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Safari Brownies

August 8, 2015 By Editor

Bush Chump’s Chocolate Brownies

Yes! You can enjoy decadent and delicious brownies (and lots of other great food) while on safari!

Ingredients:

monkey• 330g Butter
• 525g Chocolate
• 5 eggs
• 330g Castor sugar
• 45ml Strong black coffee
• 60g Flour
• 50g Cocoa powder
• 200g Cashews
• 7.5ml vanilla essence

Melt butter and chocolate. Beat eggs, castor sugar, vanilla essence and coffee until smooth and creamy, and then slowly add the chocolate mix.
Sift flour and pinch of salt (optional) over mix and stir in the nuts. Bake for 40-45min must still be moist. (Recipe courtesy of South African Airways).

FinalAfricanSafariBookCover

Filed Under: Publisher's Post

Writer’s Digest Annual Conference

July 2, 2015 By Editor

WDWhere: New York City (Roosevelt Hotel)

When: July 31 – August 2

How: To sign up go to www.writersdigestconference.com and be sure to give them WDCMAG15 code to receive $50 off registration fee.

What else do I need to know: Writer’s Digiest Annual Conference is a great networking and learning opportunity for everyone in the writing world, ranging from wanna be writers to best-selling authors, as well as 50 editors and agents. Special guests include: Jacquelyn Mitchard (The Deep End of the Ocean), Hallie Ephron (Writing and Selling Your Mystery Novel), G.P. Ching (The Soulkeepers series), M.J. Rose (The Witch of Painted Sorrows), and Jonathan Maberry (Fire & Ash).

 

Filed Under: Publisher's Post

Big Book Events

May 2, 2015 By Editor

Two of the biggest book events of the year are just around the corner.

If you’re an author, publisher, bookstore buyer, librarian, foreign rights agent, or in the media, you are probably planning to attend at least one of these events:

What: BOOKEXPO/BOOKCON

When: May 27-29/May 30-31

Where: New York

For more info: http://www.bookexpoamerica.com/

AND

What: American Library Association Annual Conference

When: June 25-30

Where San Francisco (CA)

For more info: http://alaac15.ala.org/

Filed Under: Publisher's Post

World Wildlife Fund

February 4, 2015 By Editor

PandaCool new app!

As supporters of WWF, we just had to let everyone know about their new (and FREE and FUN) app.

This award-winning interactive experience brings you closer to nature’s greatest animals, such as elephants, whales, rhinos and other incredible species.

This app has been selected as one of the top iPad apps in the App Store. Millions have downloaded this great app.

Check it out at www.worldwildlife.org/together

 

Filed Under: Publisher's Post

Best Places to Write?

December 9, 2014 By Editor

Looking for a place to get inspired to write? What could evoke more creativity than a stay at one these quirky ‘hotels’?

Dog Bark Park InnIdaho, US
“…the most unique places that my family of four has ever stayed in… an experience that none of us will ever forget.”
Superior Erlebnishotel Colosseo Europa ParkRust, Germany
“We have stayed in theme hotels around the globe… and this is honestly one of the very best themed hotels…”
Seven Hotel Paris by EleganciaParis, France
“The decor is amazing, it is worth asking them just to see the rooms, they are that fab!”
V8 Hotel Motorworld Region StuttgartBoblingen, Germany
“If you are in the region and love cars, you would be mad to miss this one.”
McMenamins Kennedy SchoolOregon, US
“…a 5 star hotel that incorporates restaurants, art, a movie theater and a soaking pool, all in a 1900’s school house.”
LEGOLAND Resort HotelWindsor, England
“Probably the best hotel designed for kids… From the moment you walk in you are bombarded with Lego…”
Malmaison Oxford CastleOxford, England
“…the place is very atmospheric and the rooms converted from cells to a high standard.”
Jumbo StayStockholm, Sweden
“This place is really cool – where else in the world can you sleep so comfortably inside a jumbo jet?”
Montana Magica LodgeNeltume, Chile
“I have never been to a hotel with such fantastic design and creativity. The hotel is actually shaped like a volcano…”
Gamirasu Cave HotelAyvali, Turkey
“This hotel is an amazing find. It is a charming cave hotel which is indeed like being in your own home.”
*Information taken from TripAdvisor: http://www.tripadvisor.com/InfoCenter-a_ctr.themehotelsEN

Filed Under: Publisher's Post Tagged With: Writing

Biggest Book Show: Frankfurt Book Fair

November 11, 2014 By Editor

BooksThe Frankfurt (Germany) Book Fair was held in October. It is one of the biggest book shows in the world, so what happens here is very indicative of what’s going on in the publishing industry worldwide.

