#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Skye Alexander

I’d like to welcome Skye Alexander to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Favorite things to do when you have free time: Eat lunch or drink wine with friends, take a walk in the countryside, go to art galleries, and of course read.

The thing you’ll always move to the bottom of your to do list: Housework

Hardest thing about being a writer: Spending so much time alone, but it’s a necessary evil in this job.

Easiest thing about being a writer: I know some writers don’t like doing research, but I enjoy it. I learn so much and get wonderful ideas that I can incorporate into my stories. For example, while researching the sixth book in my Lizzie Crane series, I learned about “poison damsels,” usually slave girls who from infancy were fed minute doses of poison so that they built up an immunity to it. However, the poison in their bodies made them dangerous to men who had sex with them, so they were used by powerful men in ancient India and parts of Europe as human weapons to assassinate their owners’ enemies. Fascinating, right?

Something you’re really good at: Astrology and tarot. I’ve been an astrologer for fifty years––I’ve even helped police in seven states solve crimes using horary astrology––and I’ve been a tarot reader and artist for twenty-five years. In several of my books I use tarot readings to plant clues and foreshadow coming events.

Something you’re really bad at: Handling my finances. I’ve never even balanced my checkbook.

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: Even before I started school, I knew I wanted to be an artist and writer. I began telling stories before I could actually read or write, and I still have drawings I did when I was three that are easily recognizable as various kinds of animals. Fortunately, I’ve been able to spend my life doing what I always wanted to do and to make a good living at it. I’m very grateful.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: Live on a cattle ranch in Texas, which I’ve done for the last nineteen years.

Something you wish you could do: Sing and play a variety of musical instruments. I can’t carry a tune, and although I tried piano, guitar, violin, flute, and harmonica none of them took. (I’m not bad on an African djembe, though.) My protagonist Lizzie Crane, a soprano in a NYC jazz band during the 1920s called The Troubadours, fulfills that role for me.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: Actually, I can’t think of anything I wish I’d never learned to do, only things I wish I’d learned to do better. My quest for knowledge has led me in all sorts of directions, from art and writing to renovating antique houses to metaphysical and spiritual practices. Every day I learn something, and I hope to keep on learning for the rest of my life.

Favorite places you’ve been: New England, where I lived for 31 years. Old England, especially Glastonbury and Stonehenge. Ireland and Scotland, most of all the Isle of Skye for which I’m named. Barcelona, Rome, Florence, the Greek Isles. New Orleans.

Places you never want to go to again: New York’s subways. Mississippi in the summertime. Any NASCAR race.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Hitchhiked around Europe for six months when I was twenty-one.

Something you chickened out from doing: Skydiving.

The most magical thing that happened to you: I liked your questions about the funniest thing and the most embarrassing thing that happened to me and tried to answer them, but nothing very funny or embarrassing has happened to me. So, I decided instead to share one of the most magical/romantic things that happened to me and, additionally, one of the scariest. First the most magical: I was hitchhiking through Yugoslavia in 1971, and a young man picked me up. When I told him I was on my way to Greece, he said he had a friend staying on the island of Mykonos. He sketched a map on the back of an envelope and wrote down his friend’s name.

A few weeks later after a series of synchronicity events, I ended up in Mykonos and found the envelope at the bottom of my backpack. Following the hand-drawn map, I walked four miles from the port along a dirt path where (at that time) no cars drove and there was no electricity. The first person I met was the young man’s friend, a white guy who’d been born in South Africa in the late 1940s. He left when he was eighteen due to the racial situation there and walked all the way through the continent. He’d been traveling the world for seven years when I met him, with only the possessions that he could carry on his back. I lived with him for four magical days in a cave overlooking the Agean Sea, before he journeyed on. It was the happiest time of my life.

One of the scariest things that happened to you: In 2005, I moved from the Boston area to live on a cattle ranch in the heart of Texas. Being a city girl, I didn’t know diddly about bulls. One afternoon while walking in a pasture the size of five football fields, two longhorns charged me across that vast, open space. If you’ve never seen these monsters, they have horns longer than my arms and they weigh about 2,000 pounds. Plus, they’re cantankerous and unpredictable.

