Tuesday, September 19, 2023

đŸ“–Authors To Watch: LJ Ambrosio, Author of REFLECTIONS ON THE BOULEVARD #authorstowatch #interview

 

 



Louis J. Ambrosio ran one of the most nurturing bi-coastal talent agencies in Los Angeles and New York. He started his career as a theatrical producer, running two major regional theaters for eight seasons. He taught at over 7 universities in America. Ambrosio also distinguished himself as an award-winning film producer and novelist over the course of his impressive career.  

Author Links  

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Tumblr | Universal Link

 

 


We welcome you to My Bookish Pleasures! Describe your writing process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When andwhere do you write?
 

I write only in the evening for 2 hours with my coffee, in my office overlooking my garden. I
write and then when finished, I do a spell and syntax correction. I reread the next day, I continue
this process until I finish, then I do another pass. After this, it goes to an editor. I write stream of
consciousness and I take on more than one point of view. It could be tricky but I’ve mastered it.

Can you tell us about your most recent release?


Book two in the trilogy is a fun buddy adventure travel book. Al three books connect and flow. I
am halfway through the third book.

How did you get the idea for the book?


My life and my passion for people.

What was the most challenging aspect of authoring your book?


Research to be accurate. If you screw up facts, you lose credibility with the reader.

What projects are you currently working on?


My third book, “Exiles.”

What advice would you offer to new or aspiring fiction authors?


Be passionate, believe in yourself, tell the story.


 

 


Title: Reflections on the Boulevard
Author: LJ Ambrosio
Publisher: Film Valor
Publication Date: June 7, 2023
Pages: 238
Genre: Fictional Buddy Adventure / Coming of Age

goodreads add to

Michael’s story continues from A Reservoir Man (2022) where we find him teaching at a university ready to retire. He unexpectedly meets a young man named Ron who becomes his protege and journeys in a haphazard adventure with him throughout America and Europe, each twist and turn of the road bringing unexpected adventures. The journey taken is one of joy, friendship and discovery. 

Buy Links:


LJ Ambrosio giving away one $20 Amazon Gift Card & an Autographed Copy of Reflections on the Boulevard!

Terms & Conditions:

  • By entering the giveaway, you are confirming you are at least 18 years old.
  • Two winners will be chosen via Rafflecopter to receive either a $20 Amazon Gift Card or an autographed copy of Reflections on the Boulevard.
  • This giveaway starts August 28 and ends September 22.
  • Winner will be contacted via email on September 23.
  • Winner has 48 hours to reply.

Good luck everyone!

ENTER TO WIN!





đŸ“–Authors To Watch: Jamie Saloff, Author of HATCH: A CHANGE YOUR LIFE GUIDE #authorstowatch #interview

 

 


Jamie Linn Saloff is passionate about aiding fiercely independent, misfit, square pegs trapped in an unfulfilling life. Author, teacher, story weaver, spiritual counselor, seer of visions, pathfinder, for over thirty years Jamie’s taught how to reignite your heart by listening to your body groan and your soul weep. She is the author of twelve books including Hatch: A Change Your Life Guide and her Marvelous Messages™ series.

Author Links  

Website | Facebook | Facebook Author Page | Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn | Amazon Profile

 

 


Welcome to My Bookish Pleasures. We would love to get to know you and your book! 

Thank you so much for having me. I am honored to appear on your blog. It’s clear you spend a lot of time manicuring it. 

When did you begin writing?

I wrote my first book when I was three. Scratch that! I filled a pad of paper with what I thought were words, but, according to my mother, my “prose” didn’t make the cut. I recently learned that I also attempted to write on the foyer floor. My mother also panned that “book” too. However, I must have gotten better because my first bio, complete with spelling errors and overstrikes, appeared in my baby book, kept for posterity. 

I guess I always knew I would be a writer. I know I couldn’t wait to be old enough to take typing classes (yes, this was before word processors and computers), but started penning stories while still in school. I know I wrote my first “novel” during Spanish II my junior year in high school. (I did not get good grades in that class for some reason.) I also attempted to write stories for children I babysat for. The kids weren’t entertained. 

After I met my husband-to-be, I wrote stories for him. He seemed to appreciate my stories, and for a while, we would write letters to each other in a blank book. We broke up several months into our early relationship and even though we got back together (and have been married for forty-forty years) we no longer shared writing in that way. He does, however, read every book I’ve published, offering unique insights I would have missed. 

