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BARNABY TAYLOR

  • The Welcome Stranger – Flash Fiction

    November 21st, 2018

    The Welcome Stranger [Barnaby Taylor, 2018]

    Two pints, says Mepham as he walks in the door. Billy is already there. And Stu. Make it three, Mepham says as he spots the boys playing pool. How’s it going, lads, he says as he walks over. Billy is lining up a shot. Red ball, centre pocket, he says though he doesn’t need to. Just hit it, says Stu. And hurry up. Stu is always in a bad mood. It doesn’t matter what you do, he always see the bad in things. Billy isn’t so bad. A couple of pints and he likes a laugh. But Stu can be wearing if you are not careful. Mepham stands next to Billy. He puts the pints on the ledge by the mirror. Mepham goes to light a cigarette. His phone lights up. The text message arrives.

    God aint glad. w’v foes of d faith n d kngdm.

    Mepham looked up from his phone. Stop playing, lads, he says to the boys. You both need to choose, he said. What you gonna be? Alguacil? Alcaide? Billy looked up. What about you, he said. You need to choose as well. I already have, said Mepham. Malleus Haereticorum, that’s me. Typical, said Billy. You would be, wouldn’t you. I suppose you need me to choose as well, says Stu. You know you do, replies Mepham. You know you do. We have been through this a thousand times. We knew this was coming, didn’t we. The phone goes again.

    God nos who’s rong n hs sinned. sn a calamity wl occur 2 doze hu av condemd us 2 deth. 

    Here we are, says Mepham. It’s kicking off nicely.

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  • VIRO Book Four – Work in Progress

    November 14th, 2018
    VIRO Book Four

    VIRO Book Four

    Hi Everyone

    I thought I would give you all an update on the VIRO series. What started as a few scratchy notes while I was on holiday two years in Portugal has now become a fascinating experiment in independent publishing.

    Book One was launched in March 2018 and has been at Number One in the Amazon chart since May. It is currently free for download for Kindle and this has been an enormous help in getting the book some attention. Book One has currently been downloaded from Amazon 766 times. This is very encouraging. Book One is also currently available for download at Smashwords as well and 84 copies have been dowloaded to date.

    Book Two was launched in May 2018 and has been very well received. The following review was left on my Goodreads page:

    Having Read Falcon Boy and VIRO, it was with eager anticipation that I started to read VIRO II. Barnaby Taylor has a daring and rich imagination that transports you to new adventures in a re-imagined world, that are vividly written with a fresh and vibrant use of language. The heroes of Barnaby’s books are children on the cusp of their teenage years. I would like to think that this isn’t a coincidence. There appears to be a deliberate opting out in relation to the current generation with Barnaby instead looking to a new, untainted generation to right the world’s wrongs in the guise of the courageous and idealistic young children that inhabit VIRO I and II. Barnaby literally and metaphorically backs the right horse. The purity of the children in VIRO II is evident throughout the book. Jake says ‘I hated violence. I hated violent people.’

    In VIRO II, we pick up with the viros (zombies) who are overrunning the world and the small band of children who are trying to survive in this world. The children’s separation from their parents also serves (as it did in VIRO I) as a powerful dramatic device, providing the next generation with the stage and platform to figure out a way forward. Barnaby really understands the mind set of young children and evocatively and beautifully captures their innocence but also their determination and guts to persevere against the odds and you as the reader wants to be with them every step of the way, willing them forward. Barnaby also excels at capturing the petty jealousies and competitiveness that can pervade the group dynamic of young children but equally the intensity and tenderness of their relationships.

