Conrad Johnson's Blog, page 40

April 17, 2013

Frank G. Poe and Star Child and 13 More Twisted Tales


After recovering from a near death experience with Multiple Sclerosis, Frank G. Poe found himself reincarnated as a fantasy horror author, poet and community activist. His latest collections of macabre short stories is Star Child and 13 More Twisted Tales
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 17, 2013 10:14

April 8, 2013

Esther Luttrell and Invitation to a Murder


Author, screenplay writer and speaker, Eshter Luttrell, bares the naked truth about what motivated her to become a novelist while discussing her book, Invitation to a Murder (The State of the Murder Series)
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 08, 2013 11:36

April 1, 2013

Linda Collison and Barbados Bound


Adventurer and author, Linda Collison, swaps sea stories with me and tells us about her latest novel, Barbados Bound (Patricia McPherson Nautical Adventure)
1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 01, 2013 11:06

March 27, 2013

Tom Spears and Heir Apparent


Harvard business graduate and author, Tom Spears, briefs us about his latest corporate thriller, Heir Apparent (Joel Smith)
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 27, 2013 09:46

March 20, 2013

Rebecca Forster and Eyewitness


USA Today best selling author, Rebecca Forster, returns to give an eyewitness account about her recent trip to Albania and how it influenced her latest novel of the same name, Eyewitness (The Witness Series, #5)
1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 20, 2013 14:15

March 17, 2013

Sandra O' Briant Got Game and so does Nancy LaRonda Johnson!


She's playing Blogger Tag! Read here answers here. Now I'll answer her questions:
1.  Beer, wine or mixed drinks?     Whatever it takes to get me laid.
2.  Time in your life that you consider was your prime?
     I still got the moves.
3.  Style of art in your home?
     Redneck noir.
4.  Favorite aspect of nature?
     The skunks that breed in my alley every spring. I get to trap and drown them.
5.  What languages do you speak?
     Ghetto, English, Spanish and Pentecostal gibberish.
6.  If you're a parent, what is it you enjoy most about it?
     Having my kid finally gone and off to college.
7.  If a family member was a sociopath, how would you deal with her/him?
     Interview them on my blog.
8.  If you had to lose one of your primary senses, would it be sight, hearing, smell, taste or touch?
     Smell. Refer to question 4 above.
9.  Pajamas, nightgown or nude?
     Once again, it depends if I'm trying to get laid and who the person is.
10. Have you ever stepped in dog shit and how did you feel about it?
     Every dog poops. No big deal.
11.  What is second favorite creative outlet?
      Arguing with idiots.

And these are Nancy's questions for me:


1. Lefty or righty?    Righty. Most of the time. heh heh.2. “Hi” or “Hello”?    Hi or Hey3. What old-time tradition would you want to bring back, i.e., drive-in movies?    Drive in movies sound cool. Lots of teenage, romantic memories. 4. What celebrity do you think you look like most?    Rob Reiner from All in the Family.5. What animal would you want to be if you had to be one?    A wolf.6. Did you have any childhood bad habits, i.e., sucking your thumb? What?    Afraid of the dark. That's why I sleep with a gun under my pillow. Just kidding.7. Momma’s boy/girl or Daddy’s girl/boy?    Momma's boy. Third son, I was. She was bummed.8. What’s your favorite leisurely activity?    Fishing.9. What one word would you use to describe yourself?    Smart ass  Sorry. That's two words. Witty.10. Popcorn or chips?    Chips. Unsalted.11. Who’s the last person (or animal) you kissed?      I don't kiss and tell.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 17, 2013 20:10

Sandra O' Briant Got Game!


