About Author

Benny Sims

Benny Sims
  • Genre:

    Crime Fiction Thriller Suspense Mystery
  • Country: United States
  • Books: 1
  • Profession: Retired
  • Born: May 4
  • Member Since: Feb 2020
  • Profile Views: 9,767
  • Followers: 13
  • VISIT AUTHOR: Twitter, Goodreads, Amazon,
BIOGRAPHY

Benny Sims has always loved the art of storytelling. He can trace that fondness to reading Jack London’s “The Call Of The Wild” when he was in the second grade, and listening to his great uncle tell war stories from his time as an artillery cannoneer in North Africa and Italy during World War II.

He was born and grew up in middle Tennessee, but his family moved to Benton, Illinois when he was fourteen years old. It was there that his teachers noticed his aptitude for writing, and encouraged him to pursue it. He attended college at Murray State University in Kentucky, where he studied journalism. His Journalism 101 professor saw his ability and affection for writing, and fine-tuned his ability to tell a story. This ability helped him serve as a writer for the university’s newspaper and yearbook.

After college, he landed a job as a sports writer and editor with a small newspaper near his hometown in Tennessee. After a couple of years there, he accepted a job with the aerospace industry in nearby Huntsville, Alabama. He recently retired and moved to Foley, Alabama.

Thanks to a large family that threatened to disown him if he didn’t develop a well-rounded sense of humor, he intentionally puts something funny in most aspects of his life, whether it’s writing a blog post about how comedians were his heroes as he grew up, or by giving his niece a high school graduation gift of a check for $114.64.

As a former athlete, he’s a fan of most sports. But since he lives in Alabama, he has to declare a love for college football or risk getting kicked out of the state. He considers himself a bit of a trivia nerd with a weird ability to remember the names of obscure musicians and songs from decades ago. One of the greatest mysteries of his life is how this ability hasn’t enabled him to land a high-paying job as the host of Jeopardy.

Among his favorite accomplishments in life, aside from getting “Code Gray” published, is teaching himself to play the guitar and attaining the rank of second-degree black belt in karate. He likes to warn people not to antagonize him, because he knows karate, jujitsu, judo, and several other Japanese words.

Along with his novel and blog posts, his writing credits include a self-published novel titled “The Protester,” and a short story that was published on the Huffington Post. His hobbies include traveling, fishing, reading, going to the beach, and writing…preferably at the beach.

Benny Sims's Books

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Book
Code Gray: Bodie Anderson Thrillers: Book 1
$5.99 kindle Free with KUeBook,
Code Gray: Bodie Anderson Thrillers: Book 1by Benny SimsPublish: Feb 12, 2020Crime Fiction Thriller Suspense Mystery

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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • The level of importance depends on the reader, but if I'm reading a book, I get turned off by bad punctuation and improper word usage (your/you're, their/they're/there, to, too, two). If a writer doesn't understand basic grammar, they have a long way to go before they're taken seriously.

        The writing "voice" matters, too. Sometimes readers don't quite connect with a writer because the voice doesn't draw the reader in. But it's all subjective. I've had numerous rejections from agents because they didn't connect with my voice, but other liked my writing style.

        A few other things I consider important:
        *Believable dialogue. Write the way people actually talk. Don't be afraid to use contractions.
        *Have characters people want to read about. That doesn't mean they all have to be good guys. Even villains can be interesting.
        *A book isn't officially a book until someone reads it, and readers tend to skip over extremely long paragraphs. I prefer to use fewer sentences per paragraph, which creates more paragraphs per page, which in turn makes more white space that is more attractive to the reader.
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • I'll let you know when that happens. Hopefully I'll be recognized by someone who likes my work rather than hates it.
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    • AllAuthor AllAuthor 4 years ago
      Allauthor
    • Have you ever experienced "Writer's Block"? Any tips you would like to share to overcome it?
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • It happens to me all the time. I try my best to just push through it, and sometimes it works. Sometimes it ends up looking like I'm writing in a foreign language and I have to delete everything.

        The more often you write, the less likely you'll have writer's block.
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    • AllAuthor AllAuthor 4 years ago
      Allauthor
    • Have you ever incorporated something that happened to you in real life into your novels?
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • Yes. In Code Gray my MC sees a television interview with a priest, where he's asked about the political divide in the country. That was inspired by an actual interview I saw decades ago. I can't remember the name of the priest or the show.
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • I'd love to see a story of mine turned into a movie. It's literally a one-in-a-gazillion chance, but hey, I can dream, can't I?
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • I'm not sure they're quite as aware as people were 40-50 years ago, but times change. Reading is a form of gathering information, and with the digital age, information is delivered differently now. Once upon a time, people had to make a trip to the library or book store if they wanted something to read. Now all they need is a phone. This gives better, easier access to information, but I think it reduces empathy for the writer, who may have put years into their work.
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • Probably horror/supernatural. I've always had a fondness for reading about scary things or something that defies belief.
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • I studied journalism in college, and we were taught to be very concise. So, when I made my first feeble attempts at fiction, I wrote it like a news story...kinda. Very Sgt. Friday/Dragnet/Just-the-facts-ma'am style, and it came across as stiff and dry. After I read lots of novels and wrote a lot of stories, my style evolved to include more detail and more thoughts inside a character's head.
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      • Benny Sims Benny Sims 4 years ago
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      • It's the first impression you make with a reader. It's what interests them enough to pull it off the shelf or click on its link to give it a look. I know I've bought books based only on the cover. I've also passed on great books because their cover didn't interest me.
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