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Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Lynda Fishman: An Inspiration To Us All


 In 1970, when she was thirteen years old, Lynda Fishman's life came to a disastrous halt when her mother and two younger sisters were killed in an Air Canada plane crash.

As a young teen, Lynda made a conscious decision to become happy and to lead a fulfilled life. She was committed to learning, growing and making a difference. Determined to find meaning and purpose in her life, she managed to muster up the courage and strength to dream big, to be idealistic, to strive for more, and to live a meaningful life where she could make a difference in the lives of others.

Lynda Fishman is a trained clinical social worker who has spent over twenty years as a camp director. In the early 90s, Lynda was one of the first camp directors in the Toronto area to incorporate children with special needs into mainstream camp life. Lynda has devoted a lifetime to organized camping and is passionate about the positive role of camping in a person’s life. She is the owner and director of Adventure Valley Day Camp.

Lynda is a motivational and inspirational speaker and facilitator. She has published articles and training manuals on leadership, teamwork, bullying, trust, childhood health and wellness,    communication and customer service.

Lynda’s husband, Barry Fishman, has his own amazing story to share, having been orphaned at age 17 and left alone to care for his brother with special needs. Lynda and Barry met as teenagers and    have been together since then. They have three grown children, and the whole family is heavily involved in supporting children dealing  with tragedy, cancer or other life-threatening diseases, fund-raising and charity events.

Barry has spent his entire career working in the health care and pharmaceutical industry. He is President and CEO of the Canadian operations for the world’s largest generic pharmaceutical company, Teva Pharmaceuticals. Barry serves on the Board of Directors of the Childhood Cancer Foundation.

Lynda is a woman of action. She has incredible enthusiasm for life. She is persistent, focused and faithful to her dreams and goals. She is willing to work for everything with patience, optimism and    determination. She finds ways to be grateful and positive. Lynda goes out there and does what she has to do with a CAN DO attitude of gratitude, positivity, compassion, and honesty.

Book Description:

    At thirteen years old, Lynda's life comes to a disastrous halt when her mother and two younger sisters are killed in a plane crash. Her father, overcome by despair, simply continues to exist, in a state devoid of hope. After burying a wife and two young children at the age of 44, the overwhelming responsibility of raising a daughter alone completely immobilizes him.
    Teetering on that tender brink between childhood and adolescence, Lynda faces the responsibility of a father in a complete state of shock, a house to take care of, and hundreds of decisions about how to proceed with their shattered lives.

    In Repairing Rainbows she candidly describes the agonizing memories, deafening silence and    endless hardships that are the fallout of incredible loss. As we follow her through marriage, motherhood and her own spiritual journey, Lynda reveals her complex feelings of hope, anger, pity and determination. Most importantly, she learns the crucial difference between "truly living" and the existence that is so often mistaken for being alive.

    A true story, written by a woman whose normal and abundant life hides a terrible past, Repairing      Rainbows is loaded with important lessons to help others overcome struggles and obstacles, and fulfill their lives. It is a powerful, captivating, riveting and easy-to-read story that will undoubtedly touch you. While I have never been through the traumatic hardships of Lynda and her husband, I believe this book can inspire those who have.

My review:

Lynda Fishman didn't mince words or wear rose-colored glasses after her mother and two sisters perished. Instead, after the tragedy she found the strength and perseverance to pull herself together, knowing that she simply had to overcome the devastating events  and get on with her life...not just living but finding rainbows again. Her story is inspiring. Pick up a copy.

Repairing Rainbows is available in print and digital formats.

Excerpt link:
http://repairing-rainbows.blogspot.com/search/label/Excerpt
Reviews link:
http://repairing-rainbows.blogspot.com/search/label/Reviews
Paperback
    Price: $18.00
    ISBN: 9780986607400
    Pages: 272
                                                    

Monday, August 15, 2011

North Carolina's Rick Helms: Thunder Moon


Rick Helms is my special guest today. 
Such a nice guy and a member of The Carolina Conspiracy, as am I. Welcome, Rick. Have a barbecue sandwich and a glass of sweet iced tea.

Thanks, Susan.

I’d be fascinated to know more about you.
How many books have you written and in what genre(s)?

Thunder Moon, my fourteenth novel, came out in June, from Five Star Mysteries. They're already slated to bring out novel number fifteen, The Unresolved Seventh, a standalone, in April of 2012.
What books or authors have influenced you, Rick?
I was very strongly influenced early on by John Steinbeck and Ernest Hemingway, along with Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald, John D. MacDonald, and John O'Hara. My early thrillers (The Valentine Profile, The Amadeus Legacy) were heavily derivative of Robert Ludlum and David Morrell. In the crime genre, I learned tons from reading the works of Robert B. Parker, Dennis Lynds, Dennis Lehane, Robert Crais, James Lee Burke, John Sandford, and Michael Connelly. Lately, I've been very interested in the work of Reed Farrel Coleman, Wallace Stroby, and S.J. Rozan.

What are your writing goals?

I want to score a multimillion dollar five book deal with Random House and retire to the island of Corfu in Greece to do nothing but write, drink caipirinhas and margaritas, and bask in the Mediterranean sun. Realistically, though, I would be content with leaving behind thirty well-written novels. I'm almost two-thirds of the way there.
What is your most rewarding experience during the writing process?

