Friday, November 2, 2012

Hello. I'm Rebecca Scarberry, author of YA novella MESSAGES FROM HENRY (Scaraberryfields on Twitter). Thank you for visiting my blog today. I have interviewed another very talented author, Melissa J. Rutter (MelissaJRutter on Twitter). Enjoy!



Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Melissa Rutter: Born and bred in boring old England, nothing exotic I’m afraid, but have many friends and family in the States and class Texas as my second home.
Scarberryfields: When you finish a novel, do you miss the characters?
Melissa Rutter: Always, with my Humangels in my trilogy they have powers and one can only dream of having them, so when I write about them it’s sort of like having the powers too…crazy I know.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Melissa Rutter: Like many, I use Word for my writing so I rely on spell and grammar checks on that, though it’s not always right and the old Oxford has to come out on occasions.
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Melissa Rutter: My children are understanding and my husband extremely supportive, but when I am editing a book, he feels a little neglected because that takes as much as writing in the first place. However, when I am done, I do give them all of my time, I write mostly at night so they don’t miss me too much.
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Melissa Rutter: Writing takes me away from all of the doom and gloom in the world, also it helps keep my mind open and alive it’s always ticking over which is great for keeping the grey matter busy.
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Melissa Rutter: No, I take breaks because I have bad hands, so I can’t write for too long, new to Twitter, but FB has helped me link up with some dear friends all over the world and their support is amazing. It helps me keep tabs on my author friends too, I love hearing how their work is coming along.
Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel?
Melissa Rutter: No, a few friends read them first, find it uncomfortable sharing it with family because you wonder if their opinion is biased.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial?
Melissa Rutter: Definitely yes, you can network your novels all over the world through them. 
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Melissa Rutter: I Immortal Part 3, Fire and Ice, it’s the final book in my trilogy.
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books? 
 
Melissa Rutter: Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk in Kindle and Paperback formats.

(Please go to Amazon to see inside any of these books.)



Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Hello. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). Thank you for visiting my blog today. I have interviewed another brilliant author. She is Misty Evans (readmistyevans on Twitter). I enjoyed learning more about Misty and certain you will also.


Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Misty: I’m a mixed bag…there’s some Irish, English, Austrian and even a tiny bit of Cherokee in my bloodline. Your all-American writer, I guess!
Scarberryfields: When you finished your debut novel, did you miss the characters?
Misty: Sure did! My debut novel, OPERATION SHEBA, turned into the Super Agent series so I’m still visiting with those characters. The fourth book, THE BLOOD CODE, comes out next year.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Misty: I have an English minor and have done lots of editing through the years, but I still use a variety of sources when I need help. During the first draft, I double check things on various internet sites and sometimes email my editors. Once that’s complete, I send the story to several content and copy editors who fix my split infinitives (love those gosh darn things) and highlight all my overused words!
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Misty: My family is very supportive, but sometimes deadlines and family life conflict, especially when you have twin teen sons, so I try to stay flexible and so do my husband and kids.
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Misty: Since I was young, writing helped me sort out emotions. I was very shy! Most of my life, I’ve kept journals to document the important stuff and work through the not-so-fun stuff. Creating fictional stories is fun and also keeps me sane!
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Misty: I try to write every morning when my muse is most active and I stay off the internet until I make my word count, especially if I’m on deadline.
Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel?
Misty: Only my mom. LOL. Most of my beta readers were agents. I had several who took the time to detail what I needed to fix with that first novel and one eventually signed me.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial?
Misty: Anything that helps me connect with my fans is awesome!
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Misty: DANCING WITH THE DEVIL, Witches Anonymous Step 5. It releases on Halloween. I also have a holiday culinary romance that just released called THE SECRET LIFE OF CRANBERRY SAUCE.


Please go to Amazon to look inside of this book by Misty. Thank you. 
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books? 

Misty: Amazon, B&N, iBookstore, Kobo, Smashwords, All Romance eBooks. Excerpts of all of my books can be found at www.readmistyevans.com  

Bio: 

Misty Evans is the best-selling and award-winning author of four series: Super Agent spy series, the Witches Anonymous paranormal romance series, the dark paranormal Lost Worlds series and her urban fantasy Kali Sweet series.
She has short stories in Entangled, A Paranormal Anthology, and Every Witch Way But Wicked. All proceeds from Entangled go to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and all proceeds for EWWBW go to Nathan Fillion’s Kids Need To Read charity. 
Misty likes her coffee black, her conspiracy stories juicy, and her wicked characters dressed in couture. When not reading or writing, she enjoys hanging out with her husband of twenty-two years and their twin sons. Learn more and sign up for her newsletter at www.readmistyevans.com. Like her author page on Facebook or follow her on Twitter.