Stats show that professional attendance has dropped, but the exact figures haven’t been released yet. However, lots of deals were still happening, especially between publishers and agents at the rights center. Reportedly, there were a number of seven-figure advances and a record number of agents in attendance. In the first of two such deals made just before the official start of the fair, Kate Medina at Random House acquired The Girls, by 25-year-old author Emma Cline, from agent Bill Clegg, as part of a three-book deal. The novel is said to be inspired by the Manson cult in the 1960s. In the second big pre-fair deal, David Ebershoff, also at Random House, took North American rights from agent Susan Golomb to Cameroon novelist Imbolo Mbue’s The Longings of Jende Jonga. Golomb said the immigrant tale has “some of the most delightful and refreshing characters seen in recent fiction.

The attitude was upbeat and polls show there is optimism about the future of book publishing. Opening day speaker was the CEO of HarperCollins, Brian Murray. He talked about a “new era of experimentation” and how this has already yielded positive results for the publisher. “What we’ve seen in the digital realm is that every time you have a new partner—a new digital partner and a new digital offer—you’re creating new merchandising opportunities,” he said. “So, while maybe there are fewer tables at the front of bookstore chains for marketing and promotion, when you introduce a brand new e-tailer, or a different e-model or distribution partner, you are picking up new ways to market your books. In this day and age, [new] companies come up seemingly overnight with billion-dollar valuations, and the next thing you know they’re trying to get into the publishing business. So you have to be at the forefront. You have to try things.”

In other news, FBB debuted an overhauled ConTec, the pre-fair digital-themed show, and the Frankfurt Business Club, which offered extra benefits for attendees.  “There are a lot of people coming from technology companies, and from hardware makers, who realize that they have to have content,” Boos explained, adding, “These people want to explore the possibilities here, and maybe they don’t need a stand, but they need to be found. The business club offers this.”

Perhaps the biggest trend at Frankfurt this year, is that more publishers, and the fair itself, are clearly no longer afraid to, as Murray said, try things. “We know that digital is going to stay, print is going to stay, Amazon is going to stay,” Boos says. “But it is not the end of the world. I am not scared to change.”

*Information came from PW Global Rights Report, 10/14.

Filed Under: Publisher's Post Tagged With: book shows, Books, Publishing

Writers’ Graves

October 15, 2014 By Editor

In honor of Halloween, we thought it might be fun to share where some of the most revered writers have been laid to rest:

Edgar_Allan_Poe EDGAR ALLAN POE (who is probably most famous for his poem, The Raven) was buried anonymously in 1849 in Baltimore. A cousin eventually ordered a tombstone but it got damaged before it was installed. It was twenty-six years after Poe’s death that a monument was erected.

MARY SHELLEY (author of Frankenstein) was buried in Bournemouth, England.

BRAM STROKER (author of Dracula) was cremated and his ashes are kept at Golders Green Crematorium in London, England.

IAN FLEMING (author of James Bonds books, such as Goldeneye) was buried in Kent, England.

THOMAS MANN (author of Death in Venice) is buried in Kilchberg Village Cemetery in Zurich.

OSCAR WILDE (author of The Importance of Being Ernest) has an elaborate tomb in Paris’ Pere Lachaise Cemetery.

CHARLES DICKENS (author of The Christmas Carol) was laid to rest in Westminster Abbey, London.

RUDYARD KIPLING  (author of The Jungle Book) joins fellow writer, Charles Dickens, in London’s Westminster Abbey.

*This information was compiled from Writers Digest (Nov/Dec ’13 issue)

Filed Under: Publisher's Post Tagged With: Books, Literature

A GHOST HUNTER’S GUIDE TO THE MOST HAUNTED HOTELS & INNS IN AMERICA

September 9, 2014 By Editor

This is our newest title…released just in time for fall and Halloween!

 

Discover the best places to see and maybe sleep with a ghost… 

 

Stanley Hotel…find out what happened to Author Stephen King during his stay that inspired him to write THE SHINING…and why the hotel has a resident psychic.

