Sam Love

See YouTube excerpt of Woodstock Library Reading with exclusive interview by a major radio celebrity

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HF7kNLHzPA4

A bit of Honey

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

 

Electric Honey press releases

Media Kit

How to purchase:

Electric Honey is available for purchase on Amazon.com

 

Unpublished Short Stories

by Sam Love,

The Box, No one expected Sandy to become a celebrity, but then the media storm hit.

R Day, Just another day in the library...

A Literary Encounter, Be careful when you ask for comments at your writer's group...

Dream House, A dreamy real estate deal...

Surreal Estate, Sometimes you get more than you bargain for...

 

Photo Gallery

Contact Info

sam@samlove.net

 

Interesting Links

http://www.tompacheco.com

http://www.tomchalk.com

http://www.creative-mindflow.com

 

 

 

 

 
Why I wrote Electric Honey
I attended college in the 60's, and I decided someone should write a story exploring a time that now seems like a fairy tale. Explore with me a period when magic hijacked America. Some inhaled its freedom (unlike Bill Clinton who swears he didn't inhale) and others tried to crush it, but then they also had their repressed secrets....
Electric Honey

Cover by Tom Chalkley, an activist cartoonist who has drawn for the New Yorker.

What they are saying about Electric Honey:

"Having lived through the life-altering 60's, 
this book would make a fantastic movie that could share the magic decade's experience with a new generation. A must read." 
--George Pierson, Former Senior Vice President, Discovery Communications and founder Creative Mindflow

  
 "An enjoyable book for all those who lived through the 60's and it will also appeal to
their children to help them understand their  
occasionally loony parents."
- -Tom Pacheco, a wonderful 60's -style folk singer who lives in Woodstock, NY

 

"Electric Honey is a funny spoof of the sixties. Lots of laughs as the Sidney Bunch Society, dreamchild of a few mischievous students, collides with John Birch Society-style superpatriots in an era when paranoia ran deep in Mississippi."
-- Curtis Wilkie, Kelly Gene Cook Sr. Chair of Journalism, The University of Mississippi