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Showing posts with label paranormal suspense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paranormal suspense. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

AN INTERVIEW WITH PARANORMAL SUSPENSE AND MYSTICAL REALISM AUTHOR CYNTHIA CARVER

Today we sit down for a chat with paranormal suspense and mystical realism author Cynthia Carver. Learn more about her and her books at her website.

When did you realize you wanted to write novels? 

In high school I fancied myself a poet, and I am not. In the military I journaled and tried to write poetry. Then my best friend challenged me to write a story and continued asking, what if? With the inspiration he gave me, I hand wrote my first romance story in a hard back journal. During the creation of that untitled work, the realization of being an author took hold and three and a half decades later, I published my first novel, Small Bit of Justice.

 

How long did it take you to realize your dream of publication? 

My first short story was published eight years after the dream took hold. I was paid a whole ten dollars for it.

 

Are you traditionally published, indie published, or a hybrid author? 

I am an indie published author. 

 

Where do you write? 

My favorite place is outside under the awning. In the winter I have a majestic view of the southwest desert and the mountains in the close distance. Second choice is at the dining room table if it is too windy outside.

 

Is silence golden, or do you need music to write by? What kind? 

Silence is golden. On the rare occasion I want music, it is to enhance the scene. Like the jail cell scene in Small Bit of Justice, I have the heroine, Tracy, meeting her first love from high school. “Here We Go Again” by Whitesnake was played a bit loud that day.

 

How much of your plots and characters are drawn from real life? From your life in particular? 

Quite a bit. My main character, Tracy Richards, is an online psychic and a single mom of two girls. She is similar to me as I was an online psychic since the late 80’s and retired in 2017. I have four daughters and was married to my high school sweetheart.

 

The plot is from my imagination, and I wrote the outcome the way I would want a missing person’s case to be.

 

My second series is The Séance Series. It is written the way a non-charlatan session is conducted.

 

When you visit me at an in-person event, stop by the table and draw a miniature tarot card for a micro mini reading. 

 

Describe your process for naming your character? 

The original story line, she was an only child whose father named her after his favorite detective, Dick Tracy. It was a pun that failed miserably. 

 

Real settings or fictional towns? 

Brule is a fictional town.  During my travels I fell in love with a small town and the description is based on that town. I returned to visit the town after I had finished the story and it was so different, with all the trees cut and their stumps ground out. Brule became totally fictional at that time.

 

What’s the quirkiest quirk one of your characters has? 

Tracy listens to the advice her intuitive daughters offer her. Most mothers, including myself, would second guess their daughters’ advice whether intuitive or not.

 

What’s your quirkiest quirk?  

I think things through while panning for gold.

 

If you could have written any book (one that someone else has already written,) which one would it be? Why? 

That is a toss-up. The Miss Fortune series written by Jana DeLeon or Longmire by Craig Johnson. Ms. DeLeon keeps me laughing the entire time I am reading, even when it is the third or fourth time, I have read the series. Her characters could be members of my family. Mr. Johnson has the western sheriff, crime, fictitious towns and counties, native tribes and a bar that has elements I would love to incorporate with his finesse into my stories.

 

Everyone at some point wishes for a do-over. What’s yours? 

I probably should have been a journalist in the military instead of a jet mechanic.

 

What’s your biggest pet peeve? 

A blaring television.

 

You’re stranded on a deserted island. What are your three must-haves? 

Kindle with solar charger, my furry 4-legged critters, and coffee. 

 

What was the worst job you’ve ever held? 

Backpressman at a cotton gin.

 

What’s the best book you’ve ever read? 

The Monster at the End of this Book. My four girls wore out so many copies. When they had children, that was the first book purchased for their children. It is a Sesame Street Golden Book. 

 

Ocean or mountains? 

Mountains, but I do have to have a brook nearby.

 

What’s on the horizon for you? 

This year, the five prequel novellas addressing Tracy Richards’ upbringing will be released through Kindle Unlimited called, Shamaness in Silhouette.

