#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Kaye George

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I’d like to welcome mystery author Kaye George back to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Favorite thing to do when you have free time: In the times we’re having now, nap and
binge watch Netflix are tied for first.

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

Favorite snacks: Lately I’ve developed a string cheese habit. In fact, I just went and got a piece. And chocolate. Dark chocolate in any form.

Things that make you want to gag:  Okra.

Favorite smell: My late husband’s pillow. He was in a home at the end and they washed every single thing before they gave it back to me. There was nothing with his smell on it. But the pillow on our bed still, after a couple years, retains something of him.
Something that makes you hold your nose: Okra

Something you’re really good at: I’ve realized recently that worrying is my super power. It’s good to know your strengths, I think.
Something you’re really bad at: Remembering things I don’t write down.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: A really young, kid? I used to follow the garbage truck up the alley, fascinated by their job. I thought there was something romantic about what they did, daring and brave. I thought, then, that I would love to have that job. You could see what everyone threw out. I grew out of that. But I still like to learn a lot about people and, honestly, that would be one way to do it.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: I knew I never wanted to get married and have kids. I knew my life would be all dishes and laundry. I met a guy who was very convincing, and actually did get married and have kids. And it was all dishes and laundry. But with a soulmate and kids, and now grandkids. I wouldn’t trade my life for anyone’s.

Something you wish you could do: Right now? Go to any store I want to at any time, unfettered, with no worries.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Take precautions, wear my mask, disinfect everything, stay home. But I think we all wish that.

Favorite things to do: That’s easier to answer during a pandemic when you can’t do very much at all. I probably wouldn’t have given the same answers a few months ago. I now realize that seeing my kids and grandkids, being able to go into any store I want on a whim and browse the aisles, and regular grocery shopping are some of the things I miss the most.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: That’s probably the same. Sky diving. I’m afraid of heights and I think I’d be dead of a heart attack long before I hit the ground after passing out and failing to pull the ripcord.

About Kaye: Kaye George is a national-bestselling, multiple-award-winning author of pre-history, traditional, and cozy mysteries (her latest is the Vintage Sweets series from Lyrical Press). She is a member of Sisters in Crime, Smoking Guns chapter (Knoxville), Guppies chapter, Authors Guild of TN, Knoxville Writers Group, and Austin Mystery Writers. She lives and works in Knoxville, TN.

Book Links:
Revenge Is Sweet, March 10 https://www.amazon.com/Revenge-Sweet-Vintage-Sweets-Mysteries-ebook/dp/B07TS1KJ4T

Deadly Sweet Tooth, June 2 https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/deadly-sweet-tooth-kaye-george/1132868200

Let’s Be Social:
Emails: kayegeorge@gmail.com and janetcantrell01@gmail.com

Web page: http://kayegeorge.com/

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/kaye.george

Facebook author page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kaye-George/114058705318095

Goodreads page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4037415.Kaye_George

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/kaye-george

Twitter: https://twitter.com/KGeorgeMystery/

Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/kayegeorge/

Amazon page: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B004CFRJ76

Blog: http://travelswithkaye.blogspot.com/

Group Blog: http://www.killercharacters.com/

Group Blog: https://writerswhokill.blogspot.com/








 




 




#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Nancy Nau Sullivan

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I would like to welcome Nancy Nau Sullivan to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: I love my old wool slippers, daffodils, and hard rain

Things you need to throw out: I should dump my clothes closet (why did I buy this, and THAT!), all these Tupperware containers, and the contents of my garage.

Things you need for your writing sessions: a window, a second cup of coffee, and quiet; a big table to spread out my notes, or, if any of the kids are around, I need my bed, my computer on my lap, and the door
closed.

Things that hamper your writing: I create interruptions—I did not have to sit on the front step with the neighbor’s cat for an hour this morning, vacuum the living room for the third time this week, and open Facebook and Twitter (I call it the Twitter hole).

Things you love about writing: I love the bursts of creativity, wondering where in the hell that idea, character, twist came from. The hours go fast and end up on the page in my computer.

The things I hate about writing: I don’t hate anything about writing. I hate all the time spent trying to sell it—I’m no salesperson, I just want to write, but that’s not the way the world is.

