Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Wednesday 28 February 2024

HUMMING BIRD MAGAZINE II IS A HOT NEW RELEASE







#NEW RELEASE

 

THE HUMMING BIRD MAGAZINE II: Second Issue has been published.

HUMMING BIRD II is an annual magazine containing Literary news from the International Chamber of Writers and Artists [CIESART] – Trinidad and Tobago, with official Headquarters in Spain.

In the contents, you will find exquisite poetry, articles, anthology news, information on books to read, interviews, culture news, book giveaways, and the Chamber’s efforts at promoting arts and literature in Trinidad and Tobago.

Features of the magazine are two special interviews.

One is of a great humanitarian, Trinidad-born Dr.Farley Cleghorn of Washington, USA, and the other is of an international poet, Fibby Bob Kinney.

The compiler and publisher of the Humming Bird Magazine II, is Brenda Mohammed, National President of the International Chamber of Writers and Artists [CIESART] Trinidad and Tobago. Brenda is a multi-award-winning author who has published 59 books to date.

Vice-President Florabelle Lutchman edited the draft copy.

This is a one-of-a-kind magazine.

Get a copy for your home library.

Here are the links:

Amazon US  https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Canada  https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Germany  https://www.amazon.de/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon France  https://www.amazon.fr/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Spain https://www.amazon.es/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Italy  https://www.amazon.it/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Netherlands https://www.amazon.nl/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Japan https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Brazil  https://www.amazon.com.br/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Mexico https://www.amazon.com.mx/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon Australia  https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

Amazon India  https://www.amazon.in/dp/B0CW7Y7YC6

 


Thursday 24 October 2019

Happy Halloween - Will it be Books, Tricks, or Treats


Halloween will soon be here.
While the kids are trick o treating the older ones can enjoy a good scary book.
Zeeka and the Zombies is the first book in the mind-blowing Revenge of Zeeka five-book Science Fiction series.
Available on Amazon. CLICK HERE

It is the year 2036 and it is a high-tech world.
Dr. Raynor Sharpe has a vision of zombie-like men with small heads walking on the beach.
Was he dreaming or was it a reality?
He receives a call from Dr. George Brown.
Upon his arrival he is surprised to hear Dr. Brown say that a zombie visited him, he sedated him and placed him in Room Nine.
He had no name and he called him Number Nine.
The zombie told Dr. Brown that his Master was Zeeka and there were fifty others like him planning an attack on the hospital.
The mystery deepens when Number Nine disappears from the hospital.
Was he really a zombie and was he speaking the truth?
Read a review from an ardent fan: "This was such a fun read. The reading world is crammed with zombie stories, but I'll bet you haven't read one like this. It had the feel of an old black and white sci-fi movie, which I love, blended with modern themes and a more modern medical aspect. Considering the length, I was surprised by how much was packed in it as things zipped along. I really loved Janet and Raynor and found their relationship a nice addition. I'm so curious to learn more about the 'zombies' and Zeeka in the next parts"

Available at all Amazon Stores worldwide. CLICK HERE.

Wednesday 10 October 2018

Author Interview with Brenda Mohammed


Interview with multi-genre author Brenda Mohammed
Posted: October 10, 2018 | Author: kayelynnebooth | Filed under: Author Profile, Books, Fiction, Interview, Memoir, Nonfiction, Science Fiction, Travel, Writing | Tags: Author Interview, Brenda Mohammed, Memoir, Science Fiction, Travel Memoir

Brenda Mohammed Portfolio

I have the pleasure of interviewing independent author Brenda Mohammed today. She is not only a multi-genre author, but a multi-award winning author, who seems to dabble in a bit of everything. She comes from a background in finance, but became an author when she wrote a memoir about her battle with ovarian cancer. Since then, she’s written several other memoirs, as well as a science fiction series, a horror novel and a crime novel, as well as a wonderful self-help book for aspiring authors. She has done so much, and made so many travels, and I’m thrilled to have her share all that with us here, on Writing to be Read. Please give a warm welcome to Brenda Mohammed.

