Interview with Greek-Australian author, Mary D. Brooks

Hello peeps! Today, I am pleased to welcome a Greek author from Down Under! Mary D. Brooks is one of the latest additions to eNovel Authors at Work, who writes urban fantasy set in Greece during WWII. Check out these stunning covers:

 

bloodofthegks

It’s 1942 in German Occupied Greece during World War II, two women, one Greek, the other German must work together to help Jews escape. They have to put aside their mutual antipathy to each other to accomplish their clandestine operation. They know that one wrong move will put an end to their lives.

Fourteen year old Zoe Lambros’ faith in God is shattered after her mother’s death at the hands of the German Commander. She determines to defy the enemy in every way she can–including a festering urge to kill the German Commander’s daughter, Eva Muller.

Eva Muller has a tortured past, and a secret, if revealed, will lead to certain death at the hands of her father. Despite knowing the risk, Eva is working with the village priest to help the Jews escape. With her activities closely observed, Eva needs help to continue the clandestine operation. Zoe is not who Eva has in mind but they have to find a way to work as a team.

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Eva Muller and Zoe Lambros return in the award winning second novel of the Intertwined Souls Series. Eva and Zoe migrate to Australia seek refuge and a new life at the end of World War II in the ‘Land of Milk and Honey’. They try to fit into a society marred by prejudice and must hide their love for each other. Eva struggles with the ramification of her tortured past as she tries to overcome the mental constraints forced upon her. Zoe’s dream of being an artist is just a dream but Eva has a plan to make that happen even if means working at a menial job.

Shadows from their past and machinations of old enemies plunge them into mortal danger. They are about to find out the hard way that moving thousands of miles away does not protect them from those that wish them harm.

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Eva and Zoe Lambros return in the third novel of the award winning Intertwined Souls Urban Fantasy Series. They have left Greece and Germany behind, taking their secrets of new paranormal abilities, visions of the future and their love back to Australia to finally settle down for that sought after family life they so desire.

Their plans unravel when Eva is involved in a shocking accident that reveals misguided good intentions from the past will have repercussions for her future. Zoe is overjoyed to learn that their wish for children will finally be realized when she finds out she’s pregnant but she has to contend with the possibility of losing the woman that she loves.

The truth about the origins of Eva’s gifts are revealed but is it too late to save Eva’s life? Secrets from the past, visions of the future and supernatural mentors takes Eva and Zoe’s lives out of ordinary and uneventful. Truly, No Good Deed goes unpunished.

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Tags: lesbian fiction, urban fantasy, historical, WWII

 

Hello Mary and welcome to my blog!

Hello Fros – thank you for inviting me.

What has inspired you to write the Intertwined Souls Series?

Two very special people in my life put on the path that led to my very first novel. My grandfather Kyriakos Mitsos from Larissa, Greece who was in the Greek Resistance during the German occupation of Greece in World War II and my adopted grandmother Evelyn Elephan who was an Auschwitz survivor. I met Mrs Elephan when I was 10 years old and she influenced my life in a profound way.

When I was ten I met Mrs Elephan and she became my adopted grandmother because my parents worked shift work and she took care of me. I learned what those numbers on her arm meant and when I was old enough she gave me a book called “I am Rosemarie” by Marietta D. Moskin. It was about a teenager living through the Holocaust. Mrs Elephan and I then had in-depth conversations about the Holocaust and I had a million questions. She told me one day that I was going to write about the people that history books don’t talk about. It wasn’t a wish of hers; it was a statement of fact. I was going to write about the unsung heroes who tried to save the Jews and others. Someone tried to save her but in the end they were found out and she was sent to Auschwitz. Mrs Elephan was the first to encourage me to write after I said (at the tender age of 10) that I was going to be a writer. She said ‘Do it Mary, I know you can.”

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When I was thirteen I visited my grandfather in Greece. He was a pigeon breeder and we would sit up on his flat top roof with his pigeons when the sun would be setting and tell me stories about when the War came to Larissa. I was a history nut and I was in heaven; hearing a first hand account of a truly historic moment in Greek history in a town that was 5000 years old was EXTRAORDINARY and a gift. When I would go back downstairs I would write down what he told me so I wouldn’t forget it. I was beyond deliriously happy to be in Greece, the land of my birth and heritage.

My visit lasted three months and it was one of those life-changing moments. Neither Mrs Elephan nor my grandfather lived long enough to see my first book “In the Blood of the Greeks” get published. It’s set in Larissa and is about two women on opposite sides coming together to save Jews and in the process they save themselves. It incorporates what my grandfather and my adopted grandmother possessed in abundance: courage and strength against the odds.

When I started to research the book, one thing led to another and I found more horrific things that included gay men and women and incorporated that into my story. I have a lot of gay friends and along with the stories about Final Solution of the Jews, their story also resonated with me. I wanted a different take on the war and it’s victims in addition to Larissa having a huge Jewish population that was almost destroyed in the rush to exterminate them. So many lives were intertwined.

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When I was 36 years old I went to the Holocaust museum in Washington DC. Another amazing woman who survived the holocaust once again changed my attitude to life. I don’t remember her name but I remember her words as she recounted her story in the survivor videos. I stepped out of that building with a new mindset on September 8, 2001. The holocaust and the victims of Hitler’s brutality and inhumanity have been interwoven into my life since I was ten years old.

Thank you for sharing this with us, Mary. That was truly compelling and whetted my appetite for your series! What other writing have you done? Anything else published?

I’ve written two more fiction novels: Awakenings, and Hidden Truths. Also, two novellas and two adult coloring books to relax the mind.

Do you see yourself in any of your characters, or do any of them have traits you wish you had?

I think every writer puts part of their personality in their characters. Both of my main characters have bits of me in them but not fully. I wish I had Zoe’s bravado and take-no-prisoners attitude. I’ve got a smidgen of it but not the full glorious Zoe version. It’s fun to write them and just let go.

Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

Tell a good story, support your fellow authors and work hard. You want to be an indie author? Get down and dirty and find out as much as you can. If you don’t know something, ask. There is bound to be someone who has already asked the question and you will find the answer. Learn from others who have gone before you and give credit where credit is due.

Are there any sites or writing tools that you find useful and wish to recommend?

I have a ton of sites I like to visit. Here are a few:

http://enovelauthorsatwork.com/ – I found this site quite by accident while doing research on book promoters and it has been a fantastic resource. Many times I’ve gone in to check if a certain promotor is listed.

http://writershelpingwriters.net/ – I love this site. Run by the authors of The Emotion Thesaurus which is one of my favorite reference books.

http://www.indiesunlimited.com/ – again found when doing research and has been a useful site.

http://www.thebookdesigner.com/ very useful info about designing the exterior and interior. I typeset my own novels and I’m a cover designer (although I have only done two covers: A Widgie Knight and Book 6 Nor The Battle To The Strong which hasn’t been unveiled yet).

http://www.thecreativepenn.com/ – LOTS of useful info here and one of my favorite sites.

http://www.theindependentpublishingmagazine.com/ – very useful and up to date.

http://www.amightygirl.com/blog/ – any site promoting positive messages about women and girls is a must.

http://www.writersdigest.com/ – got a ton of their books and very useful information

https://www.psychologytoday.com/ – I’m fascinated by human behavior so reading this site is a great way to understand the human mind.

And a ton of other great sites – I use Feedly as an RSS reader to easily catch up with all the blogs and news sites.

As for writing tools, I use Scrivener, Word, In Design, and Photoshop.

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Thank you for sharing these, Mary. I’m sure they’ll prove useful to many. Choose a male and a female character from your book and tell us which actor and actress you’d cast to play them in a film adaptation.

 Oh that’s already been done! We filmed scenes from my novels in Los Angeles in Feb 2015. Eva and Zoe came alive – well they are alive in my head but I saw them in real life. Kat Cavanaugh (Eva) and Penny Cavanaugh (Zoe) – an awesome married couple – agreed to be my characters. They even look like them. They feature on the covers of my books.

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What do you enjoy the most as an indie author that you imagine you wouldn’t if you were traditionally published? If you had a choice would you still go indie?

 I’ve been published by small press publishers from 2000 to 2015 and then I took control of my own books in March 2015. I love the control it gives me to be an indie author. I’m a control freak when it comes to my work and setting the agenda for my work and how to do it is liberating. If I had to do it all over? Absolutely. No one cares about your work more than you and frankly no one is going to care more about how to market them or show love for them more than you. It was overwhelming at first but once you sort out the noise and get down to the good stuff, it’s a great journey.

Who is your favorite poet? Quote a couple of lines from your favorite poem.

I have three favorite poets: William Earnest Henley, Rudyard Kipling and Leonard Cohen. Here is an excerpt from Invictus by William Earnest Henley:

“It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.”

A terrific poem, indeed. Thank you for being here with us today, Mary!

Thank you for this opportunity, Fros!

 

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Mary D. Brooks lives in Australia and has been writing since she was eight when she rewrote her favorite tv shows when stories didn’t quite end up the way she wanted. Sometimes in a world of her own, she relished the quiet to invent new stories and worlds. Mary has written non-fiction articles for Australian and US magazines but her first love is fiction. When she’s not writing, she’s designing sites, creating art or being chief editor/owner of AUSXIP.com You can find Mary’s author site at http://www.nextchapter.

Visit Mary’s Amazon page:  US   UK

Visit Mary’s website

Twitter: http://twitter.com/ausxipmaryd

Character Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/zoe_lambros

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/marydbrooksfiction

 

Logo 280x178 w font AR HERMANNHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with Effie Kammenou

Today, I am thrilled to welcome a Greek-American author from New York, Effie Kammenou. Effie’s debut novel is Evanthia’s Gift, a dramatic family saga that’s responsible for my recent bouts of insomnia… I’m finding it impossible to put it down. The more I read, the more I am intrigued about what happens next. I will be reviewing it when I’ve finished, but for now, here is the stunning cover before my chat with Effie begins!

 

final coverIn the year 1956, Anastacia Fotopoulos finds herself pregnant and betrayed, fleeing from a bad marriage. With the love and support of her dear friends Stavros and Soula Papadakis, Ana is able to face the challenges of single motherhood. Left with emotional wounds, she resists her growing affection for Alexandros Giannakos, an old acquaintance. But his persistence and unconditional love for Ana and her child is eventually rewarded and his love is returned. In a misguided, but well-intentioned effort to protect the ones they love, both Ana and Alex keep secrets – ones that could threaten the delicate balance of their family.

The story continues in the 1970’s as Dean and Demi Papadakis, and Sophia Giannakos attempt to negotiate between two cultures. Now Greek-American teenagers, Sophia and Dean, who have shared a special connection since childhood, become lovers. Sophia is shattered when Dean rebels against the pressure his father places on him to uphold his Greek heritage and hides his feelings for her. When he pulls away from his family, culture and ultimately his love for her, Sophia is left with no choice but to find a life different from the one she’d hoped for.

