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My name is Rich, and I currently have one published work and two being worked on. One of the two I'm working on is a sequel to my first book, the other a collaboration. My collaboration..."
Hi Rich!
Of course, it would be a change in style. But then again it can be quite insightful for a sequel to offer a new point of view or a deeper understanding of a character. I say: go for it!



Unfortunately, a lot of the really good sites (that are free) require at least a week's advanced notice.
However, there are several Facebook groups that you can join that will let you post your promo once you've been accepted into the group.
Many do have rules for your genre so you'll need to check the group's rules on each one.
Just log-in and type in Free Kindle Books and you'll see more groups than you could ever join. Keep in mind that if you try to join more than 20 or so in a day, Facebook will likely put a hold on your account so slow and steady wins the race.
Hope this helps!
Rachel
Entrada Publishing

I've experienced many of the same things you have as I too write erotica. With this sequel I am trying to add more of a romance storyline so it's not just all about the physical aspect (which will still be there plenty). Rachel offered good suggestions to check out Facebook groups. I would also suggest to stay active on social media and engage in conversations with people.
Rich

Same - also write erotica and find many of the promotion options, whether free or paid, do not promote erotic work. On my recent free promotion days I used this service http://askdavid.com/free-ebook-promotion - Got re-tweeted a few times and a several hundred downloads in a day. I *think* you can submit with little notice but not sure.
My name is Rich, and I currently have one published work and two being worked on. One of the two I'm working on is a sequel to my first book, the other a collaboration. My collaboration has shifting viewpoints between two main characters, which I'm enjoying and have brought into my sequel.
My question and scenario is this: My first book was written completely in one point of view. Is it ok for the sequel to now introduce a second point of view to keep the story moving?
Thanks for your insight,
Rich