Tag: interview

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – LJ Cohen

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives. We’re starting 2019 off with LJ Cohen.

    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERALJ Cohen is a Boston area novelist, poet, blogger, ceramics artist, geek, and relentless optimist. After almost twenty-five years as a physical therapist specializing in chronic pain management, LJ now uses her anatomical knowledge and myriad clinical skills to injure characters in her science fiction and fantasy novels. When not bringing home strays (canine and human), LJ can be found writing, which looks a lot like daydreaming.

    LJ is active in SFWA (The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America)  and Broad Universe, and blogs about publishing, general geekery, and other ephemera at http://www.ljcbluemuse.blogspot.com. A Star in the Void (book 5 of the SF/Space Opera series Halcyone Space) is her most recent novel.  Derelict, the first novel in the series, was chosen as a Library Journal Self-e Select title and book of the year in 2016.  For more about LJ and her books, visit http://www.ljcohen.net or https://www.amazon.com/LJ-Cohen/e/B006QL6GA0

    Wolf: Thanks for joining the pack. You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.

    LJ: A perennial, my leaves emerge every year starting in the late spring or early summer. Spindly stalks grow amid the leaves and can reach four feet high. From the tips of my stalks, buds swell and each bud becomes a long, wide colorful flower. I come in many varieties, some carefully developed for selective gardeners, others emerging from the side of the road, blooming for no one in particular.

    While each of my flowers only blooms for a single day, with so many buds, I can be in continuous bloom for months.

    I am considered a weed by some, but I see myself as simply adaptable and hardy. I can grow in almost any soil and in a large variety of conditions.

    Given enough time, I will spread year by year and become a hedge. But I am also happy to be divided and planted in new ground – both my old plant and the new will thrive. Winter will not destroy my bulbs. Nor will a gardener’s neglect.

    Wolf: Sounds nice. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    LJ: Definitely a dog person. While I didn’t grow up with any animals (my mother was a fastidious housekeeper and didn’t like the chaos pets brought), I’d always been drawn to dogs. I’ve had dogs now as an adult since I got married and was gifted with a 12 week old puppy! (Not your typical wedding gift!)

    We have been owned by an assortment of pups ever since, all rescues. Our current dogs are a Jack Russel mix (Dustin) and a border collie mix (Mya).

    Since I work from home, I am around them most of the time. They have beds in my office, which has radiant heat. Once it gets turned on in late fall, it’s their favorite room in the house.

    I’m certain that dogs exude a special kind of gravitational wave that makes it nearly impossible to get up from the sofa when they curl up nearby.

    Wolf: So true. While walking in the woods you come across…

    LJ: A faded blue police box, shaded by a canopy of trees. There is a sign with white lettering on the front. The words are blurred, impossible to read.

    The birds have stopped singing. The wind fails. The trees still.

    I pause with my hand on the handle. I expect it to be cold. Roughened by the rust. It is smooth. Warm. A surge of heat moves through me and I’m very aware of my own heartbeat in the sudden silence.

    I look back at where I came from. There are no footprints in the deep leaf litter. The forest path is obscured in a swirling fog. I turn back to the box. The blue is now a clear and vibrant hue. Why did I ever think the box was old?

    A beam of low sunlight pierces the tree branches and illuminates the bottom line on the curious sign: Pull to Open.

    Wolf: Please say hi to the Doctor form me. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    LJ: To understand all the languages in the world. I would love to be able to travel and hear the music in the local language and understand a place the way someone born there does. To be able to communicate with anyone, without the barrier of an unfamiliar language between us would be amazing.

    Wolf: The main character in my WIP can do that. I’m not good at learning new languages. Which of your characters is your favorite?

    LJ: I’m not sure I have a favorite, per se, but the character whose creation most delighted me was that of Aeon from THE BETWEEN, book 1 of the Changeling’s Choice series.

    He was not a planned character. I was writing a scene after my protagonist Lydia had been taken into Faerie and told she was a changeling. In order to clear her mind and cope with her anxiety, she goes for a run in what turns into a hedge maze. Lost and resting in a clearing, she struggles to understand her new reality. She asks aloud, “Who am I?”

    At that moment, my fingers typed this reply: “That’s an interesting question.”

    I had no idea who was there with her and why. But I know I needed to find out.

    I remember that moment of creation with absolute clarity.

    That character became Aeon. He was an ancient Fae who’d been bound to the maze. I thought he’d be a minor character, but he had different ideas. So much so, that his history turned into the backdrop and major conflict of the sequel TIME AND TITHE.

    Wolf: Amazing how our characters tell us what to do, isn’t it? What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)

    LJ: In my 20s I had the opportunity to learn how to sail when my then boyfriend’s (now spouse’s) father bought a sailboat. I spent many hours on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland sailing that boat. One of my favorite sounds in the world is the sound of waves lapping against the hull, so any body of water that has a tide feels like home to me.

    Wolf: What story are you working on now?A Star in the Void - Cover Art

    LJ: It doesn’t have a name as of yet. It’s a totally different world from either my Fae Changeling books or my space opera series (Halcyone Space). It’s broad themes are inspired from this verse by Rabbi Tarfon: “It is not your responsibility to finish the work of perfecting the world, but you are not free to desist from it either.”

    Multiple worlds are connected in the quantum realm. Most are safely sealed off. Most have no knowledge that they are but one in an infinite multitude.

    A few people on a few scattered worlds can see though the multiverse. Most of those go mad. Fewer still are able to bear the burden of so many possibilities. Those are seers and are either considered cursed or blessed. Though the reality is some of both.

