#WriterWednesday Interview with Julie Gianelloni Connor

I’d like to welcome the talented Julie Gianelloni Connor to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

A few of your favorite things: All of the art that I have collected from around the world and my book collection, particularly the books about places I have lived.

Things you need to throw out: Papers, papers, papers. I keep all receipts, tax files, travel folders. Really, do I still need receipts from 1981?

Hardest thing about being a writer: Actually starting to write. There always seem to be more pressing matters to take care of.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Actually doing the writing, once I start.

Things you never want to run out of: Clear plastic bags of all sorts. I am a bit of a hoarder in terms of transparent plastic bags. They are good for so many things, from packing your shoes for travel to letting you see what’s inside without actually having to open the bag.

Things you wish you’d never bought: an Apple iPad. I hate it.

Favorite foods: I love just about all food. That’s why I am overweight. It’s so hard to turn down delicious second helpings

Things that make you want to gag: Sweet potatoes. Beets. Liver. These hates are remnants from too many school lunches at parochial schools in Louisiana. (In Louisiana, when I was growing up, all children received a hot lunch no matter what their parents’ income was and no matter what type of school they attended, public, private, or parochial. That was a legacy from Huey Long.)

Something you’re really good at: Horseback riding.

Something you’re really bad at: Anything to do with technology.

Something you wish you could do: A split. As a child, I wanted to be a ballerina, but even then I couldn’t do a split. I think horseback riding tightened my thigh muscles, making me better at riding but worse as far as being flexible. At least that is my theory.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Be a really good proofreader. I get tired of correcting other people’s errors, and they don’t appreciate me for doing it. As a boss, my staff hated how many times I would send back a document for corrections.

The last thing you ordered online: A replacement remote.

The last thing you regret buying: A blouse that turned out to be from China, was way too small, and was non-returnable. There was no heads up that the sizes ran small or that items could not be returned.

Things you always put in your books: An international setting.

Things you never put in your books: Comic book-like characters.

Favorite places you’ve been: Too many to list. There’s a reason I worked overseas for so long. Every place has something special and wonderful about it. For example, Guatemala is spectacularly physically beautiful, with volcanoes and lakes and indigenous handicrafts, while Indonesia is so exotic and culturally different that visitors have new insights about western cultural biases.

Places you never want to go to again: Any place really cold. I don’t like cold weather.

Favorite books (or genre): Mysteries. My favorite books as a child were the Nancy Drew series. Once I began my really stressful career, I returned to reading mysteries as my favorite escape.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Science fiction. Although, I have read a few sci-fi books recommended by friends and usually enjoyed them.

Favorite things to do: Read, travel, watch PBS News Hour and Masterpiece Theater, spend time with just about any type of animal but particularly with horses and cats and dogs.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Having to learn a new technology. I just learned to use the PayPal card reader to sell my books at events and then PayPal ditched the reader for a new contraption called Zettle. Do they do it to torture me?

About Julie

Julie Gianelloni Connor is an award-winning author and retired senior Foreign Service Officer. Her first book, "Savoring the Camino de Santiago: It’s the Pilgrimage, not the Hike," garnered no. 1 status on Amazon in both the category for new books on hiking and walking and the category for Spain and Portugal. It subsequently went on to win a silver medal in the eLit national competition as well as being selected as a finalist by Self-Publishing Review (SPR), in addition to three other awards. She released her second title, a children’s book, in 2021. It won first place in the children’s book category at the North Texas Book Festival and the Grand Prize for children's books from AMI (Authors Marketing International). "The Baby with Three Families, Two Countries, and One Promise" tells an international adoption story. Her short stories have appeared in four anthologies. Julie is the owner and publisher of Bayou City Press (BCP) in Houston, Texas, which focuses on travel writing, Houston, history, and international affairs. Julie writes a weekly newsletter for BCP updating subscribers about activities. She founded BCP after spending 33 years as a diplomat in the U.S. Foreign Service, first with the U.S. Information Agency and later with the U.S. Department of State. She had nine overseas assignments in seven different countries: Israel (twice), Paraguay, Guatemala, Indonesia, Colombia (twice), Malaysia, and Chile. In Washington, DC, Julie worked on a variety of matters, ranging from nuclear non-proliferation to narcotics control to women’s issues. She has one son, James, and two cats, Halloween and Charles Augustus V. Her books can be ordered from her publishing website (BayouCityPress.com), from her author website (JulieConnorAuthor.com), or from Amazon.com.

Let’s Be Social

Website Bayou City Press: https://bayoucitypress.com

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#WriterWednesday Interview with Daemon Manx

I’d like to welcome author Daemon Manx to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Favorite summer treat: Key Lime Pie, of which I am always on the look out to find the best slice available.

A summer treat that makes you gag: Ambrosia, there is only one thing a marshmallow should be used for and that involves a fire.

Best summer memory: When I was a child, my parents, my sister and I would spend a week at the Jersey shore every summer. I recall searching for sand crabs with my kid sister at the water’s edge as the planes flew overhead dragging their advertising banners. Our parents watched from their beach chairs with something like Fleetwood Mac or The Steve Miller band playing on a small transistor radio beside them on the blanket. When we finally had our fill of sand and surf we would return to our small rental and fire up the grill: cheeseburgers in paradise!

Something you’d rather forget: When I became a teenager and discovered all that came with that wonderful stage of life. My family and I continued to visit the shore, but my choice of activities had changed. The night before we were scheduled to leave, I went out with a few friends and drank a bit more than my foolish determination could handle. My father woke me up, an hour or so after I had fallen asleep. He marched me to the car, and we proceeded to make the early morning trip down the Parkway, and I proceeded to toss my cookies close to every other mile marker on the GSP. It was a proud moment for all of us.

