Friday, October 4, 2013

Interview with Author Jake Bonsignore

 Jake Bonsignore
 Central Florida

Welcome to Vision and Verse, Jake.  We're happy to have you here with us this morning. What have you written?
 I am the author of Descendant of Strife (Fantasy, 2007), Empyreal Illusions (YA Fantasy / Thriller, 2013), Awakening the Fire (YA Fantasy / Thriller, 2013), and The Lioness (YA Romance, release pending).

I think the cover of Empyreal Illusions in the most beautiful cover I have ever seen.  I was taken with it the first time I saw it.  What is your favorite genre to write? 
My favorite genre to write is fantasy and thriller or anything with a fantasy-like feel or edge. Each of my stories / series takes place in different worlds I create to give the reader more of a literary escape.

Favorite food. 
It’s probably going to be chicken stew and rice for a real meal, and good ol’ chocolate chip cookies as a treat.

Where would you like to visit? 
I would love to visit Rome, Italy and Messina, Sicily.

I LOVED Rome.  I want to go to Sicily, too.  Let's get some authors together and charter a flight.  Favorite musical artist
Epica and Lunatica are my two favorite bands. They have both influenced my writing tremendously.

Do you listen to music when you write?  What? 
I write best when I’m listening to music. Usually I listen to anything from rock music and symphonic metal to a random mix of some really awesome Japanese anime songs. I’m not one for heavy mainstream music.

What makes you laugh?
Usually anything that’s really comical or involves Seth Rogen makes me laugh really, really hard, but there’s way too many things I find comical. I try not to take too much so seriously because life becomes way too stressful then.

How old were you when you started writing?
I started writing little stories since I was in kindergarten but I started writing seriously for novels since October 2002.

Where do you get your inspiration?
I get most of my inspiration from listening to music and trying to imagine some of them (or certain lyrics) as themes to scenes in my novel.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
I don’t stress it. Instead I go back and edit other parts that I’ve already written until I get more ideas on how to continue.

Who is your favorite author? 
Brandon Sanderson, Robert Jordan, Tad Williams … it’s probably a tie between those three. 

Best book you ever read. 
Dragon Weather by Lawrence Watt-Evans is my favorite novel because of the issues of justice and revenge it tackles and the heavy philosophical / moral thoughts it provokes.

Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why? 
The one person who has influence my personal life is my girlfriend. Certain things about our relationship and traits that she has I’ve incorporated into my YA 
 Romance, The Lioness. Plus she is my only beta reader.

If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why?
I would want to have a conversation with either Brandon Sanderson or Robert Jordan as they are both my favorite authors and I think it would be very inspirational.

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer? Writing is re-writing. Don’t be disheartened if drafting that first novel takes longer than you think or if other authors on social media sites highlight their achievements while you’re still writing your WIP. Writing is not a race. Writing is a part of you, so treat it the same way. Once you’ve finished your novel, too, be prepared to edit that story four to six times. It’s all part of the wonderful process.

________________________________
*** SOCIAL MEDIA CONNECTION ***
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/jakebonsignoreauthor
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/jakebonsignore
Blog: http://jakebonsignore.wordpress.com
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1438031
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/author/jakebonsignore
________________________________
*** PURCHASE LINKS HERE -  ***
Amazon - http://amzn.com/B00D18OUU4 (Empyreal Illusions)
Amazon - http://amzn.com/B00EU9SSLU  (Awakening the Fire)
Barnes and Noble - http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/empyreal-illusions-jake-bonsignore/1115427220?ean=2940016473031 (Empyreal Illusions)
Barnes and Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/awakening-the-fire-jake-bonsignore/1116257683?ean=2940148466024 (Awakening the Fire)
Signed Paperback (with Bookmark) – Contact Jake Bonsignore directly via Facebook or jakebonsignore.author@gmail.com

Thank you, Jake, for stopping by.  Empyreal Illusions is on my To Be Read list.  Come back when you release 'The Lioness."





















Thursday, October 3, 2013

Interview with Author Stacy Shofner Williams



Stacy Shofner Williams
Oklahoma, born and raised.


Welcome to Vision and Verse this morning, Stacy.  It's a pleasure to have you with us.  Now, tell me.
What have you written?
I've written a few short stories and ongoing cooperative stories with friends online, that was some of the most enjoyable writing I’ve ever done. Last year I published my first novel, Of Shadow and Ash, and am currently working on the sequel.

Cover?

What is your favorite genre to write?
I like writing fantasy because I get to create worlds and cultures and creatures that are of my invention; I get to bend rules and make up my own. Even so, I do my best to make them believable.