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, a psychologist who specializes in the study of creativity, likes to talk about the state of flow, or that almost meditative state an artist can reach where he or she is totally tapped into the right brain, and the product is transmitted straight from the unconscious mind to the paper, or the canvas, or the musical instrument. I really crave this state. Sometimes I sit down in front of the computer and stumble over how to start a new passage or chapter. The first keystrokes are tortuous, but after a few minutes I reach a point where reality disappears and the world I'm writing about is real. I write stuff during the state of flow that I look back on later and say, “Where in hell did THAT come from?” It's like going on a vacation in your head. On the days when I can really drill down and access that creative flow, I feel really incredible.
Yes! It's a wonderful experience!
Tell us about your latest release, Thunder Moon.
Thunder Moon is the second book in my Judd Wheeler series, set in a fictional small North Carolina town called Prosperity. Wheeler is the Chief of Police there. He grew up in Prosperity, and was the local high school starting quarterback before heading off to college and eventually to Atlanta to become a cop. After returning to Prosperity to take over the family farm, he was recruited by his longtime friend Kent Kramer, a local real estate developer, to start a new police force in Prosperity.

In Thunder Moon, it's the hottest month of the year, and a top recruit for the Pythons NFL team in the next county is brutally murdered in Prosperity, in a house lent to him by Kent Kramer. Wheeler discovers bloodstained bills in Samples' pants pocket upstairs, and the county Sheriff's Department lab discovers that the blood isn't from Samples, but rather from a motorcycle gang chieftain who was killed in his car in Morgan, the Bliss County seat, several days earlier. Now, in addition to finding out who killed Samples, Chief Wheeler must figure out the connection between Samples and the slain gang member. His investigation will bring him into contact with a shady ex-con with an underaged girlfriend, pro football players with possible axes to grind, a paroled sex offender trying to set his life straight, and an itinerant tent preacher who may be running a variation on the Spanish Prisoner con game. Bodies begin to stack up like cordwood, as Wheeler's investigation uncovers a series of crimes reflecting a level of evil previously unknown in rural Prosperity.

Gulp. You've hooked me!
Is it available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?

Right now, it's only available in hardcover format. I hope to have the first book in the series, Six Mile Creek, available in Kindle and Nook formats shortly.

Were any of your books more challenging to write than the others? 

Thrillers are always more of a challenge, because of the intricate nature of interweaving plots and the need for intensive outlining beforehand to get everything straight. The availability of computers and word processing software has helped the process greatly, enabling authors to do what I call “Bill and Ted's Excellent Writing”. In other words, I suddenly decide to insert a new plot point or device, but I haven't set it up. So, I make a note to go back five or six chapters and insert the setup. I can always clean up the transitions in rewrite. With private eye novels, I very seldom do any outlining. I prefer to write them using the process that Robert B. Parker used, starting with a conversation between the PI and a client, and allowing the story to grow organically. Both processes work, but I really prefer to write the PI stories because their more fun (I actually surprise myself sometimes when the case is solved!).

How do you develop characters, Rick?

I attended a master class with Edward Albee back in the 1970s, and I recall that he said you should never write a word on paper until it can write itself. That means you are always writing, but now always putting down words. I'm not sure I totally agree with Albee, since I get a lot of mileage out of free-writing, especially in PI novels, but I do spend tons of time thinking through plots, running dialogue in my head, and figuring out what motivates my protagonists and antagonists, and sometimes even secondary characters. Being a psychologist, I understand motivation as a scientific concept, and the various theories of motivation, and I can use these to help grow my characters' personalities, again organically, so that they 'feel' real.

How do you choose your setting?

I think it's easier to write about places with which you are already familiar. I visited New Orleans several times, and explored it walking down a lot of dark alleyways, before I started writing my New Orleans-based Pat Gallegher books. With my Eamon Gold novels, I visited San Francisco several times and made a lot of notes and took a ton of pictures. The Judd Wheeler books are easy, since the fictional town of Prosperity looks very, very similar to the small North Carolina town where I live. Knowing your setting intimately makes it very easy to compose descriptions that provide readers with vivid pictures. I like to write about places where eccentric people are likely congregate.

John Berendts, in Midnight In The Garden Of Good And Evil, said that strange people are more likely to be found in cities “where the road ends”. It's as if they search and search for someplace where they can be accepted, and finally run out of road, so they stop there. Places like New Orleans, San Francisco, Key West, Bar Harbor, etc, would all qualify. The other kind of place filled by eccentrics are small towns. In small towns, everybody knows everybody else, and they tend to overlook the quirks that might make someone stand out in a more impersonal setting. David Lynch exploited this wonderfully in Twin Peaks, with the Log Lady, the Colonel (“The owls are not what they seem.”), and even with the protagonist Agent Cooper, who seemed to fit right in immediately. I try to do that with my fictional town of Prosperity, populating it with rubes and rednecks and Mama's boys, and all the wide range of personalities you tend to find in rural backwaters.

What are your protagonist’s strengths? Flaws?