Kaye: When did you know you wanted to be an author?

Brenda: I never planned to be an author. I was a successful Bank Manager for many years. After I retired from the Bank at an early age, I became an Insurance Professional. I loved working in Finance and helping many people achieve their financial goals. In 2005 I was stricken with ovarian cancer. My doctor in Trinidad told me that she could not help me, and no other doctor in Trinidad at that time was qualified to do so. I sought treatment in Miami and gained a new lease on life. In 2013 I wrote a book about my cancer ordeal and recovery, I am Cancer Free. That was my first book and I have never stopped writing after that. To date I have written nineteen books.

Kaye: You’ve written 6 memoirs, 2 children’s books, a science fiction series, a crime novel, and a nonfiction book on writing. What’s the secret to tackling so many different genres?

Brenda: There really is no secret to writing in multiple genres. I have always loved a challenge and constantly seek out new opportunities. I write whatever I feel passionate about.

Kaye: You have written books in multiple genres: science fiction, memoir, self-help, etc… What are some of the differences you run into in writing different genres?

Brenda: When I am writing science fiction I maintain my focus on science fiction, and similarly with the other genres. The secret is to stay focused on the plot or the subject to achieve the end result. However, the problem I faced was in promoting my books.
I discovered a way around that and made Facebook Author pages for each genre. I have seven Facebook author pages. I also joined several Facebook groups that specialise in genres in which I write, to promote my books.

Kaye: Which genre is your favorite to write in? Why?

Brenda: I really enjoyed writing my science fiction series because it took me to another world for a while. When I wrote it I found myself becoming the hero or heroine and doing impossible things.

Kaye: You won a Readers’ Favorite Award in the 2018 International Book Awards for both your YA science fiction series Zeeka Chronicles,and your memoir I Am Cancer Free. What, if anything do these two books have in common besides both being Reader’s Favorite Book Award recipients? What makes them award winning books?



Brenda: Strange. I think I just answered that question above. The books have nothing in common yet there is a common thread. One is a futuristic thriller and the other is a survival story. As I said above when writing science fiction. i.e. Zeeka Chronicles, I found myself becoming the hero or heroine. In I am Cancer Free I am the heroine.
Seriously though, I quote from Readers Favorite: “Contest entries are judged all year long and are given a rating score based on key literary elements. The judges simply read the book and score it based on its merits.”

Kaye: Those are not the only award winning books you’ve written. Two other memoirs, My Life as a Banker received a second place award in memoirs in the Metamorph Publishing’s Summer Indie Book Awards in 2016 and Your Time is Now received IHIBRP 5 Star Recommended Read Award Badge. What can you tell us about those two books?


Brenda: My Life as a Banker is a memoir about my life in Banking. Banking was my first love. I always wanted to work in a bank. I love serving and helping people and seeing them prosper. Banking gave me the opportunity to do so and especially when I climbed the ranks to Commercial Area Credit Manager and was able to help business people with startups and expansion. Banking allowed me to play my part in building the economy of my native country, Trinidad.
Your Time is Now is intended to help people understand their own lives and to realize that we are all here on earth for a purpose.
The reviews for both these books speak a lot for them.

Kaye: What is it like to receive notification that your book is the recipient of a prestigious award?

Brenda: I have won many awards before in both Banking and Insurance.in my home country.
However, as this was an International Award it was a most joyous feeling to tell my friends and family that I won two prestigious awards with Readers Favorite International and will be attending the Awards Ceremony in Miami. In November.

Kaye: What’s something most readers would never guess about you?

Brenda: I dabble in art, poetry, and graphics in my spare time. Some of my art work hang on the walls of my home.

Kaye: What time of day do you prefer to do your writing? Why?

Brenda: I prefer to write in the still of the night. When everyone is asleep I find peace to think and write.

Kaye: What is the biggest challenge of being a writer?

