#WriterWednesday Interview with Erica Wynters

I’d like to welcome Erica Wynters to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

Things you never want to run out of: Iced Tea and Stevia. Those mixed together are my writing fuel. Let’s face it - they’re my getting through the day fuel.

Things you wish you’d never bought: I am a sucker for Instagram ads and have definitely bought some things I’ve regretted. The main one was a dryer vent cleaning kit that arrived six months after I ordered it, and immediately broke!

A few of your favorite things: I love plants and have way too many in my house. It’s hard for me to walk past a new display at the grocery store without wanting to add to my collection.

Things you need to throw out: Sadly, I have a few plants that are dead and dying, and I probably just need to throw them out, but it’s hard for me to admit defeat.

Things you need for your writing sessions: I’m really lucky that I can manage to write anywhere with any kind of background noise. In fact, I often get the most done on an airplane.

Things that hamper your writing: Instagram! I need to keep my phone far away from me when I’m writing.

Favorite foods: I love Mexican food, and chicken fajitas are my favorite!

Things that make you want to gag: Anything with mushrooms. It’s sad because I know they are so healthy, but I just can’t do it.

Favorite music or song: My thirteen year old daughter has gotten me into Taylor Swift, and we’ve bonded over singing her music at the top of our lungs in the car.

Music that drives you crazy: I can usually find something in almost any genre of music that I can like, but I can’t stand music where the lyrics regrade women. I won’t do it!

Favorite beverage: I already mentioned iced tea, so I’ll add another one. I love a really good root beer.

Something that gives you a sour face: My husband loves kombucha, but I just can’t do it!

Things you always put in your books: My books always have a lot of romance and mystery. That combination is my favorite. I love watching two people fall in love and writing all the swoony moments, but if that’s all a book is, then I get bored. Add in a little danger? A little murder? It’s the perfect combination for me.

Things you never put in your books: I never celebrate anything relationally toxic. I’m a therapist when I’m not writing, and you’ll always read healthy relationships in my books. If someone isn’t a healthy person, it’ll be pointed out, not seen as attractive.

Things to say to an author: I just read your new book and loved it. I’m off to leave a review right now!

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: I would write too, if I had the time.

Favorite places you’ve been: My favorite place in the whole world is Kaanapali Beach on Maui. I could spend all day floating in those crystal blue waters!

Places you never want to go to again: I love to travel and have different experiences, so this is a hard one. I’ll say this – last year I visited Minnesota in November and the air temperature was eleven degrees with the wind chill below zero. I lived in Wisconsin, Illinois, and Minnesota for the first 33 years of my life, but I do not miss winter. I’ll visit those places in the summer when they’re green and beautiful.

Favorite things to do: I love to travel with my husband. I like big trips, but I also love a weekend away at a new spot we can drive to like Bisbee, Arizona, Idyllwild, California.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Camping, which ironically includes fire and bugs. It’s the bugs for me. And the sleeping on the ground.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I went bungee jumping at Wisconsin Dells when I was sixteen. Wisconsin Dells is a tourist destination in central Wisconsin and I was there with a bunch of my friends. I was the only one under eighteen and we lied about my age so I could go. No one checked my ID, and I survived. It was so worth it!

Something you chickened out from doing: Last year, I was on Maui with my family, and we had the opportunity to go cliff jumping. Some from our group went, but I didn’t. I was happy to watch and cheer from the water.

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books: Marigolds, Mischief, and Murder is set in a fictional town in rural Illinois called Star Junction. I grew up in a rural, small town in Wisconsin. While there are no specific stories in my book that are taken from my life, there are a lot of details that come from my history. There is a restaurant in the book called Bucky’s and there’s a Bucky’s in the town I grew up in. My main character was on the swim team in high school, and so was I. The biggest thing that translated from my real life into the books is the sense of community that you find in a small, rural town, the way people are willing to help one another out, and the way gossip can spread like wildfire!

