#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with D. A. Andrews

I’d like to welcome author, D. A. Andrews to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: I like coffee, my cat Luna, and currently New Girl.

Things you need to throw out: I definitely need to throw out a lot of old clothes, but I am sort of a hoarder and attach too many memories to things.

Things you need for your writing sessions: coffee and that elusive inspiration fairy

Things that hamper your writing: depression

Things you love about writing: How cathartic it is

Things you hate about writing: Chasing inspiration

Things you never want to run out of: Coffee

Things you wish you’d never bought: my treadmill haha

Favorite foods: anything you can make from a potato!

Things that make you want to gag: liver!

Favorite beverage: coffee

Something that gives you a sour face: porridge!

Something you’re really good at: writing

Something you’re really bad at: painting! I wish I was so much better at it!

Favorite places you’ve been: Denver, CO, Portland, OR and Savannah, GA

Places you never want to go to again: Don’t hate me! But maybe New York!

Favorite books (or genre): YA!

Books you wouldn’t buy: Science fiction

Favorite things to do: lounge around, travel, listen to audio books

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: washing the dishes!

Things that make you happy: cats, books, me, my boyfriend

Things that drive you crazy: I have really bad road rage, so driving definitely drives me crazy.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: I want you all to know, that I hate this style of writing verse. I will say that every time I read a book that writes verse this way, because it bothers me. Sometimes so much, that it destroys the enjoyment. Especially if the poems themselves aren't anything special.

After I read the first poem I feared, that this collection would share the same fate. But I was wrong. Yes, the style still bothered me, but the words and themes reached my heart. Especially since I'm picky when it comes to love poems. In theory, I'm a romantic. But most love poems are just too sugar sunshine rainbow for me. These ones felt more real. Like something a normal human being would feel, something I could relate to. They were really nice. The ones about loss too.

I was not on board with every poem, but I can't deny that they are all nicely written.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: Probably the same thing haha

About D. A.:

D. A. Andrews was born and raised in Kingston, Jamaica. Throughout the years, she has developed wide interests in various aspects of life, such as coffee, weddings, books, and psychology. She is a graduate of the University of the West Indies, Mona Campus with a BSc. in Marine Biology and Psychology (Honours) and is currently pursuing her MBA. She considers herself a nomad at heart and has changed cities and apartments quite as often as she changes her clothes. She is currently resting her head in Brunswick, Georgia, with her black cat (and familiar), Luna.

Let’s Be Social:

https://www.goodreads.com/dayandrews_

twitter.com/daandrews_

https://www.tiktok.com/@daandrews_?

instagram.com/daandrews_

facebook.com/authordaandrews

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with M. J. Preston

I’d like to welcome author M. J. Preston to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things:

I’m a dog owner, I have two beagles, Milo, and Jake, they are my favorite two things. Oh wait? Pizza and nachos are edging toward being my even more favorite two things.

Things you need to throw out:

You know, Jake and Milo aren’t as good as pizza and nachos, and they’re tearing around the house. I better throw them out before an incident occurs.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Finding time. Time is the something all writers need. How much we can dedicate to our craft is dependent on its availability, so it’s paramount. The march toward the great big morgue slab waits for no one.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

The first draft of anything! Novel, short story It’s that first incoherent drunken half-pitched stumble to the finish line! There is nothing more euphoric than the buzz I get when a story unfolds, it’s like pain free birthing. There is something that happens when I set my mind to writing, I am overtaken by a muse, who is a whispering miserable bastard, but he’s the best in the business for me. I transform when I write, going from “me” to a key-tapping-zombie falling headlong down the rabbit hole. Once I’m there, I have the keys, until the story is told. Then it’s yours.

Words that describe you:

Given my background in the military, I’ve been called a lot of things, but those that are genuine would be: Fun, friendly, supportive, dependable.

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

Too trusting, and wears heart on sleeve. Not my heart, mind you. I’d be dead. I generally get a human heart off the black market, also known as Amazon, they’re relatively affordable and they don’t start to decompose for about a week.

Favorite foods:

I love all sorts of food. I think spaghetti has always been my-go-to. I love Italian cuisine, but I really dig a wide variety of foods from Mexican to Chinese. I cook a traditional-bastardized Chicken Chow Mein. It’s a hit around these digs.

