Showing posts with label author interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author interviews. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Kaaren Christopherson of Decorum - #interview


Kaaren Christopherson’s brilliantly observed novel captures the glamour and grit of one of the world’s most dazzling cities during one of its most tumultuous eras–as seen through the eyes of a singularly captivating heroine…

In 1890s New York, beautiful, wealthy Francesca Lund is an intriguing prospect for worthy suitors and fortune hunters alike. Recently orphaned, she copes by working with the poor in the city’s settlement movement. But a young woman of means can’t shun society for long, and Francesca’s long-standing acquaintance with dashing Edmund Tracey eventually leads to engagement. Yet her sheltered upbringing doesn’t blind her to the indiscretions of the well-to-do…

Among the fashionable circle that gathers around her there are mistresses, scandals, and gentlemen of ruthless ambition. And there is Connor O’Casey–an entirely new kind of New Yorker. A self-made millionaire of Irish stock, Connor wants more than riches. He wants to create a legacy in the form of a luxury Madison Avenue hotel–and he wants Francesca by his side as he does it. In a quest that will take her from impeccable Manhattan salons to the wild Canadian Rockies, Francesca must choose not only between two vastly different men, but between convention and her own emerging self-reliance.


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MEET THE AUTHOR


Kaaren Christopherson is the author of Decorum—a novel about Gilded Age New York—that began taking form in 1999 during a course on writing historical fiction. From that moment, Connor O’Casey (who had been rattling around in her brain for months) finally appeared one night and said, “All right, woman. Here I am. What are you going to do about my story?” So she began to put his words on paper, and he hasn’t kept quiet since. Soon Francesca, Blanche, Tracey, Vinnie, and the rest of the characters began arguing, gossiping, loving, and forming themselves into Kaaren’s first novel.

Kaaren has had a professional career writing and editing for over 30 years and is a senior editor for an international development nonprofit organization in Washington, DC.

She has written fiction since her school days, story poems, children’s books, historical fiction, and time travel, and continues to be active in writer’s groups and writing workshops. In addition to her career as a writer, Kaaren was the owner of a decorative painting business. She loves to travel and prowl through historical sites, galleries, and museums. She is active in several churches in DC and in her local Northern Virginia community, where she shares her home with feline brothers, Archie and Sammy.

A Michigan native, Kaaren received her BA in history and art and her MA in educational administration from Central Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan.

For more information visit Kaaren Christopherson’s website. You can also find her on FacebookTwitter, and Goodreads
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INTERVIEW!

1.  Who did the cover for Decorum? Decorum had reached the stage in the publishing process when work on the cover art was about to begin. I was so very fortunate that just at that time my editor at Kensington Publishing saw this painting of Olivia Peyton Murray Cutting in a Gilded Age exhibit in the Museum of the City of New York. He asked me whether I thought this would be good inspiration for the art department at Kensington to create a new, original cover for Decorum. Of course, I said yes! Before I knew it, Kensington had acquired the rights to use the actual painting for the cover. I feel very fortunate to have Mrs. Cutting represent the look and feel of the Gilded Age. She’s perfect.

2.  How did you come up with the idea for 'The O’Casey Chronicle' as a way to give your readers 'extra'?

I was trying to come up with a way to get potential readers interested in the novel in the months leading up to the release of Decorum. Decorum is my first novel, so I didn’t have a ready-made audience from previous books and readers didn’t know anything about me as a writer. I came up with the idea of an 1890s tabloid that would give backstory on the characters without actually giving the plot of the book away, plus a character biosketch, and “Miss Decorum,” which was intended to introduce the idea of etiquette and the quotations that are in the novel. So, for example, the first issue of The O’Casey Chronicle features an article about what happened the day Francesca’s family was killed, which is the opening chapter of the book, but from a reporter’s perspective. It also has Francesca’s bio and a little Miss Decorum piece. The O’Casey Chronicle ran twice a month for eight months in the run-up to Decorum’srelease. Readers can see all the issues of The O’Casey Chronicle on my website: http://www.kaarenchristopherson.com/the-ocasey-chronicle

