#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Lynn Slaughter

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I’d like to welcome Lynn Slaughter to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Things you need for your writing sessions: strong coffee, water, music, a scented candle, and my computer.

Things that hamper your writing: scam phone calls!

Things you love about writing: I love getting into the zone and immersing myself into my characters’ world.

Things you hate about writing: I’m lousy at marketing and social media, and that’s part of the job.

Words that describe you: warm, empathetic, humor lover

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: overly sensitive

Favorite foods: pasta, chocolate, peanut butter

Things that make you want to gag: Seafood

Favorite beverage: orange juice, coffee, white wine

Something that gives you a sour face: beer

Something you’re really good at: listening

Something you’re really bad at: I have absolutely no spatial sense!

Last best thing you ate: my husband’s homemade chicken noodle soup

Last thing you regret eating: a dish made with pork that didn’t agree with me

The last thing you ordered online: gift certificate for my daughter-in-law for a “facialist” she loves

The last thing you regret buying: I ordered this automatic timer sprinkler attachment. When we turned it on, it made this ear-splitting noise that shook the whole house!

Favorite things to do: Hanging out with my husband, hugging my grandchildren, reading, writing, singing, going to garage and estate sales, supporting other writers

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Yard work- not my thing!

Things that make you happy: my husband, love, kindness, laughing, music, good food

Things that drive you crazy: Injustice, folks who peddle misinformation and hatred, and any sort of cruelty, especially to children

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About Lynn: After a long career as a professional dancer and dance educator, Lynn Slaughter earned her MFA in Writing Popular Fiction from Section Hill University. She writes coming of age romantic mysteries and is the author of the newly released Leisha’s Song; While I Danced, an EPIC finalist; It Should Have Been You, a Silver Falchion finalist; and Deadly Setup (forthcoming from Fire and Ice, 2022). She lives in Louisville, Kentucky, where she’s at work on her next novel and serves as the President of Derby Rotten Scoundrels, the Ohio River Valley chapter of Sisters in Crime.

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#WriterWednesday Author Interview with DonnaRae Menard

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I’d like to welcome DonnaRae Menard as my guest today.

A few of your favorite things: I like real coffee, black, no hybrid flavors, fall weather, and old movies

Things you need to throw out: all the skinny clothes I will never fit into again, fabric scraps from old projects, all the plastic take-out containers

Hardest thing about being a writer: I hate the selling, the feeling I am begging somebody to like me.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Letting the words flow and telling my story out loud to people.

Words that describe you: I think I’m half as old as I am, I have a hard shell that’s fake, and I love to travel even virtually.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: I speak without thinking, can be hurtful, am not all that smart.

Favorite music or song: I love music from the 60s and 70s. The Last Kiss, a lot of classical, oh, and Christmas music.

Music that drives you crazy: Loud, banging stuff where I can’t understand the words, Christmas music that’s been redone to something modern and without depth.

Favorite smell: Fresh baked bread

Something that makes you hold your nose: Unwashed hair.

Something you’re really good at: I’m a great talker. My grandmother told me when I was six that

I didn’t have to talk to everyone on the city bus.

Something you’re really bad at: Remembering I took notes and to use them.

Something you wish you could do: I’d like to be able to sing. I know all the words but can’t carry a tune in a bucket.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Not tell the truth to save someone else’s feelings.

There always seems to be sorrow later when you try to save someone from reality.

Something you like to do: Have a conversation with my mother.

Something you wish you’d never done: Not had a conversation with my mother.

Things you’d walk a mile for: A friend, the joy of walking, peace of mind

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: People who have the same two conversations on replaying tapes.

Things you always put in your books: Hm, I always try for the human element; confusion, self-doubt, then awareness.

Things you never put in your books: Animal cruelty, self-mutilation, maybe suicide.

Things to say to an author: Tell me what you’re working on.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Wow, that sucked.

Favorite places you’ve been: Albuquerque, New Mexico, Boston, Mass., Ausable Chasm, NY.