Things that make you want to gag:

Mushrooms, I cannot stomach them. Mushrooms literally make me gag. From the first time I tried one in 1972, I rolled that alien gizzard around in my mouth until I could distract the cook and spit it in the garbage. Since that day, I have moved woefully through the culinary world avoiding the fungus that grows in sh!t. Think about the last five words of the sentence you just read. Why would you put that in your mouth?

Favorite music or song:

I’m all over the place in my music these days, in that I could be listening to All them Witches, belting out Alabaster or grooving to the rhythmic beat of Eminem rapping a story about an obsessed fan in, Stan. Music is a very big part of the creation process for me, it is the soundtrack to the story I’m telling. Pink Floyd, Rolling Stones, The Black Angels, Johnny Cash, Metallica… I could keep going.

Music that drives you crazy:

Techno music. I’d rather gargle with mule pee laced with light bulb glass, than have that stuff rolling around in my head.

Favorite beverage:

Beer.

Something that gives you a sour face:

Politicians, even after many beers.

Favorite smell:

Cedar.

Something that makes you hold your nose:

Sauerkraut farts, they are the worst. [No more questions about that.]

Something you wish you could do:

Play guitar.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do:

Operating an interstellar, dimensional and time shifting, universe jumper. If I had a nickel for every time, I get a call from this secret society or that, and at all hours of the night, wanting to do a fundraising brunch in the corner of hell. It really interrupts my schedule, but it does pay the bills.

Something you like to do:

Psst. I like writing. 😉

Something you wish you’d never done:

I wish the hell I’d stayed off that grassy knoll. People just won’t let that go.

The last thing you ordered online:

Sanding discs for a drywall sander. [No, the basement isn’t finished yet.]

The last thing you regret buying:

We bought a patio set. I wanted to buy a t-shirt gun, but oh, no. “Mrs. Preston kept mentioning what happened to Ned Flanders wife on The Simpson’s so patio set it was. Ned’s wife was killed by a t-shirt gun. Practicality trumps coolness. Not cool at all.

Things you always put in your books:

I usually include a soldier or a trucker as a character somewhere in my books. I did not realize I did this until I revisited my work years later. This was unconscious, until now, thanks for ruining that by the way.

Things you never put in your books:

Now, this is sort of embarrassing, but I will never put a piece of smoked salmon in a book ever again. After a while it, roughly five minutes, the book begins smell fishy. Also, it leaves an oily stain on the pages which if you’re shipping internationally causes all sorts of grief. Because of the fish, the FDA must be involved, and let me tell you those goose steppers have zero sense of humor. Worst marketing idea I ever had.

Things to say to an author:

Anything pertaining to their stories. MJ you’re awesome. Your last story. Total fricken genius!

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

You know Stephen King wrote a story that was way better than this. [Guaranteed death by dismemberment.]

Favorite places you’ve been:

The Northwest Territories and the east coast of North America from New Brunswick to Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts. I have met and know so many cool people in all these places.

Places you never want to go to again:

New Jersey. The cops there are way too serious.

Favorite books (or genre):

Everything except…

Books you wouldn’t buy:

Nothing personal, but romance ain’t my thing.

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

Joe R. Lansdale, Robert R. McCammon, Jonathan Mayberry, Gene O’Neill, Bill Burr, and Bob Barker. Bob would get a free meal, but it would be a working dinner as he would be required to call the guests down to podiums where they’d make bids on their dinner.

People you’d cancel dinner on:

I know this will be devastating for Stephen King, but not because I don’t like him. Sometimes you gotta knock people down a couple pegs. And let’s face it, even the King of Horror needs a little humbling every now and again. Imagine his angst standing at my door, a bottle of cheap Maine wine in his hand, while me and the boys are ignoring him and playing Perogy Plinko for real money. Sorry Steve O, you just aren’t cool enough for us cats today!

Favorite things to do:

Hugging my grandkids.

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

I run through fires and eat bugs all day long, it’s a thing now. Can you rephrase the question? Perhaps, insert gargling with Mushroom extract infused with the stuff that comes out of an infected anal gland? Never mind, I forgot the question.