Best thing you ever grilled in summer: Ribeye Steaks on an open flame, medium rare with grilled asparagus and zucchini.

Your worst kitchen or grilling disaster: It was salvageable, but … I was preparing to deep fry a turkey and one of the O-rings blew on the hose. There was no way to get the gas going and the guests were getting hungry. Not sure how we finally got it figured out. I think we used a piece of a balloon and a little MacGyver spit and polish, but we got the deep fryer working. I never have too many food disasters as I am a bit of a foodie, and I love to cook.

Your favorite thing to get from the ice cream truck: The Snow Cone! Flavored Ice, what is not to love about that. Of course, once you have sucked all the flavor out and all that is left is just ice, well that can be a bummer.

Some dessert that you wish you’d never bought: Really? That is a hard one. Honestly, I don’t think I ever met a dessert I didn’t like.

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer: I write and edit in a room with the door closed and the curtains drawn. I need this to block out all distractions and usually turn off the phone and the social media as well. This is my zone, and I can spend a good eight hours a day in my little writer’s den. I can’t even have a radio or music playing.

The worst place to try to write in the summer because of all the distractions: Anywhere other than in my writer’s cave. I have tried, it doesn’t work. I need total silence with zero distractions. The worst place would be anywhere there are other people asking me questions. I wouldn’t try this at the beach … ever.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening: I love to watch the sunset, and it is even better when I get to do that with my special someone. A slow walk around the lake as the crickets begin their nightly ritual. The fireflies take to the air and there is a sense of magic on the breeze. That right there is something else.

Least favorite thing about summer: Definitely the mosquitoes. For some reason they love me.

The thing you like most about being a writer: Being able to work as much or as little as I like and to set my own hours. Because there are not enough of them in the day.

The thing you like least about being a writer: Being able to work as much or as little as I like and to set my own hours. Because there are not enough of them in the day.

Things you will run to the store for in the middle of the night: Absolutely nothing at all.

Things you never put on your shopping list: Beets!

The thing that you will most remember about your writing life: Every kind word a reader has said to me. I can never hear it enough when someone tells me that one of my stories touched them on an emotional level. I mean, that’s the reason we do it, isn’t it? At least that’s why I do it.

Something in your writing life that you wish you could do over: Actually, I have no regrets. I would only do things over so that I could experience them again for the first time. I might not have signed my first publishing contract, but that being said, it was a great learning experience and it helped shape me into the writer I am today. So, I wouldn’t change a thing, I would just love to experience the same first time accomplishments over again.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I am an avid scuba diver and learned how in the chilly waters of New Jersey. It is where I found a passion for shipwreck diving, of which Jersey is famous for. There is a wreck called the Bonanza approximately 22 miles out. It is nothing more than a scattering of an old ship and looks like a picket fence laying 120 feet below the surface. This is very deep and considered a decompression dive and should only be attempted by the most experienced and trained. Well, we made the dive, and spent no more than 15 minutes on the bottom, but we each came up with 13 lobsters. And that is why they call it the Bonanza. Mmmm Mmmm Good!

Something you chickened out from doing: Sky Diving. I actually had a free pass and the plane was ready to take off. But I just couldn’t do it. Not my kind of thrill. Too many things that could go wrong, that I would have no control over.

The funniest thing to happen to you: I was working in New York as a roadie and was in charge of working some rather interesting shows. I moved more than my share of pianos which involved driving a large truck on the narrow city streets. One day while driving I noticed three limos stopped in front of me with no room to pass. Suddenly, a secret service man exited one of the vehicles and instructed me to stop. A second later, Ronald and Nancy Reagan stepped out of the middle limo and made their way across the street. I honked the horn; they waved and so did I. Then once they were inside the building, the service man instructed me to drive through. I told him there was no room to do so, but he wasn’t having it. He insisted that I drive … so I did. I scraped the side of Ronald Reagan’s limo and took the mirror off in the process. I assure you; I can laugh about it now … quite a bit.

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: I used to play bass guitar in a band, let’s just say, quite a few years ago. The members of the group felt the need to add theatrics to our shows, consisting of smoke machines, pyrotechnics, and even choreography. Well at one particular show, in a very seedy club, on a very tiny stage, I was executing one of our choreographed spins and smacked into a steel pole situated directly in the middle of the stage. (I have no idea why anyone would put a pole there). I broke 2 strings on my bass, knocked my hat off, and hit my nose so hard, I drew blood. Oh yes, this was about ten seconds into the very first song of the night. Geesh!!! So I no longer feel the need to Rock and Roll all Night and Party Every Day!

Favorite summer treat: Key Lime Pie, of which I am always on the look out to find the best slice available.

A summer treat that makes you gag: Ambrosia, there is only one thing a marshmallow should be used for and that involves a fire.

Best summer memory: When I was a child, my parents, my sister and I would spend a week at the Jersey shore every summer. I recall searching for sand crabs with my kid sister at the water’s edge as the planes flew overhead dragging their advertising banners. Our parents watched from their beach chairs with something like Fleetwood Mac or The Steve Miller band playing on a small transistor radio beside them on the blanket. When we finally had our fill of sand and surf we would return to our small rental and fire up the grill: cheeseburgers in paradise!

Something you’d rather forget: When I became a teenager and discovered all that came with that wonderful stage of life. My family and I continued to visit the shore, but my choice of activities had changed. The night before we were scheduled to leave, I went out with a few friends and drank a bit more than my foolish determination could handle. My father woke me up, an hour or so after I had fallen asleep. He marched me to the car, and we proceeded to make the early morning trip down the Parkway, and I proceeded to toss my cookies close to every other mile marker on the GSP. It was a proud moment for all of us.

