Showing posts with label Guest Posts/Interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Posts/Interviews. Show all posts

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Guest Post: Ken Mixon - Texas Banker/Oklahoma Hunter


New Dodge Pickup

Years ago, we had a customer named Rita. Rita was eighty two and was worth about two million dollars.

We were pretty surprised at the bank when we found out she had picked Bill for a boyfriend. Bill was fifty one, but as my father would say, it was a hard fifty one. He did not have two dimes to rub together for a net worth. If you had seen him hitching a ride on a train, you would have not been surprised. He seemed a strange match for Rita.

After Rita and Bill had been dating about nine months, we discovered that they had married. At first, we were concerned that Bill had married Rita just for her money. But we found out that Rita had made Bill sign a pre-nuptial agreement. She may have been older but she was a smart lady.

Rita added Bill to only one of her checking accounts. The account had a balance of only $10,000 and she did not add him to her other accounts at our bank which totaled over one million dollars.

About a year later, we got word at the bank that Rita had passed away. One of the more solemn things we deal with at the bank is the passing of our customers. We liked Rita and were sad to hear of her death.

Two days after Rita’s passing, there was a check presented for payment on one of her accounts for $67,453. When a customer dies, we always watch their accounts for unexpected activity. This $67,453 check was unusual. It was made out to the local Dodge dealership for the purchase of a Ram pickup. It was also dated the exact day Rita passed away (and was on one of her accounts that Bill did not sign on).

 I have been reviewing check signatures for many years. While some people may not realize it, a bank has a legal obligation to be sure that a signature on a check is genuine.    

As I examined the signature on the $67,453 check, it appeared to be Rita’s signature. However, after reviewing it in length, I decided that it was a forgery. It was a very good forgery but it was not her signature. We returned the check to the Dodge dealership unpaid.

As I expected, we received a telephone call from the dealership very quickly.  Mr. Wright, the general manager of the dealership, asked if he could meet with me as soon as possible. I agreed to meet and he was at the bank in thirty minutes.

After we greeted each other, Mr. Wright got right to business. He told me how Bill and Rita had come into the dealership and how Rita had agreed to purchase the pickup for Bill. Mr. Wright added that since Rita signed the check, the bank needed to honor the check and give him the money. I asked Mr. Wright if he was there when Bill and Rita purchased the pickup and he responded that he was not but his sales manager was there and had told him the story.

I explained that the bank had a legal obligation to determine whether Rita had signed the check and that we had determined that she had not. Mr. Wright said that was impossible since his sales manager had seen her sign the check in person.

The discussion went on like this for twenty minutes. Mr. Wright said the signature was hers and I told him that we believed it was not. He said she had signed the check in front of the sales manager and I told him I did not believe she signed the check. He was adamant that Rita had signed the check. I listened but did not change my position. In the end, he left the bank without the dealership’s money for the check.

Two days later, Mr. Wright called me and asked me if he could bring Bill in with him to talk with me. I agreed to see them. They arrived within fifteen minutes (in a brand new, bright yellow, lifted, Dodge extended cab pickup).

Mr. Wright asked Bill to tell me the story of purchasing the truck. Bill told me the story but there was a significant change from the story I had heard two days prior. In the new version, Bill made the deal for the truck, went home and had Rita sign the check and he brought it back to the dealership.

Over the years, I have found that if you put a very straight question to someone, you may just get the truth out of them. After Bill finished the story, I waited fifteen seconds, looked Bill straight in the eye and asked him, “Did you sign her name on this check?” He looked back at me and said “Yes, I signed her signature. I have done it before in the past and the bank has never questioned me about it. “

I will always remember the look on Mr. Wright’s face at that point. He looked like someone had hit him with a right cross. Bill had admitted that the signature was an absolute forgery. This meant the dealership was not getting any money from my bank on this check ever. He and Bill left deflated.


Something tells me that dealership will be more careful in the future when they accept a check and the signer is not in front of them. The sad thing is that it appears Bill went straight to the dealership to buy this truck the moment Rita passed away. He probably had been planning this purchase for months. What a scum ball.