3.  When did you first get bitten by the writing bug?
I have always loved writing and can remember as a child making little books, drawing the illustrations, and then stapling them along the edges. The first time I tried writing anything historical was in junior high school. I had a wonderful 9th grade English teacher who had a real knack for teaching literature—not only reading it, but writing it. She had us experiment with writing using concepts that many writers have trouble with, like point of view (who is telling the story) and onomatopoeia (using words that sound like what they represent, like sizzle or hush). I wrote a short story for class about Jennie Wade, the only civilian killed during the Battle of Gettysburg, from the point of view of her sister, with whom Jennie had been staying to care for her after childbirth. It was such a great challenge, using my imagination to bring a scene from history to life. I think I realized then that writing would be in my future. (I got an A for the Jennie Wade story, by the way.)

4.  What brought you from Michigan to DC? Like so many people in the Washington, DC, area, I came for a job. That was a very long time ago; I’ve actually spent more of my life in the DC area than in Michigan. I do get back to Michigan several times a year to see my family.

5.  If you could invite any writers from history to a supper soiree, whom would you invite and what would you talk about?

What a great idea! How about William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, F. Scott Fitzgerald (and Zelda), Edith Wharton (maybe she’d bring artist Edgar Degas with her), Leo Tolstoy, and Agatha Christie? I would be fascinated to hear them talk about how they approach their characters, how they handle the passage of time (meaning does the story take place in one day, over the course of a month, a year, over many years?), pacing the story, and where they get their inspiration—many of the same questions aspiring writers and avid readers ask. We never stop learning.

6.  If you could live in any time period of your choosing, when would you choose and why? Wow, that’s tough, there are so many years and eras I find fascinating, especially linked to events. I would love to have been in the crowd at Lindbergh’s landing at Le Bourget Field in Paris in May of 1927 or to have walked the streets of Boston or Philadelphia or New York before the American Revolution. I would love to have seen London before the great fire of 1666 or before the Blitz destroyed so much of London during World War II. I would love to have caught a glimpse of Queen Elizabeth I or France’s Louis XIV or to have seen San Francisco before the 1906 earthquake and fire. I would love to have been a fly on the wall during the negotiation of the Treaty of Versailles or the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

7.  Some fiction authors title their chapters and some don't.  Is there some kind of rule to follow? And is a title meant to be kind of a preview?

I don’t think there’s any particular rule about titling chapters and you certainly see it done (or not) in many different ways. In the case of Decorum, the chapter title is taken from the little quotation from my great-grandmother’s etiquette book that introduces each chapter, so it has a real purpose. The chapter title and the quotation provide a set-up.

8.  What advice would you give to children who like to write?

Read, read, and read some more. Write, write, and write some more. Reading fuels writing. It’s like learning by observation. Eventually, what you love to read may become what you love to write.

9.  Where is a place (country or city) in the world you have not visited but would like to? My bucket list—goodness! I’d love to take a European river cruise. I’d love to visit St. Petersburg and the Hermitage. Turkey intrigues me. There are many, many places on the American continent I’d like to visit. Too many places, too little time!

10.  Does O’Casey et al have more stories to tell?

There are always more stories for any group of characters. I would love to write more about Connor, Francesca, Blanche, Vinnie, and the gang. I also have other stories going through my head, with characters I think could be very intriguing. So stay tuned!

Sweet Pepper Hero by J. J. Cook - #review, #interview #giveaway


Old rivalries heat up in the fourth Sweet Pepper Fire Brigade mystery from the national bestselling author of In Hot Water.

Fire chief Stella Griffin has been put in charge of judging the annual recipe contest, but Eric—her resident ghost and true culinary genius—has vanished. Before she can track down his latest haunt, she’s called in to investigate a local moonshine distillery that was set ablaze, making her realize there’s more than pies and cakes cooking in Sweet Pepper.