EVANTHIA’S GIFT is a multi-generational love story spanning fifty years and crossing two continents, chronicling the lives that unify two families.

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Hello Effie and welcome to my blog!

Hi Fros! It’s great to be here!

Tell me, is Effie short for Effrosyni by any chance?

No, actually, my name is Efthemia!

Oh, a lovely Greek name! What has inspired you to write your book?

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The inspiration to write Evanthia’s Gift came from a couple of sources, but it was my mother’s passing that put me on the path to writing. In 2012 my mother passed away after battling pancreatic cancer for two and a half years. I was trying to be the strong older sister, a compassionate mother and aunt, and a supportive daughter to my grieving father. I never allowed myself to fully express my emotions. One night I sat at the computer and just started writing. It was my way of working through my grief.

I’d heard stories all my life of my mother’s childhood in Athens, and her experiences during WWII as a child. My father had his own stories growing up in NYC, his tales of how his family came to America and for what reason, and his own experiences as a flyer in WWII. I took all those stories and gave life to several characters.

I knew there was a lot of truth in this book! It’s palpable as I read; I believe the best books are those that contain honest feelings and true experiences from their authors… Yours embodies both. Do you see yourself in any of your characters, or do any of them have traits you wish you had?

I see myself, or parts of myself in several of the characters. As an author, when you develop a character, their voice comes from within you. Sophia lives in my timeline and has had some of the same experiences that I had. Her emotions come from me, although her traits and talents are modeled after one of my daughters. Anastacia is my mother, and the inspiration of the story. However, I do see parts of myself in her as well. Most of the characters, even some of the men, have a tiny piece of me—a trait, a point of view, or an experience.

Which are your favorite authors, and what do you love about them?

I have a background in theatre and studied all the classic playwrights from ancient Greece to modern day, but Shakespeare still holds my heart. As for fiction, I love the classics there as well. Jane Austen and John Steinbeck are my two favorite classic authors. I enjoy women’s fiction and contemporary romances. Nora Roberts, Jude Deveraux, Sophie Kinsella, Adriana Trigiani, and Sylvia Day are among the novelists I read most often. But the one contemporary author who has captured my attention more than any other is Sylvain Reynard who wrote the Gabriel series. His beautiful use of language is breathtaking, and he keeps me intrigued with his knowledge of literature, religion, art, history, and culture.

You mentioned a couple of my favorites, Effie. And thanks for the tip about Sylvain Reynard! Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

I continue to take all the advice my fellow authors are willing to share with me. But I will say this: I have never met a community of professionals so willing to help each other. Every author I’ve reached out to has responded, and was more than willing to help and steer me in the right direction. My advice? Reach out to authors. They will help you. But the most important piece of advice I can give anyone looking to publish or self-publish, is not to rush. Take your time and do everything as it should be done. Make sure your manuscript is ready for publication. It took me almost three years to write EVANTHIA’S GIFT. It’s a long book – 548 pages. Get a critique partner and beta readers. Their suggestions will improve your work. When you think you are done and you think you have tightened your manuscript as much as you can on your own, get a professional editor. And don’t skimp on the cover. Get a professional designer whose work you admire.

I couldn’t agree more with all the points you made! Choose a male and a female character from your book and tell us which actor and actress you’d cast to play them in a film adaptation.

This is an amusing question for me because where I work we spend much of our free time casting the movie version of the characters in the books we are reading. It’s a little more difficult with my own work since I have visions in my head that are not inspired by movie stars. The other issue here is that the book spans fifty years. So, do you use two different actors for each character, or simply age them?

For the adult Anastacia I could possible see Melina Kanakaredes. I see both of them as elegant, beautiful women. For the teenage Sophia I see Mia Sara as she was as a teenager. She is actually exactly what I had in mind. Dean is harder for me. Maybe Zach Efron or Stephen McQueen (Steve McQueen’s grandson). I would rather the reader have their own vision and not be influenced by the appearance of stars, unless of course the book was made into a movie.

Zach Efron as Dean sounds ideal, so thanks for that, I’ll remember when I resume reading tonight, LOL! Tell us about your website/blog. What will readers find there?

I do not have an author blog or website at this time. I do write a food blog where I not only share recipes, but also traditions and stories that reflect the food. Between some of the chapters of Evanthia’s Gift, I’ve added recipes, ones that will enhance the Greek experience for the non-Greek reader. Since publishing the novel, I have been posting these recipes on my blog with an excerpt from the story that refers to the food.

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Well done, Effie! I also find that recipes work well to promote fiction. People love to try new tastes so you get a lot of interaction from readers on the blog and on the social media. Next question: If you could have one superpower what would it be?

I would like to have the power to speak every language. The idea of being able to communicate fluently in every country would be not only useful, but also enlightening. How wonderful would it be to fully immerse yourself in a culture?

What a wonderful answer, I love it! What were your most and least favorite subjects in school?

Without a doubt, Drama and English were my favorite subjects in school. In my last year of high school, an Independent Creative Arts Program was piloted. It was a wonderful experience. The theatre group within this program performed children’s plays for the district, improv theatre and classic plays—all of which were produced, directed and acted by the students. In college, I was a theatre major and I enjoyed the literature classes as well as the acting classes.

The subject I liked the least was science. It was my weakest subject, which is ironic since my dad was a chemist. This was also the reason I did not do well. I would ask him a simple high school level question and get a PhD-worthy answer. His answers were way over my head, and it wasn’t until I stopped asking him questions that I started to do marginally better.

If you could choose another profession, what would that be?

Without a doubt, I would be an actress. It was what I went to school for, and had always hoped to be. I think I needed a lot more nerve and a thicker skin at the time, and I never pursued this dream properly.

I can see you’ve come with lots of photos! How delightful! Can we have a look?

Sure!

Oh! This one looks intriguing! Is there a story behind it?

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Yes! The girl in the grad. cap is my niece, Athena, who had always struggled in school, but my mother encouraged her to go to college. When she was fighting through her pancreatic cancer, my mother spent time with each grandchild. She told Athena not to quit, no matter how long it took to finish. She made Athena promise to graduate. If it wasn’t for her yiayia she would have given up. She put that message on her hat because she thought she would see it from above and be at her graduation in spirit.

Oh that’s so sweet… and what about those two stunning young ladies at Paramount Studios?

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They are my daughters. Eleni, 29, is a 6th grade teacher, ballet teacher and tennis instructor. She is currently doing her PhD in administration. Alexa, 25, is a graphic designer and video art director for Real Simple Magazine. She has aspirations to someday work at Paramount or Disney studios.

I hope she succeeds. Best of luck! And this one’s in the States too?

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Yes, that’s me, my sister, Athena, and Alexa at EPCOT food and wine festival. The other photos are various ones with my husband, friends and family.

Love them! Thank you for sharing these and for this wonderful chat, Effie!

Thank you for this opportunity, Fros, to talk about my work.

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Effie Kammenou is a first generation Greek-American who lives on Long Island with her husband and two daughters. When she’s not writing, or posting recipes on her food blog, cheffieskitchen.wordpress.com, you can find her cooking for her family and friends.

Her debut novel, EVANTHIA’S GIFT, is a women’s fiction multi-generational love story and family saga, influenced by her Greek heritage, and the many real life accounts that have been passed down. She continues to pick her father’s brain for stories of his family’s life in Lesvos, Greece, and their journey to America. Her recent interview with him was published in a nationally circulated magazine.

As an avid cook and baker, a skill she learned from watching her Athenian mother, Effie incorporated traditional Greek family recipes throughout the book.

She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Theater Arts from Hofstra University.

Visit Effie’s Amazon page  US   UK

Visit Effie’s food blog

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EffieKammenou?ref=bookmarks

Twitter: https://twitter.com/EffieKammenou

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26069535-evanthia-s-gift

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with Inderjit Kaur

Today I’m pleased to welcome the lovely Inderjit Kaur from India. Inderjit writes inspiring, spiritual non-fiction that uses positive language to help people face life’s difficulties and to adopt a new outlook on life that will guide them to a happier, more fullfilling existence. As you will see in our interview below, Inderjit speaks from experience. Having reached rock bottom after a painful divorce, she had an epiphany that brought her closer to her faith and, as a result, restored peace and joy in her life. Eventually, she wound up writing to inspire others in the same way.

 

elementsoflife

The four elements of life, Air, Water, Earth, Fire are the only truth which can render the whole meaning of being as a human. Are we authentic? Are we living in courage? Are we kind and in patience? Are we grateful? How we face life and respond to life is all that matters.

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meaningfullife

The author highlights all the probabilities of life that we deal with and how we can simplify, how we can add more meaning to our lives, which is the gift from the divine supreme, by just understanding the different aspects of our problems, searching broader avenues, encouraging our inner souls to seek good, think good, render good, and ultimately feel good and happy.

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Hello Inderjit and welcome to my blog!

Hello Fros, thank you for inviting me.

Which are your favorite authors, and what do you love about them?

I read a lot of authors and some favorites are: Paulo Coelho, Dr. Abdul Kalam, Khaled Hosseini, Richard Carlson and Robert Schuller.

The books of these authors have been a light of hope in my gloomy days, like the period in my life where I had to face a painful divorce. The book, Leaning into God When Life is Pushing you Away by Robert Schuller has been a huge inspiration.

Sounds like a great book, Inderjit. Thanks for the tip! Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

I do morning walks five days a week, and I also practice Yoga and Meditation.

Oh my goodness, if that’s the kind of place you go to for a walk, I envy you! If you could have one superpower what would it be?

I don’t know if that’s a superpower, but I’d love to be able to relive my childhood so I can spend time again with my father.

What has been the most important lesson you’ve learned so far in life the hard way?

That you should never give up when facing the hardships of life. We all feel tempted to give up at times, but when we give up we miss the opportunity to learn. Some people prefer to dwell in self-pity or blame the entire world for their failures. But when playing the victim we run away from responsibility. Every person’s life is the outcome of their choices in life. It’s the power of choice that makes us ordinary or extraordinary.

I believe people should face life’s challenges by finding strength inside. Strength lies in our thoughts. Positive thoughts does wonders in creating positive results in people’s lives.

As a firm believer in The Law of Attraction I can only agree with you, Inderjit! Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

Work on your craft, write from your heart, read a lot, and polish your manuscript the best you can. Last, with all the above, exercise patience!

Great advice! I also think patience is key, as well as perseverance. If you could choose another profession, what would that be?

I would have loved to be a college teacher. I love to teach. Back in school I loved Zoology and Chemistry… I gave up my plans to get a degree in Chemistry due to marriage.

How would you like to be remembered?

I don’t know how I’m going to end up in life, but I’d love it if, someday, an author wrote my memoir and finished the book with the words, “And she never gave up.”

I love that! Would you tell us a little about that place you love visiting for a walk? And do you have more pictures to show us? It’s magical!