With no place to run, no place to hide, no cellphone reception, and no other people anywhere, all I could do was yell and wave my arms at the beasts, trying to scare them away. The two longhorns stopped a couple feet in front of me, eyeing me curiously. Praying as hard as I could, I held out my hands and placed a palm on the forehead of each bull. I hadn’t a clue how I’d extricate myself from this situation––maybe I wouldn’t. The bulls started knocking at my arms with their horns and I realized that even if they didn’t mean any harm, they could gore me accidentally. I don’t know how long I stood there like that before I saw an old pickup truck driving across the field. I waved and called out to the driver, who stopped long enough for me to jump into the back of the truck. That night, I went out to dinner and ate steak.

Best piece of advice you received from another writer: Don’t use variations of the verb “to be” more than a few times per chapter, and never start a sentence with “There was” unless somebody’s holding a gun to your head. Her advice alerted me to the importance of active verbs and how they enliven my prose. Something you would tell a younger you about your writing: The writing life isn’t easy and the really good, successful writers work very hard at it. Believe in yourself and don’t give up.

Recommendations for curing writer’s block: When I get stuck, I usually do research. Because I write historical mysteries, I might Google “what happened” on a particular date, which sometimes yields interesting info. I did this when writing the fifth book in my Lizzie Crane series When the Blues Come Calling (scheduled for 8/25 release) to see what happened in Greenwich Village, NY (where my protagonist lives) on June 11, 1926. I discovered that a bohemian tearoom in the Village was raided that night. Its Jewish proprietor, who went by the name Eve Adams, was arrested for having written a book titled Lesbian Love. The police imprisoned her in a workhouse and authorities eventually deported her to Poland where she died in a concentration camp. Eve’s story became part of my book.

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 translated into fifteen languages. In 2003, she cofounded Level Best Books with fellow crime writers Kate Flora and Susan Oleksiw. So far her Lizzie Crane mystery series includes four traditional historical novels set in the Jazz Age: Never Try to Catch a Falling Knife, What the Walls Know, The Goddess of Shipwrecked Sailors, and Running in the Shadows. After living in Massachusetts for thirty-one years, Skye now makes her home in Texas.

Let’s Be Social:

https://www.facebook.com/skye.alexander.92

https://skyealexander.com

#WriterWednesday Interview with Authors Midge Raymond and John Yunker

I’d like to welcome Midge Raymond and John Yunker to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Things you never want to run out of:

Midge: Chocolate. Wine. Books.

John: Beer. Books. Notepads and pens.

Things you wish you’d never bought:

Midge: Shoes I thought would fit just because I loved them.

John: Several of the vintage typewriters in my very large collection.

Hardest thing about being a writer:

Midge: The blank page.

John: Rejection.

Easiest thing about being a writer:

Midge: Revision (basically the opposite of the blank page).

John: Low overhead.

Things you need for your writing sessions:

Midge: Inspiration, time, patience.

John: To get out of the house.

Things that hamper your writing:

Midge & John: The internet.

Words that describe you:

Midge: Bubbly.

John: Introvert.

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

Midge: Bubbly.

John: Balding.

Favorite foods:

Midge: Any and all vegan sweets.

John: Vegan Mexican.

Things that make you want to gag:

Midge: Anything made from animals.

John: Carrots, literally (I’m allergic).

Favorite smell:

Midge: Vanilla.

John: Bagels.

Something that makes you hold your nose:

Midge & John: When our cats vomit.

Last best thing you ate:

Midge: Maya’s Cookies.

John: Dinner at Donna Jean.

Last thing you regret eating:

Midge: Too many Maya’s Cookies.

John: Carrots.

Favorite places you’ve been:

Midge: Australia and the Galápagos Islands.

John: Australia.

Places you never want to go to again:

Midge & John: Miami International Airport.