 

Battery Carriage House Inn…is haunted by a GENTLEMAN GHOST (who likes to get in bed with female guests) and a TORSO GHOST (a scary-looking ghost in a Civil War uniform who appears at the foot of the bed).

 

St. James Hotel…learn why no one is allowed in Room 18 , including why it had to be boarded up and padlocked.

 

Bullock Hotel…where the spirit of a former owner still reprimands employees who aren’t doing their jobs to his satisfaction.

 

Chateau Marmont…is a favorite haunt for celebrities–both alive and dead.

 

…and much more!  

HauntedHotelsInns-America_1316x2000

 

In addition to detailing paranormal activity, this book discusses the intriguing history of each place and includes lots of photos and visitor information.

 

“One of the things I really like about Terrance’s book is that it is such an easy read. The tidbits of history keep you turning the pages, and you also learn about the paranormal investigators, who have used a variety of paranormal investigation tools…A Ghost Hunter’s Guide To THE Most Haunted Places in America is one of those books that keeps your imagination wondering what really happened.” -Josh Schubert, USA Travel Magazine

 

From a lunatic asylum to a brewery, ghostly presences inhabit all these places. Complete directions and site information is provided. Even if you don’t get a chance to visit each of these locations, the stories and the black-and-white photos are fascinating. -Marcella Gauthier, Escapees Magazine

 

“…a journalist by training, she [Zepke] takes you on a tour of the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum in West Virginia, the Birdcage Theatre in Arizona, and the Colonial Park Cemetery in Georgia, among a dozen other places…” -Alan Caruba, www.Bookviews.com (National Book Critics Circle)

 

“…A Ghost Hunter’s Guide To The Most Haunted Places in America” explores the story behind these ghost story settings all throughout the country, from theatres, old factories, asylums, homes prisons, and much more. A Ghost Hunter’s Guide To The Most Haunted Places in America is a must for lovers of the paranormal in America. Highly recommended. -James A. Cox, Midwest Book Review

 

“…while the words “adventure travel” may conjure up images of the remote or the foreign, a new book suggests that some wild rides are much closer to home. Zepke documents the supernatural in A Ghost Hunter’s Guide to the Most Haunted Houses in America. As she points out, “Who else but an adventurous and brave soul would dare to spend time in a haunted dwelling—and pay good money to do so?” –Sarah Robbins, Publishers Weekly

 

“You don’t have to believe in ghosts to realize that certain places in our national history are haunted with legends and spirits of long ago. Terrance Zepke grew up in South Carolina knowing the tales of colonial pirates, Civil War legends, the impact of lowcountry voodoo, and the famous residents of weathered cemeteries…places you probably best not visit at night, She’s written books such as Coastal South Carolina: Welcome to the Lowcountry, Best Ghost Tales of South Carolina, Pirates of the Carolinas, and her latest book, A Ghost Hunter’s Guide to the Most Haunted Places in America, investigates saloons and cemeteries, former sanitariums, and penitentiaries across America where rumors of strange phenomenon seem to have some bearing…Terrance is one of the most schooled experts on paranormal in the United States.” –Rick Steves, Travel with Rick Steves

  • Paperback: 170 pages (also available in digital format)
  • Publisher: Safari Publishing (April 2, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0985539887
  • ISBN-13: 978-0-9855398-8-7
  • Product Dimensions: 0.4 x 6 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces
  • Availability: In stock; Available through most booksellers; Standard distribution channels (www.ipgbook.com)

Filed Under: Publisher's Post Tagged With: ghost books

SC Lowcountry: Beaufort Area

August 15, 2014 By Editor

Hi y’all,

I’m sad to say that this is this last post I’ll be doing about the Lowcountry.  But I am hoping that the publisher will let me stop in and post a bit every now and again. By now, I think of us as friends (and as you know, I hate to lose touch with my friends).

The last little corner of the Lowcountry is the Beaufort Area. Here’s what I can tell you:

Beaufort county encompasses 587 square miles of land mass, and extends 30 miles along the Atlantic Ocean. It also includes hundreds of small islands and sixty-seven major islands, including Port Royal, St. Helena, and Hilton Head Island. I don’t get this way very often but it is a lovely corner of South Carolina. I know the leading industries are seafood, lumber milling, USC-Beaufort, Parris Island USMC base, and tourism. You should remember that many of the island’s are connected by bridges and causeways. Some of the bridges have to be raised to accommodate Intracoastal Waterway traffic, so visitors need to accept this inconvenience as being another facet of island life. Take the time to switch gears from ‘mainland’ to ‘island’ time.

