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Author Interview with DL Fowler

Saturday, April 23rd, 2011

Interview with DL Fowler, author of the new novel Lincoln’s Diary.

PBS: Thank you DL, for allowing us to interview you for the PaperBackSwap Blog.

In your new novel, Lincolns’ Diary, the protagonist is a female. Was it difficult for you as a man to write a book from a woman’s perspective?

DL:  Not really.

As a writer I like to show my characters’ emotions by describing how their feelings play out on their faces, in their gestures and through their actions. Women make my job easy because they tend to be quite aware of their emotions and telegraph their feelings through facial expressions, body language and movement.

Men aren’t nearly as versed as women when it comes to understanding their own emotions. As a result, they find it harder to express themselves not just verbally, but through their bodies, generally.  And when they do understand what they’re feeling, their instinct is to mask it. That makes it hard to follow the writers’ rule, “Show, don’t tell.”

That said, a main character in my next novel is a man who has focused his whole life on keeping his emotions a closely guarded secret.

PBS: Sarah Morgan is very determined woman who surely has had her share of hard times. Yet at the same time she is still hopeful and a bit naïve.  Is she based on anyone you know in real life? Would you be friends with her if you met her?

DL: Believe it or not, I patterned Sarah after Abraham Lincoln. But I allowed her to have an emotional awareness that helped me spotlight some personality traits that a male Lincolnesque character might have masked.  And since I wanted Sarah to represent a kind of ‘everyperson’ in an everyday world who adopted strategies similar to what Lincoln used to manage depression, I made the stakes more personal than, say, a Civil War.

On top of that, if Lincoln suffered from post traumatic stress disorder, it was likely caused by a series of triggers more traumatic than what most of us would see in a hundred lifetimes, let alone just one. So I scaled back Sarah’s PTSD issues to make her story more in keeping with the sort of tragedies that are commonplace today, like bullying, abandonment, the loss of a loved one or a single life threatening trauma.

I do like Sarah very much. If I met her, I certainly would want us to be friends. Of course, I don’t think the feeling is mutual. After all, I made her endure some tough situations.

PBS: What gave you the idea for this novel?  Rumors have persisted for years about a long lost Lincoln Diary. Is there something you are keeping from us, DL?

DL: My inspiration for writing the novel came from learning that Lincoln suffered from severe depression and that he could serve as a model for people who want to manage their depression without medication. And yes, I am keeping something from you. I didn’t publish all of the entries I wrote for Lincoln’s diary.

But seriously, the story isn’t as much about the diary as it is about how Lincoln managed what many people today would call severe psychological disorders. The diary was simply a device to suggest secrets were buried in Lincoln’s head that beg to be explored.

PBS: Quite a bit of research must have gone into the writing of your book. Are you a history buff? A Civil War historian? A fan of Abraham Lincoln?

DL: I have to say that I am fascinated by Abraham Lincoln.  And once I got started digging into the stuff that historians have been reluctant to discuss, I got hooked. For me, he became a mentor in how to find strength in weakness. His depression or PTSD wasn’t a handicap, it was an integral part of his remarkable giftedness.

PBS: What author has made the biggest impact on you? What author has influenced you as a writer? What author is a must-read for you?

DL: Specifically when it comes to my understanding of Lincoln’s psychology, Joshua Shenk’s book, Lincoln’s Melancholy, had a profound impact on me. I also put Chris Widener’s The Angel Inside right up there as one of the most important books I’ve ever read. It helped me release the author inside me from the prison where I had it locked away.

In terms of novelists, I’d say that Stephen King is a big influence, as well as Amy Tan and Kurt Vonnegut. No, I’m not a horror writer, nor do I write science fiction (at least not yet.) I read them for style points and for the way they take you inside their character’s heads. Vonnegut is kind of my hero when it comes to weaving humor into serious material.

I read anyone I can learn from regardless of genre.  When I read I’m studying how other writers use language, how they arc their plots, how they make characters come to life, and how they handle point of view.

PBS: Lincoln’s Diary is available both in Kindle and Nook editions, as well as paperback. Will you share your thoughts on ebooks and the influence they are or aren’t having on print book publishing?

DL: I think there will always be a huge demand for print books. I know a lot of people of all ages who enjoy snuggling up to the real thing. And in spite of all the press about ebooks outselling print books, I’ve sold about 4 paperbacks for every 1 ebook. Of course, I’m not a very big sample.

Personally, I love ebooks. Since downloading the Kindle app on my iPhone I’ve done a lot more reading. For some reason, I read faster on my phone than I do when I have a book in my hand. And my phone is always within reach. That’s not true of print books.

PBS: What is next for you? Do you have any up-coming books?

DL: First off, you can follow my blog http://dlfowler.wordpress.com where my posts deal with many things I discovered about Lincoln that didn’t’ make it into my novel. I’ll also be addressing themes from my upcoming projects. You can find me on Twitter @dlfowlernovels or on Facebook www://facebook.com/DLFowlerNovels. My website is http://dlfowler.com

I’m currently working on a novel that explores the fine line that separates ‘white collar psychopaths’ from serial killers. In this case, I’ll be stripping a retired CEO of everything that kept him from crossing that line in the past so we can watch what he does when his old defenses are gone. Now if I tell you any more, I’ll have to shoot you.

 

DL Fowler has generously provided an autographed copy of Lincoln’s Diary as a prize for a member who comments on this interview. A winner will be chosen at random.

Author Interview – Carol K Carr

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

Today’s Author Interview is with Carol K Carr. Carol  is the author of the India Black Espionage Mystery Series.

A very special Thank You to Jerelyn (I-F-Letty) for this Author Interview!

 

Jerelyn:  I would like to thank Carol K Carr author of India Black for agreeing to talk to us today.

The friend who recommended your book said “What a great opening line,”:

“My name is India Black and I am a whore,”  It sets the tone for the whole book.

A Madam, Spies, Mystery, and Victorian England all of those things drew me in.

First have you always wanted to write mysteries?

Carol:  Yes.  I’ve been addicted to mysteries since the day I found my grandmother’s collection of Agatha Christie books, at the age of nine.  It’s my favorite genre to read, although I also enjoy history and biographies.  I’m not sure I’d categorize India as a straightforward mystery, although it is marketed that way.  It does have some elements of mystery in it, along with history, romance and espionage.   That said, I wouldn’t mind trying my hand at the kind of mystery I enjoy – fairly clued, lots of twists and turns, and a shocking reveal at the end.  I don’t know if I have the plotting chops, though.