Places you never want to go to again: Seaside, CA, Quebec City, Quebec, Columbus City, Ohio (I got a ticket because I was lost and crying in frustration in a no parking zone.)

Favorite books (or genre): Romance mysteries where the story isn’t necessarily all about the romance.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Self-help, it’s like doctor heal thyself.

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): George Lucas, Oprah Winfrey, Michelle Obama

People you’d cancel dinner on: The head of the local selectmens board, Donald Trump, Sarah Palin

Favorite things to do: Write, visit my kids, write, travel, write, eat cheeseburgers.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Oh, gotta be housework; dusting and cleaning bathroom and fridge.

Most embarrassing moment: Doing an intro and forgetting the headliner’s name. I was so nervous I couldn’t read the crib notes.

Proudest moment: Seeing my website for the first time. I felt as though I was really going to be able to sell a book.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Once when I was a teenager, I jumped out of a second story window on a dare.

Something you chickened out from doing: Bought the ticket, could not get in that hot air balloon basket to save my life.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: You made me cry, at a place where I cried when I wrote it.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: This character is me, isn’t it? And I’d never met the person until that day.

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About DonnaRae

My writing career began in the seventh grade, where I was a country kid in a city school. I took to writing disparaging descriptions of other students in self-defense. Unfortunately, when I got caught writing during class, I had to stand up and read my notes aloud. That was also the start of my training for the one hundred yard dash in track and field.

As time went on, I had diaries, journals, two tiny columns in small-town newspapers, and wrote competition pieces for Toastmaster's International. I also had boxes under my bed filled with novels finished and not.

On April 28, 2008, I was diagnosed with stage 4 squamous carcinoma. My prognosis was bleak. I fought back and won. In 2010, I decided I was going to write and be published. Not just self-published, but by a real publishing house. I kept writing, took classes, went to seminars, book signings, readings, and conventions. Anywhere I might meet someone with experience.

At Crimebake 2019, I met Harriette Sackler and Bruce Coffin. One offered me professional advice, the other the promise to meet me at the top. I went back to work, this time treating writing like employment, not a hobby.

I live just outside of town in the type of place where people feel free to drop off cats, kittens, cages of gerbils or white rats, and even the occasional farm animal. I have a swinging door for those that need. We talk, eat, laugh, and all the while, I type.

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Twitter - @DonnaRaeMenard

DonnaRae’s Books

Murder in the Meadows

Willa the Wisp

The Fairy Mothers, The Clarion Call Anthology, Vol 4, Fairytale Riot

Murder in the Meadows

After 10 years gone, Katelyn Took returns home in 1974 to find the grandmother who raised her has been killed in the farm meadow. Grams will leaves Katelyn ownership of the now dilapidated farm, but includes a stipulation regarding seventeen cats. Then there's the confused old woman still living in the farmhouse. Katelyn doesn't want to stay, but the longer she does, the more drawn into finding Gram's killer she becomes.


#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Michele Drier

I’d like to welcome author, Michele Drier to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Favorite thing to do when you have free time: Read, read, read.

The thing you’ll always move to the bottom of your to do list: Cleaning house, primarily vacuuming.

Favorite snacks: Popcorn, nuts, raw veggies, M&Ms

Things that make you want to gag: Organ meats (liver, sweetbreads), kale, escargots (but oh, the garlic butter!)

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: Either a Grand Prix driver or an archeologist.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: Type for a living (writing!). I’m of an age when mostly girls took typing so they could be secretaries. I started college as a chemistry major…no typing there! I took one typing class in college so I didn’t have to pay to have my papers typed. Got a D.

I’ve ended up making a living at typing (reporter, editor, writing grant proposals, annual reports and now, novels…working on the 18th so far). I still type about 45 wpm with errors.

Last best thing you ate: Greek salad
Last thing you regret eating: Ohhhh…brownie with ice cream! Same meal.

Favorite places you’ve been: Europe, almost anywhere but primarily Paris. Based my Kandesky Vampire Chronicles on Hungary because I loved it there.
Places you never want to go to again: North Dakota

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living):Louise Penny, Elizabeth George, Barak Obama
People you’d cancel dinner on: Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, Rand Paul

Favorite things to do: Travel, learn new things.
Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Household chores, going to meetings (sigh).