 

Anything else you’d like to tell us about yourself and/or your books? 

The second in the stand-alone series happens while Tracy is on vacation at her sister’s home when a serial crime spree erupts. There are fun antics, family antics, and danger around every corner.

 

Small Bit of Justice

Meet Tracy Richards. Mom. Internet Psychic. Local Crime Solver. Working with the Brule, Ohio Police Department, Tracy moonlights as their consultant and solves crimes with the help of her spirit guides.

 

None of which are that interesting.

- Find a missing Corgi

- Catch porch pirates

- Locate wandering peacocks

- Discover misplaced items

 

And all the thanks she gets is being called a witch.

 

There was a reason Tracy found her way to Brule, and all these years of escaping her past are for naught as it comes rushing back. After seventeen years, her childhood sweetheart, and baby daddy, comes waltzing back in with a case—find his missing niece.

 

It turns out her daughters have a cousin who’s been kidnapped, and it’s up to Tracy to find her before she disappears for good. With the help of her witchy neighbor Lehana, Tracy sets out on a chase guided only by her intuition and ghosts.

 

Danger lurks at every pit stop as the clock ticks, and the precious window becomes narrower. This isn’t the first time Tracy has followed visions of someone in danger, but last time, the only thing they recovered was a body. Now driven to save the girl, Tracy knows this is her chance to redeem herself, but when flashes of more girls come to her, Tracy realizes this might not be as simple as a snatch-and-grab.

 

Can Tracy beat the clock, or is she actually chasing ghosts?


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Thursday, April 19, 2018

BOOK CLUB FRIDAY--AN INTERVIEW WITH WEREWOLF LORI GRENVILLE

Today we’re joined by Lori Grenville from author P.J. MacLayne’s paranormal Free Wolves series.

What was your life like before your author started pulling your strings?
Helping rescue unhappy female shifters from packs was just an ordinary day for me. But I can't believe she got me involved with saving the life of an alpha. Alphas and I don't get along. They despise what I stand for. So to think that she got me to put up my life as security for an alpha is craziness.

What’s the one trait you like most about yourself?
That I stand up for the ones that can't stand up for themselves, give hope to those that have lost all hope. Sounds saintly, doesn't it? But I'm no saint, and sometimes I resort to less than legal tactics to get the job done.

What do you like least about yourself?
I don’t like being short and having to look up at everyone. I mean, hanging out with these big male wolf shifters can give me a literal pain in the neck.

What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you?
When she had me crawling into the bed of the most powerful alpha in all of North America, that was pretty weird. Of course, it was strictly business, and I made that clear to him from the get-go. Not that he was interested in me. Not as a bed partner, anyway. Still, it was a risky move on her part because it could have gone badly.

Do you argue with your author? If so, what do you argue about?
Yep. She tried to talk me into having romantic feelings for the wrong guy. I set her straight, of course. Not that I have time to have romantic feelings for any guy.

What is your greatest fear?
That my undercover status will be blown in the middle of a job. If that were to happen, I wouldn’t be the only one getting hurt.

What makes you happy?
Besides the obvious of completing a rescue? Going for a run in wolf form in an old forest. I’d have to dodge shrubs and young trees as I darted from one patch of sunshine to another. I could stop and drink water from a clear stream whenever I got thirsty.

If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why?
The bit about my mother. I still want to locate her. If I could rewrite that part, I’d find her among either the Jaeger or Destin pack females. It would make for a happy ending. Or happier, maybe.           

Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?
Elder Jaeger. He’s no alpha. How the heck does he keep one of his betas from challenging him for pack leadership? He’s got to have some dirt on them and I wish I knew what it was. It might enable me to do some manipulation of my own. For the betterment of the pack, of course.

Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?
Interesting question. Obvious answer would be Counselor Carlson, but I don’t think I could live with all the restrictions his position puts on him. What kind of life is it if you are surrounded by bodyguards all the time? I’ll say Elex Destin instead. He may have had a rough start in life, but he’s found what he loves to do and he’s good at it. And he won’t allow himself to be pressured to be something he isn’t.

