Wednesday, February 4, 2015

THE DEBATE (AN IMPORTANT REITERATION)


[ The debate ] over what’s true and what’s false in literature (storytelling in general) is never ending, primarily due to the fact that all written works, especially those considered of superior or lasting artistic merit, are based on some truth. Like that of a surreptitious military operation, the goal of argumentative writing is to tactically persuade your audience that your ideas are valid beyond the method by which you’ve chosen to relay your story. The Greek philosopher Aristotle divided the means of persuasion, appeals, into three distinct categories—Ethos, Pathos, Logos—which we’ve all experienced throughout our lives even though we may not have had a clue as to this strategic tactic playing out before us.



Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.

Monday, February 2, 2015

THE KUYKENDALL REVIEW [THE DREAM]


THE REVIEW: “Truly a powerful portrait of a young heroine (Khira) whose prompt mind, in contemplation of the golconda of her experiences abroad leads to a surreal journey back to the simplistic tradition of her African upbringing.” —A.K. Kuykendall 


    
AUTHOR BIO A P VON K’ORY

Akinyi Princess of K'Orinda-Yimbo (pen name A P von K'Ory) was born on the shores of Lake Victoria in Kisumu, the capital city of Luoland, Kenya; at a very young age (when she was too small to say "sod off!" as she puts it), she was sent to private school in Yorkshire, England. She is a graduate journalist of the Nairobi and the London Schools of Journalism as well as an economics graduate of the London School of Economics.

She moved to Bavaria, Germany, where she studied Germanistics and Germanspecific economics. She has been writing as a freelance journalist since 1980, serving as a columnist with various dailies and monthly magazines in Africa and Europe. She gives lectures and seminars in various German universities, colleges and high schools on topics ranging from socio-economy in Africa, Business English, Intercultural Communication, African literature and the socio-ethnological conflicts in the traditions of Africans and Europeans in particular, and the West in general.

In 2012, she got her Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology and Geo-Politics from the Heidelberg University.

She was the CEO of her companies Eur-AfrAsia Association for Quality Management & Intercultural Communications Training, and PAKY Investment Holdings Ltd. She gave up both posts in order to devote her time to her passion: writing. She is now only Chairman on the Board of Directors. She has written and published articles, papers, and a novel in German: Khiras Traum, translated from her first book, Bound to Tradition: The Dream. The series include Bound to Tradition: The Initiation and Bound to Tradition: The Separation. Her other recent books are Secret Shades Book 1: Aroused; Secret Shades Book 2: Revealed.. Her nonfiction book Darkest Europe and Africa's Nightmare: A crtical Observation of Neighboring Continents was published in 2008 by a New York publisher.

In 2010 her short story, The Proposal, won the Cook Communications first prize. In 2012 she won the Karl Ziegler Prize for her commitment to bring African culture to the Western society in various papers, theses and lectures. In 2012 her book was nominated for the 2012 Caine Prize, and in 2013 she was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers Prize. In addition she won the Achievers Award for African Writer of  The Year 2013 in the Netherlands.

In 2014 she started the publishing company, AuthorMePro Press, as part of the Cook Communications Author-me Group, to assist aspiring writers - especially from the developing world - to get published. She speaks seven languages, is married to a German politician of aristocratic descent, has a son, two grandsons, and lives in Bavaria. The family also has homes in France, Cyprus and Greece.



THE INTERVIEW:


1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

I was born in Luoland, Kenya to the royal house of K’Orinda and Yimbo-Kadimo. I went to school in Yorkshire from age nine, and studied Economics, Literature and Journalism in London; then Germanistics and German-specific Economics in Germany. Finally, I studied socio-economics and philosophy and now have an additional PhD in sociology and geo-politics.

I’m the winner of six writing awards from four continents, the last one being the Achievers Award for African Writer Of The Year 2013 in the Netherlands with my trilogy BOUND TO TRADITION.

I have five doctorates to date, since I regard knowledge as a lifelong quest of learning something new. In between all that, I run several companies coaching intercultural communication, quality management & sustainability, Business English and AuthrorMePro Press. I now live in Germany, France, Cyprus and Greece with my German husband, son and two grandsons. 

