Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2014

Writing in My Sleep by Meglena Ivanova



Bulgarian author, blogger and essayist, based in New York, USA

Several months ago I decided to give a chance to any interest of mine which I really enjoy, so in the future I won't regret that I didn't let my talents create beautiful things. This is how I came up with the idea to try writing a novel. At the beginning I had difficulty in finding inspiration easy but it was only because I had some negative thoughts and distractions at that time of the year. Since I eliminated anything harmful to my inner peace I find inspiration very often and ideas come easier than ever. Sometimes words come to me while I'm watching movie or read magazines (I enjoy writing while reading), this is when I free myself, write ideas in my goal book and let my mind do the rest. Sometimes I just play with the words in order to give a start to my thoughts and it works. Other times ideas strike when least expected, for example two weeks ago I wrote a complete chapter after watching an exciting stage of the show Sleepy Hollows on TV. :) I know it sounds strange but sometimes strong impressions and emotions give me ideas, other times I don't even expect anything but words come while practicing yoga, watching news, walking to the store and my favorite is when I dream my stories while sleeping, that's why I always keep a notebook and a pen close to my bed. :) There are a few seconds just after you wake up from a dream when you remember it completely, so you have to write everything or at list what is on your mind in those seconds. The colors, the sounds, the shapes, the characters, what was said, even emotions, everything is important. When you can remember a dream vividly, it is important to grab every one of those memories and put them in a jar with a tightly sealed lid so that you can examine them later. Otherwise, they will quickly fly away into the distance. In those first seconds after I woke up from my dream nights, for example two days ago (1/03/2014) I had a dream night, I knew exactly what I had read - written - and I knew my exact reactions upon reading it. 



From those brief notes, I eventually wrote the first half of my second book -- The Bloodstone:  the Legend Continues, from the SACRED STONES trilogy (The Legend of the Moonstone:  A series for Kids and Young Adults is the first book of this trilogy).

Writing a good novel is hard. That's just life. If it were easy, we'd all be writing best-selling, prize-winning fiction or non-fiction. You have to put your heart and soul into it and give it everything you've go, even your dreams.)

Anyway, whenever writing ideas come they are invited : ) I suppose they come easier and often when we find peace in life, feel happy and grateful and enjoy life at all. : )

Hope you have many more exciting and unexpected writing ideas!

Please share them here or on my blog http://meglenaivanova.wordpress.com
or on my website:  http://meglenaivanova.com


Regards!
Meglena Ivanova

Smashwords - https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/377347

Friday, May 30, 2014

Guest Post Heather Shumaker, non-fiction author

How/why did you start to write?

I started writing dictated books as a child before I could read or write.  Luckily, I had teachers who understood that a love of stories and storytelling was far more important than learning the ABCs.  Thanks to them, I became a storyteller first – that all-important skill of developing “voice” before it got smothered by teaching writing.

How did you become an author?

I knew I wanted to be an author by age 4.  It took me a few decades to do it.  One reason it took so long is simply because of my deep admiration for authors. I feared I couldn’t live up to my own high expectations.  It takes “self-confidence guts” to take your writing seriously.  After you do that, you have to take drastic steps to carve out room for writing in your life.  By this I mean a professional attitude toward your writing dreams – plonking down money to attend writing conferences, devoting time to a writing routine, and learning as much as you can about the business of publishing.  For years I thought I’d write when I had more time, but the reality is no one ever has time to write first books.  We are always busy with jobs and raising kids and caring for parents and doing the dishes, and…  We just have to recognize that NOW is the time we have for writing.  For me, that meant getting up early at 5:30am before the kids woke up and writing 1- 1 ½  hours every day.  It also meant paying for daycare so I could spend blocks of time on writing.

I followed the traditional publishing path to become an author.  I spent 2-3 years researching agents and the publishing process, took an online course on writing book proposals, attended ASJA conferences in New York, and joined a writing group.  By the time the information presented in conference sessions and magazine articles about finding an agent began to feel repetitive and “old news,” I knew I was ready.  I sent out 6 queries through the regular slush pile and got 4 agents interested, so I was able to interview them and choose one.  That also told me I was ready.  I think a lot of authors jump too fast and don’t spend time doing their homework.

What was your first published piece? -Where was it published? -How long ago?

My first pieces were “freebie” magazine stories.  No pay, but publication.  My first paid article was an essay about worms in Organic Gardening back in 2000. I was so happy I blew all the money on a plane ticket to Paris.  It was a great reward – to mark that milestone. 

