Tag Archives: author

#INTERVIEW: THRILLER AUTHOR GUNNAR LAWRENCE

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#INTERVIEW WITH #THRILLER WRITER GUNNAR ANGEL LAWRENCE

Why did you write this book?

It’s been on my mind since I first heard of the “Perfect Day” scenario plans discovered by US Military forces shortly after 9/11. It was a sort of “what would happen if” the horror that is a terrorist attack found its way to the most innocent and family friendly destination, Orlando, Florida.

How is your book different from other books about terrorists?

Most books pit an elite trained force (CIA, FBI, etc) against terrorists. In the Perfect Day, when the elite trained forces are scattered to the wind, it’s up to a detective, a reporter and a fraud examiner to do what they can.

Who is your favorite character and why?

I like Paul Friedman. He is a no nonsense kind of detective who is very good at his job. He’s observant, smart and has a personable feel to him. Gary Michaels is complex and has had a rough life going through what he has. It’s hard for me to choose just one.

How would you describe your writing style?

Fast paced. Action oriented.

Do you have other published books?

Yes. The first Paul Friedman thriller is entitled Fair Play. It’s the story of a pedophile and murderer who gets off on a technicality. I make a living as a freelance writer so many of the other books I have published are of non-fiction variety. There are also a number of adult titles that I did for a short period of time. I’m hoping to break out of that type of writing and stick with the thriller novels that I enjoy so much.

What advice would you give to new writers about self-publishing?

Keep writing. It is a hard road but there is an increasing number of indie authors who forego the traditional route and do so with pretty decent results. Things are changing in the publishing industry and it is becoming less and less desirable to opt for the old way of doing things.

How important is cover design and how did you decide on your cover?

Cover design is important because like it or not, people DO judge a book by it. When I saw the image in my search for The Perfect Day cover I knew I had the one I wanted. An hourglass set against a setting sun: it was just haunting.

What do you do when you aren’t busy writing?

I work full time as a freelance writer.  When I am not writing for a new novel, or a work project, I am either reading or working out at the gym.

Who is your favorite author and why?

For thrillers, I really enjoy the Steven James works The Pawn, The Bishop, etc. Lots of action, lots of twists and turns and you just never know what is going to happen.

Five years from now, where do you see yourself as a writer?

Hopefully, putting out a book every year or more. If I am able to sell enough so that I don’t have to write on the ebook or ghostwriting projects, it would be great for me and I could breathe a little more. After The Perfect Day comes the third book entitled, The Consortium. I’m hoping to finish that one in early 2015. If I’m not spending forty hours a week writing other things, it might be sooner.

#BOOKREVIEW BY AYA WALKSFAR: THE PERFECT DAY

A nail-biting thriller!

Gunnar Lawrence’s book hooked me from the first page. The author has woven a story full of surprising twists and turns. How does a homeless man figure in a series of seemingly unrelated murders? What does the killing of illegal immigrants have to do with the past war in Iraq?

The descriptions are spare, but they draw the reader right into the scene.

The characters are so well-drawn that I felt like I wanted to help that homeless man, assist that woman and her daughter; and they weren’t even the main characters!

It’s a novel with graphic violence that isn’t gruesome. That is a difficult thing to pull off.

The chapters give the reader different perspectives on the unfolding drama, but it is all woven into a tight story.

The subtle romance in the book doesn’t depend on sex or the ‘hottest looking…’  It’s real and poignant.

The Perfect Day is a story with meat on its bones and heart in its plot. A book that I highly recommend.

WHERE TO FIND GUNNAR ANGEL LAWRENCE:

https://www.facebook.com/gunnarangel.lawrence

https://twitter.com/GunnarALawrence

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6445679.Gunnar_Angel_Lawrence

http://gunnarangellawrence.blogspot.com/

http://www.amazon.com/Perfect-Detective-Paul-Friedman-Thrillers-ebook/dp/B00CKS8FFM/ref=sr_1_6?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1387042785&sr=1-6

http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-perfect-day-gunnar-lawrence/1116237807?ean=2940045186636

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/339529

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Interview with Award Winning Mohana Rajakumar

Unlikely

Interviewer: No one understands the way culture affects women better than Mohana Rajakumar, an #awardwinningauthor. A #SouthAsianAmerican who now resides in the Arabian Desert, Mohana has a unique perspective which she shares with her readers in this powerful story of a young South Indian #woman.