    To say that this book is a page turner is an understatement. Barnaby can really write an action packed scene with fear inspiring characters such as the Tall Man. Baxter the dog who accompanies the children gives the story the delightful twist of feeling like an apocalyptic Famous Five. Genius. The story is essentially an allegory set in a far more perilous and shaky world and is therefore not only for children but also for adults. Potent messages are present throughout the book. Jake incisively says ‘The world was wrong now. It was bad and broken. I didn’t understand.’ That a new value system is required to fix today’s broken world is also indicated with even the Reverend stating that ‘in order to believe in the Bible, you have to stop asking so many questions and just accept what you are told. And I have always found that hard to do. The world created in seven days? Immaculate conception?’ By the end of the book it’s apparent that the new value systems lies with the children and their unselfish spirit of caring and cooperation, the perfect building blocks of a new world order which the author may reveal in further detail in future iterations of the book as possibly hinted at by the cliff hanger of the book’s ending.

    The book is a must read. Barnaby is an exciting and passionate writer. There’s real depth of meaning behind his books. You emotionally engage with and care about the book’s characters. Barnaby’s books also have a strong visual sensibility. His stories particularly VIRO I and II would translate superbly to television and cinema. I am a huge fan of all things zombie orientated and to see the zombie genre reinterpreted from the perspective of children is thrilling. I look forward to more books from Barnaby. He’s one to watch out for. Children, adults and I suspect the film and TV industry people will love this book. I highly recommend it.

    Book Two is currently available for 99 cents and the challenge is to convert the free downloads of Book One into purchases of the rest of the series. This is taking some time but I am encouraged with progress to date.

    Book Three was released in October 2018 and is slowly climbing up the Amazon charts. I have found that sales of Books Two and Three tend to go together with people buying a copy of each at the same time. Again, the challenge is to convert free downloads of Book One into paid purchases of the other books in the series but there is forward movement here and I am confident that this will keep moving as the franchise continues to spread.

    SPOILER ALERT: Book Three also marks the first major character death. I knew that one of the main characters needed to die in order for the series to develop and Book Three is where this tragedy occurs.

    Work on Book Four began this week and I am confident that this will be ready for publishing by early 2019. There is still a very long way to go for Jake and the rest of the characters in the series. Also, with each book in the series, the world of VIRO is becoming richer and richer. The writing style is deliberately sparse for this series and it was always the intention for effect to develop over time. Our understanding of the characters deepens in the same way.

    ACTIONS GOING FORWARD

    1. Finish VIRO Book Four.
    2. Develop a professional relationship that will lead to representation and/or marketing support.
    3. Explore the possibilities of turning VIRO into a screenplay.

     

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  • The Entry Word (2018) – Flash Fiction

    November 7th, 2018

    glitch 1

    Not you too, Paul Hewson, I said to myself.  The images were grainy. The glasses gave him away. It was snowing in the footage. The garage forecourt was empty.

    Bono was talking on what looked like a Mobira Cityman 900. 183 x 43 x 79 mm. Those things have a total weight of 760g. They were nicknamed ‘Gorba’ in Finland because Mikhail Gorbachev used one during a press conference in 1987.

    Who would be on the other end of a phone like that? And what would be said? I could only imagine.

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  • VIRO Book Three NOW available in paperback and for download

    October 31st, 2018

    9781999633240

    Hello Everyone

    I am thrilled to announce that Book Three in the VIRo series has recently been launched and is available for purchase online and in all good bookshops. The series is going from strength to strength and as of this morning the Kindle version of Book One is still Number One in the Amazon chart. If you want to see what all the fuss is about then why not get your FREE copy of Book One here.

    VIRO eBook_ Barnaby Taylor_ Amazon co.uk_ Kindle Store

     

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  • ‘The Eleventh Film’ – Netflix Pitch #1

    October 24th, 2018

    devil 1

    What does the silver screen screen? It screens me from the world it holds – that is, makes me invisible. And it screens that world from me – that is, screens its existence from me.

    Stanley Cavell, The World Viewed

     

    The Eleventh Film

    lumiere 1

    The first public film screening organised by Auguste and Louis Lumière took place on December 28th 1895 at the Salon Indien du Grand Café in Paris. Eleven short films were on the bill that night. Each film was 17 meters long, which, when hand cranked through a projector, ran approximately 50 seconds. Only ten films are listed for posterity.