    Perhaps one in a billion has the ability to slip from world to world and becomes a Traveler. But always, there is balance. A Traveler comes, a Traveler goes, never more than any world can bear, treading lightly to encourage balance. Until now.

    Three individuals from three different worlds are drawn to one another through the thinning walls between the worlds. None of these three are Travelers in truth. But they are all that is left. For they discover something is hunting Travelers and obliterating them and the balance they bring from the multiverse.

    Together, they must rescue each other and fight a foe they cannot name to heal the worlds before the walls dissolve for good.

    Wolf: Cool. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    LJ: My other major creative outlet is ceramics. I make functional ware both on the wheel and by slab building.  I’ve always been a tactile/kinesthetic learner and working with clay is extremely relaxing.

    I also love to cook. Making soup – especially in wintertime – is one of my favorite things to do. Especially when I can feed friends and family.

    So between cooking and ceramics, I can both make the food and the bowl it’s served in. 🙂

    Wolf: I love clay, especially hand-building.

    Connect with LJ through these links:

    http://www.ljcbluemuse.blogspot.com
    www.ljcohen.net
    www.facebook.com/ljcohen
    www.twitter.com/lisajanicecohen
    https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B006QL6GA0

    Startouched front cover2

    STAR TOUCHED

    A. L. Kaplan

    Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population. Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble. Will Tatiana flee or stay and fight for the new life she has built? Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Rachel Mankowitz 

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    me and the girlsAuthor Biography: Rachel Mankowitz lives on Long Island with her family, including her two dogs, Cricket and Ellie, and the memories of all of the dogs that came before. She has a Master’s degree in Creative Writing from Manhattanville College, a Masters of Fine Arts in fiction, from Queens University of Charlotte, and is working on a Masters in Social Work from Fordham University. And yes, that is a lot of student loan debt. Rachel’s first novel, Yeshiva Girl, is now available on Amazon.

    Wolf: I remember the day I finally paid off my student loans. It’s a good feeling. What is the strangest food you’ve ever eaten?

    Rachel: My father made me eat Ptcha once. He wanted to make sure my brother and I tried all of the Jewish foods (though it’s more Eastern European than specifically Jewish), and we weren’t allowed to say no. Ptcha is Calf’s foot jelly, a cloudy white savory jell, sprinkled with lemon juice. And it is absolutely disgusting.

    Wolf: I’ve never tried that one. If you had to pick a weapon, what would it be and why?

    Rachel: A Light saber. First of all because I hate weapons and I really don’t want to have one of my own. Second, because light sabers captured my imagination when I was little and first saw the Star Wars movies. The light sabers seemed more like an extension of the person, a way of dancing with light.

    Wolf: Good description. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Rachel: I am absolutely a dog person. I love their enthusiasm for life and the wild rumpus they make of everything. I like cats too, but I’m allergic to them. I used to sleep over at my aunt’s house and her cats would inevitably sleep on my chest and I’d wake up choking, but I still loved them. I just had to make sure that as soon as I got home I took a long shower and set a blow torch to my clothes.

    Wolf: That’s one way of getting a new wardrobe. While walking in the woods you come across…

    Rachel: The Giving Tree. Shel Silverstein was my favorite poet as a child. I read The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends pretty much every day and memorized as many of the poems as possible to recite back to myself when I was trying to fall asleep at night. My brother and I created a whole fantasy world in our front yard based on a tree that seemed to us like the Giving Tree, and we always trusted that tree to tell us what to do next.

    Wolf: Love it. I have fond memories of that book as well. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    Rachel: I’m working on a novel with super powers in it, one character can fly, and one can make herself invisible, and one can read minds. I feel like I’ve spent my whole life trying to be a mind reader, so that would be the ideal super power for me, even though I’m not sure I would enjoy it all that much. People have all kinds of crazy going on in their minds that we should never know about.

    Wolf: Not sure I’d want to know what people are thinking. What is your favorite body of water and why?

    Rachel: My favorite body of water is Lake Placid, in upstate New York. It captured my imagination when I was little and my Mom told us stories about summers spent on the lake with her family. I especially liked to picture her rowing through the mist in the early mornings.

    Wolf: Sounds beautiful. What story are you working on now?

    Rachel: I’m always working on multiple projects at once, because I can’t choose just one thing to focus on. It’s a problem. I’m thinking about a mystery set at my synagogue, and a memoir of sleep away camp, and a middle grade novel about an older African American actress and a little Jewish girl who become best friends, and there’s the super power story…it’s a long list.

    Wolf: That’ll keep you busy. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Rachel: I watch enormous amounts of TV and always have. When I was little I watched TV shows to get an idea of what normal people were like. Most of my sense of the world came from The Love Boat and Fantasy Island, which explains a lot. I watched TV until the shows went off the air late at night, and then we finally got HBO and there was TV to watch all night and I felt like I’d found paradise.

    Wolf: Sounds like we both had the same addiction growing up. Thanks for visiting.

    Rachel also has a weekly blog on WordPress called The Cricket Pages, where she weaves together stories about her dogs with anything else she can think of, at: https://rachelmankowitz.com/

    Star Touched

    Startouched front cover2

    Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers eight years after a meteor devastates earth’s population. Her power to heal may be overshadowed by more destructive abilities. Fleeing the persecution of those like her, Tatiana seeks refuge in a small town she once visited. But this civil haven, in a world where society has broken down, is beginning to crumble. Will Tatiana flee or stay and fight for the new life she has built? Only by harnessing the very forces that haunt her can Tatiana save her friends…and herself.