Brenda: Only a few days ago I penned this poem about writing:

Writing takes me into a fantasy world.

Sometimes I find myself in a black hole.

I edit and fight to come out of it

But not before I get into a fit.



My books have gathered great reviews

Won awards and made the news.

Is it worth it, I sometimes ask?

Writing a book is a great task.



A writer’s life is a rather lonely one.

All day behind a computer is no fun.

An author must make the time

Read others’ books and go out and lime.



Do not sit at your computer all day.

Join the family in travel and play

Love of a family is life’s greatest gift

When you need to relax they give you a lift.

Kaye: Is there anything unique or unusual about your writing process?

Brenda: Before writing a story I write an outline of the entire plot in a couple of pages. I then use that to build my story. It sounds simple, but it is not.


Kaye: Your book on writing is titled How to Write for Success: Best Writing Advice I Received. Can you briefly share what the best writing advice you ever received really was? What is the main message of this book?

Brenda: The Best Writing Advice I Received was “Keep the Reader in mind when writing. In other words write for the reader and your books will sell.”
To answer the second part of the question I will quote one of the five-star reviews. The one from Readers Favorite is too long so I will share this one from an Amazon Reviewer:
“Having read a couple of Mohammed’s books, I knew I wouldn’t be disappointed in this self-help book, and I was not. The book covers not only the gamut on the art of writing, but the formulation of an idea for a book, to proofreading, and eventual marketing of his/her book. This is an excellent book for anyone who finds him/herself contemplating becoming a writer. With Mohammed’s book in hand, there should be little, if any, room for error. I highly recommend.”

Kaye: You like to travel. Do the places you travel end up in your books?

Brenda: Yes they do and they did. I wrote Travel Memoirs with Pictures: Exploring the world. It is an illustrated picture book filled with reflections of my travels around the world.


In this pictorial travel book of my priceless memories, I describe places visited and the wonderful times I and my family had in our tourist trips. The book is great to read while on a vacation or for some travel inspiration.

I want to thank Brenda Mohammed for joining us here today and sharing a little about her lovely books. You can learn more about Brenda and her books on Amazon at: http://Author.to/BCM786. I love how she turned her own life experiences into books to be shared by all.

Like this post? Follow Brenda on Amazon.

Tuesday 26 September 2017

An Interview with Author Asif Husain Khan



Today I had the pleasure of interviewing Asif Husain Khan a former Management official and author of Tracing my Footsteps.

Tell us a little about yourself?

I have been a management person with varied experience in Marketing, Planning, Procurement, and production. With thirteen years of stay with a tobacco company in Pakistan (an affiliate of Philip Morris Inc.) I was responsible, in addition to other marketing functions, writing company's long/short-term plans and also the preparation of periodic reports. During next fifteen years, I was responsible for procurement of fertilizer and pesticides from all over the world; this provided an opportunity to communicate and meet people from different nationalities.
I am a graduate with Economics and Statistics; in addition, I have attended several professional courses.

What inspired you to write your first book?

It was March 2014 in Fremont, California, that I desperately searched for a short course to kill my three months stay in the USA.
I had no specific choice in mind.
While going through available courses, I chose one on English Writing skills for non-fiction writers offered by Berkeley University, California. The choice was more for the university than the course itself, as I always desired to study there.
At the end of the course, participants were asked to write an essay on different topics suggested by the instructor.
I was asked to write on myself.
It was a difficult topic, as I had no idea what to write, the only few sentences I could think of were who I am, my qualifications experience, just like a curriculum vitae not to talk about 2500 required words.
It took quite a few days, and gradually, I was able to add more words.
When the essay was complete, it exceeded 2900 words.
Before the final evaluation by the instructor, the whole class was divided into two groups, and each group sat in a circle.
Each author dispensed his or her essay to every member of the group and read his or her essay aloud.
After he was done, other members discussed the positive and negative aspects of the essay, the author had to sit quietly.
I was the second to last to readout.
When I was done, I just sat with my fingers crossed and waited for the negative comments to pour in.
People started giving their opinion, but I could hear positive comments coming from everywhere.
They returned the copies to me with their comments after the discussions. When I went through the comments, the instructor wrote at the opening paragraph “Great first sentence. I have never heard this before. It’s very interesting.”
Again she writes “These paragraphs end with ‘snappers,’ like Zinsser mentions.
Nice work.”
One of the course participants wrote appreciating remarks at every paragraph: she wrote in the opening paragraph, “I really like learning this detail.”
At the last paragraph, she wrote “Great close. You just need a paragraph like this at the end.”
Another participant wrote about a paragraph, where I mentioned a servant in her late seventies who used to tell us a story every night; she wrote “I would like to hear more about the story-telling aspect.
What did her voice sound like?”
One of the members of the group wrote “Lovely writing. I would like to see the finished piece or the book this could turn into”
Comments from other participants were no different.


