Author Archives: Aya Walksfar

About Aya Walksfar

Born on the wrong side of a big city, Aya’s illiterate grandfather and nearly-illiterate grandmother with the assistance of a Carnegie librarian taught Aya to read and write by the age of six. Aya's novels feature remarkable women who make difficult decisions. Connect with Aya: http://www.facebook.com/ayawalksfar Check out Aya's novels: http://www.amazon.com/author/ayawalksfar

MEET SERGEANT SLOWATER, SPECIAL CRIMES TEAM

Interviewer:  Sergeant Slowater, thank you so much for coming to visit with us today. I am pleased to interview you, again.

Sergeant Slowater: Look, this interview wasn’t my idea. It was strongly suggested that I participate in your series about the Special Crimes Team, so here I am. As I told you before: I am not a fan of the media.

Interviewer: Yes, I believe you did make that clear the last time I spoke with you, Sergeant, but I am happy to have the opportunity to see if we might forge a bit more amicable relationship. With that in mind, I have given a great deal of thought to what I’d like to ask you. (Interviewer stops and waits for acknowledgement from Sergeant Slowater)

Sergeant Slowater: (shrugs) Whatever.

Interviewer: I understand that you lived in Mount#Vernon before moving to Seattle. How do you like Seattle?

Sergeant Slowater: (Frowns): I am not a fan of big cities. Too much noise. Too many people all crowded together.

Interviewer: (Raises an eyebrow): Why did you transfer here if you feel that way?

Sergeant Slowater: Let’s just say it was strongly advised as a wise career choice.

Interviewer: Okay. Since you don’t like big cities, can you tell me why you like smaller cities?

Sergeant Slowater:  (looks at interviewer and restlessly taps fingers on chair arm) They’re the opposite of big cities. Quieter, not as crowded.  Where I grew up, there was farmland all around us.

Interviewer;  Tell me something else about Mount Vernon, Sergeant.

Sergeant Slowater: Like what?

Interviewer (gives a small shrug) Whatever you would like to share. Like what is your favorite time of year up there?

Sergeant Slowater: The spring. (gives a little smile) I love how the trees start leafing out, and I like going up to the tulip fields in bloom. There are rows and rows of colors: red and yellow are the most prominent, but the one I like best is the deep purple; the orange-red ones are my choice for second best.

Interviewer: That sounds lovely. You know, I’ve never gone up during the Tulip Festival. I think I might have to, now. (gives a warm smile to Sergeant Slowater) There is one thing I think Mount Vernon cannot ever top Seattle in: the best pizza. (Interviewer gives a sad shake of head)

Sergeant Slowater: (slight snort): Seattle has nothing on Mount Vernon in a pizza contest. The absolutely best pizza I have ever eaten came from a place in Old Town, called Pacioni’s.

Voted Best Pizza in Skagit County! Best Pizza in Western Washington per Sergeant Slowater!

Voted Best Pizza in Skagit County! Best Pizza in Western Washington per Sergeant Slowater!

You can buy a pizza from the list of different ones, or you can build your own. You start with a crisp, thin crust, then you pick from a list of sauces, meats, fruits, veggies and cheeses. There’s three different sauces. My favorite is marinara. Then you have eight different meats; I like Pacioni’s Italian sausage and Black Forest Ham. Then you add the fruits and veggies. I love the roasted red peppers, Kalamata olives, Portabella mushrooms, zucchini, and pineapple for a bit of sweetness.  That’s all topped off with a choice of seven cheeses. The ones I like are feta, shredded parmesan and shredded mozzarella.

Interviewer: Now I’m hungry, and challenged. I’ll have to try Pacioni’s.  I didn’t know Mount Vernon had an Old Town section.

Sergeant Slowater: Some of the buildings there date back to 1906. The Lincoln Theatre dates back to 1926.

Lincoln Theatre Mt Vernon Washington

Lincoln Theatre Mt Vernon Washington

Interviewer: Are old buildings of special interest to you?

Sergeant Slowater: (gives a solid head shake) Not really. I’m not a history buff, and I don’t get all gaga over the way a building is built or who the architect was. I just like how some of the older buildings look, the sense of having been a survivor of unplanned progress and unconsidered development. It makes me think there are people who value the old, not because it’s old, but because it’s beautiful, and functional and solid.  Something you can depend on. Some of the buildings built today won’t last fifty, much less a hundred years.

Interviewer: I have to admit. I like old buildings, too. I like the sense that if they could talk they would have fantastic stories to tell. (looks at watch) We don’t have a lot of time left, so tell me, Sergeant Slowater, what are the three best things you remember about growing up in Mount Vernon?

Sergeant Slowater: I didn’t grow up in town, just close to it, and the area was still considered Mount Vernon. What did I like about it? (purses lips and gazes off thinking. Fingers tapping again) Fresh food. There’s farm stands during the summer, plus Farmer’s Markets–usually on Saturdays–and the Skagit Valley Food Co-op year round.

Fresh, organic food!

Fresh, organic food!

The Food Co-op has been around for forty years–before I was born–and is still the place to buy organic food,

Vine ripe Tomatoes!