In my early years of writing, I dreamed of attending one of the mail-in writing schools, but couldn’t afford it. I tried selling some magazine articles. Nothing sold. You’d think I should have given up, but writing flowed from my pen into journals all the time. I couldn’t stop. Then I finally got the chance to take a course with an instructor who had a small group that met around his dining room table. I joined that group, and for the first time, I learned the professional way to submit a manuscript to an agent or editor. Not long after, I sold my first book, which was a collaboration between myself and my husband. I did the writing and he did the photos for a book about vintage pottery. 


Describe your writing process. 

I always wrote in journals, so my early books began in that way. Then, after working with a mentor, I would work on large poster boards. Those were an awesome way to free write, but awkward to use. I eventually switched to large art pads. I prefer the smoother paper pads, and usually, at that stage, use colored, fine-point markers. I also sometimes use mini sticky notes or cut 3x5 index cards into 3 slices (about business card size). I use those to write down early ideas. However, nowadays, I usually do a lot of brainstorming in a mind map on the art pad, then move those tidbits to a phone app (Evernote, at the moment). Once I have enough notes for a book, I will begin transferring my ideas into layout software as I design and format my own books (something that became a twenty-year career for me).

What advice would you offer to new or aspiring authors?

I’ve been helping authors for over twenty years in a variety of capacities. I spent a lot of time volunteering for a writer’s organization. I learned a lot by doing that and met a lot of published authors, agents, and editors, some of whom became long-time friends. Then I became a book designer (from which I am now semi-retired). I walked countless authors through the process of self-publishing. Because of all my experiences, it’s impossible to fully offer advice. (I’d have to write a book!) But here are my top five tips.

1.     Don’t skip having your book edited by a professional, and really listen to what they are saying about readability. So many authors I work with are so focused on their “vision” for their book that they often forget that, yes, it’s cool that you can self-publish and break all the rules, but some of those rules equate to sales. 

2.     When it comes to designing a cover, most authors make two mistakes. The first is they become too attached to their first idea. They go to a cover designer and say, “Do it exactly like this.” They lose out on the tremendous potential they have tapped into. A seasoned designer knows what sells, what pops, and what attracts attention. Authors need to let their designer take their idea and enhance it (not change it, but kick it up a notch). If you let them, they can take it to a higher level. Does this mean you can’t make suggestions, ask for changes, or let them know that something isn’t working for you? Absolutely you should do these things, but don’t make them stay in the closed box you have presented them. You’ll likely have a better cover if you let them use their imagination and expertise. Secondly, I can’t tell you how many authors find a single photo or image and then tell me they have a “cover.” Uh, no, you don’t. You have an image. The font that makes the title, the other layered items that make that image pop, and the rest of the cover items (spine, logo, barcode, company info, blurb, and more) all combined, make a cover. No, it’s not “simple.” It’s not something your cover artist spits out in five minutes. Respect the work they have to do to make this all come together. A good designer can make a world of difference in the amount of your sales and is worth their weight in gold. 

3.     Buy Publisher Rocket and learn how to use it. This is a tool I use with every book. It’s invaluable and costs way less than it is worth.

4.     Learn how to market your book cost-effectively. Stop dreaming of sitting in a mall bookstore where you will sell five books and waste your day. By far, I’ve learned the most from Bryan Cohen’s ad challenge (offered free several times a year) and I don’t regret spending what I did for his ad school as well as Mark Dawson’s Self-Publishing Formula course. You will spend (and waste) far more money trying to do any number of low-dollar courses than you will gain by going straight to one of those. 

5.     After you’ve spent all your time and effort creating this piece of your heart, don’t stop. Firstly, you will likely need multiple books to really see them earn their worth. And secondly, these books don’t sell themselves. Stop worrying if you have the right color on your website and spend your effort on number four above and in writing your next book. I see so many authors spend countless dollars on their book, then believe it failed to sell, when in truth, they didn’t really understand it takes more than a book and a website to create a bestseller.


Can you tell us about your most recent release?

Hatch – A Change Your Life Guide, is for fiercely independent, misfit, square pegs trapped in an unfulfilling life. It’s a self-help, step-by-step guide helping readers reignite their hearts and answer their soul's calling. In this book, I share stories and methods for deeper self-exploration teaching how to “Hatch a life worth loving” by listening to your body groan and your soul weep. 

How did you get the idea for the book?

