What's in your TBR Pile?

What have you been reading lately? I have finally caught up to present day with Louise Penny and Robert Crais’s novels. I love them all.

I’m still working my way through Michael Connelly’s series, but I’m getting closer. I love Harry Bosch, Mickey Haller, and Renee Ballard. All of his novels are well worth the read (and the TV/movie interpretations are good, too.)

I also found a Patricia Cornwell novel that I hadn’t read, BLACK NOTICE. It was good. She was living in Richmond when we moved here, and I remember driving around town looking for the local spots in her books.

Recently, I read Mia Manansala’s ARSENIC AND ADOBO. What a great mystery, and I can’t wait to read more of her work. I also forgot how funny Laura Levine is. Her mysteries are engaging, fast reads.

And on the thriller side, I absolutely loved Steve Berry’s THE OMEGA FACTOR. This heist story with religious and historic implications has so many twists and turns. It’s fast-paced and packed full of adventure.

What have you been reading lately?

#WriterWednesday Interview with C. L. Tolbert

I’d like to welcome the fantastic C. L. Tolbert to the blog for #WriterWedneday!

A few of your favorite things:

The things I like often remind me of times or events from my past. An elegantly shaped bowl by Peter Anderson, the master potter at Shearwater Pottery in Ocean Springs, Mississippi currently sitting on a table in my living room reminds me of my mother’s back porch where it resided for years. The bowl takes me back to walks on the beach, and beauty of the Gulf Coast, where I grew up.

I cherish a poster of my “accomplishments” prepared with loving detail by my sixteen-year-old daughter for my fortieth birthday. One glance at that poster and I’m teleported back to happy times with her and to the days when she was so excited about the future and the medical career she was just starting to plan.

Finally, I love the poems written by my son when he was at Emory University, and published in the Lullwater Review. I love his insight, his humor, and his observations. And I love knowing that I’ll never be half the writer he is.

Things you need to throw out:

Over the past few months, I’ve begun the process of down-sizing - throwing out unnecessary ‘things’ to accommodate a house with poorer storage capacity than my former home. I’m throwing out clothes I haven’t worn in the past two years, electronics, and sadly, I’m giving away unnecessary, but beautiful, antique bowls, temple jars, and urns. I have too much stuff. And even though I love all of my antiques, I don’t want my house to look like a museum. Plus, we need space to breathe.

Things you need for your writing sessions:

The only things I need for my writing sessions are: my computer, my computer glasses, and a chair, a table, or a bed. I don’t even need a desk, although I often write at one. I try not to write on my bed since it encourages bad posture, but I occasionally find myself there, seeking a softer spot and a place to elevate my feet as I type away.

Things that hamper your writing:

I am distracted and aggravated by people talking, and loud noises when I write. I also do not like to listen to music with words while writing, although instrumentals are fine. I am able to write in coffee shops, but loud conversations and loud music impede my ability to think creatively. So, I seek quieter places.

Things you love about writing:

I enjoy researching issues which are relevant to each book. And I love creating the plot, the storyline, developing the characters in the book, and bringing them to life. I also enjoy the process of writing. I often get lost in the story, and cannot pull myself out of what I’m doing to have a conversation with anyone else. Getting “lost” in the story may be my most favorite aspect of writing, but it isn’t one my husband appreciates.

Things you hate about writing:

I do not enjoy the editing process. I am not good at finding my mistakes, but am especially terrible at finding redundancies. But obviously, it’s necessary.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Marketing your book is, for me, the most difficult aspect about being a writer. I have yet to discover the perfect marketing scheme, and know that I have spent money on projects that have not paid off. Yet, book marketing is essential, and the author must do the majority of the work, or pay someone else to. Most authors, including me, would far prefer spending their day writing, and leave the marketing to others, but that isn’t always possible.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

I find the writing process enjoyable, making the writing process the easiest aspect about being a writer. I love settling down and escaping into the world I’ve created. If I didn’t have other obligations and duties, such as the need for clean laundry and dishes, I would write all day long. I love building a story, and seeing how the story and the characters’ lives interconnect.

Things you never want to run out of:

I never want to run out of printer paper, Pilot pens, or a notepad to write on. I type all of my manuscripts on the computer but print off articles and other research as needed. I also keep an outline of the book in a separate notebook.