Vine ripe Tomatoes!

free-range meat including pork, and well, it just smells interesting. I go into most food stores and there isn’t any smell to them. When I walk into the Co-op that is one of the first things that happens: I’m greeted by these spicy, sweet, tangy smells. All of them pleasant, and intriguing.

The second thing I like about Mount Vernon and Skagit County is the farms. Tulip farms, berry farms, alpaca, cattle, and horse farms, flower farms. There is myriad things grown around the Mount Vernon/Skagit County area. It is a place that feels….well, for want of a better word, alive. Alive and hopeful. Do you know what I mean?

Interviewer: Yes, yes, I believe I do.

Sergeant Slowater: (gives a little smile) THE thing I love about that area, though, is a little produce stand called The Snow Goose Produce Market. It’s up close to La Conner. It has homemade ice cream, the longest list of flavors I have ever seen, and waffle cones made right there as you are ordering your ice cream. You can smell the sweet smell of waffles cooking. And the ice cream scoops are GINORMOUS! They even have some specialty ice cream from Lopez Island. I love the Skagit Strawberry and Wild Mountain Blackberry.

Interviewer: Now that is a place I am absolutely going to visit!  It appears that we have run out of time, today. Again, thank you, Sergeant Slowater, for being my guest. You’ve have given me a new perspective on a small city that I really hadn’t given a lot of thought to. Now, I’m going to have to go up there and visit.

For more photos of Mount Vernon, Washington go to: http://www.pinterest.com/ayawalksfar

For more information on the places Sergeant Slowater told us about:

www.skagitfoodcoop.com  All about local farming and sustainable food production. Newsletter and more information

www.pacionis.com  Voted Best Pizza in Skagit County

www.tulipfestival.org

www.snowgooseproducemarket.com  A f amily-owned seasonal produce stand known for “immodest ice cream cones”.

Read Sketch of a Murder and discover why Sergeant Slowater is “not a fan of the media”. http://www.amazon.com/Sketch-Murder-Special-Crimes-Team-ebook/dp/B00KU6AIPQ

Sketch of a Murderebook 7 30 2014

Visit Aya at: http://www.facebook.com/ayawalksfar

HOW SEXY IS TOO SEXY?

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HOW SEXY IS TOO SEXY?

I have been asked: what is the most difficult scene to write? That one is easy: #sex.

Now don’t get me wrong. It isn’t from lack of experience! No, the challenge stems from the fact that #sex is such an intense experience that to write it well I must decide how much detail is enough while making sure I don’t cross the line into too much. I hate it when I am reading a book and really want to shout, “TMI!”

The other thing that makes the writing of #sex scenes difficult is that I am a product of my time/era. I grew up during a certain period of history, in a specific #culture with its particular cultural norms that was nestled within the mainstream #culture. My family expressed our #culture in a certain way, and with that way comes a set of morals, ethics, viewpoints, perspectives, and obligations.

I must negotiate my way through those constraints to arrive at my own definitions of what is acceptable. But, isn’t that what writers do? We take where we came from, how we grew up, what we learned and what we dream and define the alternate realities that we create.

Beyond the personal, there is the major constraint of the story, the novel that I am writing. Scenes, whether sex scenes, battle scenes, or death scenes, must fit within the context of the story. I cannot simply decide I need some filler material so I’m going to write a battle scene, or maybe a juicy, hot sex scene. To employ such devices would create a jarring sense of disconnection within the story.

The #SpecialCrimesTeam murder mystery series I am writing does not lend itself to sex scenes, so in Book 1: Sketch of a Murder the reader will find battle scenes and death scenes, but not much in the way of sex.

In the second edition of #Good #Intentions, a literary #novel, sex is present, but more hinted at than actually shown.

Good Intentions Final cover

On the other hand, in my coming vampire series, Book 1: Artemis’ Warriors, there are very detailed sex scenes. Graphic sex is an integral part of the story.

While there is no simple solution to how I handle writing those challenging scenes, whether they are sex scenes, battle scenes or some other scene, the one constant is that a writer must be true to her vision of the story. I must know my #characters intimately enough to know how much is too much, how much is not enough to lend the #novel its verisimilitude.

I would be interested in hearing from my readers if they feel there should be more, or less, sex in my (soon-to-be-released) novels: #Good #Intentions, second edition, and Sketch of a Murder. Once you have read the novel, you can leave a comment on my blog, or leave a comment on my facebook page. Both books should be released by my publisher, Mountain Springs House (#MSH) by the end of this month.

Stay tuned to this blog for information on the release dates for Good Intentions and for Sketch of a Murder.

Meanwhile, you are invited to visit #Aya on #facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/ayawalksfar

MEET LIEUTENANT MICHAEL WILLIAMS, SPECIAL CRIMES TEAM

MEET LIEUTENANT MICHAEL WILLIAMS, SPECIAL CRIMES TEAM

(Interviewer): First, I want to thank both you and Governor Marleton for making these interviews possible; for encouraging your team to speak with me.