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: I mentioned the bar/restaurant Bucky’s lives in the book and in my real-life hometown. That was a total accident. I didn’t even remember there was a Bucky’s in my home town until the book came out and people I grew up with started reading it. I got multiple messages about Bucky’s and how I’d used that in my book. How Bucky’s in my book got its name is an interesting story. The book has been through a lot of revisions. At first, the main character, Gwen’s, best from was named Marley. But I had another character named Margie, and my editor said I had to change one. I thought long and hard about it, and changed Gwen’s best friend’s name to Penny. At the time, the bar/restaurant that they go to was named Benny’s. Now I had another problem. I couldn’t have a Benny’s and a Penny, so Benny’s had to go. I made a split section decision to rename the business Bucky’s. I’m sure my subconscious remembered driving past Bucky’s on Main Street in my hometown for all those years, but I didn’t make the connection until the book came out.

About Erica:

Erica Wynters may have lived most of her life in the frigid Midwest, but now she spends her time in the warmth and sunshine of Arizona. She loves hiking, hunting down waterfalls in the desert, reading (of course), and napping. Can napping be considered a hobby? When not weaving tales of mystery with plenty of quirky characters, laughs, and a dash of romance, Erica works as a Marriage and Family Therapist helping others find their Happily Ever Afters.

Let’s Be Social:

www.facebook.com/ericawynters

www.instagram.com/ericawyntersbooks

www.ericawynters.com

#WriterWednesday Interview with Jayne Ormerod

I’d like to welcome one of the best beta readers on the planet and good friend, Jayne Ormerod to the blog today!

Things you never want to run out of: Diet Coke, Wine, and Books.

Things you wish you’d never bought: In an attempt to avoid dog urine spots in my yard, I bought this fire-hydrant-looking thing that supposedly encourages my canine companions to wee-wee in a certain area. I placed it in a no-man’s-land area of mulch. They sniffed it and walked away. It’s still there, testament to my gullible nature.

A few of your favorite things: My comfy sweatshirts, my Crabby wine glasses, and my gardens.

Things you need to throw out: Early printed versions of manuscripts, 100+ rejection letters, and a box of chocolates that got left in a hot car and melted into puddles. But, well, throwing out chocolate is a class-3 felony, isn’t it? (If not, it should be!)

Things you need for your writing sessions: My muses (aka:dogs) at my side. And a really good idea!

Things that hamper your writing: Facebook. ’Nuff said.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Selling books!

Easiest thing about being a writer: Working from the comfort of my La-Z-Boy. Feet up. Music playing. Words flowing!

Words that describe you: Goal-oriented and slightly superstitious.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Unathletic and “Fluffy”. (I think the two might be connected?

Favorite foods: Anything from the potato family, be they fries, chips, baked, au gratin, etc.

Things that make you want to gag: Seafood. Just the smell in the grocery store has me scurrying for the odorless cereal aisle.

Favorite smell: Flowers: Gardenias, Magnolias, Honeysuckle, Ligustrums, Lilies!

Something that makes you hold your nose: Collard greens simmering on the stove!

The last thing you ordered online: Construction truck-themed birthday decorations for my grandson’s 2-y/o birthday party.

The last thing you regret buying: A pair of shoes that looked really fun on the web page, but they are bright and garish and fan out in the toe area…think “clown shoes”.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Skied down a double black diamond in Banff! (Truth be told I slid on my backside most of it!)

Something you chickened out from doing: Parachuting. No way. Un-unh. Not gonna do it!

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Sue Grafton! So cool! Beyond cool. Amazing person.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: J.B. Fletcher, of Murder, She Wrote fame. Donald Bain (the actual author, along with his wife Renee Paley-Bain) bear no resemblance to the author photo, that of Angela Lansbury, who of course, played J.B. on the TV show.

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books: The “fire” my son “put out” in my oven, the first time he cooked with my new gas range.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: That I stumble across dead bodies all the time. I do not! Only ever seen one “prettied up” at a funeral.

About Jayne:

Jayne Ormerod writes coastal cozies with a splash of humor. She grew up in a small Ohio town and attended a small-town Ohio college. Upon earning her accountancy degree, she became a CIA (that’s not a sexy spy thing, but a Certified Internal Auditor). She married a naval officer, and off they sailed to see the world. After nineteen moves, they, along with their two rescue dogs Tiller and Scout, settled in a cottage by the Chesapeake Bay. Jayne writes what she knows: small towns with beach settings.  The dead bodies are purely a figment of her imagination. 

 Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://JayneOrmerod.com

blog: http://JayneOrmerod.blogspot.com  

Facebook: Jayne Ormerod (be careful there are two of us) or Jayne Ormerod, Author  

#WriterWednesday Interview with Amy Young

I’d like to welcome Amy Young to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

A few of your favorite things: I love my bookcases in my office (they’re new and I’m obsessed), my yoga mat, and my Apple TV 4K.

Things you need to throw out: Old clothes that don’t fit anymore. I hang onto everything, then I donate it all in one fell swoop. It’s time for a culling.

Things you love about writing: I love being able to tell a story that comes into view in my head. I love coming back to something I wrote the day before and being able to continue the story.

Things you hate about writing: The self doubt. My inner critic is loud and sometimes, I can’t drown it out. I’m an oldest child and, at least for me, that comes with a massive fear of failure.

Words that describe you: Tenacious, loyal, honest

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

Favorite beverage: Red wine

Something that gives you a sour face: Kombucha. But I drink it anyway because it’s good for you 😂

Something you’re really good at: Swimming. I’ve been swimming since I could walk and taught lessons for years. I think I’m more at home in the water than I am on land.

Something you’re really bad at: Drawing. Like, painfully bad. Don’t play Pictionary with me.

The last thing you ordered online: A dress from Wolf & Badger that I’ve been eyeing for months. I love that website.

The last thing you regret buying: An Uproot reusable pet hair remover. Seemed like a miracle product; in reality, it tears fabric and carpet unless you’re super careful.

Things you always put in your books: Strong female friendships.

Things you never put in your books: Animal cruelty.

Favorite places you’ve been: Antigua, Vail, Malibu, the Outer Banks.

Places you never want to go to again: Gary, Indiana. That might seem like an odd place to choose; I had to stop for gas there on my way out of Chicago and got lost, and it wasn’t the best experience.

Favorite books (or genre): Thrillers, mysteries, suspense.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Religious books written by someone who is trying to recruit for their religion.

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): Kevin Smith, Suzy Izzard, Lisa Vanderpump, Andy Cohen.

People you’d cancel dinner on: Any cast member from The Jersey Shore.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Moving to Los Angeles and writing my first book. I didn’t think I’d ever leave Ohio, and I ended up spending a decade in LA.

Biggest mistake: Starting smoking. I’ve long since quit, but if I could go back, I would never take up the habit.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Bruce Campbell

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Believe it or not, every celebrity I’ve come in contact with looks exactly like their pictures.

About Amy:

Amy Young is an author, comedian, and actor based in Cleveland. After spending a decade in Los Angeles working in the entertainment industry and writing her debut novel, The Water Tower, she returned to Ohio to be closer to family. Amy is working on her second book, a thriller, and in her free time she enjoys going to the theatre, bingeing reality TV, and spending time with her husband and many, many cats. She has a B.A. in English from Kenyon College.

Let’s Be Social:

Instagram: https://instagram.com/amypcomedy

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authoramyyoung

Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/authoramyyoung

Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@amypyoung1

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/authoramyyoung

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/amy-young

Buy link: https://books2read.com/TheWaterTower

Website: https://www.authoramyyoung.com


#WriterWednesday Interview with Nancy Cole Silverman

I’d like to welcome the fabulous Nancy Cole Silverman to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you never want to run out of: Ideas. I love the blank page when I begin a story, and I’m always surprised what shows up when I sit down to write. I hope I never run out of ideas and that enthusiam. It’s a terrific gift, and I try to honor it daily.

Things you wish you’d never bought: Online noname clothing. I’m a sucker for a pretty dress and during the pandemic I enjoyed online shopping, only to be disappointed when the item showed up in the mail and looked nothing like what I had ordered. I tried to return a dress once, and the sender didn’t want it back. We negotiated back and forth for a refund. The sender increased the amount of the refund with each email. I felt like I was battering and it became a game for me. Finally, the website refuned my entire purchase price plus mailing cost and told me to keep the dress!

A few of your favorite things: Obvioulsy my favorite things are my family and my pets. The older I get the more I charish older items, like old clothes—those that still fit—pictures and jewelry that remind me of special times.

Things you need to throw out: Old shoes! I’ve a closet full.