 

 

(*laughs*) Yes, it’s a place on the hills not too far from where I live. It’s caled Matheran. I don’t visit it every day, but I try to go as often as I can.

Such an enchanting place! Have you brought any other photos to show us?

 

Two more… My bookshelf and my workstation at home.

Thank you for sharing these images from your home, Inderjit. They are lovely, and equally serene, as one would expect of you. It’s been a pleasure having you here today. Thank you for your time!

Thank you very much, Fros. I appreciate this opportunity.

 

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Inderjit Kaur is an author and inspirational guide with a powerful voice, who spreads positive quotes through her tweets. Following a life-changing epiphany from a poet at the young age of nine, she marked the page as an editor of her college magazine during her post-graduation in Science at Mumbai University.

Writing, being a passion, made her perceptions change forever. After a series of adversities she launched her debut book, Living a More Meaningful Life, which is now available globally.

Considered as a positive, peace messenger through her tag line “keep smiling, keep shining”, she has inspired thousands to make positive choices that impact not only their lives but also those of others. Her blog, “A Living Series”, brims over with positive quotes that her readers can draw inspiration from.

A domestic violence survivor, single parent, full time writer, author, blogger, book reviewer, Injerjit Kaur resides in Mumbai.

Visit Inderjit’s Amazon page  US    UK

Visit Inderjit’s blog, “A living series”: https://inderjitlmml.wordpress.com/

You Tube channel: http://youtu.be/wArIlTl5CIw

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/inderjitkaur

Twitter: https://twitter.com/inderjitlmml

 

 

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with author Daphne Kapsali

Good morning peeps! Today I’m pleased to welcome Daphne Kapsali, a Greek from London who fell in love with the forlorn landscape of the Cycladic island of Sifnos. Leaving the mad bustle of London behind, she moved to Sifnos to live there on her own for 100 days writing a memoir. Now, people who seek solitude like this feel like kindred spirits to me so I made sure to connect with her only to appreciate her even more. An eager supporter of indie authors, Daphne is here with us today to tell us all about her writing journey!

 

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How far do you need to go to find yourself? What do you have to give up?
Daphne didn’t go very far. After too many years of living as a writer who didn’t write, she gave up her life in London to spend 100 days of solitude on the remote Greek island of Sifnos, off season, and find out, once and for all, who she really was. Her challenge: to write every day.
One hundred days and one hundred entries later, her question had been answered in more ways than she could have imagined, and the things she’d given up never mattered in the first place. This book is her story, as personal as it is universal, of the most obvious and most fundamental quest of all: to be happy; to do what you love.
Part memoir, part fiction, part philosophy and part travel writing, 100 days of solitude is a collection of one hundred stories, all of them connected and each one self-contained. One hundred essays on choosing uncertainty over security, change over convenience, seeing things for what they truly are, and being surprised by yourself; on love, loss, death and donkeys; on reaching for your dreams, finding enlightenment on a rural road, peeing in public, and locking yourself out of the house; on dangerous herbs, friendly farmers, flying Bentleys and existential cats; and on what it feels like to live in a small, isolated island community through the autumn and winter, to live as a writer who actually writes, and to live as your true, authentic self, no matter who that turns out to be. And to write your own story, the way you want it told; to find your voice, and the courage to let it be heard.

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There are certain things that time cannot touch. Very few. Metal it turns to rust and bones to dust and the souls of those we’ve loved into ghosts and memories. Ancient temples fall to ruin and gods fall from grace, and people fall out of love and forget. Very few things can withstand the passage of time, its ruthless continuity, always moving on, always leaving moments behind, but in Anna’s short lifetime there was one thing that did.

Was it hubris to wrench apart what destiny had conspired to unite? Could there be atonement for such a thing?

This story begins at the end of a thing that hasn’t ended, and travels in orbit in the space between then and not yet, circling questions unanswered and unasked, alternative endings and futures that never came to pass, looking for a place to land. It is the story of Anna and Jack and it’s a love story, because all stories are, essentially, about love and the inexplicable things we do in its name and in its absence, in its pursuit and in its wake.

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FREE!

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I’m all for spiritual development. I’m all for awareness and mindfulness and loving kindness. Looking after yourself, mind, body and spirit. It would be lovely if we all spoke a little softer, if we took a little longer to think before we act. If we were all a little enlightened. The world would be a better place. Like the tote bag I carry on my shoulder proclaims: Yoga will save the world.

But who will be there to remind us, gently, that we’re taking it a bit too far? When our facebook feeds are inundated by inspirational quotes and we’ve lost the ability to say things in our own words. When gluten is the devil and eating cake is tantamount to suicide. When we boast, daily, of our dietary restrictions and post snapshots of ourselves in the course of a practice that was designed to be personal. When every yoga class is an opportunity to open our hearts, to acknowledge the pain, the frustration, the sadness within, to welcome it, to go with it. When we consult spiritual healers and gurus and medicine men and forget to talk to our friends. When we ostensibly strive for balance, and fail to notice the irony of seeking it in extremes.

I cannot be the only one who’s getting a bit tired of this.

FREE!  VISIT AMAZON  US   UK

(Double check it’s FREE before your purchase)

 

 

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Hello Daphne and welcome to my blog!

Hi Fros, very thrilled to be here!

So, tell us about 100 Days of Solitude. How did this book come about?

100 days of solitude is a strange book, in that it was never meant to be a book at all. It began about 18 months ago, when I quit my job in London and moved to Sifnos, a small Greek island, to spend a few months living alone and writing. The idea was to produce a novel, but I didn’t know how to start or how to keep myself motivated to write ever day, so I set up a blog – which I named 100 days of solitude – to give myself a sense of accountability. I wrote one post every day, for 100 consecutive days, just recording thoughts and experiences that came up through this process of rediscovering myself, and this blog that basically began as an exercise in self-discipline ended up being the book I wrote.

Sounds like a genius method to write a book! What other writing have you done? Anything else published?

Actually, I did manage to also write a novel while playing the reclusive author on my little island. It’s called you can’t name an unfinished thing, and it was published this summer.

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What are you working on at the moment? Tell us a little about your current project(s).

What I’m mostly spending my time on at the moment is promoting my published books, and trying to navigate my way through the world of social media marketing and do the best I can to get myself and my work out there, without losing touch with who I am and why I’m doing this. It’s tough, and it’s exhausting, but it’s also very interesting and I’m learning a lot. I don’t do anywhere near as much writing as I’d like, but I have a few projects going round and round in my head, and I manage to produce a little piece every now and again, and that keeps me going. This is a phase, and I’ve come to accept it’s almost as big a part of being an author as the writing itself. Not quite as rewarding, but just as important, if you want your books to be read.

Well said! Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

Be yourself. Be genuine. Be a little bit crazy. It’s a crazy thing that we’re trying to do, so do it fully and joyfully and with as much confidence and obstinacy as you can muster. Have fun with it, no matter what the outcome.

Excellent advice! What do you enjoy the most as an indie author that you imagine you wouldn’t if you were traditionally published? If you had a choice would you still go indie?

I’ve really enjoyed being involved in every single part of the process, from the writing itself, to editing, typesetting, cover design and publishing, and all the way through to marketing and promotion. Though it’s a lot for one person to take on, and it really does take over your life, there’s something very rewarding in knowing that you’ve made this thing yourself, all of it; that it’s 100% you and that, for all of its flaws, you can stand by it proudly, because you’ve put the best of yourself into it. As for whether I’d choose to go indie over a traditional publisher: I don’t know. Yes, for all the reasons above. No, because perhaps a traditional publisher could help my books reach more readers than I can, and that’s ultimately what a writer wants: for their work to be read.

Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

In theory, yoga. In practice, I am a self-confessed reluctant yogi, which means that even though I love yoga and I know it’s unequivocally good for me, physically, mentally and spiritually, I am sometimes very reluctant to actually do it. But I’m still a big believer in yoga, and I think there’s something about it that’s very complementary to writing. Another thing I do, when the crazy in me builds up to dangerous levels, is play really loud music and dance like an idiot. Again, it’s an excellent physical and mental exercise for writers: all that pent up energy we collect needs to be released somehow, and it’s amazing how quickly moving your body in that way gets it all out.

LOL, I know what you mean, Daphne. I do both yoga and ‘crazy dancing’ at home! What has been the most important lesson you’ve learned so far in life the hard way?

That you can do anything you want; that you can choose to be happy. That it really is as simple as that, and everything else is just fears and excuses in various disguises. But I have to confess: it wasn’t hard. Taking my life apart in order to write full-time was terrifying to begin with, and a hard decision to make, but once you start doing what’s right for you, it’s easy. Everything works out, somehow.

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How right you are. Again, I agree 100%. Fear, and the ego making excuses are the only obstacles in one’s way. What are the things in your life that you’re most grateful for?

People. All the incredibly kind, generous and supportive people I am lucky enough to have in my life. And also for the fact that I’m able to see all the possibilities that are available to me, and recognise, every day, how much there is to be grateful for.

An exceptional answer, Daphne, love it. How would you like to be remembered?

As someone who made a few people’s lives a little bit happier. If people think of me after I’m gone, I’d like them to smile. Or laugh. That’s all.

I love your answers. Actually, I’d love to keep you in my pocket and carry you around with me! I’d never have another frown on my face, that’s for sure. Who is your favorite poet? Quote a couple of lines from your favorite poem.

That’s a very tough question, but I’m going to say Philip Larkin. And the final lines from The Mower: “we should be careful of each other. We should be kind, while there is still time.”

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Daphne, I’m so pleased you could be here with us today! Thank you!

Thank you too, Fros, it’s been a pleasure.

FELLOW AUTHORS: Daphne Kapsali supports indies on INDIE BOOKS ROCK.

Head over there and submit your books! All she asks in return is a share on the social media and to spread the word a little. Everybody wins!

 

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Daphne Kapsali is a writer, reluctant yogi, pathological optimist and probably one of the luckiest people alive. In May 2014, she gave up her life in London to spend the autumn and winter writing on a remote Greek island; the result is a book entitled 100 days of solitude – 100 separate and interconnected stories on claiming the time and space to live as your true self and do what you love – published in March 2015. She has since published another two books: a novel entitled you can’t name an unfinished thing, also produced during her stint as a reclusive author, and This Reluctant Yogi: everyday adventures in the yoga world. All three are available on Amazon.

Daphne is a big fan of the law of attraction, the universe, and all things positive, and hopes her story will keep inspiring others to overcome their fears and limiting beliefs, and live the life they want.

Visit Daphne’s Amazon page  US   UK

Visit Daphne’s website

Visit Daphne’s blog

Social media links:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/daphnewrites

Twitter: https://twitter.com/dafiniduck

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/13837460.Daphne_Kapsali

 

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with Aurora Springer

Hello! It’s Monday again and I’m pleased to welcome another fabulous member of eNovel Authors at Work for today’s interview.  Aurora Springer was born in the UK and has been writing science fiction and fantasy stories since childhood. Grand Master’s Pawn (Book 1 in the Grand Master’s Trilogy) is FREE today! Check it out below with a couple of Aurora’s other books.