Best thing you’ve ever done: Had my daughters.
Biggest mistake: Getting married, getting married, getting married (yes, three times, the last one ended more than 30 years ago).

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Driven through Greece and Hungary in a rented car. Couldn’t even read the street signs.
Something you chickened out from doing: Climbing to the top of the Duomo in Florence (I chickened out almost at the top and had to fight my way down through all the other tourists coming up the one-sway staircase)

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Vice President Kamela Harris. When I was running a Legal Services organization in Oakland, she was the newly-elected DA in San Francisco and we worked together (mostly I called and left messages) on legal conferences we presented about recognizing and halting Elder Abuse.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: This goes way back, but I saw Shirley Temple shopping several times at Sak’s in a Palo Alto mall. This was when she was Shirley Black and an ambassador and Chief of Protocol for the U.S.

The most exciting thing about your writing life: Telling wonderful stories about women I want to be like.

The one thing you wish you could do over in your writing life: Start earlier and try harder to find an agent.

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Tapestry of Tears

History had always been a strong magnet for Rosalind Duke. She took up the medieval craft of making stained glass and was building a solid international reputation, taking on larger and larger commissions. Her idyllic life with her husband, Winston Duke, an art historian at UCLA, was cut short when he was gunned down in a drive-by shooting. After moving to a small town on the Oregon coast, she’s offered a commission to translate the medieval embroidery, The Bayeux Tapestry, into stained glass for a museum at a small Wisconsin university. Roz jumps at the chance. Not only to try to transfer the Tapestry into a new medium, but to spend time in Southern England and Northern France, tracing the path taken by the invading Normans under William the Conqueror. But the 21st century drags her back when she finds a body crumpled against a wall in an ancient stone church in the small town of Lympne, on the southern coast of England. Has she walked into a contemporary murder?

About Michele

Michele Drier is a fifth generation Californian. During her career in journalism at daily newspapers in California, she won awards for investigative series. She is the past president of Capitol Crimes, a Sisters in Crime chapter; the Guppies chapter of Sisters in Crime, current vice president of NorCal Sisters in Crime, and co-chaired  Bouchercon 2020.

Her Amy Hobbes Newspaper Mysteries are Edited for Death, (called “Riveting and much recommended” by the Midwest Book Review), Labeled for Death and Delta for Death. A stand-alone, Ashes of Memories was published May 2017.

Her paranormal romance series, SNAP: The Kandesky Vampire Chronicles, named the best paranormal vampire series of 2014 by PRG. Currently writing Book Eleven, SNAP: Pandemic Games.

Her new series is the Stained Glass Mysteries, Stain on the Soul and Tapestry of Tears, and she’s working on the third, Resurrection of the Roses.

She lives in Sacramento with her cat, Malley.

Let’s Be Social

Visit her webpage www.MicheleDrier.me

Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/AuthorMicheleDrier

Author Page http://www.amazon.com/Michele-Drier/e/B005D2YC8G/

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Mark Leichliter

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I’d like to welcome author, Mark Leichliter, to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Things you need for your writing sessions: I’m a terrible creature of habit, in large part because I’m always looking for the quickest path to writing productivity. As a result, I have several clear needs. I write in the same two locations of my house. I write only on yellow legal pads. I have a favorite pen and others know not to touch it. Mostly I need quiet. I’m like most writers, I suspect, in that I write best from a strange point of nearly altered consciousness because writing is so immersive. I’m living in the world I’m writing about as I write, so I don’t stand up very well to distractions. I can edit and revise in nearly any environment, but for first draft, I want to get lost in the work.