As rumors of a revived whiskey war ignite, Stella turns to the town’s elders to help her find answers. The past might have some clues as to what has sparked the present fires. But when following a lead lands her in buried rubble, Stella realizes she must extinguish this case fast or she might be going down in flames.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

High Strung by Janice Peacock - #review #interview #giveaway


***High Strung, A Glass Bead Mystery ebook will be 99 cents from Dec 5 to Dec 9. A Bead in the Hand, book two in the Glass Bead Mystery Series, is now available.  Both can be found in paperback and ebook editions on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iTunes.

After inheriting a house in Seattle, Jax O’Connell is living the life of her dreams as a glass beadmaker and jewelry designer. When she gets an offer to display her work during a bead shop’s opening festivities, it’s an opportunity Jax can’t resist—even though Rosie Perez, the store’s owner, is the surliest person Jax has ever met.

The weekend’s events become a tangled mess when a young beadmaker is found dead nearby and several oddball bead enthusiasts are suspects. Jax must string together the clues to clear her friend Tessa’s name—and do it before the killer strikes again.

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

#Interview: Nicky Penttila of The Spanish Patriot



Nicky Penttila writes stories with adventure, ideas, history, and love. She enjoys coming up with stories that are set in faraway cities and countries, because then she *must* travel there, you know, for research. She lives in Maryland with her reading-mad husband and amazing rescue cat.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Alison Morton of Aurelia - #interview #giveaway


Late 1960s Roma Nova, the last Roman colony that has survived into the 20th century. Aurelia Mitela is alone - her partner gone, her child sickly and her mother dead - and forced to give up her beloved career as a Praetorian officer.

But her country needs her unique skills. Somebody is smuggling silver - Roma Nova's lifeblood - on an industrial scale. Sent to Berlin to investigate, she encounters the mysterious and attractive Miklos who knows too much and Caius Tellus, a Roma Novan she has despised and feared since childhood.

Barely escaping a trap set by a gang boss intent on terminating her, she discovers that her old enemy is at the heart of all her troubles and pursues him back home to Roma Nova...


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AUTHOR INFORMATION

Even before she pulled on her first set of combats, Alison Morton was fascinated by the idea of women soldiers. Brought up by a feminist mother and an ex-military father, it never occurred to her that women couldn’t serve their country in the armed forces. Everybody in her family had done time in uniform and in theatre – regular and reserve Army, RAF, WRNS, WRAF – all over the globe.

So busy in her day job, Alison joined the Territorial Army in a special communications regiment and left as a captain, having done all sorts of interesting and exciting things no civilian would ever know or see. Or that she can talk about, even now…

But something else fuels her writing… Fascinated by the mosaics at Ampurias (Spain), at their creation by the complex, power and value-driven Roman civilisation started her wondering what a modern Roman society would be like if run by strong women…

Now, she lives in France and writes Roman-themed alternate history thrillers with tough heroines:

INCEPTIO, the first in the Roma Nova series

– shortlisted for the 2013 International Rubery Book Award
– B.R.A.G. Medallion
– finalist in 2014 Writing Magazine Self-Published Book of the Year

PERFIDITAS, second in series

– B.R.A.G. Medallion
– finalist in 2014 Writing Magazine Self-Published Book of the Year

SUCCESSIO, third in series

– Historical Novel Society’s indie Editor’s Choice for Autumn 2014
– B.R.A.G. Medallion
– Editor’s choice, The Bookseller’s inaugural Indie Preview, December 2014

Fact file

*Education: BA French, German & Economics, MA History
*Memberships: International Thriller Writers, Historical Novel Society, Alliance of Independent Authors, Society of Authors
*Represented by Annette Crossland of A for Authors Literary Agency for subsidiary and foreign rights.



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INTERVIEW WITH THE AUTHOR!

I am so pleased to have author Alison Morton visiting the back porch today, for a little Q&A about Aurelia, the latest installment in her "Roma Nova" series!


