#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Rosalie Spielman

I’d like to welcome the fabulous Rosalie Spielman to the blog today for #ThisorThatThursday — Fall Edition!

A few of your favorite fall traditions: My husband and I are happy when we are able to go on our long walks on the weekends again. It’s too hot in the summer, especially for our dog, so it’s a relief—and a joy—to feel those first few days of crisp air!

Something autumn-related that you’ll never do again: Go to a “Back to School Night” at a school! Yay for college-aged kids!

Favorite fall treat: Homemade pumpkin-pecan scones. Yum!

A fall treat that makes you gag: Anything with licorice or anise.

Something you only do in the fall: Rake leaves.

Something you’d never do in the fall season: Rake leaves that are “mine.” We have no trees, so all our leaves are leaves that abandon the the neighbors. LOL! We have no trees, and yet I am constantly raking…

Favorite autumn beverage: London Fog Latte.

A drink that gives you a sour face: Pumpkin Spice latte. I do like Chai, but “PSL” is too much spice.

Favorite fall smell: Freshly fallen leaves.

Something that makes you hold your nose: Not-so-fresh, rotting leaves.

Best fall memory: I love going to fall festivals, and the Kurbis festival in Germany was particularly wonderful. (Kurbis = pumpkin)

Something you’d rather forget: Also in Germany, the time a woman pointed me out, in my witch hat, and exclaimed that I looked so much like a witch since I even had “the witch nose!” Um. That’s my actual nose, but thanks?

A tradition you share with others: Boo bags!

A tradition that can be retired: Boo bags!

Best thing you ever cooked/baked in autumn: One year, I made an herbed and garlicy, super buttery dinner roll wreath from scratch for Thanksgiving. So good.

Your worst kitchen disaster: Same recipe, different year…the bundt pan leaked butter, making smoke fill the kitchen and the fire alarm go off. AND to top it off, they ended up dry. Lol!

Favorite place you spent a fall day: Sitting on my porch with a Chai and one of my pumpkin-pecan scones! I even like to take my laptop and do some writing out there, or some reading.

The worst place to spend a fall day: Inside.

Favorite pumpkin spice item: Pancakes! Having said that, I’m not a huge fan. I like pumpkin, not so much the spices without the pumpkin. (I’m looking at you, Starbucks.)

Something that should never be pumpkin-spiced flavored: Pretty much everything?

Best Halloween costume ever: It’s not mine, but one of the costumes for my kids. One year, he wanted to be a certain Star Wars character. My sister had given the kids goatherder cloaks from Tunisia, which had been George Lucas’ inspiration for the Jedi capes. My son’s cape was pretty large on him, then we got a scary black fabric mask with glowing round eyes and put up the hood… Voila, a Jawa!

Worst Halloween costume disaster: The same year my son was a Jawa, my little Kindergartener wanted to be Princess Jasmine. I found one somewhere and she was an adorable little Jasmine. But, walking along with her brother, all the other parents knew exactly what my son’s costume was, but couldn’t guess my daughter’s, despite the little broach with the character’s face... Poor little thing was so bummed out.

About Rosalie:

Rosalie Spielman is a mother, veteran, and retired military spouse. She was thrilled to discover that she could make other people laugh with her writing and finds joy in giving people a humorous escape from the real world. She writes for the multi-author Aloha Lagoon mystery series and her own Hometown Mystery series.

She currently lives in Maryland with her husband in a rapidly emptying nest. For more information on her books or to subscribe to her newsletter, go to www.rosalie-spielman-author.com, follow her Facebook page (Rosalie Spielman author), Instagram (Rosalie.Spielman), or join her Facebook readers’ group, You Know The Spiel. Rosalie strives to provide you a cozy escape...one page at a time.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: www.rosalie-spielman-author.com

Facebook Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100063501963689

 Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/760076150762688

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with J. M. Donellan

I’d like to welcome J. M. Donellan to the blog today for #ThisorThatThursday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: Writing.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Writing.

Favorite foods: The tears of my enemies.

Things that make you want to gag: Dagwood dogs. They are satan’s snackfood.

Favorite music or song: My all-time favourite song is Unfinished Sympathy by Massive Attack. I still remember the moment when I first heard it on the radio and everything just froze. I couldn’t believe music like that existed, it sounded like it was from the past and the future at the same time. It was soul, electronic, hip-hop, orchestral. There’s entire worlds in that song. Speaking of music, I made a playlist for Rumors of Her Death because I’m a huge music nerd, you can check that out here.

Music that drives you crazy: If you play Nu-Metal anywhere in my immediate vicinity we are going to have a serious problem.

Something you’re really good at: Being wrong.

Something you’re really bad at: Admitting when I’m wrong.

Things you always put in your books: Dark humour and Nina Simone references.