I turned to writing books after magazines cut back their freelancing budgets.  My first book It’s OK Not to Share…And Other Renegade Rules for Raising Competent and Compassionate Kids was published by Tarcher/ Penguin in 2012.  I’ve been promoting it ever since and my publisher has just asked for a sequel due out in 2015.

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?

My work was primarily in the nonprofit world. I worked for 15 years with environmental groups doing land conservation.  I often think this background was a tremendous asset because it made me realize how incredibly busy editors and agents are.  I always felt busy and overworked at the nonprofits and guarded my time carefully.  This background helped me develop professional business skills and helped me approach agents and publishers respectfully. My writing may be creative, but sharing it with the world follows accepted rules of business courtesy.  Nothing new here, but many writers seem to think business can’t coexist with the muse.

What inspires you?

My first book was a parenting book – a renegade one that questions parenting conventions like automatic sharing, saying ‘sorry’ when you don’t mean it, and limiting rough play.  I also write children’s fiction and stories about the environment.  I’m inspired to help those who can’t help themselves – that includes young children and the environment. I think my own life expectancy inspires me; there are so many books I want to write and only a limited time to create them.

Please share one of your successful author platform building techniques

First, you write your book.  Then you speak your book.  I’ve found numerous speaking engagements, which lead to more speaking engagements, and now invitations to headline conferences and be the keynote speaker. But first I had to reach out to local libraries, book clubs, and parent groups and speak for free or for a modest honorarium.  Also, produce quality work and ideas.  Then readers will promote it for you because they get so excited about your book.  My book was chosen as a Best Parenting Book of 2012 by Parents magazine’s Parents.com, and readers become strong fans.

Parting words

I offer book proposal coaching (for nonfiction authors) and highly recommend working one-on-one with someone to create your first proposal. Nonfiction is easier to break into than fiction, so if you have an interest in both, try starting your publication path with the nonfiction book idea.



Feel free to keep up with author news and renegade parenting ideas through my blog Starlighting Mama and website www.heathershumaker.com where you can sign up for a free author newsletter.  Links to popular blog posts include Why we say “No” to Homework and Throw Away your Timer: Why Kids Learn More When They Don’t “Share.”  Or by Facebook at Heather Shumaker Writer.



Buy the book at any bookstore or online.  Plentiful reviews here.



  
It’s OK Not to Share…

Tired of being the referee?  Eager for new ideas to guide kids through wild emotions and squabbles? “Renegade Parenting” breaks down age-old parenting conventions through 29 renegade rules.  Based on the philosophy of an unorthodox Ohio preschool, this book shares child development principles through a unique blend of forty years on-the-ground experience with evidence from emerging neuroscience.  Learn counterintuitive ideas about sharing, saying ‘sorry,’ coping with angry outbursts, rough play, social rejection, toy weapons and other topics.  Be prepared to change your mind.

"An insightful, sensible and compassionate book full of downright revolutionary ideas." –Salon.com

"Brilliant. . . . It's OK Not to Share is an enlightening book that will make you take a second look at everything you believe." –Parents.com

"Rarely do parenting books trigger in me an exhale. But the title alone for Heather Shumaker’s new book came like that rare August breeze." –The Washington Post "On Parenting"

"Did you read the title and think, what the heck? Me, too. Not only did I read it to figure out the title, I underlined about a third–it's that good." –Melissa Taylor, ImaginationSoup.net
  


Heather Shumaker is the author of It’s OK Not to Share…And Other Renegade Rules for Raising Competent and Compassionate Kids (Tarcher/ Penguin August 2012), named a Best Parenting Book of 2012 by Parents magazine, and regional bestseller. She’s a speaker, journalist, blogger and advocate for free play and no homework for young children.  She’s been featured on Fox & Friends TV, Huffington Post, New York Post, Parenting, Parents.com, USA Weekend, Wisconsin Public Radio and other media.  Heather is a graduate of Swarthmore College (BA) and University of Wisconsin-Madison (MS) and the mother of two young children.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Guest Post thriller author Michael W Sherer

From the author of the 2013 Thriller Award-nominated Night Blind comes the second Blake Sanders thriller, Night Tide.



Friends don’t let friends go to jail and live to tell about it. Twenty-some years ago, Blake Sanders’s best friend Perry Langford was arrested and convicted of murder for a campus bombing, but Langford always maintained his innocence, claiming someone else blew up the building. Not even Blake knows what really happened, and he was there, a secret he’s kept all these years. Now Langford is out of prison, and he’s gunning for all those he holds responsible for his stint in stir, including Blake. Whoever planted the bomb is cleaning up loose ends, and the prize they’re still seeking after all this time—a revolutionary battery design—is worth a fortune, even worth selling out one’s own country…and killing for.

