...back to P'kaboo Publishers

Sunday, November 18, 2012

4 new ShortStories and a brand-new Poetry section!

P'kaboo has 4 more Shortstories up (and one still under revision).  Also, please visit our bookshop to inspect the brand-new POETRY division, with pearls of beauty, nature and life's-like-that by Marie Marshall.

Enjoy!

A Tale of Heroes
A Tale of Heroes - by Douglas Pearce
Settling Up
Settling Up - by Nick Legg


Get What You Can
Get What You Can - by Nick Legg
Outside
Outside - by Dr Emma Briant



Naked in the Sea - Poetry
Naked in the Sea - by Marie Marshall

  





Friday, November 16, 2012

Naked in the Sea

...by Marie Marshall is the first book in our Poetry Section




Pearl 2:
you secret
enfolded
in salt-flesh
hidden
in a sea
of love-songs 


 ~


Enjoy this book!

Thursday, November 8, 2012

7 tips for writing a good blurb - Blurb competition


Blurb-writing is like fly-fishing. Not angling. A reader’s attention in a bookshop or book site is limited, by time restraint, the overwhelming selection, and his attention span.

P’kaboo is running a blurb-writing competition:


Go to the “Freestuff” page of P’kaboo, at www.pkaboo.net/freestuff.html.

  1. Write a blurb for any of the short-stories in the short-story project. The three best entries will win a paperback novel.
  2. Alternatively, write a deliberately lousy blurb (specify this in the subject line). The three funniest entries each win an e-book from our shop, in pdf format (which every e-reader handles, even the intelligent phones).

Mail your entry to info@pkaboo.net, and specify which part of the competition you are entering for. You may email unlimited entries, and you may participate in either part.

The decision of the judges is final and no negotiations can be entered into.

 

7 Tips for writing a great blurb:



1. Start intriguingly.


2. End by leaving unresolved conflict in the reader. The more tension, the better.


3. Be specific to the story.


4. Include “hooks” (e.g. shoutlines and questions)


5. Spoiler-alert. Beware of telling too much.


6. Keep it short – under 30 seconds to read, between 50 and 100 words. Make every word relevant.


7. Go for the jugular – and leave the reader wondering whether it will be ripped .



Saturday, October 27, 2012

Short Story Project and other Submissions

P'kaboo is inviting submissions.

If you have a short story ready, or want to submit something longer, please feel free.

Our short story project is still running:  At first we were only going to leave the stories up in "Freestuff" for a month (to gain a bit of readership for them) but have now extended this to December, by which point the project will close and the stories will be published, first as ebook, and depending on popularity, as a paperback.

This means you still have a month to submit a short story.  If you would like to influence us concerning which stories are included in the final collection, please contact us on info@pkaboo.net and voice your opinion.

Other submissions:


Be aware that your book, if accepted, will undergo the process of editing, layout, and all that goes with publishing.  Also be aware that it will first only be made available as ebook and online.  Popularity will determine if a South African paperback is produced.


Saturday, October 6, 2012

P'kaboo Titles on Amazon

Forest Circle Quest Forest Circle Quest
by Leslie Hyla Winton Noble
View on Amazon: Paperback / Kindle
Plump and pathetic "twins" Patsy and Percival Parker-Pyle are drawn quite by accident into a magical adventure...  
Lupa Lupa
by Marie Marshall
View on Amazon: Paperback / Kindle
What is reality, what is illusion? - A lost circus girl in late 20th Century Rome; a female gladiator in ancient Rome...
I: The Mystery of the Solar Wind Solar Wind I:
The Mystery of the Solar Wind

by Lyz Russo
View on Amazon: Paperback / Kindle
"I only have half of my crew, Paean Donegal!" The year is 2116. Captain Radomir Lascek sails his pirate ship, the Solar Wind, around the oceans...
I: The Assassin Solar Wind II:
The Assassin

by Lyz Russo
View on Amazon: Paperback / Kindle
"Remember who you are..." The voyage of the Solar Wind continues...