Things you wish you’d never bought:

I wish I hadn’t purchased an exercise bike since it is rarely used, and is collecting dust.

Words that describe you:

I was once told by a boss that my best traits were my aggressiveness and thoroughness. He also said that those same traits were my worst characteristics. Since my retirement from the practice of law, I’m far less aggressive, but am even more tenacious, and I like to think I’m still thorough. I also try to be thoughtful of others and kind. If I’m not always, I aspire to be.

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

I did not like my former boss’s description of me as aggressive. I never saw myself that way, but can appreciate his perspective.

Things you always put in your books:

Emma Thornton, is the protagonist in the Thornton Mystery Series. Each story in each of the books of the series has been told primarily from her point of view. Although the books in the series are all legal thrillers, Emma is also a mom, and the relationships in her life, especially with her twin boys, are important to her. As a working mother, a lawyer, and a law professor, Emma struggles to manage her personal and family life with some equilibrium. I include family interactions, and the ups and downs of family life in each of the Thornton Mysteries.

Also, the setting is a character in each of the books in the series, and a strong sense of place accents the story line of each of the books. Out From Silence was set in the fictitious town of Jonesburg, Georgia. Jonesburg is a college town, and is as charming as a “Eudora Welty novel.” Daffodils cover its hills in the spring and its local watering holes are filled with benevolent drunks quoting lines from their latest poems or books. But the early fall heat in Jonesburg is oppressive, relentless, and bears down on its citizens. The sun is so bright it sears skin and burns eyes. Jonesburg is a beautiful but deadly southern town.

New Orleans is the setting for both The Redemption and Sanctuary, and is the perfect place for a murder mystery. Both stories are set in the 1990’s when, statistically, there was more than one murder a day in the city. Police corruption was at its highest during those years. New Orleans citizens couldn’t walk outside at night without the fear of being robbed, or killed, or both. But New Orleans is also one of the most beautiful cities in the world, filled with Georgian, Queen Anne, and Victorian styled mansions lining St. Charles Avenue, the Garden District, and Bayou St. John. Flowers spill out from wrought iron fences and frame wrap-around porches. French Quarter townhouses trimmed with ornate wrought iron rails and dripping ferns soar over narrow cobblestone streets. It’s a city filled with visual treats, and sinister nights.

Things you never put in your books:

Although Emma has a love interest, Ren Taylor, I do not put explicit sexual scenes in my books.

Things to say to an author:

I am always thrilled to read a review which finds and understands the theme of the book. I am attracted to vulnerable suspects, who are usually the main character of the story. Although I write legal thrillers, there is a subtle social justice issue in each of my books, and I find it gratifying if a reader finds that issue and understands why it is important.

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

I am grateful to all of my readers, but I find it aggravating if a small typo is pointed out after a book has gone to publication. I hate typos, and strive to find each one of them. But they cannot be corrected once the book has been printed.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

I once went scuba diving in Mexico with ill-fitting, leaking equipment. I was not certified that day, and still am not. We dove down forty feet off the coast of Cozumel. I had to grab on to the sea grass at the sandy bottom to keep myself down since I apparently float. (In earlier times I may have been burned at the stake as a witch.)

I was told to keep breathing in and out of my regulator or face certain death. I had no problem remembering that and didn’t die. I was in my late twenties, and more stupid than brave. But I was with a group of friends, and at the time, didn’t want to be left out of any of the fun. I believe that’s called FOMO. I haven’t been scuba diving since.

Something you chickened out from doing:

Once, when I was in high school, I was invited on a boating trip by a friend. Her family owned a huge one hundred-and-twenty-five-foot yacht, and it seemed as if our entire circle of friends, girls and boys, were invited. When we finally anchored a short way from an island, a group of football players decided it would be fun to throw girls off of top deck, where I happened to be sunning. This deck seemed very far from the water. The unlucky girls who were thrown over came back on board complaining of sea nettles in the water. I should have left the area then, but felt a little queasy below deck. So, I stayed and hoped the boys had grown tired of their prank. Shortly afterwards, my wrists and ankles were grabbed, and I was swung out over the railing of the yacht. I screamed, and grabbed the railing, immediately wrapping my arms and legs around it. I didn’t care if my fear of being thrown in the sea nettle-infested water was uncool. I only knew that I wasn’t going in from the top deck.