All of my protagonists share a similar set of ideals. They're rooted in the work of Thomas Malory and the Chivalric Code, which I believe to be the foundation of the private eye ethos, as stated by Raymond Chandler, who said, “Down these mean streets walks a man who is not himself mean.” My protagonists believe in a private code of behavior which provides clear boundaries between what they will and won't do. They might kill, but only under specific circumstances, and never without provocation. Sometimes they act in a way that seems contrary to traditional community values, but their behavior is entirely consistent with their codes. These boundaries may shift a bit from one protag to another, but for each one of them the codes are absolute, and constitute the personality factors that separate them from the antagonists, who will do whatever they need to in order to prevail.  For some of my protags, especially Pat Gallegher, the flaws are my flaws, which mostly involve basic insecurities and anxieties. Gallegher, for instance, spends a great deal of time wallowing in self-doubt, questioning which horn of a dilemma he will follow. There's a lot of me in that writing.

Can you tell us about current or future projects?

I'm putting the finishing touches on number sixteen, a historical PI novel set in the final days of the Batista regime in Havana (The Mojito Coast), and I'm working this summer on the third title in my Judd Wheeler series, with the working title Carolina Blue. I'm about halfway through the fifth book in my New Orleans-based Pat Gallegher series (Paid In Spades), and maybe a third of the way through my third Eamon Gold novel (Brittle Karma). I've started a standalone thriller featuring a county court psychologist, which has the working title The Four-Nine Profile. I tend to alternate between hardboiled private eye novels, small-town police procedurals, and thrillers. I'm considering doing a YA novel in the steampunk genre, and I've started the outline for a 'big book' (literary novel), centered on a very tragic event that took place during the First World War. I'm also working on several short stories which I hope will find their way into Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, now that I seem to have cracked that market.

Where can folks learn more about your books and events?

Please feel free to drop by my website, www.richardhelms.net  Besides the writing stuff, you will be able to look in on my woodworking hobbies. I have a set of pages there on lutherie, or the construction of stringed musical instruments such as guitars, dulcimers, banjos, and violins; and I'll put up a section shortly covering my summer project, building a Stickley Morris chair for my home office.

Rick, thanks for taking the time to visit, and I hope to see you soon at a Carolina Conspiracy event and certainly at the Cape Fear Crime Festival in Wilmington in February.

Thanks for the interview and the lunch, Susan.


Thursday, August 11, 2011

Sue Midlock's Birthright

Sue Midlock is my guest today.

Welcome, Sue. I’d be fascinated to know more about you.

How many books have you written and in what genre(s)?
I have written one book.  Birthright is Paranormal Romance for young adults.

What books or authors have influenced you? 

I have many authors that have influenced my writing.  If I want something renaissance in my writing, I lean toward Shakespeare.  Dark Love is a good example of that.  When writing Birthright I have to thank Stephanie Meyer, her books were the first ones that actually made me feel as though I was Bella, I felt all the emotions her character was going through and I thought how wonderful that an author could make a reader feel that way.  I wanted Birthright to have that kind of pull.  As for Keri Arthur, she is amazing.  Her character Riley Jensen is so strong and gutsy and a very sensual person. I like strong characters, those who know what they want and are not afraid to get it.You could say that Birthright has a little bit of all of these authors,  the romance, the strong will, determination and pure evil. 

What are your writing goals?  
To write Paranormal Romance books that not only grabs the reader’s attention, but to have them on pins and needles for the next book to come out. 

Tell us more about Birthright, Sue.

 Birthright revolves around three main characters, Candra Rosewood, Kane Smith and Eldon Bennet.  Candra is an only child with a background unbeknownst to her other than the usual, father who works, but it’s not a leave and come home job, mother stays at home.  She doesn’t have a lot of friends because of the sheltered upbringing she has had.  Things start to unravel when her parents die mysteriously and bits of her heritage start to unfold in events that seem to constantly erupt.

It’s a fast read, but at the end of each chapter I have left the reader wanting to know what is to happen next and things do happen quite a lot.  I had to do some slight research as Birthright deals with the subject of “human servant”.  I wanted my storyline to be different than any other vampire book I’ve read.  There is also something very different about Candra, but the reader won’t know until the sequel, but they do get a glimpse that she is something quite more powerful than what her vampire had thought she’d be. 

My characters also have distinct personalities which seem to grow within each chapter.  You could say, “…things are not what they appear to be.”    I wanted them to be different than what I’ve read in this particular genre.  There had to be a strength that could not be denied and yet, a softness when the excitement got to be a bit much for the reader.  There are moments of release, but, only for a short time then the excitement builds again.  Birthright is like the roller-coaster ride everyone talks about, rides and then at the end exclaim how thrilling it was.

It also in two chapters goes back into time.  I know this type of writing tends to be confusing for the reader, but I only kept it to two chapters and very short, it was necessary as you’ll find out, because it doesn’t leave the reader wonder how this person came to be and why.  So it completes the storyline very well.

What is your most rewarding experience during the writing process? 

I never knew what it was like to be an author, to go through all the edits and the waiting.  I only lived through it with my dear friend Mary Deal.  So, when it came to be my turn, I found it exciting!  I didn’t mind changing my whole novel to read in first person, to me it was a learning experience and I loved every moment of it, that and all the edits, corrections and final read through. 

Mary Deal is a cyber buddy of mine as well. What a treat!
Can you tell us about current or future projects? 

