Author Chat: Sarah Lindberg

author chatSarah is a friend who I used to work with and I was there when she was working on her first book, Life’s Compass For Eternal Treasure.  I even was able to be one of her proof readers as she self published this book and that was pretty exciting!

Since that first book, Sarah was married and moved away from Minnesota to Florida where she now lives happily with her husband Paul.  She has written a  second book, His Hope For Your Destiny and is currently working on her third.  I had the opportunity in July of this year to interview Sarah here and she graciously offered her books for a giveaway.

This past weekend Sarah was in town for her sisters wedding and she and I were able to connect over coffee and catch up on what was new with her and about this third book that those who have followed her incredible writing style are waiting anxiously for.

Me and Sarah Lindberg


Ahhh!  Sarah it seems like forever since we have been able to connect!  I am excited to hear about the next book!

Sarah: Well, I am still working on it.  This one is coming along a bit slower than the first two.


What do you mean by coming along slower?

Sarah: In the first two books I was speaking directly about scriptures that were on my heart and I felt as though God just lead me through the writing.  In this book, I am coming in with a different approach and since this book is more in depth in different ways, I have to do more research.


So what is this book going to be about?

Sarah: This book is going to be about how thoughts and especially the negative thoughts that are verbalized around us can be taken in to ourselves almost like a toxin or poison.  This book is going to be how to keep true to God’s word, and to learn through His word how to snap off those dead branches, dead relationships even that are unhealthy for us to keep us growing in the right direction towards Him.  I am basing this book off of Philippians 4: 4 – 8, mainly on pure thoughts.  We have to train our thinking process, almost prune our thoughts.


Wow – that sounds really interesting!  Do you have a title yet?

Sarah: The title usually does not come to me until the book is finished.


Any time frame we can be looking at for this book to be available?

Sarah: The research is very interesting and I am still working on that part.  I am hopeful that it can be in print by late 2010.


Well I look forward to it!  Thanks Sarah as always for hanging out here at One Persons;s Journey Through A World Of Books with me.  Its always fun to hear what you are up to and I look forward to having you back to review and discuss your book!

Sarah’s Website

Author Chat with Erika Robuck, author of Receive Me Falling

author chatOver the weekend I was able to indulge in the Read A Thon and the first book I finished was Erika Robuck’s wonderful read, Receive Me Falling.  Today, Erika has graciously agreed to hang out with me and discuss her book and what the future holds. Please join us over a great cup of coffee.


erica

Erika, thank you so much for hanging out with me today at One Person’s Journey Through A World of Books.  Erika, I have to ask about how this incredible read came to be.  What were the early thoughts about how this book would be written?  What was the draw to write about slavery?

Erika: A black and white photo of an abandoned, fortress-like hotel in Nevis with island children playing in the foreground of its imposing facade inspired me to write my book.  It got me thinking of slavery in the Caribbean, the contrast of the wealthy and the poor, the two classes interacting with one another on a daily basis, and the complexities slavery created in familial and generational relationships.

I’ve been drawn to books about slavery since I read Toni Morrison’s Beloved and Frederick Douglass’ Narrative of the Life of an American Slave.  Both touched me deeply.


I love that!  What a great image! Is there something that draws you to the time period you wrote about?

Erika: I wanted to write about slavery as it was ending in the British colonies for a couple of reasons.  First, it allowed me to educate my readers about the process of abolishing slavery and what was going on in England and the Caribbean at the time.  Second, I’ve always been drawn to the early nineteenth century because of the music, art, and literature representative of it.


I found this story line so interesting.  I really have not read much about slavery in the past and you really opened up a new area for me.  I found it very meaningful and I really was given a lot to think about by reading this book.   This is your first book.  That astounds me!  Were you nervous about finding a publisher?  Can you briefly explain the process you went through to find one?

aErika: After work shopping the novel for several years, I began the agent search.  I kept getting very far in the process, but continued to get turned down based on the fact that I was a first time, unpublished writer whose book crossed genres.  Publishers like books to fit neatly into categories, so a semi-historical novel with supernatural elements wasn’t well received from a novice.  However, many readers who had read drafts of the novel encouraged me to publish it myself so they could take it to their book clubs, mothers’ groups, and art festivals.  I was reading agent blogs where they advised first time writers to self-publish, build their platform, and if they were successful, use that in the query process.

My husband and I started a small press, published the book, released it for sale in March of 2009, and have sold about 1,000 copies.  I’ve been profiled in local papers and publications, have visited 20 book clubs that have read the book, and have had many signings and author events. Several agents have the full manuscript, and I hope to have an offer of representation soon.


You started your own press!  That is so great!  I really had a vivid image of the scene of the dead slave girl (page 153).  I found it to quite powerful.  I am curious as to what caused you to write about this particular scene.  What are you looking to show the reader?  To show Catherine?

Erika: The contrast of the rich and the poor was stark, and I wanted to emphasize that as much as possible.  I also aneeded my protagonist to see the horrors of slavery outside of her plantation.  Her slaves had been raised with relatively less violence than neighboring plantations, so I wanted my character to witness, first hand, the brutality of most plantations so that she would be more open to the abolitionists when they approached her.


The rum drinks throughout the book were almost a light fun part of what really is a good but not lighthearted read.  The drinks were actually a bit of “fun” I thought.  I liked how the drink title matched Meghan’s mood or what was happening.  Why did you put this in the book?

Erika: I wanted the reader to see Meghan’s personality prior to the incident with her parents and her fiancée to reveal that, before all of the tragedy, she was a girl who liked to have fun.  (Sometimes, she liked to have too much fun!)  Alcohol abuse was a prevalent theme in the novel both in the past and in the present.  I wanted to make the reader aware of when Meg used alcohol to self-medicate.  I had originally included the recipes in with the text, but an editor told me that didn’t match the serious tone of the book, so I just included the drink titles.