Misty: Thank you, Becky for having me today!

Scarberryfields: You're welcome, Misty. I look forward to reading your books one day.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Hello. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). Thank you for visiting my blog today. I have interviewed another very, very talented author, Reyna Hawk (ReynaHawk on Twitter).  I have enjoyed learning more about her and certain you will also.

  
Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Reyna Hawk: Well my mother use to say my family was of the Heinz 57 origin. However, if it were to be narrowed down it would be English, Scot-Irish, German, and Native American (Cherokee and Iroquois).
Scarberryfields: When you finish a novel, do you miss the characters?
Reyna Hawk: Yes I definitely do. I will keep going back and reading the books because I miss them so much; prime reason my first book went into a trilogy. I just couldn’t give them up. In fact, for that series I am thinking of branching out into some of the minor characters to continue it. However, it is just a thought. I have three other books I need to get finished first.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Reyna Hawk: I usually will use the grammar check on Microsoft word. If that still doesn’t seem to fix it or the sentence still sounds screwy, I then go to my university’s online write editor. It has been very helpful.
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Reyna Hawk: For the most part, they are supportive; however, there are some family and friends that get their little digs in about me being so busy “writing one of my books”. I don’t think most people understand all the little details and amount of time it takes to write a book. As an author, I have to write while the ideas and thoughts are in my head. It’s definitely not a 9 to 5 job.
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Reyna Hawk: It actually helps me to relax and rid myself of the stresses of the day, week, or month. I have found my best time to write is at night when the house is quiet, which means a lot of writing into the wee hours of the morning. However, I do sleep better after doing a great deal of writing.
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Reyna Hawk: I have to; they are too much of a distraction for me. In fact, many times, if I am deep into the writing I will ignore the phone, put on some headphones, and shut the rest of the world out.
Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel?
Reyna Hawk: Yes, I have a handful of people I use to get a variety of feedback from. This is only good if they can give good objective criticism, which mine has no problem in doing.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial?
Reyna Hawk: It can be in some ways, but in some ways it doesn’t help at all. I think people get accustomed to seeing posts and articles about the same things and then begin to ignore them or skim over them. I know that I can be guilty of that myself. I surely am not the only one that does this. It has helped me a great deal to get connected to bloggers and readers that otherwise I would have never had the chance to connect with, but if these people aren’t sharing or spreading the word about my books then it’s not doing much good.
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Reyna Hawk: Angels and Arrows- it is based on true paranormal events.
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books? 
Reyna Hawk: All of my books are available on Amazon.com


Barnes and Noble
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/reyna-hawk?keyword=reyna+hawk&store=allproducts

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Hello. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). Thank you for visiting my blog today. I have yet another great author interview for you. I have interviewed Chris G. Guest (chrisgguest on Twitter). Enjoy!