Tell us a little something about your author. Where can readers find her website/blog?
Born and raised among the rolling hills of western Pennsylvania, P.J. MacLayne still finds inspiration for her books in that landscape. She is a computer geek by day and a writer by night who currently lives in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains. When she's not in front of a computer screen, she might be found exploring the back roads of the nearby national forests and parks. In addition to the Free Wolves’ stories, she is also the author of the Oak Grove series. Read more about her and her books at her blog.

And a Giveaway! In celebration of the release of Wolves' Gambit, one or more lucky people will win an e-book version of Wolves' Pawn, the first book of the series. You can enter here.  

What's next for you?
It's time for me to go into hiding for a while. Sit back, relax, recharge, wait for things to settle down. At least until I get chosen for another mission.

Wolves' Gambit
Wolf-shifter Lori Grenville was rescued from near-slavery and a brutal pack leader by the Free Wolves. To pay back the favor, she's dedicated her life to helping others in the same situation, leading shifters to safety and a new start, risking her life in the process. She's faced down alphas and has no qualms in undermining pack structure.

Now she's challenged with the task of restoring an alpha to his rightful place. If she gets it right, she can stop a war from ripping apart two packs and spreading across an entire state. If she fails, she'll be among the first to die.

There's still the option of walking away and letting the Jaeger and Destin packs destroy each other. That means she'll fail in her original mission of rescuing the daughter of the Jaeger alpha before the girl is forced into marriage for political gain.

Lori hasn't failed in a mission yet. This one may be the exception.

Although Wolves' Gambit is the third book in the Free Wolves series, each book can be read as a standalone.

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

LIVING ON A SHOESTRING WITH GUEST AUTHOR LYNETTE SOFRAS

A former English teacher, Lynette Sofras gave up a high level career in education to focus on her writing a few years ago, thus fulfilling her lifelong dream. She mainly writes women fiction, often with suspense and/or a supernatural twist. When not producing novels, she works as an editor and writing tutor at 24houranswers.com. Learn more about Lynette and her books at her website and blog.

It's said that most Americans will experience poverty at some point in their lives, particularly inner city or rural dwellers. What seems almost ludicrous to me is that as the world advances in so many ways, poverty is steadily increasing. In the UK, the dramatic rise in the number of people using food banks is testament to the fact that poverty is no longer a third world issue.

When times are tight, there are numerous ways you can cut back on expenses to save money for essentials. You don't have to starve or live in misery, thanks to food banks and the supermarket price wars. Buying budget brands doesn't always mean sacrificing quality and essential nutrition. In the UK, stores like Lidl and Aldi are forcing competition and the big name supermarkets are having to downprice accordingly. If you don't want to switch loyalties, try switching brands for a month to see how much you can save. Search for offers and money-off vouchers in free magazines or the Internet. Visit markets, boot/garage sales and auction houses to hunt down cheaper alternatives.

Foregoing expensive forms of entertainment for a short while can also help you save pennies. Cut out fancy restaurants and get experimental in the kitchen. Visit museums and libraries and broaden your mind for free or simply get healthy with a walk in the park and perhaps a picnic lunch.

While I've never known real deprivation, I did go through a period of financial hardship when I was bringing up a young child with virtually no support from the father, while putting myself through university and beyond to ensure I could provide for us both in the future. It is perhaps hardly surprising, therefore, that money issues infiltrate some of my novels. In my latest romantic suspense, The Nightclub, two half-sisters, fleeing a pretty dreadful past, find themselves living hand to mouth and surviving only with great difficulty. Money is so tight, they have to live in a squalid flat, shop at charity shops or scavenge for market bargains, and re-use teabags to save pennies. But they have each other, determination and ambition.

The Nightclub
Trying to make a living for her teenage sister and herself, naïve Laura Hamilton accepts a job offer as a hostess at an infamous London nightclub. As she struggles to survive in a world of sex, drugs and corruption, she certainly doesn't expect to find her own knight in shining armour in the club's owner, Julian. But will he really save her from a future as a fallen woman? And is he involved in the criminal organisation that threatens not only her sister's life, but will change her own fate forever?