Things you never put in your books: I’m very aware that this could offend a lot of people in the crime and mystery writing community, but I personally have no interest in writing about hero cops. In TV writing they sometimes call it ‘copaganda’, I think that if you’re going to talk about police you need to be addressing the systemic problems of police violence and corruption. I’d like to see more stories about activists and outsiders trying to redress the wrongs of an unjust system rather than celebrating the people who enforce it.

Things to say to an author: “I bought ten copies of your book, wrote reviews about how much I loved it, had the title tattooed on my arm as a conversation starter, requested it at my local library, and I named by firstborn after your central protagonist.”

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: “I only read books written by reality TV stars.”

Favorite places you’ve been: I’ve been fortunate enough to travel extensively, and Ladakh, Havana, Luang Prabang, Quito are all up there for me. However, I lived in Lisbon for a short time while I was working on Killing Adonis and I fell completely in love with it. I shared a little apartment with a cat named Pinga and drank too much wine and sat on the rooftop reading and watching the sun set over the city. I had a recently broken heart and my first major publishing contract and it was a very strange and liminal time. My wife and I went back there for a wedding a few years back and the city felt like an old friend.

Places you never want to go to again: High school.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I went on a New Year’s eve white water rafting trip in northern Laos that the guide assured my friend and I was ‘beginner level.’ We both had some experience with rafting, were nevertheless knocked out of the boat and into the freezing rapids about half a dozen times. Nothing like scrambling for your raft while your legs are going numb and a cascade of water is trying to smash you into a rock. Good times. We very carefully packed a bottle of champagne that miraculously survived and drank it in our little jungle hut that night. Still the best champagne I’ve ever had, I think the adrenaline really lifted the flavour.

Something you chickened out from doing: Answering this question.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: I generally think that our societal obsession with celebrity is borderline pathological. I don’t really care about fame, but I do admire talent. That said, I once interviewed the Coathangers, a punk band from Atlanta, and they just oozed cool. It emanated from them like ectoplasm.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: I did a supernova Comic con event with Jack Gleeson aka Joffrey once and I was like “did someone bring their kid to this event or did he just sneak backstage?” Then I realised he probably made more money that month than I’ll make my entire life. Cool. Cool cool cool cool I’m fine with it.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: This is cheating because it’s (partially) still writing, but I collaborated with a choreographer, sound designer and dancers to create a series of dance/poetry collaborations that we performed as part of the World Science Festival and other events. Had my poetry fact checked by scientists, that was a novel experience.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: During the worst of the pandemic I worked on a story-based video game I was really proud of. Taught myself some basic coding, worked with some cool people. We were getting ready for the beta release when the company crashed. That’s the tech world for you, I guess.

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Allison Brook/Marilyn Levinson

I’d like the welcome the fabulous Allison Brook/Marilyn Levinson back to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

Favorite thing to do when you have free time:

Shop online; read; do a Sudoku puzzle

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

Straightening up the area around my computer; going through my closet to remove clothes I haven't worn in a very long time.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Sitting down to write each day

Easiest thing about being a writer:

Getting up from writing for the day. Doing an author takeover and chatting with readers

Things you will run to the store for at midnight: ice cream

Things you never put on your shopping list: soda, fake whipped cream

Favorite snacks: Chocolate bark, pistachio nuts

Things that make you want to gag: marshmallows, oreo cookies

Something you’re really good at: knitting, cooking, writing, speaking to a group

Something you’re really bad at: using a sewing machine; drawing

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: a ballerina or an author

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: being a somewhat successful author

Last best thing you ate: dark chocolate

Last thing you regret eating: too much dark chocolate

Favorite places you’ve been: England, South of France, Machu Picchu, Mexico

Places you never want to go to again: Caribbean

Favorite things to do: reading, yoga, dining out, watching films and British shows

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: being an officer of an organization, cleaning, straightening up my papers and things

Recommendations for curing writer’s block: Go back a few pages before writer's block set in and see where you strayed from your story; take a break from writing.

Things you do to avoid writing: read emails, shop online, make phone calls.

About Allison:

A former Spanish teacher, Marilyn Levinson writes mysteries, romantic suspense, and novels for young readers.

As Allison Brook, Marilyn writes the Haunted Library mystery series, which has received many accolades. Death Overdue, the first book in ther series,was an Agatha nomination for Best Contemporary Novel, a Library Journal "Pick of the Month" and on Goodreads' list of the 200 "Most Popular Books Published in October 2017.

The Devil's Pawn, is a horror-suspense YA that will give you chills but leave you smiling when you've read the last page. Her Golden Age of Mystery Book Club mysteries have received many wonderful reviews. Murder a la Christie, the first in the series, was a King Rivers Life Magazine's "Best of 2014" and on Book Town's 2014 Summer Mystery Reading List. Professor Lexie Driscoll leads discussions about Christie novels as she solves the murders of various members of her book club. In the sequel, Murder the Tey Way, Lexie and the book club talk about Josephine Tey's mysteries as she investigates murders and unravels secrets.