Best thing you ever grilled in summer: Ribeye Steaks on an open flame, medium rare with grilled asparagus and zucchini.

Your worst kitchen or grilling disaster: It was salvageable, but … I was preparing to deep fry a turkey and one of the O-rings blew on the hose. There was no way to get the gas going and the guests were getting hungry. Not sure how we finally got it figured out. I think we used a piece of a balloon and a little MacGyver spit and polish, but we got the deep fryer working. I never have too many food disasters as I am a bit of a foodie, and I love to cook.

Your favorite thing to get from the ice cream truck: The Snow Cone! Flavored Ice, what is not to love about that. Of course, once you have sucked all the flavor out and all that is left is just ice, well that can be a bummer.

Some dessert that you wish you’d never bought: Really? That is a hard one. Honestly, I don’t think I ever met a dessert I didn’t like.

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer: I write and edit in a room with the door closed and the curtains drawn. I need this to block out all distractions and usually turn off the phone and the social media as well. This is my zone, and I can spend a good eight hours a day in my little writer’s den. I can’t even have a radio or music playing.

The worst place to try to write in the summer because of all the distractions: Anywhere other than in my writer’s cave. I have tried, it doesn’t work. I need total silence with zero distractions. The worst place would be anywhere there are other people asking me questions. I wouldn’t try this at the beach … ever.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening: I love to watch the sunset, and it is even better when I get to do that with my special someone. A slow walk around the lake as the crickets begin their nightly ritual. The fireflies take to the air and there is a sense of magic on the breeze. That right there is something else.

Least favorite thing about summer: Definitely the mosquitoes. For some reason they love me.

The thing you like most about being a writer: Being able to work as much or as little as I like and to set my own hours. Because there are not enough of them in the day.

The thing you like least about being a writer: Being able to work as much or as little as I like and to set my own hours. Because there are not enough of them in the day.

Things you will run to the store for in the middle of the night: Absolutely nothing at all.

Things you never put on your shopping list: Beets!

The thing that you will most remember about your writing life: Every kind word a reader has said to me. I can never hear it enough when someone tells me that one of my stories touched them on an emotional level. I mean, that’s the reason we do it, isn’t it? At least that’s why I do it.

Something in your writing life that you wish you could do over: Actually, I have no regrets. I would only do things over so that I could experience them again for the first time. I might not have signed my first publishing contract, but that being said, it was a great learning experience and it helped shape me into the writer I am today. So, I wouldn’t change a thing, I would just love to experience the same first time accomplishments over again.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I am an avid scuba diver and learned how in the chilly waters of New Jersey. It is where I found a passion for shipwreck diving, of which Jersey is famous for. There is a wreck called the Bonanza approximately 22 miles out. It is nothing more than a scattering of an old ship and looks like a picket fence laying 120 feet below the surface. This is very deep and considered a decompression dive and should only be attempted by the most experienced and trained. Well, we made the dive, and spent no more than 15 minutes on the bottom, but we each came up with 13 lobsters. And that is why they call it the Bonanza. Mmmm Mmmm Good!

Something you chickened out from doing: Sky Diving. I actually had a free pass and the plane was ready to take off. But I just couldn’t do it. Not my kind of thrill. Too many things that could go wrong, that I would have no control over.

The funniest thing to happen to you: I was working in New York as a roadie and was in charge of working some rather interesting shows. I moved more than my share of pianos which involved driving a large truck on the narrow city streets. One day while driving I noticed three limos stopped in front of me with no room to pass. Suddenly, a secret service man exited one of the vehicles and instructed me to stop. A second later, Ronald and Nancy Reagan stepped out of the middle limo and made their way across the street. I honked the horn; they waved and so did I. Then once they were inside the building, the service man instructed me to drive through. I told him there was no room to do so, but he wasn’t having it. He insisted that I drive … so I did. I scraped the side of Ronald Reagan’s limo and took the mirror off in the process. I assure you; I can laugh about it now … quite a bit.

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: I used to play bass guitar in a band, let’s just say, quite a few years ago. The members of the group felt the need to add theatrics to our shows, consisting of smoke machines, pyrotechnics, and even choreography. Well at one particular show, in a very seedy club, on a very tiny stage, I was executing one of our choreographed spins and smacked into a steel pole situated directly in the middle of the stage. (I have no idea why anyone would put a pole there). I broke 2 strings on my bass, knocked my hat off, and hit my nose so hard, I drew blood. Oh yes, this was about ten seconds into the very first song of the night. Geesh!!! So I no longer feel the need to Rock and Roll all Night and Party Every Day!

About Daemon

Daemon Manx is an award-winning American author who writes horror, science fiction, suspense, fantasy, supernatural, and speculative fiction.

He has recently been nominated for a Splatterpunk award for his debut, Abigail in the best short story category.

In 2021 he received a HAG award for his story The Dead Girl.

He is a member of the Horror Authors Guild (HAG) and has been featured in magazines in both the U.S. and the U.K.

Daemon has been referred to as the ‘Horror with a Heart’ author for his ability to trigger an emotional response in his readers. But what sets Daemon’s writing apart from so many authors is his use of the twist and the way he manages to surprise the readers with plot twists and endings they never see coming.

One of his claims to fame occurred in 1991 when Daemon was involved in a motor vehicle accident with Ronald Reagan's motorcade. He accidentally crashed into the former president's limousine on a New York City Street shortly after Ron and Nancy stepped out of the vehicle. No one was injured, except for maybe the pride of the secret service agent who was directing traffic.

Most recently, Daemon has opened his own company, Last Waltz Publishing to market his brand and to help other authors.