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

It was a librarian. She said, “I like how you put words together.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

It puts the lotion on its skin, or else it gets the hose again. Thank you, FBI Swat.

About M. J.:

M.J. Preston’s debut novel: THE EQUINOX, published in 2012, was a quarterfinalist in the Amazon Breakthrough Awards and rated a solid straight horror novel by a reviewer at Publisher’s Weekly.

His second novel: ACADIA EVENT, published in 2015, was inspired by his time running the world longest ice road, as an ice road trucker, in the Canada’s Northwest Territories. It is set to be re-released with his publisher, WildBlue Press.

His third novel: HIGHWAYMAN, a thriller, was published July 02, 2019 with WildBlue Press. He has also published scores of short stories in anthologies around the world. In addition to writing, MJ is an artist and an amateur photographer.

The sequel to Highwayman, titled: FOUR, became available for purchase on the 25th of February 2020.

He resides in Alberta, Canada with his wife, Stormy and beagles, Jake and Milo.

Let's Be Social:

Visit him online:

His website: http://mjpreston.net

His Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mj.preston.9/

His Twitter: https://twitter.com/MJPreston1

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Allie Marie

I’d like to welcome author, Allie Marie, to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Things you need for your writing sessions: My imagination, a cup of hot tea or glass of iced tea (depending on the weather), and access to the internet to research every five minutes

Things that hamper your writing: Playing Candy Crush, getting writer refusal (as opposed to writer’s block! It’s those days that I just refuse to write the unexciting but crucial scene until I’m ready.)

Things you love about writing: The chance to put my imagination into words that people enjoy reading

Things you hate about writing: The slow process of editing and publishing the book once written.

Hardest thing about being a writer: For me, it’s the dry spells of writing while tending to the aspects of everyday life.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Having an overactive imagination from which there is a never-ending flow of ideas. I should live long enough to write all the stories begging to be told!

Something you’re really good at: Word games, spelling

Something you’re really bad at: Any advanced math. Don’t like it, never will, which is why I am a writer.

Something you wish you could do: Travel more. And more!

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Get on social media

Things you’d walk a mile for: Family

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: TV commercials. They get more annoying or downright gross every day.

Favorite places you’ve been: I’ve been lucky to travel extensively in the US and overseas. Favorite places were Amsterdam, Dubrovnik, Prague

Places you never want to go to again: The hospital.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Marrying my husband

Biggest mistake: Loaning money that was never paid back ☹

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Flown solo in an airplane (and landed safely!!!)

Something you chickened out from doing: I haven’t really chickened out of anything yet, but the one thing I would chicken out of is bungee-jumping.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: “I loved your books and felt like I was right there in the scene with the characters.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you: “Are the ghosts in your stories real?”

About Allie:

Award-winning author Allie Marie grew up in Virginia, where her favorite childhood pastime was reading Nancy Drew and Trixie Belden mysteries. She never expected to grow up to be a real-life police officer herself. Eventually work her way up through the ranks, Allie retired - four times - as her experiences kept leading her to other law enforcement adventures in the US as well as overseas.

After her final “retirement,” Allie soon embarked on a quest to fulfill a long-time dream—to write mysteries and crime thrillers. She was derailed from those mystery plans, however, when she began researching her family tree. Inspired by ancestors she discovered, she began The True Colors Series, a paranormal mystery series with modern local settings and colonial history, which has garnered multiple awards and leads to a spinoff collection, The True Spirits Trilogy. The first book in the trilogy is Barley and Lace, scheduled to release in January 2022, which recently placed second in the FILNE Founders Contest.

Her standalone historical, Return to Afton Square, again with modern local settings, but this time involves a WW1 mystery. Not only does this story introduce the central character of the True Spirits Trilogy, it includes familiar characters from the original series.

She has contributed short stories to the ’Tis the Season Sweet Romance Novelettes and the bestselling Feisty Heroines Romance Collection of Short Stories. She has contributed her first murder mystery to the anthology Murder by the Glass Cocktail Mysteries.

Those other mystery stories? They still patiently wait for their turn.

Besides family, her passions are travel anywhere, and camping with her husband Jack.

Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/Allie-Marie/e/B017MXZSUO/

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Zachary Hagen

I’d like to welcome author, Zachary Hagen to the blog today for #ThisorThatThursday!

Things you need for your writing sessions: My computer and a good playlist.

Things that hamper your writing: I love her, but my wife. She can be very distracting because she loves to talk while I’m concentrating on my books sometimes.

Things you love about writing: I love the freedoms to create and discover new things or put fresh takes on old ones.

Things you hate about writing: I hate that it’s not faster. I want to find out more about my world and characters as much as my readers do, but I’m only human and have to go at a human pace when I write my books.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Hearing what other people want you to do in your books or hearing fan theories because some really work and others would throw the story off a cliff.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Solitude in the moment of creation. When a stroke of inspiration hits me, it’s like I’m alone in the world.

Things you never want to run out of: After COVID, I never want to face a day without toilet paper.

Things you wish you’d never bought: I had a Kinect for Xbox 360 when I was younger. It was the most frustrating thing to use.

Words that describe you: Brave, kind, tenacious.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Impatient, anxious, arrogant (at times)

Favorite smell: The sea breeze.

Something that makes you hold your nose: The fish section in Asian markets.

Something you’re really good at: I am a really great singer.

Something you’re really bad at: Sports. I have not found one I have any natural talent in.

Something you like to do: I’d love to go on a Mediterranean or Alaskan cruise.

Something you wish you’d never done: I wish I’d never taken jobs just to be employed.

Last best thing you ate: I just got back from a Disney cruise. There was a fantastic red snapper in one of the onboard restaurants, and I would go on another cruise just to eat it again.

Last thing you regret eating: Chicken wings from Dominoes. Blech!

Things you’d walk a mile for: a great experience with friends and/or family.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: Bad singing and bad food.

Things you always put in your books: Distinct acts for structure.

Things you never put in your books: Diverse characters that I can’t faithfully and fairly represent. If I include them, they are researched so that I don’t offend or hurt anyone carelessly.

Favorite places you’ve been: Cozumel and Tuscany

Places you never want to go to again: There’s a little resort outside Manila in the Philippines that has no hot water. I’m never going back there.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: I had a reader tell me that they are anxious to read the next book because they loved the characters so much.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: One reviewer said they’d rather read “something more fulfilling, like the Hunger Games.” I don’t even understand how you compare the two genres?

About Zachary:

Zachary Hagen is an Albuquerque based author and teacher. Writing has always been a passion for him since he was little kid when he put together little books from scrap paper. The earliest story he remembers writing was about a dragon who gave flowers to children. He also teaches creative writing to his students and loves to see their talents flourish. When he isn’t working hard at his two passions, he enjoys spending time with his wife and dog and making music any way he can. 

 Let’s Be Social:

TikTok- https://vm.tiktok.com/TTPdjYKbf5/

Facebook- Zachary Hagen Writes

Website- zacharyhagenwrites.com

#ThisorThatThursday Interview with Jennifer Lieberman

I’d like to welcome the talented Jennifer Lieberman to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: Some of my favourite things are Elton John, Tennessee Williams plays, my scrapbook of photos and programs from all my theatre productions.

Things you need to throw out: I need to toss some Old Concert T Shirts, Old Lip Gloss

Things you need for your writing sessions: My essentials for writing are as follows: A Pen, A Notebook, A Laptop, Sunshine

Things that hamper your writing: The two major things I don’t like to deal with when writing are Clutter, Darkness or a dark space.

Things you love about writing: I love writing about Relationships, Romance, Comedy

Things you hate about writing: Politics and Horror are not my thing.

Hardest thing about being a writer: The hardest thing about being a writer sometimes ins keeping all with all the ideas.

Easiest thing about being a writer: The easiest thing about being a writer is all the ideas!

Things you never want to run out of: I would be so pleased with an unlimited supply of Coconut Water, Family Time, Pomegranates and Lip Gloss.

Things you wish you’d never bought: Purchase regrets are The Facia Blaster, the regret over this purchase overshadows the memory of any other previous regret.

Words that describe you: I’m totally wacky, mildly cooky, sometimes aggressive, always upfront.

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

Favorite foods: Anything my Tunisian grandmother made was my favourite from couscous, to stews to sweets, I’m also a pastry snob since I grew up in my family bakery.

