Posts Tagged ‘action/adventure’

throw-out-the-tvMy name is Andrew Joyce and I write books for a living. One morning, about five years ago, I went crazy. I got out of bed, went downstairs, and threw my TV out the window. Then I sat down at the computer and wrote my first short story. I threw it up on a writing site on the Internet just for the hell of it. A few months later I was notified that it was to be included in an anthology of the best short stories of 2011. I even got paid for it! I’ve been writing ever since.

Debra has been kind enough to allow me a little space on her blog to promote my new book, RESOLUTION: Huck Finn’s Greatest Adventure, so I thought I’d tell you how it came about.

It all started way back in 2012 . . .

My first book was a 164,000-word historical novel. And in the publishing world, anything over 80,000 words for a first-time author is heresy. Or so I was told time and time again when I approached an agent for representation. After two years of research and writing, and a year of trying to secure the services of an agent, I got angry. To be told that my efforts were meaningless was somewhat demoralizing to say the least. I mean, those rejections were coming from people who had never even read my book.

So you want an 80,000-word novel?” I said to no one in particular, unless you count my dog, because he was the only one around at the time. Consequently, I decided to show them City Slickers that I could write an 80,000-word novel!

redemptionI had just finished reading Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn for the third time, and I started thinking about what ever happened to those boys, Tom and Huck. They must have grown up, but then what? So I sat down at my computer and banged out REDEMPTION: The Further Adventures of Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer in two months; then sent out query letters to agents.

Less than a month later, the chairman of one of the biggest agencies in New York City emailed me that he loved the story. We signed a contract and it was off to the races, or so I thought. But then the real fun began: the serious editing. Seven months later, I gave birth to Huck and Tom as adults in the Old West. And just for the record, the final word count is 79,914. The book went on to reach #1 status in its category on Amazon (twice) and won the Editor’s Choice Award for best Western of 2013. The rest, as they say, is history.

But not quite.

My agent then wanted me to write a sequel, but I had other plans. I was in the middle of editing down my first novel (that had been rejected by 1,876,324 agents . . . or so it seemed) from 164,000 words to the present 142,000. However, he was insistent about a sequel, so I started to think about it. Now, one thing you have to understand is that I tied up all the loose ends at the end of REDEMPTION, so there was no way I could write a sequel. And that is when Molly asked me to tell her story. Molly was a minor character that we met briefly in the first chapter of REDEMPTION, and then she is not heard from again.molly-lee

So I started to think about what ever happened to her. After a bit of time—and 100,000 words—we find out what did happen to Molly. It is an adventure tale where Huck Finn weaves through the periphery of a story driven by a feisty female lead. Molly Lee was my second book, which achieved #2 status on Amazon.

Now I was finished with Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer for good and could go back to my first novel and resume the editing process.

But not quite.

It was then that Huck and Molly ganged up on me and demanded that I resolve their lives once and for all. It seems that I had left them hanging, so to speak. Hence, RESOLUTION: Huck Finn’s Greatest Adventure. Here is the blurb from the back cover of the book:

12resolutionIt is 1896 in the Yukon Territory, Canada. The largest gold strike in the annals of human history has just been made; however, word of the discovery will not reach the outside world for another year.

By happenstance, a fifty-nine-year-old Huck Finn and his lady friend, Molly Lee, are on hand, but they are not interested in gold. They have come to that neck of the woods seeking adventure.

Someone should have warned them, “Be careful what you wish for.”

When disaster strikes, they volunteer to save the day by making an arduous six hundred mile journey by dog sled in the depths of a Yukon winter. They race against time, nature, and man. With the temperature hovering around seventy degrees below zero, they must fight every day if they are to live to see the next.

On the frozen trail, they are put upon by murderers, hungry wolves, and hostile Indians, but those adversaries have nothing over the weather. At seventy below, your spit freezes a foot from your face. Your cheeks burn—your skin turns purple and black as it dies from the cold. You are in constant danger of losing fingers and toes to frostbite.