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Debbie Kaiman Tillinghast

    081

    Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    DSC_0157Debbie Kaiman Tillinghast is the author of The Ferry Home, a memoir about her childhood on Prudence Island, a tiny island off the coast of Rhode Island. Debbie began writing as she embarked on a quest to reconnect with her island roots, starting with a cookbook for her family.

    She has been published in Country magazine, and her poetry has been published in three anthologies published by the Association of Rhode Island Authors, Shoreline, Under the 13th Star and soon to be released, Selections.

    Debbie, a retired teacher and Nutrition Educator, now enjoys volunteering as well as writing, gardening, biking and spending time with her children and grandchildren.

    Wolf: Thank you for participating in my oddball interview. You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.

    Debbie: I am a vine, climbing over an arbor and flowering year round in shades of pink, purple and blue. My hypnotic scent brings love and happiness to anyone who takes the time to stop and smell the haunting fragrance.

    Wolf: That sounds lovely. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Debbie: I am definitely a cat person, and I love their independence, affection, and soothing purrs. Over the years our cats have sprawled across desks as my boys did their homework and snuggled their soft warmth next to me when I was ill. Whiskers, my childhood pet, didn’t mind when I dressed her in a doll dress and bonnet, covered her with a blanket and took her for a walk in my doll carriage.

    Wolf: She sounds like an extraordinary cat. While walking in the woods you come across…

    Debbie: A hidden, deep, blue pool and a doe with three fawns frolicking at her side. The doe raised her head, gazed directly in my eyes, and I felt her trust as she returned to grazing in the emerald grass. I turned to leave, but my feet wouldn’t move. She looked into my eyes again and I heard her breathe, “Stay, you are one of us now.”

    Wolf: Cool. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    I would be able to fly at warp speed, bypassing traffic and making short, but frequent trips to see my grandchildren in NY, MD and TN. I would take a leisurely flight, soaring over the ocean and countryside, or on a whim, zoom to Holland to see the tulips in bloom.

    Wolf: Fun. There is a door at the end of a dark, damp corridor. You hear rumbling. What do you do?

    Debbie: In my mind I would open the door and investigate. In reality I would probably turn around and run as fast as possible in the other direction.

    Wolf: The world is about to end. What is the first thing you do?

    Debbie: Call each of my three sons and tell them I love them. None of them live nearby and the phone is our connection between visits.

    Wolf: Which of your characters is your favorite?

    FerryHome_V9-2 copyDebbie: Since my book is a memoir, I changed this question to, “Which story is your favorite?” I love the story called “Sleds and Sundays.” The island where we lived year-round was more isolated in the winter. Since the population dwindled to about fifty, my sister and I had fewer friends nearby, and my father’s store was closed so my dad worked fewer hours. My winter memories are cozier and more intimate than summer ones.

    Wolf: What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)

    Debbie: Narragansett Bay in Rhode Island where I grew up on a tiny island in its midst and learned to swim along its rocky shore. It is still my favorite spot for a swim, from May when the water has yet to warm until the October chill arrives. I love walking along the island clam shell beaches, watching the changing colors of the bay and listening to the waves, whether whispering or crashing on the shore.

    Wolf: Brrrr. What story are you working on now?

    Debbie: I’m in the midst of a romance novel as well as a collection of essays and poems.

    Wolf: Glad to hear you’re delving into fiction. Your answers were super creative. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Debbie: I love the outdoors and travel that includes a new place to hike. At home I enjoy walking, biking and gardening as well as reading and cooking.  Most of all I like to spend time with my three children and four grandchildren.

    Wolf: Thanks for stopping by. Connect with Debbie at https://www.facebook.com/debbiekaimantillinghast/?ref=bookmarks

    Books make great gifts

    Start the holiday season out right

    Pick up your copy of

    STAR TOUCHED

    book gift jpg

    Do you have the courage to be who you are meant to be?

     

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Karen Dowdall

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    KarenKaren DeMers Dowdall, PhD, MSN, BSN, was born in Hartford, Connecticut, and spent her elementary-grade school years in the small farming community of Salmon Brook, settled in 1680 by a stalwart group of Europeans. She grew up exploring Salmon Brook’s Forest Preserve, swimming in Salmon Brook, and ice-skating on a “haunted” pond in winter.

    Karen has traveled extensively, and has lived in the Republic of China, Saudi Arabia, and England. Living overseas opened a vista of cultures and history. It led her to understand that all cultures have storytellers that reveal all their hopes and dreams through vivid fantasy fictions, poetry, short stories, and dramatic written presentations, throughout their cultural history.

    Karen has always written poems, songs, and short stories. She now has three novels that represent fantasy, coming of age, and a dark mystery. Her next novel is a time-slip fiction love story set in the present and 1692 – the age of the witch trials, and will be published in December 2018.

    Wolf: If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why? 

    Karen: I would be a Singing Blue Sparrow. Many people don’t know that the sparrow family of birds come in many colors.

    Wolf: That sounds lovely. If you had to pick a weapon, what would it be and why?

    Karen: Words are the best weapons, because they can hurt and heal too.

    Wolf: So true. What is the nicest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?

    Karen: Let them live, be happy, and fall in love!

    Wolf: You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.

    Karen: I would be a daisy in a field of beautiful daisies.

    Wolf: Pretty. I’ve always liked daisies. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Karen: I am an animal lover, but I love doggies best. 