The two boys who tried to throw me in ended up helping me off of the rail. Nothing was ever said about the incident. But I learned that day that I have a strong survival instinct. I didn’t chicken out as much as I refused to be thrown in.

The nicest thing a reader said to you:

A lovely reader, who happens to be an incredible writer, Ellen Byron, kindly said that “C.L. Tolbert follows in the footsteps of legendary southern author Margaret Maron with her haunting debut, OUT FROM SILENCE, a beautifully drawn mystery that explores the duality of evil and kindness in a small Georgia town.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

I once received an Amazon review for THE REDEMPTION, the second book in the Thornton Mystery Series, proclaiming that it was “a fun book to read to children!” It went on to explain that the book was about a little boy who wanted a dog. I quickly realized that the comments were intended for another book, and were mistakenly identified as a review for THE REDEMPTION. I write adult-themed murder mysteries/ legal thrillers, not children’s books!

About C. L.

After winning the Georgia State Bar Journal's fiction contest in 2010, C.L. Tolbert developed the winning story into a full-scale novel. OUT FROM SILENCE was published in December of 2019, and is the first novel in the Thornton Mysteries series. Her second book, THE REDEMPTION, was published in February of 2021, and SANCTUARY, the third book in the series, was published in July of 2022.

Licensed in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Georgia, C.L. practiced law for thirty-five years before retiring to pursue writing. During her legal career she spent several years teaching at Loyola Law School in New Orleans, where she was the Director of the Homeless Clinic. She also has a Masters of Special Education, and taught in a public school prior to enrolling in law school.  

C.L. has two children and three grandchildren, and lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her husband and schnauzer.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: C.L. Tolbert Mystery Author | Thornton Mystery (cltolbert.com)




Bluetooth Tips (And Geeky Stuff You Should Know About)

Bluetooth and wireless technology have made our lives so much easier. We’re no longer tethered to a device, and we can be portable. Bluetooth is now an every-day part of our lives in headphones, keyboards, cars, personal digital assistants, TV, and the list goes on and on. Here are some things you need to be aware of to keep your devices safe from bad actors.

Where the Name Came From - The trademark for this technology is named for King Harold “Bluetooth” Gormsson who united Denmark and Norway in 958. He had a bad, discolored tooth that led to his nickname. King Harold was one of the last Viking kings to rule over Denmark, Norway, and parts of Germany and Sweden, and he is buried in Poland.

Bluejacking - This is a term to describe when someone sends unsolicited or unwanted messages through Bluetooth on your wireless devices. It’s a nuisance, and it could be dangerous if the message has viruses or other malware.

Bluesnarfing - This describes when a hacker gets access to one or more of your wireless devices and can steal information.

Bluebugging - This is when a hacker takes control of your devices through your Bluetooth. They have full access to your device and its information. This can include anything from full access to your texts and contacts to listening or watching you through a camera.

Things You Can Do

  • If you don’t need wireless access to a device, turn it off.

  • Don’t accept pairing requests (the process that allows your wireless device to connect) from sources that you don’t know.

  • Know what Bluetooth devices you have and the ones that are paired with your network.

  • Know your environment or surroundings when you are using Bluetooth. Are you in a very public place with lots of people nearby? Remember, hackers don’t have to be at the table next to you.

  • Review your device’s security settings and security options before you pair your device. Take advantage of options to secure your devices.

#WriterWednesday Interview with Philip Fracassi

I’d like to welcome Philip Fracassi to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

A few of your favorite summer traditions: Like most folks, I love a good barbecue. Burgers and chicken and salmon and sausage with lots of toppings, cold beer in the fridge, and French fries in the oven. Yum.

Something summer-related that you’ll never do again: My wife and I went parasailing once while in Hawaii. It was pretty cool for a few minutes, but after a while I got kinda bored just floating up there. A one-time experience for me, but one I’m glad we did.

Favorite summer treat: An ice-cold gin and tonic.

A summer treat that makes you gag: I’m not a big popsicle guy. They’re too cold, too drippy, and too much work for too little reward.

Best summer memory: I used to love waterskiing on a lake in Michigan, where my family owned a small cabin.

Something you’d rather forget: Pretty much all of high school.

Best summer vacation memory: For a few years running my friends and I would spend Thanksgiving in Big Bear, California. We’d bring tents and beer and spend days on the coast, swimming and hiking. Those were good times.