    1. La Sortie de L’Usine Lumière à Lyon (Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory ) (46 seconds)
    2. Le Jardinier (L’Arroseur Arrosé) (The Gardener, or The Sprinkler Sprinkled) (49 seconds)
    3. Le Débarquement du Congrès de Photographie à Lyon (The Disembarkment of the Congress of Photographers in Lyon) (48 seconds)
    4. La Voltige (Horse Trick Riders) (46 seconds)
    5. La Pêche aux poissons rouges (Fishing for Goldfish) (42 seconds)
    6. Les Forgerons (Blacksmiths) (49 seconds)
    7. Repas de bébé (Baby’s Breakfast) (41 seconds)
    8. Le Saut à la couverture (Jumping onto the Blanket) (41 seconds)
    9. La Places des Cordeliers à Lyon (Cordeliers Square in Lyon) (44 seconds)
    10. La Mer (Baignade en mer) (The Sea/Bathing in the Sea) (38 seconds)

    windy desert

    The eleventh film was called The View of Pazuzu returning to the World – a desert scene, with a half-buried broken statue and the wind blowing. It ran for only one second and was not noticed by the audience.

    eye 1

    At the very moment that cinema was born the world’s fate was sealed and so the birth of one thing brought about the death of another.

    With a new portal open, the passage from Beyond becomes possible once more.

    glitch 1

     

     

     

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  • VIRO Book Three available NOW – ‘an apocalyptic Famous Five’

    October 17th, 2018
    9781999633202
    9781999633226
    411fZ3M09AL
    9781999633202
    9781999633226
    411fZ3M09AL

    VIRO – The Trilogy now available

    A virus has destroyed the world.
    Families are torn apart.
    Will Jake find his missing mum?
    Or will he just become another VIRO?

    REVIEWS FOR THE VIRO SERIES

    ‘Powerful and poignant, VIRO packs a punch.’
    ‘Sad and haunting, VIRO is a new take on the zombie genre.’
    ‘Absolutely thrilling. I loved every page more than the previous, to the point that I couldn’t stop reading.’
    ‘Highly recommend this series to anyone who enjoys zombie stories.’
    ‘I was left on the edge of my seat when I finished the book with a thirst for more adventure!’

    ‘Having Read Falcon Boy and VIRO, it was with eager anticipation that I started to read VIRO II. Barnaby Taylor has a daring and rich imagination that transports you to new adventures in a re-imagined world, that are vividly written with a fresh and vibrant use of language. The heroes of Barnaby’s books are children on the cusp of their teenage years. I would like to think that this isn’t a coincidence. There appears to be a deliberate opting out in relation to the current generation with Barnaby instead looking to a new, untainted generation to right the world’s wrongs in the guise of the courageous and idealistic young children that inhabit VIRO I and II. Barnaby literally and metaphorically backs the right horse. The purity of the children in VIRO II is evident throughout the book. Jake says ‘I hated violence. I hated violent people.’

    In VIRO II, we pick up with the viros (zombies) who are overrunning the world and the small band of children who are trying to survive in this world. The children’s separation from their parents also serves (as it did in VIRO I) as a powerful dramatic device, providing the next generation with the stage and platform to figure out a way forward. Barnaby really understands the mind set of young children and evocatively and beautifully captures their innocence but also their determination and guts to persevere against the odds and you as the reader wants to be with them every step of the way, willing them forward. Barnaby also excels at capturing the petty jealousies and competitiveness that can pervade the group dynamic of young children but equally the intensity and tenderness of their relationships.