Favorite food.
I love a good pizza, and it seems that I’m always baking chocolate chip cookies.

Sounds good.  We'll be over.
Where would you like to visit?
The older I get the less I care to travel. But I wouldn’t mind though visiting the old house I grew up in outside of Anadarko, Oklahoma. I can imagine child versions of myself and my sisters still running around out there, playing and having our adventures. I have had vivid dreams of haunting the place.



Favorite musical artist.  Do you listen to music when you write?  What?
I would have to say Beethoven is my all-time favorite. His music has helped me through difficult times and inspired my artwork, and I find his life story to be quite moving. When I write, about the only time I'm not plugged into movie or game soundtracks is when it's raining and thundery outside. I often choose tracks that fit the mood of the scene I'm working on. For example, Bela Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (that unnerving music from The Shining), kept me pretty creeped out as I was building the climax towards the end of my novel. Lately I've been writing along to the epic music of Two Steps from Hell and Future World Music.

What makes you laugh?
My kids, they have a unique sense of humor.

Mmm.  I wonder where they get that?  How old were you when you started writing?
My sixth grade English teacher stressed writing overall and had her classes write a lot of poetry and stories. Two things I discovered that year were that I wasn't very good at poetry, and I loved writing stories.

Where do you get your inspiration?
I do a lot of reading. It's interesting to see the crafty ways other authors breathe life into scenes and the characters they create. Instrumental music. Living in the moment, observing the events going on around me, especially the little things, and the people I come in contact with. Nature will stir my muse; trees and birds, clouds and weather and the color of grass in the fields. More often than not, ideas and solutions will strike while my thoughts are nowhere near the project I'm working on, and then I'd better have a notepad on hand to write things down because I will forget it.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
I have an arsenal of strategies to deal with writer's block, as the same one will not work every time. Sometimes all I have to do is remember that every writer goes through this and if I wait it out I'll get through it. Or determine to plunge ahead and write badly, if that's all I can muster. Throughout my journey of writing my novel I kept a journal, jotting down my ups and downs, my discouragements and milestones. After publishing I went through it and saw how many times I almost quit, felt like throwing in the towel, doubted myself and felt that things were going nowhere and I was wasting my time. Now when I hit the wall I can look back and remind myself how glad I am that I kept going.

Excellent strategies, Stacy.  I'm a big believer in journaling for all kind of reasons  Who is your favorite author?
Pick one? Well, I tried. Ray Bradbury, Tolkien, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, C. S. Lewis.

I like them all, too!  Best book you ever read.
That's a tough one! If you'd asked for best read LATELY I would say Wool by Hugh Howey because of his ability to get into so many characters' heads and make you root for them and relate to them, and the story is so different and intriguing. But as the question is best book ever read, there are several that I've read the covers off of. I will just pick one and go with the classic To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.

I have not read Wool, but I'll put in on my TBR list. Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?
So many people have influenced me in different ways, it’s hard to come up with just one. My parents instilled in me a love of books and reading, and friends and family who offered a boost of confidence for pursuing my talents and dreams. I can't narrow it down to one person.

If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why?
The wizard Gandalf, because he's been around in Middle Earth for a long time and knows every corner of it and its history and all the different beings that inhabit it. He would have some wild and amazing tales to tell.

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?
Never give up! Keep writing and don’t lose sight of why you do it. Connect with other writers. Put your audience out of your head until you no longer feel them looking over your shoulder. Write for yourself, as though no one else will ever see it.

Links:
http://amzn.com/B009KZGVQS
www.facebook.com/StacyShofnerWilliams

Thank you for this opportunity to share with you and your readers!
It has been out pleasure. You are delightful.  We need more Beethoven-loving, chocolate chip cookie-baking, outstanding authors like you.  Please come back when you're ready to release the sequel to "Of Shadow and Ash."  We'll do a cover reveal for you
Thank you.  I will.
















Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Interview with Author Allison Butler

Allison Butler
Sydney NSW Australia.


Welcome, Allison, to Vision and Verse.  We are delighted to have you with us this morning all the way from Sydney, Australia.  What have you written?
I write Scottish historical romance set in the medieval era. The Border Laird's Bride was published by Destiny Romance in February 2013. I'm now writing my next Scottish medieval, but I've also just finished writing my very first short story. It has a Christmas theme and is set in Australia during World War 2.

The Border Laird's Bride is on my To Be Read list.  It sounds like my kind of story.  What is your favorite genre to write? 
I love writing Scottish historical romance.

Favorite food.
Everything:) I love food! But if I have to name just one thing it'd have to be Spaghetti Bolognese.