I read that you have another book in the works.  Can you share a little about this and when we can be looking for this one to come out?

aErika: Right now I’m immersed in researching Depression-era Key West, the Labor Day hurricane of 1935, and Ernest Hemingway.  Key West in 1935 is the historical setting of my latest work of fiction.  My protagonist is a housekeeper at the Hemingway home, and is torn between the legendary writer and a soldier.  I’m about a third of the way through a first draft of the novel, and hope to have a completed draft by the end of the year.
I would love it if you would share with us something that few people may know about you.

Erika: I used to be an elementary school teacher, and won a teacher of the year award my senior year in college.  I think my background in teaching and my love for research is important to my work as an historical fiction writer.

And like my present day protagonist, I love karaoke.

A teacher!  That is wonderful!  Thank you so much Erika for your time!  I adored your book and look forward to reading more of your work in the future!

Erika: Thank you!  I’m so glad you enjoyed the book!


See more about Erika Robuck here at her website as well as what is coming up for her.

Erika also blogs!  See her blog here

Author Chat with Cami Checketts

author chat

I have just finished a wonderful book by Cami Checkett called The Sister Pact.  Now I am very excited to have Cami here to share with us a bit about her book, her path as an author, and a little about herself.

Please pull up a chair and welcome, Cami Checketts.

Cami, thank you so much for joining me here today at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books.  I have to say I have really enjoyed  reading your book. The Sister Pact.  What was the idea behind this book?

camCami:  I had a nightmare about a man accosting my sister and pushing her down the stairs. When I woke, I started writing and the story just spilled out.

 

The characters Savannah, Allison, and Noah, even Wes – are well developed.  How did these characters come about for you?  Was the book always going to be about sisters?

Cami:  I always see my characters in the nightmare that creates the story. I know what they look like, a bit about their personalities from that initial nightmare. When I start writing the characters take on a life of their own. I’m also a big daydreamer, so I focus my daydreaming on my current WIP and get all kinds of interesting conversations and tidbits about these new friends.
The book was always written for my sister, Abbie. The romance sprang up on its own.

What was the hardest part of this book to write?

Cami:  Wes (the bad dude). He was so cocky and twisted. I hated getting inside his mind.


Of the books you have written, do you have a favorite and if so, why?

That’s like asking what my favorite chocolate is. Love every piece I inhale! My favorite book is always the one I’m working on because I’m so immersed in the story and characters. But I have to say that I still have daydreams about Ethan from The Broken Path. He’s one of those heroes that you can’t forget.


LOL… I suppose that wasn’t a fair question!  How did your writing career begin?

Cami:  After my second son was born, I fought post-partum depression. My mother woke me up for a nap one afternoon and said, “You need a hobby. Go downstairs and write a book.” I shrugged and said, “Okay.” Haven’t had time for a nap since!


If you were to identify a message in The Sister Pact that you would like your readers to take away what would it be?

Love yourself. You can’t truly love others if you don’t feel good about you.

 


That is a great message.  Do you have a favorite book?

I would have to say The New Testament. It’s one of the only books I’ve read more than once! I truly have so many favorites. The best ones I’ve read lately are: Saving Madeline by Rachel Ann Nunes, Lemon Tart by Josi Kilpack, and Illuminations of the Heart by Joyce DiPastena.


Books I will have to look into as they come highly recommended by you!  So what is next for you?  Is there another book in your future?

Cami:  I’m sending off my next manuscript today. It’s a book about a mom who blogs against certain television stations. The owner of the stations sends a hit man to take care of her. It’s so terrifying to me I won’t let my husband go away on guys trips until I’m finished with this book.


Wow!  That sounds like a great read.  What is one little known fact about you that you could share here?

Cami:  I once won a Dairy Princess contest because I was the only one who could get milk from the cow.

Thanks Cami!  I appreciate you taking the time to stop by and I cant wait to look into your current books as well as get a look at the new one!

Cami:  Thank you, Sheila! Many blessings!

Here is some fun information I learned about Cami!  She loves fitness and is actually having a contest starting in October!  Check it out here and check Cami out below as she teaches us great fitness tips!

Interview with Kaleb Nation, Author of Bran Hambric

I am pleased to welcome to One Persons Journey Through a World of Books, Kaleb Nation.  Kaleb is the author of Bran Hambric, the wonderful book that was just released on 9/9/09.

kaleb-nation-photo-creditWelcome Kaleb!  Please make yourself comfortable.  When I first started hearing about Bran Hambric I had also heard how the story came to you on March 3rd, 2003,  3/3/03.  You were 14 at the time.  That amazes me.   Would youplease tell us a little about what that was like?

I remember jumping out of bed, scrambling down the ladder of the bunk bed I shared with my brother, and dashing to my desk to write the idea down. For some reason, on that night, I knew that the date would be important, and that’s why I made sure to write it down in my notebook. I don’t know if I just had a feeling that the book would eventually be published, or if it was just part of my interest in strange and unusual calendar dates, but I’m really happy I made sure to write it down!


I can visualize that!  How amazing!  Did the idea for the book come to you as whole or were there parts you really had to think on and add to make it flow?

The main story came to me at once: I knew that Bran was being hunted by a creature, I knew that he lived in a modern city that banned magic, and I knew a lot of specific parts about his past. Most of the details of the story, however, had to be developed over the following years of writing.


I picture you as this young boy writing this book and have to wonder what did your parents think at the time and/or your siblings?  Did they think you were on to something or just using your time productively?

Luckily, I was home schooled, so my parents actually made my writing a part of my school schedule! They were very supportive, even when I would spend hours on end writing (it got so bad they had to set time limits on my writing time!). My brother Jaden and sister Maddi were my main readers for years, and know about all the deleted scenes and characters that got cut over the years. I’d always know if something was good if they liked it, or what had to be taken out when they started to get bored.