 

The Grand Master’s Pawn is FREE on these dates in November: 16, 17, 28, 29 and will be 99c on all other dates until the end of the month. Double check the price before you place your Amazon order!

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One young woman challenges the super psychics ruling the galaxy, and finds an impossible love. Science fiction adventure melded with fantasy and romance.

Young empath, Violet Hunter, travels through the galaxy on missions for her mysterious Grand Master. Life-threatening cracks appear in the vast web of portals and Violet agrees to investigate the disruptions. When she discovers the perpetrator comes from within the ranks of the Twelve Grand Masters, she must penetrate their curtain of secrecy to fulfill her task. Her challenges escalate when she meets the enigmatic man behind the griffin avatar. Armed with only her erratic powers and a mishmash of allies, she must challenge the most powerful beings in the galaxy.

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Psychically linked lovers fight the powerful Grand Masters dominating the galaxy.

In the wake of the Red Queen’s destruction of his castle, the rebellious Grand Master, Athanor Griffin, devises a risky plan to defeat his nemesis and solve the life-threatening portal crisis. He is joined by his loyal pawn and lover, empath Violet Hunter. They spin across the galaxy in pursuit of his strategy, contending with portal failures, hostile aliens and Grand Masters. Success will depend on Violet. But, she wrestles with erratic psychic talents and her doubts about their unequal partnership. She must surmount her insecurities and recruit allies to survive the inevitable battle with their enemies. Their worst nightmares lie ahead.

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Fight for freedom. Fight to survive – For refugees from an overcrowded Earth, dreams of a better life on an alien planet transform into a terrifying battle for survival.

Nothing will stand in the way of Tiger Lily’s dream of escaping the subterranean slums of Terra and visiting the stars. She enters the fierce competition for a place in the scout team on the next spaceship to the remote planet of Delta, where an earlier colony disappeared. Before the ship departs, the arrival of a mysterious message from Delta suggests that the descendants of the first colonists may have survived.

A dangerous mission to seek the lost colony exposes the team to unexpected dangers, and they encounter a grim warrior in the isolated valley. Has Tiger Lily met her match in the tortured man? Where is he leading them? And who are the real rulers of this strange world?

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Hello Aurora and welcome to my blog!

Hi Fros, thank you!

What has inspired you to write the Grand Master’s Trilogy ?

My inspiration arose from Alice Though the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll due to my idea of combining several short stories. The pawn is a young woman, Violet, who travels on missions to different planets under the command of a mysterious Grand Master. Once I set the main characters in motion, the story expanded into a trilogy.

Two of my short stories and skimpy notes about a dragon morphed into Violet’s first three missions. Following the chess analogy, each mission is a move in a game of chess. Assuming Violet makes the first move, after four missions she reaches the seventh square of the chess board and can be promoted to queen in her next move. At that point in book 1, Violet enters the secret world of the Grand Masters, although she is not fully promoted until the end of the trilogy.

Sounds very intriguing! What other writing have you done? Anything else published?

As an indie author, I have published five novels, two novellas and two short stories since 2014. I am a university professor in my “day job” and have published more than two hundred research papers in science journals. The majority of these papers are co-authored with one or more students and researchers, sometimes from other countries.

You’re so prolific – I’m impressed! Do you see yourself in any of your characters, or do any of them have traits you wish you had?

Of course, I recognize hints of myself and many other real people in the characters I create. Most of my stories are told from the point of view of a female character, and she is usually more athletic than I will ever be. Many of my characters share my determination, curiosity, optimism and sense of humor.

What are you working on at the moment? Tell us a little about your current project(s).

Currently, I am concentrating on finishing the third book in my Grand Master’s Trilogy. This trilogy could be described as the adventures of psychics in space and mixes science fiction with supernatural powers. The protagonist(s) travel through several planets, often with exotic environments and alien inhabitants. The twelve Grand Masters include humans and aliens, such as an amoeboid and two plants. I thread in mythological references, often humorous. The Master Smith has his forge in a volcano. The Chair of the Council of Grand Masters calls himself the Lord of Lightning, although his juniors may refer to him as a pompous fool.

I have several other works at different stages: the start of a couple of science fiction stories and a novella with superheroes and their animal companions. Can you tell that I love animals, plants and nature in general?

Of course! I trust you have pets?

Yes – I have a dog, Augustus, and two cats. I’ve brought pictures to show you and your readers…

Oh, thank you for sharing! They look lovely! But I see only one cat here?

Yes, that’s Ollie. My other cat is too shy. As she is black, we often just see two eyes staring from under the furniture!

LOL! Which are your favorite authors, and what do you love about them?

I draw inspiration from the novels of Jane Austen and Andre Norton. I enjoy Jane Austen’s insight into real people and her ability to describe characters in a few words. Andre Norton wrote imaginative science fiction and fantasy stories where loners struggle through perils and find a home. My ambition as an author is to combine the creative world building of Andre Norton with the caustic humor and romance of Jane Austen.

What genres do you read mostly, and what are you reading now?

My personal preference is science fiction and fantasy, although I also enjoy mysteries. I like to read adventures in strange places with a happy ending for the protagonists.

Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

Don’t expect your first draft to be the final one. Writing a good story takes hard work and there are many other aspects involved in publishing and marketing a novel. Join a group of authors and learn from their experiences.

Good advice! Oh, if I had a dollar for every time I edited my books… LOL! Tell us about your website/blog. What will readers find there?

My website/blog has information on my books such as excerpts and background as well as the buy links. Often I host other authors for guest posts about their new releases. On the weekends, I post snippets of my work in two writers’ groups: Weekend Writing Warriors and Science Fiction and Fantasy Saturday.

What do you enjoy the most as an indie author that you imagine you wouldn’t if you were traditionally published? If you had a choice would you still go indie?

I enjoy being in control of the whole process and having the ability to make changes, for example update the book cover or blurb. On the other hand, I have not ruled out the possibility of publishing more traditionally, since it might be an advantage for marketing.

Well said! Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

My regular exercises are walking the dog for one or two miles almost every day, and climbing five flights of stairs to my office at work. Occasionally I do yoga to improve flexibility. When we visit my family in the UK, we generally hike several miles a day, sometimes in the Welsh mountains.

It all sounds like great exercise, good for you! Before the end of our chat, I must ask: I hear you make extraordinary quilts, like my recent guest, the lovely Sarah Mallery. Is this true? And are there any other artistic talents you may have?

Lol! Yes, I do make quilts, although I used to do this a lot more in the past. I’ve also done a bit of acrylic painting.

Hey! Fantastic! You’re one talented lady, I knew it!

Thank you Fros. I’ve brought two more photos…

Oh my goodness, such a pleasure to have an author so eager to share photos. I normally have to pester you guys. Thank you, these are wonderful. Would you tell us a little about them?

Yes, of  course. This is me with a griffin statue at Bletchley Park in the UK. You can also see the Cliffs of the Isle of Angelsey, again in the UK. The last photo is of an America Lotus flower.

Delightful images, Aurora! Thank you so much for being here with us today. It’s been a blast.

Thank you very much, Fros. I really enjoyed our chat!

 

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Aurora Springer is a scientist morphing into a novelist. She has a PhD in molecular biophysics and discovers science facts in her day job. For as long as she can remember, Aurora has imagined adventures in weird worlds. In 2014, Aurora achieved her life-long ambition to publish her stories. She writes character-driven action stories in fantastic places, science fiction and fantasy with romance and a sprinkle of humor. Some of the stories were composed decades years ago. Aurora was born in the UK and lives in Atlanta with her husband, a dog and two cats to sit on the keyboard. Her hobbies, besides reading and writing, include outdoor activities like gardening, watching wildlife, hiking and canoeing.

Visit Aurora’s Amazon page  US   UK

Visit Aurora’s website: http://AuroraSpringer.blogspot.com

Social media links:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Aurora-Springer/885945434752937

Twitter: http://twitter.com/AuroraSpringer

Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/101087717415198221200/posts

 

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with Sarah Mallery, author of Sewing Can Be Dangerous

Hello peeps! Today I’m pleased to present a friend and co-member at eNovel Authors at Work; the lovely Sarah Mallery. I’m currently reading her short story collection, Sewing Can Be Dangerous; if I was to describe the book in one word, I’d definitely choose ‘haunting’. The stories revolve around sewing or quilts, exploring different places and times in history. They all linger in my memory and are absolutely fantastic. Check out Sarah’s books below. She could very well be your next favorite author!

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WHEN HISTORY, MYSTERY, ACTION, and ROMANCE ARE ALL ROLLED INTO ONE!

These eleven short stories range from drug traffickers using hand-woven wallets, to a U.S. slave sewing freedom codes into her quilts; from a cruise ship murder mystery with a quilt instructor and a NYPD police detective, to a couple hiding Christian passports into a comforter in Nazi Germany; from an old Salem Witchcraft wedding quilt curse to a young seamstress in the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire; from a 1980’s Romeo and Juliet romance between a Wall Street financial ‘star’ and an eclectic fiber artist, to a Haight-Ashbury love affair between a professor and a macramé artist gone horribly wrong, just to name a few.

“This is a box of bon-bons, every story an eye-opening surprise. Eat one and you’ll want to devour the whole box.” 

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A TRUE AMERICAN FAMILY SAGA: Can we learn from our ancestors? Do our relatives’ behaviors help shape our own?

In “Unexpected Gifts” that is precisely what happens to Sonia, a confused college student, heading for addictions and forever choosing the wrong man. Searching for answers, she begins to read her family’s diaries and journals from America’s past: the Vietnam War, Woodstock, and Timothy Leary era; Tupperware parties, McCarthyism, and Black Power; the Great Depression, dance marathons, and Eleanor Roosevelt; the immigrant experience and the Suffragists. Back and forth the book journeys, linking yesteryear with modern life until finally, by understanding her ancestors’ hardships and faults, she gains enough clarity to make some right choices.

“It simply is one of the best books I’ve ever read. I wish I could give it six stars!”

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Curl up and enter the eclectic world of S. R. Mallery, where sad meets bizarre and deception meets humor; where history meets revenge and magic meets gothic. Whether it’s 500 words or 5,000, these TALES TO COUNT ON, which include a battered women’s shelter, childhood memories, Venetian love, magic photographs, PTDS fallout, sisters’ tricks, WWII spies, the French Revolution, evil vaudevillians, and celebrity woes, will remind you that in the end, nothing is ever what it seems.

“Mallery’s endings keep me holding my breath until the very last word… I tried to anticipate where it was going, only to suffer whiplash at the end—19 times! I should be wearing a neckbrace.”

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Hello Sarah and welcome to my blog!

Thank you Fros! It’s great to be here!

