jenn topper

jenn topper

About

Our imaginations haven’t withered with our attention spans. I don’t want to get caught decrying technology and change or else I will become exactly what I rebel against. And I’m perfectly ok with ending my sentences in prepositions, so you can stick that rule up your ass.
 
Ripping off Dr. Seuss’ style, I write because it makes me think. I write for readers because I like to tell stories. The readers I hope to write for like to read because it makes them think. Thinking is good. Following like sheep is not good. Wearing the uniform of a movement is for sheep. Being the movement reflects independent thought. And mostly I don’t give a shit about what my hair looks like.
 
I will stand up in a crowded room and quack like a duck to contribute to a dialogue to change minds. There is always a cause to champion or fight. Without the fight, why the fuck are we here?
 
I write, think and quack for my two beautiful, perfect and brilliant little boys.. It is my job to show them that they can change the world and paint it blue.
 
I was a professional chef. I was a boxer. I formed my own record label, and then went bankrupt. I tried to make films. I am a corporate sellout now. I wrote about these ridiculous experiences in 29 Jobs and a Million Lies. I wrote a cookbook without any recipes. I write and regularly publish articles about legal marketing, of all things. I write a blog about writing and publishing, or not publishing. I write a live diary of a fictional character losing his mind. I I I I I I I I I I I I I. Enough.
 
http://29JobsandaMillionLies.blogspot.com
http://dontpublishme.blogspot.com
http://diaryofSamGregory.blogspot.com

The DarkSide of the Paranormal

The DarkSide of the Paranormal

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Description

<p>Have you ever wondered about the dark side of the paranormal? This book contains information on demons, shadow people and negative earthbound spirits. It covers how to recognize the difference between each of these creatures, weaknesses, fears, appearances, abilities and how to get rid of them if possible. There is also information on what really works to protect you and what doesn't.</p>

Story Behind The Book

It was when I was 12 years old and showed up on the first day of school wearing padlocks on the belt loops of my jeans, black eyeshadow and a Clash t-shirt when I learned I wouldn't be making friends as easily as I had hoped. So when it took 29 jobs before I turned 30 to learn that it was my own warped outlook that had been getting me into trouble, I wasn't afraid of writing 29 Jobs and a Million Lies. It is the gut-wrenching, self-deprecating account of how ambition to stand out was wiped out by clumsy choices, immaturity and self-defeating righteousness. Energized to prove to the doubters that I could succeed despite the unorthodox approach, this litany of boneheaded decisions portrays how I painfully hurled heart and soul into a long trail of draining pursuits, failing so often that success was invisible. 29 Jobs is a post-GenX novel, except it's true. Dark, twisted, and outrageous, 29 Jobs and a Million Lies is not the story of your all-American girl seeking glory and success, but a glimpse at counterculture's underbelly and attempts to succeed within that world. The stories begin as I pull cables and haul boxes for a demented B-movie, roach-infested production chock full of freakish characters and was then rewarded with a working trip to the Cannes Film Festival, but not before I was gassed and mugged on the train from Milan. Just before I got fired I found myself with a lucrative opportunity to write pornographic film scripts, but didn't realize how deep the adult film industry reached into the lives of its players. When I ran like hell from the San Fernando Valley, I started my own punk rock record label despite the tenable adversity of doing so in a man’s man kind of world, otherwise known as CBGB’s. When, after numerous waitressing and temp jobs filled with swarthy, sleazy, real-life characters, the record label came inevitably crashing down with hundreds of surplus CDs I dumped furtively in the East River on a dark night. The stories plow ahead to a grimy, Greenwich Village restaurant kitchen when I started cooking for a megalomaniac chef who taught me everything about simple, Italian cooking and had no hesitation in throwing hot pans and roasted beets at my head. And I walked away from that, too. When joining the Navy became my objective—and multiple trips to MacGuire Air Force Base for various tests—I wondered, what’s a nice girl from the suburbs doing all of this dirty work for, anyway? These deeply personal stories reflect the hilarity of youth, but also the depressing and frustrating details of living an untraditional lifestyle and the desperation of trying to make ends meet. 29 Jobs and a Million Lies is like a road map of dark alleys and sinister places, but where all the dangerous fun exists--the evil twin of adventure. This is a trail of messed-up and exciting events littered with dramatic, chaotic, hilarious failure, like when I locked the keys in a borrowed apartment in Paris while on my barefoot and half-naked pre-dawn trip to the shared bathroom down the hall, and needed the fire department, a burglar, and the screaming, cursing Portuguese superintendent to open the door.

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