"A great, great read! NIGHT TIDE is on my (very) short list for 2013 awards. Once again, a crime from the past entangles Sherer's nocturnal hero Blake Sanders in its present-day repercussions, and once again Sherer makes Seattle at night the perfect setting for a thriller full of unexpected twists, darkness (literal and metaphorical) and wonderful, three-dimensional characters. Even better than NIGHT BLIND, and that's not easy." –Timothy Hallinan, author of The Fame Thief

“Michael W. Sherer's solid, sure-footed prose reminds me of some of my favorite crime writers of the past. Night Tide shows an author at the height of his faculties, with a tight, well-constructed story and characters that leap from the page. I'll definitely be back for more.” –Robert Gregory Browne, author of Trial Junkies 2: Negligence

“I am an unabashed fan of Michael W. Sherer's books. His unlikely hero, Blake Sanders, has a newspaper route and an unsavory past--yet he's the guy you'd want if your back's ever against the wall. Add the beauty of Washington state and enough interesting and quirky characters to fill a phalanx of float planes, and you have a cracking good story and a first-rate thriller. Blake is oh-so-human--a regular guy, but from the moment you meet him you know he'll pull you through. Sherer holds his own with the big guys of the genre.” – J. Carson Black, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of The Survivors Club 

“An interesting thriller, and an interesting protagonist. Very well worth reading.” – Willa, Goodreads (4 stars)

“A great thriller, one I have no hesitation in recommending.” – Brenda, Goodreads (4 stars)


“As with NIGHT BLIND, this offering is both a thriller and a mystery, written by a writer who shows a deft storyline execution, economical yet telling character development, and expertly built conflict.” – Hal Johnson, Amazon (5 stars)


How/why did you start to write?

The one subject in college I felt reasonably confident of passing was my native language, English. Pass I did, with Cs, Bs and the occasional A.

The school used a 4-1-4 semester system—two semesters of four courses/credits each, in between which fell the month of January, otherwise known as “Winter Study,” when all sorts of eclectic courses were in the catalog, and grading was pass/fail. A creative writing course was offered my junior year. Since it was in English, I figured I could pass.

The course was taught by an alum who had graduated ten years earlier. In the first few classes he told us about his own creative writing experience. He’d gone to live with his grandmother in Spain the year after graduation and had written a novel about college life. Upon his return he sent it around to the major NYC publishers where it eventually found a home after about 17 rejections. The book became an instant bestseller, and was made into a major motion picture starring Liza Minnelli. His second book, bought by the publisher before it was written and finished under deadline pressure, bombed. Critics hated it and few people bought it. He married, moved to Taos, N.M., and wrote for a muckraking newspaper and had been working on his third novel for six years.

I decided then and there that I wanted to be a novelist. What a great life! Write a bestseller, sell the movie rights and sit around a pool in Taos living off the royalties!

The teacher was John Nichols. His first book was The Sterile Cuckoo, and the book he was writing the year I met him (published a year later) was The Milagro Beanfield War.

How did you become an author?

The easy answer is, by writing. I didn’t call myself an author for years, thinking the term was somehow reserved for those who write best-selling books. But I do feel a certain reverence for the term. Anyone who writes a book can call himself an author. If the book’s so bad that no one reads it, though, the term is meaningless.

So, let’s start with how I wrote my first book. During my senior year of college, due to a series of unfortunate events, I failed my winter study course. (Not my fault, I swear. Oddly, the only two courses I ever failed were both pass-fail college winter study programs.) As a result, I had to over-elect the final semester of senior year to have enough credits to graduate. Since I found out too late to register for courses, I begged an English professor I knew to sponsor an independent study in creative writing. He asked me what I intended to do. I told him I was going to write a novel. He said if I actually finished, he would give me a B.

Though I’d never written anything longer than a 25-page term paper, I decided there couldn’t be anything more to writing a novel than sitting down and typing out a story until it was over. So that’s what I did, and by the time the semester—and the story—ended I’d written a 385-page novel. A bad one, but a novel nevertheless.

What was your first published piece?