1. Are your Roma Nova books standalones on the same theme or does the story continue from book to book?


In a way, both! I wrote the first, INCEPTIO, as a standalone. It was an adventure thriller, but also a story of change and personal empowerment. Mousey Karen transformed herself into resilient Carina. But as I finished the last scene, my head was still full of Roma Nova; I wondered what had happened to Carina afterwards. Six years after her original adventure, I found her in PERFIDITAS established as a Praetorian soldier, but caught in the middle of betrayal and conspiracy.  Nine years later in SUCCESSIO, her children are growing up, but she is facing a vengeful enemy determined to destroy her family, and her country. So each story is a complete episode in Carina’s life, but with a common background.


The imaginary alpine country of Roma Nova, ‘somewhere in Europe’, forms the baseplate for each story. Romans were both urban and rural creatures; land and food were very important to them. Much of the action in each book takes place in towns and cities, but for Roma Novans, their family farm is a haven and a reminder of their roots.


With AURELIA, I’ve gone back to the late 1960s and started a new cycle of three books centred around Aurelia Mitela, Carina’s grandmother. This clever, tough woman in her seventies intrigued me more and more as I was writing the first three books. What part had she played as a younger woman in the Great Rebellion? When and where did she meet her lost love? Why was she still so fearful of her old enemy, long dead? Older Aurelia is a crucial influence in Carina’s life, so reading about Aurelia’s younger self and Roma Nova’s secrets is an ideal place to start reading the whole series.
3.  Are there any other alternative histories you would like to explore?

At present, no – my head is still full of Roma Nova.  I’m a historian with a lifelong fascination for Rome, so I think I need to work off that obsession first!


4.  If you could invite any author from history to supper and conversation at your home, whom would you invite and what would you discuss?


Could I cheat and have a group? Jane Austen for her intelligence and comedic wit, Pliny the Younger, the son of a strong mother and who witnessed the Pompeii eruption in AD 79. His letters to Trajan provide one of the few surviving records of the relationship between the imperial office and provincial governors. My third would be Germaine Greer, the Australian feminist writer. What an explosive mixture!


5.  What is the best thing about being a writer?
The interesting people you meet – fellow authors whether famous or beginners, publishing professionals, researchers and above all, readers!


6.  What is your writing process?  (when? where? etc.)
Chaotic! I write each day if I can; if I don’t, I feel restless as well as guilty. We’ve converted part of our basement into an office and furnished it with ergonomic desks and plenty of cupboard and shelf space, so no excuses!  

As for the books… The first set of characters had been maturing in my head for years; they were nearly fully formed when I started. Now, I sketch out a general outline of each plot and let the detail evolve as I go along. Sometimes, the characters take over the show! Then I have a little talk to them and we agree on a compromise and I nudge them back into the story.


I’ve developed a tracking grid which keeps the timeline straight and where I can jot down the main actions in each chapter – a kind of index to the book. This is especially helpful when I wield my red pen for the first (self) edit. I’m as ruthless with this as any Roman commander! Then off it goes to a structural (developmental) editor.  She looks for plot holes, character failings, extraneous or awkward scenes and inconsistent dialogue, but more than anything, for cohesiveness and whether the story grips. Without page-turning quality, the book won’t deliver a good read. After all, that’s the writer’s job!


After having the revised manuscript copy-edited, I give it a final check and send it off through the ether to the publishing house for them to turn it into a real book…

7.  What advice would you give to schoolchildren who say they are interested in writing as a career?

Don’t!  Seriously, it’s a good idea to have another career that will pay the mortgage and buy food. It will also give you invaluable life experience for when the writing bug bites so deep you can’t do anything else. And keep writing. Anything is good – plays, stories, letters to magazines, essays, reports for the school magazine/blog, then start sending short stories to competitions and submitting for anthologies. Connect with other writers, but just keep on practising.


Thank you so much, LuAnn, for letting me be a guest on your blog.
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Thank you for visiting and sharing your wonderful alternative history series with us!
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GIVEAWAY!!!
Aurelia

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Click the banner above to visit the tour schedule at Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours, where you will find more hosts of spotlights and a review!  You can also find out how to apply to become a tour host while you are there!

