Friday, May 24, 2019

BOOK: Christmas at Star Lake by Carol Ann Kauffman


Madison Rand runs Rand Solutions, an unusual and very helpful agency in the beautiful town of Silver Maple, New York. The police inform her that her highly qualified, specialized employees are targeted by a professional killer and are being picked off, one by one. To save their lives, she closes down her business, sends them all away, and retreats to a friend’s cabin at Star Lake to figure out who is after them and why. 

But danger follows her to the cabin in the woods at Star Lake, where an old ghost from her past reappears on Christmas Eve, hellbent on revenge, and the madman tracks her through the underground caves at the lake. 


Shots are fired. A body drops to the ground. Is it Kyle Miller, the love of her life, who followed her to the cabin to propose on Christmas Eve? 

The air is thick with treachery and deceit. The body count is rising and old friendships are put to the test. But Madison Rand believes in miracles, especially at Christmas time.


Amazon Buy Link: Christmas at Star Lake http://mybook.to/ChristmasStarLake


It’s the perfect time for a Christmas Murder Mystery! Somebody is killing off Madison’s employees, so she closed down shop, sends everyone home, and heads to a cabin at the lake to think. What could possibly go wrong? 1.99 #mystery #amreadingromance #Christmas

This action-packed sequel to Madison 's Christmas is brimming with suspense and humor. It is the second book in the Madison Rand trilogy. The third one is a work in progress. A humorous note:
The publisher requests no dead bodies in this one! 

Thursday, May 23, 2019

ART: The Sculpture DIGNITY by Dale Claude Lamphere




Did you know there is a fifty-foot stainless steel statue of a Native American Sioux woman near Chamberlain, South Dakota? Her name is Dignity and she's the creation of sculptor Dale Claude Lamphere. 














Wednesday, May 22, 2019

INTERVIEW: British Author Kerry Postle

















Good morning, Kerry, and welcome to Vision and Verse, the Place for
 Art and Authors. Tell us a little about what you've written. 
Here are some websites:
https://theartistsmuseblog.wordpress.com/ (for paintings in the novel)
The Artist’s Muse, a novel about the life of Wally Neuzil, model to Gustav
Klimt then Egon Schiele, 2 of the most influential artists of the 20th 
century. It shows the great impact she had on their work while showing
the toxic impact they had on her life and reputation. An unequal 
partnership but one from which she learns and grows. 

What is your favorite genre to write?
My first novel is historical/literary fiction. It was the subject matter that 
appealed to me as opposed to the genre per se. I went to an art 
exhibition in Vienna, saw rooms full of paintings of the same model, 
Wally Neuzil, but could discover very little about her other than she 
had been humiliated then discarded by the painters she served. I looked 
into the history of the time – gender, art, politics – and was shocked to 
see the deep-seated misogyny at its core. To see Wally’s life in this 
context brought her story alive and compelled me to tell it through her 
eyes.


 Favorite food.
Oh! I love all food. My favourite? Spaghetti 
alle vongole. Or mussels…or langoustines…
pretty much love anything Italian and seafood.

Tea or coffee? 
Coffee. I love the smell of it. Though when 
I’ve drunk too much I switch to tea.

Pizza or ice cream?
Pizza.

Wine or beer?
Wine. Red, white, sparkling.  Sometimes 
forget sparkling is NOT lemonade…


Where would you like to visit?
At the moment I’m writing a novel about the Spanish Civil War and so I 
would like to visit Madrid, Malaga and Barcelona. However, my starting 
point would have to be the small village of Fuentes de Andalucia as I 
have chosen the atrocity that occurred there as the trigger for what 
happens in the rest of the novel.

Favorite musical artist. 
I have eclectic tastes and my favourite changes according to my mood. 
Though if pushed, I would say that my enduring loyalty goes to David 
Bowie. Favourite song ‘Heroes’. 

Do you listen to music when you write?  
Sometimes. Though sometimes I like to read my work back to myself 
to see if the sentences flow. I look to give them their own musicality in 
which case I then need complete silence. 




What do you listen to? 
Billie Holiday, 
Amy Winehouse, U2, 
Patti Smith, folk music, 
some jazz. I’ve even been 
known to listen to music 
from the country and time 
I’m writing about, just to 
get me in the mood.




What makes you laugh?
Great satire makes me laugh and can be so cathartic. People often 
take themselves far too seriously and it does them and everyone else 
good when their bubble is burst. 

Favorite work of art or sculpture.
I have to say ‘Portrait of Wally’ by Egon Schiele although Botticelli’s 
‘Primavera’ takes my breath away.

