The Residence by Kate Andersen Brower (BEST of 2015)

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We all see the First Families as they go about what they do on TV.  Speeches and events, there to celebrate triumphs and stand tall when the world has been shaken to it’s core…

The Residence gives us a peek into what we do not see. Told from the point of views of those who have worked in the White House, maids, cooks, butlers, florists, doormen and more share their stories of what it is like to work for the First Family.

Who makes their own bed in the morning, or insists on monitoring every meal, who watched personal expenses closely, and who frivolously needed fresh flowers in every room daily.  What have these people seen through the years of working for the Presidents and their families?  What stories will warm your heart and which ones will make you sad or shocked?

 

I absolutely devoured this book.  I listened to it on audio and so enjoyed the narration by Karen White. Karen hit the ball out of the narration park!   Beautifully spoken, each story was so interesting.  Author Kate Andersen Brower shares the stories of those who spoke to her about their time working in the White House. Everything from the Kennedy Assassination and who stood alongside Jackie Kennedy as she came back home that evening still wearing the blood stained dress to Nixon’s resignation and how the Clinton household functioned during his impeachment.  This book is a side to the stories you have never heard before, quite literally an inside scoop.

While one may think this may read like tabloid tell all, it does not.  The Residence is a tasteful close up on the First families in good time and in bad.  I learned so much while listening to this book.  Highly recommended.

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 10 hours and 16 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Harper Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: April 7, 2015

 

Morning Meanderings… I Renounce My Review Status

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Tuesday.  23 degrees in Central Minnesota and nice out.  I know to some around the globe that is cold, but to us Minnesotan’s that is t-shirt weather.

WordPress is annoying me this morning with a new format.  GAH.  Liked the old one and this post has taken a painful amount of time while I figure out (AGAIN) where to upload the picture, how to link it, etc….

I think it was last week I was all like “Yeah, I am soooo going to catch up on writing reviews!  I am on it!”  And then….

nothing.

I can not even explain what happens these days where I believe I am absolutely going to get something done and then the day slips away and I do not know where it went or why I never did what I said I was going to do.  It is not only here, it is in everything I attempt to do – I have a plan…. plan fizzles.

Today however as I look at the list of books I have yet to review and fear there are some missing that I can not even recall that I read let alone reviewed, I want to renounce that review status and come back to really chatting about books.  REALLY.

Really.

Here is what I need to review:

books

Yeah.  I look at these books and I want to tell you about them.  Some I am so surprised I have not reviewed yet because I GUSHED about them in my head as I read.  One for sure here is a best of 2015 for me.  One is a huh… I don’t get the hype.  I would say at least three here are a must read.

So reviews… I will write.  (Yes, Yoda style)

On another sweet note (I really love sweet notes!) my order came in yesterday as I had mentioned and hoped….so what is it?

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It is a new GPS watch the Garmin 220.  I treated myself to the covetted watch as a way to (hopefully) get a little motivated.  I have spent the last 7 months shutting down and I am struggling to find the motivation to get back on track with healthy habits.  I was doing great at the beginning of the year and I want to slowly work my way back to taking walks, hiking, running, whatever….  This watch sets to my specifics, keeps track of heart rate, plans work outs, lets you know personal bests, uploads your workout to a site where you can keep track of your progress, etc….  I will keep you updated.

Off now to write a review – YES.  REALLY.  Trying to make lunch plans with my son Brad, and I hope to set up my watch to take out on a maiden voyage ….  roads are dry, maybe I will go on a bike ride.

 

Morning Meanderings… Can You Believe It Has Been 5 Months?

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Sunday.  It has been A WEEK.  Emphasis on that.  I have had great meet ups with friends, a bit of work at the library…  and quite a bit of time to be at home and just work on breathing.

Friday marked 5 months without Justin.  It is crazy how those anniversaries bring up so much pain and emotion.  I knew going in that it would be a hard day and tried to plan for some little “to do’s to keep myself somewhat busy.  The night before, these videos were sent to me from Honduras.

 

 

This was funds that were sent to Honduras in honor of Justin from friends and family and his co-workers.  This is what those funds have done.  This hitting right at the 5 month mark as you can imagine, brought tears of happiness, as well as deep pain as once again I try to contemplate this enormous loss to our family.  Breathing in and out?  Seriously… some days it is hard to do.