2. At what point in your life, did you decide you wanted to be a writer?

The exact time is hard for me to nail down. From the age of three or four, I enjoyed the stories read to me and once I could read, I always changed some endings or beginnings of the fairy tales to fit my taste. I guess that’s when the writer in me kicked in – around age four to five.

3. What are your most memorable or proudest moments in your writing career?

Definitely the day I met my German publisher’s editor to sign the contract for the first book of BOUND TO TRADITION. Yes, the first buyer of BOUND TO TRADITION was a German publisher who then had the book translated and titled KHIRAS TRAUM! Khira’s Dream.

4. Where would you like to see yourself in five years’ time?

I sincerely hope not where James Patterson is, manufacturing books in some mass production outlet. However, I do envy him his success. I wouldn’t mind some of that myself.

5. What advice do you wish you’d been given before starting your career in writing?

Well, since I always did things my way anyway – remember that fairy tale changer child? – I really can’t think of one.

6. Tell us about the books you’ve written so far, and your plans for any future books?

Now that’s a good one, A.K. My passion revolves around my people, their culture and my continent as a whole, even if I grew up in Great Britain. Nearly every book I’ve written has a bit of Kenya and Luoland in it. But having grown up and been educated in Europe, I can’t help but pitch both continents in me - Africa and Europe/the West  - together. I pick on their values and beliefs, their negatives and positives. All my romance novels have elements of the interracial and intercultural. All my non-fiction deal with the humanities, socio-economics and geo-politics of Africa and the West, although I also touch on the general North-South factors.

In the trilogy BOUND TO TRADITION, which the Elite Professionals Magazine compared to A Many Splendoured Thing and labelled “a cultural study”, Khira and Erik are poles apart: in age difference, cultures, social status, ethnicity, ideology and philosophy of life. But in the end it is precisely their differences that draws them closer together. Khira is fascinated by the wealthy industrialist Swede Erik, who is 24 years older than her. His “strange” looks (blond, blue eyes and “scorched-skinned”), his lifestyle, his values and cultural mores, some of which outright shock or repulse her – but still remain fascinating because she expects something else, especially from him as a “civilized European”. Her people call Erik “the uncultured one” because to them he’s too direct and therefore lacking of social delicacy and tactfulness. Although Erik, to begin with, only wants to adopt the orphaned Khira, she overwhelms him with her nature. Consider his thoughts below on the first time he invited Khira for lunch. She is sixteen:

Erick watched her as she ate and talked. There was the little lady who had been tutored by some prim and proper English old maid in deportment, etiquette and what have you. Then there was the African jungle side of her that had a savage nobility, an untainted edge, an unaffected grace and inborn dignity, an intensely reverent pride even in the way she said: Great ancestors. Coupled with her veiled, mysterious sexuality, she was an overwhelming enigma. She displayed her joy and happiness with child-like abandon but when she spoke of her family, she spoke with poise and the wisdom of a septuagenarian.

In my SECRET SHADES books, Anglo-Cypriot Helena struggles with a heritage that cripples her and traumatizes her emotional relationships. Until she meets Ramón, a Catalan from Costa Brava, Spain, who loves her and coaxes her to confront her fears and overcome them. To do that, they have to travel to Kenya in the quest to find her mother in a Benedictine convent. In Kenya, they encounter political intrigues, the danger of the Kenyan wildlife safaris, assassination attempts and the wild, untamed beauty of the continent and its people.

At the moment I’m working on my DAR DESIRES books. These are full books (120+K words) literary erotic romance, the first of which, DARK DESIRES: OBSESSION, is coming out at the end of October 2014. The second book DARK DESIRES: AFLAME will come out in spring 2015. Of course, the DARK DESIRES books are multi-layered, intercultural and set around the globe, from Hamburg to Shanghai, Montreux to New York, London to Nairobi and all the other places in between. I’m a global citizen and have travelled a lot around the planet, thanks to my upbringing. I’m also working on another no-fiction regarding globalization and causes of the shameful hunger in the world, when we actually produce enough food to feed twice the world population at the moment.

