Friday, July 7, 2017

Christmas in July: I Need Christmas

I Need Christmas,
An Oakville Family Christmas
by Carol Ann Kauffman 

After a depressing year of sadness, loneliness, and self-doubt, successful civil engineer and former All-American basketball star Elizabeth (Betsy) Curry returns home to Oakville, Ohio, for the Christmas holidays a depressed and broken women. Reeling from her bitter divorce from the handsome, charming, but morally decrepate Tommy DeMalio, her college sweetheart and first big love, who left her after two years of what she thought was a good marriage for a stripper he met at an office bachelor party for her co-worker, Betsy feels lost and empty. Not exactly anticipating the happy holiday with her family and their multitude of joyful Christmas customs and long-time storybook-like traditions, she knows she needs them in order to heal.
Once comfortable at home and feeling somewhat better about herself, Tommy shows up and claims he wants a reconciliation, throwing back into the destructive cycle of doubt, hostility, and suspision she is trying so hard to escape.
She discovers her father has set her up with his protégé at work, the tall, handsome, athletic red-haired Patrick, who, try as hard as she can, she can’t find a single thing she doesn’t like about him.
So, what’s the problem? Betsy feels it’s too soon for her to love again. How can she love anyone again when she doesn’t like herself or what she’s become since the break-up. Also, she fears she will hurt the sweet, gentle Patrick.
Will the love, joy, and goodwill of the holiday season be strong enough to lift Betsy out of her self-induced prison so that she can like herself enough to take another chance on love again? 

  

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Christmas in July: Christmas at Star Lake



Excerpt:

Christmas at Star Lake
By Carol Ann Kauffman


Office Call

“Yes, Brittany,” Madison answered the office intercom phone. “Is Kyle here?”
“Ah, no, Ms. Rand, Detective Carlucci’s here to see you,” Brittany announced.
“Oh, no, Brit,” whispered Madison. “Carlucci never brings good news. There goes my good mood, my holiday spirit, and in all probability, my lunch date with Kyle,” she sighed, looking at her watch. “Let him in,” she groaned.
“Ms. Rand will see you now,” Brittany said to the policeman.
Silver Maples’ finest detective in more ways than one, Anthony Carlucci, sauntered into Madison’s office and stared at her.
“Merry Christmas, Detective Carlucci. What a pleasant surprise. And how did my little systems analysis business offend Silver Maple’s Finest this cold December morning right before Christmas?”
“Ahh, Madison, don’t be like that. Although Rand in Cleveland, Chicago, and Philadelphia is what you say it is, we all know damn well this little systems analysis business is a front for the biggest and the best hometown protect-the-innocent-and-help-the-helpless operation in the country. You thumb your nose at the establishment and make the police department look inefficient on a daily basis and the citizens of Silver Maple love you for it, at least the law-biding ones. Remember, me and Rand, we go way back. And it’s always a pleasure to come and visit and just look around.”
“Thank you, I think. Coffee?”
“Sure.” He sat down, stretched out his long legs, and got comfortable.
“Brittany, Detective Heart-throb Carlucci’s in the mood for some coffee to go with his late morning chat,” she called out. “Now, what’s on your mind, Detective? Christmas is almost here and I’m a busy woman.”
“Madison, new evidence has come to light from the state coroner’s office. You’re in over your head, kid. Do you still own this building? Without Hawk, Pops, and Thor, you’ve got nobody to protect you. You’re pissing people off left and right. I think you should sell. Get out of New York. Go somewhere nice and warm. Open up a little dress shop in Florida.”
Brittany came in with his coffee, sat it down, winked at him, and strutted out.
Carlucci watched her until she was out of sight.
“Tony? Yo, Tony!” she called, shaking him back to the conversation. “What are you talking about? What new evidence?”
“Your big blonde guy, Thor? Real name Bob Turner.”
“Yes, what about Bob?”
“It wasn’t a heart attack. We have new evidence… he was killed.”
Madison stood up and backed away from Carlucci, leaning against the wall for support. “Bob… was killed? Murdered? Why? How? He didn’t have an enemy in the world. Who would want to kill Bob?”
“The lab report showed a highly toxic poison in his system. At the autopsy, the coroner did note a tiny pinprick on Bob’s shoulder. Someone delivered the poison by a pat on the shoulder. Fast-acting stuff. So, we gather, it happened while he was out jogging in the park that morning.”
“No,” whispered Madison in disbelief, then taking a moment to let it sunk in. “So Bob was murdered.” She walked to the window and looked out silently for a moment. “You know, I always doubted that heart attack theory,” she said. “He was as healthy as they come. Exercise freak. Vegan. Vitamin-popper. Knew all his numbers: cholesterol, blood pressure, blood sugar, hemoglobin, homocysteine, and sodium levels. Damn walking encyclopedia of health information one really didn’t care to know. Sometimes he was pure hell to have dinner with. But murdered? Who would want to kill Bob? And why?”
“Any one of the number of disgruntled thugs, bullies, and criminals that you’ve angered over the years. But, Madison, there’s more. Are you listening to me? Madison? Pops, too.”
“My dad? No, Tony, Dad had a stroke. In bed. In the middle of the night. At home.”
“No, kid. He was murdered.”
“Somebody murdered my father in our house? While I slept upstairs?” Madison sank into her chair.
“Yes.”
“But there was no sign of a break in.”
“I know. They were good.”
“How did they get passed our security system?”
“I don’t know. They were good.”
“So somebody killed Bob and my dad last December and you just now figured it out? The same way? Two tiny pinpricks didn’t send up a red flag? What’s the matter with you guys? Are you all blooming idiots?”
“There was no autopsy done on Pops, remember, so we don’t know if he had a pinprick. We’re only going on the tox reports. These things take time. The tox report on Bob Turner came in and got filed with the closed cases. The computer didn’t cough up the match with your father’s until yesterday when... Listen, you‘re all in danger, but especially your boyfriend, the toothpick from Cleveland. If someone’s targeting your muscle, then the toothpick is next to go down. Everybody knows who he is and where he works, and everybody knows he’s nuts about you. He’s a celebrity in town and he’s only been here, what, a year? The TV reporters follow him around just to see what he’ll do next.”
“Dad and Bob died last December. So… why are we in danger now?”
“A big order of this highly unusual substance has just hit the city.”
“You have a paper trail?”
“Well, no, we had a digital trail that… vanished.”
“So some crazy person out there only wants to kill my people at Christmas time? What’s the name of this substance? How much exactly is a big order? Where did it originate? Is there an antidote?”