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Thursday, May 14, 2015

BOOK CLUB FRIDAY--GUEST AUTHOR E.F. WATKINS

E.F. Watkins writes paranormal suspense and mystery. Dark Music, the first book in her Quinn Matthews Haunting Mystery series, received the David G. Sasher Award, and Hex, Death & Rock’n’Roll was a Mystery finalist for the 2014 Next Generation EBook Awards. Learn more about E.F. and her books a her website. 

Ever had a killer crush?

It's something we've probably all experienced at least once -- a major case of unrequited infatuation. The subject might be someone we actually know who is "just not that into" us or a celebrity we may never even meet.

My first crush, starting when I was about twelve, was on a TV star who shall remain nameless. In those days, before the Internet or even the VCR, I could only find out the latest gossip about him by reading “fan magazines” (more innocent than the tabloids of today), and if I ever missed an episode of his weekly series or guest appearance on a “variety” show, I was devastated. The one time I actually met him in person, at an event in New York, I could not make any coherent words come out of my mouth. I don't know if the typical fourteen-year-old girl would react quite as dramatically these days, or would be more jaded, but you never know. Not a parent myself, I haven’t observed any cases of “Bieber fever’” at close range.

Some people, including adults, take their obsessions with celebrities much further. Groupies follow rock bands around, often in hopes of ending up as a girlfriend or wife of one of the members. Fans of both sexes stalk TV or movie stars during their daily lives, trespassing on their property or even breaking into their homes. These stalkers sometimes believe that, if given the chance, they can make the object of their affections love them back, and they blame the star's handlers for standing in the way. Now and then a celebrity is injured or even killed by someone with that kind of psychotic obsession.

Maybe because I still remember the hunger with which I devoured those fan magazines and celebrity gossip columns for any mention of my first crush, and counted the minutes until he appeared on the TV screen each week, this phenomenon always has intrigued me. I ended up making killer crushes the underlying theme for my second Quinn Matthews Haunting Mystery, Hex, Death & Rock'n'Roll.

Hex, Death & Rock’n’Roll
Through a series of coincidences, journalist and fledgling psychic Quinn ends up helping a rock band that has been told it's "under a curse." The lead singer, Alan, has become the focus of a number of stalkers--whether motivated by love or hate, they're all potentially dangerous. Any of them might be behind several nasty “accidents” that have plagued the band, the latest one killing a cameraman. Is it really possible that the band’s enemy is using a shadowy entity to attack them? Can Quinn use her novice-level psychic skills to stop the killer before he, or she, strikes again? Or will the toxic fan mistake Quinn for Alan’s new girlfriend and decide to stop her, instead?

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Thursday, May 7, 2015

BOOK CLUB FRIDAY--AUTHOR AMBER FOXX

Today we sit down for an interview with Amber Foxx. Amber describes her books as not conforming to any genre but a blend of paranormal mystery, paranormal suspense, and general fiction. Read more about her and her books at her website.
  
When did you realize you wanted to write novels?
When I was eight. I wrote a little book, a mystery inspired by Nancy Drew, in red ink on bright yellow paper, and stapled the pages together. I mailed it to my grandfather, a poet and English professor. He encouraged me to keep writing and didn’t even mention my color scheme.

How long did it take you to realize your dream of publication?
I’m not really sure. I didn’t measure the years. I know I started my blog in January 2011, thinking my first book would be ready by the end of that year, and I didn’t decide it was ready until December 2013. So it took at least three years from the point that I made the commitment to that book, but it had been in progress longer.

Are you traditionally published, indie published, or a hybrid author?
 Indie. I blend genres and break conventions, so that seemed like the best choice.

Where do you write?
 In my home office. Sometimes at the breakfast table, too.

Is silence golden, or do you need music to write by? What kind?
Silence. Music makes me want to dance, or gets me so wrapped up in it I can’t do anything else. I like to brainstorm to music, but I don’t write while I do it, I just let my mind flow the way it does while I’m running.

