Ey Wade
  • Female
  • Spring, TX
  • United States
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Profile Information

Who I am:
I am a caged in frustrated author and self-publisher of thought provoking, mind bending books, an occasional rent-a- parent, a fountain of knowledge, and am ready to share. Visit Wade-In Publishing http://wade-inpublishing.com.On Tuesdays I post there,on Wednesdays and Fridays I interview characters @ http://theinterviewedcharacter.blogspot.com.

https://twitter.com/Wade_InPub

http://wade-inpublishing.com

http://wade-inpublishing.blogspot.com

http://theinterviewedcharacter.blogspot.com/
Books I've written, anthologies I've contributed to, and any scripts or plays I've authored:
These are current books I have published. They can be found in many of the e-book stores. On Amazon: http://amzn.to/wade-inbooks
Beads on a String-America's Racially Intertwined Biographical History
The Perfect Solution
The Fishing Trip
Yes, Sam Takes Care of Me
My writing is:
Fiction, Nonfiction, Blog Posts
Outlets where I review books, TV, or film:
Yes
Services I offer to other writers:
I have just started reviewing books on my Wade-In to Book Reviews blog-http://wade-intobookreviews.blogspot.com/
I'm part of these writers' groups or salons:
n/a
My professional associations:
n/a
I found out about She Writes from:
I saw on Twitter

Ey Wade's Friends

  • Deanna Fry
  • Karin B. Miller
  • Komal Mansoor
  • M Kathy Brown
  • Mari Selby
  • Marilyn Fried
  • Anjuelle Floyd
  • Jessica Ferguson
  • Susan Wels
  • Deborah Siegel

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Ey Wade's Page

Ignoring the Naysayers & Banging My Own Drums

As you may know I have worked diligently to e-publish a few manuscripts. It wasn't as hard as I thought to formulate and then upload to sites such as Sribd, Smashwords, and now to Amazon for the Kindle.

 

I've heard all of the naysayers about self-publishing, but in every aspect of life there is someone highlighting the negative. Been there, done that. Sometimes we have to turn our backs on the traditional and the norm or progress will continue to be hindered. Anyway, I just want to share my book page from Amazon.

 

A preschooler is mistakenly given to a stalker by his preschool teacher.

Mona Boots saw him, chose him as her own, and walked out of his daycare with him in her arms. This choice is traumatizing to a single mother, unimaginable to an accused father, and detrimental to a child’s safety.

The Perfect Solution, A suspenseful analysis of choices and how those choices affect the people around us. A three year old is stalked and mistakenly given to the stalker by his pre-school teacher. 

 

 

 

The Fishing Trip 

As a child, Phenigan O’Carroll endured weekend fishing trips filled with torture, sexual and physical abuse. The adults in his life were either the problem or closed their eyes to the problem and so he decided to eliminate the abuse himself. Set in Shiningbal, Texas where the perverted go to disappear, child sexual abuse is the norm and when the legal system is the monster, redemption doesn’t play nice.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes, Sam Takes Care of Me is an affair to remember. Sam a jealous provider and protector simultaneously gives and takes away in this tale of five friends sharing in the trials and humiliations of having a relationship with the same person.

 

 

 

 

 

Beads on a String-America’s Racially Intertwined Biographical History lauds loudly the accomplishments of all races that helped make America the great country it has become.Also published  in a multimedia (audio/video) e-book format and available for purchase through---WADE-IN PUBLISHING

 

 

 


 


 

 

Ey Wade's Blog

My Review of 'The House' by Anjuelle Floyd

Posted on October 8, 2011 at 9:16am 0 Comments



Dealing with the imminent death of someone you have spent the majority of your adult life with, knowing you would rather be anywhere, but with that person and having to sort through varied emotions could be mind boggling. I know I… Continue

I'm Ey Wade and I'm an Indie Author (in case you didn't hear yesterday)

Posted on July 5, 2011 at 8:00am 0 Comments



I guess I should also say, and I'm not ashamed to say it. Yesterday, I flouted my independence, for my publishing freedoms, I'm going to bask in the freedom the world has now allowed writers of all genre'.