By age thirty, I’d experienced a lot of grief. Both my parents had passed. Many other loved ones too. I’d been through a lot of health issues, including cancer. I had a lot of problems fitting in. I didn’t seem to think like other people or like the same things. I had trouble finding where I fit in life. Even though I had a great husband and two wonderful boys, I felt like there should be more to life. I knew I should be grateful to even be alive, I knew I should be happy to just settle. Yet, I still had an empty feeling. I didn’t know how to change that without losing all the good things I had. Over the passing years, I found my way to that “more” my heart had been looking for and I wanted to help others like me find their “more” too. 


What message are you trying to get across with your book?

 “Whoever you are, whatever you’ve been through, you are a being with tremendous potential.” Some periods in our lives are difficult. We may feel stuck. We may feel there’s no way it can get any better. When I look back at the different times in my life when I felt like that, if I would have stopped there, I would have missed so much. I still am amazed at all I have accomplished, experienced, and enjoyed. My hope is to show others how to ignite this type of potential in their lives as well. 

What projects are you currently working on?

I am working on a gift book called Hatch-ette (or in other words, the mini version of Hatch), which I intend to give away. It will be a quick jumpstart for those who want to “hatch a life worth loving.” When that is done, I am working on my Marvelous Messages series of books. The next one to be launched is Marvelous Messages from Your Ancestry. I have a deck of cards that goes with that one. After that, I want to create a video course, a community where I can interact with others, and an incubator program where I can privately mentor others.

How can our readers reach out to you?

 My new favorite saying is that I don’t live on the Internet. I have stopped trolling social media sites as if my life depended on it. The best place to find me is to write me via my website www.MarvelousMessages.com or to simply email me at jamie@MarvelousMessages.com. I love, love, love hearing from readers and answer all that I can.

 

 

 

Title: Hatch: A Change Your Life Guide
Author: Jamie Saloff
Publisher: Sent Books
Publication Date: June 25, 2023
Pages: 384
Genre: Self-Help/Motivational, Religion/Spirituality, Personal Growth/Personal Transformation


If you could, how would you change your life?

While bravely facing the motherlode of difficult life challenges, you never dreamt the result would be a soul-sucking, heart-crushing existence.    

Although you try to ignore the emptiness, detachment, and feeling that you don’t belong, you rarely make changes. It just seems too impossible for so many reasons. Instead, you silenced your heart’s nagging with self-sacrifice, food stuffing, or by becoming a workaholic.  

Contemplating ending her life, Jamie Saloff chose instead to hatch a new one. She knows how self-doubt and unworthiness can cloud our ability to move forward after the darkness of illness, grief, trauma, or tragedy – because she’s faced it too.    

In Hatch – A Change Your Life Guide, Saloff walks readers through her step-by-step method to:  

• Awaken your soul’s purpose by listening to your heart’s voice   

• Find confidence in your next forward step by hearing your body speak

•See messages of guidance everywhere by learning where to look    

• Uncover your future in your past by examining your ancestral heritage      

• And much, much more…  

“It’s a simple question “Do you wish you could change your life for the better” while the answer is an easy one – do you have any idea of how to accomplish the task? “Hatch – A Change Your Life Guide” gives you a systematic process that will take you on a journey of physical, emotional, and spiritual healing…I highly recommend this wonderful and enlightening book” – Yolanda Renee

Buy Links:




Sunday, September 17, 2023

đŸ“–Authors To Watch: David Myles Robinson, Author of TROPICAL SCANDAL #authorstowatch #interview

 

 



David Myles Robinson has always had a passion for for writing. During the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, while in college, Robinson worked as a freelance writer for several magazines and was a staff writer for a weekly minority newspaper in Pasadena, California. Upon graduating from San Francisco State University, he attended the University of San Francisco School of Law. It was there that he met his wife, Marcia Waldorf. In 1975 the two moved to Honolulu, Hawaii and began practicing law. Robinson became a trial lawyer and Waldorf eventually became a Circuit Court judge.   

Upon retiring in 2010, Robinson completed his first novel, Unplayable Lie. He has since published eight more novels. 

Website: www.davidmylesrobinson.com    

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

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

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/davidmylesrobinson

 

 


Welcome to My Bookish Pleasures! Can you tell us how you got started writing fiction?

I wrote my first short story in seventh grade and have been hooked on writing since. During my college years I wrote a lot of short stories and portions of novels, but when I became a trial attorney my fiction writing was put on hold for thirty-eight years until I was about to retire, which is when I wrote and then published my first novel (Unplayable Lie, a golf-related suspense novel).

Describe your writing process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When and where do you write?

I begin with a vague idea and then begin writing. So, seat of the pants would most describe it. Writing suspense and mystery novels, it is not unusual for me to write myself into a corner and be forced to retreat. I write in my home office and when I am immersed in a particular project, I can write most of the day. I love it. But I am not so disciplined that I force myself to write when I’m not working on something specific.