 I am currently writing the sequel to Birthright and I’ve also been writing several short stories chronicling the life and times of Hadley Jones, a Dhampir.  These short stories fall under the genre of Erotic Paranormal Romance.  Also, not in the writing department, I’ve been busy creating book covers for Vamplit Publishing, which is located in the Uk,   I am the Artistic Director for them.

Where can folks learn more about your books and events?

They may find me in two places…

Suemydliak.yolasite.com
 (Author website)
http://theunbeatenheart.blogspot.com/ (blog)

Continued success, Sue. Let us know when you have another book.

 



















































































































Tuesday, August 9, 2011

An Interview With James Dorr



James Dorr is the author of Darker Loves, Vamps, and Strange Mistresses. Welcome, James.
I’d be fascinated to know more about you.
Well, Susan, I’m a short story writer and a poet, working primarily in dark fantasy and horror with some journeys into science fiction and mystery, but mostly I write about whatever interests me at the time.  Ideas come hard to me, so what choice do I have?  In college my creative activity actually began in the visual arts where I was a cartoonist and illustrator, ultimately art editor, on the campus humor magazine, then in graduate school I moved more into writing as a columnist (and ultimately co-editor) on a campus underground newspaper, followed by editor of an arts newspaper, then technical writing/editing and business freelancing in the “outside world” before settling down into a proper flunkey job that allowed me to write more in the genres I liked to read, starting with SF, then migrating toward the dark side.  I also play music as leader and tenor in a Renaissance recorder consort and am a member of the Society for Creative Anachronism.  
All of this was and is cross-genre, as I also did some utility writing for the humor zine, illustrations for other college publications, pictures and words for the campus science fiction association (college and grad school, though different locations) and, in graduate school, now and again illustrated my own articles.  And, while I play “pre-classical” music now, I often use jazz as a theme for poetry and sometimes fiction. 
Tell us about your writing. 
I have two books out from Dark Regions Press, Strange Mistresses: Tales of Wonder and Romance and Darker Loves: Tales of Mystery and Regret, as well as an out-of-print poetry chapbook, Towers of Darkness, published by Nocturnal Publications.  The first two are multi-genre collections primarily of fiction, but each with a short poetry section at the end, including pieces first published in Aboriginal Science Fiction, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Asylums and Labyrinths, Bloodtype, Extremes 5, Fantastic, Gothic.Net, MarsDust, New Mystery, New Mythos Legends, The Palace Corbie, The Short Story Digest, Strange Attraction, Terminal Fright, TomorrowSF, Wicked Mystic, et al. (to give an idea of genres as well as range -- in total I probably have three to four hundred individual stories and poems in various magazines and anthologies).  Towers of Darkness, as it sounds, is horror, depicting life in a not-very-nice city and also introduces the vampiress Annchuck who later pops up from time to time in other poetry, often combined with musical sub-themes (the lady likes to dance), while the two larger collections introduce some (then) new material set in the “Tombs,” a far-future city with its environs which has served as the setting for other stories as time has gone on as well.  And then there’s Vamps (A Retrospective), a full size book of poetry just listed by Sam’s Dot Publishing -- in time to celebrate “Vampire Month!” -- of which I will have more to say a bit later (music up, rising tension....). 
What books or authors have influenced you, James?
I was once asked on a panel at a science fiction convention (to sneak into this sideways) what I thought was the best horror book of all time.  My answer was Dracula, especially when you put it in context, given its pseudo-documentary style,  in a society that might still not have been absolutely sure vampires didn’t exist -- at least in barbaric places like Transylvania.   But then I suggested if we could go outside the genre, the really best all-time horror was by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides in The Complete Greek Tragedies.  I stand by that still, and don’t mind admitting I’ve borrowed from both of the above for my own work.  Then, as a kid, I was introduced to the Modern Library Giant edition of  The Complete Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (which I still own) and the works of Ray Bradbury, particularly The Martian Chronicles (I was a great science fiction fan at the time) and The October Country.  Then since I write poetry, along with Poe I’ll add Allen Ginsberg and Ezra Pound, with maybe a little T. S. Eliot, and from (as it were) left field, Bertolt Brecht including his theories on drama and “epic theatre.”  Those are a few, but as a fiction writer and poet I also read a lot of nonfiction:   travel books about exotic places, books about even more exotic people -- or people in general, books about myths and legends and folklore -- what people believe.  Books on fairy tales, plus the tales themselves of course, because in a way that’s what I’m writing too. 
How do you develop characters?
The three basic elements for starting a story:  A being (or character) in a setting (or situation) who has a problem (wants something).  This is cribbed from Algis Budrys’s “Writers of the Future” workshops -- the basic story continues through the being’s attempts to solve the problem, getting in deeper, until a climactic all-out push either succeeds or fails, followed by a “validation” confirming that it’s been worth our attention (e.g., at the end of the original Star Wars movie, Luke and Han receive medals for blowing up the Death Star; in Cinderella, the narrator tells us Cin and the Prince live happily ever after).  So, given a problem what kind of character would be affected enough to want to solve it?  Does the setting/situation help define the character’s actions?  If a crime has been committed, is my character a detective?  An innocent bystander?  The victim?  Or how about the perpetrator (I do write horror)?  Now let’s make it interesting, “Vampire Month” and all, and suppose the character is a vampire, perhaps accused of illegal blood-sucking. . . . 