Ken Mixon was raised in Atoka, Oklahoma and graduated from Atoka High School in 1974. He attended Oklahoma Baptist University and graduated in 1977 with a degree in business administration. He has an extensive career in banking that began in 1977 as an auditor with First National Bank in Oklahoma City. From there he worked at a variety of different banks and concluded when he became President and CEO of City National Bank in Corsicana Texas, where he remains today.

Ken is a member of First Baptist Church in Richardson and is very proud to be a Rotary member in Corsicana. One of his biggest passions is being involved in selecting the high school senior to receive the Corsicana Rotary Scholarship each year. Ken is a big fan of the Dallas Mavericks, Dallas Cowboys, and Oklahoma Sooners. He enjoys hunting and fishing and being with family and friends.




LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kenmixon/

Buy link for Texas Banker/Oklahoma Hunter:

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Guest Post Tonya Barbee 10 Tips for Becoming a Better Writer


This is one of my stops during the two month tour for The Little Girl Inside: Owning My Role in My Own Pain by Tonya Barbee. This virtual book tour is organized by Write Now Literary Book Tours. This tour runs October & November.  Follow the tour here.  Book your own tour here WNL
Book Title: The Little Girl Inside: Owning My Role in My Own Pain
ASIN: B00VJFVN5Q
ISBN-10: 0692564802
ISBN-13: 978-0692564806
Genre: Non-Fiction
Tonya Barbee

10 Tips for Becoming a Better Writer-

Take classes.
Improve on your trade. 
Read books from authors you would like to be more like, or learn from. 
Be clear and specific. 
Prepare an outline first before you get started. 
Do a mind map of your outline.
Plan your writing.
Research what you are writing about so your book will have correct information. 
Write the first draft without editing what you write. 
Write as you would want to read about what you write about. 
Be relaxed and in a good place when you’re writing.


About The Author


TONYA BARBEE is a novelist and aspiring playwright. Her most recent published work is titled, The Little Girl Inside Owning My Role in My Own Pain. She is currently working on another project that complements this book. Tonya grew up in Durham, NC, a family of four daughters and one son. Her father, Woodrow served his country for twenty years as an Army officer, retired then taught ROTC for another twenty years and her mother, Doris, a college administrator. She is a proud 1980 graduate of Frank W. Ballou High School in Washington, DC. She worked in operations and management for Department of Agriculture for twenty years. For the past ten years, she’s worked as a project manager for Department of Defense in Washington, DC. She studied at National-Louis University where she earned her Masters in Business Administration in 2009.
Although she’s worked her way up the ladder in the federal government, she had no idea she would end up writing professionally however she has always enjoyed sharing her personal life through story telling with those she thought she could help. Then something clicked. As she writes, she is in hopes that her work reaches her readers that have been through something and have contemplated giving up. Her goal is to enable her readers to become empowered to keep moving forward to accomplish their dreams no matter what challenges they have been faced with.
Tonya resides in Bowie, MD with two of her youngest children, Christian and Zachary. Her eldest two, Andrew and Jessica left the nest years ago and have blessed her with seven beautiful grandkids.


About The Book
The Little Girl Inside is a prolific story of triumph and discovery of inner peace. With each page, the reader will be captivated while the author uses the writing pen as a sowing tool-seaming a garment of praise, banner of victory and fabric of joy. With imaginative color, the book is a perfectly designed combination of patterns expressing the maturation of a woman.
A uniquely designed transparent jewel every woman should own in her jewelry box. The Little Girl Inside is a ministry resource tool for women in search for transparency in the human heart. The author shows us how to overcome the inner battle of doing the right thing the wrong way, going from finding love in the wrong places to allowing love to be revealed in the right time and in the right place.