 
Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Chris: I’m from the UK, which is pretty good. I live near Manchester, England, so there’s always plenty to do!
Scarberryfields: When you finished your debut novel, did you miss the characters?
Chris: I’ve not had chance really to miss them! Once I finished the drafts for Owen & The Sky Giants, I started straight away with the illustrations and then the website www.cgguest.com so the characters have been a big part of developing awareness of my writing. This is also the first book in a trilogy so I’ve already been plotting for the next books. I don’t have a chance to miss the characters even if I wanted to.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Chris: Spell check is my best friend! In all, seriousness though, I tend to constantly redraft and between drafts I share it with a select audience who notice stuff like punctuation. That way I can make any changes necessary. I will probably pay a proofreader in order to get it ready for a publisher. Even with my eagle eye, I don’t want to leave it to chance!
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Chris: I tend to jot ideas down when they come to me, but for the slog of getting my writing down in a meaningful way, I tend to frequent the unsocial hours of the day with a trusty mug of coffee! My family are pretty supportive and always offer advice, but my writing tends to be something I don’t share with others (even my family) until I’m at least half happy about showing it off!
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Chris: Financially benefit me? No not unless you consider the 0.78p I’ve made on Amazon a beneficial sum of money! It does of course benefit me massively in other areas as I get to create stories and characters that I love. It’s great just to put pen to paper knowing that it has a larger purpose and that it will eventually be shared with others.
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Chris: Yes definitely. If I don’t respond to a tweet, post or email straight away, I’m usually writing! There are some people who can multi-task, but I’m not one of them so I definitely keep away from social networks when writing.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking is a beneficial tool for marketing your book?
Chris: It is and it isn’t really. The great thing about social networks and your writing is that you can try to appeal straight to your audience and in that way, I use it as a marketing tool. I have the obligatory fan page, twitter and YouTube channels. I really try to have a voice on the platforms that readers, who might be interested in my work, may go.
The massive downside for a new writer is that you’re a bit like a needle in a haystack, venturing onto social networks for the first time.  No one knows you in the beginning. The only way your work will be discovered is by entering into the spirit of social networking.
More often than not, I use it to post about new work and chat with people who have similar interests and can offer advice for new writers.
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Chris: I have published two collections of poetry, Words Strung Together and Melody of Chaos. These two books have been quite successful, both reaching the top 10 in their genre charts. You can find them on the Kindle store.
(Please go to Amazon to look inside these 2 books)
I released them as a way to get my writing out without releasing my main work Owen & The Sky Giants. I’m still looking for a literary agent and publisher for that one so I wanted to gather a bit of a following before that narrative got released. Both the poetry collections have had a warm reception so I’m quite pleased with the progress so far.
 
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books?

Chris:  They can find my poetry collections here on kindle: http://t.co/ubNjtu9 and http://t.co/OGgu3E1 They are both on US & UK Amazon. The best way to find out about my bigger projects is to follow me at http://www.cgguest.com  & Twitter @chrisgguest, or Facebook.

Scarberryfields:  Thank you, Chris for answering my questions. I'm certain all your fans enjoyed getting to know you better, as I have. I loved Melody of Chaos and look forward to reading all of your other books.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Hello. I am Rebecca Scarberry, author of MESSAGES FROM HENRY and Scarberryfields on Twitter. Thank you for visiting my blog today. I was going to take a long break from posting interviews here until I published my second book, RAG DOLL, but I have decided to do one or two more. I have interviewed a very talented author, Lesley Fletcher. I have read her book and love it! Enjoy!



Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Lesley Fletcher: I am a child of British immigrants, born in Montreal and raised in London Ontario, so that makes me a first generation Canadian. The grass seemed greener back in Montreal so I moved back and found that it is in fact greener in my eyes.
Scarberryfields: When you finish writing a novel, do you miss the characters?
Lesley Fletcher: I haven’t written any novels yet, but I certainly missed my Prom Girls (first book) and find myself still asking people about their own experience leaving high school.
As for my latest release, I am still working with the ‘gypsy’ in other ways (songs, stage play) so she is never very far from my thoughts!
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Lesley Fletcher: I plow ahead and then send my work to my copy editor. I honestly don’t remember all the rules of proper grammar and wouldn’t want the added task of those kinds of corrections.
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Lesley Fletcher:  Writing is a therapy the same as art for me. I am in the process of taking a play writing course where we are encouraged to free write within certain parameters. With perhaps a ten to twelve minute timeframe to work in that pencil flies into places I didn’t realize existed. That is the benefit, right there. Tapping into your own realm of creativity.
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Lesley Fletcher: Absolutely. It is imperative to have no distractions.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial?
Lesley Fletcher: Ah… Yes, I do but I need to qualify that answer. It takes a tremendous amount of energy and know-how to use social marketing properly and realize the benefits. It is not a 3 month or even a six month process. I think it is more like a one to two year process unless you have a huge budget and hire the necessary expertise.
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Lesley Fletcher: My latest book is titled 5 Pillars of the Gypsy, which is a mix of my own art, approximately 40 pieces (mostly abstract) and poetry/prose.

 I was advised, of course that it would not do well because of the genre but I have found otherwise and have been pleasantly surprised by its heartfelt reception. I think it has been accepted so well because while it is written in verse, it also tells a story through accessible poetry. What I mean by accessible is that anyone can read and understand it without having to look up words or wonder what the poem is trying to say. Each person who has provided me with feedback or reviews mentions that they personally relate to what I have to say and have found both comfort (that they are not alone) and a sense of spirituality.
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your book?  

