Interview With Kathy Davis

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  • What’s your favorite thing you have written?

Probably the poem that closes Passiflora, “Girls, She Falcons, Be Thin: Let Us Work Ourselves Asleep Against You,” because the hawk’s rise at the end feels so hopeful. Also, the title comes from a book of poetry someone gave me as a gift when I was in college but that I didn’t read until more than 20 years later. You never know what’s waiting on your bookshelf to be pulled down and read at just the moment when it will mean the most to you.

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Writing Even When You Don’t Think You Can By Kristin Durfee

Writing a novel can sometimes it can feel like being in one of those old cartoons where the character makes this herculean effort to get to the top of a mountain…only to see thousands of other mountains along the horizon.

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Printable Magic by Kathy Martone

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What lies behind the eyes shines with an unearthly gleam and sparkle, a treasure chest of magic if you will.  Gathering the letters, words, and images hidden deep within the soul’s retinal landscape becomes an act of worship, kneeling before the altar of inspiration.

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The Price of Publication and Self-Publication in the Literary World by Ren Powell

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The Price of Publication and Self-Publication in the Literary World

There is a term “pay for play” that is used about political donations and political appointments, for stand-up comics paying for stage time, and even for artists who pay for exhibition space. I have never heard it used when discussing literary publishing, but maybe it is something that needs to be discussed.

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A Little Conversation from Jennifer L. Rowlands

A common question I’ve heard of authors is “What is your writing process?” I’ve answered this question myself, though I questioned it. I mean, what is a writing process? Does the asker just want to know how I find a quiet place where I can comfortably place my hands upon a keyboard? Snoozefest.

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An Interview With Sherry Quan Lee

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  •  What’s your favorite thing you have written?

I think favorite could be interpreted in various ways. I co-wrote a performance piece, Black White Chinese Women Got the Beat, with a woman twenty years younger than me. The significance of that writing was the similarities and differences of two mixed-race women with a substantial age difference. She grew up in a rural area, I grew up in a city. Together we performed our combined stories at various venues including a bar, a coffee house, and a college classroom.

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An Interview With David Seaburn

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  • What genre Is Broken Pieces of God?

Broken Pieces of God is contemporary literary fiction. Primarily, this means it is a character driven story.

  • What Is the main plot of the book?

The main plot revolves around the lives of Eddy and Gayle Kimes and their two adult offspring, Rich and Sandy. Eddy has recently lost his job with a cable company and Gayle, an independent tax accountant, has been diagnosed with cancer. As Eddy’s attempts at finding a job fail and Gayle’s chemotherapy  is equally unsuccessful, they pin their hopes for making  it through on everything from seeking the solace of a statue of Jesus, to magical thinking, to a questionable (and possibly  illegal) financial scheme, to the strength of family ties.

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An interview with Scott & Ashley Roepel

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  • What are you working on right now?

Right now I am writing an epic fantasy series titled Thread of Souls. I’ve got the first two books published, and the third in the series is launching August 27th. The series will be eight books long, so I’m really excited to be in this for the long haul!

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An Enemy Like Me by Teri M Brown (Book Review #1384)

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‘An enemy like me’ is a political fiction written about Jacob, a loyal family man who has to leave his wife and child to fight a war he isn’t sure he will return from.

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