A summer vacation disaster that you’d rather forget: On an otherwise wonderful trip to Thailand, my wife and I misjudged a travel day that ended up being over twelve hours in a hot, crowded bus, then a hot, crowded van, then a crowded (and apparently shock-free) pickup truck. Not a good day to say the least.

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer: I tend to do all of my writing in my home office, regardless of the season. But occasionally on the nicer summer days I might take the laptop to a coffee shop patio to get some work done.

The worst place to try to write in the summer because of all the distractions: Not so much because of distractions, but for some strange reason I can’t write on airplanes. Could be that I’m distracted, or the air pressure messes up my creative brain, or that I’m just so uncomfortable.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening: I like a good sunset walk. There’s a college campus near our home and my wife and I like to walk its perimeter when the day starts cooling down. Two miles that crawls up the hills and offers a stunning view of Los Angeles and the ocean.

Least favorite thing about summer: When the days to too hot. I’m not a big “heat” guy. I prefer a cool day to an overly-warm one. Luckily we hover in the low 70s most days here, but occasionally it crawls up into the 90s and those are no bueno for me.

The thing you like most about being a writer: My favorite moments of being a writer is meeting someone who is a fan of my work; signing a book, taking a photo. Those moments go a long way.

The thing you like least about being a writer: I don’t mind bad reviews, but it really gets to me when reviews are spiteful, or snarky, or angry. I’ve been called a lot of bad things by reviewers, none of them true, and wholly unnecessary in my opinion.

Things you will run to the store for in the middle of the night: Scotch.

Things you never put on your shopping list: Mushrooms, olives, or eggplant. Yuck.

The thing that you will most remember about your writing life: Stephen King tweeting about my upcoming novel from Nightfire will be something I’ll never, ever, forget. Amazing.

Something in your writing life that you wish you could do over: As a writer I tend to let my emotions get carried away and regret a few angry social media posts I’ve made over the years. Yes, you can delete them, but self-control or not responding to something negative is a learned skill.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Not sure how daring it was, but climbing an (inactive) volcano in Guatemala was likely the most grueling experience of my life.

Something you chickened out from doing: Don’t recall ever being too scared to do something, but my biggest summertime regret would have to be not seeing Nirvana perform at the Metro in Chicago when I was a young man. A small group of friends had tickets, and I was invited, but I begged off at the last minute. A huge regret.

About Philip

Philip Fracassi is the Bram Stoker-nominated author of the story collections Behold the Void (named “Collection of the Year” from This Is Horror) and Beneath a Pale Sky (named “Collection of the Year” by Rue Morgue Magazine). His novels include A Child Alone with Strangers, Gothic, and Boys in the Valley.

Philip’s work has been translated into multiple languages, and his stories have been published in numerous magazines and anthologies, including Best Horror of the Year, Nightmare Magazine, and Black Static.

The New York Times calls his work “terrifically scary.”

Let’s Be Social

Website: http://pfracassi.com

FB: https://www.facebook.com/philipfracassi

Twitter: https://twitter.com/PhilipFracassi

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

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/author/philipfracassi


#WriterWednesday Interview with Ann Charles

I’d like to welcome Ann Charles to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

A few of your favorite summer traditions:

Taking family road trips to see new places, traveling back roads in different states, and enjoying the local food.

Something summer-related that you’ll never do again:

Pick strawberries for money. Unfortunately, that means I’ll also never have “strawberry fights” at the end of a strawberry season where all of the pickers have a big party and then get to gear up in strawberry boxes, mash up handfuls of strawberry “bombs,” and throw them at each other.

Favorite summer treat:

Iced flavored coffee.

A summer treat that makes you gag:

Ceviche

Best summer vacation memory:

Adopting kittens we found along the way from different states and watching our kids have fun playing with them in the car during the long driving days. (We currently have a cat we picked up in Idaho and another from Ohio, and have had other cats from different states in the past.)

A summer vacation disaster that you’d rather forget:

Driving across northern Montana with a pop-up camper trailer that kept falling apart and losing pieces along the way. It was hot and dry and every time we had to stop, the flies would try to eat us for lunch.

Most favorite place to write/edit in the summer:

On our back porch in the early, dry part of summer when there are very few bugs around, relaxing in a warm breeze with one of our cats on a nearby chair, listening to mellow music.