Lesley Fletcher: I have recently released it in e-book format at Smashwords


And it is available at Amazon in print and Kindle format


You can find me here:


And on Twitter @gypsyles

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Hello. Thank you for visiting my blog today. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). I have a very interesting author interview for you. His name is J. Cameron McClain (jcameronmcclain on Twitter). Enjoy!


Cameron: Hello to Scarberryfields! Nice place you got here, thanks for having me on!
Scarberryfields: Hello. Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Cameron: My passport tells me I’m a citizen of the USA, and I’m currently set up in San Francisco, California. My passport got used most recently when I spent four months with family in South Africa. Got the first draft of a book written there in fact. I lived for about thirteen years each in Boston, Tokyo and Honolulu, and feel equally at home in all three places. I lived and almost died of malaria in Tanzania back in the late 1960s, I went on a six-month walkabout through Malaysia, Thailand, India England and Wales back in 1992.
All that’s another way of saying I’ve been fortunate to call a number of places “home” in my life, so many so that I find myself embracing the “earth is my home” mindset. I will not swear extensive reading of speculative fiction hasn’t helped create that mindset, of course, but big as it is, Earth is a tiny little place, with people who are very much alike in many ways.
Scarberryfields: When you finish a novel, do you miss the characters?
Cameron: Absolutely, although I’m fortunate enough to be working on a couple of series. Even after one book is done, I know I’m going to have the opportunity to meet up with the characters again and see what they’ve been up to while I was otherwise occupied. I also know I’m going to learn more about them at the second meeting, that’s exciting too. When my subconscious is in high gear the characters write themselves, all I do is type the story as it happens.
I certainly miss some of the characters in my short stories, and sometimes think about what happens to them after the story’s done. Maybe it’s the comic book-lover in me that laughs and says, “Who knows, we may just resurrect him somehow. We can do that. We’re fiction writers.” After I read When the Shark Bites, written by my writing professor Rodney Morales, I had to tell him I was bummed when in the book >>spoiler alert<< one of the coolest characters I’ve come across recently ends up dying. >>end spoiler alert<< He shrugged and said one word to me. “Prequels.”
I admit to a terrible sadness when killing some characters. I don’t think you can make any level of investment in a person, real or fictional, without feeling some sense of loss or emptiness when you’ve written them gone. Or cruel glee, if you’ve modeled them after a person you didn’t like in order to kill them off in a story. If you don’t invest what Bruce Lee calls emotional content in all of the characters you write, you’re not writing the best story you can.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Cameron: For grammar or punctuation questions, and if it’s handy (like right now), I check my hard copy of Diana Hacker’s Pocket Style Manual. I made extensive use of it as a teaching assistant at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa. If it’s not in Hacker, or if I’m too lazy to get up and pull Hacker off the shelf, I check the Purdue OWL, Grammar Girl, and Wikipedia. Or rather, I Google it, and when OWL, Grammar Girl or some other site I know and trust comes up, I check out what they’re saying.
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Cameron: Oh, gosh no, I took care of that mess way back. I murdered my wife and six kids nine years ago, we’re coming up on the anniversary in a couple of weeks, as a matter of fact. It wasn’t even Julie and the brats’ constant whining and yammering on about how I spent too much time writing that made me take a shovel to the lot of them. It was all the small things. Breakfasts not ready promptly at seven, clothes hangars placed on the left side of the closet instead of the right side. A crayon left on the dining table. The dining table! Things that would send anybody right over the edge, you know what I mean?
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Cameron: Benefit? I made almost $850,000 last year on book royalties alone, I’m not even talking residuals from the latest film in the Devi franchise! Benefit?! Ha ha ha ha ha!
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Cameron: That’s the minimum. I’m typing with headphones on right now (now playing: Analyze by Thom Yorke). I shut as much out as I can—I write with music, that’s my only input. I know folks who (bless their souls) can manage to type 100-200 words between breast-feeding their babies, but in my case, I need to switch to writing mode, which takes about an hour to fully activate. It’s hard to describe, but for me it’s a bit like I’m charging up the story, activating it. Names come back to me, events, places, dates, actions, narrative timeline, everything switching on bit by bit until it’s a big clunking monster that I start attaching things to in order to get it moving more smoothly and acting more in accordance with my vision. Seriously, I can get grumpy when I’m interrupted because it takes so long to get into that mode. There’s no way I could Tweet every half-hour and keep the storyflow (yeah, storyflow, one word) going in my mind.