Untreed Reads has brought out new e-editions of Marilyn's Twin Lakes mysteries: A Murderer Among Us, awarded a Suspense Magazine Best Indie and on Book Town's Summer Reading List. The sequel, Murder in the Air, was on Book Town's Fall Reading List. Both books will soon be available as audiobooks. Uncial Press e-publishes her ghost mystery, Giving Up the Ghost, and her romantic suspense, Dangerous Relations. Most of Marilyn's mysteries take place on Long Island, where she lives.

Her books for young readers include No Boys Allowed, Rufus and Magic Run Amok, which was awarded a "Children's Choice." Getting Back to Normal & And Don't Bring Jeremy.

Marilyn loves traveling, reading, knitting, doing Sudoku, and visiting with her grandchildren, Olivia and Jack, on FaceTime. She is co-founder and past president of the Long Island chapter of Sisters in Crime.

Let’s Be Social:

Website

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Michelle Bennington

Things you never want to run out of: toilet paper, coffee

Things you wish you’d never bought: the vitamins and supplements I always forget to take

A few of your favorite things: Christmas with my mom, chocolate, coffee, my husband, and my dog

Things you need to throw out: old clothes I’ve had since college, old plastic containers that no longer have matching lids, expired food in the fridge

Things you need for your writing sessions: laptop, TV show (Monk, Dateline, or Great British Baking show, or music to fit the mood)

Things that hamper your writing: people talking (I know it doesn’t make sense. I can ignore voices on TV, but not actual people), noisy neighbors

Hardest thing about being a writer: balancing the rest of my life around a writing schedule, revision

Easiest thing about being a writer: coming up with ideas

Favorite foods: bacon, cheeseburgers, BBQ chicken pizza, fruit

Things that make you want to gag: raw fish, sea urchin, hominy

Favorite music or song:

Music that drives you crazy:

Favorite beverage: coffee, Ale-8-1, apple crisp oat milk macchiato at Starbucks

Something that gives you a sour face: many herbal teas—they sometimes taste like licorice or dirt

Favorite smell: cooking bacon, perking coffee, honeysuckle, lilac

Something that makes you hold your nose: gasoline, car exhaust, cigarettes

Something you’re really good at: making scones

Something you’re really bad at: sticking to a diet / exercise plan

Last best thing you ate: BBQ sandwhich, and chicken BBQ pizza

Last thing you regret eating: The communal chocolate at work. It apparently had been sitting in someone’s car for the whole summer.

Things you’d walk a mile for: A historical site I want to see (I’ve actually walked a mile a few times to do that in England and Scotland, but didn’t really have a choice)

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: vocal fry, ending statements with a question, people scraping their teeth on their silverware as they eat

Favorite places you’ve been: Scotland, England

Places you never want to go to again: DMV, any store on Black Friday

Favorite books (or genre): historical fiction, classic fiction, general fiction, biographies, true history, true crime, mystery, some romance, some poetry, psych thriller (if not too violent or gory)—there’s really so many books I love and so many authors. I can’t possibly name them all!

Books you wouldn’t buy: typcially not a fan of Sci-Fi, most fantasy, most horror, most westerns, most paranormal, most YA, occult, all sports.

About Michelle:

Born and raised in the beautiful Bluegrass state of Kentucky, Michelle Bennington developed a passion for books early on that has since progressed into a mild hoarding situation and an ever-growing to-read pile. She delights in transporting readers into worlds of mystery, both contemporary and historical.

 In rare moments of spare time, she can be found engaging in a wide array of arts and crafts, reading, traveling, and attending tours involving ghosts, historical sites, or distilleries.

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Donna Conrad

I’d like to welcome Donna Conrad to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Things you need for your writing sessions:

A strong cup of Earl Grey tea, my playlist for whatever book I’m writing, inspiration and a good thesaurus.

Things that hamper your writing:

Cleaning the entire kitchen after making tea. Email alerts. [I try to ignore them, but it’s tough.] Neighbors and friends who drop by because they have some time off and want to just hang out and chat.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

That the world at large does not realize the effort that goes into writing novels—the times we stay home instead of going to a party, the times we can’t spend with friends because we are writers who write. That writing is at its heart a solitary endeavor.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

Endless story ideas. I write historical novels about women who have been marginalized throughout history. So, I have a new subject at my fingertips any time I need to write a new book.

Favorite foods: Triple cream Brie, from France, on a piece of a fresh baked baguette. If wine counts as a food, a nicely aged Côtes du Rhône, to go with the brie.

Things that make you want to gag: Cheap wine and okra. Yuck to both.