Well, that’s an exercise.  To continue it I usually try to put myself in my character’s head, imagine myself in her circumstances (let’s make it a female vampire -- they’re sexy) and try and imagine what I would do.  Now it happens I’m a heterosexual male, but I’ve known women, was married to one once.  What would my ex do?   Well, granted my memories may be prejudiced, but sometimes she could be conniving, so let’s imagine a conniving, but charming,  sexy female vampire who happens to be innocent this one time (but doesn’t want to explain herself too much to the police, because there may be episodes in her past when she wasn’t so innocent).  Or maybe it’s not the cops. . . .
How do you choose your setting?
So does this happen in Olde Transylvania or, say, modern Paris?  Well, I’ve written one that takes place in Paris, at Christmas, but it hasn’t sold yet, so let’s pick Transylvania, specifically in a heavily draped room in a castle, perhaps a dungeon but with a window through which one might peek to see the setting sun.  This is a flash piece, about 500 words long, and I won’t have much time for characterization so I’ll borrow traits from a 1930s movie called Dracula’s Daughter.  In my version, though, the vampire and her servant Sandor have survived, but Sandor still wants her to make him immortal (his motivation in the movie too, but this is my story) and so, while she’s sleeping, he’s managed to get her into a chair and chained her to the wall.  As night comes, she’ll need to have blood before dawn -- as Sandor reminds her, he knows her secrets -- and she can’t have it unless she does his bidding. 
Just that much setting, plus her remnder to him that “I am Countess Marya Zeleska, the daughter of Dracula himself,” gives enough, I think, to cover the three basic elements discussed above (regardless of whether you’ve seen or even heard of the movie).  The problem servant (not the cops this time), the setting, the Countess who must acquiesce to her servant’s demand -- something her pride will not allow her to do! -- or perish.  Or does she, conniving survivor that she is, have a secret that even Sandor may not know? 
What it comes down to is that the character(s) and the nature of the problem can themselves be involved in determining the setting -- even, sometimes, the setting itself may be part of the problem, may even have sparked the original idea.  As for the example above, “The Shackles” won third prize in the 2009 Ligonier Valley Writers Flash Fiction Contest and has been reprinted in the anthology The Hungry Dead (Popcorn Press, 2010). 
Tell us about your latest release.
Annchuck, who we’ve met above, joins with Max Schreck, Bela Lugosi, “Guillemette” (née Mina Murray), Nadja, Nikki, a modern Medusa, a tourist who meets “Cape Man” in France (“... he had a tendency to change the subject when I asked him what he did.  Eurotrash, I suppose”), a competitive runner who races the sun, a woman who dreams of someday winning the Galactic Lottery, several survivors of unusual dates, a baseball fan who especially likes night games, a modern Carmilla who also likes jazz, and a future version of Kipling’s vampire (“a rag and a bone and a hank of hair”) in Vamps (A Retrospective), which has just come out from Sam’s Dot Publishing.  This is a full-sized collection of  75 poems, a little over a third of them never published before, and is illustrated by a friend and poet in her own right, Marge Simon -- so even if you don’t like poetry you can still buy the book!  The thing is, I’ve written poems about vampires, lots and lots of them over the years, so in a roughly chronological order (by date originally written, not necessarily published, and jiggered a bit for thematic reasons as well in some cases to make more efficiant use of pages) these are the highlights, ranging in length from a number of 3-line haiku to a 170-line and a 263-line mini-epic.  Some serious, some comic, some short, some long, some sporty, some sassy, some tragic, some sexy, some reminiscent, some even science-fictional, these are vamps for all seasons and tastes. 
Is it available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?
At least in some formats.  Vamps (A Retrospective) should be available as you read this in trade paperback form from www.samsdotpublishing.com.  Also, while I’m not sure about Kindle, I  understand it may become available as an electronic book through Smashwords, either directly or via a link on the Sam’s Dot webpage.  
Can you tell us about current or future projects, and where can folks look to find out more about them, James?
Moving away from vampires, there is one setting that’s been an element in a number of  my more recent stories, that of the aforementioned “Tombs,” a vast necropolis on a far-future, dying Earth and the cities and lands that surround it.  About a dozen Tombs stories are already published one place or another, including one in my Strange Mistresses and three in my Darker Loves collections,  and more of these should come in the future, along with a possible novel involving stand-alone Tombs segments with other material somewhat in the manner of Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles or Christopher Barzak’s The Love We Share Without Knowing.  In addition, “Vanitas,” a story that originally appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s in the 1990s, will be out in electronic book form in the very near future from Untreed Reads Publishing, to be joined hopefully by more as time goes on, while, partly as a response to the recession, I’ve been increasing efforts to get other reprints out both electronically and in print, along, of course, with new stories and poems. 

For these and more, readers are invited to visit
http://jamesdorrwriter.wordpress.com for ongoing information, leavened with occasional sample poems and stories, movie comments, bibliographical information, and resident cat Wednesday’s personal webpage. 


Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Michael Allen


Michael Allen is my guest today.

Hi, Michael! I’d be fascinated to know more about you.
Hello, Susan. Thanks.
Tell us about your books and give us a short synopsis of each one.