Mohana, after writing seven other books, what moved you to write this book at this time?

Mohana Rajakumar: In reality I’ve been writing this book for the last 10 years. When I started self- publishing eBooks, I thought I was doing it to share my novel which is set in Qatar. What I realized eventually was that those seven other books that I published were practice for the writing and publishing of An Unlikely Goddess.

You often hear people say the first book by a writer is a working through of powerful experiences. That’s certainly true for this one. I don’t think I would have been ready to write this story then take it all the way to publication without my previous experiences as an #author.

Interviewer: As an author myself I know how demanding the profession is. How do you manage to write, be a wife, a mother, a teacher, (and whatever else you are!)?

Mohana Rajakumar: This is the question so many #women and not enough men are asked. My answer does involve a man: my husband is very supportive. If I need to be away twice a week until 9pm in the office, then he covers the home front. My strategy is simple – don’t procrastinate. Whatever you have to do, whether grade papers or write a blog post, cook dinner, get to it. And cut out TV or Facebook. There’s something in your life that isn’t very important that you can let go of in order to make room for your writing. Can you reuse that towel one more time? Or live with dishes in the sink overnight? Pick your battles.

Interviewer: I can attest that having a supportive spouse is absolutely the best thing that can happen to an author. Your husband and my wife are very similar. Mohana, I can see that you are a very dedicated author, but we all need to relax now and then. What do you do for fun?

Mohana Rajakumar: Sleep! Just kidding. I love, love, love to read. When I’m not writing or revising or preparing for a book launch, I’m reading, often 2 or maybe 3 books at a time. Fiction, non-fiction, academic ones on topics I like; there’s not a genre I won’t read unless it’s horror. And that’s only because I’m a scaredy cat.

Interviewer: I understand that. I, too, love to read. Along with reading, you have, obviously, traveled. Where is the most beautiful place you have ever been?

Mohana Rajakumar: Recently we were in Zanzibar, Tanzania. The water is so clear you can see your feet, the fish, the sea grass. Amazing. But I loved Portugal, too, when I went earlier this fall on a business trip with my husband. Every place I’ve come back from seems spectacular in the light of the everyday.

Interviewer: Like one of you other books, The Dohmestics, you’ve written a powerful book about an explosive topic. Is there anything that bothers you about the public’s response to books such as yours? (Not necessarily yours)

Mohana Rajakumar: Yes, the question: “Did that Really Happen to You?”

I was at a book talk a few weeks ago and someone in the audience asked the author, a survivor of the Khmer Rouge, how much of the book “had happened” to her. She was referring to a novel in which the main character suffers abject abuse and horror while still a child.

I was appalled at the question; it seemed voyeuristic somehow, as if the suffering of the character which represented thousands of unnamed people in real life, didn’t matter as much if the author hadn’t experienced that suffering herself.

The “did that really happen?” is one of the most awkward questions you can ask a writer after reading his/her book. We want the reader to be lost in the narrative, not wondering how much of it is autobiography.

My latest release, An Unlikely Goddess, will no doubt spark a similar set of questions. The story of an Indian girl who immigrates to the United States with her parents, suffers much heartache, and finds solace in academia, is not that different from my own. Sita’s trajectory, however, is a composite of many people’s journeys as immigrants, not only mine. In some ways she is the Everywoman of the female coming-of-age for South Indians.

I found this story important to tell because it shows how the #immigrant experience is not always the “making good on the American dream” that we have come to expect from the “Model Minority” of Asians in the United States. The recent interest in Indian Literature in English which depicts a very specific part of the Indian diaspora – often well-educated Bengalis – did not speak to my experience or those who I knew growing up.

This book tells the “other story”.

2013authorphoto

Mohanalakshmi Rajakumar is a South Asian American who has lived in Qatar since 2005. Moving to the Arabian Desert was fortuitous in many ways since this is where she met her husband, had a baby, and made the transition from writing as a hobby to a full time passion.  She has since published seven e-books including a mom-ior for first time mothers, Mommy But Still Me, a guide for aspiring writers, So You Want to Sell a Million Copies, a short story collection, Coloured and Other Stories, and a novel about women’s friendships, Saving Peace.