(Lieutenant Williams): (Shifts in his chair and clears his throat.) As I hoped I made clear, any interviews my team members give is strictly up to them. I will not force any of them to speak with you, or to give interviews to any media person, unless I believe it will assist in solving a case. I made that clear with Governor Marleton as well.

(Interviewer nods vigorously) Of course. (Interviewer pauses to reorganize thoughts): You stated that questions about ongoing investigations were taboo, but I was wondering if you would care to give us an idea of the types of cases your team will be investigating?

(Lieutenant Williams gives interviewer a steady look): According to Governor Marleton’s guidelines, our team will be handling certain types of serial killings, especially if they cross jurisdictional lines, extraordinarily gruesome murders, some cases of violent rape, and a few cold cases that fall into those categories. We will also handle any cases the Governor specifically requests us to investigate.

(Interviewer): What about gang violence?

(Lieutenant Williams shakes his head slowly): At this time, Governor Marleton has not included that in the criteria she established.

(Interviewer): Tell me, Lieutenant Williams, how did you decide to become involved with the Special Crimes Team?

(Lieutenant Williams purses his lips as he gives the question some thought): Let’s just say I was encouraged by my immediate superior to take advantage of the Governor’s invitation.

(Interviewer raises eyebrows): Was that a good thing, or a bad thing?

(Lieutenant Williams’ mouth turns up slightly at the corners): Not everything falls into a good or bad dichotomy. This is especially true of police work.  As a detective, I am ultimately dealing with complex human beings.

(Interviewer cocks head and studies the lieutenant for a moment): Speaking of complex human beings: what do you think of your second-in-command, Sergeant Slowater?

(Lieutenant Williams): We are working our first case together, so I really don’t have a long term acquaintance with Sergeant Slowater; however, it is my understanding that she’s a good, solid cop. I expect her to be an asset in solving the murders we are investigating.

(Interviewer): Is there any member of your team you feel might not fit into the group?

(Lieutenant Williams crosses his arms over his broad chest): EVERY member of my team is a professional, Ms. Walksfar. Our team is not a social clique. We are police officers, detectives and “fitting in,” as you put it, is irrelevant. We do our jobs.

(Interviewer holds up hands in stop gesture): Whoa! I apologize, Lieutenant. I didn’t mean to offend you or to allude that any member of your team is less than a professional. I simply meant that since they are such a diverse group from diverse backgrounds that it might be difficult to come together without any rough spots.

(Lieutenant Williams uncrosses his arms but crosses his leg over his knee): You have my answer.

(Interviewer takes sip of water): How does Dr. Irene Nelson fit into the Special Crimes Team since, as I understand it, she answers to the FBI?

(Lieutenant Williams): Dr. Nelson is a well-respected agent and behavior specialist. We did not request her assistance, but since that assistance has been offered, we are glad to accept the additional resources.

(Interviewer glances at watch): Oh, my! Looks like we have run out of time for today, Lieutenant Williams. Again, thank you for coming. I am looking forward to getting to know the members of the Special Crimes Team.

To learn more about Lieutenant Michael Williams, head of the Special Crimes Team, read Sketch of a Murder http://www.amazon.com/Sketch-Murder-Special-Crimes-Team-ebook/dp/B00KU6AIPQ

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MEET THE SPECIAL CRIMES TEAM!

MEET THE #SPECIAL #CRIMES #TEAM!

Starting this Monday (August 19) the members of the Special Crimes Team have consented to be hosted on my blog! I am EXCITED!

The Special Crimes Team was founded by Governor Andrea Marleton of the State of Washington for the express and dedicated purpose of investigating the “worst of the worst” crimes, or in the words of one of the team’s members: “we investigate the worst actions that one human being can take against another.” The team functions autonomously and answers only to the governor. They are not bound by jurisdictional lines and can investigate crimes throughout the state of Washington.

The team (AKA: SCT or pronounced SCaT) is headed by Lieutenant Michael Williams, a veteran detective from the Seattle police department. His second-in-command is Sergeant Nita Slowater, an up-and-coming detective with the Mount Vernon PD until an “unfortunate incident,” after which she was reassigned by Governor Marleton to the Special Crimes Team.

Detective Frederick Albert, a veteran detective of the Spokane police department, and Detective Maizie O’Hara, a newly-minted detective previously with the Tacoma PD, are the other two detectives assigned to the team.

Officer Juan Rodriguez and Officer Driscoll Mulder round out the police part of the roster. Officer Rodriguez comes from the Concrete PD and Officer Mulder hails from the Vancouver PD.

Ronald Arneau, the only civilian–a computer-guru–joined the Special Crimes Team at the insistence of Governor Marleton.

Dr. Irene Nelson, well-respected in the Federal Bureau of Investigations and a Special Agent who went on to become one of the Bureau’s top profilers, was assigned on a semi-permanent basis to the Special Crimes Team by the special request of Governor Marleton.

To learn more about the Special Crimes Team read Sketch of a Murder http://www.amazon.com/Sketch-Murder-Special-Crimes-Team-ebook/dp/B00KU6AIPQ

Sketch of a Murderebook 7 30 2014

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Visit Aya at http://www.facebook.com/ayawalksfar

Plotter or Panster? Which style of #author/#detective are you?