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

Inside in our living room while the kids are home from school for weeks on end and the cats are acting stir crazy, bouncing off of furniture—and me.

Favorite thing to do on a summer evening:

Sit on the back porch and drink iced tequila with lemon.

Least favorite thing about summer:

Heat and humidity mixed together to form what feels like Hell on Earth.

Favorite place to visit in Virginia: At this time, Interstate 81 because we’ve only driven that route on our way from Gettysburg Battlefield in Pennsylvania to Natchitoches, Louisiana for some cracklin’s.

Somewhere you’ve visited way too much. Been there. Done that. Got the T-shirt: West of Amarillo on Interstate 40.

The thing you like most about being a writer:

Giving people a fun escape from reality.

The thing you like least about being a writer:

Staring at a blinking cursor on a blank page.

Things you will run to the store for in the middle of the night:

Cat food because my cats think they have to have a full bowl of food waiting for them when I go to bed or they might starve to death by morning, and if that bowl is empty, they will wake me up and let me hear and earful about it.

Things you never put on your shopping list:

Grass seed and a lawn mower. After spending almost 4 hours a week on a riding lawn mower throughout much of my childhood, melting into a pool of sweat in the heat and humidity of a Midwest summer, I have taken a permanent vacation from all lawn-mowing duties.

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

How wonderful it feels when a reader takes the time to write and tell me how much fun they had reading my books, how the stories take them away to a happier place during the tough times in their lives, how they had fun sharing the stories with their parent, sibling, friend, and even a stranger who had also read my books.

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

I wish I could spend more of my early writing years putting more energy into improving my craft and my “voice,” and less time into trying to write stories to please agents or editors.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Filed for divorce.

Something you chickened out from doing:

Umm ... well, I try to live my life without putting myself in a precarious situation that will result in me chickening out. For example, I haven’t gone up in a plane out of which I’d potentially parachute because I know without a doubt that I’m too chicken to jump.

About Ann

USA Today Bestselling author, Ann Charles, writes spicy, character-driven stories full of mystery, comedy, adventure, suspense, romance, and supernatural mayhem. When she's not dabbling in fiction, she's arm wrestling with her two kids, attempting to seduce her husband, and arguing with her sassy cats.

Let’s Be Social

Website: http://www.anncharles.com

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

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@anncharlesbooks

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Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Ann-Charles/e/B004JLYPFW

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LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/anncharles

Pay it Forward - Tips for Writers (and Everyone)

I am so fortunate to be a part of the writing and mystery communities. They are filled with such wonderful writers who are so generous with their time and advice. My post today is on ways writers can pay it forward (and make a difference).

  • Leave a review for a book that you enjoyed. Writers depend on reviews. It doesn’t have to be a book report. It can be as simple as, “I really liked this book.” Leave them on major book sites, Goodreads, Bookbub…

  • There are so many organizations who are looking for volunteers. Find some time in your schedule and share your time, passion, and skills. Your writing groups and organizations are always in need of leaders and doers.

  • If you like public speaking and have skills (as a writer, you do), many youth and senior programs are looking for volunteer trainers and mentors.

  • Donate unused items and books. There are so many organizations that can use or sell what you no longer need.

  • Be a book fairy and drop off surprise books to random locations or tiny free libraries.

  • Partner with your favorite charity to donate books, gift baskets, or other items to their fundraisers.

  • If you can, give blood. There is always a need.

  • Just be kind. You never know who needs a smile.

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Cyndi Brec

I’d like to welcome author Cyndi Brec to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

A few of your favorite things: Peach Snapple, puppies, and my family—but not necessarily in that order. Lol

Things you need to throw out: Left-sided socks because I always lose the right-sided ones.

Things you need for your writing sessions: My timer and a beverage. Initially, when I began writing I didn’t use a timer, but a dear author friend of mine introduced me to the power of a buzzer. I use the timer for writing sprints, it keeps me in the writing zone (otherwise, I can feel guilty for not getting stuff done around the home). Having that set time aside to write forces my brain to hone in on the specifics of a scene or a thought for an extended period of time.

Things that hamper your writing: Interruptions. People distracting me, conversations, and not having a white noise. Anything that keeps me from staying in the mood.