    Wolf: Me as well. While walking in the woods you come across…

    Karen: A bear and this is true!  During a forest fire, my cousins and I were caught up in a forest fire and we ran for home, running beside me and my sister, was a large black bear. We looked at each other and I thought he smiled at me. All the other forest animals, large and small, were running with us too.

    Wolf: That’s scary! Glad you and your family escaped the fire. I hope the bear did as well. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    Karen: I would be a guardian Angel.

    Wolf: The world is about to end. What is the first thing you do?

    Karen: Pray!

    Wolf: What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)

    Karen: I was an ocean life guard when I was in college and so I love the ocean. 

    Wolf: Crashing waves. Salty water. Perfect. What story are you working on now?

    Karen: I am writing a time-slip novel during the colonial period when women were accused of witchcraft. It is a fantasy and a love story too that transcends time.

    Wolf: That sounds cool. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Karen: I love to walk daily, and above all, I love to dance and even owned a dance studio. I love to teach little girls and boys to dance. To be a really good dancer, one must learn ballet, modern dance, jazz and contemporary dances.

    Wolf: Thanks for stopping by. Catch up with Karen at these links:

    www.karendowdall.com
    amazon.com/author/karendemersdowdall
    https://www.facebook.com/kddowdalll
    https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7394355.K_D_Dowdall

    Books make great gifts.

    Star Touched

    book gift jpg

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Tracy Barton-Barrett

    081
    Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    Wolf: I had the pleasure of meeting Tracie Barton-Barrett at the Baltimore Book Festival this fall. Please welcome her to Wolf Notes.

    Tracie&MishkaAs a life-long animal enthusiast, Tracie Barton-Barrett is a speaker, Licensed Professional Counselor with a specialty in pet loss, and former psychology and sociology instructor. Buried Deep in Her Hearts is her debut novel, and she hopes it will help the reader to relate, reflect, and heal after the loss of a beloved animal. She’s facilitated pet loss support groups and presented and written articles on the subject. She and her husband live in North Carolina in the US and are owned by their two cats, Rutherford B. Barrett and Oliver Monkey.

    Wolf: What was the first seed of an idea you had for your book and how did it develop?

    Tracy: Buried Deep in Our Hearts is a novel that uses a dog, cat, and horse story line to celebrate our important connection to our animals, and honor their memories. As someone who has lost animal companions, the desire to write a book about pet loss, and addressing the unique, yet universal experience, was always a goal of mine. We know now that when a person experiences sadness or grief, similar parts of the brain light up as if a person were experiencing physical pain. After losing two beloved pets in grad school, I remembered what one of my professors said, “Don’t do nothing (with grief.)”

    Buried_Deep_in_our_H_Cover_for_Kindle (1)So, ever the devoted student, I delved into pet loss research, copying as many articles as I could, proud of my newfound labeled and neatly stacked folders. But, they just sat there. Collecting dust. For years. It wasn’t until the anniversary of our Kimball Kitty’s death (whose story is featured in my book) when it hit me: Make it fiction.

    From the second this “a-ha moment” occurred, a new energy and trajectory took its course, and Buried Deep in Our Hearts was born. Ironically, I primarily read non-fiction for most of my childhood. I was more interested in reading books about psychology and physiology than picking a book from a fiction reading list. It’s only been in the last ten years that I’ve read and truly enjoyed fiction. I know that my book came from something bigger than myself.

    Wolf: It’s hard for non-pet owners to understand the connection we have to our pets and the loss we feel when they are gone. They are part of the family. Just wondering, do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Tracy: Yes! And, a horse person, as well as an elephant person, and a sloth person, and an orangutan person, and a swan person, and …..

    Wolf: Not surprised at your answer. What is the strangest food you’ve ever eaten?

    Tracy: As a seafood lover, I thought I would try Lionfish. Yes, the beautiful, striped fish you see in the aquariums with the long spines. Unfortunately, they are upsetting the ocean’s balance because they don’t have any natural predators. So, as a seafood lover, I decided to take one for the team, and try one. Unfortunately, it didn’t end so well for me. The bathroom became my best friend the next day. Maybe the spines weren’t completely cooked out!

    Wolf: Sorry to hear that. I’ll steer clear of them. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    Bubby&Me

    Tracy: To be able to teleport. It sure would cut down on travel expenses! I do believe that toddlers, as well as my cats, already teleport!

    Wolf: I think you’re right. Which of your characters is your favorite?

    Tracy: Gladys Paisley. Eccentric, older women always make me smile. Can’t pick a favorite animal character. They’re all my favorite!

     

    Wolf: What is your favorite body of water and why?

    Tracy: As a native of Michigan, I’m certainly a “water baby.” I’m drawn to any body of water, larger than a puddle. I used to live in Virginia Beach near the ocean and would visit the Boardwalk every day, regardless of the weather. The constancy and rhythm of the waves soothed my mind, especially after a stressful day.

    Wolf: I’ve always loved the ocean myself. What story are you working on now?

    Tracy: This can be a trick question for an author! For me, much of the work happens even before sentences are typed out on the screen. At the moment, I’m writing a novel focusing on a girl that loves horses, but, for various reasons, can’t have one. I’m also looking into writing a children’s book based on Buried Deep in Our Hearts. In addition, there are two other books that are just in the planning stage, but all my books will celebrate the human-animal bond, in some form.

    Wolf: Love the idea for the children’s book. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Tracy: Love to travel, laugh from a really good or clever joke or meme, learn about history, be near the water, listen to and play music, watch movies and Will & Grace or Friends reruns, or find a good bingeable Netflix or Hulu show.