Today, as part of the #MSH #Blog #Tour, I have the honor of #interviewing Lieutenant Michael Williams from the Special Crimes Team in Seattle, Washington. Thank you, Lieutenant Williams, for taking the time to come and talk with us.The subject of today’s #interview is: are you a plotter or a pantser?

Lieutenant Williams: I appreciate being invited.It would be helpful if you would define those terms again.

Actually the term pantser comes from NaNoWriMo, National Novel #Writer’s Month. It describes an #author who ‘flys by the seat of the pants’. The #author doesn’t have an outline, a summary, nothing except the basic idea for a #novel.Plotter is pretty self-explanatory.This type of #author plots the entire novel or a large portion of it,has an outline or a summary,often has biographies of the various characters, especially the main characters and protagonist.

My theory is that there are divisions within #detectives that correspond to the divisions of types of #authors. So tell me, are there #detectives who are plotters versus #detectives who are pantsers?

Lieutenant Williams: (a smile that reaches up and causes his eyes to sparkle with good humor) I am afraid I have to confirm your theory. Of course, we have certain non-negotiable procedures, protocols that must be followed as we solve #crimes. (He gets a devilish gleam in his eye) And, we do our best to adhere to those.

(Interviewer raises eyebrows in gentle disbelief) Not what I’ve heard about the #Special #Crimes #Team.

Lieutenant Williams: (clears throat) Hmm. Don’t believe everything you’ve heard about us, (big smile) even if most of it is true. However, we digress. As I was saying, there are plotters and pantsers within the ranks of #detectives. A good example of that is Sergeant Slowater–I believe you attempted an interview with her not too many weeks ago–and myself.

Sergeant Slowater would be considered a plotter. She believes absolutely in logic, in following leads in a methodical manner, in carefully constructing a case, step-by-step. She is very intent on weighing the possible outcomes against the risks, and having backup plans in place. She does not give much credence to what she terms “woo-woo stuff”. This includes non-traditional methods such as using the press, giving weight to anything that cannot be perceived by the five ordinary senses, that type of thing. Sergeant Slowater gets uncomfortable with, as my granny used to say ‘coloring outside the lines’.

I am more of a pantser. Once I have done all that I can within the ordinary methods of solving a case, I am inclined to follow my instincts, to perhaps follow unconventional leads, and give credence to information that comes from sources that don’t necessarily use the five ordinary senses. I guess you could say that I am a bit too comfortable ‘coloring outside the lines’. (He smiles.)
(He cocks his head and looks at me) May I ask you a question?

Of course. (Interviewer gives Lieutenant big smile and a firm nod) I had hoped this would be more a dialogue than simply a question and answer period.

Lieutenant Williams: How do you see your style of #writing?

(Interviewer frowns in concentration) Well, I believe I fit the pantser style, like you. I don’t use outlines, summaries, bullets, or any biographies of my characters. I simply am (smile) ‘attacked by an idea’ that won’t leave my mind until I write it down. (a shrug) After that, I just follow where it leads me.

Lieutenant Williams: Why do you use that style? Why not use the plotter style?

(Interviewer taps a finger against her lips as she thinks) I suppose it’s because my characters, like real people, like the criminals you go after, don’t always follow a script, a plot, an outline. They can sometimes dart off in unpredictable directions. I guess, for me, it’s important to study why they act, and react, as they do. What causes them to go in a certain direction, act in a certain manner, say what they do, believe as they do? People can’t be put on a graph like a mathematical equation. Does that make sense?

Lieutenant Williams: (a slow thoughtful nod) Yes, it does. That is exactly why I use the pantser style in solving crimes. It is more about understanding the perpetrator, looking at life from his perspective. If I can understand the perpetrator, then I can predict the next action to be taken.

You said you are open to using non-traditional methods. Are you talking about psychics? And what do you mean by ‘coloring outside the lines’?

Lieutenant Williams: (Purses his lips as he thinks) Let’s just say that I believe there are things outside of our normal senses that can be utilized in solving #crimes, or #writing books. As for ‘coloring outside the lines’, there are situations that force a #detective to make hard decisions. Sometimes those decisions don’t follow absolutely along the lines of procedure. That’s all I will say on that subject.

(Interviewer glances at her watch) Oh, my! We have run overtime! I am so sorry to have kept you beyond the time I requested.

Lieutenant Williams: (good-natured grin) In that case, I guess you’ll have to buy me a venti mocha with two-percent milk and no foam, but lots of whipped cream. Sergeant Slowater got me hooked on those fancy coffees.

You got it! There’s a Starbucks I like.

For my blog followers, if you would like to know more about Lieutenant Williams and the Special Crimes Team be sure to stay tuned for the announcement of the release of #Sketch #of #a #Murder, Book 1 of the Special Crimes Team series.

