#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Elizabeth Moldovan

#ThisorThatThursday Logo.png
44083324_903598026500857_6882627861400780800_n.jpg

I’d like to welcome Elizabeth Modovan to the blog for today’s #ThisorThatThursday interview.

Easiest thing about being a writer: I have grown used to writing about myself now, so it is easy for  me, and being  honest and telling the truth makes it very easy to do.

Words that describe you: Confident, vulnerable, honest, courageous, loving, kind and generous.

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

Favorite beverage: Coffee

Something that gives you a sour face: when people lie to me.

Favorite smell: jasmine and lavender.

Something that makes you hold your nose: the smell of damp on people’s clothing and belongings.

Something you’re really good at: Cooking, cleaning, gardening, making a home.

Something you’re really bad at: Marketing my autobiography.

Something you like to do: Helping people

Something you wish you’d never done: I wish I had never started to use heroin.

Things to say to an author:  Market your book six months before it is published.  Never give up and never write a book to get rich.
Favorite books (or genre): Autobiographies, True Stories, Memoirs.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Graphic horror.

Things that make you happy: Spending time with my family.

Things that drive you crazy: When people lie to me.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Go public with my true story.

Biggest mistake: Not marketing it widely for six months before it was published.  

The nicest thing a reader said to you: Reading your book has saved my life.

20191005_075321.jpg

About Elizabeth:

Elizabeth's life is penned very simply in this inspiring memoir about her incredible battle, to find a way to live. Born the year her parents immigrated from Europe, in a large Catholic family, she experienced poverty,
neglect, rejection and abandonment before the age of eighteen. She had no sense of self and felt invisible most of the time. Her father passed away after battling cancer for eleven years, when she was nineteen years old. It was then that her world took a bad turn, when she fell in love with a drug addict/dealer. Twenty-four years later, after using heroin everyday while trying to raise her five children, circumstances forced her to leave him. Elizabeth and her three year old daughter had only one bag of clothes and a stroller. They were homeless for three months, and she attempted suicide. Without a car, phone, money or friends and in very poor health she was lost and broken and needed help but was too stubborn to reach out, believing her life to be worthless and of no value. She did not attend any detox, meetings, rehabs, counselors or doctors but with only sheer determination and persistence, overcame her dependency on drugs. Elizabeth began her harrowing journey towards the light of truth and found freedom in Christ alone. She remains clean to this day and is a very private person. She wrote her story only to help people who suffer like she did and need help to find a way to live without drugs.

Let’s Be Social:

https://www.elizabethmoldovan.org/ 
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41838888-from-heroin-to-christ