Words that describe you: Tall, blonde, female and determined.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: klutzy. I’m a lefty and constantly confusing my right for my left.

Favorite music or song: There are so many, but my favorites are Broadway tunes. I’m a real Broadway Baby when it comes to stage tunes. The minute I hear a familiar tune I sing along.

Music that drives you crazy: Some heavy metal. It’s nervewracking to me, and I have to turn it off.

Favorite beverage: Wine! Unless it’s really hot and then it’s water, followed by wine.

Something that gives you a sour face: Unsweetened lemon juice. We have a lemon tree in our yard and I enjoy making fresh lemonade but please....add plenty of sweetner!

Last best thing you ate: That’s an easy one. Last night we went to a favorite restaurant and I order Chicken Marsal with mushroom in a creamy wine sauce. Supurb! Loved it!

Last thing you regret eating: The chocolate and caramel ice cream bomb I ate after finishing my main course. Couldn’t resist it...but wow...talk about a sugar high!

Favorite books (or genre): Mysteries. Historical Fiction.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Books with a racy cover.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Travel. Visit historical sights. Take cooking classes. Walk through medieval towns and enjoy a glass of wine while reading a book.

Biggest mistake: Getting lost on a freeway with an almost empty tank of gas in a city I didn’t know.

The funniest thing to happen to you: I won’t say the following incident I’m about to share is the funniest thing to have ever happened to me, but it is the most recent and poigant event in my life and will remain forever a happy memory.

My ninty-nine-a-half year old mother recently passed. Fortunately, I was able to spend her last week with her and she was in good spirits to the very end. We spent that week reminessing and enjoying the time we had left. The day before she died, I arrived at her apartment early and found her sitting up in bed. She had taken the oxygen tube from her nose and was dangling her legs over the side of the bed, tying to get up.

“What are you doing?” I asked.

She answered in a very determined manner. “Don’t we have an appointment today?”

I realized she was confused and picked up the oxygen tube, and not wanteing to stress her, gently put my arms around her and tried to help her back into bed.

“I’m not sure,” I said. “I’ll have to check my calendar. Meanwhile, why don’t you lay back down on the bed...”

“Nancy! Chickens lay. People lie.”

I laaughed outloud. My mother was an English teacher to the very end. She had a gret sense of humor and I’ll never forget her.

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: I’ve had many. Some I’d like to forget. But one I’ll share had to do with a clothing malfuction. In high school I was active in a lot of theater productions and I was tapped to be included as a dancer in a road show that appeared at a local theater. I didn’t know much about dancing, but the director was looking to fill out his dance team with a couple of local kids. The only qualifications I had was that I was tall, slim, and had a long ponytail, which evidentally was the look he needed to round out his dance troupe.

The incident, my most embarrassing moment in my then 15 years, happened on stage. I split my pants during a dance number. I was mortified, and being that the performance was before a sell out crowd and on a circle stage, or theater-in-the-round, there was nothing I could do about it. I remember finishing the number and waiting—my face as red as the red underpants I had worn that day—until it was appropriate to exit the stage.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Brad Pitt. I was sittingin a doctor’s office when he walked in. He was wearing a baseball hat and dark glasses and carrying a book. I wish I could report it was one of my books, but it wasn’t. All the same, he smiled and sat down, and I was in awe. He’s nicer looking in person than on the big screen and if his aura that day was any indication of who is, he’s a really nice guy.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I like to sketch and garden. And when I’m between books I usually do a little of each. I think they help to organize my thought.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: My garden. Much as I enjoy it, I’ve made mistake and had to pull things out that never seemed to grow and start again. But then, that’s the fun in gardening. You can always start again.

About Nancy:

Nancy Cole Silverman spent nearly twenty-five years in news and talk radio, beginning her career in college on the talent side as one of the first female voices on the air. Later, on the business side in Los Angeles, she retired as one of two female general managers in the nation's second-largest radio market. After a successful career in the radio industry, Silverman picked up her pen to write fiction, her short stories, and crime-focused novels--the Carol Childs and Misty Dawn Mysteries are based in Los Angeles, while her newest series, that Kat Lawson Mysteries, takes a more international approach. Kat Lawson, a former investigative reporter has lost her job due an office romance gone terribly wrong. Her boss they promoted. Her they fired.  And now, Kat finds herself working undercover for the FBI as a feature writer for a travel publication. Expect lots of international intrigue, vivid descriptions of small European villages, great food, lost archives, and non-stop action. Silverman lives in Los Angeles with her husband and thoroughly pampered standard poodle.  