Things that hamper your writing: If I start to think too directly about the reader or the marketplace early on, that kills a story before it ever has a chance to develop. There is a time and place to consider the reader’s needs—particularly in terms of what they need to know or what might be unfamiliar—but that comes later. The larger intrusion of worrying what someone might think is also a story-killer. This comes at the most obvious level of wanting people to like the work but it also can be much deeper, where I can fall into the larger trap we’re far too conditioned by in this country, the trap of comparison. We can only write the books we can write; we should want to make them the best books we capable of writing, but to string out false comparisons to other people’s work or worse, other people’s experiences or visions, can be crushing. I’m convinced that every book has its own needs and its own rhythms. It’s the writer’s job to find those. To look anywhere but within the text I am writing and the world that has given rise to it is only hampering to the process.

Things you love about writing: Ultimately as a writer you have no one to answer to but yourself. I care greatly about readers. I need to satisfy editors. But each day when I sit down at my writing desk, I really can write anything I desire.

Things you hate about writing: Ultimately as a writer you have no one to answer to but yourself. Sound familiar? If you want to write, you had better learn to live with your decisions. 

Things you never want to run out of: Have I mentioned that I trend towards Type A? My wife loves to give me a hard time about some of my obsessions. Some are obvious, like having lots of toilet paper on hand. That just makes good sense, right? I’ve shared already that I write longhand on yellow legal tablets. There’s a lot of lawyers in the world, right, so why are these tablets so hard to find? Or at least that’s the reasoning behind having a few dozen on hand at any time. And rum. One certainly should have a reserve bottle for when the primary runs out. I was a boy scout. An Eagle scout in fact. I took the “Be prepared” motto of scouting fully to heart.

Things you wish you’d never bought: So I suspect we all have our embarrassments for this question, those items that you’re a bit afraid to hand over to the attendant when you make the drop-off at Goodwill or The Salvation Army. Wow, my list is probably long. There was a certain light blue, big-shouldered, “Miami Vice” style blazer that hung around the closet unworn for several decades. More than a few pieces of trendy exercise equipment likely advertised on late-night infomercials; remember the “Ab-buster?” A certain POS Mercury station wagon with a rear-facing back seat that inevitably made the child sitting in it nauseous, the car that dropped its transmission and suffered broken engine mounts. The manual push-lawn mower (“Come on, the yard’s small; I’ll get additional exercise …”) That last donut … I could go on.

Favorite music or song: I’m entirely eclectic in my musical taste, and I absolutely love music. If I could carry a tune in a bucket, I’d drop this writing gig and sing everywhere I went. Kind of like a musical. (And wouldn’t the world be a kinder place if we lived inside a musical?) My tastes are so eclectic that I can drive my wife crazy—jumping from Kenyon Benga one minute to a Disney tune the next. Heavy on my play list will always be bands like The Lumineers, Mumford and Sons, The Head and the Heart, Of Monsters and Men. But of course I reveal my age with still loving 70s and 80s rock. I’m a Crash Test Dummies superfan.

Music that drives you crazy: I better whisper this because I live in Montana and grew up in Wyoming, but let’s just say that, despite eclectic taste, I’ve been slow to embrace country music and when I do, I prefer to keep it old school.

The last thing you ordered online: a very specific round glass food container with a screw-on lid (have I mentioned the whole Type-A thing?)

The last thing you regret buying: a very specific round glass food container with a screw-on lid; okay, this is the problem with online shopping; until you hold the thing in your hand and test the lid, well, it’s just so disappointing.

Things you always put in your books: Private jokes. This is stupid, I know, because it’s usually for an audience of one, but I regularly leave in at least one thing only I find funny or a reference that only a tiny handful of people can recognize. I’d give an example, but then that would kind of defeat the point, right?
Things you never put in your books: Anything gratuitous. My books are not really violent per se anyway, but I feel that all actions, including violence and sex, if present, must be a natural and productive outgrowth of plot or character. I take this a step beyond many writers, for while I place heavy emphasis on realism, I think crime fiction owes it to real victims and real investigators to present the world in a way that is accurate to the actual world. The act of solving a crime is compelling itself, and doing so is an outgrowth of applying hard work and good investigative thinking to what can seem disturbing or irrational actions by people who are either troubled, depraved, or out of their right minds. Because we are dealing with complex psychology, we’ll venture into difficult terrain, but I think writers need to with a sense of purpose and authenticity.