Jerelyn:  Why Victorian England, what about this time period attracted you?

Carol:  I feel at home there.  The Victorians were a lot like modern-day Americans:  enamored with progress and rationality, but at the same time harboring a deep religious current in society.  England was the pre-eminent military power in the world during Victoria’s reign, and America occupies that role today.  Both countries find themselves involved in military actions in the Middle East and Afghanistan.  Both societies share a strong belief in the superiority of their forms of government and their economic and legal systems, and think everyone else would be better off if they shared our values.  It’s quite surprising how similar we are to the Victorians.

Jerelyn:  I loved India, can you tell me where she came from?

Carol:  She’s the kind of heroine I like to read about – cheeky and bold with an adventurous spirit.  She doesn’t take guff from anyone.  But she does have her flaws.  India has the usual range of human emotions, but she’s very reluctant to display them.  She’s also a wee bit cocky and quite conceited about her physical attributes.  That has helped her survive the streets of London.  As to where she came from, she just appeared to me one day, just as she is.  I’ve hardly changed her character at all from the way I first imagined her.

Jerelyn:  Spies, please tell us about French, I am a sucker for tall, dark, handsome and dangerous.

Carol:  Me too!  He’s sort of my ideal man.  Mysterious, rugged, sexy, but prone to the occasional pratfall.  He’s very honorable, almost annoyingly so, and quite the gentleman, except when he isn’t.  He can be pragmatic and calculating when he needs to be.  We learn a bit more about him in the second book, and if the series progresses, so will his life story.  India is dying to know about him, although she’d never admit it.

Jerelyn:  Now my favorite is definitely Vincent, can you introduce us to him and tell us where he came from.  Will he ever bathe?

Carol:  I am very fond of Vincent, though I wouldn’t want to spend any time around him.  He was actually an easy character to create.  You need only look at photos from the slums of Victorian England to see dozens of kids like him wandering in the streets, ragged and barefoot.  I figured India needed a sidekick, someone who knew his way around the streets.  But I didn’t want to romanticize Vincent.  He’s definitely a product of his era, and that means it is unlikely he will ever willingly take a bath, unless it’s to his advantage.  Being clean just doesn’t appeal to him for its own sake.

Jerelyn:  In making India a madam, was that so she could move easily in what was a Man’s World?

Carol:  Exactly.  I wanted a heroine who could hold her own with men, and who did not consider herself a member of the “weaker sex.”  She’d entertain no illusions about the superiority of men, having seen them at their worst.  India is used to protecting her business against the police and the do-gooders, and she knows how to fight her corner.  She’s confident that she can handle any man she meets (until she meets French, of course).  The idea of “managing” a brothel appealed to me as well.  Just think of the human resource issues India has to deal with on a daily basis!

Jerelyn:  Your use actual historical figures in your book, what problem or advantages do they bring?

Carol:  It’s not really a problem, but when writing about historical figures you are confined, generally speaking, to the truth.  In other words, you can’t alter their appearance, and their behavior should be consistent with their actual character.  If you are writing about them in the context of an actual event, then their activities with regard to that event need to be accurately represented.  For example, Gladstone really did write a pamphlet about the Bulgarian atrocities, as described in the book, and Disraeli did call the uproar about the massacres “mere coffee house babble” (seriously underestimating public opinion in the process).  That said, both the prime ministers I feature in the book, Benjamin Disraeli and William Gladstone, are wonderfully quirky characters.  Their words and actions do not need any embellishment.  You couldn’t invent two more fascinating men, in my opinion.

Jerelyn:  Your second book India Black and The Widow Of Windsor will be out in October, would you like to tell us about it?

Carol:  Here’s the publisher’s description:  Black is back—Her Majesty’s favorite spy is off to Scotland in this new adventure to ensure the Queen doesn’t end up getting killed.  When Queen Victoria attends a séance, the spirit of her departed husband, Prince Albert, insists she spend Christmas at their Scottish home in Balmoral.  Prime Minister Disraeli suspects the Scottish nationalists plan to assassinate the Queen—and sends the ever resourceful India and the handsome British spy, French, to the Scottish highlands. French will take the high road, looking for a traitor among the guests—and India will take the low road, disguised as a servant in case an assassin is hiding among the household staff. India is certain that someone at Balmoral is determined to make this Her Majesty’s last Christmas…

Jerelyn:  As we speak you’re working on India Black three, any title yet?

Carol:  I’m calling it (tentatively) India Black and the Dark Legion, but that will have to be approved by the editor.  And that assumes that I actually get a contract for a third book.  I signed a two-book deal with Berkley and the second book is India Black and the Widow of Windsor.  If the third book sees the light of day, India will find herself infiltrating a group of anarchists.

Jerelyn:  When is the expect release date?

Carol:  If I do sign a contract, it will stipulate the release date.  I’d anticipate a third book would come out 9-12 months after The Widow of Windsor.

Jerelyn:  Personally I love to find a book that is a good romp, which this is.  When you sit down to read what do you reach for?

Carol:  It’s so hard to list just a few!  I love history, especially the Victorian era (bet you couldn’t have figured that out), the British Empire, east Africa and the Middle East.  I’m also a huge fan of vintage mysteries:  Christianna Brand, Josephine Tey, H.C. Bailey, Dorothy Sayers and J.S. Fletcher are a few of my favorites.

Among modern mystery writers, I’ll read anything by Jim Kelly, Kate Atkinson, Tana French, Julia Spencer-Fleming, Laurie R. King, Charles Todd, Phil Rickman and Susan Hill.  And then there’s the world of spies:  John Le Carre, Eric Ambler and Alan Furst are favorites.  I could go on, but I’m afraid I’d take up too much space.

Jerelyn:  Who are your influences?

Carol:  The greatest is George MacDonald Fraser, who wrote some of the best “romps” I’ve ever read, featuring a cowardly, womanizing drunkard as the hero.  Sounds perverse, but they’re very funny.  I also like Ruth Dudley Edwards, who writes the Baroness Jack Troutman series, which are hilariously politically incorrect.  And I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the Amelia Peabody series by Elizabeth Peters.  Amelia has all the tact and subtlety of a runaway bulldozer, but you can’t help liking her.

Thanks for allowing me to visit the blog and share some thoughts about India.  You can learn more about India Black by visiting my website at www.carolkcarr.com.