Daemon lives with his sister, author Danielle Manx and their narcoleptic cat, Sydney where the patiently prepare for the apocalypse. There is a good chance they will run out of coffee far too soon.

Recent Publications

  • Abigail: An LGBTQ Sci Fi Fantasy about Acceptance, October 29th, 2021

  • Piece by Piece: A Supernatural Coming of Age Story, December 30th, 2021

  • Drawn & Quartered: Four Twisted Tales of Horror, February 10th, 2022

  • Dark Moon Digest: The Boy in the Center of the Road, February 22nd, 2022

  • Hacked in Two: Written with Author James G. Carlson, April 3rd, 2022

  • The Dead Girl: Godless Exclusive Release, May 2022

  • The Devil’s Well: Godless Exclusive Release, June 2022

Let’s Be Social

Website: www.daemonmanx.com

Facebook: 4) Daemon Manx | Facebook
Twitter: (4) Daemon Manx (@DaemonManx) / Twitter

Instagram: Daemon Manx (@daemonmanx) • Instagram photos and videos

#WriterWednesday Interview with Carrie Carter

I’d like to welcome author Carrie Carter to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Favorite summer treat: watermelon

A summer treat that makes you gag: hot dogs

Something crazy you did on vacation: Rappelling 27 stories into a cave, followed by a 7 hour journey to get out, against the water current. Amazing? Absolutely. Tiring? Oh yea…. I’ve never been so sore the next days, and I’ve run marathons. You did notice I said days…

Something you’d never do again on vacation: Go on vacations that are 100% organized. I did it once, because my friend’s mom insisted on it, but basically, we were herded from gift shop to gift shop with five minutes at the actual historical sites. And every five minutes a new person would get on the tour bus, say two sentences and leave, but we were told to tip them handsomely. There were like 12 people a day doing that. And the most annoying part, they showed a movie on the bus, about a man who creates a serum to make women’s busts increase, and shut it off before the ending. To this day, I want to know how it concluded.

Favorite summer beverage: Nothing says summer like lemonade.

A drink that gives you a pickle face: Sake. I know, there are different grades and quality out there. But I just can’t.

Best thing you ever grilled in spring: Sashimi grade salmon. Yes, I did. I know a lot of people would cringe, but it really does make for the most flavorful, smokey, silky salmon you ever had when you grill it.

Your worst kitchen or grilling disaster: I was making a lentil bean loaf (can we use a sexier word than loaf?) and the kitchen mitt slid down. My pinky hit the hot glass and stuck to it. I had to peel my finger away. It looked like candle wax dripping down, and I had no sensation in my finger. Fortunately, after about nine months, the scar cleared up, and I regained sensation in my pinky.

Best summer vacation memory: Being in Acapulco, Mexico with my family. I was five years old but had an amazing time. To this day, those memories are crystal clear.

A summer vacation disaster that you’d rather forget: When I was five, we went to Acapulco, and ate at a chicken place. When you took a bite, you found yourself staring at green-gray chicken. I was so sick after eating that. Ha, but my family left me in the hotel with my equally sick grandmother. The maid took care of us once her shift was done! What a saint, and what was wrong with my family for not being there to take care of us? Seriously, this was sick as in, you should go to the hospital sick.

Best summer vacation ever: Too many to list. For real. All my vacations have been amazing.

Somewhere where you don’t ever want to return: Amsterdam. Of course, I wasn’t there long enough to get a feel for the city. It was just a quick lay-over. But a junkie accused me of not paying him for his meth, and I’m like, I did not buy meth from you. Then he stuck his hands in my pocket, and my best friend jumped on his back, strangling him. I had visions of us killing him and having to dump his body in a canal, but she let go of his neck, and he ran off. It kind of soured me on Amsterdam.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening: sit outside, b-b-q veggies, drink a glass of sauvignon blanc and enjoy the company of friends.

Least favorite thing about summer: the heat, humidity and mosquitos. Welcome to Texas.

The thing you like most about being a writer: writing

The thing you like least about being a writer: writing

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I rode a bicycle naked down the street in Austin, Texas. It was for my short film, where a woman experiences an event under the hair dryer at the beauty salon and sees through clothes and anything else she wants to afterwards. No one volunteered for the bike part, so I did it.

Something you chickened out from doing: Going backwards down a water-shoot made of rocks. Some call it canyoneering. I probably would have done it with no question, but the guide held my head underwater when he was telling me about the safety rules. Seriously? I thought I might drown, and my enthusiasm was squashed.

About Carrie:

Carrie Carter has a profound love for Japan, cats, sumo, dioramas, and eating unusual foods. She has traveled with her husband Jim to Japan fourteen times, so her numerous holidays across her favorite country were the inspiration for her first book, Whiskers Abroad: A Human and A Feline Perspective on Traveling in Japan. Carrie has run multiple marathons including the Tokyo Marathon, and as expected, Carrie and Jim live with an adorable cat named Frenemy, who was unhappy at not being selected as the model for the book.

She started and has been playing in an ‘80s band, Molly and the Ringwalds, for over two decades now! In addition to playing the keyboard, Carrie also plays the recorder and bagpipes.

Carrie lives in Houston, TX and graduated from the University of Texas at Austin. At home, she loves to cook, design/create Halloween costumes, daydream about meeting Jacques Pepin, and watch Elvis movies, although not necessarily at the same time. She dislikes overly dramatic music used in reality TV shows. Currently, Carrie is working on her secondbook, a sequel to Whiskers Abroad, where Audrey and Ashi explore further into Japan and get themselves into even more interesting predicaments.

