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Showing posts with label WOI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WOI. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2019

Marketing and Writing! Host Marsha Casper Cook









Link To The Show

Happy New Year! We're back...


Please join in the fun when Marsha Casper Cook welcomes Mike Petit on January 8 th at 4 EST 3 CST 2 MT 1 PST. It's going to be a terrific show with lots of tips on writing, marketing and what to do with the screenplays that you've been writing and keeping in your drawers. It's time to take your stories to the next level and sell them.

Mike Pettit has been writing professionally for ten years. He is an award-winning best-selling indie novelist. He is the author of thirty novels that includes two indie author self-help books, several Action Thriller series, three classic westerns, and numerous short stories.


For more info on being a guest on one of the shows go to http://www.michiganavenuemedia.com
For more info on Mike go to https://www.amazon.com/Mike-Pettit/e/B007ROC046

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

 

 


 

Food for the Hungry Writer ~ Story

Story

A good story somehow gets inside your brain. A good story tells you something you already know, but more than telling you what you already know, a good story also makes you feel. If you, the writer, don’t feel the story, your reader won’t feel it. To make the reader feel, we have to use the tricks storytellers have known for centuries. One of the tricks storytellers use is to build a story on a myth base.

The language of a good story draws you past the language into its myth base. A good story that hooks you into a myth base feels familiar even while it is brand new to you. Even while you read Cold Mountain, example, you feel that it is a deep story, that there is more to it than the journey of a solder home from the American Civil War. It is a story about Getting Home. It is the Odyssey, the Aeneid, it is Everyman who has ever been lost and looking for a place to rest. That is the myth base working in you.

As language draws you into the story’s myth base, you, as a reader, don’t know until it happens, so there is a bit of a mystery there, while you, the writer need to know how to put the myth base under the language so your reader can feel it. To do that, you have to get inside the story. To get inside a story as a writer, you want to look at story sources.

Sources:
The way we see it, there have been three horizon events that shape European and American story telling:
  1. Biblical: The Fall of Rome which led to the infusion of Judeo-Christian Biblical writing as a source for story.
  2. Classical Antiquity: The Renaissance rediscovery of classical (Greek and Roman) myth brought a second source of writing.
  3. Psychological and evolutionary insights arising from the work of Charles Darwin, Sigmund Freud, and Carl Jung: Survival of the Fittest, The Freudian Slip, The Archetype.
Getting inside the Source
From the fall of Rome in 410 AD until the 15th century (about the same time gunpowder is introduced into western warfare), there was essentially one source for metaphor. As a common source, the Bible gave us its characters, its events and situations; it gave us its heroes and villains.

Because the Bible was a foundation text, a writer might choose to tell a story about a strong man. To make the story understandable, he might hook his story to Samson. He might refer to being shorn as a loss of strength, to lose his hair turns him into a lamb. Because the writer hooked his story to a common myth base, the story required no explanation. Everyone knew what it meant and everyone knew what the writer was talking about.

In the story of David and Goliath, the sling shot becomes an object whose meaning is understood because all readers and listeners (the Middle Ages were, at their peak an oral period in the history of western writing) knew the reference and they knew the moral significance of it.

As a source for allusion (things and events the writer referred to) and as a source for story, the Bible was not just mandatory (no one knew anything else after a manner of speaking) it was the only possible way to connect to the audience. (We use connection as short hand for meaning). All listeners to the story about a boy who slays a giant understood the story, and a skillful writer could turn that story into a morality play where the lesson was quite simply—get too big for your britches and the little guy will pull you down. The allegory of Joseph and his coat of many colors was equally understood while Dante’s Divine Comedy, the foundation text built on the great Biblical foundation text, can be understood only in the context of biblical allusion.

Allusion, as a literary device, and story depended almost exclusively on the Bible, its Hagiography, and its Apocrypha.
The lives of the Saints, the Hagiographic texts, became important sources of moral literature. Saint Francis, Saint Sebastian, Saint Eulalia, Saint Perpetua all taught moral lessons about the Christian life and devotion to Christ. In such grand pieces as the mysteries (the mysteries are medieval dramas based on scriptural events—especially the Incarnation, Passion, Crucifixion, or Resurrection, of particular importance for redemption) the Christian passion was re-enacted for all to see. In Thomas a Kempis’ Imitation of Christ became not only a source book but a model for living the exemplary life.

