Showing posts with label Ben Woodard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Woodard. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Tour & Review of Ben Woodard's Newest MG Book: Whispers of Trees

BeachBoundbooks is pleased to be coordinating a Review Tour for the children's adventure Whispers of Trees by Ben Woodard from April 4 - April 25, 2016.


___________________________________________

About the Book





Title: Whispers of Trees
Author: Ben Woodard
Genre: Children's Multicultural Adventure
Number of Pages: 57
Publisher: Miller-Martin Press
Publication Date: March 15, 2016
Synopsis: An ancient forest, a dark night, a strange woman—and whispers.

What is going on in this eerie Irish forest? Ten-year-old Declan has to find out. His brother is missing and only he can solve the mystery. But why him? He doesn’t even like his always-yelling brother who his sister says was eaten by wolves. But there are no wolves in Ireland.

Then a witch-like woman tells him the two of them have to go into the spooky woods to save his brother. But from what? The strange trees only whisper the answer and he must discover what they are trying to tell him. But he will learn much more than he ever dreamed.

Whispers of Trees is a fun, page-turning thriller hinting of myth that delivers a multicultural adventure.
This is the second book in the Mythic Adventures Collection. The first book is The Boy Who Flew With Eagles. You can preview it here:
The Boy Who Flew With Eagles

Amazon ~ Barnes and Noble ~ Smashwords
iTunes ~ Kobo

Here's my review of Whispers of Trees:

Ireland. Home of leprechauns, fairies, and magic. What better place for ancient trees who talk?
As a young reader, I would have fallen in love with this story of a young boy caught in the midst of a troubled family. Reveled in the adventure deep into the lush green forest even with a million eyes following me. Shivered at the strange presence I sensed lurking all around me. Drawn to the mysterious woman living within the forest’s shadow. Afraid of what might have happened to my younger brother.

As a mature reader, I wanted more. And that’s what makes a great story!

I received an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

___________________________________________

About the Author: Ben Woodard

Ben is an adventurer and storyteller who has traveled the world including climbing on Mt. Everest. He now writes adventure stories for boys and girls. Tales of lost gold and river caves, and flying with eagles. Stories of friendship that endure through adversity and danger. Adventures that inspire and educate and, most of all, entertain.
For more information about Ben, please visit BooksByBen.com.

Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Goodreads 
Google+ ~ Pinterest

___________________________________________

Blog Tour Giveaway

Prize: One winner will receive a $50 Amazon gift card or $50 PayPal cash prize, winner's choice Giveaway ends: April 25, 2016, 11:59 pm, 2015 Open to: Internationally How to enter: Please enter using the Rafflecopter widget below.Terms and Conditions: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. A winner will be randomly drawn through the Rafflecopter widget and will be contacted by email within 48 hours after the giveaway ends. The winner will then have 72 hours to respond. If the winner does not respond within 72 hours, a new draw will take place for a new winner. Odds of winning will vary depending on the number of eligible entries received. This contest is in no way sponsored, endorsed or administered by, or associated with Facebook. This giveaway is sponsored by the author Ben Woodard and is hosted and managed by Stacie from BeachBoundBooks. If you have any additional questions – feel free to send and email to stacie@BeachBoundBooks.com.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

http://www.beachboundbooks.com
 

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Tips from Writers and the Kid Lit Blog Hop #58

More writing tips from successful authors. Let us know if this is helpful. This post showcases the authors interviewed in May and June of 2014 and shares their advice for writers.

Start writing. There is only one guarantee with writing stories: if you never start, you will never finish. Don’t expect your first draft to sound fabulous. Just write. Fabulous comes with revision. You have to get your ideas on paper in order to rework them. Next, rework, rework, rework. Did we mention that it is vital to rework your story? The number of reworks required depends on your writing skill and experience. Once you have your best work, let someone that isn’t afraid to tell you the truth critic it.J.S. Jaeger, author of Scrolls of Zndaria.

The hardest part of writing is finishing that first draft. Once that’s done, you’ve accomplished more than most aspiring writers will ever do. I never edit anything during the first draft. I wait until I’ve finished the last page, which can take anywhere from three months to a year, before I go back and start revising.—Laurisa White Reyes, author of The Celestine Chronicles.

The one thing that has always annoyed me when listening to anyone who has success is their fatuous advice. All I can say to any artist anywhere is that if you give up, you are lost, and just because you give your whole life to your art, you are not guaranteed recognition of any kind. This is the life you choose, that is the chance you take.—Daniel Nanavati, author of Midrak Earthshaker

Have fun! If writing’s not fun, why torture yourself?— Angelina C. Hansen, author of Julius Caesar Brown and The Green Gas Mystery.

I have learned several tricks during my ten year career of writing professionally.