    Tracie&horseWolf: You really like water, don’t you. If this question were any question in the world, what question would you want it to be and how would you answer it?

    Tracy: The question I asked my students: Who would you like to play you in a movie if they did a biopic of your life? Most of my students said they think Tina Fey for me. What an honor—she’s such an amazing and talented woman. Not to mention, hilarious!

    The other question is: What is the best compliment you’ve ever received? Because we tend to remember negative things people say about us, also known as the negativity bias, many students needed a minute to think. Truthfully, so did I. But, when I heard my students say that something I said changed, or even saved their life, it doesn’t get much better than that. 😊

    Wolf: Connect with Tracy on Social Media.

    Social Media Links:
    Email: An**************@***il.com
    Website: www.AnimalsConnectUs.com
    FaceBook: www.facebook.com/TBartonBarrett
    Twitter: @AnimalsConnect
    Instagram: traciebartonbarrett
    Amazon (Please buy new copies. Used copies only benefit seller) Paperback & Kindle: https://goo.gl/eXERyq

    Books make great gifts.

    Don’t forget to pick up you’re copy of STAR TOUCHED.

    book gift jpg

     

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – G J Stevens

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    Give a big wolf welcome to GJ Stevens

    29066376_1078869432253464_3932930084414947328_oGJ Stevens started writing fiction at the age of thirty. He describes his style of writing as popular fiction which usually has some sort of Sci-Fi or paranormal element, but he is on a journey and won’t pigeon hole himself into one genre. Even as a degree level engineer with a large family and a full-time career in a serious profession with plenty of adult responsibilities, he has always had an artistic and creative side. After years of self-suppression, the flood gates opened and his novel, In The End, is the culmination of many years of finding time from nowhere to learn the craft.

    Whilst working to self-publish his first novel, GJ, real name Gareth, chose to document his publishing journey in an open-book and honest fashion and through his blog he lays bare his journey, detailing his mistakes and the findings of his research as he treads his way into publishing.

    As a lover of the outdoors, every year he spends weekends out in the desolate countryside of the UK hiking and camping with his long-time friends which he uses as inspiration for both his creative fiction works and the subject of many a blog post. GJ Stevens is on the beginning of his publishing journey and wants to share the highs and lows with anyone who will listen.

    Wolf: Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Gareth: A dog person. I grew up with a dog in the family but as an adult I’m allergic to both cats and dogs. I get my dog fix vicariously through my best friend’s black lab.

    Wolf: I’m a dog person too. (Shouldn’t be a surprise for a wolf.) While walking in the woods you come across…

    Gareth: A sight I knew I would see eventually. I’d taken to the woods to get away. Walking between the trees because it felt safe, despite each step taken with care, a glance to where my feet might trip, might snap a branch or twig and turn their heads, might force me to run, to find some other place of safety

    This is an adapted version of one of my favourite flash fiction pieces I have pinned on my twitter account.

    Wolf: Cool. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    Gareth: Invisibility, until I really think about it. I’d like to be left alone to write, but I’d have to be able to turn the power on and off. I love my family and friends and wouldn’t want that to end just because they can’t see me! I’m an introvert when it comes to creativity but weirdly confident and somewhat more extrovert when it comes to normal life.

    Wolf: That would be a great power. It seems like every time I sit down to write someone walks in the room or calls. Maybe I should try closing the door. Speaking of doors:

    There is a door at the end of a dark, damp corridor. You hear rumbling. What do you do?

    Gareth: Shout at the TV and tell myself not to take a single step forward. When I realize I’m not on the TV, I’ll look around for anything heavy to swing. If nothing is at hand then I’ll check my pockets for a pen and paper so I can immortalize the moment, ready for adding the scene to my next book.

    Wolf: The world is about to end. What is the first thing you do?

    Gareth: Find my wife and hold her in my arms. If I’ve got a little longer then gather together with my friends and family and empty the wine stocks from the house.

    Wolf: I’ll drink to that. What five items would you want to have in a post-cataclysmic world?

    Gareth: This is very fitting. My first novel to be published is set at the start of a world changing event and I blog about preparing for the worst by packing a bug out bag. With the bag you’re limited to what you can carry on your back, but if I could only take five items they would be a water filtration straw so you can drink water from almost any source, my micro-pick for defense. It’s lightweight and packs a great punch suitable for all types of post-cataclysmic scenarios. A roll of gaffer type, the swiss army knife of survival. The final items would be a sleeping bag and my multi-fuel compact camping stove.

    gjstevens.com/2018/07/16/emergency-kit-bug-out-bag-v2-0/

    Wolf: You are ready to go. Let’s hope you never need to used it. I think my character, Tatiana, would have loved your bag. What story are you working on now?

    Gareth: I’m editing the follow up to my first novel In The End. It’s is as-of-yet unnamed, but follows the same timeline as the first novel but from another, completely different perspective.

    Wolf: What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Gareth: I work full time and have a wonderful family and group of close friends. When I get chance, I like to hike with my friends but I only get the chance to do that once or twice a year.

    Wolf: Thanks for stopping by. You can connect with GJ Stevens through these links:

    Social Media Links:
    www.gjstevens.com
    https://www.facebook.com/gjstevensauthor/
    Twitter: @stevens_GJ

    STAR TOUCHED

    CAN YOU BE WHO YOU ARE MEANT TO BE?