I graduated from college with a degree in English, which is good for one of two things: teaching and washing dishes. I ended up washing dishes in a restaurant in Denver, and kicked around for several years in a number of jobs. In 1978, I finally got a job in Chicago working for a trade magazine called Foodservice Distributor Salesman because of my background in the restaurant business. The features and news items I wrote for that magazine were my first published pieces. Since then I’ve written more than 500 feature articles for a wide range of magazines.

My first book, though wasn’t published until 1988. My first novel (the one I wrote in college) went into a drawer. I wrote another, a mystery, shortly after graduating. I started a third and wrote 250 pages before putting it aside. A few years later, after moving to Chicago, I met an agent who took me on and tried to get a contract for me on the basis of partials. He wasn’t successful, of course, and after we parted ways, I wrote a fourth novel.

I worked on that book for several years before I thought it was good enough to sell, and started sending it around to publishers in 1985. Back then, editors still responded to query letters, and authors could send books in “over the transom” with representation. I sent the book to dozens of editors, and at one point got a very nice, personal note from an editor at Dodd, Mead who said it was better than most manuscripts that crossed her desk. Her encouragement prompted me to call her and ask if she would be willing to look at another book in the same series. She said she would. Problem was I didn’t have another book.

However, I did have 250 pages of a novel I’d started, and I felt I could fix it without too much trouble and finish it. I rewrote the book in about three months and sent it to the same editor. This time I asked if she could possibly read it in a few weeks as I had a business trip to New York planned, and I wanted to take her to lunch to talk about it. She said, “Lunch is one of the things I do best.”

The fateful day came. I met her in her editorial offices in New York. She came out to reception and said, “I’m taking you to lunch,” which I was sure meant that she was going to offer me a contract. At lunch, though, after we’d ordered, she told me she wasn’t going to buy this book, either. The problem, she said, was that it was a Chicago-based series, but the book took place in upstate New York, so it couldn’t possibly be the first in the series. My heart sank.

But she raised my hopes a moment later by saying, “Send me the first book again. I’ll take another look, and if I don’t absolutely hate it, I’ll show it around to some people in the office and see what they think.” Fortunately, the book had been making the rounds in New York for so long that the publisher’s sales VP had seen the manuscript when he was at a different house and had loved it. So, the two of them convinced the editorial board to make me an (very modest) offer.

I gladly accepted, and An Option On Death was published in 1988. Sadly, Dodd, Mead, in business since 1839, went bankrupt in 1990.

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?

My non-fiction writing career—first as a trade magazine editor, then as an account executive in a public relations agency and finally as a freelancer—has been both a help and a hindrance. Writing is like almost any other craft. It takes practice to become good. Everyone from figure skaters to needlepointers must constantly hone his or her skills to improve. So I appreciate the opportunities I’ve had to work at my craft. But working as a freelance writer takes time away from writing fiction, regrettably.

All the other jobs I’ve had—dishwashing, bartending, photography, employee benefits consulting, lumber yard go-fer etc.—have contributed to my general knowledge as well as expose me to situations and people I’ve been able to draw upon when writing.

What inspires you?

Great writing inspires me. I believe there are three kinds of authors (discounting those who are downright awful)—those who tell a great story but don’t write well (think early John Grisham); those who write beautifully but wouldn’t know a plot if it bit them (think Wallace Stegner); and those who tell a page-turning yarn in language that sings. I try to be one of the latter, and my goal is to make each book better than the one before.

My other great inspiration is my wife Valarie. She makes me want to be a better person every day.

Please share one of your successful author platform building technique

I don’t think anyone has that piece of the puzzle figured out yet. Most authors have websites, participate on social media and use the standard promotion strategies—book tours, blogs, appearances at conferences, etc. But few can tell you exactly what worked for them and what didn’t.

Stephen White, the Boulder, Colo., thriller author once said that he became a best-selling author through sheer serendipity. When his second book came out in paperback, the lead title for that publication month wasn’t ready. Five minutes before editors at his publisher broke for lunch after putting aside the topic of what to do about the problem, someone raised the question again. An editor piped up, “What about White’s book?” Since everyone was hungry, the suggestion passed unanimously, and the publisher did a 400,000-copy print run, putting Stephen White’s name in front of customers everywhere.

I think you just have to keep writing good books and hope that eventually readers find you. My first Blake Sanders thriller was nominated for an ITW Thriller Award in 2013. I was sure that my sales would rocket upwards as a result. It had no effect. So, who knows?

Parting words

I’ve heard the same words from writers everywhere—those of us who keep doing it, putting out books no matter what, can’t not write. It’s what we do. It’s who we are—authors.