Favorite music or song:

Two songs tie for my favorites – Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd, and Jeff Buckley’s cover of Lenard Cohen’s Hallelujah. I’m a Sixties child so most any Rock n’ Roll will do me just fine most of the time.

Music that drives you crazy: Overly orchestrated vocals, and gangster rap.

Something you’re really good at:

Engaging with people of all persuasions. I call it my chameleon nature. And just like a chameleon, I don’t change, I am able to adapt to the situation and the person(s) I’m speaking with, then go back to my natural way of expressing myself.

Something you’re really bad at:

I’m really bad at remembering where I left my mobile phone. It’s usually somewhere in the house or car, but I’ve had folks call my husband’s phone to let him know they found my phone in a restaurant, park, movie theater, once even in my front yard. I studied Jungian psychology in college, so I should be able to figure this one out and stop it!

Things you always put in your books: Powerful women who struggle with stereotypes and stigmas. They don’t always win, but they always keep trying.

Things you never put in your books: Gratuitous sex and violence. There are sexual and violent scenes in most of my books, but they’re not gratuitous.

Favorite places you’ve been

France – most anywhere from Paris to the Languedoc, to Provence. If it’s in France, I’m so there!

Places you never want to go to again: Florida and Texas.

Favorite things to do: Write; cuddle with my cats; go for long rides along back roads in my Miata MX5; be with my husband doing something or nothing; teaching at writers’ conferences and being with my writer-tribe.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Pilling my cats and writing a synopsis – especially the synopsis.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Do I have to pick only one? I’ve done some pretty daring things in my life, such as having my breast autographed by Jim Morrison in his hotel room.

Facing down a cougar that was looking pretty hungry, in order to save my cat from becoming lunch. [That might count more as stupid, than daring.]

Writing honestly about my teen years was the most daring, and most rewarding.

Something you chickened out from doing:

Bungie jumping and parachuting. Something about flinging myself off great heights makes me run for the (low) hills.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Jimi Hendrix. He was one of the kindest, sweetest, most caring people I met during the Sixties. And very cool in all ways.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Janis Joplin, I only recognized her because of how she was dressed, which was unique.

The nicest thing a reader said to you:That writing so honestly about the dark aspects of my teen years in House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties, gave her the strength to face her own demons and change her life for the better.

The craziest thing a reader said to you:“You can still talk to Jim Morrison even if he’s dead. I know you can. Do it now, I have a question for him.”

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books:

In House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties, I tell the story of my first acid trip. I was babysitting for a woman who was dating my sister’s drug-dealing boyfriend (unbeknownst to my sister). When they came home, they gave me some LSD and we tripped together. I was only fourteen years old.

In my upcoming historical novel, The Last Magdalene, I include my first encounter with ghosts and finding my way to my mother’s bed in the small hours of the night.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not:

In The Last Magdalene, Miriam is awakened to her sexual nature during a sensual initiation scene. At the close of the chapter, she says: “I wish it were so for every woman. That each maiden was brought to know the joys of her body by equally skillful hands.”

I feel most readers, especially if they have met me, will think this is based on my first love-making experience. Sadly it is not. To know the real “first time” read “Tryst Without Consent,” from House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties.

Things you need for your writing sessions:

A strong cup of Earl Grey tea, my playlist for whatever book I’m writing, inspiration and a good thesaurus.

Things that hamper your writing:

Cleaning the entire kitchen after making tea. Email alerts. [I try to ignore them, but it’s tough.] Neighbors and friends who drop by because they have some time off and want to just hang out and chat.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

That the world at large does not realize the effort that goes into writing novels—the times we stay home instead of going to a party, the times we can’t spend with friends because we are writers who write. That writing is at its heart a solitary endeavor.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

Endless story ideas. I write historical novels about women who have been marginalized throughout history. So, I have a new subject at my fingertips any time I need to write a new book.

Favorite foods: Triple cream Brie, from France, on a piece of a fresh baked baguette. If wine counts as a food, a nicely aged Côtes du Rhône, to go with the brie.

Things that make you want to gag: Cheap wine and okra. Yuck to both.

Favorite music or song:

Two songs tie for my favorites – Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd, and Jeff Buckley’s cover of Lenard Cohen’s Hallelujah. I’m a Sixties child so most any Rock n’ Roll will do me just fine most of the time.

Music that drives you crazy: Overly orchestrated vocals, and gangster rap.

Something you’re really good at:

Engaging with people of all persuasions. I call it my chameleon nature. And just like a chameleon, I don’t change, I am able to adapt to the situation and the person(s) I’m speaking with, then go back to my natural way of expressing myself.

Something you’re really bad at:

I’m really bad at remembering where I left my mobile phone. It’s usually somewhere in the house or car, but I’ve had folks call my husband’s phone to let him know they found my phone in a restaurant, park, movie theater, once even in my front yard. I studied Jungian psychology in college, so I should be able to figure this one out and stop it!

