What To Do When You Don't Feel Like Writing

When I’m writing a book, I try to write every day. Sometimes, the universe conspires against me, or I just don’t feel sitting in front of screen. It happens. Here are some things you can do instead.

  • Try to have a normal time that you write every day. (Mine is the early morning and my lunch time.) This gets your mind and body into a routine.

  • Guard your writing time. Your time is valuable, and you are pulled in so many different directions. Your research, writing, and marketing time is work. Schedule it if you have to.

  • If you just can’t write, give yourself some grace. Work on other “writing” tasks. Create blog posts. Make marketing graphics. Clean up files or emails. Make sure that your receipts and tax information are updated.

  • I create a tentative schedule when I’m writing a book. My goal is to write 1,000 words on workdays and 3,000 words on weekends/holidays. I try to stick to that to finish my first draft in a reasonable amount of time. Sometimes, I write more to cover for “skip” days or other things I can’t control.

  • Exercise. This will clear your head and give you more energy than you realized.

  • Do some other project you’ve been dreading. There is always a junk drawer or closet that needs cleaning.

  • Work on a craft or make a recipe. These are other creative ways to get your mind working.

What works for you when you don’t feel like sitting down to write?

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Tricia Copeland

I’d like to welcome Tricia Copeland back to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: The hardest thing about being a writer is wondering if readers will like my work.

Easiest thing about being a writer: The easiest thing about being a writer is getting lost in my characters and world.

Things you need for your writing sessions: Must haves for my writing sessions are Diet Coke and quiet.

Things that hamper your writing: Things that hamper my writing are lots of distractions and noise.

Words that describe you: Words that describe me are patient, quirky, and reserved.

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Words that I wish didn’t describe me, most of the time, are structured and neat-freak.

Things you’d walk a mile for: I’d walk a mile for Diet Coke, chocolate, and one last hug from my sister which I’d walk many, many miles for.

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: I hate wet socks, a messy room, and mean people.

Things you always put in your books: I always include a fun romance in my books.

Things you never put in your books: I’ll never include graphic violence or detailed intimate scenes in my books.

Favorite books (or genre): My most recent favorite book is A Million Junes by Emily Henry, but I love just about any YA fantasy, books by Cassandra Clare and L.J. Smith, and the like.

Books you wouldn’t buy: I never buy erotica and rarely horror or political thrillers.

Favorite things to do: I love reading, mostly in the form of audiobooks, and hiking and running.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: I hate washing dishes and folding laundry.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: The most daring thing I’ve done is publish a book.

Something you chickened out from doing: In middle school I chickened out of joining the track team.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: The nicest things readers say to me is that they loved a character.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: A reader once told me that my face was very symmetrical.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: I love creating video trailers for my books and audiobooks.

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: Three words: I can’t draw.

 My favorite book as a child: Dorothy and the Wizard In Oz

A book I’ve read more than once: I’ve read Twilight, Lord of the Rings, Gone with the Wind multiple times each.

About Tricia:

Award-winning author and podcaster, Tricia Copeland writes young adult fantasy. Her audiobooks have garnered critical acclaim with To be a Fae Guardian winning the Benjamin Franklin Award for YA Fantasy. With the Kingdom Journals urban fantasy all released in audiobook, the final audiobooks of the fae fantasy Realm Chronicles will release in 2026. You can find all of Tricia’s books on her website at www.triciacopeland.com.

Let’s Be Social:

https://www.facebook.com/TriciaCopelandAuthor/

https://www.instagram.com/authortriciacopeland/

https://x.com/TriciaC_Author

https://www.tiktok.com/@triciacopelandauthor

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https://www.amazon.com/stores/Tricia-Copeland/author/B00YHN5Q4G

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14055439.Tricia_Copeland

https://www.bookbub.com/authors/tricia-copeland

#WriterWednesday with Jocie McKade

I would like to welcome author Jocie McKade to the blog today for #WriterWednesday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: Sitting down and making the time to write. If you work another job, have a family, etc., then making the time to write the words can be difficult.

Easiest thing about being a writer: My head is full of unwritten stories. You know the old saying, ‘voices in my head’? I’m where that came from.

