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Showing posts with label Amy Shojai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amy Shojai. Show all posts

Monday, March 7, 2022

AUTHOR AMY SHOJAI WRITES THRILLERS WITH BITE

Lefty and Tigger, Two of the Hero Pet Winners in Win or Lose

Amy Shojai is a nationally known authority on pet care and behavior, a certified animal behavior consultant, and the author of more than thirty-five nonfiction pet books. She’s now writing what she’s dubbed Thrillers with Bite, a series of pet-centric novels. Learn more about Amy and her books at her 
website or blog. 

Name That Pet Contests Connect with Readers 

Thank you, Lois, for allowing me to share a favorite part of my September Day & Shadow Thriller Series. The Name That Pet contest for each book now has rabid fans (pun intended), including my most recent book, Win or Lose.

 

My publishing career grew from prescriptive pet nonfiction (I’m a certified animal behavior consultant). While plotting my first novel, I drew from personal experience to create a dog trainer character, along with the service dog she trained. Shadow, the service dog, has his own viewpoint chapters (no, he doesn’t talk). The dog and cat behavior aspect adds a new dimension to the narrative my readers adore. Although I often place pet characters at risk, I don’t kill my animal heroes in the stories. No, it’s only the people who become victims, and usually the bad guys get what’s coming to them—with the cats and dogs lending a paw.

 

As a new fiction author, I wondered how to start building an audience from scratch. Could I engage my nonfiction audience while growing a fiction readership? With the first book, Lost and Found, I announced a “Name That Pet” contest, and invited potential readers to nominate their own pets to star as characters in the book. 

 

The contest struck a chord. I’d already written the story and planned to simply swap out the winners’ names with placeholder. Instead of a handful of suggestions, that first contest garnered more than 85 name suggestions. Based on cat and dog submissions and descriptions, I created a poll with my top 15-20 choices, and again invited readers to vote. More than 800 votes decided the dog and cat names in the book. Each of the winners received an autographed print copy of the book, with their names listed in the back.

 

After that, readers clamored to nominate their pets for future stories. Whoa! I didn’t even know I’d launched a series. For Book 2, Hide and Seek, I received 55 name suggestions, with 4100 votes for the winners. I had so many hotly contested nominations and doubled the initial number of pet characters. That meant writing new mini stories to incorporate these hero pets into the narrative, along with the individual pets’ descriptions and unique foibles. For instance, the Golden retriever Trixie in real life stole laundry from the neighbors. She became the therapy dog in the story’s Alzheimer’s unit and her thievery added to the plot.

 

The Name That Pet contest for Show and Tell, the third book, nearly became unmanageable. The contest resulted in 46 dog names and 81 cat names, with a total of 16,930 votes. I included six pets in the narrative and ended up writing a “bonus chapter” to also include runner up pets. All the winners shared about the books, so the contest helps promote the stories. It goes well beyond that, though.


The contest for the fourth book in the series, Fight or Flight, touched my heart. My dog had inspired the main dog character, and readers learned Magic had passed. That’s why it took me so long to write the next story. They voted to include his name…and legacy…in the story and future books. The contest connects me to readers in a way I never anticipated. We share our joys and sorrows (and stories) about our common love of furry wonders.

 

The contest for Hit and Run, Book 5, resulted in 158 cat names, 172 dog names, and 43,300 votes with a total of six “hero pets” added to the plot. My most recent thriller, Win or Lose, resulted in 104 cat name nominations, 150 dog name suggestions, and many thousands of votes. When the winning dog, a three-legged Great Pyrenees named Lefty won, I cried. My own three-legged dog had recently passed from cancer, and readers knew it and (I think) voted accordingly. Lefty is a medical alert dog in the story, while tabby cat Tigger thwarts an assassin.

 

I’ve created a beautiful monster. I love the eagerness of readers to become involved in the stories. And I love learning about them. I wouldn’t trade that connection for anything. 

 

Win or Lose

A September Day & Shadow Series, Book 6

 

September Day can't shake her mounting wedding-planning angst. Too overwhelmed to pick up a dropped-off shelter dog she once trained, she finally leaves the house to check in on a missing vet clinic employee. But when she gets there, she's terrified to find the girl's brother hanging on the edge of death and the poor young woman abducted.


