Entries Categorized as 'Blog Tours'

Invasion of the PODs

Filed under Blog Tours on September 24, 2008
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I’ve decided to leave the drive-bys to the professionals. There’s something else I want to talk about. The interview with Jeff Gerke, founder of Marcher Lord Press, over at The Least Read Blog on the Web has been my favorite post so far from this month’s Christian Science Fiction and Fantasy blog tour. One question, [...]

The challenges of a marcher lord

Filed under Blog Tours on September 23, 2008
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One of the two internships I served in college was with a small press publisher as an assistant to their Sales & Marketing Director. There were 3 full-time employees, including the president, and a part-time receptionist. They worked out of what could have been an automotive service bay. My duties included making calls to potential [...]

Are you a marcher lord?

Filed under Blog Tours on September 22, 2008
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What is a marcher lord? To summarize the article at marcherlordpress.com, a marcher lord was a knight who patrolled, defended, and sometimes even expanded the borders of a kingdom. Jeff Gerke, Marcher Lord Press’s founder, is seeking modern marcher lords for the world of Christian publishing. These knights are the authors of works that lurk [...]

Religion in fantasy fiction

Filed under Blog Tours, Trends & Tropes on May 21, 2008
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Today is the last day of the May 2008 Christian Science Fiction and Fantasy blog tour, featuring the Mindflights webzine. The editors’ vision for Mindflights is to provide quality science fiction and fantasy stories that respect “traditional values and Christian principles.” However, their submission guidelines reveal they aren’t interested in “works that appear to function [...]

The return of the serial

Filed under Blog Tours, Trends & Tropes on May 20, 2008
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When I think of serial fiction, the first thing that comes to mind are those old black-and-white serials that used to play in theaters before the main attraction. However, serial fiction has a longer tradition in the written word than the moving picture. Writers from as early as the 19th century made their livings by [...]