Carrie Carter always wanted to be a writer.  She started churning out short stories in the third grade. They all went like this: the main character, a young smart girl, noticed a suspicious person sneaking around in the dark. She investigated and ended up getting whacked in the head with a blunt object, only to wake up days later in a new location to discover everything was a simple miscommunication. Fortunately, Carrie managed to graduate from those narratives of concussions to the much more enjoyable readings about a traveling cat. Her debut novel, Whiskers Abroad: A Human and A Feline Perspective on Traveling in Japan, combined guidebook with travelogue and tales of cat adventures.  

Before writing and creating the book with her sister, Stacy Vickers, she moaned to all her friends about her lack of Ikigai (life’s purpose). She created a list of her personal likes and forced her friends to read it. They were supposed to be inspired and suggest the perfect career for her.  

The list had all the usual suspects, drinking coffee, not to be confused with making or serving coffee, petting cats, dining in hoity-toity restaurants, eating in whole in the walls, reading about infectious diseases, figuring out the nutritional content of a meal, and so on. Her sister suggested combining several of the ideas to create Whiskers Abroad. Cats, new foods, travel, Japan, and writing united? Bingo.

At first the book was going to be a spy novel with a cat as the main character, but Carrie knew nothing about espionage. She did know about traveling in Japan. She visited the country fourteen times with her husband, Jim. She once ran the Tokyo Marathon. The Whiskers Abroad concept solidified.

Carrie and Jim live in Houston with an adorable cat named Frenemy, who was unhappy at not being selected as the model for the book. They also play in the 80’s cover band she formed, Molly and the Ringwalds, which has been going strong for over twenty years.

When not making music or writing fiction, she loves to cook at home, design/create Halloween costumes, and daydream about meeting Jacques Pepin. She dislikes overly dramatic music in reality TV shows. Currently, Carrie is working on her second book, a sequel to Whiskers Abroad, where Audrey and Ashi explore further into Japan and get themselves into even more interesting predicaments.  

Carrie graduated from The University of Texas at Austin with a B.S. in Radio-Television-Film.  She has several screenplays waiting for the right producer to come along.  

Let’s Be Social:

http://carriecarterwrites.com

https://www.facebook.com/carriecarterwrites

https://www.facebook.com/AshiGrayCat

https://www.instagram.com/carriecarterwrites/

https://www.instagram.com/whiskersabroad/

 


#WriterWednesday Interview with Alex Shvartsman

I’d like to welcome author Alex Shvartsman to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Favorite summer treat: Vanilla ice cream in a waffle cone.

A summer treat that makes you gag: Aspic. It's literally meat jelly. It tastes how it sounds.

Something crazy you did on vacation: I once got kicked out of Malaysia and sent back across the border to Singapore, because my passport was full, and they wouldn't stamp over another stamp on a page.

Something you’d never do again on vacation: Probably go to Malaysia.

Favorite summer beverage: Vanilla-flavored iced coffee.

A drink that gives you a pickle face: Kombucha. It tastes like it was made with pickle juice, and you can't convince me otherwise.

Best thing you ever grilled: Marinated lamb kebobs.

Your worst kitchen or grilling disaster: Virtually any situation where I try to use the stove. When attempting to cook, I can burn water!

Best summer vacation ever: Exploring the historical sites and hanging out in the ruins of a 3000-year-old Philistine fortress in Israel.

Somewhere where you don’t ever want to return: Malaysia! (see my answer above.)

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer: By the pool in a Costa Rica resort.

The worst place to try to write in the summer because of all the distractions: At a coffee shop. I have a feeling most people don't go there to write; they go to be seen typing, so their fellow patrons would think they're writers. There are, of course, exceptions.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening: Take my Cavalier King Charles Spaniel to the dog park, to play with other dogs while I hang out with like-minded dog-persons.

Least favorite thing about summer: The heat.

Favorite place to visit in Virginia: I've never spent much time in Virginia, but if I were to hang out there, I'd do what I do everywhere: ask local friends for the best sights to see and the best places to eat.

Somewhere you’ve visited way too much. Been there. Done that. Got the T-shirt: Edison, NJ. I've gone a few too many times for work.

The thing you like most about being a writer: Setting the crazy characters I've made up in my head free onto the page.

The thing you like least about being a writer: Waiting months and months for publishers to evaluate and respond to my work.

Things you will run to the store for in the middle of the night: Coffee and chocolate.

Things you never put on your shopping list: Beer and pretzels.

The thing that you will most remember about your writing life: Seeing my fiction appear in print for the first time.

Something in your writing life that you wish you could do over: I wish I started writing a lot sooner, instead of waiting until I was 35.

About Alex:

Alex Shvartsman is the author of The Middling Affliction (2022) and Eridani’s Crown (2019) fantasy novels. Over 120 of his stories have appeared in Analog, Nature, Strange Horizons, etc. He won the WSFA Small Press Award for Short Fiction (2014) and was a two-time finalist (2015 & 2017) for the Canopus Award for Excellence in Interstellar Fiction.

His translations from Russian have appeared in F&SF, Clarkesworld, Tor.com, Asimov’s, etc. Alex has edited over a dozen anthologies, including the long-running Unidentified Funny Objects series. He’s the editor-in-chief of Future Science Fiction Digest.

Alex resides in Brooklyn, NY. His website is http://www.alexshvartsman.com.


#WriterWednesday Interview with Nancy Cole Silverman

I’d like to welcome the fabulous Nancy Cole Silverman to the blog for #WriterWednesday. You need to check out her latest mystery. I loved it!

A few of your favorite things: The change of seasons. Particularly the first days of fall. I love the crisp air and, living in sunny southern California, the rain!

Things you need to throw out: Clothes! I confess to being a clothes horse, and I’ve a closet full of old clothes I promise myself to get rid of...once I finish my next WIP...which appears to be never. I’ve always got something going.