Favorite books:

Midge: We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler, Damnation Spring by Ash Davidson, Fellowship Point by Alice Elliott Dark, everything by Jane Harper…and I could go on and on…

John: The Spare Room by Helen Garner.

Books you wouldn’t buy:

Midge & John: We’ll read anything … at least the first 50 pages.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:

Midge: Bungee jumping off a bridge.

John: Starting Ashland Creek Press.

Something you chickened out from doing:

Midge: Visual arts.

John: Acting.

About Midge and John:

Devils Island is the debut collaboration by Midge Raymond and John Yunker. Midge is the author of the novels Floreana and My Last Continent and the award-winning short-story collection Forgetting English. She earned a certificate in private investigation from the University of Washington. John is the author of the novel The Tourist Trail; editor of the Among Animals fiction series and a nonfiction anthology, Writing for Animals; and his plays have been produced or staged at such venues as the Oregon Contemporary Theatre, the Source Festival, the Centre Stage New Play Festival, and Association for Theatre in Higher Education conference. 

 Let’s Ne Social:

Twitter: @midgeraymond — @johnyunker

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Midge-John/100093520224575/

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

What Have You Done to Improve Your Writing Lately?

Writing is a skill that improves, like most things, the more often you do it. I work in IT, and we are always striving for continuous improvement in our software and the ways that we work, and that applies to the writing world, too. Here are some things you can try to help you hone your skills.

  • Read anything you can get your hands on in your genre. Look for trends, tropes (patterns or expectations of that genre), and what is new. How do writers describe things? How do they use dialog tags? How do they move the story along? How do they end their chapters?

  • Take a class. Many libraries and writing groups have free or low-cost courses and workshops.

  • If you haven’t been in school for a while, take a refresher course on grammar and punctuation. Things have changed over the years.

  • Join a writing group. Many offer programs and special events for members. There are mentorship programs, critique groups, and other opportunities for writers. I was able to get my first writing credit for a short story that was published in my Sisters in Crime chapter anthology.

  • Find a critique partner or a critique group to help you hone your craft. I have learned so much from my groups over the years. They have lots of suggestions and ways to improve.

  • Learn to use some of the not-so-obvious features of your word processor. There is a read aloud function in Word that helps you hear incorrect word usage in your manuscript. Use the search/replace feature to find overused words and other inconsistencies.

  • Hire a developmental editor to help you polish your work, especially if it is a manuscript that you plan to send out to agents and publishers. This is a pricey option, but it is a good way to refine your work and make sure that it’s ready to be queried.

What would you add to my list? How do you continue to improve your writing?

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Alison McBain

I’d like to welcome Alison McBain to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

A few of your favorite things: Cats, chocolate, coffee, comedy… I guess pretty much everything that starts with the letter “C.”

Things you need to throw out: All those clothes I wore when I was half the age I am now and that I’ll probably never wear again. But I save them just in case…

Things you need for your writing sessions: Almost nothing. I can write with paper and pen or on my laptop or perhaps even lipstick on a cocktail napkin—any medium and any place will do.

Things that hamper your writing: Noise! If my kids are running around like a herd of stampeding elephants, I find it hard to concentrate. I have a huge box of earplugs to help.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Procrastination gets me every time. If it’s what I’m SUPPOSED to be doing, it’s the last thing I often want to do.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Writing. I love to write and could do it till the cows came home.

Favorite music or song: “I Feel Fine” by The Beatles is my absolute favorite, but anything of that era—Simon & Garfunkel, Otis Redding, Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin… they’re fabulous.

Music that drives you crazy: I’m not a big fan of country. It doesn’t drive me crazy, and there are some individual songs that I enjoy, but overall it’s not my jam.

Favorite beverage: Coffee. Coffee. Oh, yeah, and coffee.

Something that gives you a sour face: It’ll sound crazy, but plain water. It always tastes bitter/minerally to me.