Things that make you want to gag: Animals, as I’ve explained to my niece and nephew, I don’t eat my friends.

Favorite music or song: Rock ’n Roll! I’m a total rocker chick and love live shows. I’d say Arctic Monkeys “I Bet You’d Look Good On The Dance Floor” is one of my fav songs, but that’s like an impossible question.

Music that drives you crazy: Most pop music isn’t my thing, I’m stuck between the 1970s-1990’s where music is concerned.

Something you’re really good at: I’m really good at being in charge, delegating and leading a team.

Something you’re really bad at: I’m a terrible singer, like absolutely awful.

The last thing you ordered online: The last thing I ordered online was my friend Paul Bahou’s book “Sunset Distortion: The Pyramid at the End of the World.”

The last thing you regret buying: The last purchase I regret was buying a compact mirror, I found the one I thought I lost so I returned the new one.

Things you’d walk a mile for: I’d walk quite far for a really good Vegan cappuccino.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: Cats, I’m super allergic to cats.

About Jennifer:

Jennifer Lieberman is from Maple, Ontario, Canada and holds a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy from York University in Toronto. Jennifer has appeared in over thirty stage productions in Toronto, New York City, Los Angeles, Europe and Australia; including her Award- Winning Solo Show "Year of the Slut", which her novel “Year Of The What?" was adapted from. In addition to her performance career, she has penned a number of screen and stage plays including the wacky web-series "Dumpwater Divas" and the short films “Leash" and “Details" which both screened at the Festival De Cannes’ Court Métrage among other international film festivals. "Year of the What?" is Lieberman’s first novel and is a #1 Amazon Best Seller.  Other books by Jennifer include “Make Your Own Break: How To Master Your Virtual Meeting in Seven Simple Steps” and “Make Your Own Break: How To Record & Publish Your Audiobook In Seven Simple Steps.”

Let’s Be Social:

WEBSITE: www.JenniferLiebermanActor.com 

BOOK: www.YearOfTheWhat.com 

www.facebook.com/iamjenlieberman

www.instagram.com/iamjenlieberman

www.twitter.com/iamjenlieberman 

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Nicole Fanning

I’d like to welcome author Nicole Fanning to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: Benji, Rocky and Loki-my fur children!

Things you need to throw out: Sentimental clothing that I will never wear again, and nearly every old phone I have every owned.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Knowing exactly what is going to happen, but not being able to share it with anxious readers because you don’t want to spoil the story!

Easiest thing about being a writer: Knowing exactly what is going to happen!

Favorite foods: Pizza, Ice Cream

Things that make you want to gag: Wasabi, Pickled Herring, Brussel Sprouts

Favorite music or song: Everything but twangy country

Music that drives you crazy: Twangy Country

Favorite beverage: TEA
Something that gives you a sour face: Sports Drinks

Favorite smell: Apple Cinnamon
Something that makes you hold your nose: Fish

Something you’re really good at: Overthinking
Something you’re really bad at: Relaxing

Something you wish you could do: Wrap Presents

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

The last thing you ordered online: My new Ducky Keyboard

The last thing you regret buying: A five-pound bag of flaxseed. Oops.

Things you’d walk a mile for: Any canine I could cuddle.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: Spiders

Things you always put in your books: Easter eggs. ;)
Things you never put in your books: Pet deaths.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Marrying my husband.
Biggest mistake: Dying my hair platinum blonde. “That was a lot of damage.”

About Nicole:

Nicole Fanning is a smitten wife and super proud dog mom to three rambunctious rescue dogs.

She’s an old school romantic and documentary enthusiast, with a proclivity for a little mischief. She also has small obsession with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and obscure boardgames.

Her debut novel, Catalyst, is the first incendiary installment of the Heart of the Inferno Series which follows the romantic entanglement of deadly billionaire mafia don, Jaxon Pace, and his unexpected paramour, Natalie Tyler.

 Let’s Be Social:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nicole.fanning.1

Instagram: AuthorNicoleFanning

Twitter: AuthorNicoleFanning

Website: nherownwords.com

 

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Sasscer Hill

I’d like to welcome Sasscer Hill to the blog this week for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: Horses, dogs, cats, and people with a sense of humor.

