Today I have the pleasure of hosting prehistoric fiction author, Jacqui Murray. I’m excited about the release of her latest novel, Natural Selection, which is book #3 in her Dawn of Humanity series. I’ve read and highly recommend the first in this trilogy, Born in a Treacherous Time!
In this post, she’ll tell you about the latest release, but first, please check out the list of actual criticisms and tips that Jacqui’s gleaned from Twitter.
12 Writing Tips and 9 Criticisms I Got from Twitter
Those of you who are either established authors, in-training, or anything in between, you probably already know the learning curve to become a writer is steep and endless. I’ve read a ton of how-to books, attended more than my share of conferences, and currently meet with fellow writers twice a month to discuss our passion. In each of these situations, no matter how often I attend, I learn something new. It will surprise none of you that I also find epiphanies in social media. Some streams offer one person’s insight on a chronic problem I also have. Others answer questions I couldn’t put into words enough to ask.
Here are some of the best writing tips I’ve gathered from social media the past year:
Get over your perfectionist tendencies.
If you’re having trouble meeting the minimum word count, it’s probably because you’re not being specific enough.
Keep a notebook with you at all times, and write in it. A lot.
Don’t compare yourself to other authors. Find your unique voice and write your stories.
If your story idea involves zombies, it probably has been done already.
If your scene sounds too much like a TV show or movie you’ve seen, cut it!
Writing’s hard. Good writing is even harder.
To uncover the plot of your story, don’t ask what should happen; ask what should go
wrong.
Don’t let your dumb show.
Perfect is the enemy of good.
There are those who can make a $75 off-the-rack outfit look hand-tailored. Not true in writing. You can’t turn a bad novel into a good one by attaching a pretty cover.
Boldly go where other writers won’t.
Criticism:
To share the criticism I’ve received, I broadened the scope from social media to query letter responses, agents at writer’s conferences, Amazon comments, beta readers, and well-meaning friends:
What this story lacked in ambiance, it didn’t make up for with anything else.
From a trusted beta reader whose day job is doctoring: “I find you have idiopathic
thinking.” When I asked what that was, she explained, “It’s thinking of unknown origin. In other words: What the f*** were you saying?”
From an agent who rejected my novel: I was whelmed.
About a too-complicated story I submitted: A bridge too far and a euphemism too short.
You promised a world-class thriller. I got a rerun of Fantasy Island.
“Why the h*** did you waste my time?” Sorry. Autocorrect. I meant to say, “Thank you for the submittal.”
I asked one agent for suggestions on fixing my story. Her response: “I got nothin’.”
“You wrote your MC right into a corner and she couldn’t escape, like a defective
Roomba.”
“Nothin’ to see there.”
Have you found any great tips on your favorite social media?
Here’s a brief summary of Natural Selection.
In this conclusion to Lucy’s journey, she and her tribe leave their good home to rescue former-tribe members captured by the enemy. Lucy’s tribe includes a mix of species–a Canis, a Homotherium, and different iterations of early man. In this book, more join and some die, but that is the nature of prehistoric life, where survival depends on a combination of our developing intellect and our inexhaustible will to live. Each species brings unique skills to this task. Based on true events.
Set 1.8 million years ago in Africa, Lucy and her tribe struggle against the harsh reality of a world ruled by nature, where predators stalk them and a violent new species of man threatens to destroy their world. Only by changing can they prevail. If you ever wondered how earliest man survived but couldn’t get through the academic discussions, this book is for you. Prepare to see this violent and beautiful world in a way you never imagined.
A perfect book for fans of Jean Auel and the Gears!

Excerpt:
Chapter 1
One Pack Ends, Another Begins
Africa
The Canis’ packmates were all dead, each crumpled in a smeared puddle of blood, Upright killing sticks embedded where they should never be. His body shook, but he remembered his training. The killers’ scent filled the air. If they saw him—heard him—they would come for him, too, and he must survive. He was the last of his pack.
He padded quietly through the bodies, paused at his mate, broken, eyes open, tongue out, pup under her chest, his head crushed. A moan slipped from his muzzle and spread around him. He swallowed what remained in his mouth. Without a pack, silence was his only protection. He knew to be quiet, but today, now, failed.
To his horror, a departing Upright looked back, face covered in Canis blood, meaty shreds dripping from his mouth, the body of a dead pup slung over his shoulder. The Canis sank into the brittle grass and froze. The Upright scanned the massacre, saw the Canis’ lifeless body, thought him dead like the rest of the decimated pack. Satisfied, he turned away and rushed after his departing tribe. The Canis waited until the Upright was out of sight before cautiously rising and backing away from the onslaught, eyes on the vanished predators in case they changed their minds.
And fell.