She's playing Blogger Tag! Read here answers here. Now I'll answer her questions:
1.  Beer, wine or mixed drinks?     Whatever it takes to get me laid.
2.  Time in your life that you consider was your prime?
     I still got the moves.
3.  Style of art in your home?
     Redneck noir.
4.  Favorite aspect of nature?
     The skunks that breed in my alley every spring. I get to trap and drown them.
5.  What languages do you speak?
     Ghetto, English, Spanish and Pentecostal gibberish.
6.  If you're a parent, what is it you enjoy most about it?
     Having my kid finally gone and off to college.
7.  If a family member was a sociopath, how would you deal with her/him?
     Interview them on my blog.
8.  If you had to lose one of your primary senses, would it be sight, hearing, smell, taste or touch?
     Smell. Refer to question 4 above.
9.  Pajamas, nightgown or nude?
     Once again, it depends if I'm trying to get laid and who the person is.
10. Have you ever stepped in dog shit and how did you feel about it?
     Every dog poops. No big deal.
11.  What is second favorite creative outlet?
      Arguing with idiots.
1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 17, 2013 20:10

March 16, 2013

Game On! Blogger's Tag!


I  know a lot of you don’t like awards … but this isn’t an award. You haven’t won anything. You’re not getting this because you did something excellent. You got it because I feel like giving it to you, so there. You don’t even get a badge (“Bodges? We don’t need no stinkin’ bodges!”). You’ve just been tagged and so, you’re IT.


Are you gonna be a snob, too good to play with the other kids? Or will you join our silly game. If we do it right, every blogger in the cyber world will get tagged! No one is exempt.Now, the rules. Sit  down  and stop complaining. I hate whiners! It’s not so awful. You can cut and paste most of it. Geez, you’d think I was making you walk on broken glass. Are we comfortable? Stop twitching. You look like you have ants in your pants. Computers at the ready?This is a test you can’t fail, guaranteed successful for every participant!! Here is a little video to explain the nature of this game:





The Rules:1. Post these rules.
2. Post a photo of yourself and eleven random facts about you.
3. Answer the questions given to you in the tagger’s post.
4. Create eleven new questions and tag new people to answer them.
5. Go to their blog/twitter and let them know they have been tagged.Random Facts About John H. Byk:1. I sometimes wear pajama pants for short trips to the convenience store.2. I use a sleeping bag to sleep on my always, fully made bed.3. I have homicidal tendencies towards dust balls.4. I enjoy watching my dog take a good healthy poop.5. Every year I have to trap skunks that come into my yard in the springtime.6. My basement always floods with several inches of water.7. I lie about my age on dating websites.8. My sailboat is named after a bird in Pakistan which I've never changed after five years.9. I have a refrigerator that is forty years old and still works great.10. Every time I dream that I'm in danger and have a gun, it always jams or misfires.11. Psychologists, by default, are my mortal enemies. Questions For You:1. Favorite vacation spot?2. Shoe size?3. Favorite celebrity?4. Cats or dogs?5. Satellite or cable TV?6. Bill Gates or Steve Jobs?7. Rice or noodles?8. What secret or hidden talent do you have?9. Any pet peeves about people in general?10. Complete this: If I could change one thing in the world it would be....11. What do you think about the haircut in my picture above?
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 16, 2013 14:24

March 14, 2013

The Passion of the Critic


Everybody wants their book reviewed. The problem is that hardly anybody knows the first thing about writing a review anymore let alone writing a book.Let’s play stud poker, showing all cards face up one at a time.
I have a Masters of English degree with a focus on modern literature and my thesis was a creative, non-fiction travelogue piece that I wrote while backpacking through communist Poland in 1985 before the Berlin Wall came down. You can get the eBook version cheap at Amazon or Barnes & Noble. Although I’ve sold quite a few copies, only one person reviewed it and gave it a two star rating, claiming that it was ‘too short’. Apparently, he didn’t bother to read the detailed description that said the print length version was only 64 pages long. Every intelligent person I know that read it said it was great, bucolic and resonated with multiple levels of meaning and, although the prose was simple, it was far from being simplistic. That’s if you know what I mean. But most people don’t. Most of the reading population, if they graduated from high school, took no more English classes than was required of them besides the mandatory and dreaded, College Composition course which I’ve taught at several universities around the world during my twenty-five years as an educator. Now how are critically handicapped people able to evaluate a book on the market using lyrical and rhetorical devices better than those who have spent years studying literature? They can’t. That’s why you get nothing but plot summaries in most online reviews  peppered with cliché phrases such as ‘page turner’, ‘likeable characters’, ‘couldn’t put it down’ or ‘lots of surprising plot twists’.Hello? Excuse me but literary criticism used to be a bona-fide field of academic studies with its own set of clearly defined parameters, commonly shared vocabulary and reliance upon the knowledge of rhetorical devices like exposition, development, climax and denouement. I know, I know. I’m speaking in a foreign language again but it just so happens that I’ve also studied Spanish literature at the graduate level and am still certified to teach it at the high school level. Take a deep breath all of you monolingual readers and reviewers. Place your bets or fold. I’ve shown two aces already.

