#ThisorThatThursday Interview with J. A. Dennam

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I’d like to welcome author, J. A. Dennam, to the blog for the Thanksgiving edition of #ThisorThatThursday.

A few of your favorite things: My chickens, motorcycles, and traveling the Midwest.

Things you need to throw out: 9/10 of my belongings. With age I have come to appreciate the minimalist lifestyle.

Things you need for your writing sessions: Coffee, a quiet space (my she-shack in particular) and Internet.

Things that hamper your writing: Rules.

Things you never want to run out of: Ground beef and toilet paper.

Things you wish you’d never bought: Excuses.

Words that describe you: Trusting, creative, tolerant, affectionate, hermit.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Procrastinator, obsessive-compulsive.

Favorite foods: Key lime pie, pizza, and cheeseburgers.

Things that make you want to gag: Pineapple on pizza. Who thought that was a good idea?

 Favorite smell: My husband fresh out of the shower.
Something that makes you hold your nose: Rotting corpses.

 Something you’re really good at: Improvising.
Something you’re really bad at: Social media.

Things you always put in your books: Hot sex.
Things you never put in your books: Weak heroes and heroines.

Favorite places you’ve been: South Dakota and Wyoming.
Places you never want to go to again: Big cities and hospitals.

Favorite things to do: Ride motorcycles, get pedicures, and write books that excite me.
Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: A full-time desk job…which I have.

Things that make you happy: My family, home, and growing bucket list.
Things that drive you crazy: My family, home, and growing bucket list.

 Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Skydiving.
Something you chickened out from doing: Working on a scissor lift. I have a terrible fear of heights.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: I was late to work because I couldn’t put your book down until 2:00 am.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: I see Danny Bennett in you (heroine in TRUTH AND HUMILITY). I wish!

About J. A.:

J.A. DENNAM resides in a small Kansas town with her husband and children. Creativity is her strong suit having nurtured a career as a western artist and graphic artist.

Storytelling, however, has been a part of her life since childhood. At six years of age, insomnia forced her to endure many long, sleepless nights staring at the ceiling. After confessing her problem to her older sister, the two of them decided to tell each other stories to entice sleep; however, the inevitable snore always tore through her sister’s nose before she could utter the words Once Upon a Time. So the stories began to flow in silence, her imagination taking her to quiet, private places so enthralling, the sudden trick was to stay awake.

Those habits carried on to adulthood until the need to purge her stories demanded she put them in print. Her fascination with romance, fast cars, and adventure films is what structures her novels today.


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New Vocabulary For The New Normal

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The new normal brings with it a whole host of challenges and new ways of doing things. It also brings its own vocabulary. I received a notice from the AP Style Book a week ago about its new standards for Covid-related words. Here are some interesting words and phrases for your lexicon.

Blursday - This was my favorite. Covid Brain makes it hard for me to remember what day it is sometimes.

Corona Babies or Coronials - Children conceived during the lockdown.

Coronacation - It’s a staycation during the quarantine.

Corona Cuts - Cutting one’s own hair during the pandemic. Don’t cut your bangs!

Covid-10 or Covid-15 - A reference to weight gain during the quarantine.

Covid Brain - That fuzzy-headedness you get because of all the change, gloom, and anxiety.

Covid Idiots - You can figure it out. Maskhole is often a synonym.

Doomscrolling/Doomsurfing - This is when you scroll through your social media feeds looking for news of the next crisis.

Extreme Teleworking - When there’s no split between home and work life. It feels like it’s all day, every day.

Fashion Mullet- When you professionally dress for a video conference from the waist up and wear shorts or pj bottoms with your flip flops. (All business on the top; party on the bottom.)

Flatten the Curve - The work done to stave off the virus and reduce the number of infections.

Hamsteren - Hoarding (stuffing one’s cheeks like a hamster).

Magpie - Like hamsteren, it’s storing supplies for the lockdown.

Maskne - The facial breakouts caused by wearing masks for long periods of time.

Quaranteam - These are the small group of folks in your bubble who you have contact with regularly.