Discovering the hound got dumped by the same vicious criminal, September and Shadow race out of town on a dangerous rescue mission. But when a body surfaces and the kidnapper seizes more victims, September fears she may be too late to prevent further bloodshed.


With the clock ticking against them, can September and Shadow deliver justice?

 

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Sunday, December 20, 2020

AUTHOR AMY SHOJAI WRITES THRILLERS WITH BITE

Amy Shojai, CABC is the award-winning author of 35+ nonfiction pet care and behavior books, and the September & Shadow thrillers. She lives in North Texas with Bravo-Dawg, Karma-Kat, Shadow-Pup, and the enduring memory of Magical-Dawg and Seren-Kitty. Learn more about Amy and her books at her website

The Birth of Thrillers With Bite!

Thank you for allowing me to share my fiction journey and my latest thriller, Hit and Run. I’d always wanted to write fiction, but my first successes focused on dog and cat nonfiction books, as I am a certified animal behavior consultant and former veterinary technician. 

 

When publishing changed (it does that every so often!), and my then-agent couldn’t sell my next nonfiction title, all my deadlines disappeared. Suddenly, I had time to experiment. So, I wrote the book I’d always wanted to read—with pet-centric stories that included strong dog and cat characters intrinsic to the plots. 

 

I call my thrillers “Thrillers With Bite!” because they all include heroic pets and their human partners. The books also include dog and cat viewpoint chapters—but they do not talk. These are not fantasy or cozy mysteries but rather are informed by my expertise in veterinary medicine and animal behavior. 

 

Although pet characters often may be at risk, I don’t kill my animal heroes in the stories. No, it’s only the people who become victims, and usually the bad guys get what’s coming to them. I also get to highlight the best of our cats and dogs in the stories by including hero pets from readers in the story after they win the Name That Dog and Name That Cat contest held for each book.

 

My main character, animal behaviorist and trainer September, partners with her PTSD service dog Shadow and her trained Maine Coon cat Macy. All the stories in the series thus far have been set in North Texas, but in Hit and Run September, Shadow, and Macy travel to South Bend, Indiana to uncover a conspiracy that has festered for decades. 

 

In the first book, Lost and Found, September trained Shadow as a service dog for her autistic nephew. I had no idea how to write in an autistic child’s viewpoint, and instead showed the story through the dog’s viewpoint in several chapters. 

 

I absolutely LOVED writing in dog viewpoint—not as a “talking” dog (aka human in a fur coat) but as a canine hero with his own story problem and character arc. Shadow perceives his world through scent, sound, and more, and acts and reacts as a normal dog would. Turns out, my readers love Shadow’s viewpoint chapters, too. They asked for “what happens next?” and the series was born.

 

In subsequent books, Shadow becomes September’s PTSD support/service dog. He’s also trained to track and find missing pets. Macy-cat, not to be outdone, copies him and acquires pet tracking skills (yes, there ARE real-life pet-finding felines). In the series, some of the amazing, true pet skills may surprise you.

 

I put my protagonist through the wringer in each story. Previous books naturally lead to the next logical “what happens next” step: In Lost and Found, September hides from her past; her stalker finds her in Hide and Seek; then the child victims from the first book become heroes in Show and TellFight or Flight, the fourth book, reveals what happened to Shadow while lost for two weeks in the previous book. It also introduces new characters and relationships, which led to a surprise AHA! inspiration for the plot of Hit and Run.

 

Through all the books September has a strained relationship with her mother. In a short scene at the end of Fight or Flight, she discovers her mother has a secret estranged sister and a hidden mysterious past. I didn’t plan that—the characters just blurted it out in dialogue as I wrote the scene. Then I had to figure out why the secret and how September would react. The answer was to confront her own past to uncover a decades-old mystery that (of course!) threatens her happiness and lives of those she loves. 

 

Readers love Shadow’s viewpoint chapters so much, they inspired me to expand that to cats. So in Hit and Run, there are some fun cat-centric heroic antics, and Macy also has a few chapters that show his part of the story through a cat’s purr-ceptions. 

 

I write thrillers because I get to control the outcome where good triumphs over evil, and hope lives for a brighter future. I hope one or more of my stories will entertain readers and maybe help them appreciate even more the pets they love. 

 

Hit and Run

A September Day and Shadow Thriller, Book 5


A Message from the grave. An assassin on her tail. Sniffing out the truth could get them all killed.