Michael W. Sherer is the author of Night Tide, the second novel in the Blake Sanders thriller series. The first in the Seattle-based series, Night Blind, was nominated for an ITW Thriller Award in 2013. His other books include the award-winning Emerson Ward mystery series, the stand-alone suspense novel, Island Life, and the Tess Barrett YA thriller series. He and his family now reside in the Seattle area.

Please visit him at www.michaelwsherer.com or you can follow him on Facebook at www.facebook.com/thrillerauthor and on Twitter @MysteryNovelist.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Interview with Author Sheila Johnston

How/why did you start to write?
 I love theatre, history and non-fiction books. So it made sense to me to start to write in 1991 about Canadian theatre performer E. Pauline Johnson-Tekahionwake (b. 1861 – d. 1913). Miss Johnson’s extraordinary life as a performing poet ticked all my boxes…theatre/history/non-fiction.

How did you become an author?
 When Natural Heritage Press of Toronto, Ontario put me under contract for my Pictorial biography about Miss Johnson, I became an author.

What was your first published piece?
 1997 saw the publication of BUCKSKIN & BROADCLOTH: A Celebration of E. Pauline Johnson.

Where was it published?
Toronto, Ontario

How long ago?
16 years ago

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?
I worked as a Communications Officer at professional theatre companies in Canada and England. It was definitely an asset to my writing. I understood how hard a job writing is.

What inspires you?
Canadian history.

Please share one of your successful author platform building technique
Hand-written notes thanking people who take the time to (1) read my book and (2) communicate their thoughts with me.

Parting words
LIFE makes you smarter;

But LIVING makes you wiser.


Thursday, January 23, 2014

Guest Post: Author Jan Degrass

The Prison Dance is available on order from any bookstore through Ingrams and can be ordered in paperback or as an ebook from Amazon.com.  In addition, the book is listed in Ingram's data base as returnable until August 2014, an offer any bookseller can take advantage of in tat time period. For further information go to the website  www.theprisondance.com

How did you become an author?
I became an author because I had promised Palestinian women political prisoners, many years ago, that I would tell their story. I also had to write about my experiences as a way to attempt to understand what I had personally been through. Not least, I had to write because creative expression has always been as necessary to me as breath.

What was your first published piece?
My memoir The Prison Dance is my first published piece.



(please click on images to embolden)

Where was it published?-How long ago?
It was published with Xlibris a year ago.  

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?
Before writing, I was a contemporary ballet dancer, touring and performing internationally. When I began to write I was still teaching dance and choreographing. The creative process was ingrained in me and this was extremely useful when I set out to write.

What inspires you?
Tales of hardships endured and the triumph of the human spirit inspire me. I read a great deal and am constantly in awe and grateful to authors who can translate their life experiences with deftly chosen words. Although I read a lot of fiction, I especially love memoirs of adventure travel and exploration, prison survival experiences, altruistic aid and activism, and lifetime goals achieved through self-sacrifice and innovative or even synchronistic means.

Please share one of your successful author platform building technique
I am nothing if not tenacious. It took me a very long time to write the book as I came up against a great many obstacles but I believed in what I was trying to say and kept at it. Now that the book is published and I have received enthusiastic and positive feedback I know that all the gruelling work was worth it to make the connections I have thus far.

Parting words
I hope as many people as possible will read The Prison Dance because I feel Palestinian freedom is central to the maintenance of worldwide peace in our time and that this memoir is more accessible than many books written regarding the Palestinian question. That is to say, the book includes stories of my own exploits and tales of an era (the end of the sixties) which, in retrospect, seem rather humorous. Because of this, many readers have told me that despite the profound nature of the book they found  The Prison Dance entertaining and intriguing as well as informative.




(Please click on article to embolden the text)

Friday, January 17, 2014

Guest Post: Story Girl by Author Katherine Carlson





The Story Girl burns to entertain. 
Yes.  Story Girl is slightly autobiographical, just like all the other stories I've penned.  But only slightly.
Tracy Johnston was incredibly fun to create; her perspective kept my jaw on the floor for most of the time.  She is deeply determined but equally insecure - an insecurity born of a history of rejection in the film biz.
Tracy is sharp and quirky, and possesses a biting, often self-deprecating sense of humour.  She is overstressed, confused, and prone to meltdown.  But her ambition to tell interesting stories keeps her on secure footing - no matter how much she may seem to sway.