Things you love about writing: The empty page. No, really. I love it when I start a new project. It’s like starting a new job or moving to a new neighborhood. Everything is new and even though have a good idea of what the story is about when I start, I’m always amazed at how things come together. In the end, I somehow feel like I’ve known these characters and the places they live forever.

Things you hate about writing: Okay, hate is a strong word, but the thing I find most difficult about writing is rewriting. It’s like working a Rubiks Cube.

Things you never want to run out of: Wine!

Things you wish you’d never bought: Bad wine!

Words that describe you: Tenacious.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Lustprinzip...it’s a new word for me, I’m trying to use it at least three times. Isn’t that the rule? It means, according to Websters, instant gratification. I want it ... and I want it now.

Favorite foods: Chocolate...chocolate and wine are even better.

Things that make you want to gag: Liver! Growing up I was anemic, and my great aunt used to make me peanut butter and liver sandwiches. To this day, I can’t stand the smell of liver.

Favorite beverage: WINE!

Something that gives you a sour face: Lemons. I have a love/hate relationship with them. We have a small lemon tree in our backyard, and it gives the best lemons, but they are sour.

Favorite smell: Orange blossoms in the spring. I grew up in an orange grove in Phoenix in the 50s and the smell still brings back memories of my childhood.

Something that makes you hold your nose: The smell of rotten fish!

Something you’re really good at: Making up an outlandish story and getting people to believe it.

Something you’re really bad at: Sitting through a boring lecture on a hot afternoon.

Something you wish you could do: Crossword puzzles. I’m lousy at it.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Clean fish! I learned as a kid. My grandfather used to love to fish, and he’d make the best fish over a campfire...but, if you want to eat...you gotta clean it. Not my favorite thing. I’d much catch and set free today.

Things you’d walk a mile for: My dog! I love her, she’s my best friend and we walk together every day. Even on those days, when I’d rather not, she makes me get up and go out.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: The sound of a jackhammer. My neighbor’s been jackhammering an old concrete patio around their house and it’s maddening. Even earphones don’t help.

Things you always put in your books: Usually, it’s a chatty sidekick.

Things you never put in your books: Gratuitous sex or violence.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: On a dare, when I was a kid, I jumped in a bull pen, with a real Brahman bull, and got chased out!

Something you chickened out from doing: Jumping in any more bull pens. I’m not stupid!

About Nancy:

Nancy Cole Silverman enjoyed a long and very successful career in radio before turning to print journalism and later, to fiction.

As a graduate of Arizona State University with a degree in Mass Communications, Nancy was one of the first female on-air television reporters in her hometown of Phoenix. After moving to Los Angeles in the late 1970’s she turned to the business side of broadcasting, becoming one of the top advertising sales executives in the market. After stints at KNX, KFWB, KABC and KXTA radio, she was appointed General Manager at KMPC, making her one of only two female managers in America’s second-largest radio market.

But in her heart of hearts, Nancy thought first of herself as a writer. In 2001 she left the radio business to found and edit The Equestrian News, a monthly publication for equine enthusiasts. “That’s when I really began to write,” said Silverman, “toggling between writing articles for the News and fiction I’d been thinking about for years.”

Today, Nancy is a full-time author. She writes both the Carol Childs and Misty Dawn Mysteries (Henery Press), numerous short stories, and is currently at work on a piece of historical fiction.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: https://nancycolesilverman.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/nancycolesilver

#WriterWednesday Interview with Ellen Bryon

I’d like to welcome the fabulous Ellen Byron to the blog for #WriterWednesday. I can’t wait for my copy of BAYOU BOOK THIEF to arrive!

Favorite thing to do when you have free time: needlepoint.

The thing you’ll always move to the bottom of your to do list: Cleaning. Especially weeding through papers, etc., to throw stuff away. But I did just donate seven boxes of books to our library sale, which I’m very proud of myself for doing. Unfortunately, it didn’t make much of a dent in my book stash!

Things you need when you’re in your writing cave: Tea.

Things that distract you from writing: Everything, lol. But especially the internet.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Writing.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Farting around by trading gossip with my writer friends.

Things you will run to the store for at midnight: Nothing, really. Except that when I was pregnant twenty-two years ago, I made my husband go on a run for Abba-Zabba bars. For some reason, I totally craved them. Not before, not since. Weird, huh?

Things you never put on your shopping list: Coffee or cilantro. Blecch.

Favorite snacks: Too many, which is why I’m constantly on a diet. But pretzels, cheese curls, and all things sweet.

Things that make you want to gag: Anything with coffee or cilantro. (See “Things I never put on my shopping list.”) I hate both with a white-hot passion.

Something you’re really good at: Dancing.

Something you’re really bad at: Push-ups.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: A ballerina.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: Write mystery novels and actually have them published!

Something you wish you could do: Go en pointe. A big regret that I never made it that far in my ballet studies.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Bake. Too many temptations!

Last best thing you ate: sliced turkey with sides of baked potato chips and Trader Joe’s Cheese Crunchies. #whitetrashmeals.

Last thing you regret eating: see above.

Things to say to an author: “I bought copies of your book for everyone in my family! And I have a really big family!”

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: “I call cozies ‘cutesies’ because they’re so light-weight.”

Favorite places you’ve been: New Orleans, just about my favorite place, next to my hometown of New York. Plus England and Italy.

Places you never want to go to again: The empty, two-lane Louisiana and Texas roads I traversed in the pitch black of night during our Hurricane Ida evacuation. I had no idea where the hell we were and didn’t see a soul for literally hours. It was terrifying, especially since I knew we were occasionally riding alongside waterways loaded with gators. But during the day, I’m sure the areas we drove through are prettier and less ominous.

