Hey Campers!
511 preorders, 239 away from the end of this campaign and a full publishing deal.
This week I wanted to share an interview that I did with my fan/friend Sue. She discovered me on Manhattan and has been extremely supportive ever since.
Check it out: https://eyesandearsbooks.wordpress.com/2016/09/07/author-interview-kyle-t-cowan/
I still need your help with spreading the word.
Please e-mail or message one friend, and urge them to preorder the book too! It won’t take you more than five minutes, and it will help me tremendously.
You can also invite all of your Facebook friends to this event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1228625917161072/
If you are following the book, and you haven’t preordered, I would really appreciate it if you would TODAY!
PREORDER NOW: https://www.inkshares.com/books/sunshine-is-forever
$10 E-Book
$20 Signed Copy
LET’S PUSH TO 750 PREORDERS! The faster I get to 750 preorders, the faster I can get this book into your hands.
You are all the best,
Kyle T. Cowan
Yes, I am absolutely the kind of person who’d use his birthday to guilt people into ordering his book. At this point, that shouldn’t surprise anyone.
If you’d like to send some birthday cheer my way, please consider pre-ordering Tantalus Depths, and get some friends and family to do the same!
For Day 2 of my week of referrals, I want to direct your attention to a fascinating book that’s been campaigning slowly but steadily, amassing a large following without much fanfare. Yet its success so far is no surprise at all; once you do catch sight of this book, it holds your attention from then on.
Murder at the Veterans’ Club is exactly what you hope it will be: a pure love letter to the golden age of detective fiction. Set in post WWI London, Murder at the Veterans’ Club follows Eric Peterkin as he seeks to find the truth behind the murder of a colleague, seeking the answers to a crime the police have no intention of solving.
Christopher Huang has clearly written this book out of a deep-seated love for the genre, and it shows. The tone, plot, characterization and language are all painstakingly delivered in the style of classic detective literature, resulting in a story that reads as if it were a manuscript recently pulled from a vault left sealed for 90 years.
If you yearn for a new Holmes or Poirot novel, you owe it to yourself to give Peterkin a try.