Things you always put in your books: Powerful women who struggle with stereotypes and stigmas. They don’t always win, but they always keep trying.

Things you never put in your books: Gratuitous sex and violence. There are sexual and violent scenes in most of my books, but they’re not gratuitous.

Favorite places you’ve been: France – most anywhere from Paris to the Languedoc, to Provence. If it’s in France, I’m so there!

Places you never want to go to again: Florida and Texas.

Favorite things to do: Write; cuddle with my cats; go for long rides along back roads in my Miata MX5; be with my husband doing something or nothing; teaching at writers’ conferences and being with my writer-tribe.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Pilling my cats and writing a synopsis – especially the synopsis.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Do I have to pick only one? I’ve done some pretty daring things in my life, such as having my breast autographed by Jim Morrison in his hotel room.

Facing down a cougar that was looking pretty hungry, in order to save my cat from becoming lunch. [That might count more as stupid, than daring.]

Writing honestly about my teen years was the most daring, and most rewarding.

Something you chickened out from doing:

Bungie jumping and parachuting. Something about flinging myself off great heights makes me run for the (low) hills.

The coolest person you’ve ever met:Jimi Hendrix. He was one of the kindest, sweetest, most caring people I met during the Sixties. And very cool in all ways.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Janis Joplin, I only recognized her because of how she was dressed, which was unique.

The nicest thing a reader said to you:That writing so honestly about the dark aspects of my teen years in House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties, gave her the strength to face her own demons and change her life for the better.

The craziest thing a reader said to you:“You can still talk to Jim Morrison even if he’s dead. I know you can. Do it now, I have a question for him.”

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books:

In House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties, I tell the story of my first acid trip. I was babysitting for a woman who was dating my sister’s drug-dealing boyfriend (unbeknownst to my sister). When they came home, they gave me some LSD and we tripped together. I was only fourteen years old.

In my upcoming historical novel, The Last Magdalene, I include my first encounter with ghosts and finding my way to my mother’s bed in the small hours of the night.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not:

In The Last Magdalene, Miriam is awakened to her sexual nature during a sensual initiation scene. At the close of the chapter, she says: “I wish it were so for every woman. That each maiden was brought to know the joys of her body by equally skillful hands.”

I feel most readers, especially if they have met me, will think this is based on my first love-making experience. Sadly it is not. To know the real “first time” read “Tryst Without Consent,” from House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties.

About Donna:

Donna Conrad is an award-winning author, journalist, activist, and teacher. Her core values revolve around the concept of individual empowerment, a sustaining ideal running through the books she writes. Her writing interests are varied and include articles for fine-art periodicals, memoir/narrative non-fiction, as well as historical, flash, and paranormal fiction. She is a regular presenter at writers' conferences.

Her first published book, "House of the Moon: Surviving the Sixties," has received rave reviews.

Donna's life is as varied as her writing. She embraces change as an exciting adventure. She has studied writing with the likes of Alan Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Jack Whyte. Her upcoming four-book historical fiction series, The Magdalene Chronicles" has been acquired by Cold Creek Press. Book One, "The Last Magdalene," will be released April 2024. She is represented by Abundantly Social.

She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and their three cats. When she's not writing, you can find Donna cruising the back roads in her black-on-black Miata MX-5, Maya - named for one of her favorite poets, Maya Angelou.

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Julie Bates

I’d like to welcome Julie Bates back to the blog for an end of the summer interview.

A few of your favorite summer traditions: I enjoy making at least one trip to the beach. North Carolina has a lot of coastline. I enjoy listening to the waves and walking along the beach looking for shells. I also like to paint when I can. I enjoy taking watercolors on my beach trips.

I like to do a little canning. I freeze some things and make jam. I also like to make pickles.. I am the only one in my family who eats jalapenos. I also make pretty good apple butter. Summer is also my time for getting large stacks of books from the library and working on crafts like knitting and quilting. I love being home and having time to do the things I love.

Something summer-related that you’ll never do again: Anything that involves long periods of time outdoors. I am not a good DIYer.

Favorite summer beverage: A large Chick fil A lemonade

A drink that gives you a pickle face: Dr. Pepper

Best summer memory: Among my favorite memories stems from my early childhood in Michigan. My dad worked for GM and left for work before we went to school. Afternoons he’d come home tired, so weekends were a treasure. In the summer we would pack up and go to Point Huron and play on the beach all day. Then we would go to a nearby restaurant where they served shrimp and fries in a basket lined with a red checked napkin. I still love almost anything to do with water.

Something you’d rather forget: Summers are HOT here in NC. One time I tried a huge garden and completely overwhelmed myself. I fought bugs, ground hogs and clay soil all summer, not to mention weeds from hell. I keep my gardening small and contained these days.