It cracks me up to see folks posting things on Facebook or Twitter like “gotta try to get writing done today.” Don’t tell the world, tell your brain and keyboard, or pen and paper!
Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel?
Cameron: Oh yes, and I have to give thanks to the folks who Beta-read the book for me, those folks—especially those in the early stages who I asked to read an honest-to-goodness not-ready-to-be-read draft. They really had their work cut out for them. The Five Watchers has had a very long gestation period. It’s been “ready” four or five times by my count. Lots of friends have read iterations over the past six years.
I let my mom read it more recently, when it was an actual first draft, so yeah, family has read pre-release versions. Dad doesn’t do speculative fiction. I did get him to read Pierre Boulle’s Planet of the Apes a couple of years ago, but only because he’s a Francophone, and I was able to track down the original French version La Planète des Singes for him, and I convinced him it was social commentary and not just a cool book about talking apes capturing almost-naked humans and how one cool astronaut guy escapes them- with a girl in tow, no less.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial?
Cameron: Whether all authors can benefit from social networks, I couldn’t say, but I’ve talked a little with Richard Tillotson, author of Acts of God While on Vacation, on this topic. As the author of a literary work rather than genre fiction, his and my self-publishing experiences have been different. Much of his sales come from hard copies sold, for example, whereas in my situation and story type I’m more focused on ebook success. I think the online community is very interested in self-publishing, and are devouring this stuff, so it’s not surprising to me that I’m making almost all of my professional connections through networks such as Twitter, LinkedIn, Goodreads and Facebook.
Marketing, sure, but there’s much more use to be made. One piece of advice that goes for any human interaction: interact. I introduced Marlene Wynn, an author whose novel I’m currently editing, to a Facebook artists’ collective. Three weeks later, after interacting with folks there and asking around, she now has a professionally-designed cover with original artwork, fee gratis. There are a whole lot of great people out there, waiting to connect with you and help you. All you need to do is ask.
And I believe this is an excellent time to point out that my connection with Scarberryfields has been almost entirely via Twitter, and here I am in my first interview because of it. Not to mention I’ve just finished reading Rebecca Scarberry’s enchanting novella, Messages From Henry because of it (readers—give this a read, it’s a wonderful story with a fresh twist). So yes, a big thumbs-up to social media from me.
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Cameron: The Five Watchers is out now. It’s gone through an evolution from kill-em-all ghost novel—my original vision—to something much more complex. And now it’s the first in a trilogy. Had to start picking more people to survive than zero, which tends to change the plot somewhat. There’s now a second, interlinked plot alongside that of the Investigators, and a lot of history involved. Much of the history revolves around the Five Watchers building and the Prescott family, who are a presence in the main setting—Shady Glen, Pennsylvania—for hundreds of years prior to the events in the book. The action was fun to write, but without a sound foundation of history, there isn’t nearly as much depth to a story, whether it’s a character’s personal history or the history of a place like Shady Glen. As you peel back the layers, you piece together a larger and larger understanding of the totality. One of the successes in the trilogy will be to peel back layers to this story in each book that readers would never have expected to find.
As for completed stuff, the first draft of my vampire-human-zombie novel Alliance is done, and I’ll be working it into a completed manuscript within the next four months. So, definitely yay for that! I love The Five Watchers but the trilogy is a longer-term thing, and Alliance is a different sort of fun to work on. First draft of 65,000 words in a month’s writing’s worth of fun in fact. Gawd, vampires? Yeah, I still can’t quite believe I’m writing vampires but if it’s wrong, I don’t want to be etc. And surprisingly enough, I have an aspect to the zombie-vampire connection that hasn’t yet been explored.