For more information about me and about my books:
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/author/ayawalksfar
Smashwords: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/314888
Smashwords: http://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/AWalksfar
#Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ayawalksfar
#Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Aya Walksfar @ayawalksfar
Blog: http://www.ayawalksfar.com
My publisher: #MSH http://www.mountainspringpublishing.com
Join me at my NEW! #Pinterest site and watch it GROW!: http://www.pinterest.com/ayawalksfar
Find me on #Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/ayawalksfar

#Interview with Bev Ransom

This week the subject for the #MSH sponsored #blog tour is to interview the main character of our novel. So, today I have asked Bev Ransom whose biography, #Good Intentions, is due out later this month to speak with me.
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Good Intentions

Bev, thank you for taking time to talk with me.

(Bev)Oh, sure. When Mom gave me the message I thought it would be interesting.

What are some of the reasons you participated in having a biography of your life written?

(Bev)Well, (she leans forward, arms propped on her thighs, face earnest) there are some things people should think about. I’m not that old, and I don’t have all the answers (she chuckles), but I know how I felt when everything came out in the open like it did.

Yes, that was quite the surprise, wasn’t it? What was the most important thing that occurred during the time sequence covered in your biography?

(Bev) My dad dying.(She glances away and blinks her eyes several times before turning back to face me)

I know how painful this must be for you. Are you okay talking about it?

(Bev gives a brisk nod)Yeah.(Taking a deep breath, she huffs it out and speaks in a stronger voice)Yeah, I’m okay. See my dad was always the one I talked to. Mom got so emotional about everything. But, Dad he was cool. I could discuss stuff with him. Where Mom cried about stuff, Dad would tell me to stop wasting time crying, and use that time to think about what I could do to change whatever it was.

That sounds like good advice.

(Bev)(She shifts around on her chair like she’s uncomfortable with what she needs to say)Well, yeah.Mostly.

What do you mean “mostly”?

(Bev)(Her brows scrunch down and she stares for a moment at her hands, clasped together in her lap) It wasn’t until quite some time after Rene died, and you know, everything else started happening, that I finally realized: with Dad it was all about logic and action, but it was Mom who let me feel.

Sounds like a person needs to do both of those things—think and feel.

(Bev smiles) Yeah, that’s what I learned. Eventually.

What was the second most important thing you learned during that time?

(Bev’s face falls into serious lines)I learned that #family shouldn’t keep #secrets from each other, especially not from their kids.

But aren’t there good reasons to keep things from #children?

(Bev firmly shakes her head) No. If a kid knows what’s going on in the family, we can find a way to cope. It’s when we’re kept ignorant of what is really happening that we get confused by conflicting messages that our parents don’t even realize they are sending out.

(Bev tilts her head and gives me a considering look) Do you know why I wanted my biography to be titled Good Intentions?

(I shake my head)No, I don’t know why you insisted on that title.

(Bev bites her lower lip then speaks) A friend of mine—and I don’t know where the quote came from—but she said, “The road to hell is paved with good intentions.” That’s what happened to my family. Everyone had good intentions when they made their decisions, especially the decision to keep me in the dark. Those good intentions were like cobblestones set in the street that we were traveling down. And that street led straight to the hell that our lives became.

Wow. That’s a heavy message. (We both take a sip of cold coffee from the mugs we’d forgotten were even there.) There you have it folks. Family secrets, even when they are kept with the best of intentions, can really bring a lot of sorrow to your loved ones. So, whenever you’re tempted to tell your children something less than the truth, please remember how much pain you might eventually cause.

Thank you, Bev, for coming today, and for sharing what has been a painful journey of self-discovery in your biography, Good Intentions.

GoodIntentions

Mountain Springs House Publishing, #MSH, will release the second edition of Good Intentions later this month of July. Please stay tuned to this blog for the final release date.

You can contact #Aya Walksfar, the author of Good Intentions, at:
http://www.facebook.com/ayawalksfar

Aya Walksfar

Aya Walksfar

Or tweet to her on Twitter Aya Walksfar@ayawalksfar
Check out other books by this author on her author page at Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/author/ayawalksfar
Check out some of the books Aya reads on Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/ayawalksfar

Picking from the Garden of Blogs

936861_10201446923641284_643288402_nDuring this sixth week of Mountain Springs House Publishers (#MSH) #blog #tour I have the pleasure of hosting a fantastic author, #Kathy Ree. The subject of this week’s sharing is all about blogs: which ones do you like, which ones do you follow, why do you follow them, and, of course the most important question–what is your goal with your own blog?

Aya: Kathy, welcome to my #author blog! I am really looking forward to your insights into what pulls you into a blog.

Kathy: I’m not much of a blog follower, really. This is the time of year when I work in my yard–happily, mind you. (BIG SMILE)

Aya:I can certainly understand that. I appreciate that you took time for this #interview. As a wildlife habitat manager and designer, this time of year I spend a lot of time outside. Other than time constraints, are there any other reasons you don’t tend to read a lot of blogs?

Kathy: I spend most of my work life in front of a computer, so it isn’t my go-to activity at home. And when I do spend time in the glow of my laptop, I’m usually deleting e-mails(over 3800 in one month alone) or writing book reviews/author #interviews.

Aya: So, when you do read blogs, they must be pretty special. How do you tend to find out about the blogs you become interested in?