A Tensional Guitarist A Tensional Guitarist
by Iain Rossouw

View on Amazon: Paperback
This book is aimed to take your guitaring to a new creative level.
 

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

3 going on 5 new shortstories up!

P'kaboo's call for submissions on shortstories is yielding fruit!  There are already 3 new shortstories up on our Frestuff Page, with two more being formatted right now.

Click here to see them.  Enjoy!!  And please remember to click that "Like" button. 

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Call for Submissions!


P'kaboo is calling for fresh short-stories for our Freestuff page. Our statistics show that our free downloads are quite popular; this means people will be reading yours. Anyone who would like to strut their skills can submit here, and if we like a short-story, we will post it for a month on our FreeStuff page. After that it is taken down, and the best of these stories will be collected for the future publication of a short-story collection by miscellaneous authors.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Sometimes it's time to say goodbye

We regret that Douglas Steward Pearce, author of the humorous metaphysical novel "Almost Dead in Suburbia", has decided to leave P'kaboo.

We wish him all the best for his further literary endeavours. 



Sunday, May 27, 2012

Coming soon to our 'Coming Soon': Immy and the Dragon

Immy and the Dragon


From our prolific children's lit author Leslie Hyla Winton Noble

Immy is lonely and bored, and goes for a walk in the woods. There she meets a dragon who wants to cook and eat her.  She has other ideas though.
Then some really nasty goblins also fancy a 'little girl takeaway'.  
She should have stayed at home...

What readers say:
 
Wonderful story! Looking forward to the next episode.’
'Trust a child to find the loophole in something. I feel like
a kid when I read it.’ 
Such a satisfying ending to a lovely tale. Nicely done.’
I want a dragon!!! I do, I do!!! Love these ...’
 

The "Immy" series is aimed at preschoolers and early readers.  The series explores how a sassy little girl who isn't afraid of anything, deals with a huge dragon and various other threats.  Illustrations done by Amanda Fieldgate.

Leslie Hyla Winton Noble has two series of books out aimed at young readers:  The "Tabika" series is enjoyable for all from reading age 7 (but the quirky sense of humour is still good even for adults); and the Magic Circle fantasy series targets readers from reading age 10+, once again being funny enough and having enough deep themes to satisfy adult readers. 

Immy has been written with great love for his own granddaughter, and other children of her age group.


Immy stories are designed to let excitement carry preschoolers and early readers through to building a feel for creative language.

Vocabularies are extended in a fun way by including more advanced words here and there in contexts where they are readily understood – and adopted.

Also, words and illustrations are carefully blended towards stimulating young imaginations.

Versions of the books with CD/DVD provide a useful introduction to music on ‘classical’ lines through the orchestrated themes composed for each character or set of characters.



Friday, May 11, 2012

Review: "Almost Dead in Suburbia" (Douglas Pearce)

http://blogs.news24.com/Ennui



It is always rewarding when a reader comes back with comments on a novel.  In this case, a reader posted a review at the above address.

Thank you for the feedback, Ennui (the blogname of said reader).  I'll take the liberty of quoting:

"Having read some of Pearce’s writings on his blog I was certainly expecting an entertaining story with a good deal of humour, and so it was. However, since, according to the blurb on the publisher’s website, the story revolves around the ubiquitous theme of one person’s spirit inhabiting another’s body, I wasn’t expecting much in the way of an original plot. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

The book is original, funny, entertaining, and a very good read. The plot takes you through several unexpected turns and “red herrings” and leaves you guessing ‘til the end - and even after the end. The style reminds me of Terry Pratchett and Tom Sharpe with a dash of Douglas Adams.

As the saying goes, everyone has one good novel in them, but I suspect we can look forward a few more from Pearce. "


~Ennui, http://blogs.news24.com/Ennui/almost-dead-in-suburbia-by-douglas-pearce-a-book-review

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