Friday, October 10, 2025

BOOK: Waiting for Richard by Carol Ann Kauffman





When Skye retired from her life-long job as office manager of the insurance agency, she planned to relax at home, sleep in late, wear muumuus, and continue writing children’s books about the cute and funny little elephant named Captain Packy, the Wacky Pachyderm. 

Captain Packy Joins the Circus
Captain Packy Visits New York City
Captain Packy Goes to Congress


She was working on her fourth book about natural elephant habitats when she retired and her co-worker Rita took over as office manager. 
One evening, Skye and Rita went out to dinner. As they walked to the car after dinner, they discovered they were being followed. Rita panicked. Skye called the police.

This is where our story begins.


Chapter One 
Fear in the Parking Garage 
Location: Sterling, Ohio 

“Run!” said Rita, fear catching in her voice. 
“Are you kidding me?” replied Skye. “I’m way too damn old to run. Do you want me to have a heart attack? Or fall and break a hip? If some slimy son of a bitch wants a piece of me that bad, let him come. He’ll be damn sorry.” 
“We’ve got to get out of here. I’m scared,” Rita whispered. Skye pulled out her cell phone and tapped 9-1-1. “Yes, we’re in the underground parking garage of the Sterling City Center and we’re being chased by a madman with a knife, and my friend here is scared and I’m too damn old to run. Yes. Skye McKenna. Sixty-six. Well, I’m glad you agree that’s too old to run.” 
“Help is on the way, Rita. Calm down.” 
“Skye, you don’t know he has a knife.” 
“You’re absolutely right. He could have a gun. Shall I call her back and correct myself?” 
Sirens were blaring in the distance. 
“Isn’t calling 9-1-1 for a non-emergency illegal? This is at least a misdemeanor, if not a felony. Skye. We could end up in jail.” 
“Would you rather be murdered in the parking garage?” 
“No.”


Waiting for Richard is a novel in the Time After Time series, where a pair of lovers find each other in different lifetimes in different countries, in different time periods, and sometimes on a different planet.

Everything changes. But love remains the same. 

Thursday, October 9, 2025

TV TIME: The Fare (You Tube)


 



One long stretch of lonely road at night. Setting: the inside of a cab. Basically three characters. One time loop. This film had all the makings of a boring little nothing of a movie. 

However… the chemistry between the two main characters, the cab driver and his fare, a young woman, was mesmerizing. Harris drives a cab for a living. Penny calls for a cab.What transpires is an otherworldly encounter between two souls finding their way. 

A touching twenty minutes cab ride that loops into so much more. 






Wednesday, October 8, 2025

INTERVIEW: Science Fiction Author L. R. Maley

 


Larry Maley 
AKA L.R. Maley

Utica, Michigan

USA 

 

 

Good morning, Larry, and welcome to Vision and Verse, the site for What have you written?

So far, it’s just The Chronicles of the Manaar. Book 1, Immersion, Book 2 Redemption, Book 3 Ascension.

I am working a space opera, a time traveler’s story, and a space alien comedy simultaneously. It slow writing, but I am waiting for one to step out in front of the others and lead me to the finish line. 

 


What is your favorite genre to write?

I read mostly fantasy and science fiction. For me its difficult to choose between these two genres a favorite. It’s a mood thing I guess.

 


Favorite food.

Anything  simple and made in my own kitchen





 

Tea or coffee?

Coffee runs through my veins in equal proportions to blood.

 

Pizza or ice cream?

Pizza




 

Wine or beer or soda or what?

Not much of a drinker. Love Faygo pop but gotta watch the sugar. I guess Faygo pop, and calling it pop over soda is a midwestern thing.

 

Where would you like to visit?

New Zealand is my bucket list trip, even before they shot The Lord of the Rings there. But now? I need to get there and walk in Middle Earth.





Favorite musical artist.

I go  I go through phases. I grew up on the great rock bands of the 70’s and 80’s.

        In my old age I like a lot of new age instrumental.

       

       Do you listen to music when you write? 

This question make me feel that you know me. I have several songs that I listened to the entire time I wrote The Chronicles of the Manaar. They are piano instrumental composed by Grand Rapids, Michigan pianist Jason Sytsma. I can listen to these songs and watch the scenes playout on my minds eye like a montage. One of his song in particular shares the title with book one. It is called Immersion.

 


What makes you laugh?

Dad jokes and Monty Python.

 

How old were you when you started writing?

I became a storyteller when I was a teenager. I was a role-playing fanatic, or geek if you prefer. As a dungeon master, I created story lines and acted them out with my friends in gaming situations. When I started writing seriously 4 years ago, I found that the process of creation was little different than what I did as a kid. I am 58 years old now, so I started The Chronicles of the Manaar when I was 54.

