Friday, September 30, 2022

BOOK: Sea Witch by Carol Ann Kauffman


 

Dr. Laura Martin, Chief Extraterrestrial Life Scientist at The Touchstone Institute of Oceanographic Research, noticed troubling but subtle changes in the Atlantic Ocean. 

Before she could make sense of it all, her longtime assistant abruptly walked out. 

Laura hired young, handsome Scott Conner to be her personal assistant. 

Mayhem ensued, mainly because of Zara, the mermaid/siren/monster in the basement of the Touchstone Institute, who eyed Scott as her possible mate in a plot for total domination of planet Earth.

“The Touchstone Institute of Oceanographic Research is the most fantastic, exhilarating place on the planet to work. It is high energy, exciting, sometimes maddening, often frightening, heart pounding work. It’s not a job. It’s a lifetime commitment. It gets in your blood. It grabs you by the throat and possesses you, body and soul. And it is work. If you’re not prepared to work your ass off day in and day out, weekends, holidays, your birthday, and your mamma’s birthday, leave now.”


Link:

https://www.amazon.com/SEA-WITCH-Carol-Ann-Kauffman-ebook/dp/B00XK6DUNA/ref=sr_1_18?crid=P6JV17OYFFSZ&keywords=sea+witch&qid=1663082635&s=digital-text&sprefix=sea+witch%2Cdigital-text%2C118&sr=1-18








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Thursday, September 29, 2022

ENTERTAINMENT: Wind River (Netflix)




 This was one of the better films I've seen recently. The body of a young Native American woman is found frozen in Wyoming on the Wind River Indian Reservation land, far away from town.

The FBI is called in. A Fish and Game Service Agent helps an FBI agent solve the crime, even though he is carrying grief of his own.

This film calls attention to the number of Native American women who disappear from their regular life and are never found alive. This is not because of harsh weather, auto accidents, or any fault of their own. 


















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Wednesday, September 28, 2022

INTERVIEW: Fantasy and Weird Western Author Jeff Chapman

 

Jeff Chapman

USA




 

Good morning, Jeff, and welcome to Vision and Verse, the site for artists and authors and those who love them. What have you written?

I’ve completed four novels and two collections of short stories. The novels are The Black Blade, a weird western; and the fantasy tales: The Great Contagion, Cat Sidhe, and The Sniggard’s Revenge.



What is your favorite genre to write?

Whatever genre the story I’m writing falls into.



Favorite food.

A reuben or a turkey sandwich topped with guacamole. When a restaurant offers both, I have a very difficult time deciding.




Tea or coffee?

Hot Chocolate, preferably mocha. And it must be the real thing made with milk.



Pizza or ice cream?

Pizza. And the more toppings the better.



Wine or beer or soda or what?

Grape juice (wine before it’s time).



Where would you like to visit?

The Tate Gallery in London.



Favorite musical artist.  

I enjoy the music of Bob Dylan, Natalie Merchant, Tom Petty, and U2. I’m also partial to Beethoven.



Do you listen to music when you write?  What?

Not when I’m writing first drafts or revising in creative mode. When I’m adding corrections or some of the other mundane work associated with prepping manuscripts I will listen to music, usually Bob Dylan, Natalie Merchant, or classical piano.



What makes you laugh?

The antics of my cats.



Favorite work of art or sculpture.

I like the work of the Pre-Raphaelites, particularly Millais and Waterhouse. I appreciate the dense physical detail in the paintings and the vivid sense of story. If I must pick a favorite, I’ll go with Millais’s Ophelia.



How old were you when you started writing?

I remember some story writing assignments from grade school but those were derivative. I was probably sixteen when I started creating my own stories. These were Edgar Allan Poe-inspired stories of the weird and macabre. Fortunately, none of those early attempts have survived, but my initial interest in the macabre lingers in the darker elements of my fantasy tales.



Do you plan out your book with outlines and notecards? Or just write?

I start with a situation and a vague idea of who the protagonists are and where the story is going. I find my best ideas come to me during the creative process of crafting the story. Outlining does not work for me because I come up with better ideas while I’m writing.


Each day when I write, I review what I’ve written the previous day. Some writers take things out when they revise. I tend to add, usually more physical details and improved dialogue. When I’m done with the first draft, I do a read-through to fix inconsistencies and weak sentences. I then send it to beta-readers or an editor. I avoid multiple rounds of revision. It doesn’t take long to revise a story to death.





Describe your perfect evening.

A comfy chair, hot chocolate, a good book, and a cat purring on my lap.



Where do you get your inspiration?

The inspiration for the Merliss Tales series came from a cat that my family rescued.


