Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts

Straight from the Mouth of 'The Silver Locket' Sophia Bar-Lev

THE SILVER LOCKET by Sophia Bar-Lev is the author’s third novel. A former elementary and high school teacher, Bar-Lev now devotes full time to writing, her lifelong passion.  She is an avid reader, loves to travel, enjoys cooking and baking and spending time with her family.  Her vivid descriptions, tasteful humor and insightful treatment of human behavior render her novels not only entertaining but thought-provoking. 

Purchase on Amazon 
Questionnaire:

Thanks for letting us interrogate you!  Can you give us a go-for-the-gut answer as to why you wanted to be an author?

I’ve had this inner drive to write since I was a child, turning in my first ‘book’ of 8 pages to my second grade teacher!  I continued writing over the years despite other responsibilities and determined that once I got past raising children and holding down a job because I had to, I would do what I really loved which is to write.  Now I do and I love it!

Tell us (we won’t tell promise!) is it all it’s cracked up to be?  I mean what are the perks and what are the demands?

Writing can be an enemy as well as a friend; it can yield great pleasure and satisfaction one the one hand and discouraging frustration on the other; but in the end, most writers – myself included – keep on writing because it’s what we love. Writers, I think, have this drive to get something said and we don’t give up.

Which route did you take – traditional or self-published – and can you give us the nitty gritty low down on what’s that like?

I went the self-published route on the advice of a few people I respect.  It has its ups and downs.  The folks I worked with at Create Space were wonderful but I quickly learned that in the new paradigm of publishing, an author has to be a marketer as well.  That’s a real learning curve for many of us and demands a significant time investment.  However, my overall evaluation is that self-publishing is the way to go at present at least until such time as one’s book gets the attention of a big name publisher.  I like the control you keep over your work that self-publishing gives you, but distribution and publicity is the challenge.  However, there are some great book publicists out there to help.

Tell us for real what your family feels about you spending so much time getting your book written, polished, edited, formatted, published, what have you?

Fortunately for me, my children are all grown and married.  My husband is very supportive and only occasionally has he mildly complained when I lost track of time and forgot to start dinner!!  I do tend to get so engrossed in my writing that I lost all track of time.  He’s really good about it.  It would be very different if I still had children at home.

Are your plants actually still alive?

I laughed right out loud when I read this question.  My plants are alive but only because they’re low maintenance!!!

In writing your book, how did you deal with the phone ringing, your family needing dinner or your boss calling you saying you’re late?

Early on in the process, I turned the ringer off on my phone and learned to use an alarm clock for starting dinner.  However, I must confess, sometimes I’ve been so engrossed that the alarm clock went off and I didn’t hear it!  For true!!
My husband heard it at the other end of the house but I didn’t and it was on my desk!  Now that’s called super concentration I guess.

What was the craziest or insane thing that happened to you in the book publishing process?

After I uploaded the manuscript to Create Space, I panicked.  Was it good enough?  Did I go through it enough times to be sure there were no mistakes?
Would anybody like it?  Then all of a sudden I realized I forgot to include the Dedication in the final manuscript.  Fortunately, my account specialist was awesome and fixed it for me.

How about the social networks?  Which ones do you believe help and which ones do you wish you could avoid?

Facebook has helped as well as Twitter.  I registered on Goodreads and have had minimal response from there so I haven’t paid much attention to it.  There are hundreds and hundreds of books on Goodreads.  I felt lost in the crowd. But Facebook has several ‘groups’ for authors and those have been helpful.

Book sales.  Don’t you just love them (or lack of?)?  How are you making the sales happen for you?

Started out with Facebook, my website and some promotional emails but that wasn’t enough.  I searched out book publicists and hired the one I liked best.  She’s been great.

What is one thing you’d like to jump on the rooftop and scream about?

People who write reviews and you can tell they never finished the book! It’s so annoying.  And people who post sarcastic comments.  Whatever happened to old fashioned courtesy?  You can write a negative review without being mean.

Okay, too much sugar for you today!  Here’s a nice cup of Chamomile tea and come on over and sit under the cabana and watch the waves roll in.  Now…can you tell us what you love about being a published author and how all those things above doesn’t matter because it’s all part of the whole scheme of things and you wouldn’t have it any other way?

Sure can – I’ll give you a specific example.  Recently a reader contacted me on the website and invited me to have a SKYPE visit with her book club who had just finished reading and discussing one of my earlier novels.  It was the most delightful and encouraging experience any author could hope for.  The ladies were great; they asked superb questions and shared valuable insights they had gained including ideas I’d never thought of but that they’d derived from the novel.  It was thrilling. 

Knowing that readers get something valuable from my novels is the best reward of all.



