One of the most difficult battles in my writing career has been the language barrier. Spanish was, and remains, my native language. The American Dream has reached outside North American borders, and I wanted to become a writer with a publisher in New York City. I figured all I had to do was write in English. A simple plan, right?
At nineteen, I was blessed with a job where I had to speak and write in English. Then there was the reading. Every early customer presented me with books. That’s when I discovered Robert Ludlum, Tom Clancy, Ken Follett and Clive Cussler. I got proficient, and people kept telling me I was good at speaking too. Match that praise with the desire to put ideas in writing and you have a recipe for publishing dreams.
I started my first novel in 1998 and made the rookie mistake of showing it to people who cared for me and didn’t want to break my heart. I can’t help but wonder if someone who disliked me would have helped me improve faster.
The very best thing I’ve done is investing in the Merriam-Webster and Oxford English dictionaries.
The second thing that helped me improve has been the support of native speakers willing to go through hell correcting the typos that would spring out of nowhere as they tried to navigate my stories.
I have writing friends who show me mistakes and help me make corrections. I will not claim I am master of the language, but one of those friends claims she can now concentrate more on plot or character development than grammar mistakes. And although the wars on Oxford comma and splitting infinitives still rage on, at least the difference between irony and coincidence is no longer a mystery to me.
The August edition of The Big Thrill is out and I contributed a piece about Preston & Child's new book Old Bones:
Up Close: Preston and Child by J. H. Bográn: http://bit.ly/2K5NNbk
July News
Here's the July edition of The Big Thrill
http://bit.ly/1WeMBji
Also, I'm visiting New York City to participate in a panel at ThrillerFest
You can expect some pictures and a full report soon.
And last, but not least, here's the July edition of my newsletter, which comes as the first in a series of articles related to the craft of writing.
Ending a book with a cliffhanger, or don’t leave your readers hanging.
http://bit.ly/1WeMBji
Also, I'm visiting New York City to participate in a panel at ThrillerFest
You can expect some pictures and a full report soon.
And last, but not least, here's the July edition of my newsletter, which comes as the first in a series of articles related to the craft of writing.
Ending a book with a cliffhanger, or don’t leave your readers hanging.
The June edition of The Big Thrill
For the June edition of The Big Thrill, I had the opportunity to interview two people I admire:
I met D.P. Lyle in the hallways of ThrillerFest in 2010, so I jumped at the opportunity to talk to him about his newest book, Sunshine State, and how he intertwines thriller with humor.
Read it here:
http://bit.ly/2EN0Awt
The first novel I read from Steven Savile was Silver. It had been recommended to me by a then-mentor. I was enthralled with the tale, the scope. Then later I discovered he also wrote novels for two of my favorite TV serials, Doctor Who and Torchwood. It's not surprised that when he submitted his newest, White Peak, I made sure the editor knew I was interested, even when it meant a second assignment for the month. The things you do for the love of writing!
There's also a catch, it turns out Steven novel was released under the alias of Ronan Frost.
Read it here:
http://bit.ly/2I9aw49
I met D.P. Lyle in the hallways of ThrillerFest in 2010, so I jumped at the opportunity to talk to him about his newest book, Sunshine State, and how he intertwines thriller with humor.
Read it here:
http://bit.ly/2EN0Awt
The first novel I read from Steven Savile was Silver. It had been recommended to me by a then-mentor. I was enthralled with the tale, the scope. Then later I discovered he also wrote novels for two of my favorite TV serials, Doctor Who and Torchwood. It's not surprised that when he submitted his newest, White Peak, I made sure the editor knew I was interested, even when it meant a second assignment for the month. The things you do for the love of writing!
There's also a catch, it turns out Steven novel was released under the alias of Ronan Frost.
Read it here:
http://bit.ly/2I9aw49
May the Fourth be with you!
On May Fourth I was invited by the Centro Cultural Sampedrano to give a lecture on Star Wars.
I took the opportunity to discuss the arc of the story on cinema's most iconic villain. I mean of course, Darth Vader, the Jedi formerly known as Anakin Skywalker.
Staying out of the Star Wars Stories, I concentrated on Episodes I through VI, starting from the cute little boy who casually murdered countless people by destroying a space ship. Granted it also saved the lives of his friends during the battle on Naboo. Visited the bad decision making during Episode III and culminated with his sacrifice in Emperor Palpatine's throne room aboard the Second Death Star.
A full path that led to redemption as envisioned by George Lucas.
I had a blast with the public because they had seen the movies, so no spoiler alert was necessary, and the discussion went into such mind-bugling details like "Why did Leia kiss her brother in Empire?" My response, beside the obvious that George dropped the ball there, was to point out that Leia was not kin on kissing her unknown brother, but rather to make Han Solo jealous.
May the Fourth be with you....and tomorrow, remember the revenge of the Fifth!
Is Avengers Endgame inadvertently promoting the Trump ideology?
I was among
the first batch of people to watch this epic 3-hour film during a midnight
showing. If you still haven’t seen it, please refrain from reading further as
the argument will definitely include spoilers.
SPOILER ALERT
If you
scrolled down, then you entered out of your own free will. Let’s discuss now.