 Excerpt

I made room for Sir Intellectual to bring what I thought were the remainder of hi things. I also made room on my health insurance policy just in case he didn't have any. Too bad it didn't occur to me to ask him. My ability to confront was non-existent. I decided not to wait until I returned to work to handle it. I contacted my carrier and updated my policy to include my new husband. The whole time I felt sad that he wasn't contacting his carrier to include me. I had a husband, though what caliber of husband, I wasn't sure. Sometimes I wanted to slap myself for being so needy that I overlooked important things and ignored flags, bells, and whistles.

Social Media Contacts
Website: http://www.iamstillarose.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/iamstillarose

Purchase Links
Amazon ebook: http://a.co/7V9fOx6
Amazon paperback: http://a.co/b9qsRcs
Tour hosted by Write Now Literary

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Mommy Loves You by Dr. Dyoni Cole


                
Hello! This is one of my tour stops during my week book tour for Mommy Loves You by Dr. Dyoni Cole. This virtual book tour is organized by Write Now Literary Book Tours. This tour runs October 30 – November 3, 2017.  Follow the tour here.  Book your own tour here WNL
Book Title: Mommy Loves You
Genre: Children's Book
Author: Dr. Dyoni Cole
Paperback: 26 pages
ISBN-10: 197619881X
ISBN-13: 978-1976198816
About The Author
Dr. Dyoni Cole is president of Dyoni, Inc., a consulting organization that specializes in leadership development in the areas of Education, Management, Organizational Leadership, and Dance Leadership.
Dr. Dyoni has a passion to see others exceed their own expectations and reach high levels of excellence. She believes in going beyond the call of duty to help others maximize their full potential and become who they have be predestined to be.
Dr. Dyoni earned her doctorate from Argosy University in Business Administration with a focus of management and organizational leadership. She earned her MBA from University of Phoenix and is currently earning a MS in Psychology.
Dr. Dyoni lives by these words" Always be a student of your craft, as each day is an opportunity to LEARN, to LOVE, and to DANCE."
About The Book
Mommy Loves You is a children's book about a mother's love for her child expressed through words of affirmation. Mommy Loves You is also an educational tool as well as a self-esteem and self-love booster.
For ages 1 - 5 years.
Connect Socially
Purchase Link
Amazon paperback link: http://a.co/8qGPtl3
Tour hosted by WLN Book Tours www.wnlbooktours.com

What inspired you to write this book?
YOU ARE, BUT YOU SHALL BE!!! This phrase is something that I think about often. Each day we are becoming.  We, as individuals are all working to become who we are predestined to be. We're all different, unique, and rare; Beautiful and handsome in our right. We all have a God-given purpose; a purpose that was explicitly given to you and given to me. Only you can accomplish your purpose, and just I can achieve my purpose.  This fact brings me to the concept of self: SELF-LOVE!
It is essential first and foremost that we know who we are as individuals and that we love who we are as individuals. You and I were perfectly and wonderfully created.  Everything about you, everything about me is a perfect fit to fulfill our purposes. It is crucial that we know and understand this. In recognizing and following this, we will embrace our uniqueness and our differences. We will no longer look down upon ourselves or compare ourselves to others. We will genuinely celebrate the accomplishments of others and not be secretly jealous and envious of others.  We will confidently stand on this truth that what is for you is for you and what is for me is for me.  This brings me to SELF-ESTEEM and SELF-VALUE, which all aligns with the concept of self.
How we carry ourselves depicts how we see ourselves, which in turn teaches others how to treat and interact with us.  As an adult, I recognize that social media is very influential in subliminally conveying the essence of what beauty looks like, what success looks like, and how one should go about becoming beautiful and becoming successful. Social media is subliminal in teaching us how to despise where we are in life and who we are as individuals. Social media is subliminal in showing us how to become the status quo and how to blend in when we were never designed or created to blend in;   blending in makes us merely ordinary. With this in mind, I can only imagine the difficulties children face with understanding who they are and the difficulties of learning how to become comfortable in their own skin.  This is why Mommy loves you was written. It is vital that children are affirmed by those who love them. It is essential that children know they were correctly created; that everything about them from their little toes, their little legs, their little hands, their nose, and their eyes are loved by those that love them; that they need not change anything about them to be loved.  

