I've nearly completed my next book, the working title: The Goose Parade of Old Dickeywood. Now that I'm putting the finishing touches on it and plan to query soon, I'm not sure this title catches enough attention. It certainly doesn't show that the book's primary plot is about lifelong friendship. I have to figure this out.
So, my fellow readers and author friends, what are your thoughts?
Authors, how do you decide on a title? (We all realize our publishers can change it, but still...)
Readers, do you select books by title, title plus cover, title plus cover and back cover, or by some other method?
Please leave comments for a chance to win a free copy once it releases.
Multi-genre author Susan Whitfield writes the Logan Hunter Mystery series: Genesis Beach, Just North of Luck,Hell Swamp, Sin Creek and Sticking Point. She authored Killer Recipes, a unique cookbook, and wrote a women's fiction, Slightly Cracked. She is currently writing an historical fiction titled Sprig of Broom. Susan interviews authors and industry experts on the blog. Web site: www.susanwhitfieldonline.com
Followers
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Friday, March 9, 2012
Clairvoyant Deborah Simpson
Aside from being a published author, Dr. Deborah Simpson is also clairvoyant and feels very blessed to have been able to help so many people in life. She doesn't believe dreams are promised to anyone; she believes you have to make a promise to your dreams. Welcome back, Deborah. It's been a long time.
Thank you, Susan. It has been a while.
How many books have you written?
To date, I have written 9 books and published four anthologies featuring work from poetic greats around the world.
What sets your book apart from others?
There are many books published written in the same genres as I write. I believe that what sets my books apart from others is the language usage and layout. I have always been a big fan of words. I believe in reviving words that have otherwise been neglected within the English language. Writing is an art and just as a picture creates its scene, I believe words should create their own vision for the reader. It’s not necessarily what you write, but how you write it. Uniqueness definitely has its place in the literary world.
Are they available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?
My books are available in all formats.
What has been your most rewarding experience during the writing process?
My most rewarding experience, I would say, happened for me when writing The Constellation of Omens. That book was channeled, so after writing blocks of fact in the book and then researching them afterwards to find that they indeed existed, was extremely rewarding in the sense that it provided me with new insights to both my writing and my clairvoyant gifts.
Were any of your books more challenging to write than the others?
Oh definitely. While I find poetry and inspiration to be fairly non-challenging, I found the writing of The Constellation of Omens to be extremely challenging both for content and word usage.
When writing, how do you determine when enough is enough?
I know when enough is enough when I feel it is complete. It’s just a feeling and writing beyond that feeling would be just for padding.
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
Writing is certainly the easy part – marketing is something of an entirely different species. I have learned a few things that I would like to share. Firstly, online, it’s not about what you’ve written, it’s about what others have written. The more you network with other writers, the further your work will reach. Offline, it’s not about what you’ve done, it’s all about who you are. Be who you are and your books will follow. That’s the best advice I can give.
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
I am currently working on another metaphysical novel entitled, Divination alongside a self-help book entitled, Hardboiled Egg.
This sounds intriguing.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
For more information including events, please visit my website at www.deborahsimpson.org. Thank you so much for the interview, Susan.
It's always nice to be in touch with you, Deborah. Continued success.
Thank you, Susan. It has been a while.
How many books have you written?
To date, I have written 9 books and published four anthologies featuring work from poetic greats around the world.
What sets your book apart from others?
There are many books published written in the same genres as I write. I believe that what sets my books apart from others is the language usage and layout. I have always been a big fan of words. I believe in reviving words that have otherwise been neglected within the English language. Writing is an art and just as a picture creates its scene, I believe words should create their own vision for the reader. It’s not necessarily what you write, but how you write it. Uniqueness definitely has its place in the literary world.
Are they available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?
My books are available in all formats.
What has been your most rewarding experience during the writing process?
My most rewarding experience, I would say, happened for me when writing The Constellation of Omens. That book was channeled, so after writing blocks of fact in the book and then researching them afterwards to find that they indeed existed, was extremely rewarding in the sense that it provided me with new insights to both my writing and my clairvoyant gifts.
Were any of your books more challenging to write than the others?
Oh definitely. While I find poetry and inspiration to be fairly non-challenging, I found the writing of The Constellation of Omens to be extremely challenging both for content and word usage.
When writing, how do you determine when enough is enough?