How much of your plots and characters are drawn from real life? From your life in particular?
My protagonist Mae Martin is based on a good friend. As you might guess, my friend’s life has paralleled Mae’s—and not always in the sequence one might expect.

Sometimes after I wrote certain things, my friend would have those events occur in her life. She knows the character was inspired by her, but these things would happen in my unpublished books she hadn't read yet, and then they would happen to her..

My experiences provide material for my books, but I avoid using myself as a character. The course Dr. Bernadette Pena teaches in the Calling is like one I really taught. I met the friend Mae is based on through our shared interest in fitness. We’ve both worked in that field professionally, and I wanted my protagonist to have a normal, down-to-earth occupation that I could write about realistically. I’ve studied a little energy healing, and I do have some psychic ability, but it’s not the same as Mae’s. I’m more conventional. I dream the future. Mae sees the past and the present.

Describe your process for naming your character?
They name themselves. I accept the introduction and work with them. I sometimes change the names of secondary characters to avoid sound-alikes, but my major characters, Mae Martin and Jamie Ellerbee, showed up with those names. I then had to research Jamie’s Aboriginal skin name, his middle name that’s sort of like a clan name, and make sure I had the Warlpiri spelling for it. He uses that name, Jangarrai, as a performer. To get authentic last names for my characters from various New Mexico Indian tribes—that’s more for future books than the currently published ones—I take note of common names when I’m visiting that reservation, but the characters usually arrive with their first names. The most colorful name in Snake Face, that of country music star Joe Wayne Brazos, simply came with the character. I had to go back and figure out how he chose it as his stage name.

Real settings or fictional towns?
All the settings are places I know inside out: Norfolk, Virginia, and Santa Fe and Truth or Consequences, New Mexico and the small North Carolina towns in The Calling and in Snake Face, which are based on real places with the names changed. Every street and house in Tylerton is real; only the name is fictional. I did that as a courtesy because Mae doesn’t like the town, even though I did.

Snake Face is a road trip, so it has to go through places a musician would play on a short tour of the south and southwest, I know the roads Jamie travels in Snake Face. I’ve done a lot of long solo road trips across the country. All the cities are real but I invented the bars and other small concert spaces where Jamie plays. Another good friend is a musician, and I got some ideas from knowing her, but her tours were not as disaster-prone as Jamie’s.

What’s the quirkiest quirk one of your characters has?
Jamie has so many I’m not sure what’s the quirkiest. Traveling with his stuffed toy that he had when he was three? Obsessing on making sure he’s brushed his hair and his teeth? Checking the sheets for spiders before he gets into bed? He’s prone to quirkiness in general. Maybe the defining quirk is not realizing quite how eccentric he really is.

What’s your quirkiest quirk?
I can’t stand to wear regular shoes and socks. I wear five-fingers or flip-slops. My socks all have toes. When I have to endure a closed-up normal boot in cold weather, I can’t wait to liberate my toes again, and I go barefoot in my office. My students have come to expect it. They come in for advising meetings and I’m shoeless. Fortunately, teaching yoga is a major part of my job. I get to do it barefoot.

If you could have written any book (one that someone else has already written,) which one would it be? Why?
 Dorothy Bryant’s The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You. I would be proud to have achieved such originality in world-building, integration of mysticism and suspense, complexity in characters and conflicts, and such an extraordinary ending. It’s a one-of-a-kind book.

Everyone at some point wishes for a do-over. What’s yours?
I wouldn’t have started on my Ph.D. I realized too late that I didn’t aspire to being a tenured professor after all, and that lecturer or instructor status with two Master’s degrees was sufficient. I can’t really regret it, though, except for the loans. It’s not as if I didn’t learn anything valuable. In fact, during a difficult time in my life, my classes kept me grounded and focused. Everything that I regret in one way, I’m grateful for in another. My life is a seamless whole, a story where each part develops the next part. When my father was dying, he said he had no regrets, and I understood that. He knew that his mistakes led him, sometimes the hard way, to his subsequent better choices and to his insights.