I’m assuming that since you didn’t ask about upcoming projects, I can’t mention Kamaitachi (second in the SpiriTrilogy: the sequel to The Five Watchers, out late ‘13), Devi, my wicked cool novel based on two wicked cool short stories I wrote about sentient robots (out mid ‘14), or the final book of the SpiriTrilogy series, Megiddo (out late ’14 or early ’15). So I won’t.
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books?
Cameron: The e-version of The Five Watchers is currently available free, and is rampaging through Smashwords like a tornado. For those seeking a hard copy, you can click the little button on the right side of the Smashwords page, or type “Cameron McClain” on Amazon. Don’t search “The Five Watchers” on Amazon because you’ll have to wade through twelve pages of Weight Watchers Five Minute Recipe books to find mine.
After October 31, 2012, I’m putting a second edition of The Five Watchers out for general release, along with a Kindle version, one for the Nook, and wherever else I can post it up on, for money. And it’ll be worth it because it’ll have maps and be geo-coded and stuff so that’ll be cool. But in the meantime, it’s free on Smashwords right now, so go get it free.
 
Thanks again to Rebecca for having me over, and as always, thanks to our readers.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Hello. Thank you for visiting my blog today. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). I have a new author interview. His name is Daniel Q. Steele (QSteele1 on Twitter). He has been very kind to write detailed answers to my questions and I love what he has to say!


Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?

Dan: English and Italian. English going back to the second ship after the Mayflower, for which offense the stinking Brits confiscated our estates and homes and forced my relatives to work for their living in the New Country. (Actually, I like the English, everything but their food, but depriving me of estates and a solid middle class country gentleman birthright has always seemed a little anal on their part for the crime of wanting to worship God as my ancestors pleased.) I’m Italian going back to Rome and Naples from whence my mother came. I’ve been back three times, the last as part of a continent crawl. I love the people of Italy, the four-hour meals, the mozzarella di bufala cheese, you can buy in the countryside between Rome and Naples, the Iodine-smell of the Neapolitan harbor, the plunging mountain roads of coastal Italy, and not least the fact that the bustiest women on earth throng the cities and towns of Italy. That is a fact. Has to be something in the water.
Scarberryfields: When you finish a novel, do you miss the characters?
Dan: Oddly enough, no. Until you asked that question, I’d never thought about it. I’ve written five novels, prior to completing the pair I’m selling on Barnes and Noble, Smashwords and Amazon right now. I can enjoy re-reading them and I like meeting the old characters again, but I don’t miss them. Probably because they’ve never gone anywhere. They’re all still In my head. There are worse things than saying goodbye. One of the saddest little existential dramas I ever saw was a long forgotten horror schlockfest of a movie called “Seven Keys to Baldpate” about a writer locking himself in a scary old mansion to finish a novel on deadline. The viewer thinks that all the murders and mayhem are really happening when they’re all in the writer’s mind. Including a winsome young woman who the writer falls for-in his story. And you’re left pondering the question of whether a writer can fall in love with a figment of his imagination. Or maybe just realize that he needs to fall in love with somebody. It was much too good a concept for the movie.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation or grammar, where do you turn?
Dan: I was a newspaper reporter, editor, and high school English teacher and that stuff is so ingrained I seldom look it up. And if I make mistakes, I should sweat them, but honestly, I don’t.
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Dan: They’re fairly supportive, but I’ve been doing this for a long time. Sometimes it causes friction. I used a line from my wife, who is still married to me, in my novel about a spectacular marital disaster and a wife who left her workaholic husband. The wife in the story says about her husband, a prosecutor, “even when he’s here, he’s not here.” And my wife used those exact same words to me.
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Dan: Let me count the ways. Like breathing. I literally wouldn’t know what to do with myself if I did not write. I’ve written for fun, for money, for women. Above and beyond all of those, when you’re writing (if you’re lucky) you enter a different world, a different realm of being. In those moments, you’re literally transported in your mind into a different skin, a different life. We all know we’re mortal and we’re going to die, but when you’re in that other place you’re godlike and you forgot those realities for a little while.
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Dan: In the act of writing, I shut out everything. You can’t stay under forever, but in my younger years, I could shut out the world for a long time. Today, I’m going to be on Twitter, Facebook, or LinkedIn when I’m not writing, eating, or doing something with my wife. And the great thing is I can tell her that ‘I’m doing this to sell my books,” and that’s a strong argument.
Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel?
Dan: No. My wife is one of those people that will read anything medical, but doesn’t read fiction.
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking is a beneficial marketing tool for books?
Dan: It’s the best tool I’ve ever found. My last two books started out as an internet serial that grew like crazy from an avocation – I just had some ideas I wanted to write down – to a never ending demand from readers in the U.S., Canada, Australia, England, France, Germany to POST MORE OF THE STORY – FASTER. When I reworked them into currently two novels, I used social media to let the readers who’d followed the story know through Facebook and a website and then Twitter that the re-done books were available for sale. And I’ve used the same resources to try to keep reader interest up and hopefully bring in new readers.
Scarberryfields: What do you like to do when you aren’t writing? Have any hobbies?
Dan: Travel, the beach, movies, comic books. I’ve always been a gypsy. If my wife said, “let’s go” we’d be out the door. Most of the time, I never knew when I walked back in our house after work where I’d be that night. And really didn’t care. If not for kids, there is no way on earth to know where we might have wound up. We’ve slept on picnic benches at the beach when there were no rooms. We wound up spending nearly six months a year at a North Florida camping resort, rubbing elbows with Snowbirds. We’ve cruised the Caribbean and took the slow route from Los Angeles to Hawaii on a cruise ship, and watched the whales mating off Maui. We’ve driven through a snowstorm in the Alps when there wasn’t supposed to be one and I came the closest to dying, or I wanted to anyway, of any time in my life when I received food poisoning from Paella cooked in insufficiently sterilized local water in the coastal resort of La Manga in Spain.
Closer to home, I’ve always loved the beaches of Northeast Florida, particularly St. Augustine, and that’s why that area plays such a large part in the courthouse/crime/adult ­love story being told in “When We Were Married.” I’ve always been a movie buff and did as much movie reviewing as I could while working for the Florida Times-Union and other newspapers in Northeast Florida. And, I had read and collected comic books since I was a kid and still love them. I’ve even written a few scripts for comics that got published.
Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books?
 