The “must see” attractions in Beaufort include the Historic District, Beaufort Museum, John Mark Verdier House Museum, and Old Sheldon Church ruins. You may want to time your visit with one of the many festivals held here, including Gullah Festival (May), Water Festival (July), Shrimp Festival (October), and Penn Center Heritage Days Celebration (November).

Did you know…

Beaufort is the second-oldest city in South Carolina.

Beaufort was the first town in South Carolina to fall into Union hands (troops arrived less than six months after the opening shot of the war was fired at Fort Sumter, Charleston. More than 14,000 Civil War soldiers (both Union and Confederate) were buried in Beaufort National Cemetery. A strong military presence remains due to nearby Parris Island Marine Corps base.

Beaufort has more antebellum homes than Charleston and Savannah combined!

Lots of movies have been filmed here, such as The Prince of Tides and Forrest Gump.

Hunting Island State Park is the most popular park in South Carolina (and is less than twenty minutes from Beaufort). It draws more than one million visitors a year!

Beaufort Shrimp Festival

FYI: Beaufort is 47  miles south of Charleston and 45 miles north of Savannah, Georgia

Lodging…there are several exceptional places to stay in Beaufort, as well as lodging along the highway or on adjacent islands:

Rhett House Inn, City Loft Hotel, Beaufort Inn, Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites Resort, Comfort Suites Beaufort, Best Western Sea Island Inn Beaufort, Hilton Garden Inn Beaufort, Hampton Inn Beaufort, and Atlantic Inn.

Restaurants…lots to choose from including The Bistro at Beaufort Inn, Bricks on Bondary, Saltus River Grill (ask for the fried lobster tails), Q on Bay, Lady’s Island Dockside, Foolish Frog, Plums, Breakwater, Boondocks, Bluffton Oyster Company, Back Porch Grill, and 11th Street Dockside Restaurant. I’d also like to give a shout out for Kooky Mooky’s (best milkshakes), CraveCupCake Boutique, Magnolia Bakery Cafe, Bruster’s Ice Cream, and Lowcountry Produce Market and Cafe. 

Looking down Bay Street  Bay Street

If you’re able, buy fresh seafood and take it home to create a memorable meal:

LOWCOUNTRY BOIL (also known as Beaufort Boil or Frogmore Stew)

*serves 30 (great for parties)

10 pounds of smoked beef sausage in long links

2 small boxes of seafood seasoning

2 dozen ears shucked, cleaned corn

1/2 bushel crabs

15 pounds shrimp (deveined and headed)

Fill 20-gallon pot half full of water. Cut sausages into one-inch sections. Bring water to boil. Put sausage and seasoning bags in water and boil for ten minutes or so. Put corn in pot and bring to boil. Add crab (whole or picked) and bring to boil. Add shimmp and once boils, pour off water.

This isn’t the recipe the CGFs use but when in Rome… this is what I found on the Beaufort Public Library website. Reportedly, Lowcountry Boil was conceived by Richard Gay of Gay Seafood Company. While on National Guard duty in Beaufort, he was preparing a cookout of leftovers for his fellow guardsmen. He brought the recipe home with him and it was a hit. According to Gay, the Steamer Restaurant on Lady’s Island was the first restaurant to serve this dish (more than 25 years ago).

I hope you found this information helpful. Come see me if you want to know more!

Lydia

A great publication dedicated to all things lowcountry is the Lowcountry Companion. www.lowcountrycompanion.com

Great sources for tourism information include: www.tripadvisor.com, www.beaufortsc.org, www.hiltonheadisland.org and www.discoversouthcarolina.com

Recommended reading:

BGTSC-biggerfile

TheSanctuaryBkCoverCoastal SC-TZ

Filed Under: Publisher's Post Tagged With: Books, SC Lowcountry

SC Lowcountry: Charleston Area

August 2, 2014 By Editor

Hey y’all,

Did you get a chance to visit Georgetown yet? Even though it is my favorite part of the South Carolina Lowcountry, I did promise to share some information about Charleston (even though it gets more than its fair share of tourists and media interest).