Jerelyn:  I would like to thank Carol as well for talking to us.  It has been a great deal of fun to ask questions of a début author, one that I feel has created wonderful characters, and a cracking good time.

 

 

Leave  a comment and  you will automatically be entered to win an autographed copy of Carol K.  Carr’s book India Black ! Good luck!

 

Author Interview with Helen Hollick

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

Today’s Author Interview by Jerelyn (I-F-Letty)  is with Helen Hollick. Thank you both for this interview!

 

Jerelyn:  I would like to thank author Helen Hollick for agreeing to talk with us about her newly released novel I am The Chosen King.


Why did you choose Harold Godwinson to write about?

Helen:  He rather chose me! I had finished my Arthurian trilogy and could not decide what to write next. My mother was organising a Women’s Group outing to Hastings, calling in at Battle Abbey – the site of the Battle of Hastings – on the way. There was a spare seat, so I went along. Walking the battlefield (on my own because it was raining) was such a magical experience…. Add to that, Harold’s own abbey at Waltham (Waltham Abbey) is only a few miles from where I live.

So he was an easy choice really!

Jerelyn:   It always amazes me how much research a historical fiction novel takes, it is evident that you did a great deal, just how long does it take you to do your research before your ready to sit down and write?

Helen:  It took me about a year to research for Harold the King (UK title) / I Am The Chosen King (US title) Another year to write it!

Jerelyn:    Often times there is very little information about the women of this time period, how do you go about fleshing them out?

Helen:  The small bits of information form the framework. For instance: we know that Edyth Swanneck was “wife” to Harold for about 20 years, and they had at least six children. So I built around that, adding domestic scenes and things from my own experience: Edyth riding her pony, walking with her daughter etc., From Saxon recipe books used domestic duties – all the little things that make up everyday life.

Jerelyn:   Besides Harold do you have a favorite person or people that you found while writing the book?

Helen:  Yes, Edyth Swanneck. She came from a village, Nazeing, which is also near to where I live. I saw her very clearly in a dream (another reason why I wrote the book) I dreamt the entire scene that became chapter 2 – seeing and hearing everything.

(*laugh* that will make you read the book now – to find out what happens in chapter 2!)

Jerelyn:   Your battle scenes are very well done, how do you go there?

Helen:  I go to a lot of re-enactments – I attend the Battle of Hastings re-enactment every year, signing books, but I have watched all sorts of battles. Some of them can get very realistic! The sight, sound, smell is as near to a battle as we can get. The rest, I’m afraid, is pure imagination.

Jerelyn:  What would you most like for people to take away with them upon finishing your book.

Helen:  Just enjoyment – and the knowledge that King Harold was our rightful King who gave his life defending his Kingdom and his people.

Jerelyn:   I understand that I am The Chosen King is being made into a movie titled 1066, and that you are co-screen writer.  Would you like to tell us about this?

Helen:  Yes that is right – when we can get the funding! I have worked on the project with the producer/director for about 5 years now (it takes a long time to get a movie together).

Our aim is to shoot an entertaining movie , but one that is as accurate as possible. The battle scenes, we promise, will be spectacular!

Jerelyn:  I’d like to change gears here, and ask you about a series you wrote called the Sea Witch Chronicles.  These are a particular favorite of mine.  So far there are three books and a fourth is slated for a fall release.

Helen:  Yes the fourth “Voyage” called Ripples In the Sand will hopefully, be published in October. I had wanted it ready for a Spring release, but publishing circumstances have caused a delay.

Jerelyn:  They are described as historical fantasy, why did you want to write about Pirates and what make them fantasy?

Helen:  I’m finding that I now describe them as Historical Adventure – it is very difficult to pigeon hole some books into a genre though. I suppose you could say they are “a blend of Bernard Cornwell’s Sharpe with Hornblower crossed with Indiana Jones”

The “fantasy” is supernatural really. My pirate’s girlfriend is a white witch – but not in the Harry Potter way, more the Star Wars “Force” way. She cannot perform magic spells – but she can use natural energy to conjure up a wind. I also have the supernatural elementals of Tethys, the Goddess of the Sea.

I wanted to write a pirate-based story because of falling for Johnny Depp’s Captain Jack Sparrow. The first Pirates of the Caribbean movie was such fun I wanted to read some novels that were in the same vein – adventure with a touch of supernatural. But there weren’t any!

Plenty of nautical adventures, several pirate adventures – but nothing with that extra touch of “fun”. So I wrote my own!

Jerelyn:   I adore Jesamiah Acorne,  I have read the story of how he came to you while walking on the beach would you tell us the story?

Helen:  He is a charmer of a rogue isn’t he? I went for a walk on a beach in Dorset, on the south coast of England. I had decided to write my story and was pondering the plot – the whole thing came to me except for my “hero”…. And then….

Well, you can read the whole encounter here…http://www.helenhollick.net/noteseaw.html

Jerelyn:   What were the challenges you faced when you departed from straight historical fiction?

Helen:  Finding a publisher for one. Publishers, for some strange reason think that no one likes reading about pirates….. A few people told me to write the story as “straight” fiction – but they had missed the point that the idea was to have a bit of make-believe fun!

I also found it quite difficult at first keeping to action, and not going into detail as I do in my “bigger” books.

Jerelyn:   Did you know about ships and sailing before writing these novels?

Helen:  Not a thing. Although I have always loved tall ships from when I was a small girl. The nearest I have been is sailing in a boat-lake dinghy! As soon as I started writing though, things just came naturally. Yes I had to look up specific words and manoeuvres, but the feel of a ship, the sounds, the smells – just being on a ship – well I just know it. I must have been a sailor in a previous life. My ancestors did come from Bristol….

Jerelyn:   What is next for you?

Helen:  After completing Voyage Four, Ripples In the Sand I intend to write another straight novel – either a follow-up to Harold or about Boudicca. Nor sure yet. And there will be at least Voyage Five “On the Account” and Six “Gallows Wake”  for Jesamiah fans.

Jerelyn:   Did you always want to be a writer?

Helen:  Yes, although until I was older I always thought writers were clever people who had degrees and a University education. (I haven’t. I left school at 16) Writers are ordinary people who have a good story to tell.

Jerelyn:   I always wonder what a writer reads, beside research.  Do you have a favorite genre or author?

Helen:  It depends on what mood I am I, I tend to go for books that provide enjoyment but I don’t have to think about too much. And an eye problem means I have to be selective with font size. At the moment I am reading some of Rosemary Sutcliff’s wonderful novels.