Most embarrassing moment: When I was in high school, I played Duke Vincentio in an all-girl production of Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure. I had to do a quick change for the last scene and the costumer forget to put out my pants. So I had to go out in a white suit jacket and no pants. I was wearing black tights, thank God! But still… embarrassing!

Proudest moment: Watching our daughter graduate college a few weeks ago. The pandemic was brutal on kids, so to see her power through the obstacles it presented and proudly walk with her classmates and receive her diploma generated a lot of tears.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I swore I’d never ride on a motorcycle or in a helicopter. Well, on a European vacation a number of years ago I was supposed to meet my family in Venice but I got trapped in Zermatt, Switzerland by a snowstorm. The only way out was by helicopter. I thought for half a second and then said, “Sign me up!” I’ll never forget flying over the pine trees and snow in the Alps. It was one of the coolest experiences of my life.

Something you chickened out from doing: When I was living in New York, I ran into an actor acquaintance on Broadway one day and he told me that he and some friends were flying to Belize later in the week. He invited me to join them, and I said, “Sure!” Then I chickened out. I still regret that. I’m not a spontaneous person. I wish I was.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: I’ve met a lot of famous people due to my work as an entertainment journalist and then a TV writer. But Shirley MacLaine might be the coolest because she gave me a mantra to use whenever I feel my fear of flying rear its head: “I am having a safe, uneventful journey.” I’ve used this mantra in so many ways ever since then. It really helps me tamp down anxiety.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: You know what? Like I said, I’ve met a ton of celebrities. And I can’t think of anyone who didn’t look like he or she did in their pictures or videos. Then again, I always met them under professional circumstances, so they had a vested interest in looking good!

The most exciting thing about your writing life: Winning two Agatha’s and three Lefty Awards!!!

The one thing you wish you could do over in your writing life: During my TV writing heyday, my writing partner and I passed on a development deal we should have taken. It could have put us on a different path. Maybe it wouldn’t have, of course. But if a genie granted me three wishes, one would be to go back and take that deal.

What’s the best thing you ever bought online? I impulse-bought a paper bouquet to send as a gift to my mother from an ad I saw on… Instagram, I think? The company is called freshcutpaper.com. Mom has a thing against fresh flowers because they end up dying and making a mess. I thought sturdy paper bouquet would be a great alternative and I was right. I’ve sent at least half a dozen since then. I call them forever flowers because they can last forever. And they’re also affordable. Here’s one I recently sent to a friend who was in the hospital.

 Worst thing I ever bought online: I succumbed to an ad for an adjustable phone stand. It turned out to be pieces of thin, cheap plastic you put together yourself into a stand that was completely useless. A total ripoff that I hated adding to our landfill crisis.


About Ellen:

Ellen’s Cajun Country Mysteries have won two Agatha Awards for Best Contemporary Novel and multiple Lefty Awards for Best Humorous Mystery. Bayou Book Thief will be the first book in her new Vintage Cookbook Mysteries. She also writes the Catering Hall Mystery series under the name Maria DiRico.  

Ellen is an award-winning playwright, and non-award-winning TV writer of comedies like Wings, Just Shoot Me, and Fairly Odd Parents. She has written over two hundred articles for national magazines but considers her most impressive credit working as a cater-waiter for Martha Stewart.

An alum of New Orleans’ Tulane University, she blogs with Chicks on the Case, is a lifetime member of the Writers Guild of America, serves on the national board for Mystery Writers of America, and will be the 2023 Left Coast Crime Toastmaster. Please visit her at https://www.ellenbyron.com/

#WriterWednesday Interview with Greg Stout

I’d like to welcome Greg Stout to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you need for your writing sessions:

Complete quiet and no interruptions. I have a very fragile attention span, and if (for instance) the radio is on, before long I’ll be listening to the song lyrics and lose the thread of what I’m doing.

Things that hamper your writing:

Any kind of interruption, unless someone has stopped by to give me money.

Things you love about writing:

Writing dialog. I was in sales and marketing for 27 years and then a teacher for 12, so I think I have a very good ear for how people actually talk.

Things you hate about writing:

Plotting a mystery. I’m good with the beginning and the end, but getting through the “soggy middle” is a chore.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Well, I would have said selling a manuscript, but that’s all set as everything I have written is under contract. So I guess the next hardest thing is actually selling the books.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

I get to set my own hours.

Things you never want to run out of:

Dark chocolate peanut M&M’s 

Things you wish you’d never bought:

A 1973 Vega and a 1968 Corvair.

Words that describe you:

Quirky

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

Cheap

Favorite foods:

Crayfish etouffee, pan fried lake perch, broiled scallops

Things that make you want to gag: 

Any variety of cheese that I can actually smell. 

Favorite music or song:

Patsy Cline, Dusty Springfield, Ambrosia, the Beach Boys

Music that drives you crazy:

“Old school” country western (like Hank), especially if they guy yodels

Favorite beverage:

Diet Pepsi, hands down. After that, Stella Artois beer
Something that gives you a sour face:

Grapefruit juice

Favorite smell:

Honeysuckle, mimosa blossoms

Something that makes you hold your nose:

Cauliflower or cabbage cooking

Something you wish you could do:

I wish I could play golf well, as it is a game you can play pretty much all your life. Unfortunately, I’m not very good at it, and because I’m not very good, I don’t enjoy playing, so I will never get any better because the only way to get better is to play a lot.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do:

Work on cars, because I'm always getting asked to "take a look" at something on somebody's car.

Something you like to do:

I like to fish in Canada. We keep only what we eat. Everything else goes back into the lake.

Something you wish you’d never done:

There was a job I took because I thought I knew my future boss better than I actually did. Turned out, he was a jerk. I couldn’t wait to get out of there. Fortunately, before I quit, the company got bought out and I got a really good package going out the door. I didn’t get to keep the company car, though.