Straight from the Mouth of 'Lakota Honor' Kat Flannery

It wasn’t long ago that I was going over my rejection letters from CHASING CLOVERS. Twelve white papers sat before me. Some with letterhead, some without, and even a few with coffee stains on them. Within the neatly typed letters, four stood out above the rest—four with the same inscription... Dear Writer.
I wasn’t important enough for them to address the letter to me. The letter they send all the rejects.
Nope, I am Dear Writer.
The first time I received a rejection letter I sighed loudly, and tossed the paper into the pile of NO’s slowly growing on the right side of my desk.
The second time my jaw clenched, and for a few seconds I think I lost my vision. I took a deep cleansing breath, and then off to the pile it went.
The third time my hand tightened, crinkling the paper a smidgen. I bit my lip from yelling out vulgar profanity, took ten deep breaths that burned my nostrils and throat. I waved the paper in the air and threw it into the pile on the right.
The fourth time I clenched the paper within both hands, spewed out “Dear Writer” in every mimicking way I could along with a few “Thank you Jack Ass’”, and crumpled the paper up into a tight ball. I went outside and lit it on fire. As I watched the orange flames lick the curled paper, my temper began to subside and I came back to reality. Every writer goes through this, right? It’s never the first time. Heck, it’s usually never the first book. I picked up the charred ball from the pavement, and went inside to run it under some cool water.
The only part that wasn’t burned beyond recognition...Dear Writer.
Dear Damn Writer. Ugh.
I stared at the two words for a long time, my eyes misting—my throat tight. Was I ever going to get this book published? I picked up what was left of my pride and dragging my feet, my chest tight, I went back to my office. I reached for the rejection letters, and spread them all over my desk. Words jumped out at me. “Good, but not good enough.” “You’re almost there, but this needs work.” “Keep trying.” “Sorry, no.” “We do not publish new writers.” “Please, do not waste our time.” (ouch)
I picked up my book, loose papers bound by two elastic bands, with scribbles from editing sprawled across the pages. I ruffled the edge with my thumb casting a faint breeze. The clean, dry scent filled my nostrils, and I smiled. The smell of paper is like homemade bread to a writer.
Purchase LAKOTA HONOR on AMAZON US /  AMAZON CA / AMAZON UK 

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Kat Flannery has loved writing ever since she was a girl. She is often seen jotting her ideas down in a little black book. When not writing, or researching, Kat enjoys snuggling on her couch with a hot chocolate and a great book. 
Her first novel, CHASING CLOVERS became an Amazon’s bestseller in Historical and Western romance. This is Kat’s second book, and she is currently hard at work on the third. 
When not focusing on her creative passions, Kat is busy with her three boys and doting husband.

Straight from the Mouth of 'Shadows Masters' Jeani Rector

A DAY IN THE LIFE OF THE EDITOR OF 'THE HORROR ZINE'

I am one who embraces technology. It is not going away, as much as some of us wish for “the good old days.”

But really, were the good old days really that good?

I used to punch out manuscripts on typewriters that are completely unforgiving. Remember White-Out? What a mess. And you were never sure if your ribbon would successfully type over the blob that a liquid eraser would make.

Today? Type away! Be productive! No interruptions about your creative process! Let your imagination go free and your typing will follow. Make a mistake? Your word document will send you a squiggly-line underline warning, and you can go back after you are done to make simple corrections.

Technology is the great equalizer. Professional writers and newcomers can compete on (almost) equal ground. And there are a lot of very talented lesser-knowns in the world.

That’s where I come in. As the editor of The Horror Zine, an online magazine, I showcase talented newcomers in the same venue as famous, professional writers.

The result is the book titled SHADOW MASTERS: AN ANTHOLOGY FROM THE HORROR ZINE. Fear casts a long shadow, and shadows take many shapes. From the award-winning The Horror Zine comes a wicked brew of spine-tingling fiction. Featuring never before published works from best-selling authors such as Bentley Little, Yvonne Navarro, Scott Nicholson, Melanie Tem, Elizabeth Massie, Earl Hamner, Simon Clark, Cheryl Kaye Tardif, Ronald Malfi, Lisa Morton, Jeff Bennington, JG Faherty and many others, this amazing collection of works also includes a Foreword from Joe R. Lansdale.

But what is a typical day in the life of an ezine editor?

I am a morning person, so I am up with the roosters (although I don’t have any chickens; I have lots of songbirds that wake me up). First thing is always coffee. Then when that kicks in, I go to my computer.

I have an office in my home. That is because although I work at home, I treat The Horror Zine like the business that it is. I even have a business license with the City of Sacramento. The Horror Zine is official!

First on the agenda is to check submissions. There are always submissions because The Horror Zine has become pretty well-known, with over 30,000 hits every month. I like to take my time and look for the positives in every submission of fiction, poetry, and art.

If the work has potential but “not ready for prime time,” I work with the author/poet/artist to see if we can polish it. Most submitters are willing to work with me to better their product.

And if I reject, which unfortunately happens a lot, I like to tell the submitter why. It does no good to simply say their work is “not a good fit.” I used to submit fiction to online zines, and feedback was rare. When it happened, I greatly appreciate it. I figure I can extend that service to others.

Next is email. I have to keep up with requests for interviews, book promotions, Facebook, book and film reviews, questions, and yes, friends! I need to remember not to neglect my friends.

And third comes the website. It takes me an entire month to create The Horror Zine website, one page at a time. I start with the Morbidly Fascinating and Oddities in the News Pages, move on to our Special Page (reserved for famous folks), go to Art, then Poetry, then Fiction.

I am a busy lady! And lately I am trying to squeeze in a personal life.


I feel all my efforts are well worth it. I want to bring creativity, talent, and fascination into the world. I believe The Horror Zine achieves my goals. If you have not yet visited The Horror Zine, please see http://www.thehorrorzine.com

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While most people go to Disneyland while in Southern California, Jeani Rector went to the Fangoria Weekend of Horror there instead.  She grew up watching the Bob Wilkins Creature Feature on television and lived in a house that had the walls covered with framed Universal Monsters posters.  It is all in good fun and actually, most people who know Jeani personally are of the opinion that she is a very normal person. She just writes abnormal stories. Doesn’t everybody?

Jeani Rector is the founder and editor of The Horror Zine and has had her stories featured in magazines such as Aphelion, Midnight Street, Strange Weird and Wonderful, Dark River Press, Macabre Cadaver, Ax Wound, Horrormasters, Morbid Outlook, Horror in Words, Black Petals, 63Channels, Death Head Grin, Hackwriters, Bewildering Stories, Ultraverse, and others.

http://www.thehorrorzine.com

Purchase SHADOW MASTERS from Amazon (paperback) and on Kindle