Jerelyn:  I want to thank you personally for taking the time to do this, and for the donation of the signed book one of our members will no doubt be thrilled to receive it.

Helen:  My pleasure!

 

For more information on Helen Hollick, please see her website http://www.helenhollick.net

To connect with Helen Hollick on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/helen.hollick

 

To win an autographed copy of  a Helen Hollick book, leave a comment.  A winner will be chosen at random. Helen Hollick has generously offered to sign a book of your choice!

 

 

 

 

 

Author Interview with Elizabeth Chadwick

Friday, April 8th, 2011

PBS would like to thank Elizabeth Chadwick for agreeing to be interviewed for the PBS Blog and Jerelyn (I-F-Letty)  for doing the interview!

 

Jerelyn:  I would like to thank 2011 RNA Award winning author, Elizabeth Chadwick for agreeing to visit with us on the PBS blog.  Ms. Chadwick is one of my very favorite authors.  I have read all of her books more than once.  We can now get most of her books without importing them.  As many are now available to her American readers.

I stole some quotes from your Web Site:

“An Author who makes history come gloriously alive!” The Times

“The best writer of Medieval Fiction currently around!” Richard Lee Founder of the Historical Novel Society.

“Elizabeth Chadwick is a gifted Novelist and dedicated Researcher. It doesn’t get any better than that!” Sharon Penman

Pretty high praise.  When did you know you had to be a writer?

Elizabeth:  I told myself stories from being very small. I can remember being three years old and making up a story about some fairies on a cotton handkerchief I had.  I told myself stories verbally for fun all the way through my childhood, but didn’t actually start writing anything down until I was 15. It hadn’t really occurred to me before, but once I started writing, I had an epiphany moment and realised this was what I wanted to do for a living. It took another 15 years plus before I achieved that dream, but I knew from being a teenager that I wanted to be a writer of historical fiction.

 

Jerelyn:  Your focus is on the 12th and 13th centuries, why the Middle Ages?

Elizabeth:  The actual reason is pure chance.  When I first started writing things down, it was because I had been inspired by a TV programme. It was called Desert Crusader and start a very handsome 12th century knight galloping around the Holy Land having adventures. I was 15 and just at that stage where young girls tend to put posters of pop stars on their walls. Only my pop star was French actor Andre Lawrence from the TV programme. I began writing a story about him; I guess you’d call it fan fiction today, but it quickly developed a full storyline of its own. I had to begin researching the Middle Ages and specifically the 12th century because it was something I knew very little about and I wanted my story to  feel as real as possible. The more I researched the more interested I became in the Middle Ages and the more  I wanted to write about it.  So really the research and the story followed each other round in a never-ending circle. By the time I came to the end of the novel I was certain that I wanted to do this for a career.

 

Jerelyn:  Did you study history, or did your expertise in this period come as you researched your novels?

Elizabeth:  I studied history at school in the UK to A level standard which is the requirement you need to enter university, but I didn’t take it any further. Also the A level I studied was in Tudor and Stuart history because there wasn’t an option for medieval at the school I attended. If there had been I would have taken like a shot. As it was the nearest I got to Medieval history in school, was studying Chaucer for English A-level. My expertise these days comes from several decades of studying the period as personal research. I have an extensive library of Medieval reference works and I’m always adding to it. Here is an url to them listed on one of my blogs. http://elizabethchadwickreference.blogspot.com/

 

Jerelyn:  You employ several unique writing techniques.  The first is music, is it your muse?

Elizabeth:   Music has always been very important to my writing. I don’t write at the computer – that would be too distracting. However I listen to music when I’m away from the computer doing mundane jobs, or when I am at the gym. I have a large collection of music and I will listen to songs that I think might suit the storyline of the novel, or suit an emotional moment of one of the characters or have resonance with a scene I am writing. I know when a song is right because I get a kind of  ‘ching’ in my solar plexus – a little moment of adrenaline. I then play the song over and over while thinking of the scene I am going to write or the emotional state of a character, and the resonances sink into my subconscious ready for when I start writing. In To Defy a King for example, the main love scene’s inspirational song is Amoreuse by Kiki Dee. The lyrics begin ‘Strands of light across a bedroom floor/change the night through an open door.’  It’s about a life changing lovemaking experience, it’s very beautiful and sensual and a little poignant too. I wanted to use light imagery in that love scene and I built on it using Kiki Dee’s song. You’ll just have to read the novel see what I mean! For the Magna Carta crisis two  of the songs I used from different perspectives were Fake It by Seether for the falsehood and double dealing, and If You Tolerate This (then your children will be next) by The Manic Street Preachers, for the dilemmas facing the hero, heroine and their families. Some songs, such as Amoureuse  are with me from the start .of the writing, others come on board later. Some stay some go, but at the end there is a dedicated soundtrack that I always send to my agent and editor when I deliver the novel. You can see the soundtrack for To defy A King and some of my other books here. http://elizabethchadwicksoundtracks.blogspot.com/

 

Jerelyn:  The second is the Akashic Record, which I find fascinating will you tell us about this?

Elizabeth:  My goodness where to start! It’s a very long story so I’ll try to condense it down as much as possible.  I’m just the beneficiary, so I’m not exactly sure how it works in full,  I only know that it does

This is what Alison King, my Akashic records consultant says:

When people think, feel or speak, it creates a subtle electrical charge. For example, the brain’s electrical activity (such as when thinking) can be measured by ECG equipment (in fact, it‘s a measurement of whether we’re alive or dead).

The electrical vibrations we create all the time are discharged into the environment, where they are impressed onto a subatomic substance which is only just starting to come to the edge of scientific awareness, (think string theory and the environment that would suggest). An analogy of this process might be voice recording techniques, where the vibrations of the voice are impressed upon susceptible material, such as magnetic tape or digital receptor. Once the Akashic recording has been made, it can be read in a similar way to listening to a voice recording or watching a movie, with similar facilities to fast forward or rewind. The huge difference is, the Akashic Record is an organic structure, rather than 21st century technology; it therefore requires an organic reader, such as a human being, who can attune sensitively to the vibrations required. A mundane example of this would be, walking into a room, and being able to pick up on an atmosphere without knowing of any preceding events that have taken place there.

I have known Alison since we were in our 20s. We met when our children were toddlers and we used to get together for coffee once a week. We carried on meeting up even after the children had gone to school. I became a published author in this time and Alison became a complementary therapist working with Reiki and NLP. I had always known she had the ability to see auras and just took it as part of who she was. Her own development and training had led her to realise that she could tune into the past and into people’s thought, feelings and emotions. She was using this in her current therapy to go back to incidents in clients lives that had troubled them.