First: It takes a lot of work to get a book written and published. While the publishing process is arduous, you can’t even begin that process until your manuscript is finished. Most people don’t discipline themselves enough to get the book done in the first place. So, if you want to write a book, you will have to set aside the time, daily, to write. Write the whole book and don’t look back! Once the book is done, set it aside for a while. Give it a rest! Then, go back and reread it. Do you like it? Hate it? Are you willing to make changes and revisions? Now is the time to make edits and revisions, not as you are writing initially.

Second: If you are interrupted during your writing time, or your allotted time is up, NEVER stop at the end of a chapter. Stop in the middle of a paragraph or even in the middle of a sentence. That way, when you come back, you already have a start!
Margi Evans, author of North Mystic. 


Write. That’s it. That’s the number one activity all of us must do. No excuses, no doubts, and no quitting. Because to get better, there is only one way, and that is to keep putting words on paper until we’re good at it. For some of us this might take years, but we really have no choice.

Most writers’ lives are a mess. Going in a dozen directions, overwhelmed by family and work, and trying to snatch a few minutes to write. This doesn’t work. You have to claim writing time. Make it a priority even if it’s only fifteen minutes a day. And find a method that works for you. I get away during the day to a coffee shop that doesn’t mind me lingering. Maybe once a month, I’ll go to a nearby state park, get a cheap room, and stay for a couple of nights. Whatever works.
Ben Woodard, author of A Stairway to Danger.


It would be the same as what they hear from everyone: write, write, write! Keep sending out query letters. If you want to self-publish, just be sure to do it absolutely professionally. Hire an editor. Pay a designer to make your cover. It's not about just putting something you love on Amazon and hoping it sells. Self-publishing is a serious business, and you become the publisher and have to take on all of those jobs. Meg Dendler, author of Why Kimba Saved the World.

Find a writer's group and a critique group. If they don't have one in your town, join an on-line group. They are so important for feedback and encouragement.Jacci Turner, author of Bending Willow.

 

Welcome to the 58th Kid Lit Blog Hop where we continue to develop a dynamic and engaged community of children's books bloggers, authors, publishers, and publicists.

On this Hop, Carpinello's Writing Pages interviews
and
Children's author Gloria Repp

You are always more than welcome to join us by popping in a post and hopping around to meet some of your fellow Kid Lit bloggers and authors! This week, we are excited to be including a Twitter Linky Party to be held in conjunction with the Kid Lit Blog Hop. These linky parties are designed to give you the opportunity to connect with and grow your network of fellow kid lit bloggers, authors, and parents through your various social media platforms.  

Hostesses:

Mother Daughter Book Reviews

Julie Grasso, Author/ Blogger

Cheryl Carpinello, Author / Blogger

Stacking Books

BeachBoundBooks

Pragmatic Mom

Reading Authors

The Logonauts

A Book Long Enough

Spark and Pook

Happy Hopping everyone and enjoy the Hop!

Kid Lit Blog Hop
 

Kid Lit Blog Hop & Linky Party Rules *Please Read*

1. LINKY PARTY: Add the link to your Twitter profile page in the Twitter Linky Party list below. Be sure to visit at least the two links directly before yours, say hello and retweet a post and follow folks as per your interests. If you do not have a Twitter profile, you are welcome to link up a different social media profile (Pinterest, Facebook, etc.). 2. KID LIT BLOG HOP: Link up any Kid Lit related post in the Kid Lit Blog Hop. This can be a link to a children’s book review, a discussion about children’s literature/literacy, or a post on a recently-read children’s book or one that you love from your childhood.
* Don't link directly to your blog, it must be a specific post.*
* For Authors, we prefer you to link to your blog if you have one. Please link unique posts each time ~ no repeats please. *
* Make sure you include an image relevant to the POST (e.g., book cover), not your blog button or photo of yourself.*
* Feel free to link more than one post.*
3. KID LIT BLOG HOP: Please visit AT LEAST the TWO LINKS from the Kid Lit Blog Hop directly ahead of your own and leave them some love in the form of a comment. We are trying to build a community of bloggers, readers, parents, authors, and others who are as passionate about children’s literature as we are so please CONNECT and follow any or all of the blogs that interest you! 4. If you like, grab the button above and put it somewhere on your blog, preferably the post you're linking up. If you'd prefer, you can just add a text link back to this Hop so that others can find it and check out all these great book links! 5. It would really help us get the word out about the Kid Lit Blog Hop if you would be so kind as to tweet, share, and spread the word about the Hop!

Happy Hopping!

 

TWITTER LINKY PARTY

(***Please do not link a blog post here - see below for the Kid Lit Blog Hop***)


KID LIT BLOG HOP

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Meet MG/Tween Author Ben Woodard

Carpinello's Writing Pages welcomes MG/Tween author Ben Woodard and his adventure book A Stairway to Danger.