Things you always put in your books: I like to pay tribute to United States Veterans, and they appear in nearly all of my books. Many are main characters, others are secondary, but I always try to give them voice, I and hope I do them proud.

Things you never put in your books: Anything that has to do with hurting a child. The world has never done enough to protect its children, and I mean that in a global sense. You’ll never see a kid harmed in any of my books.

Favorite places you’ve been: The Grand Tetons, Wyoming. Spectacular! I visit as often as I can, and I have never been disappointed. Well, that’s a lie. We were there during a forest fire and I couldn’t seen the tops of the mountains because of the smoke. I cried all the way home.

Places you never want to go to again: New York City. Please, I’m not insulting the people or even the city. It’s just I’m a country girl and let me tell you, that place is like a cattle herd on crack. It’s just far too busy for me.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: My husband was dealing with cancer, and in the chemo infusion room, the same people tend to be there at the same time. They discovered via my husband’s bragging that I was a writer working on a romcom series (The Three Baers). It’s very humorous, and a few people asked me to read it aloud as I was working on it in the room. After……I had patients and nurses thank me for making a hellish day better by making them laugh. Writing doesn’t get any better.

The craziest thing a reader said to you:

Craziest or worst? LOL because I’ve had both. Craziest: I hate your book cover and I’m giving you a one-star review.

Worst? It wasn’t really their fault, but I was at one of my first book signings. The woman glanced at the table, raised an eyebrow and ask me where the ladies room was. Authors sometimes get very good at store directions.

Things to say to an author:

I loved your book! Thank you for the escape from reality for a few hours. I cried. I laughed. I want more books in the series. That character was perfect.

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

I could have written it better. Anyone can write a book. You should consider another genre, this one (insert any genre) is over-saturated. And my favorite, especially when directed toward romance authors: ‘Did you practice all the sex in the book to be able to write it?”

Words that describe you:

Kind, open-minded, caring, family-loving, warped sense of humor, and never forgets the details of a vacation.

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

Warped sense of humor, procrastinator, self-confidence needs boosting, can’t stick to a diet, takes criticism to heart.

The funniest thing to happen to you:

With my warped sense of humor, there’s a book I could write in this category. Many years ago, we’d gotten a new car, and only had it a matter of days. My husband was picking me up after work. I march outside, it’s pouring rain, jump in the driver’s side of what I thought was our car, started complaint that he could have pulled up to the front door so I didn’t have to walk through the rain.

“I’m sorry.” I paid no attention that it wasn’t my husband’s voice.

“Turn that radio off.” It was blaring. “We have to stop at the grocery.” I’m tossing an umbrella and a briefcase into the back seat. “Your mothers coming for dinner, and I need some damn wine.”

The car didn’t move.

“Come on, get the lead out.” I ordered, turning to see a man I’d never met sitting in the driver’s seat. Then I looked across the parking lot at the front of the building where my husband was sitting at the door waiting in an identical car. “Oh, damn.” I whispered.

The man burst into laughter.

“I’ll drive you over there. No sense in making you walk in the rain.” He was still laughing. I was apologizing profusely.

Then I just had to explain to my husband why I was in another man’s car.

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you:

I was just out of high school and was working through the summer for a temp agency. They’d sent me to this huge company (Fortune 500 huge) to do some filing and clerical jobs. My very first day there, I had to report to the CEO’s office. His administrative assistant was on vacation. My job was just to file some things, type a few things and make his lunch reservation. He greeted me, showed me to my desk, and as I sat in the chair, that sucker flipped backwards, throwing me, my brand new suit skirt, and dignity into the air.

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books:

In Baer Truth, the first book in my romcom series The Three Baers, there is a tractor scene. Now, I’m a farm gal and have driven tractors since I was a kid. When my kids were small, I even mowed ditch lines for the township. One day, myself and the farmer I mowed with were paid to mow a huge field where cars would be parking the upcoming weekend for an event.

The field was knee-high in weeds, and I had a bush hog on the back of the tractor going fairly slow to not kill the engine.

Up out of that high grass jumps a snake! Now, I have no idea what kind of snake only that it’s huge. (Probably much bigger in my imagination than it really was) I scream, pull my legs to the center of the tractor, you know, so it can’t get me, and my mowing partner heard me scream. Yup, I was that loud. He’s an old farmer laughs, and says, “just run over it.”