 

In bookish news, books did come in the house this week which I love.  A house is not a home without books.

The beautiful flowers in this pic are from a good friend.
The beautiful flowers in this pic are from a good friend.

 

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The Invincible s by Cecilia Galante (looking forward to it!)

Daughter of Sand and Stone by Libbie Hawker

The Game Master by Ian Copsey (looks fun)

The Hummingbird by Stephen Kiernan (This one is going to be something.  I have a feeling.)

It’s Tough To Lose Your Balloon by Jarrett Kronsoczka

Amazing Peace by Maya Angelou (I am excited about this book that came with a cd of it read by the author!)

Jackrabbit McCabe and The Electric Telegraph by Lucy Margaret Rozier (Fun! and knowledge!)

Mirandy and Brother Wind by Patricia C McKissack (beautiful!)

The All I’ll Ever Want Christmas Doll by Patricia McKissack

 

Lots of good children s reads this week!

So my day is consisting of coffee… and cleaning up the book room, and organizing, and laundry, and mowing, and starting the canning process of all the apples in the yard AND hopefully a little reading.  Two things coming up I will be talking about soon – Banned Book Week is the end of this month and yes I am hosting again and will have the post up this week to start your planning and sign ups  AND next Sunday I am bringing back It’s Monday What Are You Reading.

Slowly… working my way back.

Have a happy Sunday all.

 

 

 

ARMADA by Ernest Cline

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Zach Lightman takes after the father he has never known…. he is a gamer.  Living alone with his mother, when he is not at school he loves to hang out on line playing war games with his friends.  Escaping the reality of his own world while listening to loud 80’s jams is the ultimate way to complete a day.

Then, one day while looking out the window of his classroom he sees it.  “It” being a space ship.  Actually it looks a lot like a war ship much like the ones that he flies when playing the game Armada with his buddies.  But that can’t be right.  Clearly he needs to start getting more sleep.

Until… that space ship opens and the person who comes out of it calls Zach’s name.

What?

Turns out there is a very real war being battled, has been being battled for decades and now Zach is being called upon to help save the earth.  Save his mothers life, his friends, and work to keep civilization going as we know it.

But Zach is just a teenager…. what can he possibly have to offer?

 

 

 

Full on geek on.  When I first heard that Ernest Cline had a new book coming out I went coo coo for cocoa puffs.  I adored his book Ready Player One.  I read it and I listened to it on audio.  Three times.  Yes, three times.  I quickly checked the audio version and had a double victory lap when I seen that it was indeed Wil Wheaton doing the narration.

Seriously, Will Wheaton could read the back of a cereal box to me and make it sound interesting.

As soon as (and I mean AS SOON AS) this book was released I downloaded the audio and began my adventure into audio.  Let me say this…  if you do listen to audio, even if you just dabble occasionally, audio is the way to go with this one (and Ready Player One for that matter but again I digress).

I enjoyed Armada on audio, not as much as I enjoyed Ready Player One but it was still a good listen.  Armada is a much stronger war game book (not my thing) as opposed to Ready Player One being more of a strategy game… absolutely my thing.  Also, Ready Player One’s awesome references to 80’s music, movies,and games made me giddy.  I know,  know… I really need to quit talking about Ready Player One.  Did you hear it is going to be a movie?  Ok, I will stop.

Armada is a good strong listen.  Although as I mentioned I am not much on war games, Will Wheaton’s animated narration brought the story to life for me.  What I didn’t think I would get… I got.  In the end, the message is an impressive one… something I did not see coming.

I have heard mixed grumbles on this one but I for one enjoyed having Ernest Cline and Wil Wheaton match up again.  Any time those two are brought together – I am in.

All in.

 

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 11 hours and 58 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: July 14, 2015

 

Let’s Talk About The Queen

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I love this picture.  This is my book club this past Tuesday after we had a great potluck dinner, talked books, and had our Queen event.  We look happy.  We look fun.

Even me.