Any friends, extended family, etc… were they supportive of what you were writing?  Involved in any way?

I had a cousin who had published technical writing and fiction for magazines before, and she was a huge help in the beginning! She would read my early drafts and make long-distance calls to me on the weekends to discuss it. I was a bit starstruck that my cousin was a real writer and was actually helping me with editing. I also had a lot of great friends who read the drafts and made comments on things they liked or didn’t like.


At the age of 14, what book was your favorite?

It’s hard to remember. I know back then that I liked The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien.


When you completed the book, did you have a publisher ready or did you have to go and market it?.  Share a bit about that experience.

After I finished the book, I first had to find an agent. I had been researching the publishing business for years and knew a lot of the process already, thankfully. I sent out a bunch of email queries and had a few agents who were interested, but after a while of nobody taking it on, I had to rewrite my query. After the rewrite, suddenly nine agents were interested (never doubt the power of editing your query letter!). I signed with my agent, and worked with him to get the book ready for a publisher.

Is there plans for another book?

Yes!  I am writing the sequel to Bran Hambric now.


Thank you Kaleb so much for your time!  I imagine your life is quite busy now and with the release of the book, probably only getting busier!  Readers, you can find Bran Hambric on sale now!  Be sure to see my review of Bran Hambric here.


Author Interview with Laura Bingham (author of Alvor)

For the last couple of days you have heard me gushing about the YA fantasy I just completed.  After reading the book, I knew I wanted to know more about the author behind this amazing fantasy, Laura Bingham.  Laura and I had first connected in July when she offered me the opportunity to read her book.  I connected with her again with questions after I had finished Alvor and Laura was gracious enough to drop everything and come visit me at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books.  (Ok ok, maybe she didn’t drop everything… but she did answer my questions that I am now going to share with you.  🙂


Please welcome, Laura Bingham.

Sheila:  Hi Laura!  Thanks for stopping by today!  Pull up a chair, grab a cup of coffee, and lets chat awhile!  I just finished reading your book Alvor and loved it!

Laura:  Yes! So glad to hear.


Sheila:  What gave you the idea to write this style of book?

Laura:  Good question with kind of a bizarre answer. The whole story fell into my head about five minutes after I said that I’ve always wanted to write a book- but I didn’t always want to write a book. I still don’t know why I said that or why the story came to me.

Sheila:  Did you have a set audience in mind for this read when you wrote Alvor?

Laura:  I wanted to write a story that captured the elements of my favorite kids/YA books. It was meant for kids and teens, but I also wanted the story to have an element that sucked adults into it as well.


Sheila:  Is this your first book?


Laura: Yes, the first of many.

Sheila:  Well that is exciting news! I really enjoyed how you used twins, a boy (Bain) and a girl (Erin) as the main characters.  Why did you create twins for this main role in your book?

Laura:  That’s the way the story came to me. I even tried to figure out how to make the story not be about twins, but it didn’t work. It had to be twins. It helped that I have my own set of boy/girl twins and could project some of their characteristics into the story.

Sheila:  The word “Alvor” to me just speaks of mystery and fantasy… I look at the cover of your book and knew from first site that I wanted to read it.  Where did the title come from?  Does it have special meaning?

Laura:  Before I started writing, I spent a week researching the elements in the story to build a stronger foundation. That’s when I stumbled across alvor, alva and alv. They are Scandinavian words that speak of old legends. Alvor means fairy, but also the Latin root vor means truth- I couldn’t pass up such a perfect title.

Sheila:  Growing up did you have a favorite book?

Laura:  Growing up I wanted a favorite book. I read Watership Down, The Lord of the Rings books, and tons of junky books about babysitting or freaky girls- but none of them really were my favorite. It wasn’t until I graduated from college that I finally started finding books that I loved.

Sheila:  Do you have a favorite read or author now?

Laura: That’s a tough one. I admire different authors for different reasons. Some for the way they write and others for the way they broke out into the world with no fan base and a small press. I have so many favorites now that I hate listing them.

Sheila:  What is a little known fact about you?

Laura:  I spent a month touring Australia and New Zealand with a college dance team and I performed clogging, modern, jazz, ballroom and some folk dances. Most people put me in a clogging box since I own a clogging studio- but I have spent years doing other things. I coached drill team for a year, have competed in ballroom and Irish dance and have taught ballet, jazz and (swallowing hard) tap. Yes, tap. My Cloggers don’t even know that about me.


Sheila:  Wow!  Thanks for sharing that!  Without giving too much away, the ending of this book left a sense of more to come.  Is there plans for a second book?

Laura: My second book is undergoing revisions and editing right now. I love book 2. In so many ways I have liked it even more than the first one. As it stands- there will be a third book in the series as well.

Sheila:  A second and a third book?  Oh I cant wait!  That is such great news!

Thank you Laura!  Your time is appreciated and I hope that many of the readers here will go out and purchase Alvor.  I think this is an incredible read with a bright future!

Lauras website

Lauras blog

Author Chat with Donna Woolfork Cross (Author of Pope Joan)

donna2006

If you have been reading here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books for any amount of time you know that one of the best reads for 2009 has been Pope Joan by Donna Woolfork Cross.  I loved the character of Joan, this strong independent woman born in a time when women were not considered worth much more than for birthing children.  I cant even put into words how I felt as I read this book and followed Joan from birth to Pope.

Through several email conversations, I have communicated with Donna Woolfork Cross about this book and about the upcoming movie of Pope Joan due out yet this fall!  I can not even imagine what Donna’s life must be like right now, I know she has observed filming and met with producers…. and yet, she took time to chat with me so I could share with all of you a little about Donna, Pope Joan, and whats next…

Please welcome the amazing Donna Woolfork Cross!!!