Her recent books have focused on various aspects of life in Qatar. From Dunes to Dior, named as a Best Indie book in 2013, is a collection of essays related to her experiences as a female South Asian American living in the Arabian Gulf. Love Comes Later was the winner of the Best Indie Book Award for Romance in 2013 and is a literary romance set in Qatar and London. The Dohmestics is an inside look into compound life, the day to day dynamics between housemaids and their employers.

After she joined the e-book revolution, Mohana dreams in plotlines. Learn more about her work on her website at www.mohanalakshmi.com or follow her latest on Twitter: @moha_doha.

Mohana’s other book that I loved! The Dohmestics. Below is my review of it.

5.0 out of 5 stars A MUST Read!, December 24, 2012
This review is from: The Dohmestics (Kindle Edition)

I’m more of the blood and guts kind of reader, but when I was given an opportunity to read The Dohmestics I took it. And, I am glad that I did.

This thought-provoking book hooked me right from the first page. On the surface, it appears to be about six women whose lives intertwine, three are privileged women and three are their servants. But, there is so much more to this book.

It pulled me into a culture and then used that culture as a vehicle to explore the relationships and dynamics between the privileged and the poverty-stricken; between workers and employees; between men and women; between power and corruption. I was taken on a journey that challenged me to not only understand this foreign culture, but to view my own with enlightened eyes.

I loved how it took a small decision and traced the ripples of that decision to its’ tragic end. But even in tragedy there existed an opportunity for people to shine, to rise above all that limits them and to reach out to each other.

This book took me from anger to sadness to strength. Quite the journey, and one I highly recommend.

Stay tuned to this blog for all interesting things write!

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Check out Aya’s books on http://www.amazon.com/author/ayawalksfar

Ruby Standing Deer Bestselling Author

Today I #interview #RubyStandingDeer, the #bestsellingauthor of  #CIRCLES, the first book in her  #NativeAmerica series. The second book, #SPIRALS, has also garnered much praise.  Ruby kindly consented to share her thoughts on books, and on life, with us.

Interviewer: What inspired you to write a series about #NativeAmerica several hundred years ago?

Ruby Standing Deer:  I dream a lot. In this dream, a Native elder sat in a chair across from me. He crossed his arms and started into my eyes. “Why don’t you get off your butt and write a book?” he grinned then faded. I jerked up and asked, “What book?”  No answer.

I started to drift off and only moments later, I heard a woman telling me about herself, and about her grandson. At three AM I found myself sitting in my chair with the laptop open. It did not take long before I had written a chapter, then two.  This is how #CIRCLES was born.

Interviewer: I noticed that your books do not contain explicit sexual content, nor do they have excessive violence.  What moved you to write without the sex and violence when many books today have a lot of both?

Ruby Standing Deer: Sex is a scared, private matter to be shared by a couple. Among my people it was not spoken of. I kept this tradition.

Violence, in ancient North America among the various tribes and clans, was not absent by any means. Many times, however, differences were worked out through talk. Even to garner honor in battle, it was not always necessary to kill the enemy. In fact, it was considered far braver to ‘touch’ an enemy than to outright kill them. It was called coup (pronounced coo).
Today, too many books are filled with violence, revenge and hatred. Isn’t there enough? Must it be that way for entertainment as well? Violence is at the core of many television shows, the news, and in real life, in your neighborhood.  Why must it be in all of the stories we read? Isn’t it enough to enjoy #humor, #spirituality, and just relax and read a good story where death is not the central theme?

Interviewer: I write #mysteries, you know the usual mayhem and #murder, but you’re right. There are times it is nice to sit down with a book that  centers around things other than death and killing, and sex, which often confused with love both in real life and in novels.

Tell me, Ruby, who is your favorite character, and why?

Ruby Standing Deer: Bright Sun Flower and Feather Floating In Water–who becomes known as Shining Light– are two characters who remind me of myself. I am the grandmother and the grandson put in one body. I may not have the powerful dream visions they do, but I do experience dreams, and I listen to the Spirits when they speak.

Bright Sun Flower loves life and so does her grandson. They see so much more than others do by just opening up. She is a teacher, and a guide. Throughout the story she tries to pass on her knowledge to the next generation. Like Bright Sun Flower, I also have dedicated my life to passing on knowledge.