7. Is there any part of your career, you find particularly challenging?

Actually, yes. It is particularly challenging to me to find a publisher/agent interested in my stories because the stories are not exactly mainstream commercial writing. They’re literary, geared towards a certain readership, especially those people interested in other cultures. Being literary works, they win me awards, but they don’t sell by the boatloads in this day and age.

8. Who do you feel, has supported you most, in your writing?

Most? Definitely my husband and immediate family. There are others like Kenneth Mulholland (Australia) and Betsi Newbury (Arizona) without whom I’d be hopeless. They advise me and edit my works.

9. Is there anything you’d like to say to your readers?

Tons. But I’ll restrict it to thanking them from the heart for reading my books, especially my editors Betsi Newbury and Kenneth Mulholland, who are always my first readers. I also thank my readers for all the feedback I get from them and encourage them to continue interacting with me. Their praises and critiques help me become a better writer for them and for any new readers.

10. Where can we find out more about you and your books?

My books are on Amazon and Kindle worldwide, my websites and Goodreads.

11. Tell us a little about your book.

Okay: I’ve mention something about both the award-winning BOUND TO TRADITION trilogy and the SECRET SHADES books. So let’s say something about my DARK DESIRES: OBSESSION (130K word) that’s coming out at the end of October.

As I mentioned above it is an erotic romance. But it is literary and a far cry from the norm. I’m one of those women who, without condemning others who prefer the hard-core BDSM lifestyle, don’t believe in the popular idea of female submission. I don’t want my heroine falling flat on her backside just at the first sight of the hero, I don’t want her subservient, stripped naked and on her knees on the floor waiting for the hero to come home to find her like that because that’s what turns him on. I don’t want my heroine revelling in the pains inflicted on her if those pains are the kind that still sting under the shower days later and make it uncomfortable for her to sit down. I think that sort of erotica might be sending out (unintentionally) the wrong signals to young adults of both sexes, about what to expect/receive/demand from a partner in order to be loved or to show you’re love by them. I prefer the subtle BDSM peppered with psychological games rather than physical “punishment”. My long blurb:

Roman is cultured, go-to-hell handsome, wealthier than is good for anybody and nasty with it. He has strong principles:

He loves his parents, especially his mother; he is the supreme commander-in-chief of his highly successful global businesses, which he built himself from the ground up; while he loves the fact that he is “what I am”, he adamantly refuses to be referred to as damaged; and he treats his "reigning queen" exactly like a queen, draping her in priceless gowns, jewels, and all the other accoutrements in exchange for her complete loyalty and sexual devotion. In the bedroom, he's a nice-nasty Taipan and only his rules count - but top among the rules is complete satisfaction of the woman. He never takes whips, floggers, chains and the like to his woman as he believes strongly in “pleasure, not pain” for both partners, and he has many varied and effective ways of extracting and dispensing pleasure. He never stays around for long – half a year would be tops in his books.

Then Roman meets the Eve that will bring his Dominant Adam teetering on the brinks of insanity... or maybe not quite…

12.
What were you attempting to convey in the artistry of your book cover?

In BOUND TO TRADITION, there’s the theme of the Planet Earth with all its elements, best emphasized by the moon. The moon rises, gets to the zenith and dips back in the horizon. What I wanted to convey was a sense of togetherness as earthlings in this beautiful planet of ours. I still love the BOUND TO TRADITIONS covers most.

13. What inspired you to write your book?

My quest to show that we are all unique with whatever we’re made of. Nature has its order in variety and never makes a careless mistake. It would be a boring world with only one ethnicity – like having only red roses and no other colours of the flower. I suppose a lot is also autobiographical, inspired by my own life.

14. Are the character profiles based on people you know or are they completely drawn from your imagination?

(Tongue-in-cheek) See 13 above. I think it’s about fifty-fifty. Often I invent a character and give him attributes of someone I know or saw somewhere. I guess I’m still that little girl, still rearranging my fairy tale in the order I prefer them to be.