No, and hell no.

At this point, I’d forgotten every single thing I ever knew about driving a tractor because I was watching that snake. The farmer came over and tried to run over it. That snake jumped again, picked its head up and hissed. Nope, I couldn’t hear over the tractor, but I know it did. He had to swing and make another round to try and mow over it.

As I’m watching him try to save me from this snake, the tractor is still running, still in drive and slams smack into a ditch. I’m thrown off of it right into the nastiest, muddiest, slimiest road-run-off ditch you’ve ever seen. Thank goodness for ‘kill-switches’. This ended up in the book. Modified slightly for the character.

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: They think I’m sneaky, stealthy, and probably would be a good private detective, since I write about a lot of them. I hate to disappoint them, but when I try to sneak, I sound like a pack of elephants, hyenas, and a murder of crows started throwing a rave.

Favorite things to do: My number one thing is spending time with family. I never realized how hard that was until they had adult schedules. I love, love, love to travel. We have always RV’d, and you never have to ask me twice if I want to travel.

I love gardening. I live on a small farm affectionately known as Dust Bunny Farm, for obvious reasons! My nearly 1/4 acre garden has shrunk through the years, and last summer we built a greenhouse, but there is nothing like a ripe tomato warmed by the sun and eating it in the garden.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: I HATE cell phone shopping. Seriously. I will put off shopping for a cell phone and a new plan until the duct tape holding my current phone together comes loose. I keep no very little personal and no financial information on my phone.

I think this comes from research for my latest book release Let Sleeping Dogs Lie, A Hope and Pip Cozy Cyber Mystery. The book has a robotic dog and an unknown AI that may or may not be helping Hope, the main character. After hours of research on scams, viruses, hacking, etc., it’s made me even more paranoid about electronics.

Yes, I can order online…..but I like to see the phone, feel the heft, see if it will fit in that one compartment in my purse. This requires me to go into a store. Blech!!!

Favorite books (or genre): I’ll read pretty much anything you put in front of me. I do love thrillers and mysteries, but hey, a good romance is awesome too!

Brad Thor, Vince Flynn, Jack Carr, Janet Evanovich, Lisa Scottoline, y’all, it’s a long list!!!

Books you wouldn’t buy: Horror. I’m a coward and easily scared. It’s a great genre, but I don’t read it because I then have to leave all the lights on in the house and it gets expense!

About Jocie:

Jocie is the author of over twenty books. Her fiction writing has received several awards for mystery and romcom books. Her non-fiction work has appeared in dozens of magazines, online blogs, and she served as the Senior News Editor of Reader’s Entertainment News.

Writing humorous cozy mysteries, and romantic comedy, Jocie can find humor in almost every inappropriate thing. She lives in the Midwest on Dust Bunny Farm with her family, and the world’s calmest Border Collie.

When not writing, she grows ArnoldSwartzaWeeds in her garden, and plots strategic military maneuvers against hostile dust bunnies.

Let’s Be Social:

Facebook: http://facebook.com/JocieMcKadeBooks

Instagram: http://instagram.com/jociemckade/?hl=en

BookBub: http://bookbub.com/authors/jocie-mckade

Pinteret: http://pinterest.com/jociemckade9

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7348715.Jocie_McKade

Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/mtn7bdf6

Spice up Your Mysteries - Just in Time for Valentine's Day

Tomorrow’s Valentine’s Day. I know not everyone celebrates, but I do because it extends the party from my birthday. This year, it’s on Friday the thirteenth, but that’s another story.

So, let’s talk romance. A few years back when I was the program director for our mystery writers’ group, I invited some amazing romance writers to visit and give us some tips for spicing up our mysteries. (Many thanks to Mary Burton, Tracey Livesay, Avery Flynn, and Lisa Dyson for all their great advice!) The writers’ genres variety from sweet to va-va-voom, and it was a hoot to listen to them describe how to write romantic situations.

I write cozy mysteries that are PG-13, so anything too racy happens behind closed doors. That works for cozy mysteries that are primarily based on bringing the guilty to justice and strong character relationships. But, the industry is changing with a whole lot of new subgenres that blend with other book genres like romancy, a combination of fantasy and romance.