Until the 15th Century, the Bible had a long run and, in its overlays on Celtic and Nordic story telling, nearly exterminated the pagan myths that lay there, and so, for example, the Romances which had correlates in Celtic or Germanic myth, became under the Biblical/Christian influence, models of not just the perfect knight, but the perfect Christian knight. It is not by chance that the Cross on the shield supplanted the animal totems that adorned the shields of Celtic warriors.

In the 15th century, when the great texts of the classical world came back into vogue in the Western consciousness, it was through Latin, Arabic, or Hebrew because all the classical writing had been taken into the Arabic-Muslim libraries in Spain and from there, in Latin translation (the lingua franca of Western Europe) spread to the rest of the continent and with them came the sudden infusion of the second Great Story Source: Classical myth.

The Renaissance was a time of syncretism wherein the Bible as a source of allusion stood toe to toe with classical myth for a period of time, but yielded, finally, in the 16th century to the classical. Jerusalem Delivered and Orlando Furioso bring an end to the great biblical themes and their overt and easily understood allusions. There is no more Divine Comedy but now the writing is loaded with allusions to different gods and heroes – Herakles, Zeus, Demeter, Persephone, Oedipus as the classical world was reborn in writers who abandoned the biblical in favor of the classical myth and now any allusion to the Sun has to be cast in terms of Sol or Phoebus, and any battle is couched in terms of Herakles the great warrior, and any journey is told as an allusion to the Odyssey and Homer’s two epic poems became the source of story instead of either Hagiography or the Bible.

In the 17th century, Milton’s epics Paradise Lost  and Paradise Regained work the biblical vein at its richest, but even there Milton is completely aware of the Homeric epics. Milton, of course, read both Greek and Latin, and knew by heart all the great classical works available to him as a student of that world.

The classical world reached its zenith in the early 19th century when the Romantic poets began to look beyond myth into nature, but still used classical myth and theme as a source and so Keats still writes his Odes on Greek themes and Matthew Arnold still alludes to the classics and all this because it was a common language, the result of the classical education. It is the common language and the common source that allows the writers to compose in shorthand. The Fall no longer means solely original sin and the Garden of Eden, but can allude to aspirations that reach too high as Icarus falls. Still understood, the Biblical allusions have less currency and in the end, are vestigial and finally come to an end as the driving force shaping western writing.

As Classical myth supplanted biblical allusion, another, the third great source floods onto the world stage: In 1859, the middle of the century, Charles Darwin publishes The Origin of Species. Darwin introduces and plays on a theme of radical change through time. In one book, he destroys the foundations of western writing because now, there is nothing immutable, nothing lasts, the 18th Century materialists were right, the whole world is in flux. With Darwin, it is a world unseen that gives us the third shift in allusion and from Darwin’s insight it is a short 50 years to Freud and the Unconscious.

With the blossoming of the Unconscious Mind into western ideology, the Third Source has broken out and drives full blown into the writing world.

Writers no longer find satisfaction or inspiration in the high flying Icarus or the muscular Herakles or the Peripatetic Odysseus. Now the allusion is to an inner world of dark places without names and the journey is not to Hell as it was with Dante, nor is it to Ithaca as it was with Odysseus, but now the journey is into the Unconscious where all of our life is coded and so we now write in the Third level of allusion that is as perfectly understood to the educated 21st century reader as was the Biblical allusion to the listener in 1200 AD.

But, the problem for the contemporary writer is one of Metaphor. If there is no common language for the code, how do you make any connection to your readers? If you can’t write about the Fall or the Descent into the Purgatory and if your readers do not understand the coded message of the Argo and the Argonauts (but think they might be a professional football team) how do you connect?

Because there is no common literary document and no common body of metaphors that all educated readers understand, writers have to build with a new set of tools that happens to be as old as the human mind: Subtext. Lacking a common set of metaphors leaves the writer free to discover structure in order to create temporalized metaphor (grand language for putting your characters in modern garb and placing them in a modern context that your audience can relate to. (See CG Jung and Erich Neumann)

How is it done?
To do this writers discover archetypal patterns stripped of metaphoric allusions – in short, your have to build the thing you refer to.  The writer cannot allude to that common language, so must build the metaphors of his or her writing from the ground up. The construction site, as always in the time of the Third Source, is subtextCold Mountain, for example, is the story of a long and arduous return home from a bloody war. It is an Odyssey that doesn’t allude to Odysseus.  E.T., Spielberg’s film, is the story of a voyager who wants to get home. He is a modern Odysseus, lost in time and space. In these works, the writers build the archetypal pattern and then cloak the archetypal characters in metaphor that connects to their audiences.