15. Which part of the book, in your opinion, was the most difficult to write?

The killing of my darlings, of course. I actually cry while writing that, and cry again each time I’m revising and re-revising. But in BOUND TO TRADITION: THE DREAM, the first book, the hardest parts were those where I had to write the dialogue between Erik and Khira’s Grandfather Solomon. The Luos, like most Africans, talk in a roundabout way, not directly. The language is flowery and the real point being made is hidden in the winding dialogue. Erik, as a European, speaks his mind directly, a fact considered extremely rude and barbaric in Luoland and most African societies. Direct speakers are time-conscious. Rural Africans have all the time in the world and will spend five minutes or more just to say hello.

16. What parts of the book do you love, in particular?

I loved the scene where Khira visits a gynaecologist for the first time, in Sweden. Again, this scene gave me the opportunity to crystalize the two negating ideologies and philosophy of life.

17. Which ways have you chosen to market your book?

Like most writers, I’m not only poor at marketing, I also hate it. I do my best with Facebook, Twitter and posting in groups, especially my groups in LinkedIn. When I win an award I send out press releases. But living in German reduces the interest in these, since I’m not “local”. Otherwise I do guest blogs and interviews, giveaways and solicit for reviews. The last, I’ve learnt, is not easy. My best chances of getting reviews are within literary book clubs and special groups with interest in African culture & literature. I often do readings and book signings to special women’s groups, students of sociology and such special interest groups.

18. If you had to do it all over again, is there anything you’d change?

I don’t think there’s anything I’d change, really. But there’s something I do regret and would gladly reverse – keep my former publisher. I’ve since gone through a few publishers, one particular one in New York, who published my first non-fiction. The publisher turned out to be a right royal cutthroat. When I signed the contract with them (without an agent) I missed the tiny little BIG words “in perpetuity”. And so now they own my work and leave me out in the cold.

19. Where can we find out more or buy the book?

All my books are listed on Amazon.com, UK, India, Japan, Canada, Australia, Mexico and China. Readers can also order directly from me, especially those who want their books signed, at my websites http://www.Akinyi-princess.de and http://www.apvonkorysbooks.co.uk

20. Who is your favourite author?

I have several, actually, because I have different favourite authors in different genres. My top faves would be Marian Keyes for chic lit, John Le Carré, Ian Rankin, Harlan Corben, Lee Child, and Minette Walters.

21. Worst book you have ever read?

Fifty Shades of Grey.

22. What book are you reading now?

As I’m in the habit of reading more than one book at a time, I’m now reading Personal by Lee Child, Im Tal des Fuches by Charlotte Link (my favourite German authoress), and L’Empire de la honte by Jean Ziegler. I speak seven languages so I often read in most of them, although English is my native language.

23. Your favourite quote about writing/authors:

“If first-time authors were never published, the world wouldn't have any authors at all. It's a misconception that getting published requires having already been published.”

24. Your biggest inspiration:

The human condition.

25. Something you can’t live without:

My husband Erich Harald.

26. Your pet-hate:

When I ask Erich Harald something about football but he’s too concentrated on the game to answer me. Like I’m thin air.

27. Your favourite place to be:

Our place in the Peloponnese, Greece, perched above the sea and the mountains on the other side of the Finikounda Bay.

28. Something you like/love about yourself?

Having been born a woman.

29. Something you’d change about yourself?

My impatience.

30. Your ideal life would be:

To permanently live and write in my favourite home, in Greece.

Finally thank you so very much for giving me this opportunity, A.K. And another big thank you to you, dear reader, for reading this. I hope we meet again in my books.


Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.

Monday, January 19, 2015

THE WAR OF THE WORLDS (A TRUE STORY)

Two world wars, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq... In the last hundred years, the United States has been involved in over a dozen wars and conflicts but is there another war that has been hidden from the public. One that continues to this day. The potential threat the government has consistently denied for well over a century. A war against an extraterrestrial enemy (?) 


Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.