It is into this world that Huck and Molly race.

They cannot stop. They cannot turn back. They can only go on. Lives hang in the balance—including theirs.

There you have it. Now, if you nice people will just go out and buy RESOLUTION, perhaps Huck and Molly will leave me alone long enough so that I can get some editing done on my first novel.

~~ Andrew Joyce left high school at seventeen to hitchhike throughout the US, Canada, and Mexico. He wouldn’t return from his journey until decades later when he decided to become a writer. Joyce has written four books, including a two-volume collection of one hundred and forty short stories comprised of his hitching adventures called BEDTIME STORIES FOR GROWN-UPS (as yet unpublished), and his latest novel, RESOLUTION. He now lives aboard a boat in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with his dog, Danny, where he is busy working on his next book, YELLOW HAIR.

WEBSITE: http://andrewjoyce76.com/

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/Yellowhair1850

GOODREADS: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7242284.Andrew_Joyce

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12ResolutionMy name is Andrew Joyce and I write books for a living. Debra has been kind enough to allow me a little space on her blog to promote my new novel RESOLUTION: Huck Finn’s Greatest Adventure. I think it’s a good book, but what do I know? Anyway, I’m kinda shy about tooting my own horn. So I think I’ll turn things over to my dog Danny—Danny the Dog. So without further ado, here’s Danny.

“Andrew took me away from some very important business—sniffing a tantalizing scent—to help him out here. For a person that works with words for a living, he has very little to say in real life. He wants me to tout his book for him, but I don’t think I will. Instead, I think I’ll tell you about some thoughts that have been rolling around in my head recently.

I’m Danny the Dog, Esq., and for those of you who have not yet had the pleasure of making my acquaintance, I am Andrew Joyce’s roommate and he is my human.

I’ve just been reading a little Billy Shakespeare and listening to Kris Kristofferson. Genius will tell out. What got to me this day was how they both spoke to having nothing. Billy said: “Having nothing, nothing can he lose.” And Kris wrote: “Freedom’s just another word for nothin’ left to lose.”

Danny MeditatingIn dog years I’m an old man, or an old dog if you will. And with age comes experience and with experience comes wisdom. And with wisdom comes the realization that we need nothing to BE, nothing to exist. We accumulate so much crap and it never makes us happy. Here in America, we have a storage facility on every corner. We have so much stuff that we have to pay someone to hold it for us!

Over one hundred and fifty years ago, Henry David Thoreau told his neighbors that they saved things—put them in their attics and there the stuff stayed until they died. Then their heirs sold the stuff and other people bought it and put it in their attics until they died. Etcetera . . . etcetera . . . etcetera.

I reckon what I’m trying to say is that all we need—we dogs, humans, and anyone else—is love. There is only love. There is fear of course, the fear of not having enough, the fear of not being loved enough. But love always triumphs over fear. So to my non-dog friends, I say choose love. I’m only a dog and I love my human unconditionally. Love those around you. Never, ever trade your love. Never ask for something in return for your love because then it is not love.

That’s about it for now. I’ve gotta get back to that scent before it dissipates.

Oh yeah, I almost forgot—check out Andrew’s new book on Amazon and make the old guy’s day.”

This is Andrew again. On behalf of Danny and myself, I would like to thank Debra for having us over. It’s been a real pleasure.

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About the Author

Andrew llAndrew Joyce left high school at seventeen to hitchhike throughout the US, Canada, and Mexico. He wouldn’t return from his journey until decades later when he decided to become a writer. Joyce has written four books, including a two-volume collection of one hundred and forty short stories comprised of his hitching adventures called BEDTIME STORIES FOR GROWN-UPS (as yet unpublished), and his latest novel, RESOLUTION. He now lives aboard a boat in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with his dog, Danny, where he is busy working on his next book, YELLOW HAIR.