    To say that this book is a page turner is an understatement. Barnaby can really write an action packed scene with fear inspiring characters such as the Tall Man. Baxter the dog who accompanies the children gives the story the delightful twist of feeling like an apocalyptic Famous Five. Genius. The story is essentially an allegory set in a far more perilous and shaky world and is therefore not only for children but also for adults. Potent messages are present throughout the book. Jake incisively says ‘The world was wrong now. It was bad and broken. I didn’t understand.’ That a new value system is required to fix today’s broken world is also indicated with even the Reverend stating that ‘in order to believe in the Bible, you have to stop asking so many questions and just accept what you are told. And I have always found that hard to do. The world created in seven days? Immaculate conception?’ By the end of the book it’s apparent that the new value systems lies with the children and their unselfish spirit of caring and cooperation, the perfect building blocks of a new world order which the author may reveal in further detail in future iterations of the book as possibly hinted at by the cliff hanger of the book’s ending.

    The book is a must read. Barnaby is an exciting and passionate writer. There’s real depth of meaning behind his books. You emotionally engage with and care about the book’s characters. Barnaby’s books also have a strong visual sensibility. His stories particularly VIRO I and II would translate superbly to television and cinema.

    I am a huge fan of all things zombie orientated and to see the zombie genre reinterpreted from the perspective of children is thrilling. I look forward to more books from Barnaby. He’s one to watch out for. Children, adults and I suspect the film and TV industry people will love this book. I highly recommend it.’

     

    Amazon links are here

    http://bit.ly/VIRO1

    http://bit.ly/VIROBOOK1

    http://bit.ly/VIRO2UK

    http://bit.ly/VIRO2US

    http://bit.ly/VIRO3UK

    http://bit.ly/VIRO3US

     

     

     

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  • Opening Lines No. 1 – Cursor (Barnaby Taylor, 2018)

    September 19th, 2018

    Dragon_medieval

    Cursor (Barnaby Taylor, 2018)

    In this age of fear, famine and fundamentalism who could ever have known that the world would end because too many people were not careful enough when typing into search engines.

    Go back

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    Warning
    Warning
    Warning

    Warning.

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  • The Professor Dunne Mysteries, ‘The Simple Matter of the Elusive Illusionist’ – Introducing Joxer Flanagan

    September 12th, 2018

    THE PROFESSOR DUNNE MYSTERIES - the Elusive Illusionist

    The Professor Dunne Mysteries,

    Book One, ‘The Simple Matter of the Elusive Illusionist’

    Chapter 5

    Sandra woke up.

    ‘I don’t know about anyone else,’ she said, ‘but I could really eat something.’

    Chuck looked in his rear-view mirror.

    ‘Absolutely, Sweetheart,’ he said. ‘I was just thinking the same.’

    He turned to the Professor.

    ‘What about you, Prof?’ he said.

    Professor Dunne stiffened slightly before relaxing. It would be extremely rude to take an elderly American to task for being over-familiar while he was driving down a motorway at 120 kilometres per hour. Despite her annoyance even the Professor felt that this would be going a step too far.

    ‘I could eat,’ she said instead. ‘I could probably eat something.’

    ‘Well, good,’ smiled Chuck. ‘That’s settled then, three probable somethings coming right up.

    The Horse and Jockey Hotel in Kilnoe, Co. Tipperary was completely full. Well, almost. Our three travellers followed a young girl who led them through the busy dining room. She stopped at a small table covered in piles of napkins, bottles of ketchup and pots of mustard, placed everything on the table along a shelf just above it and arranged four odd chairs around the table.

    ‘But there’s only three of us,’ said the dismayed Professor.

    ‘There is for now,’ the girl replied, ‘but you never know.’

    ‘I think we do,’ replied the Professor, her hackles rising.

    The girl smiled and didn’t reply. She was well used to feisty pensioners getting crabby over the poor conditions in the dining room. Chuck and Sandra sat down. Chuck smiled at the girl.

    ‘Could we have a look at the menu, please,’ he said kindly. ‘We’re starving hungry and looking forward to something traditional.’