When I was back in Pakistan, I received a few emails from my course-mates persuading me to expand the essay; Shalra, my wife also encouraged, and that was the time Tracing My Footsteps started taking a shape.

Are your writings based on someone you know or events in your own life?

Tracing My Footsteps is my story, a story about people around me: my parents, and people around me.
It contains details about the culture and traditions inside the house, a house built in 1760, it's about the culture and daily life outside the house.
It's about my travelling to other countries and also within my own country.
It contains interesting anecdotes which I encountered from time to time.
There were some emotional moments how I felt then when my parents and siblings started leaving one after the other.




What was the hardest part of writing your book?

I spent ten years in the house I was born, my father was born, and my grandfather and great-grandfather were born. I remembered the house and the people living there in a joint family system. I also had some memories about the surrounding vicinity, but I wanted to know more about the place and the people, my ancestors and the history about the house and the area. I had interviewed people living now in Pakistan and they were there in Meerut at that time, but the information I collected was not enough I would think enough for the book. I contacted my cousin still living in Meerut, India, who is very fond of collecting such information and is a writer himself. He provided some detailed information which helped me to write this book, but I still think that information was not enough.

Do you have a specific writing style?

Yes, I do in fact, although I was not aware of.
The instructor at UC Berkeley mentioned on my final project as saying " These paragraphs end with ‘snappers,’ like Zinsser mentions".
I am not sure if this style is of my own or I picked-up unconsciously while going through Zinsser's book "On Writing Well", but it seems less likely because styles cannot be changed by going through one book.
I also like and believe what Sam Shepard says "The most authentic endings are the ones which are already revolving towards another beginning."

Zinsser quotes work done by three authors, E. B. White, H L Mencken and James Herndon. All these three authors have chosen a topic which is normally of no interest to mass readers. They have written for themselves but strong attributes like rhythm, selection of words, specific details and a purpose with simple style have made those writings worth reading. Zinsser advises writers not to worry about what the reader or publisher is looking for, write for yourself, choose your own topic, depict your personality and humor if you like it. I have tried to add those attributes and wrote it for myself.


What book are you reading now?

I have just completed Brenda Mohammed's book " My Life As A Banker" and I am now reading "Life In a Hospice" by Ann Richardson.


What are your current projects?

Hopefully, my paperback version will be out this month and then I will start my new book which will consist of short real-life stories.

If you had to do it all over again, would you change anything in your latest book?
In case I get a chance to visit my birthplace, Meerut in India I would change my book "Tracing My Footsteps" considerably.
The reason is, I would see the house I was born after more than fifty years, I would go into minor details which I might have missed out.
There is so much to study, even the surrounding vicinity of the house which was built a few hundred years ago and was in its original shape at the time I was born has changed a lot how it has transformed into present-day structure but the layout is the same and most of the people living there are 2nd or 3rd generation of the people who lived at that time.
I would collect some more details and anecdotes of my forefathers from my cousin living there and is fond of maintaining the historical record. With all that additional input, I am sure the book will be changed considerably.