Quaranteens - Teenagers during the pandemic.

Quarantini - Any cocktail you mix at home.

Virtual Happy Hour - Video meet up with friends for drinks or to socialize.

WFH - Work From Home

Zoombombing/Zoomraiding - When others, with bad intentions, crash and take control of video conferences.

Zoom Fatigue - That feeling that comes from way too many video conference calls.

Zumping - Breaking off a relationship via Zoom.

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#ThisorThatThursday Interview with Valerie J. Brooks

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I’d like to welcome author, Valerie J. Brooks, to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

A few of your favorite things: my Paris pen; my crystal-encrusted moon necklace, à la Stevie Nicks; my library

Things you need to throw out: recently, I redid my writing studio and threw out binders of papers that no longer seemed useful now that we have the internet; plus I took everything out of the room and only put those things back that I really wanted, much easier than trying to pick it off, one at a time.

Things you need for your writing sessions: my Bose earphones while listening to Creative Mind System’s “Vision” and “Inspiration” by Dr. Jeffrey Thompson

Things that hamper your writing: getting started

Things you love about writing: it’s a combination of the immersive, like reading a great book, and the analytical; writing psychological femmes-noir thrillers is like solving a puzzle

Things you hate about writing: getting started

Hardest thing about being a writer:

When I was a visual artist, people saw my work in its different stages and said things like “I could never do that!” Now you can even post your paintings on the web. Writing a novel is different. It takes a long time to finish a novel, and it’s difficult to get out to your audience. Plus, some people think anyone can be a writer just because everyone can put words to pages.

Easiest thing about being a writer: LOL; Ok, seriously? Probably having your own hours.

Favorite music or song: Stevie Nicks’ “Edge of Seventeen”

Music that drives you crazy: klezmer

Favorite beverage: kombucha
Something that gives you a sour face: lima beans

Favorite smell: amber
Something that makes you hold your nose: heavy chemical perfumes

Something you’re really good at: theorizing, according to my husband
Something you’re really bad at: trying not to fix everything

Something you wish you could do: sing professionally

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: I’m happy about everything I’ve learned, even if I’m not good at it, because it always has a benefit, especially for a writer

Something you like to do: travel more, but that’s not an option right now
Something you wish you’d never done: given my dad fits when I was a teen

The last thing you ordered online: purple fairy lights for my studio

The last thing you regret buying: a “Smart Reusable Notebook”; it sounded great, but it had that horrible plastic smell that makes me sick

Things you’d walk a mile for: People; I’d walk a mile or more for my family.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: things don’t bother me, but self absorbed, aggressive people with no empathy do

Things you always put in your books: themes of justice and fairness; dogs; and three-dimensional characters
Things you never put in your books: gore for gore’s sake; sex can’t be gratuitous, must always develop character.

Things to say to an author: “Really? How cool. Tell me what that’s like?”
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: “I have this great idea that I think you should use for a novel.” So many people ask right away, “Oh, have you published?” Not a good start.

Favorite places you’ve been: Paris
Places you never want to go to again: none

Favorite books (or genre): I’m an eclectic reader, but at the moment, I’m reading anything noir as that’s what I write.
Books you wouldn’t buy: cookbooks

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): Stevie Nicks, Richard Branson, Michelle Obama, Helen Mirren, Laura Lippman.
People you’d cancel dinner on: Trump and his minions

Favorite things to do: writing and gathering with my family
Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: dusting

Things that make you happy: dancing and being with my family
Things that drive you crazy: not being able to be with my family because of Covid

Best thing you’ve ever done: had a family
Biggest mistake: I don’t think of mistakes as bad. If you didn’t make mistakes, you’d never learn.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: be a professional writer.

Something you chickened out from doing: rappelling into caves with the family; I hate that type of physical “adventure”

The funniest thing to happen to you: too many to mention!

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: too many to mention!

The coolest person you’ve ever met: my bestie, Jan Eliot, who is one of the world’s best and one of a few female syndicated cartoonists with her strip “Stone Soup”; sadly she’s retired and we all miss her daily strip.