Clint Eastwood’s A Fistful of Dollars is a retelling of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, while Jane Smiley’s A Thousand Acres is a retelling of King Lear. The writers don’t write the way Kurosawa did and they don’t write the way Shakespeare did by alluding to classical (or Celtic themes) but prefer instead to discover the unconscious story pattern and then write in the language of our day.
One way the writer in the 21st century can tap into the subtext of the unconscious mind is to rediscover the great cycle of Life-Death-Resurrection. In this structure, Jesus Christ, Attis, Adonis, Osiris and The Terminator are all metaphors for the great pattern—The Return. The Return of the Repressed. Resurrection is a metaphor for things emerging from the Unconscious.
To write in the 21st Century is to connect to the unconscious pattern and then to build on it. You take the pattern, and you put new clothes on it. You take the archetypal pattern and bring it into a time that your readers can connect to.

Rediscovering the Vegetation Cycle
We urge you to dig into the essential elements of storytelling to find the archetypal patterns that underpin all good stories. You start with the basics: death and resurrection as your primal structure. To help you get a handle on this important structure, take a look at the mythic dynamo. (figure 1.)

Commentary: You can save yourself and you can save the culture. When language is debased, when the writer doesn’t take responsibility for the language, then meaning skips away and confusion is the result.
Sample Text: Beginner’s Mind and the Blank Page
Natalie Goldberg wrote Writing Down the Bones using writing practice: “One of the aims of writing practice,” writes Goldberg, “is to learn to trust your own mind and body; to grow patient and non-aggressive….Writing practice embraces your whole life….”

Writing Under the Clock to Free up the Creative Mind
We encourage the writers to adopt timed writing as a discipline. Timed writing is a sure-fire way to discipline because when writing under the timer  (the discipline is in three parts: a) selecting a fiction problem, 2) setting  the timer for five, ten, fifteen or more minutes; 3) finishing what you start. Natalie Goldberg says it very simply: “Keep your hand moving until the time is up.” This  essential discipline—finishing what you start is the foundation of craft.  Timed writing frees up your creative mind by putting your internal editor to work watching the clock while you roam the fields of fiction unfettered to finish what you start without the internal editor bothering you about the small things.

For the writer who has never experienced timed writing, we strongly suggest buying and reading Natalie Goldberg’s foundation book, Writing Down The Bones. Writing under the clock (what Natalie Goldberg calls “writing practice”) opens you up to all kinds of writing—poetry, fiction, sketch, dramatic writing, and essay. In this book we use writing practice to assist the writer in creating progressive segments of timed writing which build stamina, strength, insight, flexibility, and writerly self-awareness.

Writing practice strengthens the writer’s craft by extending writing times on topic that take writers deep into their creative unconscious to break through the emotional barriers that block creativity.

 Every new work starts with a blank page. In the lore of world writing it’s said of Thomas Mann— author of Dr. Faustus, The Magic Mountain, Death in Venice, and The Confessions of Felix Krull—that when he finished a work, he immediately rolled a blank sheet of paper into his typewriter and wrote the title of the new work.

Beginner’s Mind is the writer’s way past the blank page because it allows you to start small. Starting small means just that. Write about character, create the settings. Let characters and setting develop into scenes. Let the characters in their scenes tell the story.
  • In Beginner’s Mind, you don’t cross out when you write because then you mix up the editor and the creator. The internal editor is guardian of the jewels.  The closer you get to the jewels the louder editor mind shouts at you that you’re not worthy of the jewels.
  • In Beginner’s Mind, you write specific detail – it’s not a “car”, but a “Cadillac.” Not just a Cadillac, but “a Cadillac El Dorado”; not just a Cadillac El Dorado, but a “gun-metal gray Cadillac El Dorado with a New Mexico license plate.
  • In Beginner’s Mind, the writer first writes say, about a piece of fruit, but that piece of fruit becomes an apple and going deeper the apple becomes a Braeburn the color of a Chinese robe….
  • In Beginner’s Mind, you don’t think, but you lose control. If the writing gets scary, that’s where you go. You follow your mind.
  • In Beginner’s Mind you let go of what you know so that you are free to take what comes.
  • In Beginner’s Mind, you want the crossing of emotion and detail. You want to be in the writing without being present in the writing.
  • And finally, in Beginner’s Mind, you already know the book. It is in you. You just have to let it out.
 © 2012 All Rights Reserved. Jack Remick and Robert J. Ray.