I came home one fall day to find a small gray cat sitting in front of the garage. I had seen this cat before but never had a good look at it. I had usually glimpsed it at night or twilight and a gray cat in the dark appears to be little more than a shadow. I had assumed the cat belonged to someone in the neighborhood. I was so wrong. It was starving. I could see every bone in its ribs. Pus was visible beneath one eye. The cat meowed at me. My wife came out the breezeway door at that moment. The cat trotted toward her and tried to enter our house.


We gave the cat some food and water. It ate like it had never seen food before. I believe at this point the cat had decided it was going to live with us. We coaxed it into a carrier and took it to an emergency vet. The cat, which we named Smokey, was not sick with any life-threatening disease. She was dehydrated, malnourished (only 5.5 pounds), suffering from an upper respiratory infection and an eye infection, and had a million fleas.


Several hours and several hundred dollars later, we returned home with two antibiotics and a sick cat. We quarantined her in the breezeway. Our other cats spent a lot of time sniffing at the back door.


Smokey responded well to the medicines and our TLC. She gained weight and proved to be incredibly well-tempered. She wasn’t the cutest kitty on the block but certainly the sweetest. We soon discovered that she was deaf and missing an upper and lower canine. We had no idea of her age, but Smokey appeared to have been up and down the alley a few times. When her quarantine period ended, Smokey moved into the house.


We speculated a lot about Smokey’s past. What stories would she tell if she could talk? The speculation got me thinking about characters based on an old cat. Somehow, I made the leap of pairing a human spirit with a cat’s body. In the fantasy world I was developing, this pairing would grant the animal’s body unusually long life, but injuries would accumulate. Merliss was born.


Unfortunately, Smokey passed away after two and a half very good years with us. Her health had been declining and then x-rays revealed painful bone tumours in her sternum. Taking her to the final vet appointment and staying with her until the end is one of the roughest tasks I’ve experienced.


Smokey’s memory lives on the character of Merliss. The cat silhouettes in the map and at the beginning of each chapter were made from pictures of Smokey.


What do you do when you get a writer's block?

It doesn’t happen very often, but if I don’t have any ideas on what is going to happen next, I’ll work on another story project. I have plenty of unfinished projects to choose from.


Who is your favorite author?

I don’t have just one. Some of my favorites include Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Edgar Allan Poe, H.P. Lovecraft, Neil Gaiman, Brandon Sanderson, Franz Kafka, Robert E. Howard, Charles Todd, Ann Cleeves, and Michael Connelly. I could list many more.


Best book you ever read.

A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny. This is a dark fantasy told from the perspective of animals serving as familiars. I read or listen to an audio version every October.


Last book you read.

Later by Stephen King.


What would you do for a living if you weren’t a writer?

I don’t make my living as a writer, at least not yet. I pay the bills by working as a software engineer.


Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?

My grandfather started a small business in a dustbowl state during the Great Depression. Somehow, he made a success of it. That dogged determination to succeed despite the odds being against you has always inspired 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 would love to talk to Stephen King or Neil Gaiman about their writing. Fortunately, they’ve written extensively or given lengthy interviews about it. Franz Kafka would be an interesting interview subject. Why did he give up on finishing The Castle?


What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?

Don’t get discouraged, don't give up, and read more books. The only failed writer is one who stops writing.




Do you have some links for us to follow you?


Website: http://www.jeffchapmanbooks.com/

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

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/JeffChapman

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/jeff-chapman

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Jeff-Chapman/e/B004YQ2ZWW


Tuesday, September 27, 2022

BOOK REVIEW: Royal LeRoy Bleu by Avery Emerson Lee



 If you are a fan of NeoWesterns, if you like Longmire, Yellowstone, and 1883, you will love Royal LeRoy Bleu. 

Royal and his companions are well-written characters. The story set in the Old West is authentic, detail rich, and touchingly believable. 

I know some of you have yet to warm up to Amazon’s new reading platform Vella. If you decide to give it a try, look for Royal LeRoy Bleu and ride with him for a while. Royal just might convince you there is more on Vella than teen stories, steamy sex, and shape shifters!








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Sunday, September 25, 2022

SCHEDULE: September 26 -30, 2022


 

Mon., Sept. 26 - ART:
Airships of the Nuclear Age
by Texas Collage Artist
Parker Kaufman
Tues., Sept. 27 - BOOK REVIEW:
Royal LeRoy Bleu
by Avery Emerson Lee
(Vella)
Wed., Sept. 28 - INTERVIEW:
Fantasy & Weird Western Author
Jeff Chapman 
Thurs., Sept. 29 - ENTERTAINMENT:
Wind River
(Netflix)
Fri., Sept. 30 - BOOK:
Sea Witch
by Carol Ann Kauffman









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Friday, September 23, 2022

BOOK: September Solitude, A Cat Collier Mystery by Caro Ann Kauffman


 

The Cat Collier mystery short story series is described as a cross between Nancy Drew and Mike Hammer. Follow Mary Catherine (Cat) Collier on her journey from small-town obituary writer for the local newspaper to big New York City detective in this series, starting with January Black Ice.