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  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Charles F. French

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    Joining us back from my break is Mr. Charles French.

    charles french

    Charles F. French is an author of speculative fiction, including horror, Gothic, and the paranormal. He holds a Ph.D. in English Literature, and devotes his working time to teaching and writing. He is the author of Maledicus: The Investigative Paranormal Society, Book 1, Gallows Hill The Investigative Paranormal Society, Book 2, and French On English A Guide to Writing Better Essays.

     

    Wolf: If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why? 

    Charles: I would be an eagle, because I have felt an affinity to these creatures for a long time, which is odd because I hate flying. 

    Wolf: I’m a rather nervous flier myself, but wings are cool. What is the nicest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?

    Charles: In an upcoming book—the third in The Investigative Paranormal Society, one of the characters finds love and marries. He finally achieves happiness, even though relatively late in life. 

    Wolf: It’s never too late to find love. What is the meanest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?

    Charles: Several have been killed. 32570160

    Wolf: That kind of ends things. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person? 

    Charles: I consider myself an animal person, because I love both cats and dogs. I would love, however, to have a Newfoundland dog. 

    Wolf: Lots of fur and drool. I wonder if you can spin Newfoundland fur like you can Malamute fur? While walking in the woods you come across… 

    Charles: A very old, tree that has a door in its trunk. When I go through the door, I step into the Shire. 

    Wolf: Come back and get me. I’d love to visit the Shire. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    GallowsHillFinalCoverEbookCharles: I would have the power to be in 3 places at one time, so I can get everything done! 

    Wolf: That could get confusing. What story are you working on now?

    Charles: I am finishing the first draft of a fantasy that has a working title of the South Dakota Story. The title will change, but it focuses on three young teenagers and their quest to save their favorite teacher.

    Wolf: I like that. Teachers don’t get enough credit (or pay) these days. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Charles: I love to read, cook, hike, go to movies, teach, sit back and relax with a good cigar and a couple of fingers of good bourbon or Scotch. 

    Wolf: Guess I know what you’re bringing back from the Shire. If this question were any question in the world, what question would you want it to be and how would you answer it?

    Charles: I would like the question be the one first asked by George Bernard Shaw FOE_Cover_French jpgand then used by Robert Kennedy in his Presidential campaign: “Some men see things as they are, and ask why. I dream of things that never were, and ask why not?” I would like to ask the world why not and get the hopeful answer that all good things are possible.

    Wolf: Connect with Charles French through these links: 

    Social Media Links:
    https://charlesfrenchonwordsreadingandwriting.wordpress.com/
    # French_C1955 (Twitter)
    https://www.facebook.com/WriterCharlesFFrench/

     

    STAR TOUCHED

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  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Beth Woodword

    081Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

    Woodward PhotoBeth Woodward is the author of the Dale Highland series of urban fantasy novels. The second book, Embracing the Demon, released on June 19. (Purchase from Amazon or Barnes & Noble.) She lives in the Washington, DC, area with her husband and the three cats who own them.

    Wolf: The universe can be dangerous at times. If you had to pick a weapon, what would it be and why?

    Beth: Well, that would very much depend on what I needed the weapon for. Am I aiming for maximum destruction or just self-defense? (Or maybe self-offense. I could see that being a thing.)

    I “invented” a type of gun in my books called the “Intelli-Target,” which corrects your aim so that you always hit your target. I think if I were looking for personal defense (or offense), I’d probably go with that, because my hand-eye coordination sucks and otherwise I’d probably shoot my eye out.

    As for maximum destruction…I’d probably want something that wouldn’t damage the environment or hurt animals. I can’t see any scenario, even as a fictitious destroyer of things, where I’d be okay with that.

    Wolf: Ah, an environmentally protective destroyer. What is the meanest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?

    Beth: My protagonist is someone who doesn’t trust easily and hasn’t made a lot of connections in her life. So naturally, I had her learn to trust someone and make a deep connection with that person…and then that person betrayed her.

    I mean, pretty much all of my fiction could be summarized as, “Beth does mean things to her characters.” But the story would be pretty boring otherwise.

    Wolf: That is very cruel. I hope you gave your protagonist a chance to recover before throwing another brick at them. Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Beth: My husband and I have three cats, whom we dote on excessively, and I volunteer at an animal shelter doing personality evaluations on the adoptable cats. (Yes, it is a thing.) So while I like dogs, I am very much a committed crazy cat lady.

    Wolf: Achoo. Sorry, my cat allergy is acting up. If you could have a super power, what would it be?

    Beth: Time travel. I’m a big history geek, and I would love to experience what it was like to live in other times…but only if I can come back home to running water and electricity when I’m done!

    Wolf: That’s a good one. Be careful not to step on any butterflies. There is a door at the end of a dark, damp corridor. You hear rumbling. What do you do?

    Beth: I run as fast as I can, as far away as possible. I’m a hard-core Ravenclaw. I have no need for heroics, and I’m very aware of my own limitations. If you need someone to stay calm and call 911 after those crazy Gryffindors have rushed headlong into danger and gotten their arms chewed off, I’m your girl. But I’m not going to be the person who rushes into a dark corridor without a flashlight. Or, you know, at all.

    Wolf: Smart. The world is about to end. (Maybe it was all those crazy Gryffindors.) What is the first thing you do?

    Beth: My first thought was, “I would drop everything, find my husband, and spend the remaining time with him.” If there was time, I’d try to get to my brother, and there’s some other friends and family I’d like to say goodbye to. But I suspect that my first instinct would override everything else. If existence is about to end, he’s the person I’d want to spend the rest of the world with.