I know when enough is enough when I feel it is complete. It’s just a feeling and writing beyond that feeling would be just for padding.
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
Writing is certainly the easy part – marketing is something of an entirely different species. I have learned a few things that I would like to share. Firstly, online, it’s not about what you’ve written, it’s about what others have written. The more you network with other writers, the further your work will reach. Offline, it’s not about what you’ve done, it’s all about who you are. Be who you are and your books will follow. That’s the best advice I can give.
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
I am currently working on another metaphysical novel entitled, Divination alongside a self-help book entitled, Hardboiled Egg.
This sounds intriguing.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
For more information including events, please visit my website at www.deborahsimpson.org. Thank you so much for the interview, Susan.
It's always nice to be in touch with you, Deborah. Continued success.
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Carolyn Rose's No Substitute for Murder
Carolyn J. Rose is the author of a number of novels, including recent indie titles A Place of Forgetting (ranked in the Kindle top 1,000 in January), An Uncertain Refuge (ranked in the Kindle top 2,000 in Jaunary), and No Substitute for Murder. A mainstream mystery, Hemlock Lake, was released by Five Star in 2010, and two Oregon-coast mysteries (The Big Grabowski and Sometimes a Great Commotion) penned with her husband, Mike Nettleton, came out through Krill Press in 2009 and 2010. In addition, she has six novels available through SynergEbooks.
She grew up in New York’s Catskill Mountains, graduated from the University of Arizona, logged two years in Arkansas with Volunteers in Service to America, and spent 25 years as a television news researcher, writer, producer, and assignment editor in Arkansas, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington. She lives in Vancouver, Washington, and founded the Vancouver Writers’ Mixers. Her interests are reading, gardening, and not cooking.
She’s addicted to Cheetos but made a rule that she can only have them when she’s on vacation or when she finishes writing a book.
How many books have you written?
14 if you count the two that are in first-draft form and will come out later this year.
Give a short synop of some of your most recent books.
No Substitute for Murder
Divorced from a philandering con man and downsized from her job as a talk radio show producer, Barbara Reed is desperate for money. She’s got a mortgage, a college loan, an aging car, and a ten-pound dog named Cheese Puff.
With her unemployment checks running out, she signs on as a high school substitute teacher and learns what stress is all about. When she finds history teacher Henry Stoddard strangled with his own outdated tie, her stress level soars into the red zone. Then she’s assigned to cover his classes.
Stoddard was a bully and a blackmailer. The list of suspects is a long one, and police put Barb at the top. When she discovers a second body, the noose of circumstantial evidence tightens.
With help from the showgirl widow of a reputed mobster, a trash-scavenging derelict, and members of the Cheese Puff Care and Comfort Committee, Barb struggles to keep a grip on her job, her sanity, and her freedom.
Here's my review: for No Substitute for Murder:
As a former educator, I have to admit that Carolyn Rose's account of subsitute teaching cracked me up, mostly due to her humor. The first character she introduces is Wilhemina Frost, affectionately called Big Chill, who schedules subs for teachers. I could swear I worked with this woman for six years. LOL. And who among us hasn't worked with someone who was "a festering boil on the backside"?
I enjoyed the main character, who admitted to having "a water glass figure" and her narration about subbing and getting herself involved in a murder investigation through no fault of her own.
I giggled throughout the novel, vowing to read another book by Carolyn Rose. If you enjoy a mystery with plenty of chuckles, check out No Substitute for Murder.
As a former educator, I have to admit that Carolyn Rose's account of subsitute teaching cracked me up, mostly due to her humor. The first character she introduces is Wilhemina Frost, affectionately called Big Chill, who schedules subs for teachers. I could swear I worked with this woman for six years. LOL. And who among us hasn't worked with someone who was "a festering boil on the backside"?
I enjoyed the main character, who admitted to having "a water glass figure" and her narration about subbing and getting herself involved in a murder investigation through no fault of her own.
I giggled throughout the novel, vowing to read another book by Carolyn Rose. If you enjoy a mystery with plenty of chuckles, check out No Substitute for Murder.
A Place of Forgetting
1966. As summer ends in Maplekill, New York, the dreams of 19-year-old Liz Roark turn to dust. A girl known only as April arrives carrying a duffel bag of bright clothing and an engagement ring from Liz’s childhood sweetheart Ben Hoyt, a Marine missing in action in Vietnam.