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Guest Post Ken Mixon: Writing is like the lyrics to a Country Song



Is there a particular song that moves you? I grew up in a small Baptist Church in Southeastern Oklahoma and there are certain hymns that move me. If I hear Rock of Ages or Just a Closer Walk with Thee, it takes me back to a simpler time and place.
When I started writing my book, this was a driving factor. Could I write something that touched people’s hearts?
I am not a big listener to country western music. However, there is a David Allan Cole song called The Ride that I like. In the song, a hitchhiker who is on his way to Nashville to make it big gets picked up by a stranger. 
After riding with the hitchhiker a while, the stranger (the ghost of Hank Williams) asked him the following, “Mister, can you make folks cry when you play and sing? Have you paid your dues? Can you moan the blues? Can you bend them guitar strings? Boy, can you make folks feel what you feel inside? ‘Cause if you’re big star bound let me warn you it’s a long hard ride.”
I love those lyrics. The lyrics are an excellent example of the creative process of writing a good book.
Can you make folks cry when you play and sing? One of my favorite childhood books was Where the Red Fern Grows. It is the story of a young boy in eastern Oklahoma who raises two coonhounds, Dan and Little Ann. It is a wonderful story that I must have read six times when I was growing up. I cried each time when the boy’s coonhounds died.
As I got into my teens, I became an avid reader of Patrick McManus who wrote hunting and childhood stories for Outdoor Life. Patrick has the ability to make you feel like you are there in his stories as he runs the rapids or eats some bad jerky. He is a wonderful writer.
When I started writing, I wanted to be able to touch people’s emotions like that. I want the reader to be able to sense my frustration as I try to figure out a loan request. I want the reader to feel the ground pounding from the buck approaching. I want the reader to smell the smoke from the fireworks.
Have you paid your dues? I am currently President and CEO of City National Bank in Corsicana, Texas. What some may not know is that I have paid my dues to become a president of a bank. Believe me; I have paid my dues as a banker.
Can you moan the blues? One of the more difficult things in writing was to be able to accurately describe what I wanted to detail while keeping the story narrative moving. One of my main objectives in the book was to tell stories as if we were standing around a fire. I also wanted the stories to be straight forward enough so that they could be read to a ten year old and he or she could understand.
This simple approach was easier with the hunting and childhood stories than with the banking stories. When I got into the banking stories, I wanted to refrain from using bank jargon and tell the story in a straight forward manner. I think I accomplished my goal in that area but it was difficult at times.
Can you bend them guitar strings? I have spent my life as a banker and as a hunter and fisherman. I know these subjects. Writing about them and hopefully making the stories entertaining was a different task than being a banker or hunter. What I concentrated on was how I felt and what the outcome was. As many tries, I think I accomplished what I meant to put down on paper. You will have to decide for yourself if I hit a sour note or two.
Boy, can you make folks feel what you feel inside? If you read my book, I hope you will feel what I felt in my stories. I put my heart and soul into the stories.  
‘Cause if you’re big star bound let me warn you it’s a long hard ride. I had a business degree and a desire to succeed when I started my banking career forty years ago. My wife and I started out with no money and no assets. We were so poor that we barely could afford our first house which cost $19,500.
Over the years, it has been an up and down ride. I have worked for banks where the work I did was appreciated but that has been more the exception than the rule. I have been let go and been out of work. It has been, at times, a difficult path.
One of the things I learned years ago is that it is not what you accomplish, it is what you overcome. My wife will tell you that I just don’t have quit in me. I just keep coming until I get done with what I set out to accomplish. When I was told early on that I could not become a lender, I just kept coming. When I was told I could not run a bank, I would not quit. Eventually, I realized my goal to run a bank as president.

That is what I think the ghost of Hank Williams was saying in the last line. It can be a hard road but you have to keep coming, whether you are in your career or you are writing. 



