Jane-Holly Meissner followed The Adventures of MONOMAN
The Adventures of MONOMAN
The Adventures of MONOMAN
An amateur super hero with the power to force others to monologue, a down on his luck thug running from his past and one of the newest members of the world’s largest superhero organization must join forces to overcome a threat to the entire world.
Jane-Holly Meissner followed Scott Carss
Scott Carss
Lover of science-fiction and fantasy. Aspiring writer hoping to realize his dreams.
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Jane-Holly Meissner liked the forum thread, How many here are unpublished vs. published?
I’ve never been published anywhere yet actually. The old rule of thumb is you are never published until it’s finally done :). 

I’ve also never tried anywhere else honestly. I came for the contest, entered, did well, and now here I am. I think crowd funding has been vastly helpful in shaping my views about the amount of work involved and really made me pay attention to a lot of other details I would of otherwise missed. 

That said, in a very short time, less than a year, I’ve got the potential now to be published in three separate bodies of work... it’s all potential. I’m excited about the next few months to come, and also because I’ve to keep the ball rolling and write my next draft. 
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    Jane-Holly Meissner followed Tahani Nelson
    Tahani Nelson
    Reader. Writer. Faoii leader.
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    Jane-Holly Meissner followed The Legend of Madog
    The Legend of Madog
    The forgotten tale of King Arthur’s brother, Prince Madog, who discovers America when he follows the trail of King Solomon on a journey to find and restore the Grail before its magic is extinguished and the world falls under an eternal veil of darkness.
    Jane-Holly Meissner liked a review for Fae Child
    Lots of things to love in this fabulous YA fantasy.   The exploration of the Otherworld that exists between reality and myth.   The promise of mystery and magic.  But perhaps the thing I like most about this story is Abbie... a little girl who is both scared and defiant, grounded yet wondrous at the magical world she is just about to discover...  this story has YA blockbuster written all over it!
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      Jane-Holly Meissner liked a review for Fae Child
      Lots of things to love in this fabulous YA fantasy.   The exploration of the Otherworld that exists between reality and myth.   The promise of mystery and magic.  But perhaps the thing I like most about this story is Abbie... a little girl who is both scared and defiant, grounded yet wondrous at the magical world she is just about to discover...  this story has YA blockbuster written all over it!
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        Jane-Holly Meissner liked the forum thread, Royalties

        Dear Authors,


        The end of this week will mark my sixth as CEO of Inkshares.  It’s been a long but exciting six weeks with all-time high-water marks: the most-ever new-author sign-ups as part of the Geek & Sundry Fantasy Contest; the announcement of our first venture into horror with Crypt TV beginning this coming Thursday; the sale of the TV rights for J.F. Dubeau’s A God in the Shed; and the exercise of the TV option for Filip Syta’s The Show.  Yes, The Show will be a show.  


        As has been actively discussed in both our emails with you, on the Slack channels, and on the forums, the Inkshares royalty structure was modified last month.  I know that my letter to the funded authors has been extensively shared, but some people suggested we share it more broadly, and here it is.


        https://medium.com/@adamgomolin/restructuring-royalties-38e7c566aa02#.v03gn8lxs


        Cheers,

        Adam.
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          Jane-Holly Meissner liked the forum thread, where do you have trouble
          @Jane-Holly Meissner  I did that the other day! I was going through the move again and again as I read the passage with a prop sword making sure it worked.
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          People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, where do you have trouble

            Jane-Holly Meissner liked the forum thread, where do you have trouble
            @Allison Griner : Reading dialogue out loud is one of my favorite things about writing, especially when it all starts clicking in place.

            I struggle walking that fine line between vagueness and clarity, particularly when it comes to threading the needle of a mystery. I map out every crime scene in the book, usually with diagrams, and then list out all the clues. From there, I try to figure out which clue my protag will focus on, and then see if or how it could lead to the perp. Most of the time it works. And when it doesn’t, a wizard did it.
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