Grieving for Ben and for what she thought was love, Liz flees small-town sympathy and humiliation, heading for Chicago to study journalism. But April hijacks the journey, steering them to a remote Arkansas farm and a psychic she hopes will validate her yearning for fame and fortune.
Ripped off and stranded on the psychic’s mountaintop with only a few dollars and a copy of Walden, Liz learns powerful lessons about trust, betrayal, deception, determination, love, and whether the psychic’s vision of tragedy must come to pass.
An Uncertain Refuge
A child orphaned by violence. A woman sworn to protect and raise him. A killer come to claim him. A few deadly minutes in An Uncertain Refuge.
Kate Dalton lives by the rules of honesty and fair play until she steps between a battered woman and the man intent on killing her. Amanda Blake barely survives; her ex-husband dies by Kate’s hand. The repercussions force Kate from her job at a domestic violence shelter. Fleeing unwanted publicity and yearning to break with her past, she heads to the Oregon coast, burdened by a coerced promise to Amanda—to care for the nine-year-old son of the man she killed and shield him from the truth.
For several weeks Kate holds a tattered web of lies together. Then Way-Ray’s vengeful uncle murders Amanda, an ambush journalist tells the story, and the boy bolts in horror. Aided by a dangerous man she doesn’t quite trust, Kate searches for the boy she’s come to love. But a sadistic killer intent on claiming his kin is watching every move.
Hemlock Lake
For generations only a few families held title to land in the isolated Catskill Mountain community of Hemlock Lake. But with the turning of the century one man, lured by easy money, sells his inheritance to a developer of luxury homes. As the contractor bulldozes farmland and forest, neighbors cry environmental rape, and someone threatens to burn what is built.
Hoping to stop the arsonist, but tormented by personal demons, Sergeant Dan Stone reluctantly returns to his family home on the shores of the lake. The previous autumn his wife died in its dark waters and his brother put a bullet in his brain. That tragedy sent Dan’s father drifting toward death.
Isolated by his pain, Dan is thrust into the no man’s land between newcomers and longtime residents who stonewall his investigation into threats, graffiti, theft, and a blaze that nearly kills the construction foreman. Townspeople blame outsiders, eco-terrorists, a ragged tramp haunting the woods and the mysterious creator of rock cairns that often mark the sites of crimes to come. But as summer sizzles on, the arsonist turns killer, and Dan suspects it’s someone he knows well: a firefighter, a friend, or a woman with a killing in her past.
Isolated by his pain, Dan is thrust into the no man’s land between newcomers and longtime residents who stonewall his investigation into threats, graffiti, theft, and a blaze that nearly kills the construction foreman. Townspeople blame outsiders, eco-terrorists, a ragged tramp haunting the woods and the mysterious creator of rock cairns that often mark the sites of crimes to come. But as summer sizzles on, the arsonist turns killer, and Dan suspects it’s someone he knows well: a firefighter, a friend, or a woman with a killing in her past.
The Big Grabowski and Sometimes a Great Commotion are cozy mysteries set in the quirky town of Devil’s Harbor on the Oregon Coast. The Hard Karma Shuffle and The Crushed Velvet Miasma, are set in Portland, Oregon, and feature Paladin, a tie-dye wearing accidental detective. Consulted to Death, Driven to Death, and Dated to Death feature TV news assignment editor Casey Brandt solving crimes in Albuqerque, New Mexico and on a vacation in the Catskills. And The Hermit of Humbug Mountain is a young-adult fantasy set on the Oregon Coast.
How do you motivate your protagonist—with fear, desire, both or something else?
Pain and fear of loss (of any kind) are great motivators, and desire is also strong. I always consider the characters’ core human needs—for love, respect, justice, etc. I ask myself what they want most and what they’re willing to risk to get it. A character with a hole in his soul he’s trying to fill gives me more mileage than one who wants to catch a killer because it’s his job.
How do you make certain that you’ve included all necessary elements in the book? Do you use specific techniques like maps or timelines?
Oh, yeah. I’m a Virgo, so I’m all about calendars and chapter logs. They’re especially important when you’re plotting a mystery because you can’t have the sleuth thinking “on Tuesday they found the body” and the reader saying “they found the body on Monday, you dope.”
In some books I used the calendars to kept track of things like phases of the moon because they were important to the story.
Interesting. What sets your book apart from others?