Story Girl explores the dynamics of epic dualities: family vs. ambition; roles vs. individuality; and expectation vs. reality.  It's up to our flawed heroine to traverse such daunting chasms.  And we - the sacred audience - get to experience in her often wild attempts at trying to bridge those gaps.

Also written by Katherine Carlson...


I enjoyed watching Katherine Carlson's interview on The Luisa Marshall Show. You may enjoy watching it too.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Guest Post Author Janet Love Morrison


“In order to write about life first you must live it.”
Ernest Hemingway

Janet Love Morrison was born in Toronto, Canada and grew up in Port Coquitlam, near Vancouver, BC. She spent a lot of her life travelling around the world doing a variety of jobs while living in Switzerland, Israel, India, Japan and Malaysia.

Travelling inspired Love Morrison to document was she felt, what she saw and what she heard. Her writing has appeared in the Pique Newsmagazine, which is published in Whistler, BC, one of Canada’s famed ski resorts, the Globe and Mail, one of Canada’s two national newspapers and several other publications.

“Refugees, children, taxi drivers, fellow travellers, work colleagues, family, friends, Dhyan Vimal, founder of Friends to Mankind, His Holiness the Dalai Lama and so many, many more remarkable people have been my teachers.

From the Himalayas, to the Alps; from the Andes to the Rocky Mountains; I have encountered this planet and I write to honour the courage of those who have met life challenges and rose to be the best they can be. They have sparked the belief in me that when we all rise to be the best we can be humanity will rise to be the best it can be.”

Love Morrison first started editing in 2004 for Masters’ World magazine in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Since that tenure she has embraced a wide variety of editing assignments including: websites, brochures, resumes, magazine articles, real estate advertisements and so much more. Those creative experiences, combined with teaching English grammar as an ESL teacher for 11 years, are what make Love Morrison a well-rounded editor today.

In addition, Love Morrison is available for speaking engagements for she has appeared on television, radio and various other platforms to speak on different subject matters.

And finally, Love Morrison is an Ambassador for Friends to Mankind, an international non-profit foundation that works with individuals, corporation and philanthropic organizations towards the betterment of humanity.

“If your work is just work, then you haven’t found your work, but if your work is your life, then you have found your life.”
Dhyan Vimal, Founder, Friends to Mankind



How/why did you start to write?

From the Himalayas, to the Alps; from the Andes to the Rocky Mountains; I have encountered this planet and I write to honour the courage of those who have met life challenges and rose to be the best they can be. They have sparked the belief in me that when we all rise to be the best we can be humanity will rise to be the best it can be.

What was your first published piece?

My first article was published in The Whistler Question in 1992.
Sponsored by a local pizza parlour, the paper offered to publish travel stories in exchange for extra-large pizzas. The article was titled, Cabbie a Cultural Oasis at Border Crossing, and chronicled my journey across the Sinai Desert into the Gaza Strip in 1985. I was pretty excited about the pizza!

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?

I’ve spent many, many years outside of Canada and my intent has been to honour and celebrate people who have met their challenges, for I believe they inspire others to rise too.

What inspires you?

This quote:
“If your work is just work, then you haven’t found your work, but  if your work is your life, then you have found your life.” Dhyan Vimal, Founder, Friends to Mankind

Please share one of your successful author platform building technique

For me, I try to always be conscious of my beliefs and intent before I write.

Parting words

What are you creating? What are you moving towards? What is the vision you are holding for your writing and yourself? What are you willing to do?



Radar the Rescue Dog
Author: Janet Love Morrison
Illustrator: Zuzana Riha Driediger
Foreword: Justin Trudeau

Released: October 2013
        Categories:   Juvenile Fiction, Animals Dogs
                                     Juvenile Fiction, Sports & Recreation
                                     Juvenile Fiction, Winter Sports
                                  
ISBN Numbers:
Paperback: 978-1-4602-2575-2
eBook: 978-1-4602-2576-9

Friesen Press, Inc.
Suite 300 – 852 Fort Street
Victoria, BC
V8W 1H8
CANADA

Tel: 1.888.378.6793
Email: publishing@friesenpress.com

Bookstore: http://www.friesenpress.com/bookstore/title/119734000011498168

Radar the Rescue Dog is a fictitious children’s story based on a real dog. Three adventurous young skiers venture beyond the ski area boundary and find themselves lost on Whistler Mountain. Radar is their hero. It’s a simple plot to teach young skiers and snowboarders mountain safety awareness.