He had planned to descend into the gully behind him. Sun’s shadows were already covering it in darkness which would hide him for the night, but he had gauged his position wrong. Suddenly, earth disappeared beneath his huge paws. He tried to scrabble to solid ground, but his weight and size worked against him and he tumbled down the steep slope. The loose gravel made gripping
impossible, but he dug his claws in anyway, whining once when his shoulder slammed into a rock, and again when his head bounced off a tree stump. Pain tore through his ear as flesh ripped, dangling in shreds as it slapped the ground. He kept his legs as close as possible to his body and head tucked, thankful this hill ended in a flat field, not a river.
Or a cliff.
When it finally leveled out, he scrambled to his paws, managed to ignore the white-hot spikes shrieking through his head as he spread his legs wide. Blood wafted across his muzzle. He didn’t realize it was his until the tart globs dripped down his face and plopped to the ground beneath his quaking chest. The injured animal odor, raw flesh and fresh blood, drew predators. In a pack, his mate would purge it by licking the wound. She would pronounce him Ragged-ear, the survivor.
Ragged-ear is a strong name. A good one.
He panted, tail sweeping side to side, and his indomitable spirit re-emerged.
I live.
But no one else in his pack did.
Except, maybe, the female called White-streak. She often traveled alone, even when told not to. If she was away during the raid, she may have escaped. He would find her. Together, they would start over.
Ragged-ear shook, dislodging the grit and twigs from his now-grungy fur. That done, he sniffed out White-streak’s odor, discovered she had also descended here. His injuries forced him to limp and blood dripping from his tattered ear obstructed his sight. He stumbled trying to leap over a crack and fell into the fissure. Fire shot through his shoulder, exploded up his neck and down his
chest. Normally, that jump was easy. He clambered up its crumbling far wall, breaking several of his yellowed claws.
All of that he ignored because it didn’t matter to his goal.
Daylight came and went as he followed White-streak, out of a forest onto dry savannah that was nothing like his homeland.
Why did she go here?
He embraced the tenderness that pulsed throughout his usually-limber body. It kept him angry and that made him vicious. He picked his way across streams stepping carefully on smooth stones, their damp surfaces slippery from the recent heavy rain, ignoring whoever hammered with a sharp rock inside his head. His thinking was fuzzy, but he didn’t slow. Survival was more important than
comfort, or rest.
Ragged-ear stopped abruptly, nose up, sniffing. What had alerted him? Chest pounding, breathing shallow, he studied the forest that blocked his path, seeking anything that shouldn’t be there.
But the throbbing in his head made him miss Megantereon.
Ragged-ear padded forward, slowly, toward the first tree, leaving only the lightest of trails, the voice of Mother in his head.
Yes, your fur color matches the dry stalks, but the grass sways when you move. That gives away your location so always pay attention.
His hackles stiffened and he snarled, out of instinct, not because he saw Megantereon. Its shadowy hiding place was too dark for Ragged-ear’s still-fuzzy thinking. The She-cat should have waited for Ragged-ear to come closer, but she was hungry, or eager, or some other reason, and sprang. Her distance gave the Canis time to back pedal, protecting his soft underbelly from her attack. Ragged-ear was expert at escaping, but his stomach spasmed and he lurched to a stop with a
yowl of pain. Megantereon’s next leap would land her on Ragged-ear, but to the Canis’ surprise, the She-cat staggered to a stop, and then howled.
While she had been stalking Ragged-ear, a giant Snake had been stalking her. When she prepared her death leap, Snake dropped to her back and began to wrap itself around her chest. With massive coils the size of Megantereon’s leg, trying to squirm away did no good.
Ragged-ear tried to run, but his legs buckled. Megantereon didn’t care because she now fought a rival that always won. The She-cat’s wails grew softer and then silent. Ragged-ear tasted her death as he dragged himself into a hole at the base of an old tree, as far as possible from scavengers who would be drawn to the feast.
He awoke with Sun’s light, tried to stand, but his legs again folded. Ragged-ear remained in the hole, eyes closed, curled around himself to protect his vulnerable stomach, his tail tickling his nose, comforting.
He survived the Upright’s assault because they deemed him dead. He would not allow them to be right.
Sun came and went. Ragged-ear consumed anything he could find, even eggs, offal, and long-dead carcasses his pack normally avoided. His legs improved until he could chase rats, fat round ground birds, and moles, a welcome addition to his diet. Sometimes, he vomited what he ate and swallowed it again. The day came he once again set out after what remained of his pack, his pace more sluggish than prior to the attack, but quick enough for safety.
Ragged-ear picked up the female’s scent again and tracked her to another den. He slept there for the night and repeated his hunt the next day and the next. When he couldn’t find her trace, instinct drove him and memories of the dying howls of his pack, from the adults who trusted their Alpha Ragged-ear to protect them to the whelps who didn’t understand the presence of evil in their bright
world.