What has inspired you to write Unexpected Gifts?

I have always appreciated looking at photographs from both my grandmothers’ photo albums. As I studied my individual relatives, I wouldn’t just think, ‘Oh, that’s my Aunt So-and-So!’ I would scrutinize their outfits, their faces, their postures. Were they sad? Happy? Bored? Annoyed at suddenly being put on display? That strong ancestral interest dovetailed nicely with my love of U.S. history, so when I decided to write this novel, putting those two themes together just kind of clicked.

What was the first thing you ever wrote and how old were you then?

Actually, I started writing when I was around fifty years old. But the germ of my first story, “Sewing Can Be Dangerous”, came a couple of years earlier. When my father told me about the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911, I had already been a quilt designer/teacher for over twenty years. So, in doing my research on that horrific event, I was particularly drawn to those hapless immigrant seamstresses who, in spite of their overworked hours and low pay, were often the only ones in their families that could find work in the U.S. I also enjoyed thinking about the sewing aspect, surrounded as I was by so many quilts and fabrics in my studio. I therefore decided to continue writing short stories, connected only by one element of sewing/crafts. That actually helped me focus on future stories. In other words, no matter what time period I was reading about, that context kept me asking questions like, how would sewing/crafting ‘fit’ into a story that takes place in this time frame? Who would be the likely characters?

Sarah, I must say, the short story about the fire haunted me the most! And thank you for these photos. You’re a multi-talented woman! What are you working on at the moment? Tell us a little about your current project(s).

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THE DOLAN GIRLS, due for publication shortly, has been a blast to research. Someone suggested that I look into writing about the Wild West, seeing as I was so drawn to history, and I will be forever grateful for that advice! I had always enjoyed watching westerns growing up–the atmosphere, the history, and of course, the HUNKY men! Yes, even at ten, I had my crushes on certain actors in movies/TV series…

But in doing my research, I couldn’t believe how much I enjoyed reading about the politics, schoolmarms, whorehouse madams, ‘soiled doves,’ Pinkertons, horse trainers, Annie Oakley, Buffalo Bill, desperados, and the lingo––talk about colorful. Just fantastic!!

Sounds highly enjoyable. Good luck with the launch, Sarah. Which are your favorite authors, and what do you love about them?

I appreciate so many writers, but the ones that I feel had a strong influence on me growing up were Harper Lee, Betty Smith, Mark Twain, O. Henry, Margaret Mitchell, and William Styron. I loved their great story telling, their clarity of prose, and all their vivid descriptions without ever being overly verbose.

What do you enjoy the most as an indie author that you imagine you wouldn’t if you were traditionally published? If you had a choice would you still go indie?

Since I started out being traditionally published, I am fully aware of the problems that can go along with that. I found out that unless you are a big name writer, many times small publishers don’t do much promoting, so you end up doing most of it yourself. Besides that, you don’t have any control with changing things, such as Amazon “keywords” or seeing your royalties. Recently, I had some interest in my THE DOLAN GIRLS, but although I was flattered, I sat back and thought about it. That would mean that if this big agency did pick me up and if they did sell it to a big publisher, it probably wouldn’t get published for at least two years. I would have no say about my cover and I wouldn’t necessarily get long term promotional help unless the book was doing very, very well, etc., etc. So I decided I’d take my chances and remain indie.

Good for you, Sarah. Although I bet it felt good that an agent actually reached out to you. Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

 I use my treadmill as I watch countless movies and TV series. I also do some ‘peddling’ on my daughter’s old, little portable stair-climber as I watch the news with my husband. And recently, I’ve been trying to build up a habit of dancing to Pandora as I do household chores. Stacking the dishwasher or dusting the house does take longer this way, but hey, I have fun! BTW, Disco, Bollywood music, Latin dancing, and the Andrew Sisters are fantastic for that! Talk about a great mood lifter!

Oh I love dancing and movies too! Well done for combining mundane chores with exercise! I always have blaring music playing when I do housework – helps to keep me moving, LOL. Is there anything you like to do to get the creative juices flowing when you write?

I have been known to write entire scenes in the car, a fast food joint, or in a doctor’s waiting room, but in general, I write at home, either on the computer or at my desk, scribbling away next to a chirpy-purring cat named June (although we tend to call her June-Bug). Her brother Rocco is usually nestled at my feet. Recently, however, I have been starting my day on my bed, with a “Cuppa Joe” and Rocco crunched against my side, as I write scenes longhand, do some editing, or answer questions such as these…

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June-Bug is gorgeous! Give her a cuddle for me… If you could choose another profession, what would that be?

Well, I’m already an ESL teacher and having that as well as my writing is a perfect combination for me. One is solitary, introspective, and self-absorbed; the other is social, outgoing, and philanthropic.

Sounds like a great combo, Sarah! I’ve so enjoyed our chat but, before I let you go, can I pester you for more photos of your handiwork please? And I hear you’ve done calligraphy in the past. Have you brought a picture on that?

Sure, Fros! Since it was Halloween only recently, how about this one?

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Wow, fantastic!

And here are more quilts to show your readers…

Oh my goodness, these are terrific, Sarah. I am amazed…

Thanks Fros; the shelf one is what I call a “Memento Quilt.” I used to make these for money. People would give me their loved one’s cherished clothing and I would work with them to design any quilt they wanted using clothing–buttons, zippers and all!

You’re one terrific lady, Sarah! Thank you so much for being here with us today, unfolding your many talents to us all.

Aw, thanks so much, Fros, for inviting me and for your kind words!

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Well, before I display my ‘official’ bio, I thought I’d present something a little different. Something that might make you understand why I’ve had such varied careers!

I happen to be a Gemini, and in writing this for some reason I suddenly decided to look up the personality traits for that sign. Now, please understand I have always scoffed at those pickup lines, “What sign are you, baby?” and would never base my future on astrology, but I was flabbergasted to read the following list which explained so much of whom I am.

According to this list, Gemini’s are socially outgoing, adjustable, restless, creative, sometimes unable to pay attention to details, good with their hands, easily distracted, anxious, humorous, and love to share. Suggested careers for this sign include writer, teacher, inventor, and craftsperson. Well, that sure fits me to a “T”! Now here’s my bio:

S. R. Mallery has worn various hats in her life. First, a classical/pop singer/composer, she moved on to the professional world of production art and calligraphy. Next came a long career as an award winning quilt artist/teacher and an ESL/Reading instructor. Her short stories have been published in descant 2008, Snowy Egret, Transcendent Visions, The Storyteller, and Down In the Dirt.

 

Visit Sarah’s Amazon page  US   UK

Visit Sarah’s website

 

Facebook:

Personal page: https://www.facebook.com/sarah.mallery.3

Fan page: http://facebook.com/pages/SR-Mallery-Sarah-Mallery/356495387768574

 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SarahMallery1

Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/107388739382996104658/posts

 Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7067421.S_R_Mallery

Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/sarahmallery1/

(Popular boards on history, vintage clothing, old films and lots more!)

 

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with fantasy author, Theresa Snyder

Today, I’m pleased to present the lovely Theresa Snyder, a delightful fantasy author. Theresa is a very supportive Twitter friend. In the process of receiving her media kit, I found out something about her that fascinated me enormously. Theresa has created the most whimsical writing space imaginable! Wait till you see the video she sent me and you’ll know what I mean!

 

Kindle Cvr_James and the Dragon

Do you love dragons? You will find Farloft irresistible.
James & the Dragon is book #1 of the exciting saga of Farloft the Dragon and his friends.
What would you do if you were adopted by a dragon? When ten-year-old orphan James nearly drowns in a bog, he finds himself rescued by Farloft, a centuries old dragon with a glittering collection of treasures and an even richer collection of stories. But, dragons and boys are not meant to live together – or are they? When Laval – a wizard harboring a secret hatred for Farloft finds out about James, he sees his chance for revenge.

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The Realms refers to a parallel dimension hidden between Minneapolis and St. Paul where creatures, humans think of as only mythical, roam free.

Cody is a shape shift with some monumental problems that all started when he died. He’s escaped to The Realms from the midlands between Heaven and Hell only to find his best friend is potential food for the resident vampires, his girlfriend only loves him in his wolf form and her mother…well that’s a whole other story.

It isn’t easy being Cody, but like a good wolf he’ll do what he can to protect his pack even if it kills him. Wait…he’s already dead.

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HelaviteWar_Final_Kindle

Love character driven scifi? Join Jake and Arr on their adventures.
The Helavite War is book #1 of the Star Traveler Adventures

Jake is a human mercenary looking for a quiet place to rest, when his Protect Dar-dolf attacks the last living Henu, Arr. Feeling responsible, Jake stays on to care for Arr, as the alien with deep blue cat eyes and unusual abilities recovers.

Jake takes on the role of teacher, mentor, father, and lost brother for his new alien friend. He and Arr share adventures dealing with the Hydra, a race of lizard-like creatures who kidnap members of other species to sell on the black market as slaves; battle the Narnon on Gligula where Tuldavian Swamp Lizards lay their traps just below the surface of the slime; and engage in numerous other missions while learning to appreciate each others rare abilities.

Ultimately, they must face their toughest foe, the Helavites, a species which has been preying on the weaker beings in the universe for generations. In the underground catacombs of these beetle-like creatures a mystery is solved and the foundation for the resurrection of an old world are laid.

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Hello Theresa and welcome to my blog!

Hi, Fros! I’m excited to be here!

What was the first thing you ever wrote and how old were you then?

I truly have written all my life. My mother used to say she spent more on stamps for my pen pal letters then she did for clothes for me. I have always kept a journal and written short stories and poems for my friends. However, the first novel I completed was “The Helavite War” which is Volume One of The Star Traveler Series. That was back in 1990. I was 40 years old. I followed that one with another novel each year in the series until 1995.

What other writing have you done? Anything else published?

I have two more series published, The Farloft Chronicles which are fantasy, and the Shifting Books in The Twin Cities Series which are paranormal. I also have one stand-alone scifi “In2Minds” and a memoir “We3” about moving my parents back in with me at 42.

Any hobbies or interests that you enjoy in your spare time?

I love to garden. I do a lot of mental writing while gardening, so when I actually get time to set down I can just let it flow. I enjoy making amateur videos of the garden and the projects in it for my YouTube Channel.

Do you see yourself in any of your characters, or do any of them have traits you wish you had?

I am a big part of Farloft, my dragon, and he is a big part of me. I think if you get to know him you have a fair understanding of me and how I think.

happy_dance_farloft_by_bluekite_falls-d80gj33Image by Blue Kite Falls

 

Farloft looks delightful! What are you working on at the moment, Theresa?