My first book was by contract with John Gordon Burke Publishing. I wrote it in 2001 and it was about new urbanism, the way they design cities around the pedestrian.  The most famous case of this would be Seaside, Florida where The Truman Show was filmed starring Jim Carrey. That book has yet to make it to print, but it was my first attempt at getting into this rodeo.

As a ghostwriter, I have been hired to write about twenty books ranging from a Sci Fi about altering space and time to a Christian Novel about two sisters who learn to fight demons in the spiritual world.  Further works have included writing a book for an NFL football player who was hurt in the 2006 season as well as the story of a lady who was discriminated against at her job, one of America’s largest corporations.  I always seem to find the most interesting projects and it’s been a great way for me to cut my teeth.

Despite all the work that I do for others, I have managed to publish two books of my own. One is called A Danger to Society, which is a true crime comedy about a man who becomes the victim of a case of mistaken identity. The other is a children’s book called When You Miss Me, a heartwarming message for children who are missing a parent for one reason or another.

What are your writing goals?
I have plenty of aspirations including getting one of my screenplays on the big screen.  My first screenplay was written in 2005, I believe, when I was trying to get an internship at Walt Disney Studios.  I have since written a screenplay that spoofs a top crime investigation television series.  But a few years ago, I was contacted by a producer who wanted me to write a screenplay about an assassin who falls in love with his mark’s daughter.  Then another producer approached me about his screenplay idea that tells the story of a neglected boy who finds a friend in the most awkward of situations.
Patiently waiting, I would love to see any of those works on the big screen.  I want to continue to write novels though.  There is nothing like getting behind the wheel of a story and taking it down roads that explore human depth and understanding, how humorous of a story I can pitch my characters and how interesting I can make their lives.  I have a daughter series of books that I would eventually like to complete.  Each story stands alone and deals with the bond between a father and a daughter, they just do it in such radically different ways.
However, the next novel I put out will be about a man who gets stabbed and gets arrested for it.  It’s a true story, but the setting is going to be in a town that doesn’t exist and the characters in the story are not going to actually exist.  I don’t want to venture anywhere near a defamation of character lawsuit.  So, I’ll keep it in the fiction category although every detail of the story is as true as it gets.
What is your most rewarding experience during the writing process?

I have taken the beginning of a story or an idea for a story and just started with absolutely no clue which way it was going to go.  When the light bulb comes on, that’s when I am most rewarded.  It’s as if I get to be the reader who enjoys the discovery having no idea what the story was about.  At that point, I just can’t wait to finish it and get it in someone’s hand for them to enjoy.
Tell us about your latest release, Michael.
When You Miss Me is a children’s book I just put out for children who are missing a parent.  When parents go through separation or divorce, the child gets passed back and forth between them.  That means there are moments when they miss a parent so much, it can be a very unbearable time.
Not only children of separation and divorce, but children in military families miss their parents as well. When a loved one is off serving their country far away from home, it can be a tough time for a child.  The message is universal and all children can appreciate it.
I wrote the book originally for my daughter when she was younger. I drew the illustrations myself and wrote her a little message.  When I saw her reaction to the book, I knew I had come up with a great idea.  Recently, it dawned on me that it might be beneficial to release the book so other children in similar circumstances could learn the message as well.
Is it available in print, ebook, and Kindle formats?

When You Miss Me is out in print and on Kindle at http://michaelallenonline.com/whenyoumissme. 

Were any of your books more challenging to write than the others?
My first book was challenging because it seemed like such an undertaking.  I added sentence after sentence, then paragraph after paragraph until I looked back and realized I wasn’t making any sense.
I wanted to be a writer so bad that I just started writing, without a story. I forced the words and it never amounted to anything.  Then one day, a great story finally hit me like a ton of bricks. It was the easiest thing to do to put it into words and I’ve been doing that ever since. 
The difference is that now I have plenty of stories going through my mind.  I know what makes a good story and I know how to tell one now. Some gate opened up somewhere and, knock on wood, it keeps flowing with newer and greater ideas than ones I’ve had previously. But now I know what my stories are about and I love writing them with that same sense of discovery the way readers do as they turn page after page.
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
My online promotion efforts change with each book just like my offline promotion efforts change.  For A Danger to Society, I built a website and started promoting it on my Tribe.net profile.  That was before the era of Myspace, now Facebook and Twitter rule the information highway.
So, I’ve adapted over the years.  For When You Miss Me, I’m contacting organizations about fundraising ideas.  If my book fits with their message, I’ll contact them and tell them about the opportunity to raise funds by displaying my book on their site.  I also write articles and publish them where readers love to find new content.  I keep the range of topics within the scope of the book so that within a few articles, you know whether or not you want to read it.
Offline, I set up book signings for A Danger to Society and I did some special radio spots.  But with When You Miss Me, I’m going to be doing a whole lot more than that.  I will be doing book signings and library readings. I have a few special visits that I’m going to make along the way to certain types of stores where my book might fit the theme of the store even though it’s not particularly a bookstore.  I will even be giving out bookmarks in bookstores so that readers have a chance to notice my book.
One thing is for sure and I have said this before, book promotion isn’t about doing one simple thing.  It’s about doing at least a few things a day to catch the reader’s attention.  Each little bit counts.  It’s like starting your beach off with a few grains of sand.  Add to it every day and soon, your readers will be playing volleyball there.

Where can folks learn more about your books and events?     