Things you need to throw out: Clothes I haven’t worn for at least three years but am foolishly reluctant to throw away.

Things you need for your writing sessions: Quiet and no interruptions.

Things that hamper your writing: My cat sitting on my keyboard.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Writing the first chapter of a new book.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Writing the exciting conclusion. It lights me up!

Words that describe you: A lover of fine bourbon, clothes and colors like purple, lavender, teal, blue, turquoise, black, red, and gold. Intelligent, animal lover, thankful for the things I have.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Not knowing when to keep my mouth shut.

Favorite foods: Steak, roast lamb, spinach, fresh fruit like pineapple. Dark chocolate.

Things that make you want to gag: Escargot, raw oysters, and Sushi.

Favorite beverage: Fine Bourbon

Something that gives you a sour face: Cheap bourbon

Things you always put in your books: Chasing the dream, fighting the odds, and helping the helpless.

Things you never put in your books: Serial killers. I find serial killer novels boring. The killer is always very smart, very arrogant, always wants to antagonize the cop who is on their trail and is usually a white male around thirty years old. The emphasis and description of how they kill and terrorize their victims is something I prefer not to read.

Things to say to an author: Keep going. Truly loved your last book! Your characters speak to me.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Your dialog is stilted and doesn’t carry the plot forward.

Favorite books (or genre): Mystery-thrillers

Books you wouldn’t buy: Serial killer novels

Things that make you happy: Meeting with friends, walking my dog, finishing a chapter I wrote that I believe is a winner.

Things that drive you crazy: People who hold forth with great authority on a subject when they have no idea what they are talking about.

Best thing you’ve ever done: Ride and win a two-mile steeplechase race over four-foot solid board fences

Biggest mistake: Selling my two-year-old racehorse in training for $22,000 who won his new owners $418,000 in purse money.

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Jocie McKade

I’d like to welcome author, Jocie McKade to the blog this week for #ThisorThatThursday! Happy Vetrans’ Day!

Words that describe you:

Honest, warped sense of humor, loves her family.

I can sometimes be honest to a fault, but I mean well. I have a super snarky sense of humor that usually explodes at the most inappropriate times. My family is first in my life, always. I am so grateful for a loving family.

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

Snarky sense of humor, klutz, procrastinator

See above why that sense of humor gets me in trouble. I am a born klutz, I can walk across the living room and trip over the socks I’m wearing! The odd thing is, I used to do gymnastics and rarely ever fell, I mean I was like a cat on the balance beam, yet couldn’t walk across the gym. Go Figure! And I tend to procrastinate with my writing….is that the best word I could use? Or, should I write something else? Or, oh look, the deer I feed is in the back field!

 Favorite foods:

I love to cook, and I love country cooking. A child of Southern parents, that means anything with butter! LOL I do love a baked ham, with mashed potatoes, green beans, and homemade biscuits. Then again, I can go for a good pizza, love lasagna, anything Mexican, and I’ve been trying a lot of Middle Eastern recipes lately. Yup, I love food!

Things that make you want to gag: 

Raw oysters, escargot, and mushrooms.

Favorite music or song:

I love most all types of music, country, rock, jazz, blues, instrumental. When I writing, I tend to go for instrumental, I often listen to Adrian Von Ziegler, a young composer from Europe. He writes the most beautiful Celtic music. I stumbled on his Youtube page quite by accident and I’ve become a fan. I also love Native American music, it soothes my soul, especially flutes.

If I’m working on my Mayson-Dickson series I flip between country music when writing about southern twin Emme Mayson, to more jazz ballads when penning lines about Jackie Dickson, the Boston sister.

Music that drives you crazy:

While I respect the talent it takes to perform opera, listening to it annoys me. Maybe I haven’t found the right opera yet, but it’s a no listen genre for me.

Favorite beverage:

My daily go to is tea. I raise herbs and blend many of my own teas. I tend to experiment with the blends as I write a tea leaf reader mystery series and I need to know how the tea tastes!

On a relaxing evening….I’m a whisky or bourbon girl. Kentucky bourbon or Tennessee whiskey!