Next card.

I’ve talked to more than a hundred authors on my podcast blog, 2012writers (STILL) ALIVE. Some of them are famous worldwide and have been on the New York Times best seller list more than once. Others have not been so fortunate, but yet they write with passion and knowledge about their particular fields of expertise. One thing that they all have in common is that they like feedback, hopefully the positive and encouraging kind. So when some idiot with a computer and Internet connection gets online and reviews their work with bland comments such as ‘not worth the money’, ‘didn’t hold my interest’ or ‘waste of time’, I feel sorry not only for the author but more so for the “reviewer” who doesn’t know the semantic difference between lightning and a lightning bug, as Mark Twain once said.

Another ace on the table.

I was accepted into a PhD program at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan and took several courses in advanced Linguistics, Composition and Literary Criticism before having to drop out for financial reasons and job demands. So I know just a little bit about language and its structure, history and usage. It’s amazing how many writers and reviewers today don’t, but like I said above, hook them up to a broadband signal and get tons of garbage upchucked online. That’s why I rarely write reviews or post them on Amazon,Goodreads (under my pen name, Conrad Johnson) or Blogcritics.org. anymore. You just can’t be intelligently honest and write the slightest negative review, no matter how constructive in tone it is, without drawing the ire of keyboard pounding Neanderthals who resent the fact that you use vocabulary outside of their knowledge base. And I’m not about to waste my time arguing with idiots on forums that I don’t have complete control over.

Ace number four. Call or cop out.

I’m extremely secure in my knowledge of literature and quite a few other subjects and if you take the time to listen to some of my short podcast interviews, you’ll see that I don’t bore guests with script questions. I engage them astutely, based upon my research of their work and my own lifetime of experiences as a world traveler and lifelong reader, writer and teacher of language. All of my guests have enjoyed talking to me and I’ve gotten private and public praise from them that I deserve because I earned it along with their respect. Is that all the money you have? How much is that watch you’re wearing worth?

Last card. The kicker.

I’m a damn fine writer (so I've been told by many professionals) that has published several novels and written for various venues on the Internet but I don’t care to ‘toot my own horn’ much because the way the book marketplace is today. It sounds like a zillion vuvuzelas at a football match. The cacophony is deafening and that’s why many agents, publishers and reviewers are slamming their doors shut for some peace and quiet, including me. Sure, it’s nice to be recognized and, sure, it would be wonderful to sell a million copies of some pulp, pornographic thriller like E.L. James or James Patterson do, but until that day arrives for me (if it ever does), then I’ll just be satisfied with an intelligent response to my writing by someone like John D. Rachel who reviewed my recent novella, Jesus Told Me To Kill Her,  with marvelous precision and insight that the mockers and the envious loathe-- similar to the type of people who stood on the sidelines on that historical day when a  simple carpenter carried a cross to Golgotha and was spat upon and brutally attacked because he dared to speak honestly and intelligently about a subject that everyone in his nation could only grasp at the basest of levels.

Your deal.
Share this:
3 likes ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 14, 2013 07:03

Conrad Johnson's Blog

Conrad Johnson
Conrad Johnson isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Conrad Johnson's blog with rss.