Monday, March 19, 2018

Jo Michaels Talks About Living Life When You Are Struggling With A Disease


 Jo Michaels will be discussing her life and struggles with MS.

Link To The Show -




I have a post in me today, and I’m just gonna throw it out there. Some of you know, but most of you don’t, so this is me, being really real.

Below is the very picture of MS. People who suffer with this disease get to look at these supplies three times a week if they’re on the shots.

Why am I talking about it right now? Because I’m having some feels over the demotivation these articles bring into my life.

See, the more a person weighs, the less these shots hurt. Yeah, I bet it’s about now that it’s starting to click in your head what kind of demotivation I’m talking about. Right?
But if it were just pain that lasted a few minutes, I could deal. This pain lasts around 48 hours, and starts to fade right about the time you have to do another one. And when I say pain, I’m talking about it feeling like someone is pressing a hornet or red wasp to your skin and letting it sting you. Would be nice if it went away after the needle is pulled out, but no. It intensifies for a few minutes, swells, and turns bright red. Then, every time that spot is pressed on, it hurts all over again. And the bruises... I look like someone has beaten me.
Without the shots, though, my brain would eventually atrophy and die. Without the fat, I feel like I’m dying 3x a week. This particular brand of medicine doesn’t demolish your immune system to help fight the disease. I’m afraid to switch. It’s also working well. No symptoms for about seven months now.
Having the pain is pissing me off, and it’s keeping me from reaching goals I’ve set for myself in other aspects of my life because I don’t want to work out and add more pain. That leaves me about one day a week. Not enough.

Some days, I reallllllly wanna say, “Screw it!” and just gain all that weight back to avoid the pain. But with the weight comes other issues: nausea, brain fog, pain in my joints, and IBS flare ups. A different kind of pain. I’d just be swapping one for the other.

So, I stare at these articles every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and I roll through my hate/love relationship. Today is one of those days, and I’m choosing to keep my brain and just deal. I push through and don’t give up. I’m not one to (usually) throw my hands up and walk away.
It scares me, though, to think about the future and the possibility that one day I’ll be weaker than I am now. What then? What do I give up?

Yes, I’ve looked into alternatives, but the side effects are those that align with some of the other issues my disease causes. So, I deal. I don’t whine, cry (often), or talk about it very much with folks other than family and extremely close friends.

Today, I wanted to share because I thought maybe someone would like to know that not everything is as perfect as it may seem on the surface. We have to scratch sometimes to know what demons and fears others are facing down. It can give us courage to face our own crap—especially when we can connect with the fear of what the future may bring.

Now that I’ve shared what I struggle with, and you’ve taken the time to read this far, what I want to know is this:

What are your secret struggles, and how/why do you overcome or push through them?
How’s it working for you?
Do you have these days, too?

Friday, March 2, 2018

It's Never Too Late For Love -


Link to the book 

 Confirmed bachelor Noah Meyers thinks living his life without a wife is just fine and manages to dodge his meddling mother’s repeated attempts to fix him up.

When an adorable dog named Gracie finds her way into his life and decides to play matchmaker, Noah finds his carefully constructed world is turned upside down.

Will Gracie complete her mission to finally find a fairy tale happy ending for Noah and ultimately help herself find happiness too?

It’s Never Too Late For Love is a timeless and delightful love story filled with a lot of laughter and just a hint of magic.

 





Link to the book

Monday, February 19, 2018

Black Panther Review - By Melissa Keir

 
 
 
 
 
 
One of the most highly anticipated movies of 2018, the Black Panther delivers at the box office and on the big screen.