Where would you like to visit?
Scotland is heart-stirring and holds a forever fascination for me.  I'd love to go back. But I'd also like to visit Prague. I've heard it's beautiful.

Favorite musical artist.Do you listen to music when you write?  What?
I don't have a favorite musical artist, I have many. Queen, FUN, Pink, RunRig (a Scottish band), James Morrison, most 80's music, just to name a few. What music I listen to depends on what mood I'm in. And I do love to dance like no one's watching. As much as I love listening to music I can't when I'm writing. I need quiet so I can hear my characters.

What makes you laugh?
Lots of things make me laugh. I love humor and think it's such an important part of life. But I can't resist hearing a baby laughing. Or someone enjoying a genuine belly-laugh. The sound is contagious.

How old were you when you started writing? 
The idea to write popped into my head when I was about 34. I started dabbling then but started taking it more seriously 5 years later.

Where do you get your inspiration? 
Life. People fascinate me. I'm always wondering why they react in certain ways or do certain things. My characters fascinate me, too.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
For me, writers block usually means I've taken a wrong turn somewhere in the story. I go back to the last decision a character made and often find it wasn't the right decision for that character. I change it and most times find the story flows again.

Who is your favorite author?
Marsha Canham. I love her voice.

Best book you ever read.
Too hard to name only one. Anything written by Marsha Canham. The Heiress by Jude Deveraux. These Hallowed Hills by Ana Leigh. I'll stop now:)

Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?
My Scottish husband truly is my hero. He is so grounded and fair and generous. He keeps life real and happy and keeps me honest. He amazes me.

If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why?
I really struggled with this question. I thought it should be some Scottish historical figure to fit in with my love of Scotland and its history. But then I realized I was looking in the wrong place. If I could sit down and have a conversation with one person I would choose my Mum. Sadly she passed away twenty-one years ago. I miss her and we'd have so many things to chat about and catch up on. I'd also thank her for passing on her love of words to me.

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?
Don't give up! Learn. Write. Love the learning but most of all love the writing and have fun.

Thank you so much for having me, Vision and Verse.
It was our pleasure to have you here, Allison. Thank you for the lovely interview and glimpse into the world of Scottish historical romance.  Best of luck to you in all you do, Allison, and come back to see us when the new book comes out. 

Links?
My contact links are -

Website -  www.allison-butler.com

Facebook - Facebook Allison Butler-Author

Twitter - @AllisonButler17

Amazon - http://www.amazon.com/Border-Lairds-Bride-ebook/dp/B00BEBSN6C/ref=sr_1_7?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1360630063&sr=1-7&keywords=allison+butler

iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/au/book/border-lairds-bride/id602053527?mt=11

Publisher - http://www.destinyromance.com/products/9781743480731/border-laird-s-bride



Tuesday, October 1, 2013

An Interview with Author Rosemary Johns

 Rosemary Johns
Oxfordshire


Good morning, Rosemary!  It is our pleasure to have you here from beautiful Oxfordshire this morning.  Welcome to Vision and Verse.  Welcome to the US.  Now, tell me,what have you written?
I’ve just finished the final draft of my current novel All Good American Boys. It’s contemporary fiction with historical elements, set in Virginia and Hungary.
A grieving Englishwoman flees to Virginia but when two brothers from one powerful Hungarian immigrant family fall dangerously in love with her, she must face the secrets of their past, as well as her own.
Like a set of Russian nesting dolls the story offers different perspectives on the same lives.
The Hungarian Revolution is the catalyst. It was an amazing, courageous, brutal and unique event. It was brief but changed Budapest and its people forever. With the uprisings occurring around the world today it has resonance.
The experience of being an ‘outsider’ in a community fascinates me: my main English character Elizabeth assumes this role when she visits America. The Suslov family who have fled the Hungarian Revolution struggle to create their version of the ‘American Dream’. Immigration, assimilation and identity are of current relevance. They’re at the core of the loves, rivalries and ambitions throughout the book.

I’m researching for a second novel set on the edges of the Amazonian rainforest.
I also write plays and short stories. I have excerpts and short stories on my Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/RosemaryAnnJohns
My twitter is https://twitter.com/RosemaryAJohns
My favorite play was Breaking Ice, which was a winner of a writing competition judged by the Royal Court Theatre and the BBC.
When a young man saves the daughter of a famous actress from a lake in a winter park, they find their very different lives are suddenly brought together.


Sounds fascinating.  I can't wait.  What is your favorite genre to write?
I love twentieth century historical and contemporary fiction. There’s something about the exploration of the past and its shadow over the present. I studied history at Oxford University so the research side is fun for me. It’s often a single photograph that can have the greatest impact.