Favorite places you’ve been: Our oldest daughter is currently living in Mainz, Germany working on post-doctoral research, which offered my wife and I a good excuse to—finally—get to Europe. We last travelled, as it turns out, the summer before the world went into science fiction mode and international travel was shut down. There are any number of places that might be worthy of highlighting as an answer to this question, but because I’m a writer who likes detail, I’ll narrow it down to one tiny, locals-favorite restaurant in Paris’s Latin Quarter. We’d come to know the Left Bank after staying there for about a week in a remarkable little apartment tucked down a gated, curving stone alley all of about 3 feet wide. So we had learned the immediate neighborhood fairly well. On our final night in Europe, we’d come back through Paris for our departure the next day. This was restaurant was classic Paris: down a cobblestone side street, an unimposing street front you’d miss if you weren’t looking for the tiny circular sign hanging above the door; diners in a multi-paned window; a dining room that held all of five tables; an elegant but simply dressed hostess/waitress/owner; and an absolutely unforgettable meal; the special was roasted bone marrow, and WOW!


Places you never want to go to again: When I was seventeen, I interned at the Wyoming State Board of Charities and Reform, which, among other responsibilities, is the state-level agency that oversees the Department of Corrections. At the time, Wyoming was building a new state prison, and the old prison—which looked like something off a movie set even in good weather—was still very much in operation, as crowded and decrepit as it was. One of the officials in our office invited me to go along for meetings he had at the prison, so we made the two-hour drive from Cheyenne to Rawlins. It was an unusually rainy late-spring day, and pulling through the car entrance tunnel of the old stone building felt like entering a castle. Seventeen, naïve, a good kid who was bookish and interested in the law, was I ever a misfit and ripe for the shocks of being inside a state penitentiary. In a truly surreal moment, among the catcalls from prisoners as we passed along a cell block, someone called me by name, and I turned to an inmate with his head up against the bars of his first-floor cell, a guy from my neighborhood who was in for grand larceny. He was two years older than me. His dad was a lawyer, which helped in shortening his sentence but hadn’t kept him from a conviction. I didn’t know him well, but seeing him on the other side of prison bars, while not a great surprise given his personality and his regular defiance of authority, still was shocking. Perhaps the only greater shock that day came from being allowed to enter the gas chamber, long unused but still the method of death for capital cases should it be called back into action in those days. The chamber looked like something out of a submarine, with windows for witnesses to watch the man strapped to the chair at its center die. I was never exactly the sort of kid destined for prison, but had I needed to be scared straight, that trip would have done it.

 Favorite books (or genre): In mystery, I’ll read virtually anything written by Tana French, Laura Lippmann, and Laura McHugh. I’m a huge fan of early Dennis Lehane. As I broaden out from mystery, my tastes are nearly as eclectic as those in music, though I trend literary. In the books I want with me on a deserted island category, I have to have these: All the Light We Cannot See, The English Patient, A Visit from the Goon Squad, Beloved, They Things They Carried, and The Times Are Never So Bad.

Books you wouldn’t buy: I can’t stand the stuff that simply preys on readers, things like a lot of self-help and diet books. I’m sure some are valuable, but those that clearly just want to make a buck are offensive. There are strange books coming out now from the so-called “influencers”; let’s make our own decisions, people!

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): (I always love versions of this question; I probably spend too much time thinking about it, although the “living” requirement adds another twist.) Anthony Doer, Claire Vaye Watkins, President Obama, Norah Jones, David Letterman, Jhumpa Lahiri, Mike Krzyzewski, Carli Lloyd.
People you’d cancel dinner on: Mark Zuckerberg, President Trump, Mike Lindell (the My Pillow guy), Richard Spencer.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Tim O’Brien

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: I don’t have a lot of experience in this realm, but I once had dinner next to Richard Dreyfuss, and while he was recognizable, man was he old. I guess that makes me pretty old too!