Wakanda, believed to be a poor third world country, hides a large secret. One people are willing to kill to obtain. When the King of Wakanda is killed at the United Nations, his son, T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) assumes the mantle of leadership, but a secret from the past sets out to destroy the peace Wakanda had worked so hard to keep.
​Filled with beautiful landscapes, a diverse country, and out of this world technology, the Black Panther movie draws the viewer in and keeps you on the edge of your seat, from the opening scene to the extra credit sneak peeks (and there are two). 
​Probably more than Wonder Woman, Black Panther features strong female characters who are leaders, generals and scientists. The women don’t take back seat. They are in all the action and make the decisions, hold to their morals and risk it all for what is right. They are some of my favorite characters and I can’t wait to see what they do during Black Panther 2. (Because with the high box office figures, you know there will be another!)
​I also loved seeing Andy Serkis without the full body costume. He’s an amazing actor who has missed out awards due to the fact that he’s so immersed in the characters in costume that people forget he’s really a man.
​The message of the movie resonates with audiences as it touches on borders, immigration, family and morality. Leaving the movie, you will feel upbeat and hopeful about our own future, after all… if Wakanda can do it, we can here, too.
​The movie reminded me of how I felt at the end of the first Ironman movie. Excited about what was coming up. Black Panther will be a favorite of many people, no matter their race or gender. It’s one I’m looking forward to adding to my video collection to see again and again.

Friday, January 19, 2018

Spotlight On Randall Dark - Written By Paul O Brien



 













January 17, 2018 / canada, china, film, film production, hd, hd video, video

Spotlight: Randall P. Dark

If you’re old enough to have used a cassette tape, I’d be surprised if that photo isn’t imprinted on the back of your brain as it was one of the iconic images of the 1980’s.  That anonymous man in the chair, who he was and what we were experiencing in that poster – music, speakers, print, early MusicTech – in many ways exemplifies, by inspiring, what you might think of as a MediaTech professional.

I sat in a local coffee shop in Austin, TX, months ago, and shared passions and possibilities with a now clean(er) cut and gray Randall Dark.

In meeting for the first time, I had no idea that the poster from my youth, a poster that got me excited about music and audio, had Dark so early in my life as to influence my path toward media innovation.  He’s an exciting personality, visionary, passionate, and just what you’d expect from a Canadian: a person you just enjoy spending time with.

Writer, Director and Producer

Today, Dark is a director, producer, writer, cinematographer, and media consultant who has not only embraced new camera technology, he is considered by the television industry to be one of the guiding thought leaders and adopters of the HD medium.  Since seeing HD first in 1986, if you can believe, he has gone on to capture on the screen Julie Andrews, Bill Clinton, Willie Nelson, Harry Connick Jr., Leonard Nimoy, Lyle Lovett, Sting, and Stephen Hawking.
“Because high definition was so real and so vivid — the coluors were perfect, you could see the tiniest detail — I believed that if you had a 65-inch TV in your home and you watched a documentary about starving children, it would touch your heart in a way that you would have to react,” says Dark. “I believed it was a technology that would have an impact on people and change their hearts. I honestly believed it would change humanity.”
Evidence of our vision that media cross pollinates throughout music, video, and other formats, Dark, found himself from Canada (he’s a native of Saskatchewan) to New York City, working out of the Ed Sullivan Theatre, where he worked with bands like Aerosmith and Crosby, Stills and Nash.  He helped build one of the first multi-camera, high-definition production trucks and shot Victor-Victoria on Broadway with Julie Andrews.   We all know the significance of the media in sports and Dark was behind the camera for Super Bowl XXX and NBA All-Star games as well as the first to broadcast in high definition a live sporting event to the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. as the American Public looked to Congress and the FCC to determine if high definition was a viable new TV standard for the United States.

In 2013, he found himself collaborating with Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Harry Connick Jr., Connie Britten and Lyle Lovett as one of the executive producers of Angels Sing and of watching Nelson and Connick Jr. create a new song, he noted, “I got to watch these two geniuses at work. My life is so amazing.  I have never been star-struck working with celebrities because people are just people. I think what happens is so many big name stars get worshipped and people go ‘I’m a big fan’ and it gets tiring after a while. I think, because I am an expert in my field I can sit down and say, ‘Hey, I know nothing about what you do but do you want to know about high definition?'”