Who is your favorite author and what is it that really strikes you about their work?

I like Russel Baker as a memoirist; his memoir "Growing Up" has a flow of story with detailed description and nice words.
In fact, I learned from this book that I went for searching new words in my book.
Although at times he describes emotional scenes he seems to be in control, on the contrary, I wrote some emotional scenes but that show I am on emotional pitch. I like Zinsser for what he describes and guides on writing non-fiction.
I learned a lot from "The Art of the Personal Essay" by Philip Lopate.
It contains essays on almost every topic.

Who designed the covers?

I conceived the basic concept of the cover design, which shows author following his footsteps back to his childhood. I asked a girl from commercial arts to develop the design. She did a good job. She showed the concept in a human face. It has come up very well.

Other than writing do you have any hobbies?

I go to gym for my exercises about 4-5 days in a week. I play tennis although not on regular basis and also go swimming occasionally.

If you were not a writer what else would you like to do?

I am a management person by profession incidentally turned writer, but I am strongly inclined towards designing and interior decoration. I feel I would have been an architect or an interior decorator if I had not chosen management as my career.

Follow Asif Husain Khan on Facebook and Twitter

Buy his book at Amazon.


Friday 2 June 2017

Author Spotlight with Dorothy Day



I had an interesting interview with Dorothy Day, a family therapist and retired teacher.
She is the author of the book, Memories of the Sharecropper's Family: Includes an Ainsworth History.



Tell us about yourself.

I am almost 68 years old, and getting introspective or just wanting to make sure my grandchildren and future generations know I occupied a place and made a small difference.
I devoted over 25 years to teaching marvelous students the joys of language and then now 22 years as a marriage and family therapist, some years overlapping.
My husband Charles and I, and our Bitza (term for mixed parentage dog, coined by Clare McIntosh) Lady live a pretty quiet life in rural Mississippi in the sunny and humid South (USA).
I was chaired as a result of a late onset muscular dystrophy, searched for a new purpose as I rolled through life, and have finally settled on writing.
I have been creative, imaginative, loving language for years, but a slow typist.
Several years ago I threw out the clutter of a couple of feet high notebooks and journals I had amassed over the years.
No regrets.
I am a different person now.

When did you first consider yourself a writer?

Like most of us, I assume, there was that little germ within that kept telling me I could write.
If I didn’t have so many papers to grade, preparations to make, people to entertain—so much busyness and so many excuses!
I wrote during the first ten minutes of class with my students.
I wrote according to prompts from a writing group.
But I did not become author/writer until I quit playing and started writing.
I was hesitant to say that I am a writer, but I am a teller of stories.

What inspired you to become a writer?

Death—the death of a career, the death of independence by new inability to drive, the death of a beloved older brother who had kept the family stories alive through his tales.
For Joe and Mike and Bill and Gene, I started retelling the stories as best as I knew them.
I interviewed siblings to get their memories of our family and our struggles and our celebrations, and our successes in leaving poverty far behind us.
I wanted others to know the richness of our lives.

Do you have a specific writing style?

My writing style is the folksy, storytelling style.

What books have most influenced your life

Books that have influenced me— To Kill a Mockingbird is one of my all-time favorites; Atticus Finch is the fantasy father I wanted.
There have been so many authors that I have loved.
I have read eclectically—literary fiction, thrillers, mysteries, nonfiction, Shakespeare, Milton, Donne, Thomas Grey.
We had few reading materials when I was young, and I read the Bible, Readers’ Digest, and the daily news.

Are your writings based on someone you know, or events in your own life?

If someone reads my memoir/family history and gets to chapter 13, she or he will discover the family Bluebeard murderer that I am writing about in my novel A Taste for Death. So I take real events and flesh them into something new. I am discovering how difficult it is to keep so much information on track. I am thankful that I was reared by a sharecropper so I can depict those Depression-era times of Mississippi farmers who wanted more and was willing to sacrifice to get more.
Unfortunately, his desire led to his willingness to sacrifice family members.
Yet, I am not a dark and foreboding person, so hopefully, there will be a redemptive message.


