James Rasile liked an update for Project Eden
Hi Readers! Just uploaded my draft of chapter 9. Please feel free to highlight and give feedback if you’re up to it (please keep it constructive). As always, thank you for your support and I hope you enjoy!
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    Author of Cape’s Side Bay, and my own personal letters to Santa Claus.
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    James Rasile liked an update for After Man

    200 readers!  Special thanks to N. Turner for being the 200th reader to support After Man on its way to publication.

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      James Rasile liked an update for The Last Machine in the Solar System

      Dear Machiners! 

      A good Monday evening to you! We have a number of important items to address, so I will get right to it. 

      First, I have been blown away by the continued response for The Last Machine in the Solar System following the Sword & Laser contest. Just this week we blew past 400 pre-orders for the novella. And there are now over 500 people following the book’s progress. So thank you all so much! With the support of the teams at Inkshares and Girl Friday Productions, I am 100% confident that we are going to produce a stellar book, with a great story and beautiful illustrations that you’re going to love. 

      Toward that end, we have received a preliminary publication date from Inkshares of February 7, 2017. This is huge! I know it seems far away. But I remind myself that quality takes time and we want this to be just right. Nine months is going to fly, and that time will be well used as we ensure the story and interior design is perfect, the back and front covers shine, and we prepare and execute a promotional marketing campaign that sets us up to reach as wide an audience as possible come February. 

      A couple of excited upcoming dates: I expect to receive feedback from the developmental editor on May 17th. Then on 5/26, I’ll receive the initial cover designs. 

      I’m incredibly excited to see the three possible cover designs and share them with you. Our cover designer is Dan Stiles. His work is fantastic. You may have seen his handiwork before on book covers or band posters. He is also the artist for Dracula v. Hitler on Inkshares. You can check out his art here. 

      FREE INKSHARES MONEY 

      If you supported me during the contest, Inksharems sent you $10 in free credits last week on May the Fourth (insert Star Wars joke here, yada yoda yoda...). So, check your email! Claim your credits and get something fun to read from Inkshares. 

      There are tons of great books to support - some of which have been published, while others are still in need of support to make the threshold for publication. Simply claiming your free credits and spending them can help make an author’s dreams come true, just as you did for me. 

      To claim your credits: Click on the green CLAIM button in the e-mail Inkshares sent on May 4. If you deleted the email, never fear! Just log into your Inkshares account, then click on "credits" in the top right corner; click the button to get the e-mail re-sent. 

      On Inkshares $10 can go a long way. For books still funding, that can be 1 ebook or 1/2 a paperback - regardless, it is one vote toward publication. For books that are already or will be published, prices start as low as $3.99 for an ebook and $11.99 for paperbacks. 

      Here are couple of suggestions on what to support: 

      This is the last week of the Hard Science themed contest on Inkshares sponsored by Geek & Sundry. There are many awesome projects and as we well know, the last week is when things really start heating up. So you’re support for any of these books can help shoot them up the standings toward publication. 

      Last week my new SciFi syndicate supported The Amaranth Chronicles: Deviant Rising by Alexander Barnes and Christopher Preiman. The book is sitting 30 pre-orders shy of qualifying for Quill publication. Your support could make a big difference!

      That’s all for now, but there’s much more excitement to come - and soon! 

      Until next time, 

       -Matt

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        James Rasile liked an update for The Punch Escrow

        There are now over 400 of you lovely readers, and I wish I could tell you that makes me sleep better at night, but I’m not one to rest on my laurels. This is a contest, and I want to win it. I know you’re with me, and that’s an amazing feeling - but I need just a little more of your help. The finish line is so close (May 16!), and having watched the contests that came before this one, I know the ending is where things get most competitive. Remember, when someone you refer buys The Punch Escrow, Inkshares will give you a $10 credit. (click here to learn how it works)

        Not only do I have to fend with my worthy fellow authors, but also an overly funded partially government owned clandestine teleportation "startup" called International Transport whom, it just so happens and totally by coincidence, is the company trying to kill the protagonist in my book. Fortunately they have lost their most powerful asset: Beloved children’s TV personality Paco the Puppet has joined the resistance. Last night, I intercepted the following video recording from him on Radio Free Costa Rica:

        This week’s t-shirt and "teleporting" coffee mug raffle winner is... CoRy Wyszynski! Congrats CoRy, I look forward to learning why the "R" in your name is capitalized. Also, CoRy is a fellow Inksharer author. Check out his book U-Turn at Next Synapse. Next week, other than our standard raffle, I’m giving away a MAJOR PRIZE! This is no leg lamp, either. The winner of the MAJOR PRIZE will get this one of a kind, future vintage mystery box and all the astounding contents found within:

        Lastly, I wanted to share an interview with David Sontag, who was my legal consult through the writing of the book. The notion of human teleportation not only introduces physics challenges, but legal ones as well. David helped me wrap my brain around how teleportation could legally "happen."

        Tal Klein: First question: What is your name, how do we know each other, and what do you do for a living
        David Sontag. We know each other from high school in the ’side (Oceanside, NY). I am Deputy General Counsel at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, a teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School.
        TK: I’m going to put you on the spot here, I did a lot of dumb stuff in highschool, I wonder if you can enlightened us with your favorite (or most embarrassing) Tal memory? 
        DS: I think my brain selectively destroyed a lot of memories, but I do remember a time when your parents were away for a while - at least a week, maybe a month. The day before they were coming home you enlisted everyone to help clean up the disaster we made (I’m not sure we actually helped). You heated a bunch of potpourri in a sauce pan with water and then we started walking around the house chanting as if ridding the house of evil spirits (and stenches). I think of that whenever I see a bowl of potpourri and laugh.
        TK: Enough about me, what made you decide to get into law?
        DS: I took a course in bioethics as a sophomore in college and realized I liked that part of medicine more than the science (I was a pre-med English major at the time). My mother, ever the pragmatist, asked me who was going to pay me to be a bioethicist. So, I thought that I would go into law, with a focus on bioethics and health law. Then I clerked for a law firm after college and confirmed that I really did want to be a lawyer.
        TK: The book gives us 400 years with which to envision the progress of human civilization. Your thoughts on the book aside, I’d love to hear your thoughts on how you think American law will evolve over the next several centuries.
        DS: I think it will evolve like it has the last few hundred years -- that is, very slowly. The law always has to lag behind what is happening in our modern culture. I’m hopeful that we will maintain our focus on civil rights, whatever that means in the future -- even giving rights to humans who are not created the way they are today. We have adjusted, for example, for people were born via IVF or with the help of surrogates. Laws are often clunky but we can make them work. We just make comparisons until laws directly on point are passed.
        TK: In The Punch Escrow, Joel Byram, the protagonist, loses his identity and then files suit to reclaim it, as if it was property. We currently live in an age where identity theft is a real issue. When someone’s identity is stolen it’s a pain in the ass to restore it. Do you think things get better or worse from here?  
        DS: Unfortunately,  I think it gets worse before it gets better. Having everything electronic has its pros and cons. Being susceptible to hacks is just a reality people will have to live with for a while. Eventually, I think people will realize that privacy is an ideal that is not worth the effort to protect -- particularly in health care. 
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