Can you tell us about your most recent release, Tropical Scandal?

Pancho McMartin, the protagonist in all of my Tropical series legal thrillers, is the leading criminal defense attorney in Honolulu. When he is asked by an aging and alcoholic trial attorney of whom Pancho had always admired to take on a murder case, Pancho, and his best friend and private investigator, Drew Tulafono, begin to uncover a bizarre and unbelievable scenario that is bound to be the biggest scandal ever to hit Hawaii’s judiciary.

How did you get the idea for the book?

Like all of my Pancho McMartin legal thrillers, of which Tropical Scandal is the fifth, it was inspired (as opposed to based upon) by true events in Hawaii. In the case of Tropical Scandal, the inspiration was a truly bizarre series of events which shook the judicial and law enforcement world in Honolulu

Of all your characters, which one is your favorite? Why?

Pancho McMartin, the protagonist, is my favorite character. He is smart and witty and loves the challenge of trial. Since my retirement from the law in Hawaii, I moved to Taos, New Mexico and so when I began writing the Pancho McMartin series I had him having been born in Taos to a pair of original hippies who lived on a commune. His parents claimed that they named him Pancho so that he would fit in better in the mostly Hispanic schools. Pancho, however, believes that his parents dropped acid to celebrate his birth and named him while stoned.

What was the most challenging aspect of writing your book?

In any suspense or mystery novel, the most challenging thing is to build the suspense and maintain the mystery for as long as possible. In legal thrillers, at some point during or before trial, the mystery usually becomes clear, so at that point the challenge is to maintain the readers’ interest by showing how Pancho will win the case and clear his client.

What projects are you currently working on?

I am contemplating turning one of my prior stand-alone novels, Son of Saigon, into a screenplay.

What advice would you offer to new or aspiring fiction authors? Just write and keep on writing. Very, very few novelists get rich, or even make a living, writing novels, so if you’re not writing for the love of writing there’s not much point to it.

 

 

Title: Tropical Scandal
Author: David Myles Robinson
Publisher: Bluewater Press, LLC
Pages: 291
Genre: Legal Thriller/Suspense/Mystery

When Pancho McMartin, Honolulu’s top criminal defense attorney, takes on the case of Dayton Kalama, a young drug dealer accused of murdering his grandmother (tutu), Pancho is faced with a daunting amount of evidence pointing squarely at Dayton. But as Pancho, together with his private investigator, Drew Tulafono, gradually pull back the layers of deceit, they begin to uncover hints at what is beginning to look like the biggest scandal ever to hit Hawaii’s legal community. This book is pure fiction, but is inspired by true, scandalous events which shook Honolulu’s legal community to its core. 

Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/3p8vwcvf



Monday, September 4, 2023

đŸ“–Authors To Watch: Avery Sterling, Author of PRECIOUS BURDENS #authorstowatch #interview

 

 



Avery Sterling’s love for the romance genre began in her teen years when she picked up her first novel. She was captivated by the sweeping scale of emotions brought about by the words. The experience catapulted her towards learning the art of wielding a breathtaking adventure, with a love that felt authentic. Wanting to inspire people with her own thoughts and words, she finished her first novel at sixteen. It was a step towards understanding the essence of what she wished to create. 

Most of her youth was spent traveling, searching out the romance and beauty in her everchanging world. From the waves that crashed against the rocky shores of Downeast, Maine, to the warm breezes of the Caribbean, she discovered that love was universal, apparent in its grandest and simplest of forms. Her goal is to write novels an audience can relate to, one that conveys the truth and nature of love…with all the steamy romance. 

Website: http://www.avery-sterling.com  

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/averysterling17  

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/avery.sterling.125?eav=AfaEN0SdTOOmVInfsysAoPRLYUanLZ1olr4QWTIjYzwm85tfJ7Ij6rQhS1Qf5oXnK7k&paipv=0&_rdr   

Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/Avery.Sterling17

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19674760.Avery_Sterling   

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/avery-sterling

 

 


Welcome to My Bookish Pleasures! Can you tell us how you got started writing fiction?

I was heavily into historical romances when I was a teenager. I admired authors for the stories they told, and their ability to wield so much emotion. When I was about sixteen, I was having coffee with my dad, and telling him about my latest read. I was a little disappointed at how the story was unfolding. My dad—who probably wasn’t a big romance novel buff—listened, then asked me how I’d change it. I told him what I thought should happen, and he nodded. He said that it sounded like a good idea, then he continued sipping his coffee. That was when it struck me—I wanted to write my own book! It was at that moment, I realized I had a true passion for something. He agreed, and even added that I could get published, one day. At sixteen, I held little interest in publishing anything. I just wanted to tell a story. But I never forgot that conversation. 