 

Though, from things I have read in forums on the internet and in various…

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From Daughter,to Mom, into Lovey

Posted on June 4, 2011 at 4:31am 0 Comments



Four months ago I became an official grandmother, well "Lovey" to Jett Parker Ellington Wade. Not being called grandma has nothing to do with vanity, but I only remember my grandma when I hear the title. My mom is 'Granny' and my sister's grandchildren call her 'grandmother'. I want to be that little…

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WooHoo! Lovin' It

Posted on June 4, 2011 at 2:40am 0 Comments

5.0 out of 5 stars A Must-Read In So Many Ways,
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Ey Wade's Videos

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Latest Activity

Ey Wade commented on the blog post 'The Conversation: "I Self-Published Myself and You're Jealous!"'
"Hi, I really enjoy your clips."
Nov 7, 2011
Ey Wade liked Laura Zigman's blog post The Conversation: "I Self-Published Myself and You're Jealous!"
Nov 7, 2011
Deanna Fry left a comment for Ey Wade
"Wow you the one who has done so much. You are one busy writer. I will see you on Twitter"
Nov 1, 2011
Ey Wade left a comment for Deanna Fry
"Hi, Deanna I'm very impressed with your accomplishments. Thanks for befriending me and I will be checking out your sites. Along with tagging behind your twitter. Mine is @jumpouttheboat. I'll be asking you."
Nov 1, 2011

Comment Wall (14 comments)

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At 3:06pm on November 1, 2011, Deanna Fry said…
Wow you the one who has done so much. You are one busy writer. I will see you on Twitter
At 10:47am on June 8, 2011, Karin B. Miller said…
Congratulations on your new book! I remember learning in high school that Eli Whitney had not really invented the cotton gin, but borrowed ideas from slaves and his landlady. And I was really annoyed at how often other (generally white men) got credit for others' work. That's still true today. Your book is sorely needed!
At 11:23am on December 2, 2010, M Kathy Brown said…
Wow! You're pic fooled me *more* than 10 times over! You are in an interesting situation... mine came quite unexpectedly.

My younger sister (now 53) lived near our mom and checked in on her almost daily. Then Mom had a fall, broke her right wrist, did rehab at an assisted living home for 3 weeks (they called her argumentative - we call her strong-willed), and could no longer live on her own. My sister took her in for awhile, but needed medical help herself. That was all in Minnesota - I lived in Vancouver Washington. I had all kinds of wonderful plans involving a move to Colorado with my husband, his active mother (my friend) living with us, and many adventures that led to good conversations and, of course, writing.

Being a bit strong-willed myself, I flew to MN, traveled with my mom by train to Vancouver, then one year later traveled with her in my car to Colorado! Like someone recently said: Your mom seems like a character, and at times a handful. She is. But that's largely because I've chosen to portray her that way in my writing, which aids me in my perspective while caring for her.
At 10:08am on December 2, 2010, M Kathy Brown said…
Interesting you say that... re: caregiving. Other baby-boomers I know seem to think it'd be okay, but think they might read it simply because they should. On the other hand, a younger generation mostly in their 20's and 30's now, all seem much more interested in this subject. I'm thinking it may be because it's their grandparents I'd be writing about, and that brings them to wondering what they'd do to care for their own moms or dads. Plus, I feel that the younger generation (of which I'm assuming you are part of also) is much more endeared and genuinely respectful of the elderly than the boomers have been. (Yes, I actually put that in writing.) Just a perspective I've gathered during my past 5 years of research and communication on this subject, in the midst of caring for my own - not just elderly, but blind and crippled - mother.
At 10:56am on December 1, 2010, M Kathy Brown said…
I have a question about marketability of a project I'm just starting. My first book, nonfiction, and three different ideas in mind: 1) a memoir - the first years out of high school, one year after Woodstock (festival), middle class white girl in the drug world of Madison WI, and an interracial relationship develops. 2) adventure/travel memoir - young female, hitchhiking/walking 1/2 way across Canada with a guy (hardly knew) and everything unexpected, from the Mounties to an underground-rock-radio station DJ, from a night in the open on the reservation to chateaubriand in a Montreal penthouse, etc. 3) Caregiving: the baby-boomers and the health of a parent - factual, realistic, helpful and heartwarming accounts; includes personal account as well - 1st blogged as "My Mother is Like a Pack of Cigarettes (sigh...and I don't even smoke anymore!)" So... which would you think today's world would want to read/buy? I feel they're equal, but you're definitely more into the thick of it all.
 
 
 

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