Ken Mixon was raised in Atoka, Oklahoma and graduated from Atoka High School in 1974. He attended Oklahoma Baptist University and graduated in 1977 with a degree in business administration. He has an extensive career in banking that began in 1977 as an auditor with First National Bank in Oklahoma City. From there he worked at a variety of different banks and concluded when he became President and CEO of City National Bank in Corsicana Texas, where he remains today.

Ken is a member of First Baptist Church in Richardson and is very proud to be a Rotary member in Corsicana. One of his biggest passions is being involved in selecting the high school senior to receive the Corsicana Rotary Scholarship each year. Ken is a big fan of the Dallas Mavericks, Dallas Cowboys, and Oklahoma Sooners. He enjoys hunting and fishing and being with family and friends.


LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kenmixon/

Buy link for Texas Banker/Oklahoma Hunter:













Friday, September 8, 2017

Guest Post: Judy Alter: Pigface and the Perfect Dog



Backlist blues – a happy look at the business of publishing
The backlist traditionally has been the backbone of publishing, providing a steady income in contrast to the spurts and uncertainty of front-list sales. Most of the cost of producing backlist titles has already been covered—and recouped in lucky cases. Backlist sales are often permanent, whereas the front list can suffer from the onslaught of huge returns, cutting profitability in half or more. These days, the backlist would seem to be even more important to publishers as Amazon encourages third-party sales of new titles, often at prices lower than those the publisher offers. Don’t ask me about the economics there, because I don’t understand it.
But what do authors do about their backlist? If they’re with a traditional publisher who does not want to revert the rights to the author, they’re stuck with whatever the publisher does with their titles. But if rights revert, and both major and small presses revert rights although one can’t always figure out their reasoning, authors have several choices in today’s bright new world of publishing.
If you think print copies of the book will sell you can choose POD (print on demand or print to order) and use such agencies as Create Space or Lightning, affiliated with Ingram distributors or it used to be. Easier and cheaper for many of us is the ebook format. You can post a book through Kindle Direct Publishing, Draft2Digital, or Smashwords for next to nothing—and sometimes nothing. Just remember that each new edition—print, digital, audio—needs a new ISBN.
Or you can license your book to a distributor yourself. And that happy occurrence is what happened to me. I have eight young-adult novels. Two are with an academic press that still holds the rights. The other six were with small presses that have since gone out of business, reverting the rights to me. Those six books have been requested and licensed to Speaking Volumes, a company that seems, from its web site, to have a strong interest in writing about the American West. Their list includes an impressive number of important writer of what we sometimes mistakenly call westerns. I will be, however, one of the few living authors. But Speaking Volumes also has a respectable front list—I just seem to be scooting in on the backlist side.
The six books will appear once a month, starting mid- to late-September. The first title is Callie Shaw, Stableboy. After that, I’m not sure of the order of the titles, but they are After Pa Was Shot (my first novel, published by a major New York house now gobbled up in the many mergers and later reverted to me whereupon I licensed it to a small press), Katie and the Recluse, Maggie and a Horse Named Devildust, Maggie and the Search for Devildust, and Maggie and Devildust—Ridin’ High! I am truly excited by this prospect.
Callie Shaw, Stableboy is set at the old Arlington Downs racetrack, midway between Fort Worth and Dallas. Here’s what Booklist said about the novel: “It's 1933, and the only economic boom in Callie's North Texas town is in horse racing. Fourteen-year-old Callie lives with Aunt Edna, who declares that the new race track is ‘the devil's work.’ When the girl loses her job as a maid, she disguises herself as a boy and finds work at the stables. Looking after a race horse becomes a labor of love, but soon Callie is trying to unravel a shady plot to fix races by doping, stealing, and even killing horses. Meanwhile she uses her new contacts to locate her father. As the pace quickens near the end, the loose ends are tied up …. this first-person story will engage readers while giving them a glimpse of bare larders, broken dreams, and stout hearts during the Depression.”
Authors need to remember that their backlist is a valuable asset. No, I don’t expect these books to make me rich at all, but they will provide some income, and they will help get my name and books into the hands of more readers. Every little bit helps, and I intend to be as active in promoting these titles as I am with my front list.
I’m excited about stepping back into the world of young-adult fiction. Another learning experience.