Sheila:  Thank you so much Donna for taking time out of your busy schedule to chat a bit with me.  I am so thankful for your kindness and continued communication.

Donna: Hi, Sheila!  My gosh, any author should be very grateful to have you on her side!  Thanks SO much, yet again, for your heart-warming–and energetic– support!


Sheila:  Donna, Pope Joan is an incredible historical fiction read that I for one (and I know I am not alone) could not put down.  Have you always been a fan of history?

Pope JoanDonna:   Thanks for the kind words, Sheila!   The truth is that I HATED history in high school and college, for it was so boring–filled with “memorized” information like dates and names of battles and lists of kings, etc.  As I was a good student, I faithfully learned these dry facts and put them down on my exams–and then promptly forgot them.  It was years later before I realized that history isn’t composed of dry old facts and dates and names;  it’s the most fascinating subject of all, for it’s composed of stories–of people who loved and fought and lost and grieved and sacrificed.  What could be more interesting than that?  Story-telling is a very primal act for humans; when we lived in caves we sat around the fire and told tales to each other.  Children crawl into our laps and beg, “Tell me a story!”

Historical fiction captures this story-telling essence of history.  It’s “You Are There” history;  it transports us in time, makes us feel that we have walked those streets, drunk that wine, worshiped those gods.  That’s why it’s my favorite form of leisure reading!


Sheila:  How did you come to the decision to write a book about Pope Joan?

Donna: I had written four previous books–non-fiction works about word and language.  They did well enough, but let me tell you, no one’s ever going to be able to retire by writing word books!  It was my daughter who suggested to me that I might want to write the kind of book she knows I most enjoy reading–historical fiction (for all the reasons mentioned above).  I was mulling that idea over–wondering if I could make the leap (no small one) from non-fiction to fiction, when I stumbled across Joan’s story in a piece of chance reading.  At first I thought it was a typo–an amusing accident that substituted the name “Joan” for “John”.

But a couple of weeks later,  I happened to be in a library.  And idle curiosity led me over to the the “New Catholic Encyclopedia”, just to check out that odd passing reference to a “Pope Joan.”  Tell you the truth, I didn’t expect to find anything.  But when I did find an entry for her in the NCE, I stood in that library with my jaw dropped open.  I couldn’t believe it–here was a story included in the work of  famous writers like Petrarch and Boccaccio and Platina, librarian to several Popes–and I hadn’t even HEARD of it?  I think I knew on the spot that it’s what I wanted to write about.  I thought then–hey, I still think–that it’s a “drop-dead” story.  I couldn’t believe I’d had the great good fortune to stumble across it!


Sheila: I think it is exciting enough to be a write (a dream I have always had!), but I can hardly imagine what it would be like to write something that is destined to be a movie.  Can you share a little bit how that happened and what that had to feel like?

Donna: If you dream of writing, Sheila, then you will one day do it!  For the simple truth is that writing is much more “perspiration” than “inspiration”!  Whether someone likes my novel or not, I can tell her this: it represents the very best I could do.   Over the long course of seven years of seven years of research and writing, I really came to care about Pope Joan, and to admire her, so I gave this story my all.  Naturally, I was nervous about what the movie version would be like (one fellow writer described optioning our novel to Hollywood as “handing your child over the the Charles Manson Day Care Center!)

Fortunately, I was lucky.  The movie stays true to the “female empowerment through learning” theme of the book that was so important to me.  And the acting is terrific!  Johanna Wokalek, a newcomer to U.S audiences is brilliant as Joan;  John Goodman is a PERFECT Pope Sergius;  and David Wenham (voted “Sexiest Australian of 2007) is very powerful in the part of Gerold (when he asks Joan to go away with him, giving up everything that she has become and achieved, you really understand her temptation!).

When I was standing on the set, watching scenes enacted that I remember writing in the privacy of my study, I was very moved.


Sheila:  What at this time as readers can we be doing to make sure the movie and the book, get around to where people all over the world can enjoy them?

Donna: What a dear and thoughtful question to ask, Sheila!   There’s two things one can do immediately:

1.  Buy the book in August!  For healthy book sales in August will help persuade U.S. movie distributors that there’s a broad audience for this story in the U.S.  Also,  if you purchase the book on or before August 9th, you are eligible for my unusual “Walk the Red Carpet” offer–an opportunity to join me and my family at the U.S. movie premiere.  Details are at http://popejoan.com/2009promo.htm

2.  Let U.S. movie distributors know if you’d like to see the movie open in a theater near you.  You can do this by going to http://popejoan.com/moviemap.htm.   If you would attend with others, such as book group members or friends and family, mention that too.  Your words will go straight to the producer’s ears!


Sheila:  What’s next for you?

Donna: Just at the moment, I’m working so hard to promote Pope Joan, long labor and work of my heart,  that I’ve had to put aside my next novel for a while.  I hope to resume work on it this fall.  It’s about another strong woman from history, this time from 17th century France. I admire her for many of the same reasons I came to admire Joan–reasons best summed up with a quote from George Bernard Shaw. “Reasonable people,” Shaw wrote, “adapt themselves to the world the way they find it. Unreasonable try to change the world to fit their own vision of it.  Therefore, all progress depends on unreasonable people.”

Following that (in my view) very complimentary definition of the word, Joan was, in fact, an unreasonable woman. So is my next heroine, whose name, I bet you’ve noticed, I have artfully not mentioned (my agent tells me that she’ll cut out my tongue if I do!).


Sheila:  Thank you Donna so much for taking time to hang out with us here.  I am excited to see the movie come out and hopefully a push from my fellow book lovers can help move that along!