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Robert Kennedy; he looked small, irritable, and was unfriendly, nothing like Jack

The nicest thing a reader said to you: I had a stranger call me from Maine to say how much one of my stories affected her and how much it helped her to read the story; it was in the anthology France, a Love Story, and was about what I learned about my father the first time I went to ParisThe craziest thing a reader said to you: at a wedding, I was approached (almost accosted) by someone who was a tipsy and wouldn’t let me up until he told me the story he was going to “give” me to write.

 About Valerie

Award-winning author Valerie J. Brooks is a lifelong writer and reader, enjoying everything from Daphne du Maurier to the latest Scandinavian crime writers. Her English war bride mum and artistic army officer dad raised her and two siblings in ultra conservative New Hampshire during the 1950-60s. Growing up in puritanical New England, she was drawn to the gothic, to secrets, mystery, and the dark side of human nature. As her mum once said, “You’re a good girl who wants to be bad.” Now she has the perfect conduit for her “bad girl” side—writing noir.

Her college studies of film noir led her to write noir. She combines her interests in politics, culture, travel, psychology and women’s issues while writing strong, gutsy women who make mistakes and have lots of baggage. As the saying goes, and Brooks expanded upon, “Well-behaved women seldom make history—or good novels.”

She received an Elizabeth George Foundation grant and the Monticello Award for Fiction. For four years, she served as fiction editor at Northwest Review, was a member of the Oregon Writers Colony board of directors, and co-founded the Willamette Writers Speakers Series.

She writes psychological femmes-noir thrillers. The first in a trilogy Revenge in 3 Parts was a finalist for the Nancy Pearl Book Award and a winner in the International Reader’s Favorites Awards in the thriller category. Her second novel in the trilogy Tainted Times 2 has just been released.

If she were hypnotized and regressed, she said she probably would have been a psychiatrist or a witch.

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Book Marketing Ideas in the Middle of a Pandemic

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The pandemic turned book marketing and events upside down. Thankfully, a lot of conferences and workshops have moved to virtual formats. Authors, book sellers, and event planners have had to muster their creativity and find new or other ways to do things.

Here are some ideas to add to your toolbox.

  1. Blog Tours (Paid and Free) - Look for blog tour services that will help you set up interviews, reviews, and guest posts.

  2. Facebook/Twitter Parties - Look for companies that provide hosted social media parties (usually for a fee). They organize the event on an event page or a site where an author can “take over” for the event. You can also create your own party. It’s a good idea to have some writer friends join you and to do a variety of give aways. Make sure you review the social media platform’s terms and conditions. They do change from time to time.

  3. Make a list of all your author/book friends who have blogs. Ask for an interview or guest blog spot to promote your new book. I offer interview spots for authors on my blog. You can send me a message on the “Contact” page if you’re interested.

  4. Talk to your indie bookstore owners. Many are doing free and ticketed virtual events.

  5. Reach out to your librarians. Many are doing virtual programs, and you can pitch a panel or workshop that you can lead.

  6. Look for book clubs who host in-person or virtual speakers. Ask friends and watch Facebook groups. There are lots of book clubs that have moved to the virtual space.

  7. There are also services out there that help authors expand BookBub, email lists, and other social media followings.

If you’re going to use a service, read the fine print, and ask other author friends about their experiences. Make sure the service caters to your genre and type of book.

What else would you add to my list?

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#ThisorThatThursday Interview with Sandra Marshall

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I’d like to welcome author, Sandra Marshall, to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things:

            My camera. My fleece blankey.

Things you need to throw out:

            Fabric I bought but never made into anything. And now it’s out of style.

Things you need for your writing sessions:

            A mechanical pencil, Roget’s International Thesaurus, a yellow tablet, and an idea.

Things that hamper your writing:

            Someone trying to talk to me while I’m working.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

            Writing the bridges between the well-visualized scenes without being boring. That’s when you really have to fall back on craft.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

            When the movie starts rolling in my head, the characters start talking to each other, and I just take dictation.