Hardest thing about being a writer: I want to get it right. I’m a former newspaper journalist. I had a boss once who said he’d fire anyone who got an obit wrong—I can still hear him. “It’s the last damn time anyone will write
about him so you better get it right.” I spend hours and hours researching, going through notes, editing, editing, editing. Checking. On one of my drafts I found 200 misspelled compound words, and they needed to be fixed for consistency and correctness. Grrrrr. Should have done it right the first time.

Easiest thing about being a writer:
I know I’ve earned my place at the computer, and I love sitting there and writing
the story. And now I am free to do it! It’s completely on me.

Things you never want to run out of: time, and chardonnay

Things you wish you’d never bought: the nine hundred pairs of shoes and boots, and, yes, the lawn mower that has never been used

Words that describe you: tenacious, thorough, devoted and loyal, creative

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: opinionated, hot-headed, at times anti-social. My best friend in high school once said to me: “You’re right and the world’s all wrong.” Well, she was only partially
right; I’m wrong a lot and so is the world.

Favorite foods: pizza, baked potato, porterhouse steak, fresh sourdough

Things that make you want to gag:  beets tempura, okra, nopal, kale, the skin on a tomato, and especially,
bananas. I didn’t realize I was so fussy until I told my daughter-in-law I LOVE ALL FOOD. I don’t.

Favorite music or song: The Beatles, The Eagles, Andrea Bocelli, Chris Stapleton, The Avett Brothers, The Pistols at Dawn (my son’s rock group)

Music that drives you crazy: heavy metal and rap …I’ve tried to understand it, to like it, and I don’t. I sort of like A Tribe Called Quest.

Favorite beverage: beer—good old Miller High Life—and chardonnay—and lemon ginger tea
Something that gives you a sour face: all that craft beer that smells like watermelon, cotton candy, bubble
gum…really?

Favorite smell: jasmine, orange blossom, gardenia

Something that makes you hold your nose: musk

Something you’re really good at: writing and editing; remembering the names of books and their authors; sewing; pole dancing

Something you’re really bad at: directions, remembering song lyrics, public speaking (although I was a teacher for 15 years and I was very good at it. Still can’t figure that one out.)

Something you wish you could do:  I want to go to Australia and New Zealand and back to Vietnam.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Nothing, I love learning—even that third-grade math when I substituted in the classroom last year.

Something you like to do: write, swim, walk, travel—I drive to Florida at least once a year by myself. I love it. I turn up the country music and eat popcorn for 1300 miles, gape at Kentucky and Tennessee and the gorgeous
red earth of Georgia, and then I’m there, on Anna Maria Island, my favorite place in the world.

Something you wish you’d never done: Besides smoking—I wish I’d never listened to my mother. I gave up a fellowship at Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern, after undergrad. She insisted I “go into the market place.” I did. I finally got the master’s after my fourth son was born.

The last thing you ordered online: Books, books, books for my son who has started writing (Ann Lamott, Stephen King, Jessica Brody, all on writing) and for my nephew on his 50th birthday (Erik Larson’s new The Splendid and The Vile)

The last thing you regret buying: Another pair of boots. OMG. It’s the second pair this year, and I still go back to my old broken down ones with holes

Things you always put in your books: How the sun looks on the water, the trees, the stones and sand; the people—dedication and acknowledgement to those who helped me. I couldn’t do it without the generosity of so many beta readers, experts, editors, and publishers.

Things you never put in your books: porn, graphic violence, and profanity. Well, I had to resort to a bit of the latter in my prison saga, The Boys of Alpha Block, coming out next year from TouchPoint Press. It’s the way they talk, but I don’t think the language is gratuitous.

Things to say to an author: I love the way you do setting (or character, plot, description). Every author has a strong point, or many. Just tell them.
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Will you review my books and give them all five stars, and will you do it now?

Favorite places you’ve been: Spain, New York, Anna Maria Island, Mexico, Ireland, Vietnam—so totally different and mind-blowing for so many reasons! My new mystery series that debuts in June with Saving Tuna Street will take Blanche Murninghan to Mexico City next, then to Ireland where she rents a castle, and on and on until she gets very tired and returns to her beloved Santa Maria Island (Anna Maria Island).

Places you never want to go to again: The boys’ prison where I taught English for five years. I wish we never had such a place, but we did, and I wrote about that, too, in The Boys of Alpha Block (TouchPoint Press, next year).

