Mojave Man

About the Book

Book: Mojave Man

Author: J.W. Gilbert

Genre: Christian Fiction – Action/Adventure

Release Date: November, 2022

Mojave Man continues the adventure of Arcon Franklin as he seeks to escape the authorities demanding his containment. His rescuer, Elaina, flees with him to a survivalist compound that could end up being a trap. As a tenacious reporter edges closer to exposing Arcon, Jesus himself makes his desires known. Whether he likes it or not, Arcon’s foray into the outside world could be cut short. He may have to return to ArcPoint, whether they want him back or not.

Click here to get your copy!

About the Author

John Gilbert Wozniak (JW Gilbert) grew up in an Oregon farm town. He retired in 2016 as an international data center cooling expert. Around the turn of the century, he began writing as a hobby. After years of expert guidance and a lot of editing, his ArcPoint trilogy is complete. His intent is to write books that are enjoyed by all ages—biblically accurate—with a touch of adventure, romance, and humor. JW has been married to his best friend Darlene since 1980. They are both retired and enjoy the hobby of creating lapidary jewelry. He is a member of Oregon Christian Writers, Mensa, ALLi, and the Tualatin Valley Gem Club.

More from JW

I became an avid fan of Christian fiction, especially after reading This Present Darkness by Frank Peretti. Working 12-hour night shifts as a data center technician, I had ample time on my hands. At one point I was devouring a book per night, but my favorite genre—action/adventure—was almost non-existent in Christian fiction. So, as is the case with many would-be authors, I decided to write the book I wanted to read. The setting? The future when Jesus is ruling the world, as told in Revelation chapter 20. My protagonist? Arcon, an adventurous young man from an isolated tribe of people. The premise? The people of ArcPoint don’t know that the outside world is safe and that Jesus has returned.

My first attempt at writing went well. I wrote my first draft in three weeks, edited it for six months, and landed a hybrid publisher with the final manuscript. The book garnered four- and five-star reviews, so I was pleased. (Not bad for someone who’d flunked English three times.) I was glad the reviews showed that the writing was good, but my readers were missing the message. I pulled it off the market.

For the past few years I’ve been honing my skills as a writer and reworking my ArcPoint story. There have been a few challenges. While researching, I found over a thousand verses in the Bible that sparked ideas for the time period I was writing about. Now the original book has become a trilogy, plus a prequel. However, traditional Christian publishers were not in the market for adventure stories, so I had to learn about self-publishing. And then, like a page right out of my prequel, the unexpected happened—a pandemic. I decided it would be best to put off publicizing until the entire trilogy was available. Now it is.

To see if the first book was ready to be self-published, I sent copies of Mojave Rift to Reader’s Favorite for professional reviews. It got five stars across the board. Then I entered Mojave Rift in their contest and won a silver medal. All the reviewers seemed to appreciate my inclusion of action, romance, and humor in a squeaky clean, fast-paced, futuristic novel.

I hope my ArcPoint series receives high scores from English teachers, but since I still don’t know a passive voice from a hole in the plot, we’ll see. Writing likable characters and adventure stories that run deep and inspire is something I enjoy. I’ve worked hard and it’s a thrill to get high audience scores.

BTW, did I mention the world-building for the isolated tribe in my story is set in America? Now that was a challenge.

Blog Stops

Vicky Sluiter, November 9 (Author Interview)

Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, November 10

By The Book, November 11 (Author Interview)

Texas Book-aholic, November 12

Simple Harvest Reads, November 13 (Author Interview)

Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, November 14

For the Love of Literature, November 15 (Author Interview)

Mary Hake, November 15

Locks, Hooks and Books, November 16

Tell Tale Book Reviews, November 17 (Author Interview)

Blogging With Carol, November 18

Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, November 19 (Author Interview)

The Lit Lady, November 20

Artistic Nobody, November 21 (Author Interview)

Exploring the Written Word, November 21

Guild Master, November 22 (Author Interview)

Giveaway

To celebrate his tour, JW is giving away the grand prize package of a $25 Amazon gift card and a print copy of Mojave Man!!

Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

https://promosimple.com/ps/28d34/mojave-man-celebration-tour-giveaway

Interview

How did you get started in writing? Senior year in high school, I had to write a survival paper—worth 25% of the entire grade for the year. We had all year to do it, but I waited until two days before it was due. I went to a girlfriend’s house and made up a story. I rattled it off, she wrote it down, and her mom typed it. I got a B+ because the teacher loved the story. It would take nearly 30 years and getting saved before I had another good story, but now I have a few—and I learned to type.

Do you have a favorite scene in your newest release? In Mojave Man, it has to be the restaurant scene in chapter 22 (for the romance and humor).

What is the genre you write? Christian Fiction. The sub-genre is a little vague—either action/adventure or speculative.

What is one thing you hope readers will take away from your story? There is hope for the future. Jesus is returning soon to rule this planet, and there will be peace on earth. Based on hundreds of Bible verses, that is the premise of the ArcPoint trilogy.

How do you get your story ideas? Personal experience mostly, as well as writing about things I’d really like to see.

What advice can you give to writers trying to break into the publishing world? Everything has changed in this new century. Traditional publishers have a lot of requirements that you should be aware of. Self-publishing allows more freedom, but it’s a lot of work. In both cases it’s good to do your research early.

What do you plan to work on next? Mojave Rock (book 3) will be out soon. A prequel to the trilogy (Mojave Lee) will come soon next year. I have a time machine sort of thing started that I’d like to finish, as well as rewrite my first two books.

Where can readers connect with you? Best place would be: jwgilbertbooks.com

4 Thoughts to “Mojave Man”

  1. This sounds like an incredible story!

    1. jodiewolfe

      Hope you enjoy it, Emma. Thanks for stopping by.

  2. MICHAEL A LAW

    This looks like a great novel. Thanks for hosting this giveaway.

    1. jodiewolfe

      You’re welcome. Great to have you stop by.

Comments are closed.