One day at our normal coffee meeting, she asked how I was getting on with my writing. At the time I was writing a novel called the Greatest Knight and I was having difficulty finding out about the mistress of William Marshal’s brother. I knew the lady’s name but that was all. Alison said she could tune in and try to find her and having nothing to lose and an open mind, I said okay. Alison tuned in and came across a lady standing on some grass swinging what Alison described as a bag on a string.  Not knowing anything about the middle ages at all, Alison thought the lady might be drying lettuce!  I laughed and said she was probably swinging a hawking lure. Alison went on to describe the lady and her relationship with William Marshal’s brother, and what came through was so astonishing and real that I knew I just had to use this resource as part of my historical research. I send the details garnered to a Professor  of Medieval cultural history for corroboration. She tells me what is coming through is medieval mindset not modern.

I would say that the Akashics are nearly always accurate and are extremely valuable in giving the emotions and reasoning beyond why historical characters made certain decisions. We don’t just see the decision we know why it was made and what the person was thinking at the time. Not only that but we can see it from several different angles internally and externally and know what other people were thinking. Very rarely Alison and will experience a blip. This has happened to us when Alison has been under the weather and her tuning has gone awry. Sometimes also we’ll have something that seems unlikely at the time but then turns out to be true. For example, while writing Lady of the English, I had asked Alison to go to Lincoln Castle and she saw a tunnel there. ‘They didn’t have tunnels at Lincoln Castle,’ I said. She replied that she was just telling me what she was seeing. Then a couple of months later, what should turn up but a tunnel at Lincoln Castle? Here’s the url. http://www.thisislincolnshire.co.uk/news/Tunnel-vision-reveals-buildings-castle/article-2935933-detail/article.html

Sometimes information is circumstantial. For example Alison saw William Marshal’s second son Richard as ‘lovely roly-poly lad with red hair and freckles.’  Unbeknown to her his grandfather Richard de Clare  had red hair and freckles. Red hair frequently broke out in the de Clare line. It can’t be proven either way because history has left us no record of Richard Marshall’s colouring, but since red hair was frequent in the family, it is strong circumstantial evidence. There is a lot  more on my website about the Akashic records. If you go to the To Defy a King page, you can click through to some Akashic material on the novel, and a recording on Youtube of Alison actually speaking.

 

Jerelyn:  I don’t know if this is a research tool for you or not, but you belong to Regia Anglorum.  What is this?

Elizabeth:  Regia Anglorum is a re-enactment society I belong to. It portrays the Viking, Anglo-Saxon Norman and Angevin periods of British history with the emphasis on authenticity. I’ve been a member of Regia since the early 1990s and have found it an invaluable research tool. It’s one thing to read about processes in a book, or to see items in a museum, but to own replicas and find out how they feel in use, is a goldmine of research for an author.  I know what it’s like to look across a tourney field wearing a bucket helm. I know what a struggle it is to get a mail shirt on and off. I have learned to spin and weave, I don’t do it well but I know the technique and the process. I have tried and tasted mediaeval foods. I know what it’s like to walk up and down spiral staircases in flat medieval shoes while wearing a long dress!  There is also a wealth of expertise among the membership of Regia Anglorum and people I can call on to ask obscure questions at a moment’s notice. Generally someone will know the answer. It’s bringing the history of the page and into real life – that’s how I see it.

 

Jerelyn:  In reading your body of work, your earlier novels have fictional protagonists. This changes in the late 1990’s. You then began using real historical figures. Is this when you began to use the Akashic record in earnest?

Elizabeth:  No. Use of the Akashic’s came about purely by chance. I had already decided to make the move to writing biographical fiction because of the changing nuances in the historical fiction genre and because I found myself becoming interested in the stories of real people. So Lord’s of the White Castle, ,Shadows and Strongholds and The Winter Mantle are my own imagining. It was just that coffee afternoon and Alison’s chance question about The Greatest Knight that opened me up to one of the most fabulous research tools a historical novelist could have.

 

Jerelyn:  I would like to talk about To Defy A King.  Will you tell us about it?

Elizabeth:  It’s another novel about the Marshall family, specifically about William Marshal’s eldest daughter Mahelt who married Hugh, the son of Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk.  Mahelt was only 14 when she married him and at a time of great upheaval for her own family who were being persecuted by King John. Her father chose to leave the country to remove himself from the heat and Mahelt was married into the Bigod family to keep her safe during her father’s absence. She had to come to terms with not only this arranged marriage to someone she barely knew who was 11 years older than herself, but also had to try and fit into a strange household with different ways of doing things. She found her loyalties challenged and it was very difficult for her to strike a balance between the needs of her birth family and her marriage family. It’s also about the upheaval in the country that brought about the signing of the Magna Carta and rebellion that happened afterwards. It’s about love too in its many forms. It’s about how love grows and how it can wither. It’s about how it endures and how it can be rekindled. It’s not just about a young couple striving to find their way through; it’s about mature people too, and family ties – the links of fathers and sons, brothers and sisters, and especially one particular link between brothers.

 

Jerelyn:  Mahlet doesn’t find life in Framlingham very easy, does she?

Elizabeth:  I’m afraid she doesn’t! At home she’s been her father’s little princess and perhaps a little bit spoiled, although she has a good heart. She’s impatient and strong willed, and although she knows her duty to make this marriage and goes into it determined to do her best, she soon finds herself conflicted when she comes up against her father-in-law’s more rigid way of doing things. She is his daughter-in-law, not his little princess and she has a place in the household. When  Mahelt steps outside of that place she is in for a rough ride.

 

Jerelyn:  Your write great male characters.  What did you find compelling about Hugh?

Elizabeth:  Hugh I found to be a lovely balanced man. He could always see both sides of an argument and mostly get on with anyone apart from his half brother William Longespée, and even then he was willing to give it a go. He tried to give Mahelt some leeway even under the stern gaze of his father. He was a fine administrator and lawyer, he could fight when he had to, but he also had a lovely artistic side. I guess I like male characters who are honourable and decent and can stand up for themselves and their families. Whenever I write heroes, I always research them a little first in the Akashic records first to make sure that they are someone I can work with.

 

Jerelyn:  What do you think motivated King John to such cruelty?