Describe your writing process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When and where do you write?

I often write in my den because it’s lined with windows, which allows me to daydream. Admittedly, I have no plan when I begin writing. The process starts with a flash, or a spark. It might be one scene, some sort of action, an image of the characters, etc. Most importantly, I want to translate the emotion that was created in me. I weave the rest of the story using those initial sparks. When I finish my first draft, I wait a few days before I look at it again. I need fresh eyes when the hard work begins. Now, having the shell of my story, I start creating a solid foundation for it to stand on. During my revisions, I peel back the layers of all the characters and their backstories. I start asking all the questions. Why did they do that? Why would they say that? How are they acting/reacting? What drives them? etc. The characters start to come alive. I can connect with them on a deeper level, and get a better understanding of the world in which they dwell. When the story starts to align with the emotions initially inspired, I know I’m getting closer to completing my characters’ journey.   

Can you tell us about your most recent release?

My most recent release, Precious Burdens, was one of the first stories I had ever written. It’s special to me because over the years, it's grown and transformed more than any other. What started as a fun, fiery love story, became something much deeper. Nye and Sarafina have more than just a passionate connection, they’re two souls aching for one another. Many obstacles threaten their love, and so many fears… questions of redemption and worthiness.

How did you get the idea for the book?

U2’s With or Without You was playing on the radio, and a flash of both characters came to me. I saw the hero standing by the railing of his ship, watching the heroine in a long boat. She was leaving him, and for whatever reason, he couldn’t ask her to stay. As the distance grew between them, they watched each other, their longing was painfully clear. Without a thought of her own safety, the heroine plunged into the water and tried swimming back. When he saw her jump in the ocean, he smiled, and jumped in after her. It raised so many questions within me. I was captivated by these two characters. The more I listened to the song, the more I saw these two together, in brief flashes. Finally, I put U2’s song on repeat, and began writing.  

Of all your characters, which one is your favorite? Why?

I can’t say I have a favorite character, they’re all unique and dear to me. 

What was the most challenging aspect of writing your book?

The most challenging aspect for Precious Burdens was Nye’s torment and stubbornness. It was difficult to go forth with some of his decisions. It was tempting to tap some keys and “fix” everything—at least for Sarafina’s sake!  

What projects are you currently working on?

I’m currently writing a novel based in Ireland, about a pagan about to be hanged for witchcraft when she’s rescued by the new lord of her ancestral home.

What advice would you offer to new or aspiring fiction authors?

Be inspired, but don’t compare yourself to others, whether by skill or their perceived success. The journey is unique for each writer. You’ll carve out your own path, and you’ll do so in your own way.

 

 

Title: Precious Burdens
Author: Avery Sterling
Publisher: The Wild Rose Press
Pages: 324
Genre: Historical Romance

Sarafina di Ramonicci sets sail for America as the promised bride in an arranged political marriage.       

Taken prisoner at sea, she clashes with her captor and demands freedom, only to discover he is planning her future husband’s demise, with her as a pawn in their deadly feud. The challenge of escape tests her loyalty to family, human decency, and love.  

Captain Nye Tarquin is a dangerous man. Left to die on the streets of New Orleans, he swears retribution on the man responsible. When he makes Sarafina part of his plan, he isn’t prepared for the fiery vixen aboard his ship, nor his desire to claim her as his own. When passion overtakes honor, he’s torn between his heart and his need for justice.  

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Precious-Burdens-Avery-Sterling-ebook/dp/B0C8VHNH3V  

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/precious-burdens-avery-sterling/1143685468?ean=2940160809335




Sunday, August 27, 2023

đŸ“–Authors To Watch: Stella Atrium, Author of HOME RULE: BOOK III OF THE TRIBAL WARS #authorstowatch #interview

 

 



Stella Atrium is writing The Tribal Wars series. The first trilogy is available as ebooks and in print. BookLife has awarded the Editor’s Pick designation for each book upon its release.    

Home Rule rounds out the first trilogy and received first place in the 2023 Artisan Book Review Awards for Science Fiction and Fantasy.     

Book 4 titled Tribal Logic is scheduled for release in early 2024. Also be certain to pick up Atrium’s standalone novel Seven Beyond that won a 2014 Reader’s Favorites award in science fiction.   