In my first series, my character was devoted to her job, and she really didn’t have much of a social life. And I received a lot of feedback from readers that they wanted more romance to make her seem more like a regular person. (Delanie did have a fling in Secret Lives and Private Eyes, and that caused a lot of conflict for the storyline. Later in the series, she starts dating an FBI agent.)

For two of my cozy series, I’m currently writing books 7-9, and I’m toying with the idea of having a wedding. No spoilers yet.

I think romance is important to any story, and here’s why:

  • A little romance livens up the story line.

  • It can create conflict for the characters to move the plot forward (or attempt to derail it).

  • It makes the characters more human. Emotions are a part of life.

  • And romance add some fun elements for the characters and readers.

Do you like a little (or a lot of) romance in your mysteries?

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Seth Voorhees

I’d like to welcome author Seth Voorhees to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday.

Hardest thing about being a writer: The hardest aspect of being a writer, for me, is financial: professional editing services, marketing, publishing, and advertising. It requires a team. Writing and doing revisions are the easiest parts.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Drawing inspiration. I have an active imagination. I’m inspired every day. By what I read, see on television, experience at work, hearing the news, when talking to coworkers, driving down the road, or even when I’m at the gym. Frequently through observation, I find myself thinking, “I should write about that.”

Things you need for your writing sessions: I’m an early morning writer. For me, I need my coffee, or hot chocolate if it's really cold out.

Things that hamper your writing: Traveling for work. It takes me out of my groove and limits my writing time. I am an early-morning writer. That’s when my creativity and imagination are at their peak. I’ve learned that after three in the afternoon, I’m useless.   

Words that describe you: Positive, Spiritual, Creative, Caring, Productive, Humble, Loving, Joyful, Dorky, Humorous, and Patient. 

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Stoic, Reactionary, and Blunt.

Favorite music or song: That depends on my mood. I love most genres. But the song that comes into my head frequently is “Fly Me To The Moon,” by Frank Sinatra.

Music that drives you crazy: Screaming heavy metal.  

Things you’d walk a mile for: A great movie. I love going to the movies. You can walk into a theater with troubles, and when you leave the theater, all of those troubles have vanished.

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

Things you always put in your books: Aspects of spirituality, because it is a big part of my life, and it can lead a character down many roads.

Things you never put in your books: Killing off the main character. I’m not a fan of killing them off. Even if their ending fulfilled some larger picture, or they are now at peace because they completed some unfinished business, I don’t care. I feel it ruins the experience.

Things to say to an author: Don’t let the trope police scare you. Writing about a popular trope with your clever twist is not copying someone else's work. Proof: scan the mystery section and point out all of the books with the trope: Person dies, their friend doesn’t agree with how the investigation is being handled, so they try to solve it.

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: My views on Politics, Men’s Health, and Religion.

Favorite books (or genre): The Horror Genre. I cannot pick one book. There are too many to count. But one that I’ll recommend is The Winter People by Jennifer McMahon.

Books you wouldn’t buy: Sorry Politics, but no thanks.

Favorite things to do: I love reading, fishing, going for walks, doing puzzles, watching the Pittsburgh Steelers, and hanging out with my family.

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Going to a late-night concert. I have no interest anymore.  

The first 8-track, record, cassette, or CD you ever bought: The first Cassette Tape I ever purchased was Garth Brooks, titled: Chase.

A type of music that’s not your cup of tea: Heavy Metal. I can live without it.

 My favorite book as a child: The Frog and Toad series by Arnold Lobel. I loved all of them. My mother read them to me before bed.

A book I’ve read more than once: I’ve only read one book more than once. That was Animal Farm by George Orwell. The reason was that I’d read it in High School and didn’t grasp its deeper themes. I reread it as an adult to better understand it.

Your favorite movie as a child: The Princess Bride, directed by Rob Reiner. As an adult, I still love it.

A TV show or movie that kept you awake at night as a kid (or as an adult): As a child, Are You Afraid Of The Dark on Nickelodeon. The Tale of The Fire Ghost was one of several that kept me up. As an adult: Arachnophobia.   