Please see my review of Pope Joan here



End of Grace by K. Thomas Murphy with Interview+ Giveaway

Honestly when this book arrived for review I did not think I was going to enjoy it.  This is a little out of my reading genre.  When I did get start reading it, from the very first page I was pleasantly surprised how the writing brought me right in!  ~  Sheila


end of graces

An incident in computer specialist Rick Macey’s past has put him on the path of revenge. If his plan is successful, the object of his wrath, the Church of the Latter-Day Saints, could lose millions of dollars and thousands of members. What Rick cannot foresee are the sinister ways this church will react when threatened.

Mormons begin receiving letters that question the validity of their gospel and inform them that loved-ones have been baptized into an alternative faith. It’s an assault on the authority of the church,and more importantly, it’s beginning to impact church revenues. The Mormon leadership dispatches Kay Summers, a young but capable administrative assistant, to Oregon, where she finds and follows a thread leading to Rick.

Unbeknown to her, they’ve also dispatched agents from the church’s secret army, the Danite Knights, to follow her to the source of the problem and fix it – permanently.

Initially, Rick and Kay play cat and mouse, each trying to find out what the other knows, while in the shadows the Danites use limitless resources preparing to stop not only the letters, but anybody involved with them. Soon, mysterious deaths and close calls start happening. Rick and Kay, the two erstwhile adversaries become a team; ultimately running for their lives, desperately trying to put the puzzle together as they stay one step ahead of the tempest Rick has awakened.

Much like the way Dan Brown captivated so many with his fiction book The Davinchi Code, I too became totally entwined in the fast paced adventure of this book.  Normally, this is not my style of reading and I admit I was hesitant when it arrived….  computer hackers, church politics….  but from page one I let the preconceived notion of what I thought I would find in this book melt away…. it started with this:

Day One:  Monday

Salt Lake City, Utah

She jogged.  Not necessarily because she wanted to – more because she had to.  If Kay stopped jogging for even a few days she would notice the slight weight gain on her body, the slightly pinched way her clothes felt.  Her college days had been over for less than seven years, she thought.  Back then it seemed she never exercised and had no trouble maintaining a slim figure.  Before that it had all been high school volleyball that kept her fit.  She was tall and had even played on the all-state team.  Now, however, fitness was a semi constant battle – one she was more than willing to wage.  She liked looking good.

Unfortunately, she wasn’t trying to look good for anyone in particular.

I liked Kay from those very first words.  She was real.  She battled like the rest of us (well, errr… me anyway).  And the book flows on from there.  I found the reading engaging, the storyline – two men trying to take the church for millions for different reasons.  One for a broken heart filled with revenge, and the other for the almighty pay off.

The book moves quickly but did not feel rushed as I moved along with Kay, who works for the Mormon Church, to try to get to the bottom of who was sending the letters out to families of deceased Mormons telling them their faith is a lie.  While this book touches on the Mormon faith, K Thomas Murphy handles the book well and has great characters all the way around.

Author K Thomas Murphy granted me an interview to discuss this book and what was next.

S:  I am curious what made you come up with this book topic?k thomas

K Thomas Murphy:   Inspiration. While traveling to Salt Lake City one time a friend and I were talking about the Mormons.  He mentioned reading about the outrage of the Jewish people when it was revealed that Mormons were performing posthumous baptisms on the holocaust victims.  I am not Jewish, nor Mormon, but I understand outrage and indignation.

My vivid imagination turned everything over for about ten years.  Finally, about a year and a half ago, I decided to see if I could write a book.  In early February I sat down and working only a couple hours in the evenings and some weekend mornings, I turned out End of Grace in a little over two months.  Aside from atrocious punctuation that challenged excellent editors, the way you read End of Grace is pretty much how it came out of my head and flowed onto the paper.

S:  This books deals a lot with computers and hacking into data bases.  Is this something that that comes natural to you or did you do a lot of research about this in order to write this book?

K. Thomas Murphy: Writing is very enjoyable and very rewarding for me.  I am not a religious person, but have been in the tech world for over 20 years.  All things technical have always come very naturally to me. I consider End of Grace to be a tech thriller in a religious setting.  I also love to learn and research, so spent countless hours learning about Mormon doctrine, past and present.

S:  I was reviewing your website I found hints of two more books, End of Secrets and End of Fire.  What can we expect from these books and when do you think they may be available to the public?

K Thomas Murphy: I have since outlined several more books using a couple of the same characters.  I am currently about a third the way finished with End of Secrets, a pure technical thriller that touches heavily on the history of computers and I feel it’s as intriguing as my first story.  Not meant to spoil the end of EOG for you, but Kay and Rick are both heavily featured in the sequel.  End of Fire would be a natural follow-on where the two battle a new kind of technical threat, and a secret society of computer elite are reveled.  Sort of a Big-Brother/ Guardian-Angel organization.

Assuming that it might be the religious aspect of End of Grace that excites people, I also have a full outline of a book that brings the Mormons back onto central stage.

Some of my future depends on me finding a person to carry my torch.  Self-publishing is incredibly demanding and time consuming. Time I’d rather spend writing (not to mention I still have a day job).  At the same time it’s been so rewarding that I’ll probably continue either way.  Eventually I’ll be discovered, make some publisher a pile of money, and make myself enough to take the whole thing more seriously.

S:  Thank you K Thomas for taking time to answer my questions and allowing me the opportunity to read and review your book.

We are offering a giveaway for a copy of this book.  here is how to enter:

1.  Leave a comment here

2.  Receive a bonus entry by being a follower of this blog and or following me on Twitter (be sure to let me know)

US entries only please and no po box numbers.  Be sure I have a way to connect with you if you are the winner.  🙂

Giveaway will end Aug 20

end of secretsEnd of Secrets reveals one of the most obscure but powerful mysteries of the computer era.  An urban legend that if true, has the potential to make the most secure, private and even top secret information freely available.

end fo fireEnd of Fire introduces a new kind of compute threat.  One that could render every computer on the planet useless.  The only chance of stopping it is with the help of  a secret society of the computer elite.