Website: https://stellaatrium.com   

Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/SAtriumWrites 

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

 


Can you tell us how you got started writing science fiction?

Thinking back… I remember that I wanted to expand roles for women where they drive the plot and have tools to succeed. What better realms than magic on other planets where the roles for women are not structured by institutions like marriage or teaching or politics.


Describe your writing process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When and where do you write?

Since the narrative is carried by more than one narrator, I have charts for who is on which planet at any time in the plot, and other charts for who is speaking and present in the scene. I’m a list maker, so I find many opportunities to procrastinate. 

I write in the mornings before the phone demands my attention. I like to review the current scene, write in the character’s voice, and leave something left to write tomorrow so I have energy to start again the next day.  These habits are hard-won over decades of experimenting what works to shut out distractions. 


Can you tell us about your most recent release, Home Rule: Book III of The Tribal Wars Series?

I’m so glad you asked. Reader response has been great. Amazon readers have stated that the first two books work well, but HOME RULE in exceptional in that it ties up the story threads with a big event at the end that changes the world for all characters.
 

How did you get the idea for the whole series?

Although placed on another planet, the tribes bind together into a society where everybody votes. Individuals make big sacrifices in the struggle for unity amidst diversity. Scenes may resemble what we see on TV news segments for the Arab Spring (decades ago now), for protests in the Middle East or in India or in Asia, anywhere that voices are raised for more representation in governance.


Of all your characters, which one is your favorite? Why?

In HOME RULE Hershel Henry drives the story. He’s a photojournalist from Earth who witnesses big changes in tribal leadership. Reviewers have called him an ‘intrepid reporter’ and feckless for taking responsibility for the consequences of his actions. 

Overall of course, Brianna Miller is the protagonist. She is mixed blood and educated by different factions, even jumping back to Earth for a decade. She can see the motives of one group or another, working to negotiate a peace treaty. 

What was the most challenging aspect of writing your book?

Currently, the most challenging aspect is promoting three books together. HOME RULE includes the big ending and can be read as a stand-alone novel. THE BUSH CLINIC starts off our adventure, and THE BODY POLITIC serves to increase jeopardy for favorite characters and pressure on the tribes. 

As a writer, I’m in an unusual place in that the next novels (Books 4 and 5) are completed and in production. I have to think back for choices made for characters in the earlier books to ensure continuity. 

What projects are you currently working on?

Book 4 in the series titled TRIBAL LOGIC is in production. I recently re-edited sections of books 5 and 6. I have to keep the timelines straight and the ages of characters as they mature into adult roles. One character named Stuben, who is introduced in HOME RULE, sort of carries the narrative for later events while we see him find his place in the world.  But, that’s for later. 

What advice would you offer to new or aspiring fiction authors?

The world of publishing remakes itself every 18 months, it seems. Advice for writers that worked 3 years ago may not apply, or be useful in your genre. 

And now we have change-ups in Amazon, Meta, and Twitter for how they allow self-published writers to advertise. I find it’s best to work close to home with the writer website and with promotion partners who I can trust for book tours. 

For the writing, uh well… Writers must find lifelong themes that become signatures for what to expect from them for genre, characters, storyline, delighting the reader in specific ways – like using magic. 

Be bold! Be original! Allow the world to grow into your vision rather than reflecting what’s already written. Your voice is unique.

Stella Atrium

Website: https://stellaatrium.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SAtriumWrites

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

Reviews for HOME RULE:

Self-Publishing Review 

“a multi-world plot that is a testament to Atrium’s long-game draftsmanship”  @selfpubreview

“rich in detail at every turn, this is high sci-fi that will thrill anyone who loves imaginative stories populated with three-dimensional players”  -- @selfpubreview

https://www.selfpublishingreview.com/2023/05/home-rule-by-stella-atrium/

Artisan Book Reviews

First place winner in the 2023 @ArtisanReads Book Excellent Awards Contest for Science Fiction and Fantasy

An epic page-turner, Home Rule by Stella Atrium is a masterpiece of science fiction world-building and plotting. Terrific—a powerful, commanding, political, sci-fi with soul.

https://artisanbookreviews.com/2023/07/02/home-rule-by-stella-atrium-award-winner/

BookLife Editor’s Pick

“This superb third entry in Atrium’s Tribal Wars series showcases the author’s great strengths. Atrium populates these new realms with compelling, all-too-human characters, especially women and outsiders, trying to do the right thing despite the tangled mess of politics and power.

First-rate SF novel of revolution, oppression, and the urgent textures of life.