Elizabeth:  I think there are several strands to this. Part of it was jealousy. John wanted people to be attached to him not others, so in Longespée’s case, that meant he was jealous of Longespée’s wife Ela, and wanted her in the background or out of the way. I think it was envy that motivated him to act towards her as he did. I think another part of it was about control. John used cruelty to control people, but it didn’t always work. It’s like dogs in the park, peeing up a tree. John wanted to be biggest alpha male and pee the highest!  Perhaps other things in his family background, and even genetic predisposition also led to such behaviour, but these are matters for future research. I wouldn’t like to say at the moment but hope to do so at some point.

 

Jerelyn:  We talk about you a great deal in our Historical Fiction forum here at PBS.  We are continually astounded by how you are able to bring to life the sights sounds, tastes, and smells, of this time period.   Do you credit your participation in Regia Anglorum and the Akashic Record with your ability to do this?

Elizabeth:  Absolutely. I would say that is a great part of what makes the difference. Imagination obviously plays its role too. You have to sink yourself into the body of your character whether it be male, female, child, older person, or even an animal! You have to become that identity. You have to experience everything through your character. Doing a vast amount of research really helps you to know and understand a person from a different period. I began researching the Middle Ages when I was 15 years old, so that makes a difference too I think. I’ve been at it for decades. If I suddenly decided to leave behind the Middle Ages and write about a different historical period, I wouldn’t know where to begin. How many years of research would it take for example until I was au fait with the Regency period or the Roman?

 

Jerelyn:  I understand that Alison King has had some rather difficult experiences when doing her readings.  Could you tell us about a few?

Elizabeth:  Well childbirth scenes are always a bit dicey because you never know where you going to come across.  Alison works at the high empath range and this can involve some discomfort! Then there was the time I asked to go to William Marshal when he went to Ireland the first time in 1201. Alison arrived when he was on his way there and still on board the ship. Unfortunately he was feeling very seasick indeed and Alison was heaving! Apparently in history William had a really difficult sea crossing and vowed that if he was spared he would found a religious establishment on the site his landing, which he did at Tintern Parva. Alison has also been to the death of Prince Arthur in the Tower of Rouen, and that was something pretty terrible which I’m not going to say any more about here. We have had some very moving experiences, and sometimes some very amusing ones. One of the funniest we had, which I mention in very brief passing in For the King’s Favor, was Mahelt throwing her doll off the top of the castle tower just to see what would happen. It landed in a pig wallow and she got covered and then had to have a bath! Talking of baths, the bathing scene in To Defy A King is taken from the Akashic records, although I did tone it down slightly as Hugh was actually filthier than stated!  You just never know what you’re going to get with the Akashic records.

 

Jerelyn:  You had a brush with Royalty early on in your writing career. Will you tell us about it?

Elizabeth:  My first novel won an award called the Betty Trask Award, which was for first novels of a romantic or traditional nature. The year I won, the awards were presented by Prince Charles at Whitehall.  It was a bit surreal, because before that I had been working in a supermarket stacking shelves on the cat food aisle in order to make ends meet while my husband was home from work looking after the kids. Then I got a publishing contract for The Wild Hunt, and next minute I was accepting this award from Prince Charles! I didn’t say much, just went up curtsied and receive my cheque – but what a start to a career!

 

Jerelyn:  Wild Hunt and The Running Vixen are being release in one volume, will this also be available in the U.S.?

Elizabeth:  Not at the moment that I know of because it’s a different publisher.  It’s my UK publisher Sphere that are doing the two titles, but look out for a contest on my blog.

 

Jerelyn:  The Lady Of The English is your next novel, and it will be released in the UK in June, when will it be available in the U.S.?

Elizabeth:  Sourcebooks are publishing it on September 1st I believe. They are thinking about changing the title – I so hope they don’t!

 

Jerelyn:  Will you tell us about Lady Of The English?

Elizabeth:  It’s a slice of life story about Empress Matilda and her stepmother and Queen of England Adeliza of Louvain.  It takes both women from 1125 to 1148. The former date was when Matilda was widowed and returned to her father’s court. The latter date is when Matilda, having fought for her right to inherit, left England and Normandy, and when Adeliza too went through a second major life change. Her first major life change (if you discount marrying Henry I), was her marriage to William D’Albini after Henry died. Lady of the English, is about how these allied but very different women struggle to win through in the difficult years between these dates.

 

Jerelyn:  As I have stated before, you write great men.  In the H/F forum we call them “Historical Hunks”, who is the Historical Hunk in Lady Of the English?.

Elizabeth:  There are three – sort of. I don’t suppose you could really call him a hunk, but there is Geoffrey le Bel, Matilda’s husband. He’s a nasty piece of work but I suppose has a dangerous charisma and superb looks. We know he was very handsome, had reddish coloured hair and light-coloured eyes. So a kind of anti-hero, and I don’t condone his behaviour towards his wife one little bit.  But he was still sexy.  Then there’s Brian FitzCount, Lord of Wallingford. He carries a torch for Matilda, but how far will each of them let the attraction go? Alison tells me he has a slight look of Cat Stevens!   The other one is Adeliza’s second husband William D’Albini – Will for short.  I think readers might quite fall for him and what he gives to Adeliza, despite them having difficulties to overcome, not least being on opposite sides of the dispute between Stephen and Matilda.  It’s not a perfect marriage, but that’s what makes it a real one.

 

Jerelyn:  How many languages are your books translated into?

Elizabeth:  I’m not sure now. It was 16 but I think that may have gone up again. Let’s say 18 to be on the safe side!

 

Jerelyn:  What do you read?

Elizabeth:  Anything and everything. My reading tastes are very eclectic. I enjoy all eras of historical fiction and most sub genres, although I don’t read much straight historical romance. I enjoy modern-day crime and thrillers, again all genres. So I will read Peter James alongside Janet Evanovich. I don’t read much chic-lit, but the occasional one still goes down a treat. What I am looking for in any novel I read is an absorbing story well told that respects its audience’s intelligence. I don’t read fiction in the medieval genre very often because to be honest I’m way too picky and most of them end up as wallbangers because of historical errors either of detail or mindset. I do enjoy the novels of Sharon Kay Penman though.  I love her big works of biographical fiction, but I do wish her publishers would like to write another Justin de Quincy mystery.  Oh, just remembered.  I love the novels of Terry Pratchett.  Witches Abroad is one of my favourites –  Grebo is perhaps the sexiest alpha male I have ever met!