Every July for the past hmmmmm… I don’t know how many years, we have had a Queen event.  We dress up, we perform a talent (or not) and say why we would make a good Queen of the Book Club.  It is all in fun, the Queen really only comes into play when we have a tie on books to read or when we can’t decide where to meet.

This year I went back and forth.  Do I participate?  I didn’t want to.  I wanted to wear Capri’s and a t-shirt and take pictures.  They would have understood.  Yet I knew that Justin would be so sad to know I changed how I did life so I instead put on a prom dress, a little princess crown, looked up and said, “This is for you kid.”

Off to be a Queen participant….

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Why is my head so freakishly small?

It was a good time.  We were at my friend Lori’s home.  We discussed the books we had read last month (free read month) and then had our event.  My “talent” was a story about a girl who decided to create a book club so she could expand on her reading.  I ended the story with how after many years the group became so big they had to limit how many came and how close all the Bookies became to one another.  Friends.  Other talents were, speeches, songs, mime, a quiz, and even a violin playing rendition to The Devil Went Down To Georgia.

I couldn’t make this stuff up if I tried.

Our Queen for 2015-2016 is Brenda.  If you look closely at her beautiful white dress you will see that the top (and along the bottom) is made from a book.  She will be a wonderful Queen.

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Bookies
A few of us had a little “after party” at a nearby pub… an ongoing tradition after the Queen event. After you are all dressed up – you should have somewhere to go. 😉

Fat Chance by Nick Spalding

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Once you listen to this audio sample you know that this book is going to be a funny take on losing weight as a middle age couple takes a challenge (and journals all about it) for a chance to win $50,000.  Truly brilliant and fun.  ~Sheila

Zoe and Greg Milton were quite the good looking couple. Zoe the stunner turned heads wherever she went.  Greg was toned from all the rugby he played.

Of course…

that was many years ago.

Decades later Zoe has added 5 stone (70 pounds) to her frame and Greg more than that thanks to a more relaxed lifestyle, good cooking and many beers.

When Zoe’s best friend Elsie who works at  radio station tells Zoe about a competition they will be sponsoring called Fat Chance, Zoe is appalled that Elsie though of her and Greg.  When Zoe hears that the winner “biggest losers” of the competition win $50,000… she is not so appalled; after all she and Greg did need to lose some weight….

And so begins the 6 month competition that Zoe and Greg journal (part of the competition rules)…. through thick and hopefully thin, through bad diets and poor work out choices…. to the final weigh in.

I had read somewhere that this audio was hilarious.  Listening to the audible sample, I had to agree.  When you take a couple who have become quite stagnant in their ways and offer a nice prize package to change the habits… life can get interesting.  I loved the personal journal entries from Zoe’s funny results with the Cabbage Soup Diet to Greg’s hilarious attempts with work out fads.

Fat Chance is a fun story line with realistic weight battles.  It was a lot of fun to listen to.  I admit, I had to look up on-line how many pounds equaled a stone and the answer is 14 pounds.   See?  I learned something.  Bring on Jeopardy.

I really enjoyed this listen.

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 8 hours and 38 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Brilliance Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: October 7, 2014

 

Out Of Orange by Cleary Wolters

Out Of Orange, Orange Is The New Black, Piper, Alex, Book Journey, audiobookI find Piper’s story interesting having followed it on Netflix (even though I am sure they took fictional liberties and there is much in the series I could have done without but I did like the story line if that makes sense).  I admit I have not read Orange is the New Black.  ~Sheila

You may have heard of Orange Is The New Black.  The true story of an upper middle class girl names Piper Chapman who was sentenced to serve 15 months in a federal prison for drug smuggling with her former girlfriend Alex Vause.  Piper, who was now years separated from Alex and happily engaged is about to do her time.

Out Of Orange is Alex’s side of the story.  The background story of how she became involved in drug smuggling and how she met Piper.

I found Out Of Orange to be interesting.  Having followed Piper’s side of the story it was interesting to hear Alex’s.  As I listened to this one on audio, narrator Barbara Rosenblat had just the right style for Alex, raspy voiced and self-assured with a kick of humor.  Learning how Alex became involved in drug smuggling was a subject I knew little (nothing!) about.  What a frightening and fascinating world she lived in!