 

 

Title: Home Rule: Book 3 of The Tribal Wars
Author: Stella Atrium
Publisher: Stella Atrium Writes LLC
Pages: 458
Genre: Science Fiction

Sarafina di Ramonicc In book 3 of the award-winning series, photojournalist Hershel Henry witnesses the loss by self-torching of tribal women. The Madquii and Gora tribes have laid siege to the city of Urbyd, and Brianna Miller must seek a peace treaty.   

Kelly Osborn travels to Stargate Junction to set the wedding of ambassador Otieno. Hershel Henry opens a gazette to report on pending elections for home rule, but then shocking events upset their plans.  

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C44QT91N


 

Thursday, August 24, 2023

đŸ”¦In the Bookish Spotlight: Blood & Water by Linda Armstrong-Miller

 

Title: Blood & Water
Author: Linda Armstrong-Miller
Publisher: Dorrance Publishing
Pages: 266
Genre: Christian Thriller

Lisa Rivers is a genius with a photographic memory. She is the youngest, highest paid computer designer for the Department of Defense. Her program promises no more POWs and can be used domestically. No more missing children. So, how is it that Lisa is kidnapped? How was her identity discovered? Is she still alive and if so, can she be found before it is too late?

Amazon: https://tinyurl.com/35nwbkz3

Barnes & Noble: https://tinyurl.com/bdcu442x

Goodreads: https://tinyurl.com/tbn9suhe




Sunday morning, Sam Rivers and his son Zach ran from the parking lot to the entry of the emergency room. The run had only been a hundred yards but, with the guilt Sam carried, twenty extra pounds, and no sleep in the past twenty-four hours, he found himself panting and sweating as if he had just run a marathon.

He bent over, placed a hand on each knee for support. As he did, sweat joined in the center of his smooth, black forehead, ran down to a point, and dropped off his nose as he held his head first down then up, trying to catch his breath.

The few gray strands at his temple appeared to outshine the rest of his black hair. If this is what getting old is all about, Sam decided he didn’t want any part of it. He stood and wiped his face. The sweat made his skin look like dark shiny caramel.

Breathing less like an asthmatic old man, Sam led Zach through the door-way. Once inside, they felt lost and overwhelmed. They stopped, looked around for a familiar face then tried not to panic when they didn’t find one.

As Sam looked around, he continued to work on controlling his breathing and on the catch that had seized his right side.

There were two areas where they could seek help, triage and the information desk—both busy. Between the two areas was a door sporting a Staff Only sign. Sam thought about trying the door. Before he could, a young woman wearing baggy blue jeans and a sagging yellow T-shirt—Sam could only guess she was someone wanting to be seen but hadn’t—beat him to it.

The exasperated attendant of the information desk turned to her and asked, “Can’t you read?”

“I was just looking for the bathroom,” the lady with the yellow T-shirt said then sucked her teeth.

“That sign don’t say Bathroom.” He pointed down the hall to a sign that did.

With that, the attendant turned back to the young mother of two standing before the information desk. The lady with the yellow T-shirt turned from the door, flipped the attendant a bird then left through the doors Sam and Zach had just entered.

The waiting room was filled with mothers holding babies and with men and women reading magazines as they waited for one of the too-few rooms to become available. Sam and Zach felt like intruders as they walked through the waiting room trying to find a way back into the patient care area; unwilling to wait. On the way to the bathrooms, they passed a man holding his head down as if snoozing, a lady sitting next to him, trying to quiet her crying baby. He never looked up but she watched them suspiciously as they walked through.

After checking the phone and bathroom areas, Sam and Zach had no choice but to go back and wait for someone at either the triage area or information desk to become available. There were two nurses at triage. One, somewhere in her early twenties, was assisting an elderly white-haired lady—who was not making her job easy. For some reason, the lady kept trying to pull her blouse up and show the nurse something underneath. Each time she did, the woman exposed her undergarment. The nurse noticed Sam, smiled then looked back at the elderly lady.

The other nurse, mid-thirties, maybe older, was with a young mother who was holding a runny-nosed little boy. He squirmed, trying to get down. When he didn’t get what he wanted, he screamed for all to hear, “Let go!”

More focused and quicker than the younger nurse, the older nurse finished with the mother who couldn’t control her child then moved on to yet another mother and child combo. When done, she turned to Sam and Zach.

“Sir, may I help you?” she asked.

Her name was Tish, no last name, just Tish. She was light skinned with sandy brown hair, which was pulled tightly into a ponytail. Tish was heavy-set with a pretty face but, for some reason, she seemed unwilling or unable to smile. She looked tired, although it was only 0800.