 

Jerelyn:  I consider you an Historical Fiction writer.   Do you see your work more historical fiction, than historical romance?

Elizabeth:  I consider that I have never written historical romance. I have written the romantic historical which is a different thing entirely i.e. A historical novel might have a romance in it, but that romance is only one strand in the fabric of the story. I enjoy including a romance in the historical fiction I write, but I like the work to be meatier than just the story of the hero and heroine. So it’s historical fiction with a romance involved. And probably when you look at most historical novels they will have a romantic element somewhere.

 

Jerelyn:  Thank you so much Elizabeth, it isn’t everyday one gets to communicate with ones idol.  I appreciate you taking the time.

Elizabeth:  Thank you for inviting me. I’ve enjoyed the chat – and it makes me smile to think I’m someone’s idol!  I just happen to write books for for a living!  :- )

 

Jerelyn:  If you want to learn more about Elizabeth Chadwick, she has one of the best author web sites I have seen,  You can see and listen to the soundtracks to her books, read more about the Akashic Record, see her puppies, and much much more at  http://www.elizabethchadwick.com/. Your can also follow her on Facebook and Twitter!

 

 

Elizabeth Chadwick has offered to send one of the following books, autographed by her, to one lucky member who comments on the Blog. The winner will be chosen at random. Good luck to everyone!

Winners of the Jeri Westerson Book and prizes!

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

 

The winner of the autographed Jeri Westerson Book, The Demon’s Parchment is:

Jill F. (GAmomJill) !! Congratulations, Jill!

 

2 other lucky members have won a nice bookmark and sword pen from Jeri Westerson:

Elizabeth B. (Cattriona)

&

Stephanie G. (thestephanieloves)

Congratulations Elizabeth and Stephanie!

 

Your prizes are on the way!

Thank you everyone for your comments!

Thank you again, Jeri Westerson, for your interview and for participating in the Historical Fiction Read Along.

And thank you Jerelyn!

Author Interview with Ethan Stone

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Today’s interview is with Troy D. (tdaulton) who writes under the pseudonym Ethan Stone.  He currently has two full-length novels In The Flesh and Flesh and Blood as well as two short story eBooks published through Dreamspinner Press.  He has two additional full length novels in the cue: a paranormal novel, Wolf Moon, due out in May and Blood and Tears due out in late summer 2011.  He is also a volunteer Book Image and Book Data Approver for PBS.

A very special Thank You to Mary (kilchurn) for doing this interview with Ethan Stone for the PBS Blog!

 

Mary:  How did you come up with your signature character, Cristian Flesh?

ES: Cristian Flesh started in my head with just his last name. With just that I pictured a very visceral man who put a lot of importance in sex. When I decided on the name Cristian, I pictured him more clearly. I could see the shaved head, the man-scaped body and his cool, aloof demeanor. I saw him as a macho, tough guy who everybody would imagine as a sexual top, when in fact he was a total bottom. The rest of his personality came to me shortly after that.

Mary: What qualities (if any) does he share with you?

ES: Like me, when Cristian loves a man, he loves totally and completely. Insecurity is also something Cristian and I share. Cristian may not come off as insecure, but he is. He wonders why Colby would love him and is always waiting for something bad to happen and for it all tobe over.

Mary: Will we see Cristian in future books or are you heading in a different direction?

ES: In the Flesh and Flesh & Blood were both stories that were in my head almost from the beginning. Cristian plays a supporting role in Blood and Tears, which is due out in July or August. As for beyond that, I don’t have any concrete plans. I have some brewing ideas, but I’m not sure if they’ll ever come to fruition. But I’m definitely not saying never.

Mary: Why write male/male gay fiction?

ES: Why not? I’ve always liked to write. For years I wrote my own personal soap opera. Many years ago I wrote a novel that would be considered a mainstream novel, but I’m not sure how good it is. After I accepted my homosexuality the only ideas I ever had involved gay men and I just didn’t think there would ever be an audience for that sort of thing. I was thrilled, ecstatic, and very excited when I discovered the m/m genre. The short answer for the question is that I write m/m fiction because the voices in my head are gay men in love with each other.

Mary: Which is easier for you to write; the dialogue, the sex scenes or the background /transitions?

ES: Definitely not the sex scenes, those are very easy to write. Too easy, actually.  I eliminated about three sex scenes from In the Flesh after the first draft because they just weren’t needed.  When I start a book it is often the dialogue, but once I get a strong handle on the characters the dialogue become easy.

Mary: You have a paranormal book coming out in May.  What can your readers expect?

ES: I think Wolf Moon is a departure from the Cristian Flesh books. I wrote it before Flesh & Blood, but Dreamspinner Press chose to publish it as my third book. Wolf Moon is about Jack Coleman who falls in love for the first time only to discover that both him and the man he loves are werewolves.

Mary: Do you think you’ll ever write a novel based on or in relation to your real-life job?

ES: Working at a prison I do get a lot of ideas for books. It could be a non-fiction book but a lot of readers wouldn’t find it believable. As far as fiction, I do have ideas but they’re in conflict with my personal convictions. For instance, I have an idea about a guard and an inmate falling in love. But that is something that is obviously forbidden. As far as inmates in love, it would be absolutely necessary for me to make it as realistic as possible. The couple prison stories I have read seem to get things wrong, like the use of condoms. Inmates don’t have access to condoms, because sex between inmates is not allowed. Not even consensual sex between inmates. So if the characters are going to use condoms there should be an explanation of how they got them. Otherwise, they’d have to go without condoms or use something else, such as rubber gloves.

Mary: What books are in your immediate TBR pile (ie: that you want to read RIGHT NOW?)

ES: Man and Wolf by Kate Roman. Final Encore by Scotty Cade. Heaven Sent by Jet Mykles. Moth and Flames by John Morgan Wilson.

Mary: Do you have an “auto-buy” author, meaning is there an author that you love so much that you buy their book on the day it is released?

ES: Marie Sexton is an absolute favorite of mine, but I also love John Simpson, J.L. Langley,  Joely Skye, K.A. Mitchell, T.A. Chase and Josh Lanyon.

Mary: What one book on your WL do you desperately wish someone would post?

ES:  I can only pick one? Mahu Blood by Neil S. Plakcy. I absolutely love that series.

Mary: You’ve been an active member of PBS for a while.  How did you hear about us?

ES:  I was in a waiting room and an article mentioned the best online sites for trading. I made a list of the sites, one of which was PBS. I don’t remember what those other sites are now, but I’m still here.