The first I
noticed is the change of hands in the gauntlet holding the stones. Thanos wore
it on the left hand. After a successful Time Heist, the Avengers made their own
version of a gauntlet using, I assume because of the one-size-fits-all
property, that nano-technology was involved. The Avenger’s device was right
handed. Of course, the explanation can be as simple as saying Thanos was
left-handed while Iron Man was right-handed. However, you can’t miss the hidden
message that
Thanos=left=bad
While
Avengers=right=good.
The right
is good and left is evil is hardly a new concept. The word “sinister” comes
from Latin to mean “left-handed.”
For a while, people who were left-handed were considered un-lucky or even evil.
I’m sure we can find many a case of men or women punished for the sole crime of
using their left hand.
So, given
the Russo Brothers’ penchant for detail, I can’t but otherwise think the
left-handed Thanos is evil in thinking wiping half the population of the
universe with the snap of a finger was an intentional allusion. Whereas Banner
and Stark’s use of the stones was to make things right again.
If that
were all, I’d chalk it off to costume, a sort of muscle memory, except…
Enter the
refugees from Asgard.
When
putting the team back together, Rocket and Bruce pay a visit to Thor and what’s
left from his people. They’ve settled in a small town, interact with the rest
of the world and are treated fairly. Never mind the majority of them look like Viking
gods.
The problem
is when the dark-skinned Thanos comes from a sh*thole planet, and well, a big
battle ensues. Things didn’t turn out well for him, even Google is erasing him
out of existence if you click on the gauntlet.
Tell me
that’s not a double standard!
Now, for the
record, I enjoyed the film and this is nothing but observations that were
perhaps too long to be included in the IMDB profile.
Have you
noticed this? Is there any other instance that supports this claim? You can
leave your comments below.
The January Edition of The Big Thrill
It's truly an honor to be featured in The Big Thrill, the e-zine managed by the International Thriller Writers.
The month of January not only did they feature my new novel, Heir of Evil, but also granted me the opportunity to interview and New York Time Best Selling author, my gratitude for John Lescroart for answering my questions.
Heir of Evil, or what if Hitler had produced an off-spring? Book 2 in The Falcon Chronicles Series:
http://www.thebigthrill.org/2018/12/on-the-cover-j-h-bogran/
The Rule of Law, by John Lescroart
http://www.thebigthrill.org/2018/12/up-close-john-lescroart/
The month of January not only did they feature my new novel, Heir of Evil, but also granted me the opportunity to interview and New York Time Best Selling author, my gratitude for John Lescroart for answering my questions.
Heir of Evil, or what if Hitler had produced an off-spring? Book 2 in The Falcon Chronicles Series:
http://www.thebigthrill.org/2018/12/on-the-cover-j-h-bogran/
The Rule of Law, by John Lescroart
http://www.thebigthrill.org/2018/12/up-close-john-lescroart/
New Year Resolution: Release Day for Heir of Evil.
Here's wishing you a Wonderful 2019!
I start the year not with resolutions consisting on diets or reducing waist size, but with a party!
Today is the release date of HEIR OF EVIL, the second novel in The Falcon Chronicles.
About Heir of Evil
The Third Reich collapses. With the siege of the Soviets in Germany and the Second World War lost, Hitler's doctor finds out that Eva Braun is pregnant. A man, close to the Führer, conceives the plan to give continuity to the political-philosophical ideas of Adolf Hitler: we must save at all costs the legitimate heir of the leader of Nazism.
As the 20th Century dies, Oscar Brown emerges a financial superhero on Wall Street. On his thirtieth birthday, he discovers the inevitable skeleton in his family closet: his grandfather is none other than the most hated man in the world: Adolf Hitler. With a Neo-Nazi radical group looking up to him as a symbol, the Mossad wanting him dead, and the CIA turning a deaf ear to his plead for help, Oscar must now run for his life and discover the true origin of his heritage.
Discover how the shedding of police actions, a beautiful Mossad spy, an adventurous archaeologist - of the Indiana Jones type -, a great executive of the New York Stock Exchange and other characters intermingle to give rise to this novel.
J. H. Bográn covers the days from the end of the Second World War to the globalized present in a thriller that takes us across Europe and America in search of evidence that clarifies what happened with the cursed genes.
Blurbs:
"Heir of Evil is the ultimate high concept thriller, brilliantly conceived. J. H. Bográn has fashioned a classic tale that checks all the boxes from historical speculation, to a deadly secret, to a sinister international conspiracy. Reminiscent of Robert Ludlum, as well as Steve Berry and Brad Meltzer, this is storytelling at its level best."
--Jon Land, USA Today bestselling author of the Caitlin Strong series
“Gripping, spine-tingling, and explosively brilliant, Bográn’s Heir of Evil will grab you with its initial and very imaginative opening and keep you reading into the night. A very original, fast-paced, and suspenseful thriller. Highly recommended!”
--R.J. Pineiro, author of Avenue of Regrets.
You can start reading today for just $4.99 wherever e-books are sold.
The Big Thrill did a wonderful article about, you can read it HERE:
And check it out, I even made the cover!
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