Things you’d walk a mile for: My kids. No matter what, I’m always there for them.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: My kids. And that contradiction, folks, is one of the many joys of parenting.

Things you always put in your books: Diversity. As a bi-racial author, I’m committed to expanding diverse books and voices, starting with my own.

Things you never put in your books: Poor research. I’m a stickler for details, so I always try to make sure everything I put into my writing (as far as I know) is accurate.

Things to say to an author: I just bought your new book and can’t wait to read it! I’ve loved everything else you’ve ever written.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Your newest book sucks and here are all the reasons why…

Favorite things to do: Play board games or do anything creative (draw, paint, sew, write, etc.).

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Eating bugs, actually. That’s a huge NO from me.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Have kids. It’s an adventure every day!

Something you chickened out from doing: Everything else. I’m pretty risk-adverse.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: That they were only going to read a couple chapters of my book but ended up staying up all night to finish it—they couldn’t put it down!

The craziest thing a reader said to you: That they didn’t like the genre that I wrote but decided to read my book anyway—and found out that they still didn’t like the genre after reading my book. It was baffling to me that they knew they hated a genre and then chose to read it anyway. No, my writing won’t make you love something you really hate. It would be nice if it did, but I don’t have that superpower.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I draw a webcomic occasionally called Toddler Times. It’s loosely based on the more ridiculous aspects of parenting I’ve discovered over the years.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: EVERY project, LOL. There’s always something that I don’t anticipate, no matter how well I plan for it.

About Alison:

Alison McBain’s novels are the recipients of over 13 awards, including the Foreword INDIES. Her latest novella Dual was longlisted for the 3-Day Novel Contest. When not writing for herself, she’s a ghostwriter who has penned over two dozen books for clients, as well as an award-winning editor who has worked with both celebrity and NY Times-bestselling authors. She’s currently pursuing a project called “Author Versus AI,” where she’s writing a book a week over the course of a year, using NO AI at all (52 books total). When not writing, Ms. McBain is associate editor for the magazine ScribesMICRO and draws all over the walls of her house with the enthusiastic help of her kids. She lives in Alberta, Canada.

Let’s Be Social:

Author Versus AI website: http://www.authorversusai.com/contact.html

Author website: https://www.alisonmcbain.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alison.mcbain.9

Twitter: https://x.com/AlisonMcBain

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

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alison-mcbain-0a026a266/

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCm9PMu4p4urp_un0oy1vroQ

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@1authorversusai

Medium: https://medium.com/@amcbain

#WriterWednesday with Author Sue Minix

I’d like to welcome my friend, the fabulous Sue Minix, to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

Things you never want to run out of: toilet paper and deodorant

Things you wish you’d never bought: all the exercise equipment I never use

Things you need for your writing sessions: Something to drink and my writing buddy Sadie.

Things that hamper your writing: Distractions of any kind.

A few of your favorite things: my books and vinyl records

Things you need to throw out: all the power cords from every phone I’ve ever had

Favorite foods: ice cream and spaghetti

Things that make you want to gag: Brussels sprouts

Something you’re really good at: procrastinating

Something you’re really bad at: managing social media

Favorite music or song: oldies, light rock, and older country

Music that drives you crazy: heavy metal and hip hop

The last thing you ordered online: medicine for my dog

The last thing you regret buying: the hat I thought would look great on me, but didn’t

Things to say to an author: I loved your book!

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Don’t quit your day job.

Favorite books (or genre): mysteries

Books you wouldn’t buy: literary for deep thinkers. I don’t want to work that hard.

Favorite things to do: hiking and watching old movies

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

About Sue:

Sue is a member of Sisters in Crime, Mystery Writers of America, and the Crime Writer's Association. When she isn't writing, you can find her reading, watching old movies, or hiking the New Mexico desert with her furry best friend.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://sueminixauthor.com

Website: www.sueminixauthor.com

Facebook: (2) Sue Minix Author | Facebook

Instagram: Sue Minix (@sueminixauthor) • Instagram photos and videos

Threads: (5) Sue Minix (@sueminixauthor) on Threads


How do You React to Feedback?