Author of Irish Adventure/Thriller, Jon Michael Riley,
appearing in person for wine reception, book signing, and discussion at
Malaprops in downtown Asheville, NC April 6, 2015 at 6:30 pm
Visit Malaprops event page for directions

Well-known novelist, Vicki Lane, author of The Elizabeth Goodweather Appalachian Mysteries, says this: “Jon Michael Riley dreams the dawn with the eye of a photographer, the passion of the environmentalist, and the soul of a lover. His delicious descriptions of Ireland are the setting for an intricate Robin Hood caper and a heartfelt love story.”

author imageJon Michael Riley is the author of Dream the Dawn, an environmental adventure/thriller, loosely based on a particularly interesting event in Ireland—a major, long-term environmental protest (well-known in Europe, unknown in the USA) which became known as the Shell-to-Sea Campaign. The initial focus was on the Rossport Five—five subsistence farmers jailed for ten months because they refused to go along with Shell-Statoil-Irish government’s wishes. Mr. Riley became aware of this contentious environmental drama early on and found detailed online and Irish newspaper articles about corporate and governmental chicanery.

The true story behind this fictional rendition began when Royal Dutch Shell, Swedish Statoil, and other Big Energy concerns, along with the Irish and British governments, planned a major on-shore high-pressure gas pipeline near Rossport, County Mayo. The Corrib Gas Pipeline would emerge from the sea at Glengad and cross nine kilometers of bogland to a gas processing plant that was under construction when he began writing Dream the Dawn in 2008. The disregard for safety issues, citizen rights, and using the state police to enforce corporate wishes seemed worthy of a story that might involve a New York photographer.

There are comparisons to be made between the fictional story and the true story of the author’s life. Jon Michael Riley is of Irish heritage and, before focusing his creative talents on writing, he was a studio and location photographer of considerable reputation in New York City with clients like Audi, IBM, AT&T, and Coca-Cola.

free to share and use_shell to sea campaign demonstrationAs a long-time subscriber of The Irish Echo, Jon followed the Shell-to-Sea environmental protest and after the Gulf Oil disaster, he recognized that both events had much in common. When the BP-Deep Water Horizon disaster occurred in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20, 2010, he couldn’t help but see direct connections to the Corrib Gas pipeline issue. What if someone had intervened in BP’s safety infractions?

“I wanted to write an action story where the environmentalists actually win. The Shell-to-Sea is a true David and Goliath drama and with a big dose of fiction and drama. I created an environmental protest action thriller and kept the local color, flavor, and historical accuracy without using any of the real place names, hence the village of Glenboy, a stand-in for Rossport.”

Jon and his wife Catherine spent a lot of time in Ireland and Jon’s first book was of Irish photography, The Irish File-Images from a Land of Grace, in 2002. Since then, Jon has worked on a photo-image book on Ireland’s myriad sacred sites, including Holy Wells, pre-Christian as well as Christian sites and, more recently, places sacred to the founding of the Irish Republic.

Jon is a member of NYU’s Glucksman Ireland House and has supplied them with portraits of Tory Island artists. He’s also a graduate of the Atlanta College of Art, lived and studied in Paris on a French Government Scholarship, and attended New York University’s Graduate Institute of Film and Television.

Dream the Dawn is available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, iBooks/iTunes, as well as local booksellers. See more at http://jonmichaelrileynovels.com/

dream full cover

About the Book

In Ireland to cover America’s most daring rock climber, successful New York photographer, Channey Moran, witnesses a rogue wave sweep the climber off a sea cliff. Joining in the search and rescue mission, Channey meets a cast of Irish characters, including award-winning photojournalist, Glennie MacDonald.

Discovering an impending international petro-crime, Channey seeks to understand the issues. But eco-mercenaries, led by an eccentric and brilliant leader, kidnap him from a remote monastic island and take him aboard the now hijacked Solon Maru, the world’s largest pipe-laying ship.

Two things might save Channey’s life: his uncanny knowledge of Irish history, learned as a child from his father, and the love of a remarkable woman he cannot have, Glennie MacDonald, the beautiful but married photographer from Killarney, who refuses to let Channey die.

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