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About Mark:

 The Other Side, a contemporary mystery novel, is the crime fiction debut from Mark Leichliter. Writing as Mark Hummel, he is the author of the contemporary literary novel In the Chameleon’s Shadow and the short story collection Lost & Found. His fiction, poetry, and essays have regularly appeared in a variety of literary journals including such publications as The Bloomsbury Review, Dogwood, Fugue, Talking River Review, Weber: The Contemporary West, and Zone 3. A former college professor and writing program director, he has also served as a teacher in an independent high school, directed a writers’ conference, worked as a librarian, and taught on the faculty of several writers’ conferences. He is the founding editor of the nonfiction magazine bioStories. A native of Wyoming, Mark lives in Montana’s Flathead Valley.

 

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#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Debra H. Goldstein

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I’d like to welcome my friend, Debra H. Goldstein, to the blog. Her latest in her Sarah Blair series launched this month.

Favorite thing to do when you have free time: read, try new restaurants, get together with family and friends.

The thing you’ll always move to the bottom of your to do list: Exercise!

Things you need when you’re in your writing cave: Show music playing.

Things that distract you from writing: A beautiful day outside my window or my husband needing his remote control fixed – again.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Discipline – there are so many distractions from simply sitting down and writing.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Meeting deadlines – I write best under pressure.

Things you will run to the store for at midnight: Toilet paper and ice cream.

Things you never put on your shopping list: a head of lettuce (pre-washed and made salads for me)

Favorite snacks: Pizza, ice cream, Girl Scout Thin Mint and Samoa cookies

Things that make you want to gag:  Almost anything healthy, Nutella, and garlic.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: Doctor.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: Walk away from my judicial position to be a writer (passion!)

Things to say to an author: “I love yours books (or stories);” “You write beautifully;” “I stayed up all night reading your book. I had to know how it ended.” “Thank you.”

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: “I don’t think any of that could ever have happened.”

Favorite places you’ve been: Australia, San Francisco, China, and any theater in New York showing a Broadway musical

Places you never want to go to again: Jamaica – the country was beautiful, but the food did me in. Ended up in the hospital for a week.

Favorite things to do: Washing laundry, reading to children/grandchildren, writing, reading

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Folding laundry, making a bed, cleaning a toilet (notice the theme here… if I could afford it, I’d add cooking to the list)

Best thing you’ve ever done: Having my children

Biggest mistake: When I’m angry, I’d answer getting married, but after thirty-seven years, that is old hat, so I’ll simply say it’s a toss-up between putting the interior of the oven on fire while cooking or blowing the computer brain on the oven/stove while trying to use the automatic self-cleaning.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: “I’d been sitting with my mother who is in hospice, but for a few hours, while she was resting and my sister was with her, your book made me forget what was going on.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you: “You’ve got everything wrong!” – of course, the book was set in 1970, but the change in the road he was talking about didn’t occur until 1971.

The most exciting thing about your writing life: Every day is different, but there is something thrilling when I realize people like my writing (and occasionally my works are nominated for awards).

The one thing you wish you could do over in your writing life: Start sooner. I waited until I’d already established myself in other careers and in my family life to follow my dream.

Four Cuts Too Many

Sarah Blair gets an education in slicing and dicing when someone in her friend’s culinary school serves up a main corpse in Wheaton, Alabama . . .
 
Between working as a law firm receptionist, reluctantly pitching in as co-owner of her twin sister’s restaurant, and caretaking for her regal Siamese RahRah and rescue dog Fluffy, Sarah has no time to enjoy life’s finer things. Divorced and sort-of dating, she’s considering going back to school. But as a somewhat competent sleuth, Sarah’s more suited for criminal justice than learning how many ways she can burn a meal.
 
Although she wouldn’t mind learning some knife skills from her sous chef, Grace Winston. An adjunct instructor who teaches cutlery expertise in cooking college, Grace is considering accepting an executive chef’s position offered by Jane Clark, Sarah’s business rival—and her late ex-husband’s lover. But Grace’s future lands in hot water when the school’s director is found dead with one of her knives in his back. To clear her friend’s name, there’s no time to mince words. Sarah must sharpen her own skills at uncovering an elusive killer . . .
 