Merry Weather also has reviewed this book.  You can see her review here


This book came from Bostick Communications – the giveaway copy is coming from the author

This is a PG13 book due to some language

Guest Blogger/Author Interview with Rachel Stolzman (+ Signed giveaway copies!)

In recent weeks I have had the pleasure of chatting back and forth with author Rachel Stolzman.  Rachel is the author of the book, The Sign for Drowning.


Rachel Stolzman

When Anna is eight years old she witnesses the tragic drowning of her younger sister at the beach.  While her parents frantically search the waves for their child, Anna watches alone from the shore.  Desperate for hope, Anna begins silently communicating with her sister, begging her to resurface.

Anna’s  family emotionally breaks down in the years following the drowning.  In her grief and loneliness, Anna develops the belief she can communicate to her dead sister through sign language.

As an adult, Anna makes her living working with hearing impaired children, and she develops a close bond with a deaf foster child she works with, Adrea.  As Anna makes the momentous decision to adopt Adrea, she is driven to face her conflicted desire to hear her daughter speak and she is forced to delve into the connections between Adrea and her own, lost sister.

BIO:

rachel-thumbI was born in New York and at the age of seven moved to Los Angeles with my family.  My sister and I told everyone we were moving to a swimming pool.  I began writing poetry in my journal when I was about ten years-old.  My first poems were about children, a phony fortune teller, the question of an afterlife, and an anti-war poem called Warheads.  I attended the University of California in Santa Cruz.  It was during my college years that I began working in the HIV/AIDS field, work which I continue to do to this day.  At UCSC, I took numerous poetry workshops, participated in readings, and I had my first poems published.  Looking back, these poems were about solitude, escapism, and drunken love.  A year after college, living in San Francisco I decided to apply for MFA programs in creative writing.  I was surprised to see that the applications required you to choose between poetry and fiction, and I marked ‘poetry’ on each.  But while completing my applications, I thought- I don’t know how to write fiction, if I’m going to go back to school it might as well be to learn something I don’t know.  I sent for new applications and applied to three programs in New York.  I went to Sarah Lawrence College, and received my MFA in creative writing- Fiction.  An early draft of The Sign for Drowning was my thesis.  In 2008 my first novel, The Sign for Drowning was published by Trumpeter.  I am still writing about children, impermanence, loss and the workings of the heart.  I currently live in Brooklyn and am working on my second novel.


I want to thank Rachel for taking time to join us here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books I have really enjoyed talking with you these past couple of weeks and I am excited to hear more about you and your books.

S:  As I read your biography on line about how you were really writing from about the age of ten, it reminded me of the books of short stories and poetry that I had written at about that age.  Did you feel at such a young age that writing would be a part of your future?

Rachel: As a kid I had a closet in my bedroom with sliding doors.  One side held clothes, and the other held a bookcase with all my books.  I was infinitely more interested in the book side of my closet.  I read my favorite books over and over.  I do remember thinking that these writers were leaving something in the world that would be here forever, long after the writer was gone.  It only now occurs to me that I was thinking about immortality.  Luckily, I didn’t know then about going out of print!

S:  Your book, The Sign For Drowning sounds wonderfully deep and dramatic.  I just read the synopsis again and I am so excited to actually get a chance to read and review this book.  How did the idea for this book begin to develop?

Rachel:  I had written a short story based on an actual event that happened to my family.  When my older sister was two she was washed out of a small boat in the waves, while playing with my father.  She was only underwater for a minute, but they couldn’t see her and it was very scary.  My mother was filming them playing as well.  A friend in the water felt my sister, Dana, brush against her leg and she pulled Dana out.  In the story I wrote, there is an older sister watching and narrating the story, and the child is not recovered, but drowns.  As an MFA student I returned to this story and became curious again about the family, especially, Anna, the sister who tells the story.  I wondered what happened to them afterwards, and if and how this loss would affect Anna as an adult. rachel reading

S:  This book centers around sign language.  Is this something you knew about before you wrote the book or something you learned to write the book?

Rachel:  While I was writing the book, I was taking American Sign Language classes for the fun of it.  I had always been interested in sign language and I stuck with it until I was pretty fluent.  I really enjoyed learning from my deaf teachers, not just the language but about deaf culture and history.  I decided to make Anna, in her grief and loneliness, develop a fantasy that she could communicate to her lost sister through sign language.  This childhood fantasy grew into an alternative family and home for her and a career working with deaf children.  And it would ultimately lead Anna to her adopted deaf daughter, Adrea.

S:  What sort of background prep work did you find yourself doing to write this book?

Rachel:  I read a lot of books about Deaf culture, and about the history of ASL and deaf education.  After becoming proficient in ASL, I got a job in New York City working with deaf people at Fountain House.  I was around interpreters everyday, a co-worker who was the child of two deaf parents, a deaf co-worker and many deaf members.  I was told amazing stories about being deaf in hearing families and vice-versa, living in deaf boarding schools, surviving during World War II- deaf and alone, and the many ways people learn to communicate and cope.  Those stories helped shape the lives of my characters.

S:  I just love that you are blogging your journey from your first book signing to the arrival of the paperback version.  How did you decide to do a blog?

Rachel:  I think I started blogging very hesitantly.  My agent and publisher had recommended I launch an author website, but I had declined to do so just feeling it wasn’t necessary.  Then I took a course on book promotion and it was heavily encouraged there too, especially blogging.  And the final push came when I did an author interview on the radio with Reading with Robin and she actually reprimanded me on the air for not having a website for my readers to go to!

S:  You are currently working on your second book.  Would you share a little hint about what that is going to be about and when we may expect to see it in print?