Monday, October 19, 2015

The Color of Clouds by J.C. Whyte - #review #interview #giveaway


Pedro’s on a mission. But not your everyday, run-of-the-mill type mission. Because Pedro is dead.

That’s right. Dead.

Spirit guide Pedro normally busies himself with conveying messages from departed loved ones through a psychic named Gwen. But when he encounters a recently deceased teenager, the boy’s anguish just about breaks Pedro’s heart. So the spirit guide decides to try and help this boy. Yet meddling in the affairs of the living is a troublesome business, as Pedro soon discovers.

Nevertheless, he convinces Gwen to take an ocean voyage, and that’s when the trouble begins. Within days of leaving port, two passengers on the cruise ship fall into a mysterious coma. Gwen seeks Pedro’s help to restore these passengers, but natural as well as unnatural obstacles keep getting in the way. And by the time the ship docks in Honolulu, the still-living are flat out scrambling for their lives!

A playful blend of science fiction and the paranormal, The Color of Clouds offers a glimpse into the unseen world while taking the reader on an extraordinary ride. The adventure includes danger, mystery, humor, sweet romance and even a dash of thriller.

But the clouds are not what you think.


Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Plantation Shudders by Ellen Byron - #review #interview #giveaway


Check in for some Southern hospitality in Plantation Shudders, the Cajun Country series debut from Ellen Byron.

It’s the end of the summer and Prodigal Daughter Maggie Crozat has returned home to her family’s plantation-turned-bed-and-breakfast in Louisiana. The Crozats have an inn full of guests for the local food festival–elderly honeymooners, the Cajun Cuties, a mysterious stranger from Texas, a couple of hipster lovebirds, and a trio of Georgia frat boys. But when the elderly couple keels over dead within minutes of each other–one from very unnatural causes– Maggie and the others suddenly become suspects in a murder.

With the help of Bo Durant, the town’s handsome new detective, Maggie must investigate to clear her name while holding the family business together at the same time. And the deeper she digs, the more she wonders: are all of the guests really there for a vacation or do they have ulterior motives? Decades-old secrets and stunning revelations abound in Ellen Byron’s charming cozy debut, Plantation Shudders.


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MY REVIEW

I like the element of the supernatural in Plantation Shudders.  And yes, that is the correct spelling, because the author refers to the shudders you get when a cold chill runs up your spine, and not the window decor when using the term.  You see, when you get the shudders, that means something bad is going to happen.  And in my book, a older couple who keel over after supper is definitely in 'minus' side of the day's events.

I'm feeling like it would be hard to have to turn the family home into a B&B.  Granted, many of the larger homes and estates have really too much room for one family, but you'd always have to be on your best behavior with guests coming and going at all hours.  But times are tough all over and it's not only the working class feeling the pinch.

The sheriff did not impress me much.  It's great that Ms. Byron writes unlikeable characters so well.  I get it that he is from a rival old family in the area, but if he draws out the investigation to force the Crozats into losing money (as they generously offered to either have their guests transferred to another accommodation or to let them stay on where they were for free), then it's time for johnny law to step down and let someone who can keep their business and personal lives separate.

Once the older couple, who were not whom they claimed to be, met their maker, the other guests' facades started falling faster than the leaves in autumn.  Most or all of them had something to hide.  Of course, this is not a bad thing in a murder mystery, because it leaves lots of suspects to sort through.  If everyone knew whodunit right from the start, it would make for some very short books!

The setting was wonderfully written by Ms. Byron.  I could feel the history and the danger of the old plantation and area seeping into my bones.  It's going to be fun watching Maggie and Bo 'dance' around each other in a kind of Cajun "West Side Story", as the Crozats and Durants are rival families.

All in all, Plantation Shudders is a wonderful debut novel!  Makes me want to go to Louisiana, check in at the Crozat's B&B (or something similar) in time to sit on the porch reading the follow-up novel and sip sweet tea!