In her latest adventure September Solitude, Cat Collier, now married with two children, questions what she wants to do with the rest of her life, and where she wants to live.
Tracking down a baby girl given up for adoption over twenty years ago meets with disastrous results.
A midmorning bank heist in a nearby city implicates Nola in an armed robbery.
Old cases collide with new ones in the middle of the lobby of the Palazzo Castellano.
A murder. A runaway. Another secret society. Cat joins force with a band of Asian women to lure a killer.
Personal relationships are tested to the limits.
The Skampotti Family shows Cat what ‘All for Family’ truly means.
Cat feels all alone.

Also in Paperback



Amazon Buy Link:



Excerpt:


Chapter One

Distress Call

 


 My name is Cat Collier. Well, Mary Catherine Collier Paxton, to be more precise. I run a research service called Red Cat Investigation in Heaton Valley, Ohio and Cay Cosa Investigation Service in the Cardinal Park area of New York City. Most of my work is online research. Almost everything is online. But sometimes I have to do some actual physical investigating involving stakeouts, tailing, eavesdropping, and disguises. 

Since I had my children Poppy and Douglas, I mostly work at the New York City office, which is in the Paxton Building. I’m married to my sweet, handsome, lovable, blond Scandinavian landlord, Spencer Paxton.

My husband Spencer is older than I am. Seventeen years older, to be exact. I met him when I went up to ask him for some modest improvements in my rental office. At first, he was surly and defensive. But the more I got to know him, the more I found him to be a warm and wonderful man. Not the heart throb of my life, like the marvelous Carter Larsen. But unlike Carter, Spencer understands the meaning of the word ‘faithful.’ He is honest and dependable. 

He’s also a recluse. He rarely ever leaves the penthouse apartment that was his childhood home. He has severe panic attacks. His father was a wealthy textile tycoon. Although Spencer has siblings, he alone inherited everything because of a horrific childhood incident. He spends his days managing his stock portfolio from the comfort of his home office. 

Mostly I do research for private citizens. Now you might not believe this, but privacy is a thing of the past. Death certificates, birth certificates, and real estate appraisals are all public record.  Credit scores, bank account balances, and employment records are a little harder, but not much. Social media is a treasure trove of free and easily accessible information about relationships, new babies, new jobs, and current location. Mutual friends of friends can yield a ton of sought-after data. With an Internet connection, a little luck, and minimal hacking skills, I can find out almost anything without leaving the comfort and safety of my beautiful leather padded swivel chair in my office. 

But a distress call from my Ohio business partner Nola White one morning set in motion a strange series of events that would change my life forever.

 

“Cat,” Nola cried. “I’m in trouble. Big trouble. It’s bad. The police are here. They asked to see my registered firearm. I went to the safe to get it. And it’s gone. They say my gun was used in a bank heist in the Cleveland area. They’re taking me in.”

“Go. Do not resist. I’ll get you a lawyer.”

“Detrick saw them pull up in front of the hotel. He’s here with me now. He said he’ll handle it.”

“Okay, good. I’ll be there as soon as I can. Don’t worry. You did nothing wrong. We’ll get this sorted out. Who from the Heaton Valley Police Department is there that I can talk to?”

“No one. It’s all FBI. I’ve got to go.”

Nola hung up.

I went to find Spencer. He was in the kitchen with Nelson.

“Spencer, I need to get back to Ohio. Now. Nola is having an emergency.”

“What kind of emergency? Did she run out of cupcakes? Can’t she handle things? Matteo does a terrific job of managing everything here in the Cardinal Park office. He never bothers you at home with mundane, day-to-day operational details.

“This is different.”

“How different?”

“Nola’s in trouble. The police showed up at the office. They said her gun was used in an armed robbery. They asked to see her weapon. When she went to get it, it was missing.”

“What kind of crime?”

“A bank heist in the Cleveland area.

“That’s ridiculous. Nola wouldn’t rob a bank. She’s psychic. She would’ve known she was going to get caught.”

“Spencer, this is no joke.”

“It sounds like a made-up story to me.”

“Nola wouldn’t do that, either.”

“Well then she’s been watching too many crime dramas. Or hallucinating. Maybe mixing her medications?”