I have an Author’s Page on Amazon.  Plus, I have my own book page too that talks about my books and links directly to their specific pages where anyone can learn more about them. As I schedule events, I’ll be sure to keep both of those pages updated.
Thank you Susan!  I appreciated stopping by and being given the chance to talk about my work.  I hope we can do it again sometime when I have something new for your readers to enjoy!

Absolutely. Keep in touch, Michael, and continued success!

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Reading Hell Swamp excerpt


When Barnhill's invited me to come to Winston-Salem for a book signing, I didn't know I'd be videoed reading an excerpt from Hell Swamp. I flubbed a sentence, but here it is in all its glory. Nice display of my other books behind me, I must say. Thanks for the invitation and the video, Barnhill's!

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Jennie Bentley's DIY series



I met Jennie Bentley at Killer Nashville a few years back and have been a fan ever since. Her DIY Mystery series is as delightful has she is. The series includes Fatal fixer-upper,  spackled and Spooked, plaster and Poison, and mortar and Murder, the titles done in an interesting manner.
Welcome, Jennie! Please tell us more about yourself.
Thanks, Susan. There’s not a lot to tell. I’m just not that interesting. Most of us writers aren’t. We live through our characters and spend our days playing with our imaginary friends and having conversations with the voices in our heads. Apart from that, I live in Nashville with a husband and two boys, a dog, a parakeet, a couple of frogs and a couple of goldfish. I’m allergic to cats, so I only have those vicariously. Writing used to be a hobby that’s now my profession, and I haven’t found another hobby to replace it yet. I do like to travel a lot, and I also spend a lot of time reading. I used to knit more than I do now, but maybe I’ll pick it up again.
When you decided to write, did you make a conscientious effort to write cozies or did it come naturally?
LOL! I never planned to write cozies. It’s not a genre where I’m particularly comfortable, to be honest, although I’ve been told I do it fairly well. I started out writing romance, and then ended up in a sort of romantic mystery hybrid that’s been compared to Janet Evanovich and Mary Kay Andrew’s Savannah Blues. The chance to write a cozy series came out of left field, I wasn’t going after it, but I didn’t think I ought to turn it down. I’m more comfortable with series than I am with standalone books – once I get to know charactesr, I like to keep playing with them! – but at the same time, the cozy subject matter is somewhat limiting, and I feel acutely the lack of sex and violence. Or more accurately, I feel limited by the fact that I can’t show my characters in bed together, when we all know they’re having sex, and there are certain subjects that aren’t considered ‘cozy’ enough, and those tend to be the subjects that excite me. I was able to push the envelope a little with Mortar and Murder, where I tackled human trafficking, but that’s as far as I’ve been allowed to go, and I had to tone it down considerably. It’s great that there are cozy mysteries out there for people who prefer their murders nice and clean, but for me personally, I like my mysteries a little grittier.  
Interesting, Jennie. I write gritty stuff in my Logan Hunter series and have been told by a few readers to tone it down a little. Ha! I love Evanovich and Andrews as well.
I'm intrigued by the way your cover fonts are designed. Why are the title fonts designed the way they are?
I have no earthly idea. I have fantastic designers, for the inside of the book as well as the outside, and I have a really great cover artist who creates the picture that goes on the front of the book, but all of that has nothing to do with me. The art department at the publishing house does it. They show it to me and say “This is the cover for the new book, what do you think?” and if I have any concerns, they do their best to address them, but that’s the limit of my involvement with the exterior of the book. I have no idea why the publisher decided to brand the books the way they did – although I’m thrilled about it! The books are gorgeous, and I’m very happy the publisher did them that way – I think I have some of the nicest covers around! – but I don’t have any say at all in what they look like.
I love them too!
Each of your books includes design tips in the back. Do you have a background in home-renovation?
I do, as a matter of fact. My husband and I bought our first house in 2000. Now we’re in our ninth, or maybe tenth. All of them have been renovation objects, some more needy of fix-up than others. We’ve owned everything from an 1899 transitional Victorian to the current one, which is a mid-century brick ranch, like the haunted house Derek and Avery renovated in Spackled and Spooked.
I really like Avery Baker, a young lady who seems to find many a mystery to solve even though her background is textiles. How did you develop her?
When my editor and I first started talking about the series, she had a few ideas in mind for what she wanted it to be like. One of them was the very popular trope of fish out of water: a character dropped into a location/situation she’s ill prepared for. A big-city girl at heart, Avery inherits her Aunt Inga’s house in a tiny town on the outer edge of the back-beyond: the coast of Maine. I used to live in New York City, and a few chapters of the book take place there, so I gave Avery that background, since I could write about it with some degree of authority. I knew I needed to build in conflict between Avery and her love interest, so I made Derek a traditionalist, a restorer rather than a renovator at heart; someone who prefers to keep the integrity of the old architecture whenever possible, rather than updating it. Avery, meanwhile, came to Waterfield with her heart set on stuffing as many modern amenities into Aunt Inga’s old house as she could. She needed a profession and a background where she could innovate, where she wasn’t bogged down with history or preservation. Textiles sounded interesting, and besides, it allowed her to show some personality in her mode of dress. She’s developing and changing as the series is going along: the Avery from Fatal Fixer-Upper is quite a different character from the Avery of Mortar and Murder or Flipped Out, the book that’s coming in October. Her personality is still the same – she’s impetuous, quick to jump to conclusions, inquisitive, a little neurotic, and not as careful as she should be – but her actions and reactions have changed a little as a result of her new life and the people in it.   