    ‘No need,’ replied the girl, putting her pad and pen back in her pocket. ‘Everything’s gone, we only have coddle left. We’ve got two coaches on their way to meet a cruise ship at Cobh and they cleared us right out of frozen fish and chicken wings.’

    ‘What a frightful combination,’ said the Professor.

    ‘Oh,’ said the girl. ‘Not together, Miss, you can’t order them together. You can only have one or the other.’

    ‘Or neither,’ said the Professor, ‘as we’ve been beaten to them by hordes of hungry holiday makers, haven’t we?’

    The girl looked around the crowded dining room.

    ‘Pilgrims, Miss, not holiday makers. They’re pilgrims.’

    ‘Pilgrims?’ said the Professor. ‘What on earth would pilgrims want with frozen fish?’

    ‘It’s Friday, Miss,’ said the girl, wishing her shift would miraculously end here and now.

    ‘Of course it is,’ said the Professor. She looked at Chuck and Sandra. ‘I guess we’ll have to make do with three plates of coddle, please.’

    Sandra looked slightly perplexed. She smiled at the girl.

    ‘What’s in a coddle, please.’

    The girl smiled back, probably pleased that she was speaking to someone else. The Professor had really put the wind up her.

    ‘Coddle,’ she said as kindly as she could. ‘Not a coddle.’

    ‘Oh,’ said Sandra sheepishly. ‘What’s in coddle.’

    The girl smiled, pleased with the small victory she managed to win.

    ‘Bangers and rashers and spuds and oinons and herbs.’

    ‘Bangers?’ said Sandra. ‘What on earth’s a banger?’

    ‘I believe it is another name for a pork sausage,’ replied the Professor, herself uncertain about the appropriateness of such a word on a menu. ‘It doesn’t sound very appetising, does it?’

    ‘That’s all we have, Miss,’ said the girl. ‘It’s that or nothing pie.’

    Chuck went to say something but Sandra stopped him.

    ‘Three bowls of coddle, please, she said.

    The girl smiled.

    ‘Cutlery is on the shelf above your head. You have to order drinks at the bar over there.’

    Over there seemed far too far to have to travel.

    The coddle quickly arrived and before anyone had time to ask for anything else three bowls of thin-looking stew with small pink lumps of sausage bobbing in a broth alongside waxy potatoes were expertly plonked down in front of them.

    ‘It’s a local delicacy to add ketchup to the coddle,’ said the girl as she sidled away to serve another table. ‘Enjoy!’

    ‘That looks tasty,’ said a voice to the Professor’s right. She looked up to see an orange-hued man with a huge silver quiff sit down opposite her. ‘I’m fond of a bit of coddle,’ said the man.

    ‘I’m sure you are,’ replied the Professor, her senses quickly recovered. ‘Perhaps you might take your aforementioned fondness for coddle to another table? I’m sure the coaches are leaving very shortly.’

    ‘They probably are,’ replied the orange man, ‘but I’m not with them. I’m on my own.’

    ‘I’m not surprised,’ replied the Professor. ‘You can’t just sit down next to people and start a conversation as they’re about to eat their coddle without so much as a please or thank you.’

    The man pointed at the girl.

    ‘She said this was the only seat left in the entire dining room and because you were such a lovely old lady you really wouldn’t mind if I ate my lunch with you.’

    ‘Well she was wrong,’ said the Professor. ‘In fact that poor, misguided girl could not have been wronger if she had tried.’

    ‘Wronger,’ smiled the man. ‘Is that a real word?’

    ‘It is now,’ snapped the Professor.

    Chapter 6

    ‘Joxer Flanagan,’ said Joxer Flanagan as he shook Chuck and Sandra’s hands. ‘Lead singer of the Joxer Flanagan Star Times Showband, formed in 1967 and still going strong today.’

    ‘A showband?’ said Chuck politely. ‘You must have some interesting stories about life on the road?’