Favorite books (or genre): I love the Ann’s and Alice’s – Munro, Tyler, Patchett, Hoffman, Lamott, Beattie. They have a way of making the reader sit up and take notice and appreciate the world down to its finest, and sometimes regrettable, point. I love the police stories of Laura Lippman and the incredible description and characterization of James Lee Burke; so many—Sittenfeld, Allende, Semple, Amato, Harper, Moriarty, and all the books my cousin Charles sends me by new writers. I want to read more work by my Sisters in Crime. I read Vuong’s On Earth We Are Briefly Gorgeous, a new novel by the Vietnamese poet. I almost fell out of my chair the writing was so gorgeous.

Books you wouldn’t buy: anything sci-fi except Ursula Le Guin and Kurt Vonnegut

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): My cousin Charles, my college roommate, Heidi, who I lived in Spain with, my good friend, Bobbi, an art teacher who I gossiped and smoked with so many years ago, Jamie Dimon (he’s reviled but he’s done some good stuff, too), Curtis Sittenfeld, James Lee Burke, and Alice Hoffman. I think eight is a good number for dinner.

People you’d cancel dinner on: I just wouldn’t go there. I know how to say no in the first place.

Favorite things to do: write, read, walk, travel, sit and watch the cardinals flit by the window. (I do too much of the latter.) I can’t wait for the hummingbirds to come back, and then I can waste more time daydreaming.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Clean the oven. I actually ate bugs in Mexico—chapulines (grasshoppers) and they were pretty tasty and crunchy, but I don’t think I’d do it again.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Zip lining in Costa Rica—my cousin Kathy, the adventurous one, said, “What’s the worst that can happen?” As I looked 40 feet down through the tree canopy…

Something you chickened out from doing: Horseback riding, after falling off twice

The coolest person you’ve ever met: My dad, a funny, totally magnanimous Irishman who loved me unconditionally and believed in me

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Kiefer Sutherland—I met him backstage after a Broadway play. He was gracious, but sweating like nobody’s
business, and he’s very small.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: “I loved your book.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you: “I loved your book, but I had to find something wrong, so I gave it four stars.” My high school classmate. She’s still a card after all these years.

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About Nancy:

Nancy Nau Sullivan is a former newspaper journalist and English teacher. She taught at a
boys’ prison  in Florida, in Argentina, and in the Peace Corps in Mexico. She returned to the setting of her memoir, THE LAST CADILLAC, to write SAVING TUNA STREET, her first mystery. She lives in Northwest Indiana and, often, anywhere near water. 

Let’s Be Social:

Twitter: @NauSullivan

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nancy.sullivan.9638

Facebook Author page: https://www.facebook.com/lastcadiauthor/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nancynausullivan/?hl=en

Website:  https://www.nancynausullivan.com









#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Pamela Webber

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I’d like to welcome author, Pamela Webber to the blog today for #ThisorThatThursday.

Things you need for your writing sessions: My computer, a notepad, and pencil

Things that hamper your writing: Necessary housework

Things you love about writing: Creating characters that become friends, settings that are life-like, and storylines that resonate with readers.

Things you hate about writing: Jumping through the hoops of publishing and marketing
Words that describe you: Loyal. Ethical. Questioning.

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

Favorite music or song: All genres

Music that drives you crazy: Songs without a melody

Things you’d walk a mile for: A really good cup of coffee.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: Fanaticism of any kind.

Things you always put in your books: Life lessons I want my children and grandchildren to know long after
I’m gone.

Things you never put in your books: Overt sex. Books can be sensual and deal with sex related issues in fascinating ways without being graphic.

Favorite places you’ve been: Just about anywhere in the US, Spain, Africa/Botswana, Europe, Bermuda
Places you never want to go to again: Africa/Namibia. Beautiful place, but we were there during protests against a corrupt government.

Favorite books (or genre): To Kill a Mockingbird
Books you wouldn’t buy: Fifty Shades of Gray

Things that make you happy: My family, all of them.
Things that drive you crazy:  Being told by anyone how I should feel and react.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Marrying my wonderful husband
Biggest mistake: Underestimating evil people.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I spent a month in Peru at a deep Amazon research station and hiking the Inca trail to Machu Pichu.
Something you chickened out from doing: Skydiving.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: A reader compared my debut novel, The Wiregrass, to To Kill a Mockingbird, Tom Sawyer, and Of Mice and Men.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: A PETA member took me to task that one of my characters put an out of control cat in a mailbox, even though the cat was fine.