First, a bit about Ben:

Ben grew up practically living in the local library. Reading was his escape, and the library was his portal. He loved boys' adventure stories, and he’s been amazed at the reports that say boys don't read. So he decided to write the kind of stories he remembered. Tales of lost gold and river caves, and fun. And stories of friendship that endure through adversity and danger. Adventures that inspire and educate and, most of all, entertain.

Why did you pick to write books for MG/Tween readers?

I love all children's genres, but I felt that early teens, 12 to 15, and especially boys, didn't have a lot of realistic, adventure books to read. Those are the ones I grew up on, from the classics like Tom Sawyer, to the Hardy Boys and the Rick Brant Series– my favorite. Some of them were racist and sexist, which mine aren't, but I liked the adventure and camaraderie of boys in realistic fiction. And  that's what I've tried to write.

What types of books do you like to read?

My tastes haven't changed much. I still like kids' books and that's what I most often read. When I first started writing I tried to read all of the Newbery and Printz award winners for the last 10 years and many of the honor books.  Those stories moved me as much as any books I’ve read.

When you are not writing, what do you like to do?

I like to read, to hike in the woods, to play with the grandkids, and snuggle with my wife on the couch. Oh, and not necessarily in that order.

Tell us about A Stairway To Danger and how the story came to be.

A Stairway To Danger is the first of three in the Shaketown Adventure Series set in small-town Kentucky in 1923. The idea for the book came from stories my dad told me about growing up in a rural village in Kentucky in the twenties. The stories fascinated me because he got to do things he would have never allowed me to do. I also had a nagging desire to write for reluctant readers, especially boys. So I wrote a NaNoWriMo book several years ago imagining my dad and his cousin in this town. It was terrible, but the idea stuck and two years ago I started writing the story again, but from a different prospective. I made the boys a bit larger than life and gave one a horrific past.

Here's a peek at A Stairway to Danger:


A rusty barge, a dead body, and a perplexing mystery entangle two Kentucky cousins in a life or death struggle against a shadowy gang.

It’s the summer of 1923 and two cousins hunting for hidden gold stumble on a decayed body. Was the death an accident? Fourteen-year-old Tom Wallace is convinced it was murder and drags his older cousin, Will, into a harrowing struggle against a shadowy group. Not even repeated attempts on their lives can stop the boys from relentlessly pursuing the mystery. But when their curiosity leads them to investigate a derelict barge, what they find is bigger and more dangerous than anything they could have imagined.




Have you written other books? If so, tell us a bit about them.

I have. I mentioned the Shakertown Adventure Series above and the second book, Steps Into Darkness is finished and available. I also wrote two short stories, The Hunt and The Trestle, about the two cousins, and The Trestle is free.

Also published is The Boy Who Flew With Eagles, a short, middle grade story with illustrations. Again, written primarily for reluctant readers. While the book hasn't sold a huge number of copies, it's gotten wonderful reviews and is being used as a teaching aid for adults learning English in Germany and Bulgaria.

Here's a brief peek at this book:

By the light of leaping flames an old man weaves a story. A tale of a time of great hunger when every living thing might die. Only one boy can save his people and all creatures from starvation. But he must risk everything in the effort.

What's next for your writing? Are you working on a new story?

Always. I'm constantly thinking about new stories, and I have several in the works. The final book in the Shakertown Adventure Series is my next novel. It will be titled The Staircase Of Fire. All of the books in the series have something about steps in the title, and this book will make the reason known.
I have another novelette about the same size as The Boy Who Flew With Eagles that is in the final edits. It will be another unusual book in that a local photographer will be supplying pictures of trees for the story which is about a young boy's adventure in an ancient forest in Ireland. Another project is a middle grade paranormal trilogy that one agent has shown some interest in acquiring. Writing is my new career and I’m loving it.

What advice do you have for other authors?

Write. That’s it. That’s the number one activity all of us must do. No excuses, no doubts, and no quitting. Because to get better, there is only one way, and that is to keep putting words on paper until we’re good at it. For some of us this might take years, but we really have no choice.

Most writers’ lives are a mess. Going in a dozen directions, overwhelmed by family and work, and trying to snatch a few minutes to write. This doesn’t work. You have to claim writing time. Make it a priority even if it’s only fifteen minutes a day. And find a method that works for you. I get away during the day to a coffee shop that doesn’t mind me lingering. Maybe once a month, I’ll go to a nearby state park, get a cheap room, and stay for a couple of nights. Whatever works.

Anything else you want readers to know?

I believe that reading is the basis for all success. People who read are more interested and curious about the world, and have a range of knowledge far beyond a non-reader. The most important skill a child can learn is the love of reading. Encourage your children to read. Get them to turn off the electronic games for a while and enter a world of imagination. And please have them try one of mine.


Where can readers find you and your books?


Amazon Author's Page
Website
Twitter
Facebook
Goodreads

A Stairway to Danger
    AmazonUS
    All other countries http://smarturl.it/stairway

The Boy Who Flew With Eagles
     AmazonUS