In my books, I try to provide something that many #kids today are without: a connection to #tradition. Unfortunately, most kids spend a lot of time in day care centers and other care centers because both of their parents must work. Grandparents, unlike the old days, are often too far away to interact with the kids, even if they aren’t working out-of-the-home jobs. Consequently, the kids lose that connection to the past, to their own traditions. 

Once kids learned from their grandparents and their parents about sacred things, about everyday ways of looking at the world, about how to value and respect all living things. Times have changed and kids are no longer given that. In my books, I show how it once was and hope that some of the teachings that Feather and Bright Sun Flower share will reach across the pages and touch the kids.

Feather is full of energy, curiosity, and has a lust for life. He has to grow up much faster than a child should. He and I share this, as we also share Feather’s curiosity about life. And, heh, maybe we share his mouth, too.

Interviewer: You have published CIRCLES and the second book of the series, Spirals.  Are you currently working on a third book in this series?  If so, can you give us a “back cover blurb” about it and when you expect it to be released?

Ruby Standing Deer: I am two-thirds finished with STONES, the third book. Part of my childhood was spent on the back of a horse. It was there that I learned what true freedom really meant. STONES became much more than a book for me after reading about a man who raced to the wild horse auction, not to get the best horses for his ranch, but to get the best for the slaughter house. Each fall there are many roundups of these magnificent, beautiful, Sacred animals. Many are pregnant and give birth in the holding pens. Their foals die. The slaughter men call the horses and their young a waste of space.

Interviewer: Wow, that’s sad. It’s my understanding that many of these #wildhorses are grazing on public lands that have been leased for extremely low rates to large ranchers and that is where some of the conflict comes in: the ranchers don’t want the wild horses, a part of America’s heritage, to eat the food from the public lands. They want the grass for their cattle and their horses which then increases their profits.

So, STONES illuminates the slaughter of #wildhorses. What’s the rest of the story?

Ruby Standing DeerSTONES is about more than rescuing mustangs from a band who tracks them down for the hairy-faces (what they call whites in the story). The Hairy-faces don’t want Native People to acquire mustangs as it would increase their ability to resist the influx of the whites.

This story is about the journey of two young people, Singing Stone and Dove, both of whom are following sacred tradition.  Singing Stone is protecting a small herd of  mustangs from the Likes To Fight People and the Hairy-faces (whites so named because of the hair on the men’s faces.)

Far away in the Land of Tall Trees, Dove, the daughter of the Holy Man, Shining Light, dreams of the mustang boy. Through visions, she is told that she must go to Singing Stone and help him protect the #mustangs. Another dream tells her she must hurry for danger is closing in on the mustangs.

Interviewer: Will this third book complete the series, or will it run longer?

Ruby Standing Deer: I am not sure if there will be a fourth book. It depends on where I am led. I listen to my dreams, take long walks with my dogs and set my mind free. It is those times I ‘see’ what to do next.

Interviewer: How did you find your publisher? Did you query a lot of publishers, or find one right away?

Ruby Standing Deer: My editor/publisher, and I were in a writing group together a long time ago. The writing group, we both learned, was a scam. You bought ‘tokens’ from the site’s creators. Then, you took the tokens and bid on people in auctions to have them review your chapter. Unfortunately, except my editor/publisher, there was not one writer in the group.

Interviewer: What piece of advice would you give to new writers about working with a publisher?

Ruby Standing Deer: Find one who will listen to you, not tell you what he/she wants. Indie publishers are more likely to work with you, listen to you and then advise you.

Visit Ruby’s website at:    http://www.rubystandingdeer.com

Connect with Ruby on Facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/ruby.deer

NEW #AUTHORS, NEW BOOKS TO READ!

This week I have read two books that are well out of the stream of ordinary. These #authors have both approached their subjects with a great deal of thought and craft.

Elizabeth Garcia’s The Reluctant Cowboy addressed some tough issues–such as violence, rape, gender identity, and love– but not with an in-your-face approach. She wove a story that pulled me in, made me feel a connection to young Jed, and consequently, to the pain and confusion he faced. I won’t say how it ended, but I will say I recommend reading it.

Chantal Bellehumeur’s, Just Another Common Killer. Not being a Ripperologist, nor really a fan of horror, still the book intrigued me and I didn’t put it down until I had finished it.  It was written in a reportorial style that added to the feeling of reality. Quite interesting, it kept me thinking even after I turned the last page.

To read more reviews on these books go to Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com

Both books are available on Amazon.

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

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!