    Joxer’s eyes lit up. The Professor’s dimmed somewhat darker.

    ‘Well funny you should say that,’ smiled Joxer. ‘Did I ever tell you about the time that I …’

    ‘I’m sure you already have,’ said the Professor. There was an edge to her voice that even seasoned members of the Professor’s inner circle would not have recognised.

    ‘I’m not quite sure what you mean, Mum,’ said Joxer. ‘We have never met before, have we?’

    The Professor stiffened.

    ‘Oh, you would know if we had ever met before, you self-inflated, pompous old fool.’

    ‘Professor …’ protested Sandra.

    Joxer waved Sandra’s protests away.

    ‘I’m fine here,’ he smiled. ‘Let the lady have her say.’

    The lady. The lady! Professor Dunne considered tipping her bowl of coddle over the conceited singer’s head. The trouble was if she missed she might spatter her travelling companions and that would never do. She took stock of the oaf sat before her.

    He was tall and even though his skin was orange-hued he was handsome. This made it even worse. Being the lead singer of a showband, he was more than used to being adored. His hair was beautifully coiffed in the sort of well-oiled quiff that would make most men jealous, not least those in their later years. Even though she would never dare to admit it to anyone, this pompous prig looked a lot like an Irish Rock Hudson. You’ll never those words issue forth from my lips, she said to him in her head.

    Fortunately, the girl returned and saved everyone sitting at the table, especially the Professor, from ‘the lady’ having her ‘say.’

    ‘What can I get you?’ she asked Joxer.

    As the Professor watched, Joxer turned slightly to one side and spoke quietly out of the side of his mouth. The Professor thought he looked perfectly ridiculous. The girl blushed slightly and almost curtsied.

    ‘Well, my dear,’ drawled Joxer, ‘I guess I’ll have a bowl of whatever these good folks are having.’

    Joxer’s accent was somewhere clearly in the midpoint between Mullingar and Michigan. Even Chuck was taken aback by the jarring oddness of Joxer’s accent.

    ‘Are you one of us?’ he asked.

    Joxer turned to Chuck and smiled.

    ‘Why most certainly, my fine fellow, whatever one of us is.’

    ‘I meant American,’ Chuck continued.

    ‘So did I,’ continued Joxer without missing a beat. ‘I have always been American in everything I do and have done, the difference being that I was born here instead of there.’

    ‘And where is here exactly?’ asked the Professor.

    ‘Dublin by way of Roscommon.’

    ‘So why pretend to be American?’

    ‘I’m not pretending, I’m simply demonstrating the full range of my stagecraft.’

     

    All Rights Reserved Barnaby Taylor 2018

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  • Experiments in Independent Publishing – ‘FREE #VIRO Amazon Kindle Downloads’ – GET YOURS NOW

    September 5th, 2018

    Amazon.co.uk_Best_Sellers_The_most_popular_items_in_Teen_&_Young_Adult_Monster_Fiction_eBooks_-_2018-09-04_10.01.37

    ‘I absolutely loved this book. Powerful and poignant, ‘Viro’ packs a punch. Sad and haunting, ‘Viro’ is a new take on the zombie genre.The characters are dynamic and interesting, finding strength despite their horrifying circumstances. Jake is a character that will stick with you long after the final page. The action sequences are thrilling. I was on the edge of my seat!’

    Experiments in Independent Publishing

    What started as an experiment in independent publishing has led to Book One in the VIRO series currently sitting at Number One in the Amazon charts. Book One has occupied this position for most of the Summer and from June 6th when the experiment started until today there have been 589 downloads.

    Absolutely thrilling. I loved every page more than the previous, to the point that I couldn’t stop reading. Jake, a unique and curious character with good intentions. Ellis, the cunning and loyal girl who sees that Jake is different. Abe, brave but not so bold. Amber, intent on getting the Job done the quickest way possible. These four kids make their way through a zombie infected place they used to call home, struggling to cling on to the things they love and desperately seeking safety. I was left on the edge of my seat when I finished the book with a thirst for more adventure!
    Amazing.