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MEET THE AUTHOR



Byron is a native New Yorker who loves the rain, lives in bone-dry Los Angeles, and spends lots of time writing about Louisiana. She attributes this obsession to her college years at New Orleans’ Tulane University. Her debut novel, Plantation Shudders: A Cajun Country Mystery, launches on August 11th.  Her TV credits include Wings, Just Shoot Me, and many network pilots.  She’s written over 200 magazine articles, and her published plays include the award-winning, Graceland.  She is also the recipient of a William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grant. She’s the proud mom of a fifteen year-old daughter and two very spoiled rescue dogs.

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AUTHOR INTERVIEW

Do you like one style of writing (fiction, playwrighting, television, magazines) more than the others?  If so, which one and why?
I actually don’t have a favorite. I like to go back and forth because if I do one style too much, I risk burning myself out. I’m really loving writing fiction right now. But I’ve also been doing a lot of guest blogging, and it’s really fun to come up with a short, entertaining piece. It provides a nice balance with the fiction.
So, your debut novel.  Excited?!?!?!
Sooooooooo excited!!! I am having the time of my life. One of the biggest thrills is hearing from people who’ve responded to the book. I feel like I’ve been welcomed into a wonderful new world of authors and readers.
Love the 'breed names' you've come up with for your family's pets.  Can you tell us a little more about them?
There’s this wonderful rescue in Beverly Hills called The Amanda Foundation. We had a rescue basset hound for years that we adopted from Basset Hound Rescue of Southern California, but when our daughter was seven, she asked for “a pet that moves.” (Anyone who’s ever parented a basset hound will be laughing right now!) We went to Amanda, met with three dogs, and Eliza fell in love with Wiley, a fifteen pound mutt who’s got lots of Corgi in him, as well as other breeds (hence our calling him a “corgi-jack-huahua”).Then two years ago, we went back Amanda to get Wiley a friend. Pogo ( a ten-pound Chihuahua and terrier mix of some kind – hence my calling him a “cherrier”) had been surrendered by a heartbroken family that was no longer allowed to keep him where they lived, and Amanda promised they’d find a good home for him. The minute we expressed interest, they were all over us! His name was Snoopy, but he jumps up and down like a Pogo Stick, so our daughter renamed him Pogo. And get this: a couple of weeks ago, I received a Facebook friend request from a teenage girl. I messaged her to find out how we know each other, because she didn’t look familiar. And she wrote back, “We were Pogo’s first family. I just wanted to see how he was doing.” Tears! I sent her pictures, of course.

Here are our boys. (And me in jammies holding the TV remote!)

What made you decide to have a go at writing books after all your other writing experiences?
I’ve always loved reading mysteries. A good friend started a writers group and since I was feeling the aforementioned burn-out from writing for TV, I thought I’d try my hand at a mystery. My first manuscript, You Can Never Be Too Thin or Too Dead, won a William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grant from the Malice Domestic Conference. While I was hunting for an agent and then waiting for that to sell, I wrote Plantation Shudders. Good thing, too, because You Can Never Be Too Thin or Too Dead is still looking for a home. ￿
Has "Graceland" ever been performed at its namesake?
No, not that I know of. But it did get the seal of approval from whatever executive board runs the place. They certainly should like it; it’s basically a mash note to Elvis. BTW, I wrote the play because I didn’t understand the devotion his fans showed him. It seemed, well, fanatical. But writing the play turned me into an Elvis fan, albeit a low-key one.
If money was no object, where would you live?
I’m originally from New York, and my fantasy has always been a Central Park West apartment with a giant terrace and view of Central Park. I’d also have a place in Louisiana, somewhere in Cajun Country, and a vacation house on Bantam Lake in Connecticut. My family had a cottage there for 36 years, but we had to sell it after my dad passed away. I still miss it terribly. 
If you could invite any writer from history to a meal and conversation, whom would you invite and what would you discuss?
Emily Bronte. I’m obsessed with Wuthering Heights, and the Bronte family. Number one on my bucket list is eventually visiting Haworth in England and the Bronte Parsonage. I’d pick her brain about her life and every detail that inspired the world and characters in the book. But having read many biographies of the family, I get the impression she was very reserved and not too communicative, so I’d really have to work at getting information out of her. 
Any idea how many instalments there will be to the Cajun Country Mystery series?
As many as my publisher will allow me to do! I just turned in the manuscript for book two, Body on the Bayou, and I’m super excited about it. My fingers are crossed that I soon get a deal for additional books because I’m really attached to my characters and to Pelican, Louisiana, the fictional village where they live.
Tell us what the future holds for Ellen Byron, writer?
Hopefully a lot more books in the Cajun Country series! I’m also attending conferences like Bouchercon, where I’ll appear on a panel and at the New Author Breakfast. And my television writing partner and I are working on an animated series, as well as a pilot for a cable station. 
If you went to talk to your daughter's school class about being a writer, what would you tell them?
I’d tell them that if you want to pursue a writing career, you must be passionate about it, because it can be a tough road. You hear “no” and “pass” a lot, and it can wear you down. You have to trust your own talent and absolutely adore doing it. I love to write. Love it, whether it’s a play, a TV show, a magazine article, a book, a blog – or a Question and Answer interview! ;-)
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GIVEAWAY!!!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