Favorite food.
Italian- our Honeymoon was to Rome, also my favorite City (at least for romance) and the food there was the best I’ve ever eaten. Every anniversary we eat Italian and it takes me straight back to the beauty of Rome.

Where would you like to visit?
So many places! I’d love to take a road trip around America. The Amazon as I research it is blowing me away. Nature, people, culture, woven together by a past that can leave Catholic temples in the middle of rainforests.

Favorite musical artist.  Do you listen to music when you write?  What?
I find that creative people are often creative across the arts disciplines. I go into a bubble when I listen to music, similar to the one I go into when I write. I like different types of music for different moods. But my favorite has always been American alternative rock. EELS are incredible. Beautiful Freak is an understated masterpiece. When I was a child I had a haunting music box that played TCHAIKVSKY’s Swan Lake. I was mesmerized by it. It’s still my favorite ballet.
I can’t, however, listen to anything when I’m writing my first draft. I need total silence. I go into a ‘zone’. The second draft is typing up for me because I write the first one by hand. On this one I listen to music, something really energized to keep me going, like NIRVANA.


What makes you laugh?
Laughter is so important. Every evening I try and watch something that makes me laugh. I used to write some comedy, so I know how difficult it is although those who are best at it make it look easy. Curb your Enthusiasm is the gold standard of comedy. LARRY DAVID makes social awkwardness into an art form. Genius.

How old were you when you started writing?
First stories and book attempts when I was eight (a naval tale in the nineteenth century) then throughout my teenage years. But seriously when I went to university and set up a theatre company. Before this I had also been involved in a range of ways with different theatre companies. I think it’s the best apprenticeship a writer can have. Stagehand, front of house, director, actor – when you know about the mechanics of plays from all different angles you can understand them far better. In the same way, writing plays and being involved in theatre, has helped in writing novels. Structure, psychology of characters, point of view, dialogue – just to mention a few. I took a short break from writing whilst my son was young because he has autism. Now he’s older I’m writing again.

                                                                                    Where do you get your inspiration?
The world…I have a writer’s ideas book where I write down sometimes whole concepts, sometimes a single line of dialogue. I may not use an idea for five years and then the right project has come along for it, sparking it to life. Often other mediums inspire me – ballet, opera, rap, art, movies – just a passing line, image or the feel behind a scene.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
So far- touch wood- it hasn’t happened. I start each day I’m writing by re-reading the section I’ve written before and this seems to kick start me back in.
I do some art photography as a hobby and I think it helps having other creative outlets. My latest set of photographs was entitled Spectacular Light. They’re an exploration of beauty and colour in abstract, as well as ideas of infinity, exploration and space. They’re on https://facebook.com/RosemaryAnnJohns


Who is your favorite author?
The Russian novelist FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY.
I came to his novels, particularly Crime and Punishment when I was a teenager and they had a profound effect. Rereading them as an adult they hit me in different ways. He has a unique voice. A way of taking you right into the mind and soul of the protagonist.
He showed me as a writer what it is to be morally complex and conflicted. To sympathize with characters who are on the surface unsympathetic because the point of view is so close.
The great strength running through his novels is the emphasis on family and family ties. What binds people. Society, religion, or family. The dialogue is wonderful, with a dark humor.
His books started my love for Russian and European literature.

Best book you ever read.
My favorite book is The Master and Margarita by MIKHAIL BULGAKOV.
The devil appears one day in the streets of Moscow, accompanied by a huge black cat and what follows is a tour de force of political and social satire. It’s funny, reads as a surreal fantasy, is wildly imaginative and you can imagine it being true if it were to happen today in London…
It was BULGAKOV’s last novel and was finished in 1938 at the height of Stalin’s purges. It wasn’t published in Russia until 1966.


Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?
My son. When you have disability in your life it changes your whole perspective on the world. Social justice and the impact we have on each other as humans, across generations, across continents has come through as a connecting theme in my writing because of my son. It’s a powerful idea. It’s the concept behind the uprisings that are currently sweeping the globe. And that have periodically throughout history. But in small ways every day each one of us faces the same choices and decisions. We’re all part of families, communities and society.


If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why?
When I was about eight I injured my foot and was unable to walk for a number of months. My parents owned an antique collection of DICKENS and I read every book, cover to cover. For this reason I’d like to have a conversation, over a good dinner, with DICKENS. I like his humor, his vivid characters and the worlds he pulls you into. The Pickwick Papers is one of my favorite novels. But he was also a social critic, campaigning for and highlighting in his novels, the needs of the poor, children’s education and reforms. I’d be interested in how he married the two. Oliver Twist is a good example. He remained always a man of his time, weaving in events happening around him, people he met, social problems and realities. He saw the novel as a reflection of reality, not to be rose-tinted or pure entertainment (although they are endlessly entertaining) but also as having a moral purpose too. It would be an interesting conversation!