Includes quick and easy recipes!

Let’s Be Social:

Website – www.DebraHGoldstein.com

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/DebraHGoldsteinAuthor/       

Twitter - @DebraHGoldstein

Instagram – debrahgoldstein 

Bookbub – https://www.bookbub.com/profile/debra-h-goldstein

Book LInks:

Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Four-Cuts-Sarah-Blair-Mystery/dp/1496732219

Barnes & Noble: Four Cuts Too Many by Debra H. Goldstein, Paperback | Barnes & Noble® (barnesandnoble.com)

About Debra:

Judge Debra H. Goldstein writes Kensington’s Sarah Blair mystery series. Her short stories and novels have been Agatha, Anthony, Derringer, and Silver Falchion finalists. Debra is on the national board of MWA and is president of SEMWA. She previously was on SinC’s national board and was the Guppy Chapter president.

 

 

#ThisorThatAuthor Interview with Terry Shepherd

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I’d like to welcome author, Terry Shepherd, to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: 

My beautiful granddaughter jumping into my arms when she sees me. Watching my kids parenting their kids and animals. The smile on my wife’s face when I first see her every morning. 

Things you need for your writing sessions:

I write in Vellum and then, run my daily word count through Pro Writing Aid. The last step is narrating it to mp3 audio. It’s always surprising what you find when you read your writing aloud.

Things you love about writing:

I love the characters best. I try to populate my tales with highly diverse casts. Researching the culture and talking to people about their life experiences is a treasure trove. It builds empathy and has given me a unique perspective on the rich variety that makes up humanity. The highest compliment you can get is to hear someone say, “Hey! You told my story!”

Things you never want to run out of:

New people to meet. Kindness. The desire to create.

Words that describe you:

Optimistic to a fault. Impatient with myself. Driven. Passionate.

Favorite music or song:

I’m a sixties guy. Anything from 1963 until 1974 is my wheelhouse. I favor Motown and early Beatles but also love Earth, Wind & Fire and the Manhattan Transfer. I was a rock drummer as a kid and still can’t listen to Buddy Rich’s West Side Story Medley without getting chills.

Something you’re really bad at:

Handwriting. Learning to type in 9th grade was a life changing experience.

Things to say to an author:

“Here’s what I enjoy about your storytelling…”

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:

“Your book was terrible and I won’t tell you why.”

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living):

The famous: Authors David McCullough & Megan Abbott, Record Producer Bones Howe, Barack and Michelle Obama

The important: My closest college radio friends

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

“You made me believe I could be a heroine, too.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

“Your LGBTQ character is exactly like me and we’ve never even met. Have you been stalking me?”

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About Terry:

Terry Shepherd writes thrillers for grown-ups and detective stories for kids. His first published fiction, the Jessica Ramirez Thriller “Chasing Vega” is a 5-Star hit in both English and Spanish. Book two, “Chasing The Captain” is due out in May. He’s the author of the Waterford Detective series for children and the forthcoming kids time-travel history series "Students In Time." In 2020 he and his wife, Colleen co-wrote the "Juliette and the Mystery Bug" series, teaching kids how to protect themselves from Covid-19 and other “mystery bugs." Terry hosts the Authors on the Air podcast, is co-chair of the Sisters in Crime / Capitol Crimes 2021 Anthology committee and watches the sun come up on the ocean from his home in Jacksonville, Florida.

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#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Linda Norlander

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I’d like to welcome Linda Norlander to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

Favorite Things: Books, Running Shoes (not that I run), Potted annuals

Things to throw out: Old running shoes, socks with holes in them, old manuscript drafts

Things you love about writing: Characters popping in when least expected, figuring out the ending

Things you hate about writing: Not knowing where the commas go

Things you never want to run out of: Gas—ever see the opening of “Night of the Living Dead?”