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(Disclosure:  I received a print copy of this book from the author and publishers in exchange for my honest and unbiased review.) 

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Eric Matheny of The Victim - #interview


In the spring of 2003 on a desolate stretch of Arizona highway, Anton Mackey’s life was changed forever.  A reckless decision to get behind the wheel when he was in no condition to drive spawned a moment that threatened to destroy everything the 21 year-old had spent his life working toward.  In an instant, Anton made a decision to save himself.  A decision that claimed the lives of two people.

Eleven years later, Anton is a rising star in the Miami criminal defense community.  He is married and has an infant daughter.  He is earning a good living and steadily building a name for himself as an aggressive advocate for the accused.  Anton shares an office with veteran defense attorney, Jack Savarese.  A mentor of sorts, Anton strives to model his practice – and career – after Jack’s.  A Miami criminal defense legend, Jack’s accomplishments in the courtroom are second to none.  However, Jack remains burdened by the conviction of Osvaldo Garcia, a mentally-ill client from ten years earlier found guilty and sentenced to life in prison for the death of a troubled teen.

When Daniella Avery, the beautiful wife of a man accused of a heinous act of domestic violence, comes into Anton’s office seeking his services, Anton thinks he’s landed a great case with a great fee.  But when he succumbs to temptation, he realizes that Daniella is a figure from his past.

Anton finds himself caught between the possibility of being exposed and the fact that his client – Daniella’s husband – may be an innocent pawn in the victim’s attempt to carry out her revenge against Anton.  As Anton struggles to balance defending his client while concealing the secret he has sought to forget, he uncovers the truth behind what really happened on that highway eleven years earlier.  The truth that may be connected to the conviction of Osvaldo Garcia.

Monday, September 21, 2015

#bookreview #interview Brooklyn Drop by Susan Russo Anderson


In the middle of a wintry night, private investigator Fina Fitzgibbons finds Lorraine’s friend, Phyllida Oxley, slumped over her dining room table, the victim of memory-impairing date rape drugs. When her condition goes from poor to comatose, her distraught fifteen-year-old granddaughter, Kat Oxley disappears. Meanwhile, Fina’s agency is busy surveilling a massage parlor in Bensonhurst suspected of human trafficking, and Fina’s father reappears to throw a wrench into her relationship with NYPD Patrol Officer Denny McDuffy. As Fina frantically searches for the missing teen, she uncovers the truth behind the traffickers, but they have a surprise waiting for her in the not-so-friendly skies.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

#Interview: Laura Lee of Identity Theft



Laura Lee is the author of 14 books. She is best known for her non-fiction with such publishers as Reader's Digest, Harper Collins, Running Press and Broadway Books. Her first novel Angel was published in 2011, released in an audio edition last year and will be published in a second edition later this year. She has also written two collections of poetry, and a children’s book (A Child’s Introduction to Ballet). She brings to her writing a unique background as a radio announcer, improvisational comic and one-time professional mime and she divides her time between writing and organizing national ballet master class tours. The San Francisco Chronicle said of her work, “Lee’s dry, humorous tone makes her a charming companion… She has a penchant for wordplay that is irresistible.”