About Seth:

Seth Voorhees lives in the Black Hills of South Dakota with his partner and stepdaughter. He enjoys drawing from his experiences as a social worker, particularly in adolescent development and mental health, to shape his characters and their journeys through human morality and challenges. He identifies himself as a Dark Fiction author. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree with an emphasis in Sociology and Psychology from Black Hills State University. 

Let’s Be Social:

Website: http://SethtVoorhees.com

Facebook (@Seth T Voorhees)

TikTok (@stvoorhees)

Instagram (@authorsvoorhees)

#WriterWednesday Author Interview with Nikki Knight

I’d like to welcome the multi-talented Nikki Knight to the blog for #WriterWednesday.

Hardest thing about being a writer: Rejection
Easiest thing about being a writer: Taking edits and notes – after a lifetime in a newsroom, I’m not hung up on my lovely words!

Things you need for your writing sessions: Five minutes and a flat surface for the laptop.

Things that hamper your writing: Lack of sleep – I work morning drive on the weekend, and I can’t get anything done on Mondays!

Words that describe you: Determined, creative, loyal, family-oriented. (Family of blood, work, and affection!)

Words that describe you, but you wish they didn’t: Easily distracted, hot-tempered, oversensitive.

Something you’re really good at: “The Dance,” anchoring breaking news.
Something you’re really bad at: Meeting people in person. I’m painfully shy. (I know it doesn’t make sense!)

Last best thing you ate: Chocolate cake on date night…I took the best bite and my husband didn’t mind!
Last thing you regret eating: Leftover canned soup. But I hate wasting food!

Favorite music or song: K-Pop Demon Hunters soundtrack (today!)

Music that drives you crazy: Pop stars trying to be country because it’s hot right now.

The last thing you ordered online: Fun press-on nails.

The last thing you regret buying: Blue eyeliner that looked cobalt and turned out to be turquoise. (Cobalt eyeliner and mascara is my signature thing.)

Things you always put in your books: Pets with personality –and a role in solving the case!
Things you never put in your books: Children in danger.

Things to say to an author: I love your work.
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Gee, it looks so easy!

The funniest thing to happen to you: Walking in Manhattan’s Battery Park with a friend, we turned a corner and there she was. And I said, in the hill country accent I’d spent the last ten years working to lose: “Oh mah Gawd, it’s the Statue a’ Liberty!” My buddy just walked away like he didn’t know me

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: That time my dress fell off onstage during a college theatre production. I was a costume assistant, and I’d checked everyone’s outfits but my own. Good thing I was wearing dance underpinnings.

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books: We were at the Aquarium with our son, watching the beluga whale when there was suddenly a wave of liquid under it…and my son said, at full volume: “Look, Ma, the whale’s peeing!” It’s in the opening scene in MURDER ON THE SEA OTTER EXPRESS. 

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: Unlike Grace, I don’t poison people…though I’ve thought about it occasionally!

My favorite book as a child: ANNE OF GREEN GABLES.

A book I’ve read more than once: STRONG POISON, Dorothy Sayers.

About Nikki:

Nikki Knight is the pen name of Kathleen Marple Kalb, an anchor/author/mom…not in that order. The Agatha-nominated author of short stories and more than a dozen novels, she’s also a longtime weekend anchor at New York’s 1010 WINS Radio. Her book series include the Grace the Hit Mom, Vermont radio – and under her own name, Ella Shane and Old Stuff Mysteries. Active in writers’ groups, she’s currently a Marketing and Communications Liaison on the National Board of Sisters in Crime, and a past VP of the Short Mystery Fiction Society and NY/Tri-State SinC. She and her family live in a Connecticut house owned by a large calico cat.

Let’s Be Social:

Website: https://kathleenmarplekalb.com/

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/Nikki-Knight-101660128672615

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

Threads: @kathleenmarplekalb

Bluesky: @mysterymarple.bsky.social   

 

 

 

 

What To Do While You're Waiting...

I never realized how much I would be waiting in my writing life. I am not a patient person. I like websites that respond in three seconds, check-out lines that are short, and quick responses. And I’ve learned, not everyone is on my schedule. There is a lot of waiting when you decide to write or publish a book.

If you want to be traditionally published, there are things you will have wait for. You will wait months (if not years) to hear back about queries, for edits, and for cover designs.