My name on the cover? LOL
No, seriously, in my more recent books I would say it’s the description and the link to character. I used to just describe things, but lately I have the point-of-view character respond to that description with thought or opinion or action. I think that deepens both description and characterization.
Is it available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?
Yes – paperback, Kindle, and Nook.
What has been your most rewarding experience during the writing process?
Hearing from readers who find me through my website or review my books.
When writing, how do you determine when enough is enough?
Did I mention that I’m a Virgo? I could go on revising forever. When I think I have enough, I send the manuscript to my best friend from second grade. She tells me where I need a little more description or information, or writes “whoa, mommma,” when I’ve put in too much.
Everyone needs a friend like that.
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
In the next year I’ll release a sequel to Hemlock Lake entitled Through a Yellow Wood, and a sequel to An Uncertain Refuge that I’m calling By the Sea of Regret. During 2013, I’ll write the third book in the Hemlock Lake series.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
Check my Amazon author page.
Monday, March 5, 2012
Velda Brotherton's Wolf Song
Velda Brotherton, author of Wolf Song, is here today. Good morning, Velda. Please give us a brief bio, and include something about yourself that readers might be surprised to learn.
Sure, Susan.
I enjoy placing characters within the rich history of our country, in both fiction and nonfiction. But it's fun to step out of the past into contemporary settings to write about women and the challenges they face. Tough heroines, strong and gentle heroes, villains to die for, are brought alive in the pages of my novels and books. I've even written a horror novel that is being considered for publication.
Where do you live, and how has your environment affected your writing?
I live in a home I designed and helped build on the edge of the Ozark National Forest in Arkansas. Like music and poetry, this environment lends peace and tranquility to my writing life. I am able to involve myself totally in every story with no distractions.
How many books have you written?
Written? twenty or thirty, I would suppose. Had published? Thirteen going on fourteen. The rest were merely practice, a way of honing my craft.
Give a short synop of each book of Wolf Song.
Wolf Song is a paranormal mainstream novel recently released by SynergEbooks. Olivia wants only to escape her guilt and run free with the wolves. It will take a wolf to show her how to meet the challenges of her life and two men to teach her to love again. Strangely, the three are one.
Stone Heart's Woman is a western historical romance to be released in February from The Wild Rose Press. Stone Heart is torn between two worlds. Hating one he embraces the other. Aiden Connor stands with him to help his mother's people, the Northern Cheyenne, escape the grasp of the white world and return to their homeland.
What sets your book apart from others?
The depth of unusual characters and the blending of truth and fiction to create unique stories.
What do you think is the greatest lesson you’ve learned about writing so far? What advice can you give other writers?
If you love writing enough to stick to it day after day, no matter the rejections and disappointments, then you will succeed. If you have to force yourself to write, then perhaps you should be doing something else.

Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
My website: http://www.veldabrotherton.com is updated regularly. I also have three blogs: vbrotherton.blogspot.com; veldabrotherton.blogspot.com; velda-brotherton.blogspot.com; at authorveldabrotherton on facebook.
Thanks so much for having me. I enjoyed answering your questions.
I'd like to give a free copy of the book to a commenter.That's great, Velda. Free copies are always a hit, right gang? Nice to get to know you better, Velda. Bloggers, leave a comment in the box below for a chance at the free book.
Friday, March 2, 2012
Carole Gill's House on Blackstone Moor
My guest today is Carole Gill, author of The House on Blackstone Moor. Welcome, Carole.
Please give us a brief bio, and include something about yourself that readers might be surprised to learn.
Thanks, Susan. Surprises: I went to the same acting school Al Pacino did but not at the same time unfortunately. Learning The Method I think benefited me with regard to dialogue writing. Currently I am widely published in sci-fi and horror anthologies. I wrote my first story at age 8. It was about a Martian invasion of earth which wasn’t all that unusual as both of my parents were sci-fi fans.Life got in the way of my writing but I turned back to it some years ago, joined a local writer’s workshop and just started to write for publication. North West Playwrights of England selected me for further development, but I found I preferred fiction writing. Besides, I didn’t think I would be another Harold Pinter! My debut novel, The House on Blackstone Moor was published by Vamplit last year. It’s been pretty well received. Vamplit suggested I do the sequel and I am. Unholy Testament will be released in the spring.
I actually have written about three, but never sent the other two away (just as well, I think)!
Give a short synop of The House on Blackstone Moor.