Rachel:  My current book is about a pair of twins born in NYC in the early 70’s.  One twin, David, is born a reincarnated enlightened Buddhist.  The Dalai Lama is a character in the novel, and he becomes David’s teacher.  Jamila, the twin sister, struggles to find her soul, her purpose and her own journey as a bodhisattva’s twin sister.

I will definitely let you know when you can find it in stores, and thank you so much for having me as a guest at One Person’s Journey Through a World of Books!

Peace, Rachel

Rachel’s Official Website

Rachel’s Blog

♥Rachel has generously offered two signed copies of her book, The Sign For Drowning to the readers here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books.

To enter your name to win:

1.  Leave a comment here about Rachel’s interview

2.  Receive 2 extra chances to win if you blog/twitter about this giveaway

3.  Earn a BONUS chance by commenting on any other of my posts

US only and no PO box numbers.  Please be sure to leave me an email so I am able to contact you if you win.

The Giveaway will end August 16.  Have fun and good luck!






Author Interview with Sarah Beth Lindberg (+ Giveaways!)

SarahThis giveaway is closed – winners announced

Thank you to all who entered…  🙂

Today I am very excited to interview the author of two great reads (a third in the making) and she is also a friend of mine who I have had the pleasure of working with, rollerblading, and talking with for hours .


Good morning Sarah!  Thank you so much for joining me here today at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books!  I had watched you work on your first book and had the pleasure of being one of your proof readers before it went in for the final ok to go to print.  I am wondering, when did you first know you wanted to be a writer?


Sarah: I don’t know if I can pinpoint an exact time when I decided I was going to be a writer.  I just know that I have always had a passion to write.  I remember when I was in elementary school, my teachers always had great things to say about the stories I wrote.  All my stories had inspirational meaning behind them.  Writing was the one thing I truly enjoyed when I was in school.  In college, I knew I wanted to some day write a book that would glorify God with the life He has given me.

When did you take that step to actually start making this desire to write a reality?


Sarah: I started praying about what to write in 2004 and pursued writing in 2005.

What was it that gave you clarity on what your book would be about?

Sarah:  In my prayer time, I felt like I needed to write on the passage of Scripture that has guided my life.  Psalm 37:3-6 has seen me through many hard times.  It was my compass when I was a little girl and has continued to be my road map throughout life.  The words in the book literally flowed from my heart through my fingers.  They were words that simply shared the experience I had known of God’s faithfulness in my life.  I had a few bumps in the road where the words didn’t quite flow, so I would stop.  I put the pen down until the fluidity of the message came back.

Describe what that time was like from the point of finishing the book and then looking for a publisher.

Sarah:  I had finished writing my book in about 6 months, but I still had a ways to go in the publishing end of it.  I looked at many different places.  All the publishers that are well known did not want to accept an unknown author.  That was understandable because you never know what book sales are going to be like for a new author, but I wasn’t accepting no for an answer.  I had looked at some of the self-publishing options, but didn’t like what I saw.  I wanted something that was going to invest in my talent.  I waited a few months and prayed for God to show me who to go through.

How did you come to choose the publisher you are with, Tate Publishing?

Sarah:  I was at church one Sunday and someone mentioned to me that there was this great top of the line self-publishing company called Tate Publishing.  The big thing was that they only accept less than 3% of the manuscripts they get a year.  I was excited about that because I knew if God wanted me to publish with them, it would all go through.  The manuscript was read by their board and I received a phone call letting me know it had been accepted.  I had to go through the same process for my second book.  They have been a wonderful company to work with because they partner with me every step of the way.  They have my best interest in mind.

Your first book, Life’s Compass for Eternal Treasure, came out and what did you do to help promote your book?
a
Sarah:  The sales did very well and are continuing to do well.  I have a marketing representative from Tate Publishing who works with me to market the book in various avenues.  I did many book signings in book stores, coffee shops, retirement homes, malls, Bible studies, etc.  I was able to speak at a few women’s conferences and at a couple church services.  I have been able to speak to youth at different events.  I have a website and a blog to promote the book.  Also, I do a daily devotional online.  A lot of promoting comes through word of mouth.   The best marketing tool is yourself and others who have read your book.

Since then you have written a second book, His Hope for Your Destiny (which came out in March of this year), married, and started on a third book!  When do you find the time to write?
aa

Sarah:  The best way for me to answer this is to say that if you are looking to find the time to write you will never find it.  You simply need to designate time every day to write.  It needs to be something you want to do, not have to do.  If I lived each day trying to find time to write, I don’t think I would ever get anything written.  I have to discipline myself to set aside time to write, to study, and to learn.  Writing is one of my passions, so I choose to make it a part of my day.

How do you promote your books now?

Sarah:  I continue to call book stores for book signings and am willing to have them in even unconventional places.  Coffee shops are great and I’ve since learned that a book signing at Chick-fil-A can be very profitable.  There are two things I’m strongly promoting right now.  One is the devotional I write on a daily basis because it gives people a way to find out who I am and how I write before they buy an actual book.  I know I always like to know the authors I read.  Second I have been given an opportunity to get as many books as possible into Prison Ministry Fellowship.  This excites me greatly, as I write desiring to see people draw close to the Lord.  If anyone would like to support this ministry, please email me and let me know.  Every book donated will go to the prison for the inmates.

Of your books, which is your favorite?

Sarah: Now, what kind of question is this?  It’s like asking a mom which child is her favorite.  I enjoy both my books for different reasons.  I love how the first book brings you through a journey of trusting in the Lord.  I enjoyed writing out the testimony of who God has been in my life and how He has always been faithful.  Then there is the second book.  This book I wrote during some major storms in my life based on my second favorite passage, Isaiah 40:31.  I was so encouraged by God through the writing of this book.  God continued to remind me that He had a plan and a purpose through the storms I faced.