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About Pamela:

Pam Webber is author of the bestselling debut Southern novel, The Wiregrassa Historical Novels Review
Editors’ Choice, and Read of the Month at Southern Literary Review. Her second novel, Moon Water, which was released in August garnered both of these honors as well. An invited panelist for Virginia Festival of the Book, Pam has also published extensively in nursing and is an award-winning educator and family nurse practitioner. She and her husband, Jeff, live in the Northern Shenandoah Valley.


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Let’s Be Social:
Author website: https://pamwebber.com

Facebook: @authorpamwebber

Twitter: @pamwebber1

Instagram: @pbwebber1

BookBub: @pwebber1

YouTube: Pam Webber on YouTube








#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Judy Snider

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I’d like to welcome author Judy Snider to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

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Words that describe you: Loyal, kind, warm, funny....

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: interrupt others when chatting a little too much

Favorite foods:  Chocolate, crabcakes, donuts,...potato chips...wait, realized I did not put healthy things
I eat...lots, but ...

Things that make you want to gag: Tomatoes

Favorite music or song: All kinds depending on my mood, Motown, folk, Ed Sherin..... .....but favorite songs are
Remember When by Allen Jackson, and  the beautiful What More Can I Say a mother/son wedding dance song my husband and I had done with Pearl Snap studios (yes, no one wants us to sing..ha)

Music that drives you crazy: Punk...most of time....like Irish Punk for a holiday song...

Favorite beverage: Coffee

Something that gives you a sour face: Tomatoes

Favorite smell:  Smell of the ocean, smell of food in the oven on a cold day, and smell of the air after a
rain storm.

Something that makes you hold your nose: Too strong chemicals, scented candles,
etc.

Something you’re really good at: Walking into a room and enjoying chatting with anyone. I love to meet new people, see people I know, and just laugh with them.

Something you’re really bad at: Staying awake late.

Something you wish you could do: Get my books into tv/film....suspense, and get our children's book done by Hallmark

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: How to go about in a boot with a broken ankle....yikkes...

Last best thing you ate: lobster roll

Last thing you regret eating: too spicy a food....

The last thing you ordered online:  Shoes, baby item, and books

The last thing you regret buying: Shoes that didnt fit....

Things you’d walk a mile for: Good food.....family, friends....

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: Certain smells, Pouporri, strong chemicals, perfume too strong, etc...

Things you always put in your books:  CATS, Suspense, and Strong Women
Things you never put in your books: Too much violence/blood, or gore.

Favorite places you’ve been:  Mackinaw Island, Michigan, Budapest, New Orleans, Quebec City....lots more too....love traveling....

Places you never want to go to again: Haven't found one like I feel strongly about avoiding, but too crowded cities....

Favorite books (or genre): An Angel Like Me, a wonderful holiday picture book, but I
read suspense and thrillers books. I also now get paperbacks as I like a
"book in hand".

Favorite things to do: Spend time with family and friends, travel, eat, write, watch
shows, and spend time with my cat.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Forms/paperwork

Things that make you happy: Being with family and friends

Things that drive you crazy: When I can't figure out something on the computer

Best thing you’ve ever done: Having two terrific kids (now grown) with my husband.
Biggest mistake: Made many in life, but no biggest....learned from them.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: I love that your books are not too long...suspenseful, but easy quick read

The craziest thing a reader said to you:  Add more murders.....not crazy, but interesting....

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Let’s Be Social

Website:    www.judysnider.com    
Instagram: judyksnider_author

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#ThisofThatThursday Author Interview with Anne Moss Rogers

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I’d like to welcome author, Anne Moss Rogers to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

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Things you need for your writing sessions: Quiet, uninterrupted space although I have written in chaotic situations

Things that hamper your writing: Distractions. So I put my computer on “do not disturb.” Best feature ever.

Things you love about writing: The page never taunts me, spits at me, or chastises me for writing how I feel.

Things you hate about writing: Interruptions that take me out of the moment

Hardest thing about being a writer: The time spent sitting alone 

Easiest thing about being a writer: Accessibility to our job and how mobile it is. There is always need for writers and writing

Things you never want to run out of: Toilet paper

Things you wish you’d never bought: A Disney timeshare

Words that describe you: Passionate, emotionally naked, bold, persistent.

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

Favorite smell: Fresh cedar and coffee (although I don’t drink coffee)
Something that makes you hold your nose: Skunk. Worst smell ever

Something you’re really good at: Creative problem solving and ideas
Something you’re really bad at: The financial side of things (although I’m working on that)

Something you wish you could do: Perform on a trapeze. I love how they fly through the air flipping

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: I love learning, so I can’t fathom that anything I would learn wouldn’t have value of some kind. Even things I detest doing.