Monday, November 3, 2014

THE KUYKENDALL REVIEW [WILLIAM BRADSHAW, KING OF THE GOBLINS]


THE REVIEW: “From the crisp visuals of the dynamic cover through to the sidesplitting tale within; Daigle’s read was indeed a tour de force.” —A.K. Kuykendall




AUTHOR BIO – ARTHUR DAIGLE


Arthur Daigle was born and raised in the suburbs of Chicago, Illinois. He received a degree in biology from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, which sounded like a good idea at the time. This led to work as a zoo intern at Brookfield Zoo, an assistant fisheries biologist at the Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation, and a research assistant at Morton Arboretum. Most recently he's been employed grading high school essay tests (yeah, the job market is that bad). In addition to writing, Arthur is an avid artist and gardener.


THE INTERVIEW:


1. Tell us a bit about yourself.

I am a graduate of the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, where I received a BS degree in biology (what can I say, it seemed like a good idea at the time).  I've worked as an intern fisheries biologist at the max McGraw Wildlife Foundation, research assistant at the Morton Arboretum and worked in the Brookfield Zoo Butterfly House. Currently I write and grade state mandated achievement tests.  My books are a blend of fantasy and comedy intended to be read by young adult and older audiences.

2. At what point in your life, did you decide you wanted to be a writer?

I didn't decide to be a writer so much as I stumbled into it. Writing was one of my hobbies for many years. I joined a writers' group at my local library, where I enjoyed the company and assistance of fellow amateur writers. Friends and family members encouraged me to try publishing my work, but for the longest time I didn't try.  The publishing industry isn't easy to get into, and success is hard to reach even if your book gets to market.  But regular work was also hard to come by (curse this weak economy!), and I had a lot of free time.  Then one day a friend recommended a publisher who liked my work. Things didn't work out too well for us in the end, but at least it got my book in print. Currently I am self-published.

3. What are your most memorable or proudest moments in your writing career?

The proudest moment was when my first publisher accepted my work. I dropped to my knees and thanked God then and there. Since then things have not worked out between us, but it was still the best experience I'd had in years. Another time that stood out in my memory was once when I read to my writers' group. There was an older woman in attendance, and she told me that while she normally avoided my genre, she found what I'd written compelling.

4. Where would you like to see yourself in five years’ time?

I currently have one book out and am preparing a second to publish in time for Christmas. In five years I hope to have an entire series of books available at Amazon, hopefully with a strong following.

5. What advice do you wish you’d been given before starting your career in writing?

I had a lot of training in how to write in school, both at the high school and college level.  That helped, but I've found that selling books is half writing and half marketing. My original publisher didn't offer much in the way of marketing advice except to go online. It's been hard letting people know I have a book out and that they'd enjoy it. I wish I'd had lessons in how to successfully market a book.

6. Tell us about the books you’ve written so far, and your plans for any future books?

All of my current writing is a blend of fantasy and comedy. I try to avoid stereotypes common in fantasy, such as noble elves and brutish goblins. There are good people and bad among all the races, with no one having a monopoly on virtue or vice. When reading my book, expect rampant stupidity and poor judgment, just like Congress. While my goblins have a reputation for being dumb, many of my characters also have an IQ in the double digits.

7. Is there any part of your career, you find particularly challenging?

Marketing.  I must admit to being something of a recluse.  I like peace and quiet, which makes getting the word out on my book that much harder. That plus my lack of experience in marketing makes sales difficult.

8. Who do you feel, has supported you most, in your writing?

My family has been there for me since day one.  They offer useful suggestions and spot many mistakes in my writing that need to be fixed. After that I would say my old writers' group was a big help. They folded a few years ago due to declining membership, but when times were good I could count on them for help and encouragement.

9. Is there anything you’d like to say to your readers?

If you like a book, write a review for it on Amazon. Let people know when you've found a keeper.

10. Where can we find out more about you and your books?

@ Facebook



11. Tell us a little about your book.

William Bradshaw, King of the Goblins is my first novel. Will Bradshaw is tricked by lawyers into becoming the King of the Goblins on the world of Other Place.  His goblin followers are short, stupid and slightly crazy. Most people on Other Place view goblins as vermin, and they have chased them to the worst parts of their world.  Will accidentally starts a war with a neighboring human king, and now he has to lead his followers to victory. But no one thinks the goblins can win, especially the goblins! It's going to be an uphill fight, and Will is going to need stealth, secrecy and a seemingly infinite supply of exploding outhouses.