Let’s Be Social:

Website: Nancy Cole Silverman

#WriterWednesday Interview with Sarah Bewley

I’d like to welcome author Sarah Bewley to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

A few of your favorite things: Signed copies of favorite books, dogs, baseball, ice cream, and Pat

Things you need to throw out: The old padded envelopes that I keep saving for some reason.

Things you need for your writing sessions: water and quiet

Things that hamper your writing: noise

Things you love about writing: creating stories

Things you hate about writing: proofreading - which is why Pat does it for me.

Favorite foods: Anything I didn’t have to prepare.

Things that make you want to gag: Pickles and mayonnaise

Favorite music or song: piano jazz

Music that drives you crazy: anything that’s autotuned

Something you like to do: rock climb

Something you wish you’d never done: white water rafting

Favorite books (or genre): The Second Coming by Walker Percy, Children of Light by Robert Stone, and The Hawk Is Dying by Harry Crews

Books you wouldn’t buy: Self Help Books

Favorite things to do: reading, rock climbing, boxing lessons, watching baseball

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: cleaning the bathroom

Best thing you’ve ever done: Falling in love with Pat

Biggest mistake: Discovering that cold brewed coffee doesn’t upset my stomach. I love it.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Stephen Hawking

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Keanu Reeves. He’s even MORE handsome in person.

About Sarah:

Sarah Bewley writes, climbs rock walls and takes boxing lessons. She was born young, grew old very quickly, then entered into her second childhood which she found far more satisfying than her first. BURNING EDEN is her first mystery and the first book in the Eden County Mysteries series. She shares her life with Patrick Payne, who likes things that burn and explode, knives that are too sharp, and is a photographic artist. She's worked as a licensed private investigator and now works in utilities security, which is physical protection for critical infrastructure.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://www.sarahbewley.com

Twitter: https://www/twitter.com/WPAdmirer

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sarah.bewley.50/

Book Trailer: https://youtu.be/uW3r8rCC4kk

#WriterWednesday Interview with DonnaRae Menard

I’d like to welcome author DonnaRae Menard to the blog for #WriterWednesday where she talks about her two latest books.

Murder in the Village Proper

Katelyn Took came home to settle her grandmother’s estate, only to discover not only did Gram have seventeen cats. But Ruth Beauregard, a childhood chum, had moved in. Ruth was confused, penniless, and abandoned by her in-laws because they believed she had murdered her husband. Ruth had improved, physically and mentally, but she still lived under the stigma of the Beauregard family’s accusations. Katie wanted her adopted aunt to be happy, but to make it so, she’d have to look for dirt under a lot of rocks, and it was looking like someone was going to throw those same rocks back. Hard. She could duck and weave, but could Katie find the truth without getting stoned to death?

The Wait and the Warlord

A foreign born orphan child, Rhys, is presented to the Warlord Most High as tribute. Her people are savages exhibiting fearful traits. It is the Warlord's plan to train Rhys as a child gladiator for his blood sport. But the wizard living in the castle believes Rhys has a different destiny. Custom dictates every man standalone and call forth a dragon. Only such a pair can rule. The Warlord's dragon is the most vicious ever seen. Never has a girl been granted such a prize.

About DonnaRae:

My unofficial writing career began in the seventh grade. While writing descriptive notes about fellow classmate, I was apprehended and sentenced to reading those notes to the class. The episode went far in undermining my popularity and was the start of my training for the hundred-meter relay. Though it was an embarrassing event it didn't deter my fascination with the written word. I followed the course of diaries, pen pals and eventually to a children's story published in a High School anthology. Though my education was non-contemporary, I continue to attend writing courses, seminars, conferences, and even book signings learning from authors about their works and how they moved through the publishing process. I wrote bi-weekly visual pieces for the local newspapers, one in the About Town column and another featuring my Golden Retriever as the traveling star.