Currently, I have several ‘irons in the fire’ as they say. The end of October I will be releasing “The Beast Within.” This is the 7th in The Star Traveler Series, but I have made an effort to make it a stand-alone volume. My hope is that folks will read it and find teasers which will take them back to the previous six volumes. This series is very character-driven and even though they were my first novels, and I was learning my craft, they are still very moving. Great for YA scifi readers or adults who enjoy less techie mumbo-jumbo and more heart.

farloft book cover

Image by Blue Kite Falls

The day after Thanksgiving Farloft will roll out his “Farloft’s Storybook” for the hatchlings in your family. I do readings for our local county library and the older, middle-school kids, bring their younger siblings. So I wrote a dragon book specifically for them. It is nine short stories suitable for 2-1/2 to 6 year olds. A six year old will be able to read them on their own. The book is filled with delightful illustrations and coloring pages. I know it is going to be a hit.

It certainly sounds like it!

Thanks Fros. I’m also working on creating two adult ‘formatted’ versions of The Farloft Chronicles. I noticed while doing book signings and table-top appearances this past summer that some 25-50 year old men were reluctant to buy the chronicles because they are trade formatted and larger print for middle-schoolers. I didn’t have this trouble with the adults who read them online, because they didn’t ‘see’ the formatting. So now I am compiling two collections, Collection No. 1 with books 1-3 and Collection No. 2 with books 4-6 in a regular paperback-sized book for the adult readers. They are getting a really spiffy new cover and will sell for about a third less than the three trade paperbacks combined.

My last project is Affordable Proofreading & Editing Service. I have been beta reading, proofing and editing for other authors for years. There are some really great authors out there who just need another set of eyes on their work before they publish it. I checked into costs for that service and was astonished at how expensive it was. I wanted to help my fellow authors, so I am doing it at a discount for now. I would really like to retire in a couple of years, so if I get this service off the ground, perhaps I can do just that and help others along the way.

 Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

I will put in a pitch for my proofreading and editing service here. No matter how great your idea is, you need to make it as clean a book as possible for your readers – if you don’t, you risk alienating them forever. Get enough bad, or even slightly testy, reviews and it will sink you as an author. Most of the time authors read what they ‘think’ they wrote. Let someone else take a look at your work. Don’t be in such a hurry to get it published that you are detrimental to your own published future.

Sound advice, Theresa – and good luck with this new endeavor. Tell us about your website/blog. What will readers find there?

My blog is a continuously running selection of short stories. Some verge on novellas. I switch scifi, fantasy and recently even a paranormal. My blog is where my readers will find out whether they like my writing, and if so in what genre. There are also sub-blogs linked to the site where I explore things like poetry writing, current issues, what’s on my bookshelf, marketing tips, fun happenings and events in my life, and other interviews and reviews. I started writing my blog in the early 80s and it is a reflection of my growth as an author. Often I will try out something on the blog and it will develop into an idea for a book which I flesh-out later and publish. I have over 82,000 views and many, many of them are return readers who get hooked on a story. I post every Saturday to the basic story and do additional posts to the sub-blogs when the muse moves me.

Wow, I’m definitely going to check it out! Describe your workstation. Are there any favorite objects you have there for inspiration?

Oh, I love to answer this question. I have a Moroccan Room where I write. There is a video of it on my YouTube channel. It is my place to escape. I originally built it because after my mom passed on, my dad took to watching a lot of TV, very loudly. I could not concentrate, because I like instrumental music playing when I am reading and writing. I can’t concentrate with chatter going on. I go out to my Moroccan Room with my cup of tea, turn on the classical or light jazz, and go to work. Our cat, Jewel, often joins me in the chair opposite mine. We both like to listen to the rain on the roof in the spring and fall.

 

 

That’s magical, Theresa. I’m enchanted! And as green as Farloft 🙂

LOL – thank you, Fros. It’s a pleasure to work in there, that’s for sure.

Have you a picture of your cat to show us?

Yes, here is a photo of Jewel. This was taken in the house; she was actually listening to the rain on the roof as I took this!

Jewel

Awwww! What a cutie! Last question: How would you like to be remembered?

First of all, I would like to be remembered as a sweet, caring individual. My mom left behind that legacy. Everyone thought well of her. Second, I hope many people remember my stories and retell them. Not my books, but my life stories which I passed on to my students and friends. Stories I hope will enrich their lives and the lives of others through their messages. Like Farloft, my dragon, I have a million of them. Without stories our lives are so boring. Lastly, like all authors, I would like to be remembered by my body of work. I hope it will live on many, many years after I am dead and gone.

Theresa, this has to be one of the best answers I’ve ever received to this question. It speaks volumes for the rare qualities of your character. I’m so pleased you could be here today. Thank you so much and enjoy your wonderful Moroccan Room!

Thank you too, Fros! You’re welcome to have tea with me there anytime!

Right! I’m booking the flight now! Got a spare couch?

Of course! LOL

Tweeter Profile Photo_Flipped

Theresa Snyder is a multi-genre writer with an internationally read blog. She grew up on a diet of B&W Scifi films like Forbidden Planet and The Day the Earth Stood Still. She is a voracious reader and her character-driven writing is influenced by the early works of Anne McCaffrey, Ray Bradbury, Robert Heinlein and L. Ron Hubbard. She loves to travel, but makes her home in Oregon where her elder father and she share a home and the maintenance of the resident cat, wild birds, squirrels, garden, and occasional Dragon house guest.

Visit Theresa’s Amazon page  US   UK

Visit Theresa’s website

Other links

https://twitter.com/TheresaSnyder19

https://plus.google.com/u/0/+TheresaSnyderAuthor/posts

https://www.facebook.com/booksbytheresasnyder

http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7077138.Theresa_Snyder

https://www.youtube.com/user/lorjim3su/feed

https://instagram.com/tsnydert/

https://www.pinterest.com/tsauthor/

Check out the Moroccan Room where @TheresaSnyder19 writes her stories! #dragons #CR4U Click To Tweet

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

An interview with David P. Perlmutter

Hello peeps! Today, I’m excited to present David P. Perlmutter, a successful indie author of both fiction and non-fiction. David has had a harrowing experience during holiday in Spain which he recorded in his book, Wrong Place Wrong Time – an Amazon #1 for True Crime and Biographies.

wrongplacewtime

#1 Best Seller in BIOGRAPHY in the UK.
#1 Best Seller in TRUE CRIME in USA.

I would like to say that yes I made a number of mistakes during the events that took place and I hold my hands up. I look back at what happen everyday and wish I could turn back the clock but you can’t.

The following story is based on true events about my trip to Marbella, Spain, where having lost everything, which was all self inflicted, including my job, apartment and self respect, I leave memories of a London police cell behind me and head for Spain with its promise of adventure and fun. Little do I know that I’m about to be thrust into the most terrifying time of my life.

WRONG PLACE WRONG TIME is a gripping true-life story of an unimaginable nightmare and how my ticket to a new life turns out to be a one way ticket to hell.

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fiveweeks

An Estate Agent from North London attends a party with a friend in Islington where a fight breaks out and a few months later is threatened by the same guys from the party, BUT this time with a gun in his back and told if the see him again, they will use the gun. So after resigning from his job, he decides to spend a romantic Christmas in Eastbourne with his girlfriend Jenny. They decide to stay and move to Brighton where he is offered a job as a tele-sales manager for an American portrait company, but first must take a trip to Pennsylvania for a five week training course.

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Aptly named “My Way”, this book will take you simply and easily through each step that I took in order to get my book “Wrong Place Wrong Time” to the #1 spot in True Crime on Amazon’s USA chart. If you’re a newbie, or if what you’ve been doing just isn’t working, I’m hoping this book will help you to get the recognition you deserve. It’s written in a very easy to read style with no technical words, no assumptions and no need to research anything I discuss in order to understand it. Everything is explained fully, and written in its most basic form. I don’t tell you what to do, I show you how I did it. I also provide examples of what I continue to do, as well as links to wonderful people who will help you in your journey. If you’re not a social media guru…if you’re someone who perhaps knows that you should be using Twitter and Facebook and other social media platforms, but aren’t entirely sure how you should be using them or what you should be saying, then this book is for you. However, if you already know what you’re doing and are just looking for the ‘secret’ to having a bestselling book, you’ll be disappointed. There is no secret.

‘My Way’ is quite simply a story. It’s the journey I took from the unknown to the acknowledged; from being in the abyss of the Amazon charts to making my way to the top.

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Hello David and welcome to my blog!

Hi Fros, I’m thrilled to be here.

I understand your book Wrong Place Wrong Time stems from a real-life holiday experience in Spain. Is this the first one you ever wrote?

Yes, it’s my first book. I started to write a blog about my experience when I visited Spain and my friend and now editor said, “David, this should be a book.” And that is what I did, I self-published it on Amazon.

What other writing have you done? Anything else published?

Yes, I have published a marketing book for indie authors called My Way. I have also published a fiction book called Five Weeks and I recently launched another marketing book called My Way Too!

Any hobbies or interests that you enjoy in your spare time?

I enjoy football, tennis, and play table tennis with my friends and brothers. I also dance in my spare time and in fact entered a charity dance event with a very good friend and we came 2nd dancing salsa!

That’s brilliant, well done, David! Tell us, do you see yourself in any of your characters, or do any of them have traits you wish you had?

As my first book Wrong Place Wrong Time was based on true events, I was the main character!

Yes, of course! Sounds intriguing, by the way. What are you working on at the moment?

After launching My Way Too, I am now working on a sequel to Wrong Place Wrong Time and also planning another book which I hope to be out next year.

Which are your favorite authors, and what do you love about them?

I like dark thrillers so James Patterson is someone I admire as well as Stephen King, of course. His book Misery is in fact featured in Wrong Place Wrong Time.

Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

Just go with the flow when writing, don’t edit whilst writing and just love every minute of it. Also market the hell out of the book once completed.

Choose a male and a female character from your book and tell us which actor/actress you’d wish to play them in a film adaptation.

Well, from Wrong Place Wrong Time I have had many reviews suggesting that the story would make a great film and Tom Hardy, Marc Warren, Danny Dyer and Daniel Mays have all been suggested for the lead role.

Tell us about your website/blog. What will readers find there?

My blog is all about my books, of course, but there are also many books featured from many talented authors whom I have met online. In fact in My Way Too they are also featured in there. All about indie support!

What do you enjoy the most as an indie author that you imagine you wouldn’t if you were traditionally published? If you had a choice would you still go indie?

I love being an indie author as there are so many I have connected with on social media, but would be amazing to have a publishing company who would support and market my books in High Street book shops plus the advance money would come in very handy!

Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

I walk a lot and play table tennis. One does sweat running around a table!!

Describe your workstation. Are there any favorite objects you have there for inspiration?

As I use my laptop I wander from place to place to write. At this moment I am in a café that my brother and sister run, so I am here a lot. My apartment is one bedroom, so no study as yet!

Is there anything you like to do to get the creative juices flowing when you write?

I drink coffee and when I write in the evening, I would indulge in a glass of red!

Have you brought any photos to show us today?

Yes, I’ve brought two from my travels: one from London (I am at the top of the O2) and another from the beautiful island of Madeira.