In 1978 Radar was Whistler’s first avalanche rescue dog. His home was Whistler and his owner was Bruce Watt, one of the original founders of the Canadian Avalanche Rescue Dog Association (CARDA).

The safety of mountain guests is critical in all ski areas. Much like we are taught about the hazards of water, electricity and fire, we must also teach young people about the fundamentals of mountain safety. This is the intent of Radar the Rescue Dog.

Justin Trudeau has written the foreword. His brother Michel was tragically killed in an avalanche in November 1998. Since then the Trudeau family has participated in mountain awareness.

Radar is endorsed by the Canadian Avalanche Foundation; the Canadian National Ski Patrol; the Canadian Avalanche Rescue Dog Association; Whistler Search and Rescue; and Dave Irwin and Steve Podborski of the famed Crazy Canucks.

 About the Illustrator:
Zuzana Riha Driediger lives in Revelstoke BC, and has been a member of CARDA since 1993. She currently sits on the board of directors for the organization and helps instruct rescue teams when required. She is presently training her third avalanche rescue dog who looks a lot like Radar.

For information about Janet Love Morrison's other books, please visit this site

Janet Love Morrison's video about her book Friends: Six Women, Six Cultures, One Humanity


Friday, December 27, 2013

Guest Post Author Carrie Snyder




Carrie Snyder's latest book -- The Juliet Stories -- was a finalist for the 2012 Governor General's Award for fiction, and her novel, Girl Runner, was published in Canada by House Anansi.

How/why did you start to write?
I’ve wanted to be a writer since I started reading books (or perhaps slightly thereafter, when I realized that the books I loved reading were written by people called writers). I love words, language, ideas. I seem to have infinite patience for the technical challenges of writing books: crafting characters and story in ways that use carefully deliberated structure to create momentum, suspense, surprise, pleasure, and emotion for the reader.

How did you become an author?
My first published poems were written when I was 16 and still in high school, and were published three years later in a well-respected Canadian literary journal. Over the years I’ve had many mentors who have encouraged and guided me, including teachers and editors. My first job after graduating from U of Toronto with an MA in English Literature was in the books section of the National Post newspaper. This was an excellent crash course on the publishing industry. The steps to becoming a published author are too tedious to recount here, but suffice it to say that there were rejections and disappointments along the way, but I found an agent, who sold my first book, Hair Hat, to Penguin Canada, and it was published when I was 29. I never gave up, despite rejection.

What was your first published piece?
Two untitled poems, published in The New Quarterly. Small literary magazines are enormously important in the life of a beginning writer. Enough cannot be said about the hard-working, eagle-eyed, supportive, gentle, warmly enthusiastic editors who nurture new writers and help bring them to maturity.

How long ago?
My first poems appeared in 1994. My first book was published a decade later in 2004.

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?
I always intended to be a writer. I aimed myself at developing a career as a fiction writer from a very early age. I have degrees in English Literature, and my only real “job-job” was at the National Post, where I worked in the books section, and then later as a copy editor, and also wrote for the arts section. A great deal of reading and writing – any form of writing – can only be an asset to one’s career as a writer.

What inspires you?
I love a good story. And I love an iconoclastic character, perhaps an outsider, or someone who pushes the boundaries of convention in their time. I read the obituaries faithfully. I’m fascinated by how we make choices in our lives, and how bound we humans are by our own flaws; but also how adversity is overcome, painful rifts mended sometimes, and sometimes really beautiful things happen against all odds. I love the flaws in a character, almost as much as the strengths. Flaws are what make us interesting. Relationships are fascinating too. We are who we are in relation to others.

Parting words
Thanks for your interest in my books and my blog, Leanne. Good luck with your own writing!
(Thank you for the well wishes. It was a pleasure having you visit.)



author photo taken by Nancy Forde

Visit Carrie Snyder's popular blog:  Obscure CanLit Mama

Friday, December 6, 2013

Guest Post Author Brock W.B. Clayards (thriller author)


How/why did you start to write?

I have always been a story teller. Even as a little boy I would recount events in the neighborhood as they inspired or impressed me. This occasionally had a down side as my parents tended to take these reports with a grain of salt. One incident in particular stands out. My parents refused to come to the top window in our house for a look see, at one of the biggest building fires in Dartmouth where we lived at the time. Not until the sounds of approaching fire sirens were evident was I able to convince them.
It was a natural progression for me to commit my stories to paper.

How did you become an author?

I was bored one rainy Sunday afternoon in Port Alberni. My wife was using the internet computer for school work so I sat down at our stand alone keyboard and began recounting an event that had occurred early in my police career. One paragraph led to another and soon I was hooked writing my first novel.