 





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

I plan-start to finish in vague bullet points. At the start of Immersion, I turned those bullet points into a thorough outline. A carry over from college work. But in the process of writing Immersion I found That the best writing comes when I let the characters do as they wish. 

Let me provide context - I started off as an outline writer, English 101. When I was writing Immersion, there came a scene where two armies were about to join in combat. My outline said, they see the battle developing, describe, and the characters escape in a departing caravan. Simple. But when my two main protagonists saw the situation, one of them said, “We can help.” To which the other said, “Right. Lets go.” For me it was like watching a movie, almost surreal. I must have been 300 words into this digression when I realized I had gone off my plan. I began to remove the digression to bring the story back to the outline. I stopped. Thought about it. And let it play out. It turned out to be one of the most rewarding scenes thus far in the book. Sure, it changed things, but I learned to not set up a rigid plan. From then on, I ditched outlining and just planned ahead with brief scene descriptions. Then I let the characters react. It was their story after all.

 

Describe your perfect evening.      

Summer in my backyard with my wife watching my daughter happily playing and laughing to a joke I have no idea what it is.

 

Where do you get your inspiration?

I am at a loss for inspiration, I wait until its time for bed, and request that my subconscious work the night shift to give me what I need. It has worked well for me, as I often wake up with a plan.

 

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

I bullet point, and substitute Ba bah blah… or yada yada… (whichever is more appropriate) for words to be filled in later. This allows me to move on to the parts that need to be captured, and see the ba bah blahs, and yada yada’s as a bridge. It is easier to conquer with a target in mind.

 

Who is your favorite author?

Predictably, Tolkien and Rowling are my favorites. Though I would mention contemporary authors Drew Hayes, Scott Meyer, and Robert Kroese who have given me cause for rereading. Great story tellers.

 



Best book you ever read.

This is a difficult question for me, I love Mark Twain, and have enjoyed many of the modern classics. If forced to answer, I would have to say The Lord of the Rings, because it made me a reader and opened up my imagination.

 

Last book you read.

Brandon Sanderson’s Tess. A really cute story and a bit different style of writing for him with a Princess Bride-ish quality.

 

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

My life experiences include automotive design and engineer, entrepreneur, and inventor (Zip-UP Ceiling and Zip-UP Underdeck) and have several successful business startups to my credit. However, these latter endeavors have taken a back seat to being fulltime caregiver to my autistic daughter. Writing is what I do when she doesn’t need my attention.




 

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

Lots of people I have known have added to that story, however, my life partner and wife, Terry, has been with me through it all. We support each other, encourage, and face each new adventure knowing the fall back is the other.

 

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 think it would be cool to talk to somebody like Newton, or Darwin, and describe to them the modern world we live in. How cool it would be to validate their work and worth to every person who has lived since their minds began their scientific journeys.

 

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

Write for yourself first. Your heart is the best guide to what is great.

 

Do you have some social media links for us to follow you? 

https://www.facebook.com/LRChroniclesoftheManaar

Website: https://www.lrmaleynovels.com/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/60792671-immersion

Other: https://www.instagram.com/l.rmaleynovels/

Links To Purchase Books

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B35S2GM6?binding=kindle_edition&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tkin_taud

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B35S2GM6?binding=audio_download&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_taud_tkin

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B35S2GM6?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_taud

https://www.lrmaleynovels.com/

 






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Tuesday, October 7, 2025

BOOK REVIEW: First Touch by Teyla Branton



 

Wow. I couldn’t put this down. Summer and Winter Rain had a daughter and named her Autumn. Autumn Rain runs a little antique shop. She is a little quirky. She hangs onto her mother’s afghan when she gets stressed. She is an empath who can read “imprints”, which is like a psychic, but she gets impressions from objects and can see what the impresser sees. 

In this introductory novella, Autumn helps a police detective track down a child molester/killer to save a young girl’s life. But not all their attempts are successful. Terrific characters. Scary good story. 





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Monday, October 6, 2025

ART: Southwest Artist Stephen Morath


 


I love the work of Stephen Morath. Simply looking at his southwestern landscapes makes me happy. They are winsome, beautiful, serene. They are anything but somber. 













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Sunday, October 5, 2025

SCHEDULE: October 6-10, 2025


 Monday, October 6 - ART:
Southwest Artist
Stephen Morath
Tuesday, October 7 - BOOK REVIEW:
First Touch
By Teyla Branton 
Wednesday, October 8 - INTERVIEW:
Science Fiction Author
L. R. Maley
Thursday, October 9 - TV TIME:
The Fare
(You Tube)
Friday, October 10 - BOOK: 
Waiting for Richard
by Carol Ann Kauffman







VISION AND VERSE DISCLAIMER

Note:

Vision and Verse does not store any personal information, such as email addresses or home addresses. We do not give any information to third parties. And cookies? We eat cookies.