Favorite places you’ve been: Vienna. We had an unforgettable dinner in a palace with the best table of people I’ve ever sat with in my life.
Places you never want to go to again: Anywhere but an ocean cruise

Favorite books (or genre): I read from almost all genres. Bonfire of the Vanities and Man’s Search for
Meaning are two of my faves.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Anything Sci Fi

Favorite things to do: Public Speaking, getting together w/ friends/family, learning new things
Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing:Taxes (But I do them)

Best thing you’ve ever done: Starting my blog Emotionally Naked, and deciding to go public with my story and the topic of suicide.
Biggest mistake: Making a financial decision when I was stressed that turned out to be an elaborate scam.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Fought a man who attacked me at knifepoint for the purpose of rape and murder.

Something you chickened out from doing: I was sitting with some girls in a gym. They asked me to sit with them on the bleachers and I did, excited to be included since I was new. Someone I had been friends with at the new school walked in and all the girls sat there making fun of her eyebrows which she had overplucked. And there I sat shocked because they had planned this and wanted me sitting there to further her humiliation. My regret is that my shock and desire to be accepted prevented me from standing up for her. I’ve never ever been cruel but my lack of action here has been a regret.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: “I lost my own son to suicide 15 years ago, and although I have read so many books about this kind of loss, nothing has touched me as deeply as this.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you: “difficult to consider the pain for this family.” (I can’t figure out what it means but if that’s the worst review, then I’m lucky)

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About Anne

Anne Moss Rogers is an emotionally naked® TEDx storyteller, the 2019 YWCA Pat Asch Fellow for social justice, and author of the book, Diary of a Broken Mind. Despite her family’s best efforts, Anne Moss’ 20-year-old son Charles died by suicide June 5, 2015 after many years of struggle with anxiety, depression, and
ultimately addiction.

Anne Moss chronicled her family’s tragedy in a newspaper article that went viral and her blog, Emotionally Naked, has been read over a million times.  After receiving a message from a young lady who wrote that one of her blog posts saved her life, she sold her digital marketing business and followed her purpose of preventing suicide, and helping people find life after loss.  

She has been interviewed by the New York Times and was the only non-clinician ever invited to speak
at the National Institute of Mental Health.

Originally from Fayetteville, North Carolina and a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a BA in Journalism, she currently lives in Richmond, VA with her husband. Her surviving son, Richard,
works in LA as a editor and filmmaker.

Social Media Links

Website

IG: https://www.instagram.com/annemossrogers/

TW: https://twitter.com/AnneMossRogers

FB: https://facebook.com/EmotionallyNaked

LI: https://www.linkedin.com/in/digitalmarketingexpertise/

Free ebook downloads: https://annemoss.com/resources-2/free-ebooks/

Resource pages: https://annemoss.com/resources-2/

Book Links
Please buy from a local bookstore when you can. Available in ebook and soon audio book.

https://annemoss.com/diaryofabrokenmind/

Fountain Book Store: https://bit.ly/diarybrokenmind

Beach Glass Books: http://www.beachglassbooks.com/books/diaryofabrokenmind

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/diary-of-a-broken-mind-anne-moss-rogers/1133614432?

Amazon: https://amzn.to/2pw5id8












 








 








 








#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Rosemary Shomaker

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I’d like to welcome author, Rosemary Shomaker, to the blog today for #ThisorThatThursday.

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Things you need for your writing sessions: I need bright light, pencils or pens, and a window.

Things that hamper your writing: Interruptions by humans, either in person, on the phone, or even email.

Favorite music or song: I like Bluegrass

Music that drives you crazy: I’m not a big fan of “Urban” music, but I have an open mind.

Favorite smell: Fresh cut grass!

Something that makes you hold your nose: Rotten potatoes; they are disgusting,
slimy, and stinky!

Something you wish you could do: I’d love to win an Olympic Gold Medal. Maybe in another life!

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Vilify

The last thing you ordered online: Wool socks

The last thing you regret buying: Impractical shoes

Things you always put in your books: I always put dogs in my books.
Things you never put in your books: Nail polish

Things to say to an author: Tell an author, “I really identified with this character.”

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: “Your story is a bit thin.”

