
In addition to the ebook version from Smashwords (Available by clicking on the image on the right), Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess is now available at Feedbooks.com. Get it by clicking RIGHT HERE.
Monthly Archives: June 2009
Blog Site Tweeking
His Robot Girlfriend – Paperback Updated

The digest paperback edition of “His Robot Girlfriend” has been updated, fixing a few typos that had eluded ten different editors. You can purchase it with the link to the right. It is available for $4.95, which is essentially at cost and fits in nicely with the free ebook, also available on the right side of the screen.
His Robot Girlfriend – Hardbound Coming
Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess – Free Ebook Available Now!
As you have noticed, Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess is now available as a free ebook. Download it today in your choice of several formats. Just follow the link at the right.
Allow me to introduce myself. I am Eaglethorpe Buxton, famed world traveler and story-teller. Of course you have heard of me, for my tales of the great heroes and their adventures have been repeated far and wide across the land. In truth I am probably better known in any case as an adventurer in my own right than as a teller of the adventures of others. From storied Aerithraine, where I once had the pleasure of spending a fortnight in the company of the Queen, to distant Holland, I have wondered the world being a friend to those in need of a friend, a protector to those in need of a protector, and a guardian to those in need of a guardian.
Eaglethorpe Buxton is a fool and a hack. You couldn’t find a writer of less wit and style.
– Dextius Winterborn, Story-teller’s Guild.
Without a doubt, the biggest liar that ever walked the world.
– Sir Roderick Bairn, Adventurer
That boy will never amount to anything. Mark my words, he was born to hang.
– Margram Buxton, Father
Who? I don’t believe I’ve ever heard of him. Yes. No, I’m sure I haven’t.
-Queen Elleena I of Aerithraine
Join Eaglethorpe Buxton as he adventures across a magical world to help… a poor orphan child? An elven princess? Who can know for sure, when it is Eaglethorpe himself who tells the tale?
Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess is a short book by Wesley Allison, author of His Robot Girlfriend, and Princess of Amathar. Available now as a free ebook and soon, for a nominal fee, as an old-fashioned paper book at fine bookstores everywhere.
Prioritizing

I feel like I’ve been running around with my head cut off, trying to write and publish and study for my Masters and teach. Bah! I’ve got to get organized. While I wait on any word of Senta and the Steel Dragon from Baen Books, I need to get things going. Here is my plan.
1. Hardbound “His Robot Girlfriend”
As the Target lady says “Approved!”. You should see it at Amazon soon.
2. Multi format ebooks of “His Robot Girlfriend”
Now available!
3. Finish writing “Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess”
It’s done!
4. Publish paperback “Eaglethorpe Buxton”
Waiting for the Review Copy.
5. Free multi-format ebook “Eaglethorpe Buxton”
Available today!
6. Second edition of “Princess of Amathar” in hardbound and paperback.
7. Multiformat ebook of “Princess of Amathar” with a new lower price.
Of course, if word should come that someone wants to publish Steel Dragon, everything goes on hold as I finish book two.
His Robot Girlfriend on Feedbooks
In addition to the edition at Smashwords (which you can reach through the link on the right), His Robot Girlfriend is now available as a free ebook download at Feedbooks. You can follow this link: http://www.feedbooks.com/userbook/5854
The editions have a few cosmetic differences, such as chapter heading fonts, but the text is the same. The whole idea is to have as many copies distributed as possible, and Feedbooks hooks into many distributors of mobile devices. If any of you got here through that route, drop me a comment and let me know.
Princess of Amathar – Chapter 17 Excerpt

Four Amatharians waited for us within the room. The man who opened the door was the tallest man that I had yet met, something over seven and a half feet. Just looking at him frightened me. I could imagine how an enemy facing him felt. He was middle-aged, with streaks of grey shooting through his straight black hair. His hawkish nose and a large scar across one cheek, gave him the look of a predator. He was clad in the garments of a knight, though his tabard was fringed with gold trim; His crest was an eye with a flaming sun as its pupil. He was Reyno Hissendar, Norar Remontar’s uncle, and the chief of the Hissendar Trading Group.
The second fellow was equally impressive, though not because of height. He was a formidably muscular man with a piercing gaze and a tightly set jaw. His tabard was fringed with gold, and his crest showed a flaming sun within a circle. His bodysuit wasn’t black though, it was tan. I had seen Knights in other colors, Nicohl Messonar for instance, wearing the colors of a teacher. I later learned that tan was the traditional color of Archaeologists. He was Vandan Lorrinos, a highly respected member of the Sun Clan, and a fleet commander.
The third person in the room was a woman. She was a breathtakingly beautiful older version of Vena Remontar, or for that matter, of the Princess. She was just over six feet tall, with long straight black hair framing her beautiful dark blue face. She had the same stern look about her that I had found in Nicohl Messonar, and the same ability to seemingly look into a person’s heart. She stared at me with what I thought was a look of more than simple appraisal. She was the mother of Vena Remontar and the aunt of Norar Remontar, and her name was Mindana Remontar. She wore a bodysuit and tabard, but without the crest, indicating she was not a knight. Her bodysuit was dark blue, indicating her profession was that of biologist.
The final individual in the room, was the man for whom I had been summoned– the Overlord of the Sun Clan, Nevin Lorrinos. There was no doubt that he was Norar Remontar’s grandfather, for he was tall and handsome, with the same prominent features and the same noble bearing. He wore a great black robe with a golden crest above the heart– crossed swords over a flaming sun, the same crest that Noriandara Remontar had worn. I bowed low to him.
“Greetings knight,” he said.
“Yes,” said Mindana Remontar. “You have certainly wasted no time integrating yourself into our culture.”