There is nothing like that feeling in the pit of your stomach when you receive critiques or edits on your work. All those mark-ups. That’s when self-doubt and loathing set in. Should I just give up and quit now? Maybe I’m not really cut out to do this.

It is very hard to offer your creation to someone and then to review their comments. When I started with my first critique group, I would have to wait a day or so after the discussion to go back through the written comments to be able to look at the comment without letting emotions take over. While many were positive, my brain tended to jump right to the criticisms and all the things that were wrong.

Receiving feedback became a lot easier when I changed how I thought about it. This is not personal, and it’s not an attack on me. Feedback is actually a gift to make you a better writer. You can learn so much and improve your craft.

I appreciate my beta readers, critique partners, agent, and editors. Writing is a business, and if you want to sell your writing, it needs to be the best it can be. Writing and revising are hard work.

My critiquers have provided ideas to make story lines better, they’ve explained what worked (and what didn’t work) in a story, and they helped me learn techniques and tricks of the trade.

One of the biggest things I learned was that you don’t have to list out every mundane thing that your character does. I come from a technical writing background where you detail every step in precise order. That’s necessary for software and process manuals, but not so much for fiction.

I read through the feedback and the notes from our discussion. I make the changes. If there’s something I don’t agree with (because it alters the character or story too much or it removes a vital clue to the mystery), I may choose not to make the edit.

Writing is a business, and you need to hone your skills and constantly make improvements. Critique groups, writing partners, and editors are the best way to do this. You learn more from doing than you do from reading craft books.

What has been your experience with receiving feedback on your work?

#WriterWednesday with Korina Moss

I’d like to welcome my friend, the fabulous Korina Moss, to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: Dealing with the uncertainty of the business.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Coming up with ideas, as long as you don’t have to flesh them out.

Something you wish you could do: Travel more.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: I can’t think of anything I learned that I wish I hadn’t, but I wish I’d never discovered reality television. It’s such a waste of time because it’s mindless, but it’s also fun because it’s mindless!

Last best thing you ate: Raw oysters and lobster ravioli in Rhode Island.

Last thing you regret eating: Ice cream that I didn’t love. Not worth the calories!

Favorite places you’ve been: The list is long, because I used to be able to travel often – London, Paris, Rome, Florence, Hawaii, Nantucket, Martha’s Vineyard, Montreal, Disney World, Maine, New Hampshire, NYC at Christmas time, Niagara Falls.

Places you never want to go to again: It’s not that I wouldn’t want to go there again, because I enjoyed many things about it, but if I ever got to go to Scotland again, I’d skip Edinburgh and venture to the Highlands.

Favorite things to do: Jigsaw puzzles with a lively seasonal scene, watching The Great British Bake-off, going on trips with my son, going out for a meal with family or friends.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Cleaning my house, running for exercise. (So I guess I’d only run through fire if it’s a very short run, lol.)

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Decide to pursue a writing career after my divorce.

Something you chickened out from doing: Riding Everest at Disney World. I love Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, and I’ve done Tower of Terror and Space Mountain, but I draw the line at going backward in a tunnel on a rollercoaster.

The funniest thing that happened to you on vacation: My family and I were having dinner at The Whispering Canyon Café at Disney World and after getting our meal, I asked for ketchup for my son, who was about six. Still standing at our table, the server yelled throughout the restaurant, “KETCHUUUUUP!” and one by one, the other diners at the restaurant started bringing their ketchup bottles to our table. We were all laughing hysterically (my son the most) by the time the tenth bottle arrived. Apparently, that’s the tradition at this restaurant and we had no idea. (Of course, we did the same with our ketchup bottles when the next KETCHUP announcement was made!)