I could relate.  I had a poster on my wall for years when I was growing up.  Yeah, I’m that much of a media geek that I had a Maxell cassette tape poster on my wall.   Dark had the opportunity to work with Maxell to recreate it years later.  What a brilliantly fun coincidence; and in a moment I was a little star-struck, here I was having coffee with an inspiration of mine, even though it wasn’t actually, originally Dark in the chair on the poster.  The idea behind media and technology suddenly started gelling in my brain. Dark, pointedly, wasn’t in that original chair; his influence is such that Maxell recreated it with him.

Dark is a media personality that we want to spotlight not just because of my personal connection with him.  He is known for taking the experimental approach that we want to challenge everyone to embrace.  He’s long been digital technologies and as we all wonder at HOW we can afford quality media production, whether we’re advertising, producing a film, or in need of a music video, he just does it.   For his documentary Fast From The Past, he he used many different types of cameras, everything from an Apple iPhone to a 4K camera.  Whatever it takes.

Truly, embracing all forms of media.  If you’re as inspired to write as am I, you can appreciate that bubbling in the back of such a brain are stories to be told, and not always through video.  Dark wrote a children’s play some 25 years ago, Tale of Sasquatch, and found it later published by the Playwrights Guild of Canada.  Today, it’s an animated mobile app, available now [android | apple].
What brought us together to share chairs in a coffee shop was our alignment on so many ideas for the future of media and it’s therein that I’d like to encourage you to get to know Randall Dark.  Thinking globally and in the sense of how networking and education will drive forward our media economy, he co-founded the Macao China International Digital Camera Festival and serves today as its artistic director.  He, as do we, works with companies and non-profit organizations on how to use technology to grow their businesses and and To see articles written about Randall and the projects he has been involved in, check out –  http://randalldarknews.blogspot.com/.  Curious about listening to more of his story?  Join him on Marsha Casper Cook’s podcast World Of Ink Network as they explore even writing books beyond producing movies.






Paul O'Brien

Paul O'Brien

Director at MediaTech Ventures
Long time Silicon Valley technology and startup veteran, Paul O'Brien is affectionately known as SEO'Brien for an extensive past in the search industry.
Now Texan, O'Brien works in Venture Capital Economic Development, serving the investment and venture capital economies directly, through thought leadership, consulting, and startup development.He's the founder of MediaTech Ventures, a founder and managing director of the Texas Technology Council, and partner in 1839 Ventures.









































































































Thursday, August 11, 2016

WOI - Special - A Brothers Badge - Host - Marsha Casper Cook

LINK TO THE LIVE SHOW AND DEMAND SHOW

Detective Michael Glade, with the San Antonio police department, has wandered onto the dark side and has run afoul of the Mexican Mafia. He battles his family and feelings while riding his collision course to its ultimate outcome.





Wednesday, August 10, 2016

WOI - Special - A Brothers Badge - Host - Marsha Casper Cook

LINK TO THE LIVE SHOW AND DEMAND SHOW

Detective Michael Glade, with the San Antonio police department, has wandered onto the dark side and has run afoul of the Mexican Mafia. He battles his family and feelings while riding his collision course to its ultimate outcome.





Thursday, March 31, 2016

Naughty Night Press -new Box set - Beyond The Veil







Naughty Nights Press Authors are the special guests on WOI Network.  Join Marsha Casper Cook on Tuesday April 5 at 9PM EST 8 PM CST 7 PM MT 6 PM PST when she welcomes Gina Kincade and several of her authors when they discuss their boxed set BEYOND THE VEIL.

19 FULL LENGTH NOVELS for 99 pennies! A STEAL of a DEAL! Shifters, Vampires, Witches, Wizards, & More! All manner of Magical & Mystical Paranormal Creatures!

20 USA Today, Amazon, International, and Award Winning Bestselling Authors in this LIMITED EDITION sizzling magical paranormal romance boxed set.

Beyond the Veil is 'Where Magic Happens,' and the alpha men and their sassy, head-strong and independent women, heat up the pages of this steamy and engaging collection of stories.



 Call in number (714) 242-5259


http://bit.ly/btvboxedset

#magical #paranormal #romance #boxedset #novels #fulllength #limitededition #beyondtheveil #vampires #witches #shifters #werewolves #gods #goddess #wizards #entertowin #giveaway


http://i874.photobucket.com/albums/ab307/Rebekah_Eastland_Ganiere/output_9LX60o%201_zpsnvi5ziq2.gif