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Interivew with Author Armand Rosamilia






 Armand Rosamilia 
Jacksonville FL


Good morning, Armand, and welcome to Vision and Verse, the Place for Art and Authors. Tell us a little about what you've written. 
Over 100 published stories. I’ve been writing full-time for six years and loving every minute of it. Truly living the dream. My latest is the crime thriller Dirty Deeds 3.

What is your favorite genre to write?
I just enjoy writing characters. I mostly wrote horror but always dabbled in crime thrillers, contemporary fiction, supernatural thrillers and whatever else I wanted to write.


Favorite food.
If my wife would let me rotate pizza
one night and then Chinese food the next for the rest of our lives I’d do it.

Tea or coffee?
I drink about 2 pots of coffee per day. Either Dunkin Donuts or Death Wish Coffee. I panic if there is less than 2 lbs. of coffee in the house and less than 3 bottles of flavored creamer.

Pizza or ice cream?
Pizza. I love sweets (mostly chocolate) but not a huge ice cream fan for some reason.

Wine or beer?
Social drinker of beer. Mostly microbrews if I have one. I go about four months between drinks so not really all that social about it.

Where would you like to visit?
Italy. It is a trip my wife and I want to do before we get too old to enjoy it properly. I’m half Italian and I’d love to see where my great grandparents came from.

Oh, Armand, go. Go now. Italy is fabulous. It's not just the breathtaking scenery and fantastic architecture, or the amazing food, it's the centuries of culture painstakingly cared for and loved, and the people. They know how to live! Favorite musical artist.  Do you listen to music when you write? 
If I had to pick just one artist it would be Billy Squier. I listen to a lot of different music while I’m writing. I can’t write if it is completely quiet. I need the noise.

What?
Mostly heavy metal from the 80’s. I like it loud. I don’t choose music based on what I’m writing because when I’m in the zone I never hear the music except as background noise.

What makes you laugh?
My wife laughing. I swore when we got married I’d make her laugh every day of our lives. So far, two years in, she’s still laughing. Mostly at the dumb things I say or do, but it counts, right?

Favorite work of art or sculpture.
I’m a huge Frank Frazetta fan. He did the original Conan covers. HR Geiger is also a favorite. I love science fiction and fantasy artwork.

How old were you when you started writing?
Twelve. I got hooked because of Dean Koontz books. I swore I’d someday be a full-time author. It only took me another 30 years to get there from that point.

Describe your perfect evening.
Takeout Chinese food and/or pizza. Cuddled up on the couch with my wife watching Catfish television episodes and then reading a good book before bed. I’m not someone who likes to go out a lot.

Where do you get your inspiration?
It’s all around me. Every conversation. Every mannerism of people I see. Stories people tell me. Everything can be part of a future story.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
I never do because I write multiple stories at the same time. I always have 4-5 open docs on my computer and I go between them all day. Whichever one I have an idea for.

Who is your favorite author? 
Dean Koontz was the first one to make me believe you could do this as a career. I still take inspiration from his work as well as the memories of being 12 and trying to figure out what I wanted to do with my life.

Best book you ever read.
Watership Down by Richard Adams. As a kid it blew me away, and it’s one of the only books I’ve read multiple times.

I love Watership Down. Fiver! Fiver! Last book you read.
Pay Up And Die by Chuck Buda. He has a great voice and I see great things from this new-ish author.

What would you do for a living if you weren’t a writer?
I’d still be stuck in retail management, slowly dying inside and wondering if I’d ever get out. It did give me some great characters and stories after twenty years, though.

Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?
My wife, Shelly. She got me focused when it came to looking at this as a career and not just a fun thing to do. She’s a commercial property manager and set me up with spreadsheets and schedules. She taught me the business side of writing.

If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why?
RE Howard, who created Conan and so many other great characters. I’d want to know how his mind worked with writing and being so prolific in such a short amount of time.

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?
Read. A lot. Not just in your genre, either. Read it all. I mostly read nonfiction now and it gives me fresh ideas. You can learn a lot by going completely outside of your comfort zone to see how other authors put together a compelling story.


Do you have some links for us to follow you?
You can find me all over social media.
Twitter: @ArmandAuthor

Armand Rosamilia, Author
Horror. Thrillers. Contemporary Fiction. Heavy Metal. Zombies.

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