12. What inspired you to write your book?

The works of the filmmaker and puppeteer Jim Henson and the artist Brian Froud inspired me. Both men created works of beauty and good humor that greatly impressed me.

13. Are the character profiles based on people you know or are they completely drawn from your imagination?

My characters are wildly dysfunctional on many levels. I decided long ago to never base a character on a real person to avoid hurting anyone's feelings. That could result in losing friends and possible lawsuits.

14. Are experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?

Only roughly! My goblins were made to be the people on the bottom, looked down on and mistreated by everyone around them. I had times in my life where that was the case for me, too, but we've all been there.

15. Which part of the book, in your opinion, was the most difficult to write?

You know, I didn't have a hard time writing any of it. I did delete a few paragraphs at one point, but that didn't bother me. I quite like writing and can't think of a time it was unpleasant.

16. What parts of the book do you love, in particular?

Will's interview with the lawyer, Twain, was one of my favorite parts in the book.  In real life job interviews I had to answer dozens of dumb questions that had nothing to do with the work I'd be doing.  This was my chance to make fun of that stupidity. I've been trying to top that scene ever since and I haven't come close.

17. Tell us about the cover design of your book. 

The artist Aaron Williams, who also created the comic book Nodwick, designed the book cover. My old publisher and I discussed scenes from the book that would make for a good cover, and we chose the part when Barbecue the dragon makes her first appearance. Vial, the head of the lab rat goblins, wasn't there in the book, but my publisher wanted him present so I said yes. There was some back and forth with Aaron at that point where we discussed the pros and cons of his character sketches.  In less than a month we had a cover we were all happy with. I couldn't be more pleased with the results, and I hope to work with Aaron for the cover on book two.

18. Which ways have you chosen to market your book?

I advertised at a number of local bookstores and gaming stores in the area. I also advertised at Caribou Coffee, a chain that has sadly closed all its stores in the area.  I posted my book on many free websites such as AuthorCorner, and I joined author groups on Facebook.  I have also done a number of interviews like this one for blogs. I maintain an account on LinkedIn, which has been fairly useful. Friends have suggested I try Twitter, so I may go there next.

19. If you had to do it all over again, is there anything you’d change?

I would have self-published sooner.

20. Where can we find out more or buy the book?
@ Amazon

21. Who are you?

A writer, a gardener, an artist, a biologist, a friend, a Catholic, an American and an optimist. You have to be an optimist if you're an author, since the odds of being successful are a thousand to one.

22. What are the titles of your books?

William Bradshaw, King of the Goblins
. And coming soon… William Bradshaw and a Faint Hope

23. Who is your favourite author?

Terry Pratchett.  He does great work with fantasy and comedy, and he's had a very long career in the field. I would recommend Going Postal and Making money as his best books.

24. Worst book you have ever read?

Blood Music. I love books and give away the few that disappoint me. That one was so bad it went into the recycling bin so it couldn't hurt anyone else.

25. What book are you reading now?

I just finished The Enemies of Rome, From Hannibal to Attila the Hun by Philip Matyszak. It's a fascinating read about who Rome fought and why.

26. Your favourite quote about writing/authors:

None come to mind.  I don't really collect quotes.

27. Your biggest inspiration:

Jim Henson is my biggest inspiration. His work spanned decades and reached hundreds of millions of people. His message was kind and just, seeking to build hope and inspire others.

28. Something you can’t live without:

I need green plants and healthy, growing woods. Going to the forest preserves around me helps when I am stressed.  Put me in a city or desert and I'd wither away inside.

29. Your pet-hate:

I hate destruction in all its forms. Arson, vandalism, deforestation, mountaintop leveling, all these things take something of beauty and ruin them. The wondrous places in our world needed decades or even centuries to reach the peak of their beauty, and then some jerk comes along and wrecks it for profit, or worse, for no reason at all.