Favorite places you’ve been: Quebec City, the Cotswolds, Niagara Falls.
Places you never want to go to again: A drug house during a drug buy

Favorite things to do: Take walks, read, learn
Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Running a marathon. Well, running any kind of race.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Given birth to a child, and then giving birth to a second child.
Biggest mistake: Illicit, reckless romance

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: I’ll never tell!
Something you chickened out from doing: Telling the truth in a situation when it was easier to lie

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Brenda Blethyn; she’s the actress who plays “Vera”

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Mike Farrell; he’s really aged. I guess I have, too.

About Rosemary:

Rosemary Shomaker writes about the unexpected in everyday life. She’s the woman you don’t notice in the grocery store or at church but whom you do notice at estate sales and wandering vacant lots. In all these places she’s collecting story ideas. Rosemary writes mystery, women’s fiction, and paranormal short stories.
Stay tuned as she takes her first steps toward longer fiction.

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#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Elizabeth Moldovan

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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.

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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.

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








#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Jayne Ormerod

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I’d like to welcome my author friend, Jayne Ormerod, back to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

A few of your favorite things: Almost all food and wine; a good book on a rainy day; a walk on the shore in any weather; and dogs. If I had a big enough yard, I would be that “crazy dog lady.”

Things you need to throw out: I have a lot of clothes I need to throw out, partly because I bought on-line and the sizing/quality was way off and it was too much of a hassle to return. My spice rack could do with a good cleaning out, too. I used one spice the other day that had a Use By date of 2001.

Things you need for your writing sessions: My laptop. I just can’t write the old-fashioned way. I edit as I go, which requires lots of deleting and moving of text.

Things that hamper your writing: My puppy laying his head on my laptop while I am writing. He is QUITE the snuggler, and my new laptop has a touch screen that is sensitive to dog noses and I’ve found stuff deleted.

Things you love about writing: Plotting!  I love to noodle up a good plot!

Things you hate about writing: The additional 62,000 words needed to flesh out the plot and turn in into a story! 

Favorite music or song: Carolina Shag music!

Music that drives you crazy: Rap. I can’t understand the words and it always sounds so angry to me. Not relaxing.

Favorite beverage: Diet Coke and wine (not together of course!)

Something that gives you a sour face: Bad milk. (you’d think at my age I’d know better than to smell it after it’s expiration date!)

Favorite smell: Coq au vin simmering in the oven. Mmm-mmm. Now that’s good eating!

Something that makes you hold your nose: The smell of fish at the fish counter at my grocery store. It literally makes me gag.

Something you’re really good at: Few people know that I took 12 years of piano lessons. “Moon River” is my favorite song to play. It was my mother’s favorite song.  

Something you’re really bad at: Anything athletic.

The last thing you ordered online: Large, thin crust mushroom, chicken, red onion and spinach pizza from Pizza Hut.

The last thing you regret buying: This thing for my dog that is supposed to control barking by squirting citronella oil in his face when he barks too much. I haven’t even opened the package.

Things you always put in your books: Food and drink.

Things you never put in your books: Putting dogs (or any animal) in danger! I do love it when they burst on stage and save the day, though!

Things to say to an author: “I didn’t want the book to end!”

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: “You missed a quotation mark on the second sentence of the third paragraph on page 79.” (Trust me, I didn’t do that on purpose!  Stuff happens during the editing process. I hate it when it does, but it’s a reality of being a published author.)

Favorite places you’ve been: Perhaps I have romanticized the small town I grew up in, but I love going back to my hometown of Chagrin Falls, Ohio.

Places you never want to go to again: A rock concert. Too many people. Too expensive. Too loud. And WAAAYYY past my bedtime.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Sue Grafton. It was the happiest Happy Hour of my life!

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Jessica Fletcher, the author of the Murder, She Wrote series, mostly because the author was really a ghost writer by the name of Donald Bain. (He also was the ghost writer for Margret Truman’s Capitol Crime series. He doesn’t look like her, either!

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About Jayne:

Jayne Ormerod grew up in a small Ohio town then went on to a small-town Ohio college. Upon earning her degree in accountancy, 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, have settled into a cozy cottage by the sea. Jayne is the author of the Blonds at the Beach Mysteries, The Blond Leading the Blond, and Blond Luck, as well as a dozen other short stories and novellas. Her most recent releases are Goin’ Coastal and "It's a Dog Gone Shame!" in To Fetch a Thief.

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