If you liked Piper’s story, or are a fan of the Netflix series, I think you would appreciate this story.  Recommended on audio.

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 11 hours and 59 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Harper Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: May 5, 2015

 

The Pocket Wife by Susan Crawford and narrated by Cassandra Campbell

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When Dana Catrell’s neighbor Celia is found and it looks to be murder, Dana’s world is shaken to the core.  After all, Dana is quite possibly the last person to see Celia alive but the details surrounding her encounter with her neighbor are fuzzy.  Dana knows they had words, she knows there was quite a bit of Sangria, there was the picture of her husband, and she is the only person who has a key to her neighbor’s home.

But could Dana have committed murder?

While the evidence is pointing towards Dana, Dana is working through her own personal demons to try to clear her foggy memory of the afternoon she spent with Celia.  With an unsympathetic husband and her insecurities this is no easy task. Hopefully Dana can clear her own mind all the while wondering if she really does have the capacity to take another persons life.

 

 

 

 

*I started listening to The Pocket Wife in March.  I state that now because in March I was in a different frame of mind then I am now.  I finished listening to this in May and there are many things that may contribute to my thoughts on this book so read this review with all of that in mind.  (Basically if I have finished this one in March my thoughts on this may have been different but I do not think by much)  ~ Sheila

 

I wish I could recall why I chose to listen to The Pocket Wife.  Quite possibly it could have been the narrator, Cassandra Campbell, who I have enjoyed in other books. I know there was something that intrigued me… perhaps it was reviews or the synopsis I can not recall.  I think going into this one if I had known it was centered around another unreliable narrator (more on that later) and around a female protagonist that had a problem with drinking and seems unstable to boot, I probably would have passed on this one.  After all, I did not enjoy Girl On The Train and that was very similar in all of these things I just mentioned.

The Pocket Wife’s protagonist was one I could not like.  Dana was weak minded and whiny.  I need to point out that I listened to this on audio and the narration of Dana as being this weak and soft person only added to my dislike.  This in no way is related to poor narration, in fact I would say just the opposite, Cassandra Campbell is an excellent narrator and I believe she captured the essence of Dana as she was written to be.  I also know in this trend of unreliable narrator (there it is again) that I am in the minority as to how I feel about these books.

Ok, briefly let me explain unreliable narrator.  This is something we see in books like Gone Girl and Girl On The Train.  It is a book written so you are unsure if what you are reading from the view point of the narrator is true or accurate.

Admittedly I enjoyed this one a bit more than Girl On The Train but still struggled with Dana and my love for strong female protagonists overpowers my ability to be sympathetic to Dana.  As they say on Shark Tank, with that being true for me, I am out.

If you enjoyed Girl On The Train you will more than likely enjoy The Pocket Wife as well.  The similarity of the books is there, yet The Pocket Wife I felt brought a little more to the table, a little more to grab hold of and that is what readers will enjoy.

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 11 hours and 14 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Harper Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: March 17, 2015

To My Book Loving Friends… An Update On Me

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Dear Friends, while I am up to it I want to share with you my absence.  On Saturday April 4th my wonderful 24 year old son Justin was killed in a car accident.  I can not even tell you the pain that myself, his father, and his brother are in.  Justin was an amazing kid with such a great spirit and love for all things.  If you want, you may follow me on Facebook at Sheila DeChantal where I am posting occasional updates.  Beyond that I am unsure when I will be able to return to this spot, although I do hope that some day I will.

 

Author Chat With Julia Lee, Author Of The YA Novel Seven Stones

author-chat

It has actually been quite a while since I have had an author chat on Book Journey.  Lack of time to do them is mainly the reason you don’t see them anymore.  Occasionally, an author comes along that you can not pass up a chance to chat with, and that is exactly what is happening here with Julia Lee.  Julia is passionate about writing. What she has done in her book Seven Stones with racial differences is truly brilliant. I have the pleasure of knowing her and I am excited to feature her here today to share with you about her book that is being released this Saturday, Seven Stones.

Please welcome Julia Lee.

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

 

Hi Julia!  I know you are not so much of a coffee drinker as a tea drinker but I think we can still get along.  🙂  When did you first know you wanted to write?