Something that gives you a sour face:

Scotch, I have no idea how anyone drinks that libation. Maybe that’s why I tend to make all the bad guys in my books scotch drinkers??? Hmmm.

Favorite smell:

I’m a country girl and live on Dust Bunny Farm, so to me the smell of fresh cut hay is my favorite smell in the world. I can stand in the barn and just close my eyes and take in the scent of fresh hay just laid up in the loft.

Something that makes you hold your nose:

Most perfumes and colognes. I suffer from migraines and whoooo, sometimes those perfumes just set my head off. I’ve found a few that are lovely, but very few.

Something you wish you could do:

I wish I could draw. I’d love to be able to draw book scenes that I see in my head. I also have vivid dreams and I wish I could draw the details my sleepy mind sees.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do:

Nothing. Honestly, there are some things I don’t like to do, but I wouldn’t want to ever ‘un-learn’ anything that I’ve been fortunate enough to learn. I find anything I can learn, any skill I can master, any fact I can study is a wonderful thing — Life is learning.

Things you’d walk a mile for:

One more conversation with my mama to tell her I actually got my book published. I’d walk thru fire for this.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room:

Any room where people put down others. Everyone is important. I have left conversations and friends who gossip or put someone down because of where they were born, their education, or their job.

Things you always put in your books:

Veterans. I’ve written over fifteen books and nearly all of them have a U.S. Veteran in them. I don’t think our service members get the recognition they deserve, particularly those that served during Vietnam. I try to include them in all my books. I only hope my characters make them proud.

Things you never put in your books:

Any harm to a kid. I can have violence in a book, but my soul just won’t let me write anything that would show harm towards children.

Things to say to an author:

Your books made me smile, kept me up all night, made me laugh at inappropriate  moments in the doctors office.

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

True story —- “You write ‘that’ stuff? No wonder nobody is in line to buy a book.”

Referring to a cozy mystery…..then she asked where the ladies room was. There is a special moment in fiction for her.

Favorite books (or genre):

I read everything! Hey, I was a librarian for sixteen years, so of course, I had to read many of the books that we ordered. I mean what kind of librarian would I be if I couldn’t recommend good books? LOL I love thrillers. Shhh…..as a kid I wanted to be a secret agent, so thrillers let me indulge my childhood

Books you wouldn’t buy:

Horror….not for me, I’m a coward. I’ve started a couple of horror books through the years, but leaving all the lights on was expensive. Although one of my book series, The Three Baers (a romantic comedy series) was featured as a prop in a horror movie! The movie was actually a fun horror movie, Happy Death Day. It released on my husbands birthday, so guess what movie he got to go to for his birthday?

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

I been blessed with amazing readers. Last year a reader discovered my books and wrote me a heartfelt email of how my books lifted her spirits and gave her sanity throughout the ‘lock-down’. How amazing, and humbling that my words would make someone feel that way!

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

I was at one of my first book signings and a very enthusiastic reader came bounding up to my table and said, “I love your books, and I want an Albert!”

 I was completely stumped. I smiled and nodded as she went on and on about ‘Albert.’ I couldn’t for the life of me place ‘Albert’. My daughter showed up about then, saw my completely confused face, leaned down and whispered, “mom, that’s the grizzly bear in one of your Baer books.”

 I had completely forgotten I’d put the little critter in my book, and totally forgotten I’d named him. LOL Bless readers who love your books so much they remember those little details.

 

About Jocie:

Jocie worked at several jobs before landing her ideal one as a librarian, a perfect segue to becoming an author. 

 With a soft spot for U.S. Veterans, she chaired her local Veteran's Oral History Project, and her work with the program lead to her speaking before the project committee at the U.S. Library of Congress. 

 She has won several awards for her non-fiction writing on a multitude of subjects. 

 Her fiction writing has received the Author / Ambassador at Library Journal Self-e Authors, Winner Queen of the West Reader Favorite Award, Amazon Bestseller - Historical, Double finalist in the Next Generation Indie Book Awards in the Mystery and Humorous Categories.

 The author of sixteen books of cozy mystery and romantic comedy, Jocie can find humor in most anything. She lives on a farm in the Midwest with her family. When not writing, she grows ArnoldSwartzaWeeds in her garden and RVs whenever the opportunity presents itself.

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