The House on Blackstone Moor is a tale of vampirism, madness, obsession and devil worship as Rose Baines, only survivor of her family’s carnage, tells her story. Fragile, damaged by the tragedy, fate sends her to a desolate house on the haunted moors where demons dwell. The house and the moors have hideous secrets, yet there is love too; deep, abiding, eternal, but it comes with a price, her soul.
How do you motivate your protagonist—with fear, desire, both or something else?
I don’t write anything without first thinking of the character’s motivation.
I mentioned The Method which teaches the actor to become the character he/she is playing, well frankly, I ‘method write.’ As I wrote Rose Baines (and the other characters), I became them.
Once I do that everything else evolves. Also, I don’t (I would if I could) write with an outline. So the motivation is the key thing for me. For example, the sequel to my novel is about a demon’s confession of all the sins he has committed in his existence. His reason for doing this is so that the woman he loves can better understand him, if she can understand him at all. His love for her is the motivation for the novel as it is his motivation. To answer your question more specifically, anger, fear, hatred, love evolve fairly easily when the motivation has been carefully considered I find.
What elements are important to include in your plot?
There again—those elements that make people act the way they do. Dare I say it: motivation! Conflict must be present. Not a punch-up but the conflicts and challenges we all deal with in the course of our lives. We are always overcoming something or striving for something or waiting for something.
In school we might have a crush on the school athlete who doesn’t know we’re alive. For me and the way I write it’s all tied in with motivation really as it’s the conflict that makes the story evolve by kick-starting everything.
How do you make certain that you’ve included all necessary elements in the book? Do you use specific techniques like maps or timelines?
I suppose I do. But they tend to be in my head. I mean take the sequel, it spans thousands of years. My protagonist has an encounter with Countess Bathory for example. Well, I know when she lived and where she lived so I just read some books about her. I find that once I get a feel of the time and place I am comfortable enough to start writing.
What sets your book apart from others?
I think all writers want to write the best book they can. But we write for different reasons. In my case I read that gothic romance was passé.I didn’t believe it was and studied the markets, I found there is a wide readership out there for it. In my opinion it probably needs to update itself. I’m not talking about paranormal romance with ‘racy bits.’ I am talking about dark gothic horror with romance combined.
I guess you could say I had that in mind when I wrote my novel. Further, I want to continue writing in this vein. I have with regard to my sequel and intend to for the book after that.
Is the book available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?
Yes, it is available in print, ebook and kindle also.
What has been your most rewarding experience during the writing process?
Seeing that I was able to keep to a commitment, actually sitting down nearly every single day for several hours was most rewarding to me. During the entire writing process, first being able to summon up enough courage to actually send out a story, was rewarding. Getting rejected on occasion and not letting that deter me in the slightest was also rewarding as it made me feel stronger and more determined.
Were any of your books more challenging to write than the others?
Yes!!! The sequel, Unholy Testament is by far the more challenging.
I’m meticulous about research and well, my main protagonist has existed for thousands of years—well that was a lot of ground to cover! It helps to be a nerd though, which I am. I love reading history. But it was and continues to be very challenging!
When writing, how do you determine when enough is enough?
Seriously? When I begin to nod off at my laptop! I overdo it most of the time. So I have to be careful not to perish from exhaustion!
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
Twitter, Goodreads and Facebook are handy as well as my blog. I prefer a blog to a website, though. I find the website is too static for me. Promotion is so difficult and finding the right balance is the key whatever sites you use!
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
I’d like to write a book a year. Actually I’d like to write two a year. I can’t see myself not writing!
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Gary Val Tenuta
I'm delighted to welcome author Gary Val Tenuta back to the blog. Welcome back, Gary. Please give us a brief bio, and include something about yourself that readers might be surprised to learn.
Sure, Susan. My name is Gary Val Tenuta. The name, Tenuta, is Italian. It’s a word that translates into a broad definition pertaining to the ownership of land. You’ll see it on the back label of some Italian wines as a prefix to the name of the vineyard, or the owner of the vineyard, where that wine was produced. For example: Tenuta dell'Ornellaia, or Tenuta Valdipiatta.
I’m a book cover designer (www.bookcoversandvideos.webs.com) and a former feature article writer for Fate Magazine (U.S.) and Beyond Magazine (U.K.).