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Delightful! Thank you for this interview David; I wish you success with your books.

Thank you, Fros, for inviting me. Best of luck to you too!

 

dpp

Wrong Place Wrong Time is my first book and was encouraged by my family and friend/editor to put pen to paper/fingers to laptop and write. It is based on events that happened in the early 90’s when I visited Marbella, Spain where my dream holiday turned into the biggest nightmare of my life.

I am delighted to share that the book has become a #1 Best Seller in true crime on Amazon in US, along with #2 in True Accounts in Japan and Australia, #1 in Factual in Spain and top #10 in UK. I am also amazed at the number of reviews, over 400 with over 265 x 5* so far! Thank you readers.

My second book is called My Way, it’s about how I have marketed Wrong Place Wrong Time, firstly because I was told I should and secondly to give new authors, like myself, some tips.

My Way has received over 80 x 4/5* reviews from self-publishing authors from around the world.

My third book is called Five Weeks, about one man’s disturbing trip to America, where he was nearly left for dead in a remote Pennsylvania forest.

Visit David’s Amazon page:  US   UK

Visit David’s blog

Other links

https://uk.linkedin.com/pub/david-p-perlmutter/1a/94a/a36

https://twitter.com/davepperlmutter

https://www.facebook.com/wrongplacewrongtimebook?fref=ts

 

 

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

Interview with Dougie McHale

Hello and happy new week, everybody! Today, I’m delighted to welcome Dougie McHale, a Scottish indie who loves my country and has set his debut novel on the island of Zakynthos. From the little I’ve spoken to him, I can tell you he’s a sweetheart. The way he expresses himself exudes courtesy and good manners in a great degree, something that astounded me about him. Let’s find out what this Scot with the big, Greek heart is all about, shall we?

homecoming

Louis Satriani has the perfect life in Edinburgh or so he thought, it only took a second to discover it was a lie. Forced to readjust to the shifting events that have rocked his world he confronts the secret and deception that will change his life for ever.

A moment of crisis can offer new directions and escaping his past he travels through Greece, an experience he hopes will afford him opportunities to reconstruct his life and rediscover a sense of normality, by burying his torment and establish a reason to be in control of the choices and decisions he makes. Will the lure and sanctuary of a Greek island, Zakynthos, erase the loss of the hopes and dreams that once galvanised his life? Will it offer a refuge and reconciliation with his past? Louis is offered a sanctuary, Maria, a local tour guide. The ghosts of Louis’ past are never far and the circumstances that have brought Louis and Maria together embroil them in conflicting emotions forcing them to face and confront their feelings for each other opening old wounds of the past and suppressed hopes that resonate in the present.

Passion blossoms in a voyage of love, doubt and self-discovery. But can there love survive life changing events and the unfolding of a secret that can only be resolved by a homecoming, forcing Louis to choose between his heart and head. The Homecoming encapsulates love, loss and reconciliation, set against the backdrop of Edinburgh, mainland Greece and an Ionian island.

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Hello Dougie and welcome to my blog!

Thank you for asking me to be featured on your site, Effrosyni!

What has inspired you to write The Homecoming?

I wrote a travel journal/book of my visit to the island of Zakynthos many years ago. It was my first serious attempt at writing a book but it was never published. I didn’t know it at the time but it was to influence the writing of The Homecoming which has Zakynthos as its main backdrop. I used that piece of writing as my research when the story line of the novel moves to Zakynthos. The main backdrop in the novel was always going to be Greece; that was never in doubt.

I’m interested in identifying with a physical place and the feeling of belonging, therefore Edinburgh and especially Greece are prominent in my writing and very much so in the foreground. I’m also inspired by what it means to be human, our thoughts, feelings, emotions and beliefs and how such things influence our relationships with others and our personal stories.

I’m hooked! Do you see yourself in any of your characters, or do any of them have traits you wish you had?

The main protagonist in The Homecoming is Louis Satriani. Although he has an Italian father, his mother is Irish and Louis supports Hibernian Football Club, a team from Edinburgh. I’m third generation Irish and also support Hibernian. There’s a part in the novel where Louis meets an Irish priest in St Marcos Church, the only Catholic Church in Zakynthos. There follows a bit of a theological debate where they try to put right two thousand years of Christianity. The views that Louis expresses originate from my own beliefs so I definitely see a bit of myself in Louis.

I visited Greece for the first time in 1987. The moment I stepped from the plane there was an instant attraction; the more I visited Greece it became a love affair so it was hard not to be influenced by such potent feelings. Louis’ attraction to the landscape, people and culture runs parallel to mine.

What are you working on at the moment? Tell us a little about your current project(s).

At the moment I’m writing my second book. It has the working title of The Villa. The main part of the book will be set in Majorca, Spain, although lately I’ve been debating whether I should continue to write with Greece as my main theme but that would mean trying to adapt the plot and themes of the book. It’s certainly a decision I haven’t made yet. I’m about less than a third of the way through so I’ve time on my side to decide.

Which are your favorite authors, and what do you love about them?

I have several authors whose books I always read. The common denominator is that they write about what it really means to be human through our relationships with the world and each other. Most importantly they write good stories with beautiful prose. To name but a few, Sebastian Faulks, William Boyd, Anita Shreive, Carlos Ruiz Zafon and I’ve a soft spot for Victoria Hislop.

Hislop writes about Greece so I presume that’s why – LOL. What genres do you read mostly, and what are you reading now?

I love books that have a sense of place and time that draw you in to the social and cultural complexities with ease. Currently I’m reading Midnight in St Petersburg by Vanora Bennett. It’s an intelligent and beautifully written love story swept with passion, danger and suspense.

Do you have any advice for other indie authors?

When I published my novel it became very apparent to me after the first week that I had no idea how to market or promote my book. So, I started on the long journey of finding approachable indie authors and sites for advice and information. Luckily I stumbled upon my ‘Greek indie guardian angel,’ metaphorically speaking (you know who you are), who has helped me enormously to navigate the maze that is indie publishing.

I wasn’t prepared for the amount of time and energy that needs to be invested in marketing and promoting an indie book. I work full time therefore I have to try and be disciplined in my approach however I’m finding that most of my spare time is taken up with trying to get the book out there to as wide an audience as possible. At the moment it’s difficult and a bit of a struggle to concentrate and be disciplined on my writing which is definitely not a good thing.

My advice for other indie authors who are just starting out would be, do your research and make contact with others in the indie publishing world for information and advice before you publish.

Networking! Oh, precious advice! Thank you Dougie. Are there any sites or writing tools that you find useful and wish to recommend?

I was given the good advice to check out Beezebooks.com and get in touch with Michael. C. Smith who has been a great help and source of advice. Another good site is eNovel Authors at Work, again full of great information and advice for the indie author.

I totally agree. Both Michael C. Smith and Jackie Weger are online angels that educate and support indies with all they’ve got through these sites. On to the next question: what do you enjoy the most as an indie author that you imagine you wouldn’t if you were traditionally published? If you had a choice would you still go indie?

I enjoy seeing my book published and also holding it in print. For an author there is nothing more satisfying. I’ve had total control over designing the cover and setting the pricing. I spent years sending the standard three chapters, synopsis and bio to agents and publishers in the knowledge that it would land up on their slush piles along with the tens of thousands manuscripts that took the same journey each year. During that time I redrafted the novel about eight times until I was at the stage where I felt it was ready to publish and it was then that I started to explore indie publishing.

I suppose in the world of traditional publishing the benefit would be others take the responsibility for marketing and promoting a book which leaves the author with more time to be creative and write which is the point of it, after all.

If I had the choice would I still go indie? That’s a difficult one; there are pros and cons, however, if I hadn’t gone down the indie route my novel would still not be published. To know that people are actually reading my book, meeting the characters and hopefully emotionally responding to them and the plot, well, as an author, there is no better feeling.

Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

I have a very hyperactive Golden Retriever called Gracie who likes her daily walks. I often use that time to think through and develop my writing, characters and plots. I enjoy going to the gym but not as often as I should. I bought a hybrid bicycle about two months ago which I’d like to say has helped keep me in shape but this summer has not been summer at all so the bike is still brand new. My wife, Sheona, is a health and fitness lecturer and also a personal trainer, so she keeps me on my toes.

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Gracie is adorable! Do you listen to music while you write and if so, what kind?

Actually, I do, and it is often an integral part of my writing routine, just as important as my laptop. I enjoy a wide range in musical taste but throughout the writing process of The Homecoming I listened to classical music from the Baroque period, especially composers like Corelli and Boccherini. My favourite composer is Mozart, but strangely I don’t listen to him while I’m writing.

I love Mozart, too. I believe you have some pictures of your favorite places to show us?

Yes, Fros, here they are. These are all special places that I love to visit: the river Forth with the road bridge and rail bridge, St. Andrews beach and of course Edinburgh.

Oh my goodness, what splendid photos! You know, Scotland is one of the places I long to visit someday. Last question: who is your favorite poet? Quote a couple of lines from your favorite poem.

These are quotes as opposed to poems but the words say it all for me:

“I am at last determined to go to Greece; it is the only place I was ever contented in.” Lord Byron, 15th June 1823.

“Our love of what is beautiful does not lead to extravagance; our love of things of the mind does not make us soft.”

Pericles, Athenian statesman. (430BC)

These are both wonderful, thank you. You know, the Greeks love Byron, and it’s only fair. He did a remarkable job defending the nation when it needed it the most. Dougie, it’s been a great pleasure to have you here today. Thank you very much!

Efcharisto, Effrosyni. It’s been a pleasure!

 

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Dougie has been a musician and a song writer, playing in several bands, performing live and recording throughout the U.K. He retired his guitar and studied at Dundee University and Strathclyde University. Writing has always been part of his life, crafting lyrics or poems before embarking on the long learning curve of writing a novel. The novel developed from a visit to the island of Zakynthos. Dougie was transfixed by its landscape, its light, its ambiance, people and sea, all of which have become important symbols and themes in The Homecoming and his writing.

He lives in Dunfermline, Fife, with his wife, teenage daughter, older son and golden retriever. The Homecoming is his first novel, inspired by his favourite city Edinburgh and a passion for Greece.

 

Visit Dougie’s Amazon page   US  UK

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dougiemchale

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/www.dougiemchale?fref=ts

 

cropped-Website-header-necklace1.jpgHave you enjoyed this post? Follow the blog (see right sidebar) and miss no more posts! Sign up to Effrosyni’s newsletter to keep up to date with her news and special offers (very sparse emails). Interested to read more? Head over to Effrosyni’s Blog, where you’ll find her earlier interviews, book reviews, author tips, travel articles and even Greek recipes!