Mary: If you could change one thing about our site what would it be?

ES: I would love to be able to have more than 200 books on my wish list. But I’m not sure 500 would be enough for me.

Mary: What is one thing you’d like your readers to know about you that they may not know?

ES: I don’t wear underwear.

Comment on the Interview! One lucky winner will get a signed copy of Flesh and Blood! The winners will be chosen at random from the comments and we will announce the winners soon!

Author Interview – Lynn Marie-Ittner Klammer

Saturday, April 2nd, 2011

We would like to thank Author Lynn Marie-Ittner Klammer for this interview.

 

Lynn is the Author of Frankenmuth A Guide To Michigan’s Little Bavaria, as well as numerous Children’s Books.

This interview is also extra-special because Lynn is also a PBS member, (ChWriter). 

 

PBS: Thank you. Lynn for allowing us to interview you for the PBS Blog.

Lynn:  My Pleasure.

PBS:  What made you decide to become an author?

Lynn:  I didn’t choose writing as much as it chose me.  I was already writing descriptive text and crazy stories shortly after I learned as a child to form letters.  Even if I hadn’t done this for a living, I would still be writing in my free time.  It’s not just a job to me, but rather a part of who I am.

As to how I became a professional writer, that’s a different story.  I would have liked to have chosen writing as a career early on, but because of various factors, including that there wasn’t much money in it, I chose a different career path.  It wasn’t until I had my first child 20 years ago, and wanted something to do while I was at home with my son, that I came up with the idea of trying to write professionally.  There were few start-up costs, no significant risks and I could do it anywhere and anytime.  It seemed a perfect opportunity to see if I could make it as a writer, and the rest is history.

PBS:   Being a successful author of Children’s Books, what was it that made you want to write a book about Frankenmuth, Michigan?

Lynn:  I’m not a “children’s writer” as much as I’m simply a “writer”. I’ve always written lots of things, from gardening articles and parenting advice to inspirational material. It was when my first children’s book hit the bestseller’s list I began to be labeled a “Children’s Author” in the media…but I have books on other subjects as well. On a daily basis, I also do a lot of freelance work—writing those questions you see at the end of college textbook chapters, certification exams for various professions, etc.
When I heard that the publisher of Tourist Town Guides was looking for someone to do a book on a nearby touristy area of Michigan…I proposed they do a book on my town as well—and that led to me getting the job. As an established writer, nearly life-long resident, and descendant of one of the founders of the town (from back in 1845), I was a perfect choice.

PBS:  What has the reaction been in Frankenmuth since your book was published?
Lynn:  Frankenmuth is one of the top tourist attractions in the state, but there had never been an independent, national guide on the town, so my guidebook filled an important role. There had always been promotional material in town as well as available in neighboring areas/states, but an independent guidebook is more far-reaching and gives the town greater exposure.

PBS:  As an author, you are also a member of PaperBackSwap. Would you share your thoughts with us about book swapping in general and PaperBackSwap in particular. Do you see PaperBackSwap as helpful to you as an author?

Lynn:  I’m almost as big a reader as I am a writer, so I love PBS. It saves me lots of time searching for the books I want, and of course the savings in money is significant as well.

As far as being useful to authors…while PBS deals in used books, I think it’s still beneficial because it gives authors greater exposure, and helps connect readers to their work. I know a lot of people who tried a new author because they could get the book on PBS, which led of course to the reader purchasing that author’s future releases. Especially now in the age of the internet, eBooks, etc…the trade in used books really isn’t the issue for authors that it once was.

PBS:  Tell us a little bit about your experiences of your membership here at PBS. How did you find PBS?

Lynn:  I believe I learned about PBS through a woman I bought books from on eBay. I was always searching for used books for reasonable prices, so PBS was just perfect for me. Prior to PBS, I could barely keep myself and my family in reading material. Now I have a very tall TBR pile in my den. Little did I realize that what I thought was simply a means by which to swap books would become an obsession. LOL—I’m in the forums many times during the day. For someone like me who sits at a computer all day long, it’s wonderfully refreshing to be able to click back and forth between work and the forums to get that much needed break from time-to-time.

Another thing that’s great about PBS is that it’s a great source of information about almost anything. I can ask a question about getting ink out of a shirt, manage a difficult relative or even find out what to order at an area restaurant…and someone (usually many people), will have something intelligent and/or entertaining to say about it. I’ve participated in other online forums before, but I can definitively say that PBS has the nicest people! I’ve made some great online friends here.

PBS:  What would you like our members to know about you?

Lynn:  They should know that I’m always looking for an excuse to take a break from my work throughout the day.  So feel free to PM or chat in the forums any time.

I suppose it would be good to know that I’m also willing to answer questions about writing. When I first started, I didn’t know anyone I could ask even the simplest question of, so I try to be there for others who are starting out. I’ve seen too many people disappointed because they didn’t understand the basic issue of “rights”, or thought self-publishing was the same as traditional, etc. I hate to see that sort of thing happen to people.

PBS:  What is your favorite Lynn Marie-Ittner Klammer book? What book was the most fun to write?

Lynn:  I don’t think I could say that I really have a favorite, but I do “favor” the children’s books and my “Real Mom’s Devotions” because they’re all true stories about my family. They record some special moments in my family life.

As to the book that was the most fun to write, that would probably be the Frankenmuth book. Since I had already been to just about every place and festival in town, a lot of the knowledge was already in my head—so it was fast and easy to write up the basics. That left me with just the fun part of exploring those lesser-known elements of the town, and that even led me to discover some things about my own heritage that I hadn’t known previously.

PBS:  What are you reading now?

Lynn:  I read a wide-range of things, but mostly a mix of quirky non-fiction and fiction. Right now I’m reading Tinkering with Eden by Kim Todd (which is the natural history of exotic species in America), and The Eyes of Laura Mars by Gilmour & Carpenter. I like to switch between something educational/interesting, and something simply entertaining (depending upon my mood at the moment).

PBS:  Do you have any new books in the works?

Lynn:  Right now I’m awaiting the release of another children’s book. It’s already done and I’m just waiting for it to come out. Other than that I’m doing freelance work, currently writing test questions for a substance abuse exam, and working on a new book proposal.

 

 

Lynn has graciously offered an autographed copy of her book, Frankenmuth: A Guide to Michigan’s Little Bavaria to be given away to a PBS member. It will be awarded to a member who comments here on the Blog. The winner will be chosen at random.