Things you love about writing: Okay, I’m a myth and legend geek. There are so many secrets hidden in myths and legends and that’s where my storytelling comes into play. I love tweaking and twisting existing tales and seeing a new story idea take shape. This approach puts a new spin on an old legend, brings about a fantastic surprise, and plot twist. I also believe developing depth of the world building, can deepen reader interaction with the characters. History teaches us and stories connect us to the richness this world has to offer us. In my opinion, a great story is one that a reader can engage with, but an excellent story is one that helps us see beyond ourselves and allows us to feel, sense the pain of the character, and grow—deepening our understanding of life.

Things you hate about writing: There’s never enough time to write. Plus, my ice melts before I’ve finished the scene.

Hardest thing about being a writer: The industry is subjective and there is no easy way to make everyone happy.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Diving into unchartered territories and creating whatever I want, even making the unbelievable believable. Writing is fun!

Words that describe you: Loyal, bubbly, friendly, cheerful, and it’s been mentioned a few times that I can be silly—I love to laugh.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Oh, boy! I’m a talker, and at times, I may insert my foot in my mouth. I’m not perfect! Lol

Favorite foods: Any and all Mexican and Italian dishes.

Things that make you want to gag: Liver and onions.

Something you’re really good at: I’m really good at cooking main dishes—not that I follow recipes well.

Something you’re really bad at: Technology. I love the craft of writing but navigating even my computer is troublesome.

Things you always put in your books: Plot twists and unexpected turns for the character.

Things you never put in your books: Never is a strong word to use, but I try to not overly describe the setting and my characters in the story. I want to give the reader the opportunity to create the images in their mind.

Favorite places you’ve been: Austria, Germany, France, and Venice, Italy.

Places you never want to go to again: I truly love to travel, experience new things, and venture beyond my comfort zone, but that’s because I love seeing things through my husband’s eyes or my kids. For me, it’s more about the company you travel with than the location.

Favorite books (or genre): I enjoy fantasy (I’m a huge Victoria Aveyard fan) mystery, and historical romance. Some of my favorite books are Red Queen, A vow so Bold and Deadly, Shadow Fall, and the Twilight series.

Books you wouldn’t buy: I see what’s popular in the industry, read book reviews, and monitor what comments are made about a new book before I buy it. The first thing that will stop me from buying a book is several different people commenting ‘there is no character arc.’ The inner journey of a character over the course of a story should be powerful and unforgettable—the character should never be perfect.

People you’d like to invite to dinner (living): Author Steven King, Victoria Aveyard, and Stephanie Myer. These authors represent different genres, but it’d be intriguing to hear who influenced their writing and what fuels their story building.

People you’d cancel dinner on: Hannibal Lecter

The nicest thing a reader said to you: A reader once said to me, “I can’t believe you can conceptualize that plotline and write it out. It’s awesome work.”

The craziest thing a reader said to you: “I think you should use more semicolons in your manuscript.” Mind you, this is after my agent, Jonas Saul, and writing buddies told me to eliminate them. Lol

About Cyndi

Cyndi Brec is a debut author of Scarred Visions, book one of the Marked for Life series. Also, author of Scarred Secrets and Scarred Lies—short stories.

An Ohio native, Cyndi lives with her best friend, her husband, her two crazy-fun-loving kids, and her embarrassingly energetic dogs, who find unending trouble.

Her experience as a Recreational Therapy Technician for the Geriatric psych and mentally challenged, love for travel, and creative story building has given her many facets to draw from when world-building.

Cyndi never thought of herself as an author, more of a storyteller. Her love of history was part of the driving force in writing the series, but more so, mythological stories that stretched across civilizations and time. The secrets hidden within those mythical tales cultivated an unending list of questions and inspired her to write a YA urban fantasy series.

Let’s Be Social

Website; www.Cyndibrec.com
Instagram: www.instagram.com/cyndibrec7
Instagram: www.instagram.com/callie_tresham

#WriterWednesday Interview with Skye Alexander

I’d like to welcome author Skye Alexander to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

Things you need for your writing sessions: A least an hour or two of uninterrupted, quiet time. In the morning, a cup of coffee; late in the afternoon, a glass of wine. And the company of my beautiful Manx cat Zoe.