Things you never want to run out of:

            Good coffee, lead for my mechanical pencil, books to read.

Things you wish you’d never bought:

            Clothes that didn’t quite fit, but would as soon as I lost a couple pounds. Sure.

 Favorite smell:

            Rain falling on the desert.

Something that makes you hold your nose:

            Gardenia blossoms. Too sweet and cloying. Makes me queasy.

 Something you’re really good at:

            Research

Something you’re really bad at:

            Swimming

Something you wish you could do:

            Play a musical instrument.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do:

            Play internet mahjongg. Had to go cold turkey on that one.

The last thing you ordered online:

            Books, books, nematode spore to kill blackflies, books.

The last thing you regret buying:

            A jar of purple glop meant to enhance curly hair.

Things to say to an author:

            “I loved your book, especially the part where…”  Then you know they actually read it.

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

            “How’s your next book coming?”

Favorite books (or genre):

            Histories, biographies, literate mysteries.

Books you wouldn’t buy:

            The Art of the Deal

Best thing you’ve ever done:

            Marrying my husband.

Biggest mistake:

            What were their names again?

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

            Gave up a steady job to go back to school—three times.

Something you chickened out from doing:

            Accepting an invitation to go skydiving.

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

            I just finished your book. I don’t know what I’m going to do now.

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About Sandra

Sandra Marshall was raised in Texas. She holds degrees in anthropology and public history and had an extended career as an archaeologist and architectural historian, primarily in the American Southwest. Now a writer and photographer, she has settled in southern New Mexico with her husband, historian George Matthews, and tabby cat  Fog. Recipient of the 2018 William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grant, she is a proud member of Sisters in Crime, Guppy and Croak and Dagger Chapters, and of Women Writing the West.

Let’s Be Social

https://sandramarshallbooks.com/  

#WriterWednesday Interview with Judy Penz Sheluk

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I’m so excited to welcome my friend and author, Judy Penz Sheluk, to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

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

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

Things you need when you’re in your writing cave: Talk radio or silence.

Things that distract you from writing: Music.

Favorite snacks: Cherry or grape tomatoes.

Things that make you want to gag:  Olives.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: Become an author.

Something you do/did that you never dreamed you’d do: Run a marathon.

Last best thing you ate: Double cheese and mushroom pizza slice.

Last thing you regret eating: Chicken salad sandwich loaded with garlic (who puts garlic in a chicken salad sandwich?)

Things to say to an author: I love your books. They make me feel as if I’m there.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: How much do you make?

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): Vince Gilligan (Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul)

People you’d cancel dinner on: I prefer not to answer on the grounds it may incriminate me.

Favorite things to do: Golf, walk my dog, read.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Go to a surprise birthday party for me.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: I love your books.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: At a book launch at Chapters Bookstore, while pointing to a photo of a Mandarin Chinese to English Dictionary: “Where find?”

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Where There’s A Will: A Glass Dolphin Mystery #3: Emily Garland is getting married and looking for the perfect forever home. When the old, and some say haunted, Hadley house comes up for sale, she’s convinced it’s “the one.” The house is also perfect for reality TV star Miles Pemberton and his new series, House Haunters. Emily will fight for her dream home, but Pemberton’s pockets are deeper than Emily’s, and he’ll stretch the rules to get what he wants.

While Pemberton racks up enemies all around Lount’s Landing, Arabella Carpenter, Emily’s partner at the Glass Dolphin antiques shop, has been hired to appraise the contents of the estate, along with her ex-husband, Levon. Could the feuding beneficiaries decide there’s a conflict of interest? Could Pemberton?

Things get even more complicated when Arabella and Levon discover another will hidden inside the house, and with it, a decades-old secret. Can the property stay on the market? And if so, who will make the winning offer: Emily or Miles Pemberton?