    Wolf: I’m with you. Describe a meal you would be served while visiting another world.

    Beth: I’m a horribly picky eater, so having a meal on another world would not go well for me. The aliens would serve me some delicacy of their world, and then I’d feign a stomach flu because I couldn’t bring myself to try the unidentifiable dish of gray mushy stuff with chunks. (Chunks, as any picky eater knows, are the bane of our existence.) And then I’d go to bed hungry and cursing my phone and my existence—because obviously you can’t get GPS signal on an alien world—and desperately wanting to know if there’s a Pizza Hut on Alpha Centauri.

    Wolf: I’ll make a note not to have you over after the next hunt. What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)

    Beth: Dolphin Cay at Atlantis Beach Resort in the Bahamas. We did a “Dolphin Trainer for a Day” experience, so we got to feed the stingrays, swim with the dolphins, snorkel with all kinds of fish, and spend eight hours learning about all the marine life they have at Atlantis. I was really impressed with how invested they are in the conservation of our oceans and aquatic life.

    Wolf: That sounds cool. What story are you working on now?Embracing the Demon front cover

    Beth: I’m in the very, very early stages of planning book 3 in the Dale Highland series. It’s still mostly index cards at this point, but I’m super excited about it. Big things will happen. And Beth will do even more mean things to her characters.

    Wolf: What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Beth: I love to travel! Even short weekend trips are great, but we do as many longer trips as we can manage, too. We just went to Italy and Spain in March, and it was amazing! I try to find a ghost tour in every place we visit; I love learning about spooky history. I’m a huge Doctor Who geek, and I’m so excited that we’ll finally have a female Doctor this fall. I read constantly, which is probably not a surprise. I would also move to Disney World and live there forever if I could.

    Wolf: I’m looking forward to the new Doctor as well. You can keep the ghost tours. I don’t do well with spooky.

    Connect with Beth through these sites:
    Website: http://beth-woodward.com
    Twitter: @beththewoodward
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bethwoodwardwriter/

    While you’re checking out Beth’s books, take a look at Star Touched.

    Startouched front cover2

     

  • Countdown to the Day of Reckoning – 3 Days – An Interview of Tatiana from Star Touched

    Startouched front cover2

    Here is an interview of Tatiana, the main character in Star Touched, that The Wolf did a while back.

    Wolf: Welcome to Wolf Notes, Tatiana. If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why?

    Tatiana: Thank you, Wolf. I’d love to be a bird. That way I could fly anywhere I wanted, feel the wind in my feathers as I soared through the air. I’d be free, with no worries.

    Wolf: That sounds nice. Any particular kind of bird?

    Tatiana: Swallows are pretty and graceful. I love the way they glide.

    Wolf: Sweet. Swallows are cool to watch. Would you consider yourself a cat person or a dog person?

    Tatiana: I love all animals, but I suppose I’m partial to dogs right now. Fifi is very important to me.

    Wolf: You mean that tiny poodle you’re bonded to?

    Tatiana: I’d rather not talk about her. Please ask a different question.

    Wolf: Sure. While walking through the woods you come upon…

    Tatiana: Wild blueberries, a whole field of them. There are also wild carrots, dandelions, cat tails, and all sorts of other yummy foods.

    Wolf: That sounds more like a grocery store. What is the strangest food you ever had?

    Tatiana: Food is food these days. Although I did see someone else eat, well… something I really don’t want to talk about. I mean I’ll eat almost anything, but not…that. I’d rather starve. Not that I would. I’m pretty good at finding food in the wild.

    Wolf: I’m not sure you really answered that one. Let’s try another. What do you do for fun?

    Tatiana: Surviving is very time consuming, so I don’t have much free time, but when I do, I love to read. Doesn’t matter what. Fiction, history, science… I just love books. When I read I can be anyone and go anywhere. It’s a wonderful escape and I learn things.

    Wolf: I agree. Books are pretty awesome. You’ve just been turned into a plant. Describe yourself.

    Tatiana: That’s a tough one. I don’t like the idea of staying in one place. My roots would need to be movable. More like legs.

    Wolf: A walking plant?

    Tatiana: Yes. With a forest green stem and bright-green heart-shaped leaves with a splash of blue. They could be made into a tea that would cure any disease. I’d also grow clusters of tasty and nutritious berries. Each would be enough to fill your belly for a day.

    Wolf: That sounds fantastic. Aren’t you worried people would hunt you down for those berries and leaves?

    Tatiana: Oh. I didn’t think of that. Can I change my answer to a small inedible red flower with no useful purpose?

    Wolf: Sorry. No take backs. There is a door at the end of a dark damp corridor. You hear rumbling. What do you do?

    Tatiana: Open the door and try to fix whatever machine is malfunctioning.

    Wolf: Are you a mechanic?

    Tatiana: No, but I’ve read lots of books on fixing things.

    Wolf: If you could choose any weapon, what would it be?

    Tatiana: Knowledge. I don’t like weapons or fighting.

    Wolf: If you could pick any super power, what would it be and why?

    Tatiana: None!

    Wolf: Really?

    Tatiana: I don’t want ANY special powers. I just want to be a normal person. I need to go now.

    Wolf: Wow, Tatiana ran out of here fast. If you want to know more about her, you’ll have to read Star Touched.

    Don’t forget to get your copy of Star Touched so you can learn more about Tatiana an her friends.