Something readers might be surprised to learn about me? The first thing that comes to mind is the fact that I was fortunate enough to have seen what has become known in the field of ufology as the “Black Triangle” UFO. It was a close-up sighting as the object was only about 500 feet above me. My affidavit attesting to the details of the event was among 30 others that were offered into evidence in a legal suit filed by attorney, Peter Gersten, against the U.S. Dept. of Defense in an attempt to get the DoD to release whatever files they had pertaining to that particular unidentified craft. The whole story is available here: www.examiner.com/ufo-in-national/close-encounter-with-black-triangle-ufo
Two completed and one in the oven.
Give a short synopsis of each book.
The latest book is Ash: Return Of The Beast, a modern-day occult crime thriller inspired by a real-life (or should I say real-death) mystery from more than 60 years ago. It’s a work of fiction based on a little known factoid about the death of Aleister Crowley (1875-1947), the notorious occultist the British press once called "The Wickedest Man In The World". Crowley’s body was cremated but the whereabouts of his funerary ashes has remained a mystery… until now.
The story carries the reader through a series of odd (and sometimes unsettling) events spanning the years from 1947(and the death of Aleister Crowley) to the 1990s and the coming-of-age (and eventual stardom) of a "death-metal" rocker named Rodney Duckworth.
The time-line shifts to the present day where Brian Kane, a gruff and gritty, street-worn Seattle Police Detective, reluctantly teams up with the mysterious Rowena Ravenwood, an attractive female FBI agent. Their task is to figure out why good, healthy, God-fearing preachers in their fair city are suddenly dropping dead.
What is the meaning of the strange symbols branded onto the bodies of these hapless victims? Are they all part of some bizarre cult? No eyewitnesses. No fingerprints. Is it really murder? Where’s the evidence? If it is murder, what is the ultimate goal of the killer? And what is the disturbing secret that Detective Kane is holding so close to his chest?
The investigation catapults Kane and Ravenwood headlong into life-threatening situations as they wind their way through the strange, dark labyrinth of the world of the occult and find themselves battling the powerful forces of ritual magick.
Problem is, the clues to help solve the case are in terribly short supply. Worse yet, so is the amount of time left to stop the mysterious killer's reign of terror before all Hell breaks loose. And – according to Special Agent Ravenwood – that’s not just a figure of speech. (Powerful video trailer and more: www.ashreturnofthebeast.webs.com)
My first novel, The Ezekiel Code, was released in 2007 and quickly became a “bestseller” on amazon.com and remained in the top 50 in three categories for over 57 weeks. Much of its success is due to the fact that it was one of the few novels that incorporated the 2012-end-of-the-Mayan-calendar phenomenon into the story line.
In The Ezekiel Code, December 21, 2012 (the end of the ancient Mayan calendar) holds the promise of a window of opportunity for the next step in the evolution of human consciousness. But a catastrophic event of global proportions looms on the horizon, prior to that date, threatening the annihilation of our planet and the end of civilization.
Zeke Banyon is a handsome Catholic seminary dropout who now runs a homeless shelter in Seattle's old waterfront district. Angela Ann Martin is an attractive young widow who just wants a simple part-time job at the shelter. But a single twist of fate turns their simple lives upside down when together they stumble onto a mysterious code and a rumor about a lost scroll penned by the prophet, Ezekiel, thousands of years ago. They soon find themselves tumbling down the rabbit hole into a world of secret societies, synchronicity-run-rampant, high strangeness, metaphysics, mystery and murder as they jet across continents in a race to understand the code that will lead them to an ancient artifact of profound importance. Dodging rogue Jesuit priests at every turn and unaware that the Illuminati are ever-present in the shadows, Zeke and Angela soon discover it's not just their own lives that are in danger but also the lives of everyone on the planet.
What sets your book apart from others?
The Ezekiel Code is the only novel ever written in which English gematria provides the plot device that drives the story. Not familiar with the term, gematria? In a very broad sense, you could think of it as a form of what might be called “sacred numerology” although it is much more than that. It’s a form of both “coding” and “divination” that was used by the ancient Greek and Hebrew priests and mystics, using their respective alphabets and languages. I’ve developed an English-based form of this same system. (www.secretofnine.com)
How do you motivate your protagonist—with fear, desire, both or something else?
The protagonists in Ash: Return Of The Beast are motivated initially by their sense of professional duty as law enforcement officers. That sense of duty, born of their profession, becomes a sense of duty on a much grander scale as they discover the survival of the entire human race has fallen upon their shoulders.