This was considered the “big city” when I was growing up. We used to go into Charleston to go shopping for school clothes or for special occasions. It is nearly twice the size of Georgetown. Charleston is actually a peninsula where the Ashley and Cooper Rivers meet to form the Atlantic Ocean–or so Charlestonians half-jokingly claim. It dates back to 1670 when it was originally named Charles Town, in honor of King Charles II. There are 2,800 historically significant buildings. The intersection of Broad and Meeting Streets is called the “Four Corners of the Law” because every legal requirement can be done at this junction. On one corner is St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, where couples may get married; the next corner is the Charleston County Court House, where couples may pay taxes on their new home; the next corner is City Hall, where couples may file for divorce; and across the street on the fourth corner is the post office, where newly married or divorced couples can file change of address forms!

Charleston is also known as the “City of Firsts” because so many ‘first’ things have happened here. The first shot of Civil War was fired in Charleston Harbor at Fort Sumter. Charleston boasts the world’s first successful submarine attack during the Civil War. Charleston had the country’s first golf course, first railway mail service, first prescription drug store, first passenger train, first public museum, first public theatre, first music store, and much more.

Today, it is the second largest city in the state and the seventh largest cargo port in the United States. But its main claim to fame is tourism. More than ten million tourists flock to this charming city every year. Some of their favorite things to see and do include: The Battery, Rainbow Row, Aiken-Rhett House, Charleston Museum, Charles Town Landing State Historic Site, Fort Sumter, Patriots Point, SC Aquarium, and the Old Exchange Building and Provost Dungeon.

Visitors can explore the city in a variety of ways, such as historic walks, pirate walks ghost walks, carriage tours, trolley tours, and harbor cruises. A few other points of interest in the greater Charleston area include Folly Beach, Kiawah Island and Angel Oak, Sullivans Island (Fort Moultrie and Sullivans Island Lighthouse), Edisto Island and Edisto Beach State Park, Charleston Tea Plantation, and Isle of Palms. See what I mean about so much to see and do?

I recommend contacting the tourism board for the names and contact info for tour companies and outfitters, as well as a comprehensive list of accommodations, restaurants, and art galleries. I suggest you avoid summer as it is peak season so it is very congested on Highway 17 and hard to find bargains on lodging and also it is VERY hot and humid as this is the South Carolina Lowcountry, after all.

The French Protestant (Huguenot) Church is one of only two remaining Huguenot churches in America.

FYI: Charleston is sixty miles south of Georgetown and sixty-nine miles north of Beaufort.

Lodging…there is a wide range of options to fit any budget and type of traveler. The top hotels and inns in the city are:

French Quarter Inn, Wentworth Mansion, Planters Inn, John Rutledge House Inn, Venue, Market Pavilion Hotel, Restoration on King, Mills House, Wyndham Grand Hotel, and Charleston Place. Additionally, there are many choices on the outskirts of town and up the road in Mount Pleasant and Summerville and in the heart of the city there are some budget options, such as Holiday Inn Express Charleston, Days Inn Charleston, and Town and Country Inn & Suites.

Restaurants…endless. Some of the best chefs in America can be found in Charleston restaurants. There are restaurants to suit any budget and desired cuisine, but since I’m a Lowcountry girl, I’m not even going to talk about Mexican or Italian eateries! My picks are Lowcountry Bistro, Hominy Grill, Poogan’s Porch, 82 Queen, Jasmine Porch, Hyman’s, and Slightly North of Broad. I have left out a lot of good restaurants simply because there are so many (too many to name) but a visitor’s guide will provide detailed descriptions and let you know what awards which restaurants have won. You can also opt to buy fresh seafood in Shem Creek or at one of the local seafood markets, if you are staying in a rental house or condo. Don’t forget there are some yummy recipes in the back of my back, The Sanctuary.

Rainbow Row

Well, I think that does it for my knowledge of Charleston. Don’t forget I’ll be back soon to talk about Beaufort.

Lydia

 

A great publication dedicated to all things lowcountry is the Lowcountry Companion. www.lowcountrycompanion.com

Also, Charleston Magazine, www.charlestonmag.com

Great sources for tourism information include: www.tripadvisor.com, www.charleston.com, www.charlestoncvb.com and www.discoversouthcarolina.com

Recommended reading:

Lowcountry Voodoo cover-1

TheSanctuaryBkCoverCoastal SC-TZ

Filed Under: Publisher's Post Tagged With: Books, SC Lowcountry

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