 
Dan: You can find WHEN WE WERE MARRIED - ­ VOLUME ONE – THE LONG FALL
AT:
AND you can find WHEN WE WERE MARRIED – VOLUME TWO – SECOND ACTS
AT:
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/when-we-were-married-volume-1-the-long-fall-daniel-steele/1106754384?ean=2940013654587&itm=1&usri=when+we+were+married

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Hello. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). Thank you for visiting my blog today. I have interviewed author, Tracy Kauffman and you're going to enjoy getting to know her better. She is KauffmanTracy on Twitter.



Scarberryfields: When you finish a novel, do you miss the characters? 

Tracy Kauffman: Not since, Kay from Southern Adventures is an image of me. 

Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn? 

Tracy Kauffman: I use my Thesaurus mainly for help with changing the same word to something different.  Then I have hired a proofreader to check some of my grammar and punctuation problems such as commas.  Commas are my biggest downfall.  I can never figure out where to put them.  I know to use them in some places, but lost in other places. 

Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them? 

Tracy Kauffman: Since I write in my son’s old room, I am always available if they need me.  If they want to go somewhere, then I take a break.  I feel it is always good to take a break from writing.  Your mind gets weary when you try to focus too hard on something and it takes twice as long to finish, what you need to do. 

Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how? 

Tracy Kauffman: I started writing when my son left home for the Air Force.  I felt like writing helped comfort me and allowed me to express my feelings about him leaving home, so yes writing gave me the benefit of calming my fears and help me with the grieving process.  I never knew how hard it would be to have a child leave home after eighteen years, but it is very difficult and I still have to keep my mind busy so I will not worry about him.  He is in Japan and it makes it even more difficult, since I cannot travel to see him so easily. 

Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks? 

Tracy Kauffman: As I’m writing, my internet is turned off.  I don’t like a lot of distractions, because the quiet helps me think.

Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel? 

Tracy Kauffman: I had my daughter read “Southern Adventures” to tell me if it was interesting.  I had my husband read it to tell me if I used good grammar, since I use a lot of slang words in everyday life, and he is from Indiana. 

Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial? 

Tracy Kauffman: I feel any way you market yourself can be beneficial if you do it consistently.  Since I am a new author, I have not reaped the rewards yet, but I know they have to be paying off, eventually. 

Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?

Tracy Kauffman: Southern Adventures was the first book I wrote, and it is the one that is currently being published.  It will be released by next month. It is a coming of age book about a woman recalling her life growing up in the south.  Even though, she endured some hardships along with some very memorable experiences, she is thankful that she had a chance to learn from her mistakes.  She knew that the bad times in her life, make the good times even better.

 

Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books? 

Tracy Kauffman: On my website I have links that people are able to click to take them to where they can purchase my books. 