Here are some things you can do while waiting:

  • Write your next book, especially if you are querying your first book. If you get a multiple book offer, you’ll need to have that second book ready for submission in year (or less).

  • Work on your newsletter and social media followings. If you are querying an agent or publisher, they do look at your web presence. After I sold my first book, I spent a lot of the waiting time between edits building up social media followings. It took a lot of time, but it was worth it to build up a base and a small street team.

  • Create or spiff up your website. Make sure it looks like you and your style of writing. Make sure that all of the buttons and links work. The colors, graphics, design, and fonts should be unified.

  • Join a writing group. They are wonderful for networking, finding opportunities, and learning about your craft and genre.

  • Find a critique partner or group to help you polish your manuscript.

#WriterWednesday Interview with Kristine Jensen

I’d like to welcome Kristine Jensen to the blog for #WriterWednesday!

Hardest thing about being a writer: As someone with a full-time writing job, making time to sit down and write my personal work

Easiest thing about being a writer: Letting the words flow once I sit down to write

Things you need for your writing sessions: My iPad with attached keyboard that has no access to email or social media

Things that hamper your writing: Getting sucked into my emails or social media

Words that describe you: Loyal, disciplined, trustworthy, hardworking, imaginative

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

Something you’re really good at: Coming up with creative solutions to problems

Something you’re really bad at: Sleeping

Last best thing you ate: Gingerbread cake

Last thing you regret eating: Stale tortilla chips at 2am

Favorite music or song: Female vocalists

Music that drives you crazy: Hard rock, some repetitive techno music

The last thing you ordered online: A 2026 calendar

The last thing you regret buying: A book about clearing clutter (it just makes me feel worse about all my stuff)

Things you’d walk a mile for: Almost anything, I love to walk

Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: A certain politician’s voice who shall go unnamed

Things you always put in your books: My heart and soul

Things you never put in your books: Murders

Favorite places you’ve been: Croatia, Southern France, Santa Barbara

Places you never want to go to again: Las Vegas

Favorite books (or genre): Fiction and historical fiction

Books you wouldn’t buy: Dystopian sci-fi

Favorite things to do: Reading, gardening, baking, hiking

Things you’d run through a fire or eat bugs to get out of doing: Removing a dead “gift” that our cat has brought into the house

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Climbed to the top of a fire lookout tree in a Montana forest

Something you chickened out from doing: Learning rock climbing from my son

The funniest thing to happen to you: I was talking about an ex-boyfriend to my mom and we ran into him and his new girlfriend in a mall — he must have heard me because we both turned red.

The most embarrassing thing to happen to you: I misspelled the last name of our CEO in a printed program for the company’s annual event with 10,000 attendees.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: My husband

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: Hmm…the celebrities I’ve met looked like their pictures.

The nicest thing a reader said to you: You’re a great writer, please keep writing.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: “It must be easy to write a memoir” — my book is fiction, not a memoir, and is set in 1963.

Besides writing, what’s the most creative thing you’ve done: Designed and planted beautiful flower gardens in our front and back yards

A project that didn’t quite turn out the way you planned it: Most recently, a fancy cake I baked got stuck in the pan and came out in pieces

Some real-life story that made it to one of your books: An incident with sheep who get caught in flood waters

Something in your story that readers think is about you, but it’s not: One reader thought the protagonist in Wednesday Club: A Novel was me, but Ivy is actually very different from me

The first 8-track, record, cassette, or CD you ever bought: Fleetwood Mac

A type of music that’s not your cup of tea: Hard rock

My favorite book as a child: Little House on the Prairie

A book I’ve read more than once: Ordinary Grace by William Kent Krueger

Your favorite movie as a child: Wizard of Oz

A TV show or movie that kept you awake at night as a kid (or as an adult): The movie Willard — a horror film about rats

About Kristine:

Kristine Jensen is a lifelong writer whose work spans scripts and storytelling for brands and organizations. Raised in South Dakota, Kristine drew inspiration for Wednesday Club: A Novel from the minutes of her grandmother’s women’s club. She lives in Oregon, where she writes fiction that celebrates unlikely friendships and the quiet power of small towns.

Let’s Be Social:

Website/social media: www.wednesday-club.com

Facebook: Wednesday Club Novel

Instagram: Wednesday_club_novel

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jensenkristine/