Tell us more about Derek Ellis, the hunky “Mr. Fix-it”. Hubba, hubba!
LOL! Glad you like him!
Derek is Avery’s boyfriend. In the first book she sort of suspects him of wanting to drive her out of Aunt Inga’s house, but not really seriously. After Fatal Fixer-Upper is over, the two of them go into business together, renovating houses, and they also become romantically involved.
Derek is 34 when the series starts, 35 now, a year later. He’s a native Waterfielder, who grew up in a small, green Folk Victorian cottage on Chandler Street. His father is Dr. Benjamin Ellis. The Ellises have been doctors for generations, and Derek went to medical school, too. While there, he met Melissa James, and married her. The two of them ended up back in Waterfield after Derek finished his residency. He was supposed to go to work with his father, but after a year or so, he decided he’d rather work on houses than people and left the practice, with his father’s blessing. Melissa wasn’t as understanding; she divorced him and took up with Avery’s cousin Ray instead. When Derek and Avery meet, it’s five years later, and Derek is finally getting to the point where he’s ready for a serious relationship again.
He’s just about six feet tall – quite a lot taller than Avery, who’s just 5’2”. He has blue eyes and hair that’s light brown in the winter and dark blond in the summer, when the sun bleaches it. He looks good in jeans and a T-shirt, and better without either. Avery is crazy about him, and I have to admit to having a bit of a soft spot myself. 
I’m sure folks would be interested in more information about each book. Please give us a brief synopsis of each one.
Book 1, Fatal Fixer-Upper, starts with Avery inheriting her Aunt Inga’s house in Waterfield and deciding to spend the summer in Maine renovating it. She hires Derek Ellis, a local handyman, to help her, and things develop. There’s a little bit of romance, a few dead bodies, and a history mystery that dates back to Marie Antoinette and the French revolution, while going into some of Aunt Inga’s past. At the end of Fatal Fixer-Upper, Avery decides to stay in Maine and go into business with Derek, renovating houses.
In book 2, Spackled and Spooked, Derek and Avery are renovating their first real project together – since Avery moved into Aunt Inga’s house and they couldn’t sell it. The house they’re working on is a mid-century ranch which is rumored to be haunted after a man killed his wife and inlaws there some seventeen or eighteen years ago. There are creepy footsteps in the hallway when no one’s around, and then Derek uncovers a skeleton buried in the crawlspace. When one of the neighbors end up dead, Avery realizes the murderer is very much alive and still keeping an eye on the house.
At the beginning of book 3, Plaster and Poison, Avery and Derek still haven’t sold the mid-century ranch, and they don’t have any money to take on a new project. Instead, they agree to renovate an old carriage house on their friend Kate McGillicutty’s property and turn it into a love nest for two in time for Kate’s wedding to Waterfield chief of police Wayne Rasmussen. But when a dead body turns up in the carriage house, and turns out to be someone from Kate’s past, someone Kate’s daughter Shannon has been spending a lot of time with, it’s questionable whether the wedding will take place at all. Add in Avery’s mom and stepfather, in town to check out Derek, plus a set of initials carved into the wall of the old carriage house that Avery is trying to trace, and it’s a complicated few weeks.
Book 4, Mortar and Murder, find Derek and Avery renovating a 1783 center-chimney Colonial on Rowanberry Island, off the coast of Maine. The island – and the house – has a past going back to the Revolutionary War, and it isn’t long before Avery suspects that smuggling is still going on on Rowanberry Island. Except this time, it isn’t tea and sugar being brought in; it’s young women. Women with a connection to Irina Rozhdestvensky, Avery and Derek’s realtor, a Ukrainian immigrant.  Between Irina and Gert Heyerdahl, a reclusive thriller writer who spends his summers on Rowanberry Island, and an island population that doesn’t take kindly to outsiders, Avery has her hands full figuring out what’s going on.
Book 5, Flipped Out, will be released in October. Avery and Derek are filming an episode of a TV program that’s also called Flipped Out, the premise of which is to renovate – flip – a house in a week. The house belongs to Tony ‘the Tiger’ Micelli, anchor for Portland’s Channel Eight News, and when the television crew arrives, it turns out several of them know Tony from before. When Tony ends up dead, and his new fiancée Melissa James, Derek’s ex-wife, is arrested for the murder, it’s up to Avery to delve into Tony’s past and figure out who the real murderer is. 
Congratulations on a unique and adorable series, Jennie. Please let me know when you have another book release.
Thanks so much, Susan! DIY-5 comes in October, DIY-6 sometime in 2012. Meanwhile, I’m self-publishing a series of Nashville-based real estate themed mysteries as e-books for Kindle and Nook under the pseudonym Jenna Bennett. A Cutthroat Business was released in May, Hot Property in June, and Contract Pending in July. Book 4, Close to Home, will be coming in September. Readers can find out more about those on my blog, www.jennabennett.com The website with more information about the DIY series is www.jenniebentley.com 
Hope to see you at Killer Nashville again this year!
I hope to be there!