What is conflict in the literary sense? Conflict is to a story what motivation is to a murder. It’s the primary reason things happen and one of the things that keep a reader reading your work.
If your heroine goes off to find her fortune, and she finds a bunch of gold in the first cave she checks out just six feet down the road . . . Ho hum. There’s no conflict. There’s no story.
Now, if her family threatens to never speak to her again if she goes hunting for gold, and her fiancé’ says he’ll marry another girl if she’s not back in a year, and if she has to deal with evil claim jumpers and fight bandits who steal all her food in the middle of winter, and she breaks her arm falling in a pit mine, and she begins to regret the whole idea, and is pretty sure she’s not going to make it out alive, well! So now you have a story because you have conflict.
There are various kinds of conflict. First, there is a simple internal conflict: she might not make it out alive; that she’s regretting even trying.
Outside events or circumstances generate internal conflict: The fiancé says he’ll marry someone if she doesn’t come back within a year to the very day. You know she’s going to worry about that. Or the attitude of her family toward her venture.
Bad guys, accidents, weather, and other obstacles create conflict.
Your job is to keep the conflict realistic enough to maintain the reader’s suspension of disbelief and drastic enough to keep your reader turning pages to find out if your gal’s going to get out of the pit mine with a broken arm. [If. Don’t let it be a foregone conclusion, or there’s no story.]
And will she ever realize she might be better off without that lazy, unhelpful fiancé?
You get the idea—internal and external conflicts. And plenty of them. Pile ‘em up like pancakes.

This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. Author Campaign Method (ACM) of sales and marketing is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authorpreneurs who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for them.
Release Party
Web Presence
Book Signings
Facebook Profile and Facebook Page
Active Social Media Participation
Ebook Cards
The Great Alaska Book Fair: October 8, 2016


Costco Book Signings
eBook Cards

Benjamin Franklin Award
Jim Misko Book Signing at Barnes and Noble
Cortex is for serious authors and will probably not be of interest to hobbyists. We recorded our Cortex training and information meeting. If you’re a serious author, and did not attend the meeting, and would like to review the training information, kindly let us know. Authors are required to have a Facebook author page to use Cortex.
Correction:
This is Publication Consultants’ motivation for constantly striving to assist authors sell and market their books. ACM is Publication Consultants’ plan to accomplish this so that our authors’ books have a reasonable opportunity for success. We know the difference between motion and direction. ACM is direction! ACM is the process for authors who are serious about bringing their books to market. ACM is a boon for serious authors, but a burden for hobbyist. We don’t recommend ACM for hobbyists.

We’re the only publisher we know of that provides authors with book signing opportunities. Book signing are appropriate for hobbyist and essential for serious authors. To schedule a book signing kindly go to our website, <
We hear authors complain about all the personal stuff on Facebook. Most of these complaints are because the author doesn’t understand the difference difference between a Facebook profile and a Facebook page. Simply put, a profile is for personal things for friends and family; a page is for business. If your book is just a hobby, then it’s fine to have only a Facebook profile and make your posts for friends and family; however, if you’re serious about your writing, and it’s a business with you, or you want it to be business, then you need a Facebook page as an author. It’s simple to tell if it’s a page or a profile. A profile shows how many friends and a page shows how many likes. Here’s a link <> to a straight forward description on how to set up your author Facebook page.



Mosquito Books has a new location in the Anchorage international airport and is available for signings with 21 days notice. Jim Misko had a signing there yesterday. His signing report included these words, “Had the best day ever at the airport . . ..”



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ReadAlaska 2014
Readerlink and Book Signings
2014 Independent Publisher Book Awards Results

Bonnye Matthews Radio Interview
Rick Mystrom Radio Interview
When he published those overseas blogs as the book The Innocents Abroad, it would become a hit. But you couldn’t find it in bookstores.
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