Hi New Subscribers, Thank you for opening this email. The fact that you’ve read this far tells me we’re already off to a great start. Hopefully, this trend will continue well into the foreseeable future. So, some of you already know me personally and are getting this email because you’ve chosen to support me during my professional face-lifting season. I appreciate your coming out and flicking those thumbs up. Nothing beats a wink and a smile, except for maybe pizza and/or tacos. But I don’t have either of those right now, so I’m happy with the wink and smile. But some of you don’t know who I am, nor do you know why I have an email list, and odds are you’re getting this message because SendFox thought you might want it. (I guess that’s what got you here. I’m not quite sure.) So, if you’re part of the second camp, then let me first of all say hello. Officially. I know you probably got a couple of my test messages when I was trying out the system, and maybe you even said, out loud, “Who’s this dude sending me a list of his blog articles?” To that, I say, “Who indeed.” But that doesn’t answer your question, so let me extend my hand—metaphorically, of course, because 1. I haven’t figured out how to transfer my hand through the Internet, 2. That would be really weird and disturbing if I did, and 3. Are we even still allowed to shake hands with people, given world events? Assuming you’re metaphorically reaching back, I’d like to say thank you and welcome aboard to whatever this ends up being. So, my name is Jeremy Bursey, and I am a writer. Not just a blog writer—and thank you if you actually clicked on any of those articles from my earlier test; hopefully you liked what you read—but also a storyteller. What kind of storyteller? So, that’s where it gets a little complicated. Most authors stick to a brand. For example, if you read Lee Child, you’ll know that his brand is Jack Reacher, and Jack Reacher’s brand is a former military police officer, current wandering traveler (or badass homeless person if you want to get honest), who meets people in trouble, helps them out a little, smacks around a few bad guys, throws away whatever he’s wearing, then moves on to the next town without a goodbye, just to do it all over again. If you’re a reader of Jack Reacher (and Lee Child by proxy), then you’ll know what you’re basically getting each time you open his books. (And in case I sound like an idiot right now, I’ve read up through Jack Reacher #9, so if that formula changes in Book 10 or beyond, I don’t know it yet—and don’t spoil it for me if it does!) I, on the contrary, do not stick to a particular brand (unless you count fish-out-of-water stories and a general quirkiness), nor do I stick to a particular story size. I’ve produced short stories, novellas, novels, screenplays, poems, essays, and even emails! Here’s one of the short stories, for example:
And here’s one of the super epically crazy I-need-to-break-this-into-three-separate-novels adventure tales:
That said, my most common genres are thrillers (especially crime and psychological), coming of age (think The Breakfast Club or Ferris Bueller’s Day Off), and action-adventures (especially within the superhero subgenre). But, honestly, my range is wide.
- One of my thrillers is about an estranged married couple who rekindles their marriage under very stressful conditions (closest comparison I have at the top of my head is Dead Calm with Nicole Kidman, but it’s not like that movie at all, so probably not close enough). Note: Check the bottom of this email for a special offer regarding this book.
- One of my coming of age tales is about a young man who reunites with his childhood rubber ducky and learns not only about its grand adventure but how to let go of the past (think A Dog’s Purpose, but with a rubber duck and no creepy canine voiceover).
- One of my adventure stories has more in common with A Christmas Carol than with Indiana Jones, but is also inspired loosely by a scene from Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey and by the graveyard next to the nursing home I used to drive by to get to work during my college years (at the University of Central Florida, if you’re wondering).
Note: The original newsletter provided bonus e-book content reserved for my earliest subscribers only and will not be reposted here.






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