What was your first published piece?

Pacific Flyways was my first novel. It is a thriller set on the north end of Vancouver Island involving a plan to infect migrating wildfowl with a deadly strain of the H1N5 virus, Avian Flu.

Where was it published?

The novel is published as an e book and is available through Amazon or Smashwords.com

How long ago?

It hit the either last September 2012.

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?

 I was a member of the RCM Police. Included in my varied service was a stint with their counter terrorism section, Middle Eastern division. I spent several years in Ottawa chasing agents from Sadam Hussein’s Iraqi secret police operating in Canada under diplomatic cover. This combined with several years of small town policing on Vancouver Island helped inspire my book.

What inspires you?

 I love detail and research. My formal training is as a historian so I guess this comes from hours of working on essays in university. The trick is to write about things in such a way that my readers will catch the bug. 

Please share one of your successful author platform building techniques.

I have arranged a book reading in conjunction with a popular local musician. The two of us did our thing and shared venue, costs and benefits. He was glad of the audience and shared expenses while I was glad of his notoriety to pull in a crowd.
 
Parting words

 My next book, Chasing the Dragon’s Tail, is a historical thriller set in Victoria at the start of the Great War. It is an adventure transporting the reader from the gritting brick enclaves of Victoria’s Chinatown, to the Sea of Cortez and back. Redvers Duncan, a Victoria City constable, battles drug tongs and German spies. He is faced with rescuing his beloved Wynn, a feisty school teacher, while trying to thwart an Irish Nationalist/German plot to sink the Canadian battle cruiser HMCS Rainbow.  The book should be available in the New Year from Diamond River Books in both E book and traditional hard copy.



Book Description (from Amazon)
'Every year thousands of migrating birds fill the skies of North America. This year a madman plans to infect them with a deadly strain of the avain flue, turning them into flying time bombs...and you thought The Birds was scary.
RCMP Constable Grayden Swift and Federal Fisheries Officer Janice Mason, rookies in their respective careers, confront terrorists, thieves, and romantic complications in the small town of Pasquin Cove. Pacific Flyways is a tale of action, sex, and intrigue in one of the most beautifully rugged areas of North America; the Broughton Archipelago.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Guest Post Author Susan Schoenberger


How/why did you start to write?
 I started to write seriously in my late 30s as a creative outlet that tapped into a different part of my journalist's brain. I don't like embellished writing as journalism, so I needed another venue to play with words.

How did you become an author?
 That was a very long road. I first wrote a novel that didn't go anywhere, then started working on short stories. When I attempted writing a novel again, I was fortunate enough to win a contest that helped me, eventually, find an agent. But even then, it took two years to sell A Watershed Year. Since then, I've had some rough luck and some great luck. Borders, which was much more enthusiastic about my book than Barnes & Noble, filed for bankruptcy just as it was coming out, so that didn't help. But then my editor at Guideposts Books moved to Seattle and got a job with Amazon Publishing, where she told them about my book. They are re-releasing it in November, which will give it another life, and they also bought my next novel, The Virtues of Oxygen.

What was your first published piece?
It was a short story called "Intercession," and it's the basis for the first chapter of my novel. 

Where was it published?
 It was published in the small journal Inkwell, which is based at Manhattanville College.

How long ago?
That was 2002. 

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?
 I was a reporter and a copy editor, and both of those helped me as a fiction writer. The reporting skills are important for research, and the editing skills help me to fine-tune my own work.

What inspires you?
 Many other writers inspire me, as well as anyone who pursues a craft and really tries to untie the knots of what makes art successful and meaningful.

Please share one of your successful author platform building technique
I'm convinced that Twitter is a meaningful endeavor, but I haven't had enough time to devote to tweeting and building my followers. So please follow me on Twitter! https://twitter.com/schoenwriter

Parting words
Thanks for the opportunity to share my story. 
(You're most welcome, Susan. I enjoyed reading about your author journey. And I wish you much success with A Watershed Year.)


Blurb:

A woman in the midst of heartbreak finds renewed purpose in her life when she decides to adopt a young boy from Russia in this powerful and triumphant debut novel.
Two months after the death of her best friend Harlan, Lucy remains haunted by the things she never told him. Then she begins receiving emails he'd arranged to be sent after his death, emails that will change the course of her life. One email in particular haunts her -- he tells her he is certain she is destined for motherhood. Thus begins her watershed year.
Links
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