In The Ezekiel Code, the protagonists are initially motivated by sheer curiosity. That curiosity, however, leads to a profound discovery. The motivation of simple curiosity is then replaced by a sense of duty to save the planet from total destruction.
What elements are important to include in your plot?

The Ezekiel Code, on the other hand, was quite different. From the beginning, I had a purpose for the book that went beyond just telling a compelling story. I’ve had a life-long interest in the paranormal, ancient mysteries, esoteric lore and, more recently, the intriguing ways in which some aspects of quantum physics seems to be providing possible explanations and support for some of those previously unexplainable phenomena. So my goal with The Ezekiel Code, beyond just telling a story, was to include just about everything I’d learned about those things so that readers who knew nothing at all about any of it could become informed about such things. It was a gamble, to be sure, because not all readers want to be inundated with that much information. It was a huge experiment of blending fact with fiction that resulted in the book being nearly 700 pages long. The press release for the book began with the following paragraph:
It's all here in one puzzling page-turner of a novel: conspiracy, codes, secret societies, UFOs, the CIA’s remote viewing program, ancient mysteries, sacred geometry, the prophetic Mayan calendar end-date of 12/212012, alternative interpretations of Biblical events, mystifying metaphysics, good guys, bad guys, murder most foul, a touch of romance and a trace of sci-fi. All of this, and more, is intricately woven into the multifaceted storyline of THE EZEKIEL CODE.
In what formats are your books available?
Ash: Return Of The Beast (www.ashreturnofthebeast.webs.com) is only available on Kindle right now. I hope to have a paperback edition available by March of this year. The Ezekiel Code (www.ezekielcode.com) is available in both paperback and Kindle.
What has been your most rewarding experience during the writing process?
Definitely it would have to be the process of creating an entire world, a whole “reality”, including the characters, that began as an idea and a blank page. Watching it all develop and change throughout the writing process is a fantastic experience.
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
All the usual online suspects: facebook, twitter, youtube, goodreads, and a host of other social networking sites. Offline, I’ve put posters in the back passenger windows of my car and an 18”x4” banner in the rear window. Great exposure over a long period of time.
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
I have an unfinished YA fantasy that I keep threatening to get back to. That will likely be my next project.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
Ash: Return Of The Beast, www.ashreturnofthebeast.webs.com
The Ezekiel Code, www.ezekielcode.com
Wishing you every success, Gary.
Thanks for having me over, Susan. Same to you.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Bobby Nash returns
Bobby Nash has been on the blog before and it's a pleasure to have him back.
Bobby, welcome back. You've been busy since last we spoke. Please give readers a brief bio and tell us something about yourself that might surprise us.
Susan, it's always great to visit your blog.
Readers might be surprised to learn that I started out wanting to be a comic book artist, not a writer. The writing came about because I started writing stories for myself to draw. Eventually, I realized I was a much better writer than artist and started to focus my efforts on writing.Here’s my bio:
From his secret lair in the wilds of Bethlehem, Georgia, Bobby Nash writes. A multitasker, Bobby is certain that he doesn’t suffer from ADD, but instead he... ooh, shiny.
When not writing fiction, Bobby attends conventions and writers conferences, promotes his books, teaches writing courses and panels, and is a part-time extra in movies and television. Bobby is also the co-host of the weekly Earth Station One podcast (www.esopodcast.com) and writes for New Pulp (www.newpulpfiction.com) and All Pulp (http://allpulp.blogspot.com) news sites.
For more information on Bobby Nash please visit him at www.bobbynash.com, www.facebook.com/bobbyenash, www.twitter.com/bobbynash, www.lance-star.com, and http://BEN-Books.blogspot.com among other places across the web.
How many books have you written?
14 published Short Stories/Anthologies29 finished and in the hands of editors awaiting publication
3 published novels
2 finished and in the hands of editors awaiting publication
29 published Comic Books/Graphic Novels
6 finished and in the hands of editors awaiting publication
Of course, this doesn’t take into account the projects that are in process and not yet completed.
ARE YOU SERIOUSLY KIDDING ME?
Holy crap! I didn’t expect this number to be quite this high.
I'm almost afraid to ask you to give a short synop of each book.