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When the rock star she idolized responded to her e-mail, Candi was thrilled. When he started to flirt with her, she thought all her dreams could come true. The fantasy takes over her entire life, but none of it is true. The man of her dreams is not a rock star at all, but a bored office worker whose internet game quickly spins out of control.

Laura Lee’s second novel, Identity Theft, is now available. It is a humorous, thought-provoking examination of the state of the self in the 21st Century full of surprising plot twists.

It explores celebrity, online relationships, the loss of professional identity that comes with insecure employment and how inner reality is often at odds with outer image.


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AUTHOR INTERVIEW


1.  What was the hardest book for you to write?

I don't think any of them have been hard to write. Some of them take a while. They tend to be hard to sell.

2.  Where do you stand on the indie-traditional publishing debate?

I'm not sure what the debate is. As it stands now, traditional publishers are most interested in publishing the types of authors who least need them. That is, people who are already famous. They already have an audience and can sell directly to them and not  have to give up 70% of their royalties. I imagine that this will not be sustainable as a business model. Literature will always exist. Right now the indie publishing model doesn't work. Writers cannot make a living wage from it, with very few exceptions. There is very little quality control. What is really needed is some sort of farm system to develop talent, promote it, and share in the rewards of championing great literature.

3.  Have you been 'tricked' by someone who presented a false online presence?  (I only ask because I was ... many years ago.)

No, but I did have someone contact me who thought he was an alien and said he could tell by my writing that I was one of the aliens too.

4.  You get to invite your favorite author of all time to a place where time has no meaning (so you can both be alive at the same time) for supper and conversation.  What's on the menu and what would you talk about?

I would sit with Oscar Wilde and his friends at the Cafe Royal and listen to his stories.

5.  Where in the world would you like to visit that you've never been before?

I have not yet been to Russia.

6.  Your books cover as big a variety as I've ever seen from one author.  Is there one (or more) that appeal to you more as a writer?  A reader?

My books fall into two broad categories. The first is humorous reference and the second is fiction and creative writing. A lot of the topics of the non-fiction books were assigned to me. I enjoy writing those books and they do showcase my sense of humor and my voice as a writer. I had a lot of fun writing the Elvis Impersonation Kit. In general, I have less of an emotional attachment to those books even though I think they are fun. My first novel, Angel, is a book that I am particularly proud of. It was written in a very intuitive way over the course of a decade.

7.  Describe your ideal writing day.

I don't have an ideal writing day. The most pleasant days are when the subconscious has done its work and delivered up something. Writing is a process of ebb and flow and all of the stages are necessary. There is a stage where an idea has not quite coalesced. All you can do is walk away from it for an hour, a day or a few years and let the subconscious work on it. When the subconscious is done and it delivers up the piece that makes everything fit together you generally want to have nothing else on your plate so you can work exclusively on getting it all down. At the moment I am trying to write a book proposal but I am on the road with my ballet project, so my writing time and attention are very fragmented.

8.  Three students come to you:  a grade-schooler, from jr high (middle school) and from high school, and tell you they want to be writers.  What do you tell them and does it change from one age group to the other?

When anyone comes to me and wants me to read something they have written I try to figure out of they actually want constructive criticism or if they want praise. If they clearly just want praise, I don't offer constructive criticism because they will not listen to it.

9.  What is your favorite color?​


Do people really have favorite colors?

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Be sure to check out my review of Identity Theft from yesterday!




Many thanks to Sage's Blog Tours for including me on the tour for this title!