 

Telling stories has always been a big part of my life. My parents were my first inspiration. My dad is an amazing storyteller and would tell us bedtime stories every night. I started writing because I wanted to tell stories the way he did. My mom is a prolific reader and always encouraged us to read everything we could get our hands on. Between the two of them, I developed a deep love of the written word at a very young age. I started writing short stories in kindergarten and never stopped. Besides writing, I’ve always adored reading. As a kid, I’d happily spend most of my day reading books or at the library. I would often dream about seeing my own book on a library shelf.

 

Bonus points for mentioning the Library!  Seven Stones is your first book.  Have you any others books that you have been working on prior to Seven Stones?

 

Seven Stones is my first full novel. I wrote several short stories in college, but never anything longer than twenty pages or so. Since completing the manuscript however, I’ve began working on several very different projects that I’m really excited about. Of course, my main project has been writing the sequel to Seven Stones and hope to have the first draft finished by September.
My other projects include a futuristic dystopian series about human survival after the earth can no longer support life (also Young Adult) and a book I’m writing with my husband that revolves around the life and struggles of a fictional baseball player. However, my heart really belongs to Celtic folklore and culture, and I know I will be returning to those elements again.
Overall, I feel like I am just beginning to stretch my wings as a writer, and look forward to writing many more stories!

 

Seven Stones is unique to anything I have read before.  How did you come up with the idea for Seven Stones?

 

It was a long process. Inspiration for the original story began in high school. Back then, it was going to be a fantasy novel that focused solely on Celtic culture. I wrote about 150 pages, and then put it aside during college. After graduation, I returned to my original manuscript and scrapped about 99% of it. I still wanted to write a novel about Celtic culture, but I needed a different story.
After we moved to Minnesota in 2011, I began learning about Ojibwe culture for the first time. The more I learned, the more similarities I saw between my own Celtic heritage and Ojibwe culture. I was fascinated that two cultures with seemingly nothing in common, could have such amazing parallels. One day, I thought to myself, “Someone should write a book about this.” Then it hit me: why don’t I write it? With a totally new vision, lots of research, and more chocolate than I’d like to admit, I started working on what would eventually become Seven Stones.

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

Can you explain the steps you took to finding a publisher?

 

Well, I started out in the traditional way: sending out hundreds of queries to agents…and getting rejected hundreds of times. I did get several requests for partial and full manuscripts, but no offers for representation.
How I actually found my publisher was a mixture of serendipity and persistence. In April of 2012, I attended a publishing conference. Chip and Jean of RiverPlace Press were among the publishers speaking at the event, and I remember thinking that I had to introduce myself to them. After all the publishers on the panel were finished presenting, I approached them and did just that. I told them how much I loved the sound of their independent press, asked them about publishing tips, and told a little about myself as an author. To my great surprise, they asked me if I’d like to meet them for coffee sometime and talk about the publishing market.
A few weeks later, I met them at a local coffee shop with my synopsis in hand. When they asked me, “What is your book about?” I was ready. I gave them a copy of my synopsis and my elevator pitch. They loved it! They asked me to send them the first few chapters. After a few weeks, they asked me to send the whole manuscript once it was finished. Fast forward a few months: after an initial edit, I sent them the first draft of my completed manuscript. They loved it, and we have been working together ever since!

 

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

What did that feel like when you actually knew you were going to be a published author?

 

I don’t know if I can accurately describe the feeling I had as I left the publishing house the day they presented their offer to publish. As soon as I got home, I danced around my apartment and sang, “I’m going to be an author! I’m going to be an author!” It was the most incredible rush, and completely overwhelming. To have a life dream become a reality, to know that your story is going to be a real, physical book that other people are going to read. It is beyond wonderful and incredibly humbling. I still can’t believe it sometimes!

 

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

 

I was impressed when I read Seven Stones to discover that your protagonist and her family were Native American.  You tied in a lot of history and culture into your book.  As you are not Native American yourself, I am curious as to why you decided to write a book with characters outside your own culture.