With there being 83 stories to choose from I will save you some space and point you toward www.bobbynash.com where there is information on most of these projects available. Some have not yet been announced by the publisher officially, even though they are completed so those are still hush-hush at the moment.
Whew! Thanks. My blog can't handle all of that:-)
How do you motivate your protagonist—with fear, desire, both or something else?
It varies depending on the book, the theme, and the characters. There is not a specific motivating factor that I use all the time.
What elements are important to include in your plot?
The most important element for me is well-rounded characters. If I have defined the character and he or she feels real to me then all I have to do is insert them into the story and follow the character’s reactions to the plot. Cohesiveness is also important. I want to make sure the plot holds together. I hope it makes sense to the readers.
How do you make certain that you’ve included all necessary elements in the book? Do you use specific techniques like maps or timelines?
Sometimes. I have been known to make notes and graphs, especially if there is a mystery involved so I can track the clues I’ve placed throughout the story. I’m fortunate that I’m somehow able to keep the plots straight in my head. Not sure how I do it, but I do. For the shorter works I usually put a brief plot in the manuscript so it is easily accessible as I go along, leaving little notes, hints, character names, etc. so they are there if needed.
What sets your books apart from others?
I’d like to think that I have a unique voice that makes my books stand out. I have been told by people who have met me in person that they can hear my voice in their head when reading the story. I don’t try to emulate any particular style of storytelling. I write the story the way that I would like to read it. Fortunately for me my readers and publishers seem to like my style.
Are all of them available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?
Yes. All of my books are available in print (although some have gone out of print at this time). Most, but not all are available digitally. I am working with various publishers to get more of the books out there for electronic devices. Hopefully, that will happen. You can check the digital edition tab at
www.bobbynash.com to see which books are available as ebooks.
www.bobbynash.com to see which books are available as ebooks.
What has been your most rewarding experience during the writing process?
There is a moment when writing where suddenly everything makes perfect sense and you get into the writing zone. It’s almost like a literary epiphany and the words just flow out of you as if a creative dam has burst. I love that feeling.
Me too, Bobby.
One of the most rewarding moments is when someone comes up to me and wants me to sign a copy of my book for them. Very humbling and flattering.
Oh, sure. Working on anthologies, I often find myself writing characters that I did not create and might not be as familiar with. As a result, sometimes it is more of a challenge to get into that character’s head than others are so the challenge is to connect with that character and tell a good story. And usually I have to do it quickly to meet the deadline.
When writing, how do you determine when enough is enough?
Usually, it’s based on the word count limit given to me by my publishers. On the novels that I write then shop around I write until the story is done, although I know what publishers are generally looking for length-wise so I try to stick close to that.
Bobby, we all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
Promotion is very important and I spend a good deal of time doing promotional work. I have a website (several, actually) and I try to update them regularly, especially www.bobbynash.com as it gets a good bit of traffic. I also use social media. Facebook, Twitter, Google+, writing forums and message boards, comic book forums, and the like. Wherever I am allowed to post, I do.
Off line I visit stores, make and pass out promotional postcards and flyers, attend conventions, set up book signings and other appearances, and always have copies of my books on hand because you never know when someone will be curious about what you write when you talk to them.
The trick is to balance promotion with other things. I see some writers who only post “Buy My Book” posts. I find myself ignoring those posts. I mix in updates about books I’m reading, what other writer friends are doing, convention, favorite movies and TV shows, etc. in addition to information about my books. Promotion is selling your books and yourself.
Can you tell us your writing goals for 2012 or beyond?
2012 is already shaping up to be a busy year and I have deadlines stacking up around me. So far this year I have 13 short stories/novellas to write, 5 comic books/graphic novels in productions, 5 novels I need to write or finish writing (3 are already in progress), 1 novel that is being re-issued by a new publisher so there will be a small amount of work there, and 1 completed novel that I will be releasing through my publishing imprint, BEN Books so I have to do design and layout work on that. Definitely a busy year.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
You can always find information about me, my books, and my appearances at www.bobbynash.com. I’m also at www.facebook.com/bobbyenash, www.twitter.com/bobbynash, www.lance-star.com, and http://BEN-Books.blogspot.com, www.esopodcast.com, www.newpulpfiction.com, and http://allpulp.blogspot.com on a fairly regular basis.
Well, Bobby, you've probably missed out on at least one book by taking the time to answer these questions, but I'm glad you did. I hope you get all of that done. Continued success with all endeavors.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)