Every job I have had has offered me an opportunity to examine the human conditions that are reflected in my writing.

For twelve years I was a member of Toastmasters International, an organization established to promote public speaking. Four of those years, I was an award-winning international competitor in the areas of motivational, humorous, and Table Topics, an exercise which requires you to think on your feet.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://DonnaRaeMenardbooks.com

 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DonnaRae-Menard-103359971477217

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/donnaraemenard

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/donnarae-menard

Twitter: @DonnaRaeMenard


#WriterWednesday Interview with Ivanka Fear

I’d like to welcome Ivanka Fear to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

A few of your favorite things: I love animals (especially cats), nature, summer, the beach (all bodies of water), and flower gardens. I enjoy reading books, watching movies, and looking at family photos. I cherish gifts and keepsakes given to me by family.

Things you need to throw out: Too much space is taken up in my house with old clothes and linens, old receipts, old electronics, knickknacks that serve no purpose, stuff I’ve bought over the years and been keeping for ages and can’t bear to part with but will never use.

Things you need for your writing sessions: I don’t need much. Ideas flow when I’m going for a walk, doing chores, lying in bed. For the actual writing, I need my laptop, a comfy chair, music for inspiration, some snacks, and peace and quiet.

Things that hamper your writing: My laptop is a necessity but a problem because I spend too much time on social media and scrolling, getting distracted. Also, the television needs to be turned off. Cats on my lap are welcome, but it’s hard to write with a cat on your laptop.

Things you love about writing: I love creating a setting, characters and problems, situations for my characters to work their way through and resolve. I enjoy all stages of the writing process, having ideas roll through my head, molding those ideas into sentences and paragraphs, and finishing a piece of writing. Great satisfaction comes from reading back what I’ve written, sharing it with others, and seeing my work in print.

Things you hate about writing: The dreaded writer’s block (which I didn’t believe in at one point) is a real downer, and getting stuck about what comes next in a storyline, is not fun. The editing (especially cutting out parts) is hard for me.

Hardest thing about being a writer: As an introvert, marketing myself is difficult. In-person events, on-line events – they all make me nervous. I’m not good at PR. Also, technology is not my forte. And accepting criticism, as well-intentioned as I know it is, is tough.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Writing. I just love to write.

Favorite foods: If it’s unhealthy, I’ll eat it. That means lasagna, pizza, chocolate, ice cream, cake, doughnuts, anything sweet. Salted snacks work, too.

Things that make you want to gag: I don’t like to see onions, peppers, and other spices in my food, but if they are well-hidden, I will tolerate them. Anything too spicy or greasy is a no for me. I’m also not a fan of seafood.

Favorite music or song: As I’ve grown older, I love to listen to the oldies and classics. Mostly I enjoy rock/pop/country music. My all-time favorite musical artists are Michael Jackson and Elvis Presley.

Music that drives you crazy: I don’t listen to rap, and repetitive lyrics drive me up the wall.

Something you wish you could do: I wanted to take piano lessons when I was young. I would love to be able to play an instrument and to sing well.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: I can’t think of anything. All learning is good. I should have learned more things. I guess that’s the teacher in me.

Things you always put in your books: My protagonist is usually a strong independent woman with issues. Cats and the lake (if I can fit them into the storyline) have a place in my books. A bit of romance and humor takes the edge off the darkness which is an inherent part of crime fiction.

Things you never put in your books: I don’t like to read or write excessive gore and violence.

Things to say to an author: I heard good things about this book. I couldn’t stop reading your book. I wish it had been longer. I can’t wait for your next book to come out.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: I couldn’t relate to your main character. They seemed unrealistic. How much did you have to pay to get this published, anyway?

Favorite places you’ve been: I love Europe and the places I’ve been fortunate enough to visit -- Slovenia (which is where I was born) and Croatia, Venice, Vienna, Cote d’Azure, the Adriatic. In North America, I loved the Gulf of Mexico in Florida, and the Rocky Mountains in Canada. Mountains and lakes and oceans are my favorite places.

Places you never want to go to again: Any place that doesn’t have an easy escape or is up high is somewhere I don’t want to be. So narrow caves and gondolas, elevators and airplanes (although that is unrealistic) are out of the question.