The most embarrassing thing that happened to you on a vacation: Our first trip to London, my (then) husband and I saw a café that looked good, so we attempted to enter, but when he pulled on the door, it wouldn’t open. It was a completely glass-fronted café and there were tables all along the front windows with people in them, so we knew it was open. So, he pulled again and again, tugging harder. By this time, the entire front glass is kind of shaking and everyone in the café is looking at us. Finally, he pushed the door, and we practically fell into the café. That’s when we learned much of Europe is push not pull.

The most exciting thing about your writing life: Getting to meet readers and other authors.

The one thing you wish you could do over in your writing life: Give myself permission to prioritize it sooner.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: That my books got them through a really hard time in their life. I’ve had several people say this for different circumstances and it really touches my heart.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: That I’m their favorite author. That blows my mind.

Best piece of advice you received from another writer: Writing is like a muscle; the more you use it, the stronger it gets.

Something you would tell a younger you about your writing: It’s something I heard from my agent and my editor many years later – You have good writing instincts. Trust them.

Recommendations for curing writer’s block: I think what most people call writer’s block is just a fear of putting those great images in your head on paper. Write through it. Write badly. Use a different medium (for example, use a notebook and write longhand). Give yourself a fifteen-minute time limit to put something on paper. However, what I consider to be writer’s block is when you feel creatively depleted. When this is the case, I do quiet things that allow my mind to wander, like walking in nature, driving without the radio on, or spending the day exploring a nearby town on my own—anything where I get out of my routine and also have plenty of quiet moments to myself away from distractions like my phone, books, or TV. I booked a cruise for myself once as a solo retreat. After seven days by myself at sea with no responsibilities and lots of downtime, my creative spark returned.

Things you do to avoid writing: Do my social media marketing, watch mindless television and live tweet it, chat with my sisters and friends.

About Korina:
KORINA MOSS is the author of the Cheese Shop Mystery series set in the Sonoma Valley, including the Agatha Award winner for Best First Novel, Cheddar Off Dead and the Agatha Award finalist for Best Contemporary Novel, Case of the Bleus. Her books have been featured in USA Today, PARADE Magazine, Woman’s World, AARP, and Fresh Fiction. The 5th Cheese Shop Mystery, Fondue or Die, releases on October 22nd. To learn more, visit her website korinamossauthor.com.

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What's Your Author Brand?

What is your author brand? A brand is something that is easily recognizable like a logo or packaging. It’s a way for readers to know what to expect from your writing. It’s your identity as an author.

Colors - The colors you choose for your logo, bookmarks, website, and social media sites create a feeling or a mood. Make sure your color palette matches your writing style. My first traditionally published work was a short story in an anthology series that had a black, white, and red cover. I used that color scheme for my first website and my graphics. Later, I was talking with a publicist, and she asked me why I chose those colors because my mysteries are lighter and often humorous. She recommended that I stick with brighter colors and pastels.

Fonts - Fonts also evoke a mood or style. Design applications like Canva will let you create a color and font palette with some of their packages. That way, you can be consistent with your designs. Some fonts are thicker and bolder, while others are loopier. Some fonts are more casual than others. Find one or two that match your style and your genre. If you’re using it for headlines or logos, make sure that it’s easily readable. I saw a tagline on the back of a tow truck recently. It looked like it read, “We Tow Less.” The words were on two lines and there was a squiggly something that I couldn’t read under the “We.” It was actually the word “for” in a loopy font. Their message of “We Tow for Less” got lost and twisted because of a font choice.

Things to Consider -

  • Make sure you have a professional headshot. Selfies aren’t the quality that you want to reproduce online or in print.

  • A logo helps link you and your brand. It’s a nice item that you can include on everything.

  • It’s also good to have a tagline that’s easily understood (and readable) that describes your style.

  • It’s helpful if you can get all of your social media handles to be the same. Sometimes, that’s not possible. You want to make it as easy as possible for people to find you. In Meta products (Facebook, Instagram, Threads), it is much easier to find Heather Weidner than it is Heather.Weidner.1234 or Mystery_Author _Heather Weidner.

Your brand helps readers know about you and your writing style. It creates a cohesive look for your online and in-person presence.