Book Link: Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08KFLQ6KH

 B&N: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/where-theres-a-will-judy-penz-sheluk/1137780682?ean=2940162992455

 Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/where-there-s-a-will-87

 Apple: https://books.apple.com/us/book/where-theres-a-will/id1533844283?ls=1

About Judy:

A former journalist and magazine editor, Judy Penz Sheluk is the author of two mystery series: the Glass Dolphin Mysteries and the Marketville Mysteries. Her short crime fiction appears in several collections, including The Best Laid Plans and Heartbreaks & Half-truths, which she also edited.

Judy is a member of Sisters in Crime, International Thriller Writers, the Short Mystery Fiction Society, and Crime Writers of Canada, where she serves as Chair on the Board of Directors. She splits her time between Alliston and Goulais River, Ontario, with her husband, Mike, and their Golden Retriever, Gibbs.

Let’s Be Social:

Website/Blog: http://www.judypenzsheluk.com

Facebook: https://business.facebook.com/JudyPenzSheluk/

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

Twitter: https://twitter.com/JudyPenzSheluk

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.ca/judypenzsheluk/

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

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/judy-penz-sheluk

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Judy-Penz-Sheluk/e/B00O74NX04

 

Location! Location! Location! Setting is Key

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Setting is key to your story or novel. In some cases, it can even be a character in its own right.

I write where I know. I’ve lived in Virginia all my life, and I love sharing the food, culture, history, beauty, mountains, and beaches with my readers. I use many places, street names, cities, and businesses in my stories. However, if it’s the site of a crime or murder, then I make up the place name.

Google Maps (Street View or Satellite View) helps me find neighborhoods and street names. In my Delanie Fitzgerald novels, she is a private investigator who does a lot of stake outs. I look on the online maps to find her places to park to watch suspects. The online maps help me get an idea of what the area looks like. I look for houses and other buildings. Many of the street views have photos on the site of the neighborhood.

In my short stories in the Virginia is for Mysteries and Deadly Southern Charm anthologies, I use historic areas or landmarks as settings (e.g. Mill Mountain Star in Roanoke, the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, Shockoe Bottom, and the Church Hill Train Cave-in). I love using these interesting sites as a backdrop to my mysteries. In my novels, my PI visits a lot of places in Central Virginia. At the end of each book, there’s a list of the sites to let readers know which places are real.

My new cozy series, the Jules Keene Glamping Mysteries, is set in a made up town, Fern Valley, located near Charlottesville, Virginia in the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains.

I also keep an idea file when I hear about neat events or places. I jot them down for future stories.

Locations and details about them are important to your story. You need to get the culture, customs, and typography of the region right. I actually do a lot of research on setting and locales. People like to escape with books, and they love to find out about new places.

Writing for You - Journaling

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I started a diary in the third grade. Someone gave me a denim-covered one with a lock and a key. This was an amazing gift that fed my love for writing. And I made sure to lock it each time I wrote down my innermost secrets.

I’ve kept journals, notes, and scrapbooks through the years. I even started two journals for my nieces when they were born. But I stopped journaling when I started writing novels. Life gets too busy sometimes, and things that were important get ignored or pushed to the side.

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Through the years, I’ve received some beautiful journals as gifts. After the Pandemic started, I pulled one out and started recording thoughts about the virus, the shut down, and all the craziness. It helped. I also did a lot of my ranting, so it was cathartic. I hope in the future that it will help me remember what we were all going through during this historic moment in time and how I felt about it.

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Then I realized there were good things going on, even in our darkest moments. Mr. Rogers always said to look for the helpers in any tragic or scary situation. And he was right. I saw so many examples of heroes and people helping others. So, I started a “Sudden Glory” journal. I use this to record positive, upbeat stories and examples of kindness. This has definitely helped me realize that there is goodness in the world no matter what is going on. It has also helped me with my outlook during the quarantine and stay-at-home orders. I felt so bad for the Class of 2020, everyone affected by the closings, and everyone who had their life upended. Everyone’s anxious, worried, scared… My journaling has helped me think about what’s going on and how I’ve reacted to it.

Journaling or keeping a diary is a wonderful way for you to write for you, and I think it will be a treasure later when you look back on what you recorded, doodled, drew, or shared.

Who else journals?