Everywhere he traveled, when he crossed paths with an Upright, it was their final battle.
Interested? Find out how you can grab your copies of this series and come meet Jacqui!

Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular prehistoric fiction saga, Man vs. Nature which explores seminal events in man’s evolution one trilogy at a time. She is also author of the Rowe-Delamagente thrillers and Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. Her non-fiction includes over a hundred books on integrating tech into education, reviews as an Amazon Vine Voice, a columnist for NEA Today, and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics.
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Book information:
Title and author: Natural Selection by Jacqui Murray
Series: Book 3 in the Dawn of Humanity series
Genre: Prehistoric fiction
Editor: Anneli Purchase
Available print or digital) at: Amazon.ca
That is a mouth-watering extract from Jacqui’s book. Thanks for sharing.
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Thank you, Ankur. She’ll be pleased to hear this.
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Thank you, Ankur. I can see you’re an animal lover, too!
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That is fantastic advice, Jacqui – so lovely to see you here. I love that excerpt – I think everyone needs to read this series, to learn about their ancient past. Toni x
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I think the take-away is–do I really care about Tweeple?
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“Perfect is the enemy of good.” That resonates so deeply with me! Learning is truly how we grow. ❤
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I take that to heart. I want a good story–excellent–but not obsessively so.
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Those criticisms were so harsh! The roomba one was creative, though. Did you get all those personally, Jacqui? Brave of you to share. The advice was also great, my favorite being: “To uncover the plot of your story, don’t ask what should happen; ask what should go wrong.” That’s brilliant.
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It’s unfortunate that some decide that putting others down is a show of strength. In reality, chirping from the cheap seats is cowardly. Jacqui is a great writer with plenty of wonderful advice, including the one you mentioned. Thank you for stopping by and supporting her. 🙂
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Some were from friends. Yikes! I might quit if I got all those!
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Oh wow, yeah. I might get drunk for the first time in my life.
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No beating around the bush with those comments- Geesh! It’s hard enough to put yourself (through your writing) out there without getting slammed. I think people could use a kindness pill these days.
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I think most people refrain from these comments, but unfortunately, there are always a small percentage. I guess they have never heard of using tact. 😦
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I can take criticism with a bit of humor.
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Sounds great!
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Thank you, Susanne. 🙂
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Thanks, Susanne!
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Great post, Mark and Jacqui. Writing, publishing, and marketing is a steep and endless learning curve, isn’t it? One of the things I’ve found over the past decade is that a marketing strategy that might work one year won’t necessarily work the next. With many promo efforts, a little gambling and luck always seems to be part of the equation.
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Thank you, Debra. I’m with you on the steep and endless learning curve. In fact, I find it can even change from month to month.
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Great point. I’ve found that too, but didn’t always bob and weave fast enough!
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It’s great to see Jacqui here today, Mark. Beyond any doubt, writers have to develop a thick skin. Some of the criticisms Jacqui shared are living proof of that fact. Great post! Best wishes on the trilogy!
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Thank you, Jan. It takes guts to put yourself out there and open yourself up to criticism.
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This has been fun. I don’t have a thick skin, not even medium, but I do my best to ignore stuff.
Thanks for the good wishes on the trilogy. I am having a great time planning it right now.
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I think Jacqui’s book are amazing, I’ve enjoyed the series. I am glad the criticism kept her going, it must’ve boosted her spirits. Thanks for sharing it Mark.
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Thanks, Balroop! I know Jacqui would be pleased to hear this. 🙂
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Thanks, Balroop. I can handle most criticism if it’s well-intentioned and with a spot of humor!
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Jacqui, This was great. I loved the: Boldly go where other writers won’t:)
As far as your critics: Bad on them for their lack of taste and politeness.
Mark, Thanks for hosting. It’s been a pleasure to see your blog at work:)
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Thank you, Sandra, for your visit today. 🙂
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I love taking life with a sense of humor. A spoonful of sugar is still great advice.
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Natural Selection was an extraordinary read, and Jacqui’s words of wisdom underscore why. I loved her twist regarding plot: don’t ask what should happen; ask what should go wrong. Brilliant–you’ve got me thinking. Thank you, Mark, for hosting, and congratulations, Jackie. 🎉🎊🎉
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Thank you, Gwen, for your visit today! It’s nice to see you. 🙂
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I keep telling myself that advice–make something go wrong! I don’t do that enough.
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Thanks for the great suggestions and the reminder that even accomplished writers can have harsh critics!
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I’ve been surprised by the odd comments from people. I don’t care about criticism. I care when they make it personal for no reason. What’s with that?
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Besides having to be a great writer (which Jacqui is), you also have to have the skin of an elephant to endure all the rejections and insults from agents and publishing houses.