Things you wished you never bought: A Plymouth Horizon car—small parts like door handles kept breaking off until the only way to get was through the hatchback

Words that describe you: Contemplative, good sense of humor, low key

Words that describe you but wish they didn’t: Steady

Favorite Foods: Olives, potato chips, salted caramel ice cream

Things that make you gag: Anchovies, peanut butter

Favorite Music or song: Anything by Bruce Springsteen

Music that drives you crazy: Heavy Metal (except I love AC/DC’s Highway to Hell)

Favorite Beverage: Wine, preferably a white

Things you always put in your books: A dash of humor

Things you never put in your books: Graphic violence

Favorite Places: North Shore of Lake Superior, Paris, Cuba

Place you never want to go again: Buffalo

Most embarrassing moment: Hitting the wrong note for the processional as the church organist (fired shortly thereafter.)

Proudest moment: Seeing the cover of my first published novel

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About Linda:

Linda Norlander is the author of “Death of an Editor” and “Death of a Starling” from a Cabin by the Lake mystery series set in the woods of Northern Minnesota. Norlander has written award winning short fiction, non-fiction and humor. In her life before taking up the pen to write murder mysteries, she worked as a nurse in public health and end-of-life care. She resides with her husband in Tacoma, Washington.

 Let’s Be Social:

www.lindanorlander.com
www.facebook.com/authorlindanorlander

www.twitter.com/lindanorlander

 

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with J. P. McLean

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I’d like to welcome author J. P. McLean to the blog this week for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things:

My husband, the smoky scent of a campfire, family photographs, red wine, and the sound of grown women giggling.

Things you need to throw out:

Insecurity, perfectionism, and what other people think of me.

Things you need for your writing sessions:

Not much: a coffee, a laptop, and at least one hour (I don’t write well in shorter spurts).

Things that hamper your writing:

Lyrics in music because they distract me. Nor can I write with a telephone ringing in the background, or people talking. When that happens, I get up and make another cup of coffee.

Things you love about writing:

Creating dialogue, especially when my characters are having an argument. I love that I have the time to come up with the perfect retort (which rarely happens in my real life).

Things you hate about writing:

Feeling like a dunce when the edits come in.

Things you never want to run out of:

Pepperidge Goldfish Crackers

Things you wish you’d never bought:

Pepperidge Goldfish Crackers

Favorite foods:

All the pasta.

Things that make you want to gag:

Liver, tongue, heart, kidney—pretty much all organ meat.

Something you’re really good at:

Organizing: closets, filing cabinets, bookshelves, photos, you name it.

Something you’re really bad at:

Cold calls to sell my books.

Something you wish you could do:

Speak another language.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do:

Housework.

Things to say to an author:

I loved your book; where can I post my review?

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:

If I had nothing to do, I’d write a book, too.

Things that make you happy:

Puppies (such fond memories), Fridays (even though I haven’t had a day job for years), finding a twenty-dollar bill in a coat pocket from last season (yes!), and going out for dinner (something I’ve dearly missed during COVID).

Things that drive you crazy:

When you get stuck behind a car that is driving WAY under the speed limit. Or when you get all the way home only to find the store’s non-removable tag still attached to the new jeans you bought for tonight’s party.

Most embarrassing moment:

Almost scoring for the other team when playing grade-school basketball. The nets changed ends at halftime, and I was exhausted—forgot we’d changed ends. I made a break for it—I honestly thought all the shouting was me being cheered on. Sadly, they were yelling at me to stop. If I hadn’t been such a lousy shot, I would have made the basket and scored two points for our opponents.

Proudest moment:

When I overheard my mom and dad tell a stranger that their daughter was an author.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Scuba diving

Something you chickened out from doing:

Skydiving

About J. P.:

JP (Jo-Anne) McLean writes urban fantasy and supernatural thrillers. She is best known for her Gift Legacy series, which reviewers call addictive, smart, and fun. Her work has won honourable mentions from the Whistler Independent Book Awards and the Victoria Writers’ Society. JP is a graduate of the University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business and makes her home on Denman Island, which is nestled between Vancouver Island and British Columbia on Canada’s west coast.

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