 

I read once that, until an author specifies otherwise, most readers will assume a main character is white and thin. I’m not saying that is true for everyone, but that statement really troubled me because my original main character was white and thin. Why did I make her that way? I didn’t even think about it until then. I was simply writing from what I knew. After I moved to Minnesota and learned so much about Ojibwe characters, a new idea started forming. Once I decided to make the book about both Ojibwe and Celtic cultures, it seemed natural to make Keilann Ojibwe.
I gained so much from this decision. Through the research I’ve done, I have gained a new appreciation for the beauty of both cultures. Writing this novel only emphasized to me how superficial racial differences are. To me, that is the true goal of reading and writing: to learn about and empathize with people around the world. Literature has the power to break down barriers and introduce ideas and perspectives in ways we can understand. Culture is a beautiful representation of humanity, and I wished to bring to light both the beauty and similarities of the two cultures explored in my novel.

 

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

Was it difficult to write about a culture outside your own?

 

It was intimidating. No matter how much research I did, I was afraid that it would never be enough. I wanted my novel to be an accurate representation, and I was terrified that I would make a mess of it. At first, I was also afraid that my writing about Ojibwe culture would anger people. A few times, I was almost abandoned the project because it just seemed too big for me.
Ultimately, what kept me steadfast was my belief that reading books changes how you view the world around you. Confining people to restricted perspectives goes against what reading and writing are all about—and is a slippery slope. If a white author is only allowed to write about white characters, then should a white reader only read books about white protagonists?
Of course, ensuring my work was authentic and accurate was always top priority. I undertook years of research and learned so much more about Ojibwe and Scottish culture than I ever would have otherwise. I am truly grateful for the experiences I’ve had and people I’ve met along the way. Writing from a cultural perspective other than my own was one of the best decisions I could have made.

 

I understand that Seven Stones is not going to be a stand alone book.  Can you share a bit of what will happen in a second book?

 

Actually, I hadn’t intended to write a sequel until the meeting with my publishers. Toward the end, they asked me what I was currently working on. I excitedly rattled off my projects. When I was finished, they asked, “Have you thought about writing a sequel?” I answered that I hadn’t. “You should.”
Say no more!
Though I hadn’t really considered a sequel prior to this, I had toyed with some ideas. It has been wonderful to return to the world of Seven Stones and the characters that are like old friends. This next chapter of Keilann’s journey will take her back to the States to the reservation where her mother grew up. While learning more about her heritage, Keilann’s dreams will take a new twist and she’ll have some big decisions to make as she grows from girl to woman.
Because of graduate school, the writing process has been a bit slower for the sequel. However, it is my goal to have the first draft finished by September and begin working with my editor immediately.

 

What advice would you give first time writers?

 

Meet people. Make as many friends and connections as you possibly can—especially in the writing world. If there are any writing conferences or workshops in your area, go to them. You never know when you’ll meet someone who can help you with your writing in some way.

Write every day—even if it’s only for five minutes. Enjoy every minute of your writing process. And eat lots of chocolate.
Most importantly: NEVER, NEVER, NEVER GIVE UP!

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

 

Sounds like excellent advice.  It has been a long-standing tradition here that when I do author interviews I ask them to share a little known fun fact about themselves.  Please share with us something unique and fun about you.

 

Many people know that I do yoga to relax. Not many people know that I used to be a Muay Thai (full contact Thai kickboxing) fighter and hold a black belt in Kenpo karate. Back in 2005, I injured my knee during a kickboxing match and the subsequent surgery ended my fighting days. Now, I do yoga to keep in shape because it is low impact for my knee and also requires the same discipline and focus as martial arts. I’ve grown to love it as much as I loved being in the ring.

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

Awesome.  Thanks Julia for hanging out with me here and chatting about Seven Stones.  I am sooooo excited for you!

 

Julia Lee, Seven Stones, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantalYou can read more about Julia Lee at her website (and her blog!) where she chats about books, life, tasty recipes, and publishing.  You can find her on Facebook at Julia Lee

Seven Stones is available for pre-order now at RiverPlace Press.  Her book will be available on Amazon soon.  Secure your copy today and be ready to dive into a book that will keep you reading long past your bedtime.  😉

 

Do you have any questions for Julia?  I am excited to hang out with her this Saturday at her release party!