Best thing you ever grilled in spring: Chicken breast or burgers.

Your worst kitchen or grilling disaster: Do not ever use sesame oil in a wok! I very nearly set my kitchen on fire. My exhaust fan was charcoal and smelled awful.

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer: I have a chair near a window where I can watch the birds. In my dreams I will renovate our back porch into a sunroom and hang out in there. I enjoy watching the bird feeders I have outside.

The worst place to try to write in the summer because of all the distractions: The living room. My husband keeps the TV going constantly and it drives me cuckoo.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening: Go star gazing

Least favorite thing about summer: The HEAT!

Favorite place to visit in Virginia: Colonial Williamsburg. I like the feeling of going back in time. I enjoy the crafts and history. No wonder I write historicals!

Somewhere you’ve visited way too much. Been there. Done that. Got the T-shirt: Amusement Parks. I outgrew those when my son reached adulthood.

The thing you like most about being a writer: The freedom to create my own world, painting an imaginary canvas in all the colors of the rainbow with words and thoughts and feelings. I also love research. I learn so many new things!

The thing you like least about being a writer: deadlines. I always feel there is more I should have accomplished, done better, researched more. I can drive myself batty with details.

Things you will run to the store for in the middle of the night: Coke zero, chocolate, missing ingredients for what I plan to cook for dinner.

Things you never put on your shopping list: collard greens, liver, sardines

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Riding a roller coaster

Something you chickened out from doing: Mountain climbing. I’m fine with hiking but I’m not crawling up a bare rock face.

About Julie:

Julie Bates enjoys reading and writing in a variety of genres. After spending a few years writing freelance articles, her first novel Cry of the Innocent, premiered in June 2021, followed by A Seed of Betrayal in 2022. The Eight book series follows the timeline of the American Revolutionary War. In addition, she has blogged for Killer Nashville and the educational website Read.Learn.Write. She is a member of Sisters in Crime, Triangle Sisters in Crime, Mystery Writers of America, Southeastern Mystery Writers of America (SEMWA) and The Historical Novel Society.  When not busy plotting her next story, she enjoys working in her garden, doing crafts and spending time with her husband and son, as well as a number of dogs and cats who have shown up on her doorstep and never left.

Let’s Be Social:

https://juliebates.weebly.com/

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Jackie Layton

I’d like to welcome the wonderful Jackie Layton to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday. Check out her latest mystery!

Things you need when you’re in your writing cave: Coffee. I used to enjoy M&Ms, but thanks to some bad bloodwork, I now enjoy sesame sticks or pretzels. I also need music, and I have different playlists for different books.

Things that distract you from writing: TV, nice weather, and email.

Things you will run to the store for at midnight: Nothing in my little town is open at midnight, and that’s something I imagine would be nice about living in a big city. I would run to the store for more coffee or tea, especially if I’m on a deadline.

Things you never put on your shopping list: Margarine.

Favorite snacks: Popcorn is my favorite snack.

Things that make you want to gag: Boiled peanuts. It’s a big deal in South Carolina, and I tried to eat boiled peanuts once, but that was enough. My friends just laugh at me.

Something you’re really good at: Math. I’m sometimes surprised at how blessed I am to figure out math. I’m also a pharmacist at a compounding store, and there’s a LOT of math involved.

Something you’re really bad at: Standing up for myself.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: I wanted to be a writer, a nurse, and a pharmacist.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: I really never thought I’d be a published author, and I am so thankful to the people who have encouraged me.

Last best thing you ate: I had a Polynesian sandwich last night, and it was so good.

Last thing you regret eating: Spicy chips.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: As a single mom, I moved from Kentucky to Athens, Georgia and started pharmacy school.

Something you chickened out from doing: Oh, wow, there are so many things I’ve chickened out of. The thing I most consistently chicken out of is introducing myself to great authors. It’s embarrassing.

The most exciting thing about your writing life: I’ve gotten to meet some of my heroes at conventions and online. There are so many nice people in the writing community, and there are also fabulous readers!

The one thing you wish you could do over in your writing life: I wish I had started sooner.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: Just last night, a reader quoted what a character said in Weeding Out Lies. He said he laughed right out loud.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: In A Low Country Dog Walker Mystery series, a reader said people in South Carolina don’t drink Cokes. They only drink Pepsi.

Best piece of advice you received from another writer: Join a writing organization.

Something you would tell a younger you about your writing: One good thing I learned from NaNoWriMo is the importance of writing my story. Then I go can back and fix it, but at least I have something to fix.

About Jackie:

Jackie Layton is the author of cozy mysteries with Spunky Southern Sleuths. Her stories are set in Texas, Georgia, and South Carolina. She lives on the coast of South Carolina where she enjoys walks on the beach and golf cart rides around the marsh. Reading, gardening, and traveling are some of her favorite hobbies. She always keeps a notebook handy to write down ideas for future stories. Be careful what you say around her, because it might end up in a book.