What’s your biggest pet peeve?
I have no interesting or original ones except perhaps the sound of the word peeve. It sounds whiny. I can’t make a pet out of it. I’ll share a minor thing that bothers me that also makes me laugh: students who e-mail me when they’ve missed a class and ask, “Did I miss anything?” They’re in college. What do they think? I’m tempted to tell them, “No, we had milk and cookies and took naps. You didn’t miss a thing.”

You’re stranded on a deserted island. What are your three must-haves?
I’ll assume the island has fruits and nuts and greens and fresh water, so my necessities will be for my mental and spiritual happiness. I’d run barefoot and do yoga on the beach, so I’d be fine, basically. But I’d want my netbook, a solar panel, and a way to connect the two. That way I could keep writing until I was rescued, and I have a lot of books on the Nook on my netbook, so it would serve a two-in-one happiness function. I’d want to be rescued by the time I ran out of reading material, though.

What was the worst job you’ve ever held?
It’s a tie between being the assistant director of a fitness center (at a college that shall remain nameless) where my boss knew nothing about fitness, and a fitness and management job at an exclusive spa where the working conditions were so bizarre it would take a book to do them justice. I hope to do a Lucky Jim sort of thing with it—turn the things that drove me crazy about the job into humor and a good plot, if only readers will believe that such a place could exist. It was up on a mountain and had no employee parking except for upper management. The rest of us had to ride a gondola up the mountain from a parking lot in the town below—making what would have been a fifteen-minute commute into a forty-five-minute one. That’s just one snippet of the weirdness.

What’s the best book you’ve ever read?
The Collected Poems of William Butler Yeats. I’ve read many books I’ve loved, so it was hard to choose the single best one, but I’ve read and re-read Yeats’s poetry for decades. I can’t say that about any other book.

Ocean or mountains?
Mountains. The only possible New Mexico answer. You have to love rocks and dirt to live here.

City girl/guy or country girl/guy?
City. My favorites: Santa Fe, of course, and I loved Norfolk when I lived there.

What’s on the horizon for you?
Mountains. And the fourth book in the Mae Martin series, Soul Loss, set in Santa Fe. It’s finished, and will be coming out this summer. I’ve also started a new book blog, Indies Who Publish Everywhere, dedicated to helping readers with e-pub e-readers discover authors who publish on all platforms. 

Anything else you’d like to tell us about yourself and/or your books?
Thanks for asking. Of course.  I love to talk about my books:
Shaman’s Blues received the B.R.A.G. medallion, an award recognizing the best in indie fiction.

My humorous paranormal short-short story Clairalience, featuring winners in the Santa Fe Reporter’s 2014 writing contest, can be read here

The series prequel, The Outlaw Women, is free

Snake Face, the third Mae Martin Psychic Mystery
No murder, just mystery. Every life hides a secret, and love is the deepest mystery of all.

Trying to revive his career, singer Jamie Ellerbee is on his first tour. Mae Martin is venturing into her first relationship since her divorce. Bad judgment and worse luck force Jamie to ask for Mae’s psychic aid. His unrequited love for her makes it an awkward request, but she can’t refuse to help a friend. The more she looks into the problem, the more frightening it becomes and the wider its web expands—not only into Jamie’s past, but also a bad-boy celebrity’s private life, and even her new boyfriend’s history. 

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Saturday, October 30, 2010

THIS WEEK'S BOOK WINNER

Thanks to all who stopped by this week at Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers. We hope you'll come back often and also tell your friends about us. We have lots of exciting posts and guests planned for the months ahead. I’d also like to thank Caridad Pineiro for being our Book Club Friday guest and offering a copy of Sins of the Flesh to one of our readers who posted a comment this week. The winner this week is babyfro. Please email your mailing address to me at anastasiapollack@gmail.com. I’ll forward the information to Caridad, and she’ll mail your book to you. Happy reading! -- Anastasia