Are there any new authors that have grasped your interest?

I reach out for information to other authors and delight in making connections with them. Janet Taylor-Perry has answered so many of my questions about self-publishing and has pushed me toward promotion and marketing; Charlie Spillers needs to belong to this group; his account of years as secret agent in Mississippi and Louisiana are thriller-worthy memoir—he tells a story of two women whose story I want to purloin; he also answers my questions.
Phyllis F. McManus tells a good story, is encouraging, and we have talked on the phone several states apart.
I have found out with my dependencies as the youngest in a family of eight that writers share eagerly.
We all want our voices to be heard.
My college English teacher, Edna Earle Crews, has mentored many writers and has helped me ever since I left her class fifty years ago; she is a poet.
Holly Lisle’s, Janice Hardy’s, Lakin’s websites, thenextbigwriter.com, my college roommates have also influenced me.
Cassie Select is the author I sought to impress, and she said very nice things about my WIP.
Ian Sutherland has also been kind to answer questions, as well as Wesley Banks.


What book are you reading now?

I have finished Paz Ellis’s book and will soon post a review.
I have waiting for me when I get a certain amount of work done Greg Iles’s new book.
It is purchased, signed, and is a great motivator to catch up to my writing plan.

If you were not a writer what else would you like to do?

I have travelled some, but if life were more accessible, I would go in an RV to every state, find interesting people, and tell their stories—oops, back to writing again!
Career-wise, I believe God has so ordained and ordered my steps that past background has prepared me to be a writer.
I have sold toys, Tupperware, makeup, encyclopedias, appliances, and furniture.
I have slung food, cafeteria style and worked a soda fountain and gift shop.
I have worked in libraries.
I worked as a home daycare provider, kindergarten teacher, taught grades 6 through 12.
I have been a college liaison counselor for Job Corps and taught college prep classes.
I have been a social worker, mental health center counselor, case manager for the Baptist Children’s Village.
I have been a public speaker in the area of family life.
Those were my jobs, but my life was working for my family as wife, mother, mother-in-law, daughter, daughter-in-law, and grandmother.

Connect with Dorothy on Facebook

You can purchase her book on Amazon


Wednesday 5 April 2017

Why I Wrote Memoirs



The following is an extract from an article by Rachel McGrath of Indies United Facebook Group.

Brenda Mohammed is a multi-genre author living in Trinidad and Tobago who has now written and published sixteen books.
Six of her books are memoirs and so we asked Brenda to share what instigated her journey to write such personal stories and share them with the world.


Brenda's response:

When I retired from the Bank at an early age, I was depressed.
Everyone in my family noticed that in the weeks leading up to my retirement that my demeanour had changed.
I had ceased to be jovial and fun loving.
My husband and my sisters did their best to brighten up my days and I managed to force a smile or a giggle to appease them, but no one realized that I was feeling as if I had come to the end of my life.
I went through the motions at the grand retirement party, which the bank staff hosted at a popular restaurant in South Trinidad.
Customers and staff were present.
The ambience was enchanting, and the speeches were great.
Superiors, colleagues, customers, and staff showered me with praises and gifts.
Their words brought tears to my eyes. However, all I could think about was, ‘What lies ahead for me?’

Fortunately, for me, my husband had planned a trip for both of us to attend a friend’s wedding in Virginia in the USA.
We left the morning after the retirement party.
All during the flight, I kept remembering the words of the many who spoke at the party.
It all seemed like a dream.
When we arrived in Virginia, I felt relaxed.
Virginia is remarkably beautiful.
We had so much fun over the next three weeks that I forgot all about the bank.

