always wanted to be a writer. It was a dream of mine to be published and to write stories that everyone could enjoy. My first novel “Cold Warriors” was actually inspired by a short story I wrote many years ago and had submitted to the L. Ron

Hubbard 'Writers of the Future' contest.

The story did not win, however it was liked by one of the judges who sent me a personal letter back home saying how much he had enjoyed the story and thought that it should have won. From there, I reworked and expanded the story until I ended up with the novel Cold Warriors.

Do you have a specific writing style?

Yes, I do but I am not sure what to call it. I like to place people right there in the environment where they can almost hear, taste, smell and see the action going on around them. I tend to write tight stories with quick pacing. It's what I like to read and consequently how I write.

How did you come up with the title?

A good friend of mine, novelist D. K. Gaston actually came up with the title. I was in his writing group who really helped me tie the novel together and to get ready for publication. I remember that I was having trouble coming up with a name for the book and Keith who was fan of the genre and liked my work came up with the title! He did an excellent job! I am forever grateful!

Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?

Yeah, don't give up on your dreams. You see both of the main characters had a dream of a kind of life that they had wanted to lead but was taken from them tragically. However they managed through hardship and struggle to find the life of their dreams together.

What books have most influenced your life most?

To be honest, the old Star Wars books that came out in the eighties after Return of the Jedi. The expanded universe books taught me more about atmospheric and expanded universe development and how to write a cool leading man than anything!

If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

Douglas Preston and/or Lincoln Child. They write incredibly compelling books of which I generally can't put down.

What book are you reading now?

To be honest and I am almost finished with “Book of the Dead” with Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. I'll be going through their back list very soon in order to get caught up.

Are there any new authors that have grasped your interest?

Last night I was thinking about The Friday House by D. K. Gaston and how it's a compelling story about assassins who have no memory of their being programmed and stuff. I think it's cool. And several books on the military scifi romance front that I have recently heard about. I write in a tiny subgenre so it's nice to see what other authors are doing in it. That way I don't get lonely!

What are your current projects?

Presently I am finishing up the final editing for “Ice and Peace” the sequel to Cold Warriors. As well as having another expanded universe book in the works. Not to mention, two futuristic romances that are completely different from my military fiction.

Name one entity that you feel supported you outside of family members.

The Motown Creative Writers Group--they helped get on the road to being published. I'm grateful for that.

Do you see writing as a career?

Yes! One day I hope to do it full time.

If you had to do it all over again, would you change anything in your latest book?

Yeah that's why I have to hurry up and get it out of my hands cause I keep changing it!

Do you recall how your interest in writing originated?

As a child, my father use to encourage it. I use to write stories for my family and give it to them and they would say “Maybe one day you could get this published!” I was like five.... and then when I was in middle school I found out that S. E. Hinton had been published at sixteen-- I became truly determined then.

Can you share a little of your current work with us?

Certainly. Ice and Peace, published by Aspen Mountain Press, takes place approximately 3-5 years after the first book Cold Warriors. Medoro Keegan and Caitlin (Driskoll) Keegan are now married and settling into their lives when the problems from her past and his arise and threaten to take away the happiness that they have established.

Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Yeah, getting through the first draft!

Did you learn anything from writing your book and what was it?

Just get the first draft down on paper and don't be afraid to make stupid mistakes and have dumb lines on paper, cause it's the first draft and you are allowing the characters to come alive. Later on you can fix and micro manage but don't try to do it the first time through, cause it will stifle your creativity.

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Don't give up on being published! Try every avenue! There is away for you!

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions. It was a pleasure interviewing you.

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