I turned to self-publishing after having written seven novels and accumulated drawers full of rejection slips. I enjoy writing and telling stories about people and their relationships and I was determined to see my stories in print. Fortunately, readers have liked my first two novels and I have sold more than enough copies to cover printing and distribution costs, if not earn me a fortune.
Friday, 12 October 2018
The Man Who Voted For Australia Chapter 9
Jeff has an uncomfortable meeting with his very-British brother in which he begins to suspect the rumours about him are true. He learns that the Chinese woman is working for his brother, which makes him suspect her agenda, and he is invited by his son to go with the grandchildren and their other, Turkish, grandparents, to an Anzac Day ceremony. All of this is moving the story forward but something is missing. I think the problem is that Jeff's racist undertones are not relevant here - so where is the conflict?
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