Barnes and Noble/Nook buy link: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/s/gwendolyn-s-wish?keyword=gwendolyn%27s+wish&store=book

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Hello. I'm Rebecca Scarberry (Scarberryfields on Twitter). Thank you for visiting my blog today. I have another author interview for you. I have interviewed author, Massimo Marino (Massim0Marin0 on Twitter). I'm certain you will enjoy getting to know this talented author as much as I have.


Scarberryfields: Can you tell us a little about your nationality?
Massimo: Nationality is the easy part: Italian. What is more complex is the influence of various cultures. My first work was abroad, in Switzerland, and I never spoke Italian at work: either English or French. I lived in Switzerland, France and the US. I adapt and enjoy people and discover traditions, way of life, culture. I felt at home wherever I lived.
Scarberryfields: When you finish a novel, do you miss the characters?
Massimo: Totally. Amazing, isn’t it? With me, characters take up their own life and they act independently too. I kind of sit and watch what happens to them and how they react to situations. Sometimes I struggle to write down all that happens and everything they say so much it goes fast. Maybe you need a bit of insanity to write a novel.
Scarberryfields: While writing, if you need help with punctuation, grammar, etc., where do you turn?
Massimo: Luckily, I found, after a good deal of research and previous attempts, to a great editor and fellow-writer: Rebecca Stroud. She is an established author and praised for her impeccable editing. I am in debt with her for how much effort she has put into Daimones. Then I also have the plethora of written tools, dictionaries, physical and online, Webster, the Internet and Google, and The Elements of Style. I wish I could swallow it and learn by osmosis.
Scarberryfields: With the number of hours spent writing, do family members support you or complain about the time spent away from them?
Massimo: I tell myself I am on a forced sabbatical, so I can write a lot. Luckily, it does not interfere at all with family life…often ;-) Anyway, they are very supportive and waited patiently for a revised second draft to be ready before I let them read the novel.
Scarberryfields: Does writing benefit you in any way and if so, how?
Massimo: In a sense, writing is entering a different world, a separate dimension. Sometimes you find yourself in a trance-like state and the real world becomes veiled and obfuscated. It is a dreamed moment. I do not need to find other means of evasion from the asperity of life, when I’m writing.
Scarberryfields: When you’re writing, do you shut-off all social networks?
Massimo: Sometimes. It does not disturb me. I always had a multi-tasking mind so I can write and reply to the occasional tweet or email without losing track. Or maybe I have latent schizophrenia.
Scarberryfields: Did you use any family members as Beta readers for your debut novel?
Massimo: No. At all. I used critters, an online community who provides peer-to-peer beta-reading, a couple American friends, and two British. They claimed my English was better than that of a few of their neighbors. They suggested I get an editor, too. So you see, they are good friends, they know how to say things without hurting your feelings ;-)
Scarberryfields: Do you feel social networking as a marketing tool, is beneficial?
Massimo: I hope so. It is something I have to discover yet. I can’t see why or how it couldn’t though. For sure, it will allow me to connect with readers, actual and potential ones.  On twitter I found a large community of writers. As an example, see what happened with Paulo Coelho and his latest work. He made a tremendous use of social network and the results have been incredibly positive. He tweets a lot, by the way.
Scarberryfields: What is the last book called that you completed and published?
Massimo:Daimones” is my debut novel, and the first volume of a planned trilogy. Elsewhere, I have been published a lot for academic reasons. I won’t mention the title of the paper—as they are called—here because we are here to discuss fiction, not reality ;-)

Scarberryfields: Where can readers go to find your books? 

Massimo: Primarily on Amazon and Smashwords. Am now on their Premium Catalogue also, so Daimones—and the sequels—is available on Kobo, B&N, Lulu, Nook, and others. It is also going to be on Italian e-retailers soon.  Here are the most direct links: 




 
As closing remarks, Becky, I want to thank you dearly and your readers for the opportunity to present myself and my novel. I wrote it for myself and because I couldn’t hold Daimones inside any longer: It erupted. But I also wrote it for every single reader, whenever it will happen, with the goal to share emotions and feelings, and hopefully good reading time. To evade together with me, as I do when I write. I hope to be a good host and of good company.

Scarberryfields: You don't need to thank me, Massimo. Everybody knows how much I enjoy featuring and supporting talented authors like you. Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions. I have enjoyed learning more about you.