Kathy: The blogs I follow show up in my e-mails, so I always check them out.

Aya: Once you check them out, what types of blogs hook you in, have you subscribing to them?

Kathy: Let me give you an example. There is a blog, http://www.funnylifestories.com, that is absolutely hilarious! What G.K. Adams can do with .gifs is such a hoot! It is a great way to get my day going.

Aya: I’ll have to check that one out. Like you, I enjoy blogs that have entertainment value to me. What else hooks you into a blog?

Kathy: One of my favorite blogs is http://www.indiesunlimited.com. This is a multi-admin blog dedicated to resources, contests, tips, etc. for the independent author. A lot of useful information there, and some very humorous stuff as well. I always look forward to getting that in my mail every day. Another informative, and entertaining, blog–one I just picked up on today is http://www.dieselelectricelephant.wordpress.com . This guy, Ian Hutson, writes the most creative, most hilarious author interviews I have ever seen. Here’s me, waving my hand in his audience, wanting an interview from him–just from what I read today. He writes like Terry Prachett–crazy funny! And then there are blogs by our own elite group of Mountain Springs House authors.

I’ll only mention a few here, just enough to let your readers get a taste for the wonderful talent that Mountain Springs House Publishers have gathered.
http://www.mickihess.wordpress.com
http://www.writingsbykrystol.blogspot.com
http://www.angelastclair.blogspot.com
http://www.veronicacronin.com
http://www.codymartin.blogspot.com
http://wwww.iangeorge.larmani.com
http://www.mountainspringspublisher.com
http://www.allisonbruning.blogspot.com

Aya: What about your blog, Kathy? What can you tell my readers about it?

Kathy: Well, I have two. One is my book review/author interview/whatever else I can think of blog. It’s called “Kitty Muse and Me”. I see that blog as a forum for both author/book exposure and a creative outlet for myself. The address is: http://www.kathyree.wordpress.com . People seem to appreciate what I write, so it gives me warm fuzzies as well.

My other blog is my author blog at http://www.krmorrison325.wordpress.com . This is where I post for the Blog Tour. I haven’t had it up for very long, so I haven’t really had a chance to use it for anything else, yet. I’ll be posting short stories there in the future, and letting people know when I have books coming out.

Aya: Your blogs are very focused on giving to the reader, but what about you? What do you hope to receive from your blog?

Kathy: What I will get, besides a creative outlet, is really unclear at this point. I like providing exposure for other authors. Their success means success for me, too. I fully invest my own feelings for my little family into their happiness as well as my own. Of course, the blog will help readers learn about my writings, when my books will be coming out, and they’ll even get a taste of my style once I begin to post the short stories.

Aya: It certainly sounds as if your readers will receive a number of benefits from visiting your blog. I think that about wraps up our interview for today. Thank you, Kathy, for being my guest.

Kathy: (BIG SMILE) Okay, with the questions answered and the coffee finished off, I go forward into the late morning with promises of future margaritas dancing in my mind. Have a great Fourth of July weekend, everyone!

When Do Characters Attack You?

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I have always heard voices in my head. When I was eight years old, I found a spot beneath the concrete, city steps that went from one street to the street above, and that is where I hid, scratching out the conversations that only I could hear.

As I got older, my hiding spots became more creative. Crunched under the covers at night, holding a flashlight between my ear and my shoulder, I scribbled descriptions of worlds that only I could see.

My mother worked, so I was expected to pull my weight around the house as well as excel in school. However, sometimes I couldn’t help it: I hid in back of the clothes closet furiously jotting down arguments and betrayals. One time, in the grip of a pitched battle, I secreted myself beneath a broken down car with pen and paper.

It wasn’t that my mother was unsympathetic. No, she understood that I was different, but “even different has to make a living” she once told me. So, she kept tracking me down and assigning chores, and I kept slipping away to some other reality.

Nowadays I don’t have to do that. Nope. Just have to make sure my dogs don’t see me, or hear me, sneaking into my office. If I get caught there is a whole lot of bark-demands to be my “Muse for the day”.

Of course, I am using the word ‘day’ very loosely here. Much of my writing is done between the hours of midnight and dawn. I love the absolute quiet of those hours. My work on the land is finished for the time being, my dogs are all asleep, my wife is either reading or sleeping, the phone is silent, and the world outside my window lies wrapped in warm darkness. Sometimes, if I am fortunate, a coyote will sing.

When it comes right down to it, however, I write at any hour that my characters chatter too loudly for me to hear the present day. There are times that I pull my vehicle into a rest area so I can jot down bits of dialogue, or snippets of description. I have been known to rise up from my bed, and a sound sleep, wander half-blindly through the house searching for pen and paper to write down the argument clamoring in my head. Then, I can tell my characters to shut up and let me rest!

For this Blog Tour, Mountain Springs House asked me to explain my writing routine, how do I get those novels written. So, there you have it: my confession about my writing non-routine.

