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joeekaitis

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. . .and I promise to never, ever plug it here again. :)

Collinsfort Village by Joe Ekaitis, illustrated by Nick Greenwood

Dennis Pearson grew up reading the stories of popular author Karolyne von Frankenburgh, but no one had ever seen Fräulein von Frankenburgh — until now, maybe. When Dennis finds a revealing clue (a portion of a letter from Frankenburgh’s publisher), he enlists his two closest friends, Bear, a lovable Suburban-driving grizzly who works for the local phone company, and Griff, twenty feet of half-eagle, half-lion, dragon-slaying griffin who reads stories to children at the local library, to help him solve the mystery. But Dennis soon realizes that there is more than just one secret in his hometown of Collinsfort Village. And in the process, he learns the value of trust and the true meaning of friendship as he, Bear, and Griff face mistaken identities, cover-ups, a bit of espionage, and the history of a dragon who hasn’t flown for nearly one-hundred years.

Well, hey, there's a '68 Suburban on the cover, so it's a marginally auto-related post. :)

Also available as a Barnes & Noble NOOK book and from kobobooks.com. All editions $4.99.


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Congrats Joe. Style reminds me of my brother's son. Cover font reminds me of The Prisoner.

I don't usually plug this, just brag about it. I wrote a song in 1969 that got recorded and became a contemporary Hawaiian standard, has been in continuous release ever since and was just released this year by yet another breakout artist, Mailani.

The song is Mehameha and it sells electronically on every continent except Antarctica. (Come on you Antarcts, carry yer weight.) The royalties come to roughly a cheeseburger a week, though the first quarter of Mailani's release was almost a cheeseburger a day (mostly CDs which pay more than MP3s). On older releases (Makaha Sons of Niihau) the track outsells the album it's on by 2 to 1. And you can still buy the original from 1970, on Sunday Manoa Guava Jam.
 

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