Sarah, thank you for sharing your books with us today!  I can’t wait to see you again this fall and then we can chat about what is on the horizon for you!

Sarah has generously offered to give away two copies of each of  her books Life’s Compass For Eternal Treasure and His Hope For Your Destiny, as well as an audio version copy of His Hope For Your Destiny.

For a chance to win (1) post a relevant comment here about this interview and (2) earn a 2nd entry by blogging of tweeting about this interview and giveaway.
US entries only please and no po box numbers.  Giveaway will end August 25 EXTENDED to August 31 and winners will be posted here.
Sarah’s:
Faith1

Out of The Pumpkin Shell by Nancy Werking Poling

pumpkin

A book centered around friendships and aging gracefully…. or in some case, not so much.

~Sheila

The book said: The teaching careers of lifelong friends Harriet (Hat) and Elise have come to an end in spectacular style, with the two women leaving more than burning bridges behind them. Now they are looking menopause straight in the eye–and they don’t care one bit for what they see. Fight, they vow, we’ll fight the interloper tooth and nail. More than a tad bruised and battered from the struggle, Hat and Elise undertake a journey to Bryson’s Mill, Indiana, birthplace of Elise s mother, Rose, who by any definition was inadequate to the simplest tasks of motherhood. Stella May and Margaret, old friends of Rose, hold keys to a past very different from Elise’s memory. When Elise adamantly refuses to accept their conflicting reality, Hat is confronted with choices–and risks–about what friendship with Elise actually entails. For both friends the journey to Bryson’s Mill becomes a pilgrimage of a different kind: into the past lives of women, into truth, into sisterhood, and most of all, into new possibility.

I said:  This book arrived Friday in the mail box and I  started it right away (sorry Elizabeth Bennet, I will get back to you soon!)

Is it possible to love and hate a book?  I loved the friendship between Hat and Elise.  I laughed out loud as they plotted together how to beat the aging process.  The begining of the book reminded me of some of my own friendships.  As the pair dives into Elise’s childhood memories of what she believes to be true, some discoveries are made that are hard to take.

Secrets of the past can be a heart wrenching journey.  As the book develops, I was saddened – even angered at Rose’s story and without giving away too much of the book, the storyline was hard to read – the book, while a great story of friendship, also deals with some very tough life issues.

Overall I enjoyed this read and loved the friendships that developed. Nancy has written a  women’s novel that will make you laugh, make you cry, and make you thankful of the great women in your own life.

I am excited to share with you my  interview with author Nancy Werking Poling!

Nancy, tell us a little about you.

Nancy: I was born a Hoosier (Indiana) but raised in Orlando, Florida, before Disney, when Orlando was a sleepy southern  town. After living in the Chicago area for more than twenty years, my husband, Jim, and I have recently retired to North Carolina. So I’m unclear about whether I am primarily a Southerner who has spent much of her life in the Midwest, or a Midwesterner influenced by years of living in the South. I often linger to chat with store clerks and say “y’all,” if those characteristics are any indication.

NancyWhat was it like writing this book?

Nancy: Unlike writers who snatch an hour or two in the early morning, I need large blocks of time to myself. So I couldn’t really start writing seriously until my children were grown and out of the house—which partly explains my being a late bloomer. Out Of The Pumpkin Shell is my first novel to be published but not the first I have written.

How long did it take you to write Out of The Pumpkin Shell?

Nancy: About two years. It started as a short story, which I read at an open-mic literary event. Someone said, “I assume that’s the beginning of a novel.” The thought hadn’t occurred to me, but I liked the characters Hat and Elise so much that I just kept going. After two drafts I knew the narrative wasn’t yet all that it could be, so I met weekly with a writing coach, Bonnie Kustner. She helped me maintain the momentum of the story and keep the humorous voice in spite of the serious events that developed.

Where did the idea for this book come from?

Nancy: So many places. Over lunch one day a friend, who had a hilarious way of relating even the grimmest events, had me in stitches over the story of how her cousin was terrified of menopause. The cousin was convinced that like her mother she’d go into a deep depression and never come out. That’s how the book’s humorous tone came about too. Another inspiration was the friendship between my mother, Ethel Mae, and Geneva. They went to school together in Indiana. To my knowledge, though, they never engaged in the kind of wacky exploits Hat and Elise carry out. My family moved to Florida when I was six, but we returned to Indiana every summer to visit Geneva and her family, along with my grandparents. That’s how Indiana came to be the setting for the story.

Emotional and clergy sexual abuse are in the book too. I said earlier that I’ve always been fascinated by stories. Sadly, I have listened to many women tell of being abused. In the nineties I edited a book titled VICTIM TO SURVIVOR: WOMEN RECOVERING FROM CLERGY SEXUAL ABUSE. Six women tell their stories of having been sexually abused as adults. These stories left me concerned not only about victims but also about the wives of abusing clergy.

Of course, a major challenge was combining the hilarity of Hat and Elise’s perspective and activities with the seriousness of emotional abuse.

My original intention was simply to tell a good story. From the feedback I’ve been getting, I’ve discovered that the book speaks to women on several different levels. Some women see their own lives in Elise’s mother, Rose. One reader commented on how the book reminded her of how stubbornly we cling to a notion from childhood about ourselves or our family. The book has made others think about the importance of female friends and the absence in their life of a Best Friend.

Any advice on aging gracefully?

Nancy:  When I find the secret, I’ll market it, maybe sell it on e-bay.

No, seriously. Why should we age GRACEFULLY? Why not step on a few toes? I think that’s what Hat and Elise figure out. No matter our age, we need to continue to search for adventures and skills that excite and enliven us.


Thank you Nancy for sending me your book for review and for taking the time to share with us about Out of The Pumpkin Shell!

**Readers please note that this book contains some strong language**

I received this book from the author, Nancy Werking Poling

This book rates a PG13 for strong language