Come chat with me on Facebook: http://facebook.com/ayawalksfar
Or tweet your thoughts to me on twitter: Aya Walksfar@ayawalksfar
Stop by Mountain Springs House Facebook page and check out my publisher: http://facebook.com/mountainspringpublishing

Interview with Allison Bruning, Author/Publisher

Today I have the great pleasure of interviewing Allison Bruning. I read Ms. Bruning’s book, Calico: Children of the Shawnee. I enjoy some history with my fiction, so I was impressed with the satisfying, complex read. Once I began reading, I was loathe to put it down.

CalicoNEW!!!
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“What inspired you to write Calico when you’re not even Native American descent?”

I cannot tell you how many times I get this question. To tell you the truth I absolutely love it, too. Growing up in Ohio I was bombarded with funny names such as Chillicothe, Wapakoneta, Mohican, and Cincinnati. The memorials of the Native American tribes who had once inhabited Ohio were in the names of our towns, camps (I went to Camp Wakatomika as a youth), and streets. Although, as far as I know, my family has no Native American heritage I was often drawn to the history and culture of these people. Calico has been in the market for two years now. It’s drawn a lot of attention from Native Americans. Most Native Americans that I meet are shocked to learn that I do not have any native blood in me. I have been adopted by a Delaware woman who tells me I am more of a sister to her than her own sister and a Creek shaman who thinks of me like his granddaughter. I am a good friend with a Navajo medicine woman and her family. All of the natives who meet me tell me that my heart bleeds red but my skin is white. I hold a Native American healer’s spirit in me although I walk this life as a white woman. I am very honored by the First Nations to think of me as one of their own.

When I was a child I was taught that the Shawnee were vicious people who murdered white men and raped their women. As I grew older I began to realize just how one sided the American history books are when it comes to dealing with Native American history, especially in the media. We often see the Shawnee in movies, television shows and books portrayed as bloodthirsty savages bent on raping women and killing men. It dehumanizes them. American history teaches us that the British and latter Americans were rescuing women and children from the Shawnee. They’d raze their settlements, rescue the poor white damsel in distress then off they go back to civilization with the female where she’s joyfully reunited with her family. The End! Isn’t that a nice fairytale? The savages are defeated and our hero saves the day.

But did you know that many of the women who had been “rescued” by the British or Americans actually ran right back to their captors? Why would these women go back to the natives who had captured them? Was it some sort of Stockholm syndrome? No, the white women of the 18th century often times left for their captors because they had more freedom in a native village than in a European colony.

This thinking goes against what we have been taught about the native population. On the contrary, a woman was valued more in native cultures than a man. When she was traveling with a man she would carry their belongings and be behind him. Why? So she would be protected! Think about it. The Shawnee were at war with the white man for a long time. He couldn’t carry his belongings and be prepared to fight should they be attacked. It was his duty to protect the women, children and elders.

In camp, the women were in charge of the fields and housework while her husband was laying around. Why was the man so lazy? He wasn’t. He was often hunting, fishing and protecting the village. Sometimes a man needs his rest but don’t think he wasn’t aware of his surroundings. In a moment’s notice, he would be able to defend his wife and family should the village be attacked.

“Allison, why didn’t the Shawnee men ever look at their wives when a white man was around?”

Would you want your enemy to know which women meant the most to you? He ignored her to protect her. You never know just how far someone would go to hurt another. Another thing to think about. If the Shawnee did not value their women then why did their laws insist anyone who hurts a woman receive double the punishment than if they had hurt a man?

When I wrote Calico’s character I had decided to make her the daughter of a French Fur Trapper. Why? Because I wanted to show my readers the truth. The British were so hell bent on saving every single white woman from the native population they never took time to consider whether or not the woman was actually British. As long as someone looked white the British would retrieve her. The problem with this is that not all white women were actually British. Some of them were the daughters of French traders who had married into the population. A French woman would marry into the tribe to secure a tighter trade relationship between her father and the native population.

If, in the event, a European woman was ever captured she would walk the gauntlet and then be adopted into a native family. Why? To replace the dead wife or child of a native person. Men on the other hand were often considered a threat. The natives knew if a man was adopted he might cause more harm then good. It was all about survival. I wanted my readers to understand these points through the eyes of a female who lived with the Shawnee.

Before I wrote Calico I had read a book called “Follow the River” by James Alexander Thom. I had watched the movie with my husband. While it was a good attempt to show a different side of the story, that is to honor the Shawnee, I felt it was lacking a lot. I decided to write Calico to fill in the cultural gaps this book left.

An interesting thing to think about is this as well. The natives were not the only ones who were kidnapping women and children. The British did so in order to provide labor for their slave market. The native populations didn’t just attack a British village for kicks, they often times did so in order to free those who had been captured by the British.

AUTHOR BIO:
Allison Bruning has had a passion for writing since childhood. She originally hails from Marion, Ohio, but lives in Louisville, Kentucky, with her husband and their Australian Cattle Dog, Lakota Sioux.

Her father, Roland Irving Bruning, was the son of German immigrants who came to the United States at the turn of the 20th century. Her mother’s family had immigrated from Scotland, Ireland and England during the 17th century.