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Weeding Out Lies:

Flower farmer Emma Justice’s life is firmly rooted in Lutz, Texas where she has recently begun her new business. One morning while delivering flowers, she stumbles upon a prominent citizen. Dead. When a friend is accused of murder, Emma launches her own investigation. She’s used to separating weeds from flowers. Emma will dig for clues, weed out red herrings and cultivate a plan to find the killer.

 

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Josh Pachter

I would like to welcome the incredibly talented Josh Pachter to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: When I’m asked to be on a panel at Malice Domestic or Bouchercon, the one question I dread is “What’s your process?” I don’t have a process. I don’t write every day, I don’t have a daily or weekly (or anyamountoftimely) quota. When a story idea knocks on the inside of my head — which I guess happens more often than at any other time when I’m in the shower! — I get out of the shower and towel myself off and go write it. So I suppose the hardest thing for me is actually sitting down and doing the work.

Easiest thing about being a writer: When I do have an idea, I find the actual writing pretty easy. So I suppose the easiest thing for me is actually sitting down and doing the work!

Favorite foods: Crab legs. Spaghetti alla carbonara. A really good bacon cheeseburger. Frank Pepe’s white pizza. Vivoli’s gelato. Watermelon.

Things that make you want to gag: Sushi. Edamame. Lentils. Gross.

Favorite music or song: I like singer/songwriters, which is why I’ve been editing a series of anthologies inspired by the songs of, so far, Joni Mitchell, Jimmy Buffett, Billy Joel, and Paul Simon. (The next one is Happiness Is a Warm Gun: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of the Beatles, and it’s coming from Down and Out Books in October!)

Music that drives you crazy: There’s some rap and hiphop I’ve liked a lot, but I’m really not interested in all the stuff about bitches and ho’s and f*ckin’ tha police.

Last best thing you ate: An early anniversary dinner with my wife Laurie at Demi’s Mediterranean Kitchen, our favorite Richmond restaurant. We shared a delicious fried-oyster appetizer, and then she had the dish I usually order (shrimp Santorini) and I tried something different (pork Marsala). Demi’s serves really big portions, and the next day we ate each other’s leftovers. So this was the last best two things I ate!

Last thing you regret eating: Like Edith Piaf, je usually ne regrette rien, so I have to reach back a while for this one. Laurie and I moved to Richmond at the beginning of the pandemic; before that, we lived for a decade in Northern Virginia. When a Bonchon franchise opened up near our home, we tried it — and that Korean fried chicken was like crack cocaine, absolutely addictive. One day, though, I had lunch there with Lisa Nanni-Messegee, my officemate at Northern Virginia Community College’s Loudoun Campus … and we both wound up horribly sick. I suppose we just hit the place on an off day, but neither one of us ever went back … though every once in a while I’m tempted to give Bonchon another chance. I’m serious: that chicken actually is finger-lickin’ good, unlike certain other fried chicken that claims to be and isn’t.

Things you always put in your books: Easter eggs. I love hiding little treasures in my work. It’s fun when readers find them, but — and I’m sorry if this sounds cruel — it’s even more fun when they don’t. For example, each of the stories (eight so far) in my Helmut Erhard series includes a truly massive Easter egg that (so far) no one has spotted, and I get a huge kick out of knowing that those eggs are there but have (so far) remained hidden.

Things you never put in your books: Gratuitous sex and violence. That’s just not my thing. I shared Dutch Threat with a friend who writes cozies — (not Heather; another cozy-writer friend) — and she didn’t finish reading it because, despite the tea drinking and the cat, she told me that the occasional four-letter words prevent it from qualifying as a cozy. I debated taking out the swears pre-publication, but finally decided that my first-person narrator is a guy who does sometimes curse, so I left them in. (When I told another writer friend, Gigi Pandian, about this, she laughed and said she just writes “she swore” in her books but doesn’t actually include the swearwords. By then, though, it was too late for me to go that route. Damn!) Anyway, so if you read my book you’ll find some cussing, but no gratuitous sex or violence….

Favorite places you’ve been: I lived overseas from the late Seventies through the early Nineties and continue to do a lot of traveling, so I have a lot of favorite places. Tuscany in Italy, Fes in Morocco, Annecy and Eze in France, Amsterdam in The Netherlands, the Diamond Beach and the Secret Lagoon in Iceland, Meteora and Parga in Greece. I could go on….

Places you never want to go to again: Rome. I was only there once and that was fifty years ago, so perhaps I’d feel differently today, but Florence is smaller and less mobbed and easier to navigate … and in my opinion everything worth seeing in Rome — okay, except for the Colosseum — has an even nicer equivalent in Florence. I could also live without returning to Athens, although I love everyplace else I’ve been in Greece….