Tish looked at Sam through the open glass partition which separated them as he approached. “Yes, I’m Detective Rivers. My daughter was just brought in by helicopter.” Sam who was tired and had pain in both his knees and his legs also found it hard to smile at 0800.

The pain in his knees and legs were the least of the pain he felt, the pain that encompassed his heart threatened to encompass the rest of him. He felt all of the fifty-three years that made up his life catching up with him. At least he was no longer panting. He was thankful for that.

“Sir, let me get the patient representative. She’ll be able to…”

“I don’t want the patient representative.” Sam walked away from Zach, meaning for him to stay where he was, and approached the door. Zach followed anyway. "I want to see my daughter, Lisa Rivers. I know she's here?"

Sam looked through the open door into the hallway located behind triage. He wondered where Special Agent Frank Millwood was. Sam couldn’t help feeling angry at Frank. He knew they were coming. Where was he? Why hadn’t he made arrangements for them to be taken straight back upon their arrival?

“Sir, at the moment—” Tish started again.

“There was an FBI agent that came in with my daughter, Agent Millwood.

Where is he?” Sam interrupted her again.

“Detective Rivers, Zach, over here.” They turned and saw Millwood standing in the hallway, at the end of the waiting room. The sight of him immediately made Sam forget he had been angry at him. In fact, he was glad to see him. According to Frank’s partner, Sam couldn’t ask for anyone better to protect Lisa. That kind of praise from one lawman about another was gold.

Saturday night, when Frank was called in, before Lisa’s rescue had gone down, Frank had been dressed in a nice coat and tie. Sam marveled that all he had to show for the day’s wear and tear was a little dirt. As far as Sam was concerned, that made him a lucky man.

Frank had thick curly brown hair with even thicker and curlier eyelashes, the kind that women envied. He had perfect white teeth that flashed easily.

Sam found him easy to like and trust—something he rarely found, especially the first time he met someone.

Millwood was a second-generation FBI agent, joining the agency because it was expected of him. If Millwood was feeling the pressure of walking in his father’s footsteps, it didn’t show.

“Thank God,” Sam said leaving Tish and triage.

Millwood waved at Tish, indicating that Sam and Zach were friends, not foes. This didn’t seem to impress Tish one way or the other, but she said nothing more, allowing the two to pass.

As Sam and Zach walked with Millwood, it appeared that he was either already familiar with this emergency room or he’d done a lot of investigating since arriving. He led them down a long hallway that had no patient examination rooms, just closed doors.

They went about halfway down that hall and turned to the right, which placed them in an area that did have examination rooms. They passed the mother with the runny-nosed little boy. She was chasing him in the hallway while other patients watched her. Some were laughing at her and encouraging the little boy to run faster.

Millwood caught the kid and held him for his mother. He then flashed a look at a young, white male of about twenty-two, sporting tattoos of horned serpents all over his right arm. The look said, I dare you to say another word.

When the mother had her son in the room again, Millwood pulled the door shut and the three of them continued.

They made a left onto another hall and Millwood led Sam and Zach to room 104, where all else ceased to exist for Sam. The door to the room was open and no one in the room seemed to realize visitors were standing outside looking in. Sam and Zach watched the flurry of activity centered on a stretcher that sat in the center of the room.

Lisa laid on that stretcher, attached to three IVs—one in each arm, and another one with four tails extending from it, protruded from her neck. Two one-liter bags, which were almost empty, hung from an IV pole; their fluids ran into Lisa’s veins. A small bag with the word Dopamine and the life saving liquid from two units of blood were also running into Lisa’s bruised and battered body.

As if that weren’t enough, she also had wires running from her small chest to a cardiac monitor mounted to the wall. Other wires ran from her chest and back to another monitor that sat on a red cart. Without being told, Sam and Zach knew what all the activity was about. Lisa had gone into cardiac arrest and now she was being resuscitated. She had coded.


 

Linda Armstrong-Miller has worked in the medical field for over twenty years. In that time she has worked as a counselor, registered nurse in the emergency room, ICU, Recovery Room, and she has worked with children placed in psychiatric hospitals. She understands when a family is in crisis and she has been with them during their time of distress, depression, anxiety and difficulty. She believes in God and uses her belief as well as her experience when writing. Blood and Water is her second book published. Touched is her first book. Currently she is working on a young adult trilogy.

Website: lindaarmstrongmillerauthor.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/lindaam1 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100039732613292