When a friend and I both had exactly the same negative comments from an agent to whom we both submitted our work of very different genres, I realized I didn’t have to take the insulting comments seriously.
Jacqui’s books are well researched and entertaining. A treat for all readers.
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That’s so true. Everyone has an opinion, and their own tastes. I agree, Jacqui’s work is well written and well researched. Thank you for visiting and supporting her. 🙂
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Kudos to you. Wow. That agent should be embarrassed. I got the same negative comment on three of my books from a reader, told Amazon they should be deleted. No surprise they disagreed. I haven’t asked since.
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Some readers are so nasty. And stupid! I had one comment that she didn’t like my book, and then added “dint even read it,” or something to that effect, spelling mistake and all.
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I have to add to my previous comment that most readers are not like that nasty one. Most are really kind and generous with their feedback. Funny how you remember the really awful ones though.
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I liked Jacqui’s tips, especially this one: “To uncover the plot of your story, don’t ask what should happen; ask what should go wrong.” What great advice. And the criticisms were hilarious. I enjoyed this book (all Jacqui’s books to be honest). Congrats on a great tour, Jacqui, and thanks for hosting, Mark. 😀
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I agree, Diana. The challenges faced by the characters, and how they deal with them, are key ingredients to a story. It was a pleasure to host, Jacqui. She works hard and has plenty of great advice. Thank you for stopping by.
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🙂
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I guess if one has a life that always goes right, that is bad advice. Sigh.
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I don’t know anyone whose life is all rosy all the time. It would make a very boring book.
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Those critical comments are very harsh. “Why the h*** did you waste my time?” That’s just rude. What happened to “Thank you for submitting. We find that you book is not for us.”? The latter communicates the same information.
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I agree, Liz. Someone suggested that maybe they are meant as a joke . . . still kind of mean. I hope no professional publisher ould ever send a response like this.
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If they meant it as a joke, it’s not funny.
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Yep. Do you see why I ended up an Indie? At least I can skip the first round of rejections!
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Did you actually receive those responses? They’re really mean. (And unnecessary.)
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“Keep a notebook with you at all times, and write in it. A lot.” — Good advice! This is something that I know I should do. But I’m usually negligent about it.
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I don’t do it either, but I agree, it’s a great idea. 🙂 Thanks for stopping by and supporting, Jacqui.
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I should do that… You do it, Neil, with your camera.
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Great post and insight into what advice writers can get. We can’t lose our sense of humor.
Thanks for hosting, Mark!
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Thanks for dropping by today, Denise. A sense of humor is vital to life!
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That sense of humor–my lodestar.
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Congrats on your latest book, Jacqui! Your criticisms cracked me up. Thanks for hosting Jacqui, Mark! 🙂
Yvette M Calleiro 🙂
http://yvettemcalleiro.blogspot.com
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I agree, some of the criticism/witticisms are quite funny. Thanks, Yvette, for stopping by and supporting, Jacqui.
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I’m glad they brought you a chuckle. A few, I did rephrase from their original just to make them more fun. That actually reaches me a lot better than the battering ram of negativity.
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🌹🙏🌹♥️
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Thank you so much for hosting me today, Mark. It will be great to get to know your community better.
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My pleasure, Jacqui! It’s a wonderful community!
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HI Mark, great to see Jacqui Murray here. The twitter tips are useful the unhelpful negative criticism, unwarranted. I’m tempted to think those comments are a joke? I can’t imagine anyone would say such things.
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Thanks for stopping by, Robbie. I would hope that some of those comments are a joke, but who knows?
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Oh they do! Though the tweeter might have meant it as a joke. Thanks for visiting, Robbie!
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Thanks for hosting Jacqui today, Mark. I loved the Dawn of Humanity series!
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Thank you, Jill. I know that Jacqui would be thrilled. 🙂
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Thank you, Jill! That means a lot. Hugs to you.
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Such a fascinating Article about story writing responses 🌹🙏👍🏻 very inspiring to read 👌😊
This line so much correct and truth that Don’t compare yourself to another Authors,
find your unique voice and write your stories 👏👌Grace wishes to dear friend 🌹🙏♥️🌹
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I agree, never compare yourself. 🙂 Thank you for stopping by.
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Haha 😆 not myself , I’m not writing stories,poems and article 🌹🙏
Only Malaysian culture photos , earth climate and my home
Special only 👌You wrote Authors in between don’t copying 🤔
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I think the mantra is applicable to everything in life . . . cars. money, status. 🙂
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👌🙏♥️😊
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That unique voice is maybe the hardest thing for an author to expose. WE tend to think we should emulate successful writers. Not true!
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Mark, thank you for giving our mutual friend, Jacqui, such a wonderful review! 📚👍
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Thanks, GP. It’s so nice to see you!
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It’s going to be a good day, GP. Thanks for adding to it.
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My pleasure!
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