Allison is a member of the Daughters of American Revolution, tracing her linage to Private Rueben, Messenger of Connecticut. She enjoys family stories, history and genealogy.

Her educational background includes a BA in Theatre Arts with a minor in Anthropology and a Texas Elementary Teaching certificate. Both were acquired at Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas. Allison received National Honor Society memberships in both Theatre Arts and Communication. She was also honored her sophomore year with admission into the All American Scholars register. She holds graduate hours in Cultural Anthropology and Education. In 2007, Allison was named Who’s Who Among America’s Educators. She is also the recipient of the Girl Scout Silver and Gold Awards. Allison will receive her Masters of Fine Arts in Creative Writing at Full Sail University on June 28, 2013.

Her books, Reflections: Poems and Essays and Calico: Children of the Shawnee (Book 1), are published by Mountain Springs House.

She is currently working on Passions Awakenings, book one of a high fantasy erotica series titled Draconian Corazon that will be released this summer. She is also working on a historical fiction series known as The Secret Heritage that takes place in early 20th century Ohio. Elsa, book one of the series, will be released in the fall.

Allison’s interests include Ohio Valley history, anthropology, travel, culture, history, camping, hiking, backpacking, spending time with her family, and genealogy.
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She can be found on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/AllisonBruning.
She is also on twitter @emeraldkell.
Her blog can be found at http://allisonbruning.blogspot.com.
Her author page on Goodreads is http://www.goodreads.com/emeraldkell
Her Amazon author page may be found at http://amzn.to/LZ0UsT

MOUNTAIN SPRINGS HOUSE BLOG TOUR!

I am thrilled to announce that Mountain Springs House Publishing is doing a blog tour from Memorial Day through Labor Day.

This is the VERY FIRST blog tour I have ever been involved in and I am honored that my publisher, Allison Bruning, has asked me to participate. I will be getting to host some really fine authors on my blog, and I will be doing guest posts on other blogs. This is going to be so much fun! Even for a technosaur like me!

Check out Mountain Springs House on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/mountainsprings/
And “LIKE” us on http://www.facebook.com/MountainSpringsHouse?fret=ts

I have been asked to post a bio and photo so you can get to know me a bit better.

One dark night, just as the wolves howled…. Oh, wait! I’m supposed to do the true stuff, right? Okay, try again.

I was born. I grew up. I am now a big monster. Oh, okay, that’s not quite what I was supposed to do. Do I ever do what I am supposed to do? Not really. Probably why I like Sergeant Nita Slowater of the Special Crimes Team.

Sooo…here’s the real skinny:

Born in a rougher section of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, (and there were several of those areas when I was growing up. I hear they’ve cleaned Pittsburgh up very nicely, now. Haven’t been back in many years.) I soon learned how to make myself invisible. If you tend to be on the smaller side, this is a very good talent. As a result, I got to observe people in their myriad of attitudes and emotions. They fascinated me.

In self-defense against loneliness, I learned to read very early, and to write. My first story was written in pencil on those tablets for little kids with huge spaces between lines. It was a story about a lost dog. Do you ever forget your first?

Ever since that day, I have been creating alternate realities.

Fortunately, my life has been anything except traditional, and therefore, I have never run out of stories to tell. I lived on the road for several years, have worked non-traditional jobs (and a very few traditional jobs), and have walked many dark roads and city streets.

Currently, I live on a 12 acre wildlife/wild bird/indigenous plant habitat that my wife of 25 years and I have created. During a single year, we host over 68 different species of birds, and many different animals.

When I am not either reading or writing, I love to hike, take photographs, work with my dogs, tend the land, horseback ride, travel, learn new things, and recently, I acquired a motorcycle, so I am having a great deal of fun learning to ride. Whenever I have the opportunity, I also search for the perfect chocolate. There are many good chocolates in the world, but I am convinced that there is a “perfect one”. Have to eat a lot of chocolates while I am researching!

Aya Walksfar

Aya Walksfar

Now that you know who I am, let me share what I write.

My novella, Dead Men and Cats, is a murder mystery set on an island in Puget Sound, Washington. Two women, Megan Albright and Janie Sampson, while walking on the beach, discover an old rowboat stuck in a driftwood tree. As they turn to continue their walk, a calico kitten leaps from inside the rowboat and onto the slick tree trunk. Nearly falling into Shallow Point Cove, the frightened animal leaps back into the boat.
Megan wades out to the rowboat to rescue the kitten, and encounters the body of a dead man lying in the bottom of the boat. A few days later, Dan Uley’s bookstore is firebombed. With a black cat.
Not long after his bookstore is firebombed, Dan is gruesomely murdered.
Fearing that Sheriff Johnson’s lack of progress may stem from his well-known anti-gay sentiments, Megan and Janie launch their own investigation. They never expected their search to lead to a young man that they both considered a friend.

In mid-July, my literary, coming-of-age novel, Good Intentions, will be re-released as a second edition, by Mountain Springs House.
In August, the first book in my three-book series about the Special Crimes Team, Sketch of a Murder, will be released by Mountain Springs House.

So, there you have it: who I am and what I’m up to!