Things that hamper your writing: People wandering around the house, making a racket. Lately I’ve had a lot of construction guys doing repairs and they’re distracting. My ex-husband used to just burst into my office––even if I put a Do Not Disturb sign on the door––never understanding that once the train of thought pulls out of the station, there’s no calling it back.

Things you love about writing: Pretty much everything. I love doing research. I love hanging out with my characters. I really love it when the story flows through me effortlessly and I’m just the designated typist.

Things you hate about writing: When the Muse decides to take the day off without letting me know ahead of time.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Being alone so much, although it’s a necessary part of the job.

Easiest thing about being a writer: I don’t have to commute, wear a business suit and pantyhose, or deal with bitchy coworkers.

Something you’d like to do: Go on a tour of England’s sacred sites.

Something you wish you’d never done: Gone out with some of the guys I dated when I was younger and less discriminating than now.

Things that make you happy: Hanging out with my friends, playing with my cat, sitting by the ocean, watching sunsets, dancing, writing, reading, playing my drum, music, flowers, art.

Things that drive you crazy: Truck drivers who ride my bumper at 75 mph, neighbors who let their dogs bark for hours on end, waking up at night with a great story idea and forgetting it by morning.

Things you always put in your books: Music. Colorful locales. At least one cat per book. At least one character who’s gay. Interesting and/or obscure historical information (my novels take place in the mid-1920s). For example, the first automatic gates were devised by an Egyptian inventor named Heron nearly 2,000 years ago––he also designed a coin-op dispenser for holy water. How could I resist putting that in?

Things you never put in your books: Child or animal abuse.

Things to say to an author: I always try to say something positive and encouraging, especially to new authors. If they ask, I offer constructive suggestions. I also tell them writing isn’t easy and urge them to stick with it through disappointments and frustrations. I’ve heard that Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury got 60 rejections before a wise publisher brought it out. It’s one of the most highly acclaimed novels in American literature.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Don’t give up your day job. I really hated your book/protagonist/plot. (However, one of my beta readers told me she hated the ending of the third novel in my Lizzie Crane mystery series and her criticism inspired me to write a much better one.) Whether or not the author kills you off fictionally in a book, remember that anything you say to a writer is fair game and may appear in some form in a future novel.

Favorite places you’ve been: Barcelona, Florence, Rome, Stonehenge, Ireland, the Scottish Highlands, the Greek islands. I also love Maine and the North Shore of Massachusetts where the first four novels in my Lizzie Crane series are set.

Places you never want to go to again: Some of the rough neighborhoods in Boston, Houston in the summer, Bosnia, Acapulco, the New York subway, any NASCAR race.

Favorite books (or genre): Historical fiction, historical mysteries

Books you wouldn’t buy: Books about war, books with a lot of violence in them (although I really like Dennis Lehane’s books, so go figure), westerns, contemporary romances.

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

People you’d cancel dinner on: Kim Kardashian

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Hitchhiked around Europe for six months with my sister when I was twenty-one, with no itinerary, no cellphone, no contacts.

Something you chickened out from doing: Firewalking

The nicest thing a reader said to you: Recently I got a real, paper letter from a high-school girl who said reading one of my books gave her confidence and helped her connect with her personal power. Compliments like that are my favorites because one of my goals is to encourage young people––especially young women––to value themselves, to pursue their dreams, and to think for themselves.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: I don’t know if this person was really a reader, but she posted a negative review on Amazon about me for a book I didn’t write. Sometimes readers suggest changes they think I should make in my books. One told me the house in which the third novel in my Lizzie Crane mystery series is set should have a mile-long winding driveway. I pointed out that the historic mansion, built in the 1700s, is located in the heart of Salem, Massachusetts, where all the grand houses are only steps to the street and each other––I lived a few blocks from the actual house for eight years. Not satisfied, she replied, “Well, it doesn’t sound like a mansion to me.”

About Skye

Skye Alexander is the author of nearly 50 fiction and nonfiction books. Her stories have appeared in anthologies internationally, and her work has been published in more than a dozen languages. In 2003, she cofounded Level Best Books with fellow authors Kate Flora and Susan Oleksiw. The first novel in her Lizzie Crane mystery series, Never Try to Catch a Falling Knife, set in 1925, was published in 2021; the second, What the Walls Know, is scheduled for release in September 2022. Skye lives in Texas with her black Manx cat Zoe.

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