Trusted Reviews and Author Features Since 2016
Posted on September 17, 2022 by Jeyran Main
6 years have passed, and it certainly has gone by fast. WordPress does give you these nice reminders. Well, let’s say a big thank you to everyone who follows, likes, subscribes, and endlessly supports this platform for authors.
You guys make a difference!
Here’s to the future!
Jeyran Main
Founder and Editor-in-chief of Review Tales Publishing & Editing Services

Posted on September 16, 2022 by Jeyran Main
Death at Dusbat College is a beautiful story written about Cristiano visiting his aunt, hoping to learn about magic at the magical Dusbar College. When the Grand Magician passes away, Cristiano has a riddle to solve, becoming the premise of this exciting story.
Read MorePosted on September 15, 2022 by Jeyran Main

When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
When I was ten or eleven, I began to write a few poems. The satisfaction I felt when I finished a poem was a great motivation to keep going. One of my first poems was about an old woman knitting.
How do you schedule your life when you’re writing?
My schedule doesn’t change much whether I’m writing or not. I try to do something for writing daily, even if it’s not actual writing. For instance, I submit a poem or essay to a journal or work on revisions. I never write for long periods of time—at least not anymore. Ten minutes to an hour per day is standard, so it makes sense that I enjoy writing poetry and flash.
What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I don’t have to have a favorite pen or beverage. I don’t play classical or coffeehouse music to write. I just sit at the kitchen table with a pad or at the computer to write. However, what is probably noteworthy is that although I write for short periods of time, I am pretty diligent about writing or doing writing business almost every day.
How did you get your book published?
I submitted this collection to the publisher as a chapbook with less than 25 poems, and by the time the publisher offered to publish the chap, I had already increased Rooted and Winged to a full-length poetry collection. I asked if they were still interested, and I am grateful that they were.
Where did you get your information or ideas for your book?
Most of the poems in Rooted and Winged arose from personal experience, mainly from my recent life in the Sonoran desert and from childhood memories, especially of my maternal grandparents in Kalamazoo, Michigan. I also am very fond of writing prompts and love the ones I find in Diane Lockward’s craft books, such as The Strategic Poet and The Practicing Poet.
What do you like to do when you’re not writing?
I love to cuddle my cats, read (especially poetry, memoir, and mysteries), enjoy the garden my husband has created, and work on my junky art journals (sort of a cross between art journals and junk journals).
What was one of the most surprising things you learned in creating your book?
It was what I learned when I put the collection together that really struck me. I had no idea that the poems were so informed by images of wings/flight and rootedness. But when I noticed it, I realized how important that movement and friction between “heaven and earth” is to my imagination.
Is there anything you would like to confess about as an author?
I write a lot about family history and memory. My chapbook Kin Types was all poetry and flash nonfiction based on the history of my family, for instance. My confession is that as a kid, I wanted to get away from my family and adventure out into the “outside world.” If you had told me then how the memories of my early years and the stories of my ancestors would inspire me today, I would have said you didn’t know me at all.
As a child, what did you want to do when you grew up?
I remember thinking that adults “be” rather than “do.” The title was what I focused on, and I didn’t really imagine what the day-to-day would be like. I always told people I wanted to be one or all of the “three As”: actress, author, and archeologist. After high school, I realized I would not like the lifestyle of an actress or an archeologist, but being a writer is a very convenient aspiration because I could do whatever else I wanted to do and still write!
How do you process and deal with negative book reviews?
Not well! I get upset at a negative comment in a review for a while, but I tend to get over things pretty fast. After all, I have been the grateful recipient of many beautiful reviews—probably more than I deserve!

The poems of Rooted and Winged explore the emotional and physical movement of flight and falling. They are of the earth, the place of fertile origins, and of the dream world we observe and imagine when we look upward. Golems and ghosts that emerge from the ground, as well as the birds and angels that live above us, inhabit the collection. We will always be striving for flight, even as we feel most comfortable closest to the earth.
Author Bio:
Luanne Castle’s new poetry collection is Rooted and Winged (Finishing Line Press). Kin Types (Finishing Line Press), a chapbook of poetry and flash nonfiction, was a finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award. Her first collection of poetry, Doll God (Aldrich), won the New Mexico-Arizona Book Award for Poetry. Luanne’s Pushcart and Best of the Net-nominated poetry and prose have appeared in Copper Nickel, American Journal of Poetry, Pleiades, Tipton Poetry Review, River Teeth, TAB, Verse Daily, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, Saranac Review, Grist, and other journals.

Posted on September 15, 2022 by Jeyran Main
Misadventures in the Screen Trade is an interesting story about Alison trying to make it in the media industry, where men are mostly dominating the field. Besides the humorous remarks and the determination you see in Alison, there is an underlying message here that I believe we still face even today, and that is, women still struggle to be treated as equals.
Read MorePosted on September 14, 2022 by Jeyran Main
These numbered days is a contemporary fictional story about Annie Wolff and how she addresses her mental illness by shying away from everyone and giving away her rights to motherhood. She thinks all is well by leaving her kids to her other half, Joel, but once she finds out that Joel has died in a car crash, her motherly instinct kicks in. Annie has to make sure her kids are okay.
Read MorePosted on September 13, 2022 by Jeyran Main
Black, White, And Gray All Over is a memoir written about the author’s encounter and life trying to stay away from trouble and instead navigate all his energy and potential as a cop, making a change. He discusses how the system is corrupted and how racism exists in the police force. He also explains how he personally has experienced cruelty and has lost fellow cops or survived near-death experiences.
Read MorePosted on September 12, 2022 by Jeyran Main
It was the third month into the beginning of the Roaring 2020s, and New Orleanians were coming down off the high of a lively Carnival season when the devastating news broke. Our beloved holiday, Mardi Gras, had been a COVID-19 superspreader event. Along with the rest of the world, New Orleans shut down.
Read MorePosted on September 2, 2022 by Jeyran Main
I’ve been professionally writing for about as long as I’ve been homeschooling. With over a decade under my belt, it seems silly now that I didn’t plan to write about this parallel journey.
Read MorePosted on September 1, 2022 by Jeyran Main
Pantsing versus Plotting
There is no right or wrong way to write a novel, but when two authors meet and chat for the first time, invariably the question is asked: Are you a pantser or a plotter?
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