How old were you when you started writing?
I started writing in my teens, wrote articles in my 20’s and 30’s, though 
didn’t finish a novel until my early 50’s. A late starter.

Do you plan out your book with outlines and notecards? Or just write?
Oh, to be a good planner! I try outlines, but when I start to write I end up 
going completely off-piste. After The Artist’s Muse I was determined to 
be stricter about planning but now I’m on my second novel I’m making 
the same ‘mistakes’. I imagine that this way of writing (where I go off at 
tangents) is the most natural for me. It takes me into directions I hadn’t 
considered and when I look back at what I’ve written, it surprises me that 
it’s usually better than what I’d planned.

Describe your perfect evening.
My perfect evening would be dinner out with my family. To share food, 
wine and conversation with the people I love is, for me, one of life’s 
greatest pleasures. 



Where do you get your inspiration?

Inpsiration for The Artist’s Muse 
came from a visit to an Egon 
Schiele exhibition at the Leopold 
Museum in Vienna. 




For images of the paintings go to

I wasn’t looking for a story to write but it presented itself to me 
nevertheless. Images of the artist’s model were everywhere – 
some beautiful, all challenging, others disturbing. I wanted to find 
out more about this woman, so integral to the artist’s work. Then, 
when I did, I wanted to tell her story. 

Similarly, with my second novel about the 
Spanish Civil War, it was the treatment of 
girls and women by Franco’s rebels that 
propelled me into action. The brutal, sexist 
punishments meted out to their female 
‘enemies’ – such as dosing up with castor oil, 
shaving their heads, raping…- inspired me to 
write their story. I don’t see myself solely as 
a feminist writer  but female issues are central 
to my work. Women have inspired me and I 
owe it to them to tell their story.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
I either go back to my source material 
(eg. books I’m using for research) or I read 
a few pages of a good book and study the 
writing.

Who is your favorite author?
I studied A la Recherche du Temps Perdu 
by Marcel Proust at university and I run a 
Proust book group because Proust is my 
favourite author. His writing it so layered, 
full of cultural references, social and psychological observations and it is full of 
humour. His scathing wit is merciless – no one is exempt, not even himself. For 
me he is the most human of writers, and it takes so long to read him that when 
you finish it’s like saying goodbye to a dear, dear friend. That’s why I set up the 
book group – so that I could read my friend again and get to know him even 
better. 

When I first started writing I used to work through exercises from Ursula 
LeGuin’s marvellous book on how to write, ‘Steering the Craft’, where she 
recommends you write in the style of a favourite author. I sometimes try to 
do that but no one has noticed my attempts to channel my inner Proust yet. 
Also, when I found out that he wrote his own early reviews (glowing, of course),
I loved him even more. So flawed. So human.

Best book you ever read.
A la Recherche du Temps Perdu.




























Last book you read.
‘The Life and Death of the Spanish Republic: a witness to the Spanish Civil 
War’ by Henry Buckley (part of my research library for my second novel). 
I’m currently reading ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ by Margaret Atwood.

What would you do for a living if you weren’t a writer?
I would be a teacher. I used to be a Modern Languages teacher in a secondary 
school until I was attacked in the classroom. It was because of that incident that 
I became a writer. Here is a link to a radio programme about my transition http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p05hcvxn from teacher to writer 
(interview from 2hrs 10 minutes in). I would probably still be doing that if 
the attack hadn’t happened. 

Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?
My friend Simon. He has shown me how important it is to love and be loved. 
He doesn’t judge, always supports me and I try to do the same for him. He has 
been my best friend for nearly 36 years and he has shown me that when awful 
things happen they don’t have to define you.


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 have like to have a 
conversation with Marcel, the 
narrator of A la Recherche 
because, although he has so 
many things in common with 
Proust the man, Marcel, as 
Proust’s fictional self, expresses 
the essence of the man without being dragged down by the extraneous details of 
his life. In the novel everything has been carefully chosen, his every word 
intended to have significance. Therefore to enter this perfectly constructed world
and have a conversation with this perfectly constructed character who I know so 
well and love so much would be a delight. Ideal venue would be at a party where 
we’d sit in the corner. He would be talking about the other guests and I would be 
laughing guiltily as he shows me how a misspent youth does not exclude you 
from becoming a writer.  

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?
Less talk, more writing. Although in fairness it’s all part of the process. 
Write every day, write about anything. Join a group if you can find one, create 
your own if you can’t. Don’t be too hard on yourself and remember to always 
enjoy it! 