Last best thing you ate:

There is a little breakfast-lunch place near where we live. Their Friday fish fry is really good.

Last thing you regret eating:

Chinese food off the real-deal Chinese menu. It was spicy as hell and made me sick for two days.

The last thing you ordered online:

The first three books in the Bosch series by Robert Connelly

The last thing you regret buying:

Cargo pants

Things you always put in your books:

My friends (at least the ones who actually read my books) refer to them as “Stoutisms.” These are terms and phrases I’ve used pretty much all my life, and so I put them into my characters’ mouths, e.g., “You can’t blame a goat for being a goat.”

Things you never put in your books:

Explicit sex. I figure anybody old enough to read my stuff already knows the drill and doesn’t need me to spell the process out.

Things to say to an author:

“I really liked your book. In fact, I bought seven copies to give to my friends.” (This actually happened.)

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

“I noticed a mistake on page 38.” You read the whole book, and that's your take-away?

Favorite places you’ve been:

Belize. The fishing, the food and the tropical breezes are the best. After that, Hawaii, for the same reason.

Places you never want to go to again:

The wound specialist. She was great, but the problem took a solid year plus surgery to heal.

Favorite books (or genre):

PI or police procedural mysteries.

Books you wouldn’t buy:

Anything written by a politician or a business executive.

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

Pope Francis.
People you’d cancel dinner on:

Donald Trump. He’d order something expensive and stick me with the check.

Let’s Be Social:

My website is www.gregorystoutauthor.com.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/greg.stout.5602/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/958863.Greg_Stout

 About Greg:

Greg Stout is the author of Gideon’s Ghost, a young adult novel set in small-town America in the mid-1960s, and Lost Little Girl, a detective novel set in Nashville, Tennessee. He has also written 22 books on the history of American railroads. His first title, Route of the Eagles, a history of the Missouri Pacific Railroad, was released in 1995. A complete listing of Greg Stout’s published works can be found at www.gregorystoutauthor.com.   

Greg resides with his wife and two cats, Wallace and Gromit, in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, where he is a member of the Heartland Writers Guild and the Southeast Missouri Writers Guild. His second novel for Beacon Publishing Group, Connor’s War, will be released in July 2022. His second Jackson Gamble mystery for Level Best Books, The Gone Man, is scheduled for release in October 2022.

#WriterWednesday Interview with J. Lynn Else

I’d like to welcome author, J. Lynn Else, to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

A few of your favorite things: These would definitely include books, loose-leaf tea, Grogu/Baby Yoda, Autumn

Things you need to throw out: My husband’s Dungeons and Dragons movie DVD. Worst. Movie. Ever.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Editing.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Talking to other book nerds like me about my books.

Favorite foods: My mom has this amazing chicken crescent recipe. I’m always so happy when she makes it again!

Things that make you want to gag: Peas. My kids love peas, so they always show off foods they order that are full of peas. “Look, Mom! Delicious.” Bleck.

Favorite music or song: 80s music. My favorite is “Take on Me” by A-ha. Though I’ve currently been asking Alexa to play a lot of “I Believe in a Thing Called Love” by The Darkness.

Music that drives you crazy: Country music. Rap music.

Favorite smell: The inside of a Crumbl Cookie store.

Something that makes you hold your nose: New plastic. Burnt popcorn.

Something you’re really good at: Star Wars trivia

Something you’re really bad at: Any and all other trivia

Something you wish you could do: I wish I could participate in an archeological dig in Egypt!

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: I can’t say there’s anything I wish I hadn’t learned. I’m always open to new things.

Things you’d walk a mile for: A new bookstore.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: Spiders. Seriously, just torch the place.

Things you always put in your books: Female lead characters.

Things you never put in your books: Steamy bedroom scenes. It’s simply a personal preference, I don’t read spicy books either. If you like spicy books, continue to enjoy! It’s just not an element in my books.

Things to say to an author:

• “I could really relate to <name of character>!”

• “I really loved when <scene in book> happened!”

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

• “<Name of different author> writes better fantasy than you. You should read their books.”

Favorite places you’ve been: Disney World; Napa Valley, CA; Door County, WI

Places you never want to go to again: Waterloo, IA

Favorite books (or genre): Fantasy! I recently read Daughter of the Moon Goddess, and it’s my favorite read of 2022 thus far.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Romance.

Favorite things to do: Reading in my hammock. Girl’s Nights Out at our favorite breweries/wineries.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Dishes.

About J. Lynn Else:

J. LYNN ELSE is an award-winning author from Minnesota who’s self-published two historical fiction novels set in ancient Egypt, “The Forgotten: Aten’s Last Queen (2013),” which was named an Indie Editor’s Choice book for 2016 by the Historical Novel Society, and “The Forgotten: Heir of the Heretic (2016)” as well as a sci fi novella “Strangely Constructed Souls (2018).” Through Inklings Publishing, she’s authored an Arthurian-influenced, female-driven fantasy trilogy, “Descendants of Avalon” (2018), “Lost Daughters of Avalon” (2019), and “Destiny of Avalon” (2021).” Her short story “The Girl from the Haunted Woods,” won 2nd place in the “Journey into the Fantastical” Anthology contest. In 2021, she became the Indie Reviews Editor for the Historical Novel Society. She believes in unicorns and practicing random acts of awesome.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://www.teasippinnerdymom.com (that’s “tea-sippin’ nerdy mom”)

Facebook: www.facebook.com/teasippinnerdymom

 Twitter: https://twitter.com/JLynnElseAuthor

 Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/jlynnelseauthor/

 Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7275724.J_Lynn_Else

 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jlynnelse_author