“I have to go. I’ll have to stay in Ohio until I can clear up this mess.”

“So, you intend to leave your two children and your husband in New York City and go traipsing off to Ohio to put out imaginary fires?”

“To Ohio, yes. Imaginary fire? I’m not so sure. This could be serious. As far as Poppy and Dougie are concerned, Sophia is quite capable of taking care of the kids during the day. At night, they’re asleep. And you and Nelson are here. 

“The kids will be fine. You, on the other hand? I don’t know. I don’t want to leave you. You could come with me, you know. We could all go. There’s plenty of room for everybody at my apartment at the Palazzo Castellano.”

“Once again, you forget you married a hermit,” he snipped.

“You play that hermit card at your convenience, my darling. What would you like me to do?”

“I would like you to stay home and take care of your family obligations like a normal adult woman. Occasionally show up at both offices, impeccably dressed, with flowery compliments for all, generous bonus checks, and a knock-out smile.”

“One: This is not 1950, Ward Cleaver. Two: I can’t do that.”

“Sometimes you are little more than a willful child, Mary Catherine. Do what you want. You always do.” 

Spencer stormed down the hall to his office. He slammed the door.

“What’s with him?” I asked Nelson, our butler and Spencer’s closest (only) friend and bodyguard.

Naturally the ever-loyal Paul Nelson shrugged his shoulders and did not comment. 

“If I’ve done something to piss off His Lordship, I’d like to know what it is so I can fix it.”

Again, the shrug. “Go. Take care of business. Call me in a day or so. I’ll see if I can find out what seems to be troubling him.”

“Thank you, Nelson.”









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Thursday, September 22, 2022

ENTERTAINMENT: Last Nigh in Soho (HBO Max)


This started out as a cute movie about a country girl who goes to London to become a fashion designer and encounters the ghost of a young woman who throws her back into the swinging 70's.  It had fashion, cool music, the typical mean girls, and so much more. 
It ended up a slasher horror film. 
To say I was disappointed is an understatement. 
The beautiful and talented Ana Taylor and Mark Smith of Doctor Who fame starred in this and I had to wonder if they read to the end of the script before signing on.













I claim nothing here as my own except my opinion.










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Wednesday, September 21, 2022

INTERVIEW: Fantasy Author D. L. Gardner



D.L. Gardner

I live in the beautiful 

Pacific Northwest.


 

Good morning, D.L. And welcome to Vision and Verse. What have you written?

I have written two fantasy series and a many stand alone novels in the fantasy, historical and historical fantasy, mystery and romance genres.


 

What is your favorite genre to write?  

Everything I write has a fantastical element to it, so I guess I can easily answer that as fantasy.


 

Favorite food

Barbecued ribs

 


Tea or coffee?

Herbal tea


 

Pizza or ice cream?

Non-dairy ice cream

 


Wine or beer or soda or what?

Gatorade


 

Where would you like to visit?

A remote vineyard in Italy

 


Favorite musical artist. 

David Garett 

 

Do you listen to music when you write?  What?

Yes. Pandora the Bear McCreary radio

 


What makes you laugh?

Running on the beach on a windy day.



 

Favorite work of art or sculpture.
John Singer Sargent’s Capri Girl on a Rooftop

 

How old were you when you started writing?

12


 

Do you plan out your book with outlines and notecards? Or just write?

I plan with outlines and maps.

 



Describe your perfect evening.

The sun is setting and the entire earth glows gold. I sit along the bank of a creek far away from anywhere and crickets sing. My fishing line bobs as an old bass nibbles my bait. Lightning bugs flicker, waiting for dark, and the warmth of the summer’s day sighs into the cool of twilight.

 


Where do you get your inspiration?

Nature, mostly. And human nature.


 

What do you do when you get a writer's block?

Go for a walk, or eat. 


 

Who is your favorite author?

C.S. Lewis but I have others, like Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson, and Joe Abercrombie.


 

Best book you ever read.

Half a King by Joe Abercrombie.   


 

Last book you read.

Eye of the World by Robert Jordan (I’m reading the series again).

 



What would you do for a living if you weren’t a writer?

Work in film. I love being on set.

 



Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why?

My husband because he is the sweetest most forgiving person I’ve ever met. He teaches me to be kinder.

 



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’d love to talk with C.S. Lewis. He was such a wise and compassionate man. I’d love to listen to his stories.


 





What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?

Read. A lot! And study your craft. Be critical of your own work and take your time. Enjoy the process of learning and improving.



 





Do you have some links for us to follow you?

https://gardnersart.com 
https://www.patreon.com/DLGardner

https://dianneg.substack.com/

https://twitter.com/



 















 











 


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