Tuesday, May 21, 2019

BOOK: Book - The Clockmaker by Drew Neary and Ceri Williams





Neary-Williams is the co-writing team of Andrew Neary and Ceri Williams, based in the Midlands of the UK.This is the first time we are co-writing and we are really excited about how dynamic our partnership is .It was evident from our initial meetings and the snowballing of ideas that evolved, that we absolutely had to write 
this novel.

The Clockmakeroriginated as a character in the much larger prequel novel – Optics. When we put some extracts on our website we received acclaim and requests to develop the minor characters further. That was when The Clockmakerwas born.

As the first in an upcoming series of supernatural books, the Clockmakeris the story of Annette and her young son Duncan. Widowed in World War 2, they face a completely different life as they exchange the devastation of post-blitz London for the slow pace of a small village in Scotland.

The house they have inherited is old, its bones still settling, creaking noises in the dead of night and the murmur of scritch-scritch in the walls. Located outside the village of Lochnagar, it’s been empty for many years.


It is here in this village that a series of strange events begins to unfold.
How the Clockmaker makes his plans, his meticulous preparations and macabre creations, builds up to a series of gruesome, horrific murders. These have just one end in view: his release from that which has held him captive for centuries.

When planning the writing of this novel, we wanted the setting to be somewhere special. We visit Scotland a lot and chose the Balmoral area for it's beautiful geography that would lend itself to the dramatic scenes we had planned. We see Scotland as a land steeped with myth and mystery that dates back to the time of the Romans and beyond. We loved the feel of ancient power resting in the Dolmans, waiting to be released.

The third member of our team is a visual artist based in the Netherlands. Priscila Rodriguez Aranda worked closely with us to create a cover that reflected both the content and the genres of the book.

We are currently running a series of book launches across the country, and interviews with press media. We have received 5 star reviews on several sites including Netgalley:





The third member of this exciting writing team is cover artist, Priscilla, who does amazing cover art.









All the stars and a few full moons, too, for this amazing gothic thriller!

First, take a look at that gorgeous cover art! Rarely are we treated to such beautiful cover art. Of course, that is just the beginning. The real treat is inside the cover where there awaits an amazing cross-genre tale that will have you hooked from beginning to end.

The Clockmaker is the story of Annette and her son, Duncan, who are moving to an ancestral home in the highlands of Scotland. It is a tale set during the post-war era and has all of the atmospheric prose of that time period. The house is old, full of creaks and sounds that lend to the overall aura of the book. Of course the house comes with secrets, a some-what supernatural element and an old man that is full of surprises. As murders begin to happen, Annette starts to wonder how this man is tied in with the murders and the other strange events that the small family is experiencing.

This tale is fabulously written. There are times that it could have veered off into the "campy" side of horror or supernatural but it never once did that. Instead, it is  captivating and will have you mesmerized until the very last page - and then you will want more because this is the first book in a trilogy! While this story ends well, there obviously are questions that will be answered in subsequent books - and I cannot wait for those books to be written and printed!! The Clockmaker offers something for everyone's tastes: history, horror, supernatural, thrills and suspense. I highly recommend it for all.”

©Mackey Stanley

Monday, May 20, 2019

BOOK: Madison's Christmas by Carol Ann Kauffman


Madison's Christmas
by Carol Ann Kauffman

Christmas is Madison’s favorite holiday, but this year is different. She has to face it alone, without her father and her best friend sometimes-boyfriend Bob, amid the problems of running her own high-stakes business and dealing with family issues.

Does grief always win out over joy during the holidays?
Can the spirit of Christmas lift a heavy heart?


Madison's Christmas is the first in a series of three Madison Rand books. 

Amazon Buy Link: Madison's Christmas  http://mybook.to/MadisonsChristmas

“This is a sweet, short story about an woman who is emotionally fragile during the holiday season. She finds love in the most unexpected way. I smiled often as the story developed. It was adorable!” 
$.99 #Christmas #mistakenidentity

The second in the series is Christmas at Star Lake, which is already out. I am working on the final book in the series now and hope to have it out in the late fall. 


Sunday, May 19, 2019

SCHEDULE: May 20 -24, 2019


Schedule
Mon., May 20 - BOOK: Madison's Christmas
by Carol Ann Kauffman
Tues., May 21 - BOOK: The Clockmaster
by Drew Neary and Ceri Williams
Wed., May 22 - INTERVIEW: British Author
Kerry Postle
Thurs., May 23 - ART: The Sculpture DIGNITY
by Dale Claude Lamphere
Fri., May 24 - BOOK: Christmas at Star Lake
by Carol Ann Kauffman