Favorite books (or genre): I mostly read and write in the same genre. That means suspense, thriller, mystery, but also gothic, and romance. Some of my favorite authors (although there are so many) are Janet Evanovich, Linwood Barclay, and Shari Lapena. And I enjoy classics like Wuthering Heights and Little Women.

Books you wouldn’t buy: I don’t read fantasy and sci-fi, and not much non-fiction either..

Favorite things to do: The best thing is to spend time with my family. I love to go to the beach, and to travel. I enjoy reading, writing, and watching mysteries.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: No bugs, please, or spiders, or worms or snakes or other slithery skittery creatures.

Best thing you’ve ever done: I met and married my husband, became a mom, then grandma. My family is the best thing in my life.

Biggest mistake: I worked too hard at work, and took life too seriously, when I should have concentrated more on the fun things.

About Ivanka:

Ivanka Fear is Canadian writer, born in Slovenia. She earned her B.A. and B.Ed. in English and French at Western University. Prior to pursuing writing full time, she enjoyed a long career in education. Her debut novel, The Dead Lie, is the first in her Blue Water Mysteries series. Ivanka is a member of International Thriller Writers and Sisters in Crime. She resides in Ontario, Canada, with her family and the stray cats that wandered in. When not reading and writing, Ivanka enjoys watching mystery series and romance movies, gardening, going for walks, and watching the waves roll in at the lake.

Let’s Be Social:

Visit her at www.ivankafear.com

#WriterWednesday Interview with Keith Saltojanes

I’d like to welcome author Keith Saltojanes to the blog for #WriterWednesday — summer edition!

Something crazy you did on vacation:

Accidently walked onto the grounds of President Emmanuel Macron’s estate while they were doing construction on his fence, leaving it wide open for someone to accidently walk in. He has great security as I now know what it’s like to be yelled at in French while having a machine gun pointed at me.

Something you’d never do again on vacation:

Walk near fencing that has signs reading “en cours de construction.”

Favorite summer beverage:

Unlimited refills on iced tea. I’m a three-tea minimum wherever I go.

A drink that gives you a pickle face:

Cucumbers that have been marinated in vinegar.

Your favorite thing to get from the ice cream truck:

The attention of the driver so they can serve me. Hey, I know I’m an adult but take my order too!

Some dessert that you wish you’d never bought:

Lamb ice cream with whipped cream tartar

Best summer vacation memory:

Swimming in a pool as a kid with my dogs running around it contemplating whether or not they should jump in or not.

A summer vacation disaster that you’d rather forget:

That one unforgettable summer that I forgot about.

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer:

A quiet, empty coffee shop, instrumental music playing, and good iced tea options.

The worst place to try to write in the summer because of all the distractions.

On a raft in the middle of a public pool during open swim. Oh, and there’s a lot of bees around for some reason in this scenario.

The thing you like most about being a writer:

The freedom to write whenever I want and to see ideas that were in my head come alive, either from actors or from other people reading them.

The thing you like least about being a writer:

That freedom also comes with immense guilt at any moments that I’m not currently writing.

The thing that you will most remember about your writing life:

All the ideas that I still haven’t written.

Something in your writing life that you wish you could do over:

Have a clone of me who could write out and complete all those ideas while I’m busy with other things.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Jumping onto a moving train in Bangkok.

Something you chickened out from doing:

Waiting a little bit longer for the train to be going even faster.

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

“That really inspired me.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

“There once was a little walk to get the best answers for the next few months back” ….I think they wrote it to me using predictive text.

The best summer job you ever had:

Working at Dunkin' Donuts because of all the free unlimited donuts

The worst summer job you ever had:

Working at Dunkin' Donuts because of all the free unlimited donuts

About Keith:

Keith Saltojanes is the Founder of Improv-LA, the internationally known creative training center based in Los Angeles. He has taught improv techniques in over 10 countries and for executives at some of the biggest companies around (including Disney, Netflix, Amazon, IBM). He also has a Guinness World Record for the Longest Improv Show and was a writer National Lampoon and for comedians from SNL, MADtv, In Living Color, and Mr. Show. His first book The Improv Mindset releases June 2023.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://www.keithsaltojanes.com

The School: http://www.improv-la.com

Instagram: @keithsaltojanes