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Skydiving. Only once, although I would have loved to do it more often. Nowadays, a novice’s first jumps are tandem jumps with an instructor wrapped around the newbie, but when I did my training in 1973, your first jumps were solo. There was none of the leaping out into the Wild Blue Yonder and yelling “Geronimo!” like you see in the movies. Instead, you stepped onto a strut sticking out from the side of the plane and held onto another one, and a jumpmaster would tap the back of your leg when it was time to let go of the top strut, at which point the plane would keep going and you would begin to fall and what’s called a “static line” connecting your parachute’s ripcord to the plane would pull the cord for you, so all you had to do was enjoy the ride. Well, my jumpmaster got distracted and tapped me off the strut too late, so instead of landing in a carefully manicured drop zone I wound up hitting the hard Nevada desert and wracking up my knee so badly I was never allowed to make another jump.

Something you chickened out from doing: I almost chickened out from skydiving. Once I was under the canopy and descending through three thousand feet of absolute silence, it was perhaps the most glorious experience I’ve ever had, but while I was still on the plane I was terrified. The only reason I went through with it was because my then-girlfriend and I had taken the course together and, as luck would have it, she’d already jumped — and I was more scared of looking like a coward than I was of the jump itself.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: I’m not sure that the general public would call him “cool,” but I certainly do. When I was a teenager, Frederic Dannay — who was one of the two cousins who wrote as “Ellery Queen” — took me under his wing and guided me through my first years as a crime writer. Whatever measure of success I’ve had in the publishing business, I owe to his kindness.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: I grew up on Long Island, and from the time of my first publication in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine at the age of sixteen until I went off to the University of Michigan I would take the train into New York City to attend the Mystery Writers of America’s monthly cocktail parties. One evening, unofficial bartender Chris Steinbrunner — who would sneak me adult beverages though I wasn’t legally old enough to drink them — pointed out a gorgeous woman who looked to be in her late twenties sitting on the far side of the room and told me she was a former Hollywood star who’d written a couple of mysteries. (I want to say Hedy Lamarr, but I don’t think that can be right.) I was pretty shy at that point in my life, but I was very interested in old movies — I would ultimately wind up studying and then for fifty years teaching film history — so I screwed my courage to the sticking place and walked over to her … and with every step I took, she got five years older. By the time I reached her, that lovely twentysomething had aged into a woman in her seventies. Still beautiful … but not in the same way the work she’d had done made her appear from a distance.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: In 1986, I helped make a little human! Her name is Rebecca K. Jones, and she’s now a successful attorney in Phoenix — and the author of the Goldie-finalist courtroom novel Steadying the Ark. (A sequel, Stemming the Tide, comes out next week and is up for pre-order now!)

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: In 1991, I moved from Europe back to the US. I wasn’t sure where I was going to wind up, so I put almost everything I owned into storage in Germany, figuring I’d send for it when I was settled. Before I had a chance to do that, though, the storage company changed ownership, and the new owners sent me a letter giving me until such-and-such a date to have my things shipped to me. Unfortunately, that date had passed by the time the letter reached me. I got on the phone immediately — but I was too late. Everything I owned (except some boxes of books I’d mailed to a cousin in New York) had already been destroyed. So at the age of forty I had to start accumulating possessions all over again. (I should add here that my personal motto on my Facebook page comes from John Lennon’s “Beautiful Boy” — “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.”)

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books: In 1982, I taught a course on a US Navy ship that was doing what was called a “show the flag” run through the Persian Gulf from Bahrain to Pakistan. At one point, one of the sailors spotted a gunboat streaking toward us, and the ship went to full battle stations. It turned out to be an Omani vessel, though, and it was coming to escort us, not attack us. I used that incident in my Mahboob Chaudri story “The Ivory Beast,” which you can read online for free or in my Wildside Press collection The Tree of Life (which includes the complete ten-story Chaudri series), although in real life there wasn’t a murder during the incident….

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: Since my name is Josh Pachter and the protagonist of Dutch Threat is Jack Farmer, I expect that any readers who might happen to know that “pachter” is the Dutch word for “tenant farmer” will think I based Jack on myself. I didn’t, though. I made him up out of whole cloth.

About Josh:

Josh Pachter was the 2020 recipient of the Short Mystery Fiction Society’s Golden Derringer for Lifetime Achievement. His stories appear in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Black Cat Mystery Magazine, Mystery Magazine, Mystery Tribune, and elsewhere. He edits anthologies (including Anthony Award finalists The Beat of Black Wings: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Joni Mitchell and Paranoia Blues: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Paul Simon) and translates fiction and nonfiction from multiple languages—mainly Dutch—into English.

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