 

An interview with Sofka Zinovieff, author of The House on Paradise Street

Whoohoo! Boy, am I thrilled today! It’s not often that I have a traditionally published, widely known author on this humble blog. Come to think of it, this is actually a first, so excuse the ear-to-ear smile I’m wearing this fine morning. My special treat to you today is a chat with Sofka Zinovieff, author of the enchanting novel, The House on Paradise Street that follows the recent history of Athens for a few decades, including the gruesome years of the Civil War. If you’re looking for an unforgettable read about Greece and its tumultuous, modern history, look no further!

 

paradisestr

In 2008 Antigone Perifanis returns to her old family home in Athens after 60 years in exile. She has come to attend the funeral of her only son, Nikitas, who was born in prison, and whom she has not seen since she left him as a baby.

At the same time, Nikitas’s English widow Maud – disturbed by her husband’s strange behaviour in the days before his death – starts to investigate his complicated past. She soon finds herself reigniting a bitter family feud, and discovers a heartbreaking story of a young mother caught up in the political tides of the Greek Civil War, forced to make a terrible decision that will blight not only her life but that of future generations…

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Sofka Zinovieff had fallen in love with Greece as a student, but little suspected that years later she would return for good with an expatriate Greek husband and two young daughters. This book is a wonderfully fresh, funny and inquiring account of her first year as an Athenian. The whole family have to get to grips with their new life and identities: the children start school and tackle a new language, and Sofka’s husband, Vassilis, comes home after half a lifetime away. Meanwhile, Sofka resolves to get to know her new city and become a Greek citizen, which turns out to be a process of Byzantine complexity. As the months go by, Sofka’s discovers how memories of Athens’ past haunt its present in its music, poetry and history. She also learns about the difficult art of catching a taxi, the importance of smoking, the unimportance of time-keeping, and how to get your Christmas piglet cooked at the baker’s.

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Born in 1907 in St. Petersburg, Princess Sophy “Sofka” Dolgorouky was born into a world of privilege and nobility—ten short years later, Sofka’s world would crumble when the Tsar and his family were overthrown, exiled, and executed. Burning with shame, Sofka and her family fled to England and then to Paris, where Sofka quickly embraced the bohemian culture of the 1920s and 1930s. During the Nazi occupation, Sofka would leave her first husband only to lose her second. Interned in a Nazi prison camp, she worked with the French Resistance and discovered communism, whose cause she would ironically continue to uphold for the rest of her life, becoming an outspoken member of the British Communist party and even leading tour groups for workers visiting the Soviet Union. But what was even more outrageous in its day than her conversion from princess to communist was Sofka’s private life. She not only believed in sexual freedom, but often placed love, literature, and adventure before even her own children. Sofka was much more than a princess in exile—she was someone whose existence was constantly dislocated by revolution, yet nonetheless believed in revolution as a way of making the world a better place (16 b&w illustrations).

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Faringdon House in Oxfordshire was the home of Lord Berners, composer, writer, painter, friend of Stravinsky and Gertrude Stein, a man renowned for his eccentricity – masks, practical jokes, a flock of multi-coloured doves – and his homosexuality. Before the war he made Faringdon an aesthete’s paradise, where exquisite food was served to many of the great minds, beauties and wits of the day.

Since the early thirties his companion there was Robert Heber-Percy, twenty-eight years his junior, wildly physical, unscholarly, a hothead who rode naked through the grounds, loved cocktails and nightclubs, and was known to all as the Mad Boy. If the two men made an unlikely couple, at a time when homosexuality was illegal, the addition to the household in 1942 of a pregnant Jennifer Fry, a high society girl known to be ‘fast’, as Robert’s wife was simply astounding.

After Victoria was born the marriage soon foundered (Jennifer later married Alan Ross). Berners died in 1950, leaving Robert in charge of Faringdon, aided by a ferocious Austrian housekeeper who strove to keep the same culinary standards in a more austere age. This was the world Sofka Zinovieff, Victoria’s daughter, a typical child of the sixties, first encountered at the age of seventeen. Eight years later, to her astonishment, Robert told her he was leaving her Faringdon House.

Her book about Faringdon and its people is marvellously witty and full of insight, bringing to life a vanished world and the almost fantastical people who lived in it.

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Hello Sofka and welcome to my blog!

Hi Fros, I am very happy to be here!

You know, I don’t have words to describe how much I loved The House on Paradise Street! Tell us, what has inspired you to write a story about my country and its recent history?

I was inspired to write The House on Paradise Street (Short Books, 2012) because I was increasingly aware of the powerful legacy of the Greek civil war in contemporary Greece. The more I found out about the horrors of what went on after World War II, the more significant they appeared and it was shocking how many people outside Greece knew little of this phase of history. Even harder for me as a British citizen, was discovering the troubling role of the British army, which turned against its former allies (the resistance against the Nazi occupiers) and fought them as the communist enemy. Many families were divided by the Civil War – brothers fought on different sides – but I was keen to look at the women’s story and describe how two sisters became enemies. The book follows three generations of an Athenian family from the middle of the twentieth century to the riots of 2008.

The Civil War is a shameful part of Greek history. Perhaps that’s why the Greeks avoid talking about it… the harm done runs very deep, I think. Anyway, on to the next question. What was the first thing you ever wrote and how old were you then?

I wrote diaries and stories from a very young age. I have exercise books that I filled in from when I was 7 or 8, so it’s hard to specify the very first thing I wrote. I always loved reading and the two occupations went hand in hand.

What other writing have you done? Anything else published?

My first long piece of writing was my PhD thesis about modern Greek identity and the impact of foreigners and tourists. I lived in Nafplion and these years laid the foundation stone for a life-long attachment and deep involvement with Greece. After leaving behind the academic world, I worked as a freelance journalist for many years and I think that was good practice for just getting on and writing. I was lucky enough to live in very interesting places – Moscow during the fall of the Soviet Union and later, Rome in the late 1990s – and was able to send pieces back to England to various magazines and newspapers.

I have also published 3 other books:

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Eurydice Street: A Place in Athens (Granta, 2004) is a description of my return to Greece with a Greek husband and our two young daughters after years away. It is part memoir (what it’s like to bring up children in modern Athens), part anthropological exploration of what it means to be an Athenian and part travel literature about the atmosphere of Athens. I spoke with politicians, priests and prostitutes, tried to get Greek citizenship, and learned all about the stresses of an education system that expects mothers to do hours of homework every day with their young kids. Among other things, I analysed the art of hailing a taxi that is already occupied, how to cook your Christmas piglet at the local bakery, the 2 a.m. rush hour and why you should avoid saying ‘thank you’ to your in-laws.

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Red Princess: A Revolutionary Life (Granta, 2007) is the story of my Russian Grandmother. Born a princess in pre-revolutionary St Petersburg, my father’s mother fled the Bolsheviks, grew up in England and then became a dedicated communist! She was unapologetic about being an adventurer – a sexually liberated lover of poetry and literature, who helped save Jewish lives in a Nazi camp in occupied France during the Second World War. It was an amazing experience to follow in her footsteps and meet people who had loved her and hated her.

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The Mad Boy, Lord Berners, My Grandmother and Me (Jonathan Cape, 2014) is another family memoir. I trace the bizarre history of my maternal grandfather, the Mad Boy, and how he came to live with his much older lover, the eccentric composer Lord Berners, at Faringdon House. There were visits from Salvador Dali and Stravinsky, collaborations with Gertrude Stein and Diaghilev, and nobody suspected that the Mad Boy might suddenly get married and have a baby… The cover shows a photograph taken in 1943 by Cecil Beaton, with Lord Berners on the left, the Mad Boy and his bride (my grandmother). The baby is my mother. I only went to stay for the first time with the Mad Boy when I was 17 and an unlikely friendship developed that led to a shocking development eight years later.

All this sounds marvellous! Any hobbies or interests that you enjoy in your spare time?

I love gathering up driftwood and painting on it or creating hangings with bits of glass, scrap metal or shells. I also play the piano and gardening is something that inspires and soothes.

Love what you’ve done with the shells! What are you working on at the moment? Tell us a little about your current project(s).

I’m currently writing a novel, set between today and the 1970s. Greece will enter into the story but the location is basically London.

Yay! Being a fan of your work, I can’t wait! What genres do you read mostly, and what are you reading now?

I read more fiction than anything else, but I love memoirs and biographies too. I’m reading Miriam Toews’ remarkable novel All My Puny Sorrows that is based on her own experiences. Although it tackles a miserably dark subject – her talented, beautiful older sister’s insistence on committing suicide, it is written with humour, beauty and a wicked intelligence. This year I’ve also hugely enjoyed Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Trilogy.

Tell us about your website/blog. What will readers find there?

My website has sections for all four of my books, with reviews and interviews. There’s also a biography with photos, a section for events like book readings or literary festivals and there’s a small section with some of my driftwood and ceramic art.

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What a lovely painting, well done!  Being an author involves a lot of sitting around. What do you do for exercise?

My favourite form of exercise is swimming and I’m extremely happy if I can get into some water. When I live in Greece I usually have a daily swim for about 6 months of the year as we live by the sea and also near to a thermal lake. I also like walking and (in short bursts) running and during the last couple of years I’ve become devoted to yoga, which has opened up a new approach to exercise for me.

I love yoga! Perfect to relax the mind as well as to exercise the body. Describe your workstation. Are there any favorite objects you have there for inspiration?

I’d describe my desk as being an orderly clutter – I basically know what’s there even if it looks messy. There are piles of papers, letters and books, a small jug of flowers, a cup of pens and pencils, a few stones and shells I’ve collected at favourite beaches, the odd postcard I’ve been sent, a bottle of eau de cologne and some hand cream…

Sounds like mine, LOL. Last question: do you have any pets?

Yes, I do, and I’ve brought photos to show your readers. Here’s Barnaby, our house rabbit…

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Oh, so cute!

And that’s Lily, now 17. This is a few years back in Greece.

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A doggie! Doggies are always welcome in this blog. And what a stunning photo! Well, Sofka, it’s been a real honour to have you here today. Thank you so much for coming!

Thank you too, Fros. It’s been a pleasure.

 

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I was born in London and was named after my Russian grandmother. Both my father’s parents were émigrés from St Petersburg, who fled the Russian Revolution. My father ran an electronic music studio from home, and I’d get back from school to find musicians like Pink Floyd or Harrison Birtwistle trying out the synthisizers. I read social anthropology at Cambridge and first lived in Greece while doing the research for a PhD on modern Greek identity and tourism in the late 1980s.

While living in Moscow and Rome I worked as a freelance journalist for mainly British publications including The Independent Magazine, The Telegraph Magazine, The Times Literary Supplement, The Financial Times and Tatler. I am married to Vassilis, who is Greek, and we have two daughters. We lived in Athens from 2001-2014, during which time I wrote my first book (2004) and then three more. We are currently dividing our time between Greece and England, where we have an ancient dog, an independently-minded house rabbit and a flock of coloured doves (for more explanation of this, see this post on my site: The Mad Boy, Lord Berners, My Grandmother and Me )

 

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