    Phase One of this experiment has been to make Book One available for FREE download and as you can see from the graphic this has been successful so far. Though the percentage is currently relatively small, there has been some conversion in terms of people paying for Book Two in the series. This is something that I aim to increase through a new social media campaign for Autumn 2018.

    A fascinating premise drives the narrative in VIRO. How would a zombie apocalypse unfold behind the eyes of a child? Jake, the central protagonist, embarks on a simple quest. He wants to reunite with his mom who has not returned home from work. From there, the reader sees the terrors of an increasing zombie infestation as Jake unites with Ellis, Abe and Amber on his journey to find her.

    VIRO does a good job of capturing the voice of an older child reacting to the horrors unfolding around him. His thoughts and actions are simple and emotional and age appropriate. The developing friendships and relationships between the children drive the story. You get a clear sense of each character and become emotionally invested in them and their journey.

    This book takes the zombie story in a different direction and that’s refreshing. It is much more unsettling to see children deal with the horrors of a zombie apocalypse than adults. Fans of zombie stories should add VIRO to their bookshelf.

    Phase Two is to convert downloads to reviews. This is going to be much harder and will require a much greater effort to be successful. I have set myself a target of 30 reviews for Book One by the end of 2018. Again, this target will be part of the new social media campaign for Autumn 2018.

    In case anyone reading this wants to be part in the ongoing experiment Book One in the VIRO series is available for free download here http://bit.ly/VIRO1 and here http://bit.ly/VIROBOOK1

    Feel free to join the #VIROSWARM by reading Book One and leaving a review.

    Amazon.co.uk_Best_Sellers_The_most_popular_items_in_Teen_&_Young_Adult_Monster_Fiction_eBooks_-_2018-09-04_10.01.37

    Social Media Management

    In terms of social media I have primarily relied on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and have been scheduling posts using Buffer. Buffer is a useful social media management tool but does have some limitations, especially if, like me, you choose to use their basic free service. It is useful to be able to schedule a series of posts that reach three platforms at the same time but Buffer is really let down by the limitations that these platforms, especially Twitter and Instagram, have in place. Twitter will not let Buffer share similar tweets too close to each other. Instagram does not allow links in the posts to be available to anyone reading the posts unless, I’m assuming, I pay a premium which at the moment I cannot afford to pay. With this in mind, I am looking to see how else I might use Instagram as a platform for promoting the VIRO series.

    In fact, a WordPress blog like the one I am giving weekly updates on is, I think, far more useful in terms of reaching people and allowing them to interact with your posts. Nevertheless, Buffer does have some value in terms of the campaign to date and my plans for Autumn 2018.

    I will keep you all informed as to how the experiment is going and in the meantime, if anyone is keen to join the #VIROSWARM then please find and follow me on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

    Thanks for reading and if anyone has any experiences they would like to share then please feel free to comment on this post.

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  • The Entry Word 1.13

    July 30th, 2018

    ENTRY1

    ‘Backwards,’ declares Jodocus Meaddowcraft. ‘Backwards now world-spinning. All progress halt. New histories writing.’

    His voice is a terrible one, all wrath and gritty.

    ‘Not resting us ‘til world back beginning spin at start once more.’

    Bartholomaus Hamson, Einav Dionisii, Mally Jaqueminet, Agatho Wagner, and Husniya Hindge agree.

    ‘My plan,’ crows Jodocus Meaddowcraft to the weary Assembly. ‘My heart-hope all ambition decided.’

    Jodocus Meaddowcraft raises himself to a height hitherto not imagined and looms large across the floor of the UN Building.

    ‘My palace now begone foul fellows flee!!!!’

    The delegates scattered with a mixture of fear for the future and relief from the experience.

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