We returned home after a glorious vacation. I gave away all of my working clothes as I felt that I no longer needed them.
I decided to dabble in art.
Out of nowhere, my talent for art surfaced and I painted several pieces, which I framed and hung in my library.
I applied for other jobs and received positive responses from many firms.
I accepted a job in an Insurance Company, and of course had to buy a new wardrobe of clothes.
Since I did not have to work full time, I needed something else to keep me busy.
It was then that I decided to write My Life as a Banker: A Life worth Living.
The book has been very popular with fellow bankers in Trinidad.
I revised the book in 2014, published it on Amazon and Create Space, and donated copies to the National Library of Trinidad and Tobago, and my Alma Mater St. Augustine Girls’ High School.
My Life as a Banker - A Life worth Living" is a banker's memoir, in which I describe changes in the banking system and changes in the bank's attitude to its employees throughout my working years in a Trinidad bank, with ties in the United Kingdom.
Personal details of my life are the highlights of the memoir.
Reviewers have described the book as Fascinating, Intriguing, Inspiring, Positive, Heartwarming, and Motivational.

Later on, I was having so much fun as a retiree, that I wrote, Retirement is Fun: A New Chapter.
The book is a sequel to "My Life as a Banker - A Life Worth Living."
I learned through my many experiences at the end of my banking career, that retirement is a time to enjoy life.
I faced many challenges such as cancer, deaths of loved ones, and an accident in Miami, which made her realize that life is very short. On the other hand, I landed a new job in an Insurance company and had numerous travel opportunities after I left my job at the bank. I have proven that when one retires from a first job one does not retire from life.


My recovery from cancer inspired me to write another memoir, I am Cancer Free.
It is a book about my battle with Ovarian Cancer.
The killer disease threatened my life and financial well- being.
My strong faith in God saw me through all the trials I had to undergo.
Cancer does not have to be a death sentence.


My career in the Insurance Industry was successful.
I qualified each year for membership in The Million Dollar Round Table [The Premier Association for Financial Professionals], and this gave me many opportunities to travel to different parts of the United States to attend conferences.
My frequent travels worldwide prompted me to write another memoir, Travel Memoirs with Pictures: Exploring the World.
It is an entertaining book filled with reflections of my travels around the world.
I also relate the family adventures and treat readers to a pictorial story of priceless memories.
I describe places visited and the wonderful times my family and I had in our tourist trips.
The book is great to read while on a vacation or for some travel inspiration.


I was later inspired to write yet another memoir – Your Time is Now: A Time to be Born and a Time to die.
I had a driving force within me to write this one.
I based the content on powerful words spoken by King Solomon in the Book of Ecclesiastes about times and seasons. "There is a time to be born and a time to die, and a time for every purpose under the Heaven."

Both My Life as a Banker: A Life worth Living and Retirement is Fun: A New Chapter were nominated in the Category Bio/Memoirs for Metamorph Publishing Summer Indie Book Awards 2016.
The final results showed that My Life as a Banker: A Life worth Living placed second in that category.
I am Cancer Free: A Memoir won the McGrath’s House Indie Book Awards in the category Non-Fiction in November 2016.
I want to take this opportunity to thank all my Facebook friends, family, former banking colleagues, and friends in Author groups, who all voted for my books.
All of my books are registered in the matchbook program on Amazon. When you buy any book in Paperback you get the Ebook FREE.
Here is my Amazon Universal Link

Monday 6 March 2017

Request a Free Book and Authorgraph from Brenda Mohammed.

Readers can now request an Authorgraph straight from my Facebook pages or through this blog.

On my Facebook pages click on the column on the left below my profile picture and choose the book for which you want the Authorgraph.

At the same time, you can request a free book by completing the form above it - Yes I want the Free Book

My Facebook Pages are as follows:


BANKER TURNS WRITER



REVENGE OF ZEEKA


FASCINATING MEMOIRS


Or, You can go directly to Authorgraph. com and Request an Authorgraph by Clicking HERE


I am looking forward to hearing from each of you.