September Day is ready for a new start with her detective boyfriend. Believing she’s finally put her husband’s death behind her, her life upends when his mother sends her a safety deposit box key that could unlock the truth. But before she can examine the cryptic contents, she’s brutally attacked, the files are stolen, and her former in-law is murdered.

 

Determined to uncover the harrowing facts, September and her dog Shadow battle to stay one step ahead of the merciless killer. But when they stumble upon shady business at a cattery, she must expose the mastermind before she too ends up in the ground.

 

Will Macy-Cat sniff out the key to unmask a decades-old horror? Can September and Shadow confront the past and live to tell the tale?


Watch the trailer here

 

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Tuesday, December 29, 2015

HEALTHY LIVING--GUEST AUTHOR AMY SHOJAI, SERVICE DOGS & #PTSD

Photo Used With Permission: Service dog training for German Shepherd, image by domaco/DepositPhotos.com 
Amy Shojai is a nationally known authority on pet care and behavior, a certified animal behavior consultant, and the award-winning author of 30 nonfiction pet books. She also writes thrillers with bite!—including the dog-viewpoint thrillers Lost and Found, Hide and Seek, and Show and Tell. Learn more about Amy and her books at her website and blog.

(Note from Anastasia: For information on keeping your small dogs healthy, click here.)
Show and Tell, PTSD, & Pet-centric Characters
I’m a longtime reader and lover of all-things-pets and knew that dogs (and cats) would be part of my thriller series. But as a “pet journalist,” I also wanted to enlighten readers, not only entertain them. In Show and Tell, my two main characters share this burden and are a reflection of people and pets that I know.

Animal behaviorist September Day continues to suffer from PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder.) Many of us are very aware that military personnel face challenges from the experiences they’ve encountered in service to their country. In fact, anyone can develop debilitating stress from a past or ongoing traumatic experience. September’s flashbacks and panic attacks arise from an abusive relationship in her past. Since then, she’s been stalked, kidnapped by the abuser, and nearly burned to death when he tried to kill her.

In response, September turned her house into a fortress, shut herself off from the world, and became frozen by fear and unwilling to risk new relationships. September only begins to heal through working with animals and falls in love with Shadow, a German Shepherd who becomes her service dog.

Through Shadow’s viewpoint chapters, I wanted to showcase the fact that service dogs also suffer emotional challenges and even burnout. In real life, military dogs can also suffer from PTSD, and Shadow has been through so much, he’s also emotionally damaged. He feels responsible for keeping September safe. It’s “a good-dog’s job” to search through the house to be sure it’s safe, to become an 80-pound weight to hold September down until her panic fades, and to recognize and alert September prior to a flashback. But Shadow worries all the time that he might fail and lose his person forever—and be alone.

September’s mother is embarrassed by the panic attacks, and believes September just needs to toughen up. Outsiders raise eyebrows when Shadow acts like a dog rather than their pooch-perfect ideal, and are surprised there is no “service dog test/license” or tag/harness identification requirement. When September’s autistic nephew reappears, Shadow worries he’ll lose September and be returned to “his-boy.”

Shadow’s presence reduces September’s PTSD to manageable levels, and his early warnings of imminent episodes or danger boost her confidence. In turn, Shadow relies on September for the love and family he’s always craved. They are each other’s support, chosen family, and share an almost mystical connection. September refers to Shadow as her “heart.”

And then an intruder breaks into September’s house . . .

Show and Tell
An animal behaviorist and her service dog race a deadly storm to expose a treacherous secret others will kill to protect.

A blackmailer returns to sell a deadly cure.
A mother’s denial dooms millions of children.
And a dog shows true loyalty…when he runs away.

With her stalker finally caught, animal behaviorist September Day’s PTSD has abated and she’s begun to trust again. She dares to hope Detective Jeff Combs might become more than a friend, until his investigation into a dogfighting ring leaves her reeling.

Shadow wrestles his own demons. A German Shepherd autism service dog before losing his-boy to a health crises, Shadow found love and his true purpose working with September. Now his-boy is back—but changed—and Shadow fears he’ll be forced to choose.

When a desperate mom demands help, and Combs’s son disappears with his dog, September and Shadow must find the children before a devastating storm hits. But the children have a secret plan of their own. Only when September shows true courage, and a good-dog tells the truth, can they find their way home again.

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