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A.C. Weston liked an update for Deus Hex Machina

Hi all!

Just a note to let you know that I’m still plugging along on writing the first draft of Deus Hex Machina. In fact I just put up chapter 6 on the [URL redacted by order of the Church of Technology]. 

Well that was weird.  If you are already a backer of the book you can find the code in the email Isidore sent you. It will enable you to read all the chapters so far.

I’m ramping up to head into the Disneyland prison in chapter 7, which is going to be a blast. Did I tell you I used to work there? Wow, time flies.

Thanks again for your support of the book! I can’t wait for you all to get a chance to read it!

Love,
Amanda
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    A.C. Weston liked an update for Lucky

    Readers,

    Big, BIG news today! We got a funding extension for Lucky, which means we have two more months to reach our goal of 750 copies ordered!

    What does it mean if we get 750 copies? This:
    • full editing 
    • design
    • printing 
    • distribution to booksellers like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and numerous independent book stores around the country
    • marketing
    • TV and movie tie in rights
    This is what I have been dreaming about and working towards since I was a teenager and first started writing stories. This is the dream that you are helping to bring to life with your support and your purchases. And this is the dream that we got an extension on making a reality.

    If you haven’t yet purchased a copy, please consider doing so. If you haven’t shared this novel with your friends and family and coworkers and the deli lady who makes your sandwiches, please do so as soon as you can. To make the goal in time, we need to sell about 8 copies a day between now and the first of July. Let’s make this a reality and put a new book on the bookshelves!

    A thousand thousand thanks to you all,

    - Webster

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      A.C. Weston liked an update for Murder at the Veterans’ Club


      Dear friends and followers,

      We are at 6 weeks in, with 223 orders. We’re very close to the 250 mark now; I have every confidence that we will cross it this month. Which means that at the end of the month, I will be writing my first cheque for a donation to Chez Doris! These people do good work, and of course if any of you wants to make a donation, you should feel free to do so.

      The sooner we cross that line, and the further we go beyond, the better. And that’s going to take a bit of help from all of you. If each person could get a friend interested in picking up an order, we’d overshoot that 250 line by a mile and I’ll have a pretty sum to put on that cheque. I’ll also have to scramble to identify that second charity I want to add on at the 450 mark....

      Anyway! Let’s see what’s-what on the bookshelves this week.

      1) "Scribbles", by Tabi Card. This was among the first books I decided I wanted, once I began taking an active part on Inkshares. Short stories are really handy things, bite-sized pieces of fiction that you can consume on the go or when you otherwise don’t have a lot of time to commit; and I promise you, Ms Card knows how to turn a phrase. She doesn’t have a lot of time, though: 13 days to get 119 orders. It seems terribly daunting. Still, it’s happened before, at least twice in the past month, and it could happen again.

      2) "Wings of the Pirate", by Eric H. Heisner. Pulp adventure! I admit I was on a bit of a pulp adventure kick once, and the attraction of the genre still lingers a bit. The story involves treasure-hunting in the south pacific while being chased by pirates. The opening paragraph implies a 1920s/1930s setting.  Also, the book has the word "pirate" in its title. Arr.

      3) Have I never mentioned "Cape’s Side Bay", by James Rasile, before? Well, I’m mentioning it now. Like Mike Donald, Rasile hails from a film making background; and like JF Dubeau, he’s telling a story of something unearthly in an idyllic rural setting. It’s billed as science-fiction, because of the nature of that something unearthly, but I think it could fit just as comfortably into the horror niche. In any case, expect cinematic suspense.

      Until next week, friends and followers: have fun, and keep reading.

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