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?
Read…anything and everything. Not just in your genre or your form. Read plays, poetry, YA, science fiction…then write a little of everything until you’re sure of your own voice, the right genre and where you want to position yourself. Sometimes people are surprised to find they’re really a short story writer when they thought they were a poet or a poet when they thought they were going to be a novelist…diving in too fast can be a problem. Finding your voice- and having a strong and unique voice- is the most important thing. If you can’t identify it in other people’s works first then it’s much harder to develop your own. But if you want to do it, be confident in yourself!

Links?
FACEBOOK: https://facebook.com/RosemaryAnnJohns
Twitter: https://twitter.com/RosemaryAJohns















Monday, September 30, 2013


Charming Deception
By
Carol Ann Kauffman
September 2, 2012


Episode One   Confusion

    Okay, where the hell am I?  She opened her eyes and didn't recognize her dimly lit surroundings.  She looked out the window.
It was still dark outside, very cloudy, not a star in the sky.  She was lying in bed.  Naked.  And judging from the smell of the lavender scent on the perfectly ironed, high thread-count sheets and pillowcases, she was either in a very high-end luxury hotel or in one of Martha Stewart's guest rooms.  A snore interrupted her thoughts.  She glanced over at the noisy lump lying beside her.  Nope.  Didn't recognize him.
    There's a very strong possibility, she said to herself, that I've been teleported back to the free-loving sixties.  She got up to go to the bathroom.  A glint of gold caught her eye from the ring finger of her left hand.  I'm married?  Oh, shit!  When did THIS happen?  This isn't the sixties!  This must be Vegas, Baby!  She crept quietly into the bathroom, closed the door, and snapped on the light.  Definitely a hotel.  Antiseptic.  Martha Stewart's guest bathroom would have scented candles and a sense of style, hospitality, and luxury.  And not so much white.  White walls, white floor, white towels, white shower curtain.  A rather bizarre-looking attachment on the faucet, and another one on the showerhead.  She looked in the mirror.
    Yikes!  Well, I give that bony lump sleeping beside me credit for marrying me when I look so bad!  Good Grief!  HE must be a total loser!  She examined her dull, spotty complexion, wild Einstein hair, and the bags under her eyes.  She rehearsed her speech to Bony Lump.
    "Hey! Bozo! Whatever happened between us, it was just some bizarre mistake.  Gather your things and get the hell out of here!  I'll contact my lawyer to annul this fiasco as soon as I get home.  Now go!"  Then she would point to the door for dramatic effect.
    As soon as I get home.  Home?  Where was home?  She couldn't remember.  She looked back at her reflection in the mirror.  She couldn't remember where she lived, or how she got here. She couldn't remember where she worked, or what she drove.  
    Hmmm. did Bony Lump drug me?  Did he drug me, take advantage of me, and then, MARRY me?  No, no, why would he do that?  That makes absolutely no sense.  She wiggled the gold ring with a very decent-sized brilliant cut diamond in the center.  Weighty.  Expensive.  Good fit.  And… slightly familiar.  She thought it was very beautiful.  Oh, look, a tan line!  Now, how can that be?  This has to be a dream.  She snapped off the light and crept silently back into bed and sighed.  The sooner I go back to sleep, the sooner I’ll wake up, and this bad dream will be over.  Bony Lump rolled over and pulled her to him gently, hugging her, patting her shoulder.
    "It was just a nightmare, Love.  I'm right here.  You're safe," he whispered sweetly in a sleepy voice.  "Go back to sleep.  I’ll protect you.  Always."  He kissed her head gently.  He had a wonderful voice.  British accent.  Kind.  Reassuring.  Gentle. Very touching.  And so she did.  She fell asleep in his arms, with her hand on his chest.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

This Week on Vision and Verse, Sept. 30 - Oct. 5


Monday, Sept. 30              Cover Reveal for Tasha Gwartney's BEAUTIFUL NOISE

Tuesday, Oct. 1                 Interview with Author Rosemary Johns

Wednesday, Oct. 2            Interview with Author Allison Butler

Thursday, Oct. 3               Interview with Author Stacy Shofner

Friday, Oct. 4                    Interview with Author Jake Bonsignore

Sat., Oct. 5                        Excerpt from BLUE LAKE by Carol Ann Kauffman