30. Your favourite place to be:

Waterfall Glen Forest Preserve.  It's a local place built around a research laboratory.  I go there often to enjoy the beautiful trees and animals.  After that, I'd say my local church, Our Lady of Peace. I've attended there for decades, and going there helps when I am low.

31. Something you like/love about yourself?

I love being able to create. There are many authors more successful than me, and my artwork isn't good enough to make a living off of. But making something makes me feel better, and sharing it better still.

32. Something you’d change about yourself?

I'm not good with people and never have been.  So much of what people do doesn't make sense to me. I wish I were better at dealing with my peers.

33. Your ideal life would be:

Long.  Seriously, I would like to make it big as a writer.  I don't really need a lot of money, but I would like it if I was able to reach a lot of people. I want to make people laugh loud enough and long enough that they feel a little better when they're done. If I can do that and inspire someone else to write his or her own book, then I think that would be a life well spent.


Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.

TYRANNY FOR SOME AMERICAN'S IS TYRANNY FOR ALL AMERICAN'S

In Ernest B. Furgurson's book [ Ashes of Glory ] he writes that , 'on May 20 [1861], the Confederate Congress voted to move the government to Richmond...With that, Virginia's capital had become the very symbol of the Confederacy, and the ultimate prize in a bloody war'.


Being that big business and political office was the primary reason why the Klu Klux Klan abandoned those asinine marches of theirs; gives relevance to a theory I've surmised as it relates to a Second Civil War to which I only ask of you three things: 1.) to give it some thought, 2.) to contemplate why is it that gun ownership is like literally pulling teeth for "certain" people in our society, and 3.) to prepare as if your life depends on it as the results of the coming election may, in fact, signal a revolution.


Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

THE WALKING DEAD & REALITY

In his final days as Commander in Chief, Dwight D. Eisenhower chose to covertly warn us about this, but the unusual heaviness of his words at that particular time in history fell upon deaf ears when he spoke of the dangers having to do with—we the people—becoming, “the captives of a scientific-technological elite." If you don’t believe my theory to have legs as tall as the ones Jack encountered once his ass got up that fabled beanstalk, then all that’s left to say is Happy Halloween.  

 
Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.
 

Saturday, September 13, 2014

THE 35 MILLION DOLLAR PUNCH

There is most certainly an issue some men AND women have with touching, grabbing, spitting, scratching, pinching, biting, punching, et alia those whom each claim to love. The story is older than one can fathom!

When women psychologically, sexually, financially, physically, etc. moved into the space men, since the dawn of mankind, have held like a menacing virus upon the female gender; it was the laws giving voice to underrepresented women and their unrecognized plight that ignited the urge in women to do unto men what men did and continue to do unto them in an unrelenting stream of violence no one ever deserves. And though some women have taken on this male persona, others simply cherish the fact that laws (as was the case for countless generations) no longer prevent them from realizing their unalienable right to fight back.

Beyond the NFL and their initial motives, which is steeped wholly in a corporate mind frame that can’t see anything beyond any given profit and loss statement; it is quite disturbing to watch the imagery captured in the TMZ Sports video where an obvious heated argument between Baltimore Ravens running back Raymell Mourice "Ray" Rice and his wife Janay Palmer led to Raymell Mourice "Ray" Rice punching and knocking out in an extraordinary display of unfiltered fury his then fiancée.

Minoring in psychology through my years in college led me to conclude that there are quite a few surface level reasons that may have contributed to this most mine numbing event; to put it mildly. These have to do with Mr. Rice’s upbringing, a questionable sexuality, and/or a probable psychosis (a severe mental disorder in which thought and emotions are so impaired that contact is lost with external reality) brought about by his trek to become an NFL football player.

All quite speculative, I know, but it is my hypothesis, which is a supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation that some may want to explore.

  
Pragmatic author A.K. Kuykendall has a passion for writing conspiracy, espionage, horror, and suspense literature that blend the concepts of fact and fiction. For more information on his projects, visit http://www.thewriterofbooks.com/list-of-works/ or, to email the author directly for Q&A on this post, write to info@thewriterofbooks.com.