  • WOLF NOTES: An Uncommon Interview – Robert Waters

    081

    Welcome to WOLF NOTES, where interview questions stray from the rest of the pack. It’s nice to know the usual stuff like where an author gets their inspiration and why they write, but sometimes we need a little fun in our lives.

     

    REWatersRobert E Waters is a technical writer by trade but has been a science fiction/fantasy fan all his life. He’s worked in the gaming industry since 1994 as a designer, producer, and writer. In the late 90’s, he tried his hand as writing fiction and since 2003, has sold over 50 stories to various on-line and print magazines and anthologies, including the Grantville Gazette, Eric Flint’s online magazine dedicated to publishing stories set in the 1632/Ring of Fire series.

    He has also written in several tabletop gaming universes, including Games Workshop’s Warhammer Fantasy series and in the Wild West Exodus weird tech/steampunk universe. He has also dabbled a bit in Warlord Games’ Beyond the Gates of Antares milieu, writing about assassins and rescue missions.

    Robert currently lives in Baltimore, Maryland with his wife Beth, their son Jason, and their precocious little cat Buzz.

     

    Wolf: If you could be any animal in the universe, what would it be and why?

    Robert: I’ve actually given this some thought, believe it or not. There are many animals that I’m quite fond of, but the one I’d like to be the most is a jaguar. Pound for pound, the jaguar has the strongest bite of any wild cat in the world. The jaguar was also one of the most important animal symbols in Mesoamerican and South American culture. In Mayan mythology, the jaguar was seen as the ruler of the Underworld. I have no interest in ruling the Underworld, you understand, but the jaguar symbolized power, ferocity, and valor. That sounds pretty good to me.

    Wolf: No kidding. I wrote a short story with a jaguar called Mark of the Goddess.  It’s in an anthology called In a Cat’s Eye. You should check it out. What is the strangest food you’ve ever eaten?CatsEye_Final-72dpi

    Robert: Probably alligator. When I worked for AutoZone at their corporate office in Memphis, Tennessee, we would do these so-called “travel weekends,” where diverse groups from the corporate office would go out into the field and visit stores (the purpose of which was to give us pencil-pushers a better understanding of how the stores were functioning in the real world). One such weekend was conducted in the New Orleans area. I ate a lot of “first time” foods that weekend, including sucking cayenne pepper juice from crawfish. But alligator takes the cake. A very greasy, rubbery meat. Not bad, but very different from your typical hamburger at McDonalds.

    Wolf: I’ve had alligator before. Tastes like chicken. What is the nicest thing you’ve ever done to your characters?

    Robert: Probably every author would say that the nicest thing that they have ever done for their characters is to allow them to achieve their goals. I’m no different. Whether those goals be marriage, or gold, or sheer survival, allowing your characters to overcome adversity is the nicest thing you can do. Because if you can imagine that your characters are real people, would they not feel the same satisfaction and joy in beating the odds that we do?

    Wolf: Do you consider yourself a cat person, or a dog person?

    Robert: Both, actually. I grew up with dogs. My family had a dog (or dogs) from the time I was born to the time I graduated high school. Since then, however, I’ve gravitated toward cats. Someday, however, I may go back to owning a dog.

    Wolf: I’m definitely a dog person. Do you have a favorite character?

    Robert: Sonata Diamante. She is the protagonist in my upcoming fantasy novel, THE MASKS OF MIRADA (slated for publication a little later this year from Eric Flint’s Ring of Fire Press). Sonata works for her nefarious wizard uncle, Borshen Galo, as a thief and swordsmaster. She’s the toughest character I’ve ever created, and perhaps the crudest too in many ways. She’s willing to kill when necessary, but she can be funny, vulnerable, and compassionate when required. I’m excited about introducing her to the world.

    Wolf: She sounds interesting. What is your favorite body of water and why? (river, ocean, waterfall, puddle, bottle…)

    Robert: Well, if I can pick a non-earthen body of water, I’d pick the vast ocean beneath the ice of Europa. There are depths within our own oceans that we have yet to explore, but for me, the idea of drilling down into that water, and then discovering life there, excites me. One of these days, perhaps we will, and I hope I’m alive to see it.

    Wolf: I never thought about water on other worlds. Love it. What story are you working on now?

    Robert: I have a number of projects in the works right now. Most of them are novels, which is rare for me. Usually, the bulk of my projects is short stories, but I’m reaching a point in my writing career where novels are beginning to take up most of my time. A good problem to have, so no complaints. I’m working on three novels right now.

    The first is a sequel to my recent publication, The Cross of Saint Boniface, called THE SWORDS OF EL CID. It should be released in 2019.

    The second is a media tie-in novel in Mantic Games’ Warpath SF universe, and its working title is THE LAST HURRAH. The novel is based on their game Dreadball, and it too should be out late 2019.

    And third, I’m collaborating on a novel with Charles E Gannon which is set in Eric Flint’s 1632/Ring of Fire universe. The title of the book will be 1636: CALABAR’S WAR, and it’s set in the New World (Brazil and the Caribbean). It will probably be published late 2019 or 2020.

    Wolf: That’s a lot to keep track of. I look forward to reading them. What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

    Robert: I’m a gamer, miniatures, board, card, video, you name it. I like to play games, so when I’m not writing, I’m playing games. Or reading. I’m an avid reader.

    Wolf: I’m a gamer as well, but not the video kind. Connect with Robert on his website: www.roberternestwaters.com

     

    Startouched front cover2

    Don’t forget to pick up your copy of STAR TOUCHED

    Can you be who you are meant to be?

    Eighteen-year-old Tatiana is running from her past and her star-touched powers.