Strength for Parents of Missing Children by Author Marie White


"Some of us have had our child abducted off the street. Others of us have had our child abducted by a family member. There are those who have had our child abducted by a governmental agency. Some have had a child run away. No two stories are exactly alike. But the pain and emotional roller coaster are the same."
The above quote is from 'Strength for Parents of Missing Children' by Marie White.
I have had the opportunity to read this book while assisting in the editing.
I never had a missing child.
However, this book has inspired me and I know that the contents will be a great inspiration to all Parents who have lost children.
Get the book for someone who has lost a child.
It is on Pre-order. You will be glad you did. Get the book at this link

Monday 13 February 2017

Resurrection: Revenge of Zeeka Book 5 on Pre -Order at Amazon


This is the moment you all have been waiting for.

Resurrection :Revenge of Zeeka Book 5 is now on pre-order until 25th February 2017.

The book is dedicated to you, my readers.

It is the final installment in the Revenge of Zeeka Series.

Pre-order your copy now. CLICK HERE Do not miss out.
Also available for pre-order at Kobo
Available in Paperback for immediate distribution


BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Mandy’s new robot helper Eve encounters a stranger in the backyard.
He claims to have connections with Zeeka. Who is this stranger?
When he learns that Eve is a robot, he discloses his story to her.
Eve promises him to keep their conversation secret but can she?
‪She records it on her security device and plays it for Steven and Mandy. ‬‬‬‬
When he collapses in the backyard with an epileptic fit, Eve alerts the Gosh hospital.
Tests and records reveal the stranger’s identity.
Police records show that he died in the Carnival massacre in 2036, but did he?
Steven faces opposition to launch his greatest invention of the century.
Who will be the first volunteer to test it?

EDITOR'S NOTE

"This Story, 'Resurrection: Revenge of Zeeka Book 5' is the final episode in the Zeeka stories written by Mrs. Brenda Mohammed. The Book is based on the return of someone who people thought was a "Zombie." It makes for interesting and inspiring reading. Once you start reading, you have to continue to the end. The author's imagination is extremely wide and vivid and she really gives you an exciting glimpse of what the future could possibly turn out to be- with beautiful robots for housekeepers, companions, and security, and a device to cure diseases of the brain without any surgical incisions. What a great future we can envisage in this story!!!
This proves to be a wonderful ending to a trilogy of stories. It was great to know that Nieman, his new name, was cured of his disease.
Every Chapter of the Book is well- written with use of entertaininglanguage and I congratulate the author on her brilliance and her psychic lookinto the future."

If you have not read the other books in the series, I urge you to do so now.


Books can be obtained at Amazon Universal Link

Sunday 12 February 2017

Happy Valentine's Day


Whatever you do please have a Happy Valentine's Day.
If you are looking for a good book to read check out this list from P.D. Workman
Her recommendations are sound.


Click here - Friendship Before Flowers

Wednesday 25 June 2014

Book Review - Adventures of Squeaky Doo


Here is another review from a verified purchaser of the book, "Adventures of Squeaky Doo."

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Delightful and refreshing children's stories told from the point of view of a teddy bear
on June 25, 2014
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
This collection consists of five stories narrated in the first person by Squeaky Doo, a teddy bear owned by a little girl named Marge. Marge lives with her younger brother and parents in Miami. However, except for the first story which takes place on a beach in Miami, all the other stories are set in different locations. The tales describe adventures in Los Angeles, Orlando, on a cruise trip, and in the author's native island, Trinidad. Squeaky Doo accompanies Marge as her family, including her grandparents, vacation in these different places. He gets lost in each story and, fortunately for him, is always rescued and reunited with Marge.

Squeaky Doo is an observant bear who never misses any detail of the family's activities. He gives vivid descriptions of a warm and loving family of which he is proud to be a part. Children will surely fall in love with this likable teddy bear and will want to read about all of his adventures. The perspective of the teddy bear makes the stories easy to read and will encourage youngsters of all ages to keep reading to find out what will happen next to Squeaky Doo.

Available at Amazon