Author Bio


Judy Alter is the author of six books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries, two books in the Blue Plate Café Mysteries; and two in the Oak Grove Mysteries. Pigface and the Perfect Dog follows The Perfect Coed in this series of mysteries set on a university campus. Judy is no stranger to college campuses. She attended the University of Chicago, Truman State University in Missouri, and Texas Christian University, where she earned a Ph.D. and taught English. For twenty years, she was director of TCU Press, the book publishing program of the university. The author of many books for both children and adults primarily on women of the American West, she retired in 2010 and turned her attention to writing contemporary cozy mysteries.
            She holds awards from the Western Writers of America, the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame, and the Texas Institute of Letters. She was inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and recognized as an Outstanding Woman of Fort Worth and a woman who has left her mark on Texas. Western Writers of America gave her the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement and will induct her into its Hall of Fame in June 2015.
The single parent of four and the grandmother of seven, she lives in Fort Worth, Texas, with her perfect dog, Sophie.

Buy link for Pigface and the Perfect Dog:

Buy link for The Color of Fear:

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Guest Post from J.T. Bishop


I have always been fascinated with the unknown. From a young age, I’ve questioned where we come from, why we do things, what motivates us. Growing older, those questions grew to what happens after we die, where are those loved ones who’ve crossed over? Can we talk to them? And what about life on other planets? Do they exist and do they visit us? What is the explanation for those strange lights in the sky that can’t be explained?

Lots of questions, but not a lot of answers. Just based on my own experience and gut instincts, I do believe there is life after death. I do believe our loved ones are with us after they die and I do believe there is life on other planets. These ideas spur my writing and inspire me. They allow me an open range of possibilities where I can create a world of possibilities.

In 2012, I saw a Facebook video that theorized the origins of our planet. It discussed how earth was a gathering place of extraterrestrials thousands of years ago. They would gather here to meet and exchange ideas. I don’t know if that’s true or not, but it got me to thinking. What if they were still here? What if extraterrestrials walked among us and we didn’t know it? What would their story be?
And I started writing. The idea spawned four books with a fifth one coming in September plus a sixth in the works. I love creating a world of unique individuals that deal with their own special skill set, while living among those that don’t know who they are or what they’re capable of. And then to put that set of characters into a challenging set of circumstances that only they can deal with, that requires them to rely on each other, even when they have their own interpersonal issues just like everyone else.

It’s been a fun ride. I love the thrill of a great idea flowing through my fingers and into the keyboard. It came naturally to me as if the story was looking for a landing place and it found me. I may have dabbled in writing before, but now it’s in my bones. Finding that inspiration made all the difference.
And now as I promote my fourth book, and begin to prepare for the launch of my fifth, I have found the fun in adding in a little murder mystery on top of everything else. A little whodunit ramps up the suspense and creates an additional tension among my group of earthly extraterrestrials.

So my question to you is, what inspires you? Do you act on it? Do you read about it? You are likely compelled to read certain books. What gets your juices flowing? I would guess that most writers write about what compels them. Otherwise, why write? Can you tell the difference between an inspired story and one that is not? My guess is you can.


So take a moment to think about your favorite books. What was it about them that stirred you? That left you wanting more? Comment below and let me know. Was it the characters? The mystery? The unknown? And maybe one day, if I’m lucky, one of my stories will join the list.



About the Author
Born and raised in Dallas, TX, J. T. Bishop began writing in 2012. Inspired by a video that theorized the meaning of the end of the Mayan calendar, J. T. began the Red-Line trilogy. The video surmised that the earth was the central hub of activity for extraterrestrials thousands of years ago. J.T. didn’t know whether that was true or not, but it did spawn an idea. What if those extraterrestrials were still here? Two years and a lot of work later, the first three Red-Line books were complete, but she’s not done. The Red-Line saga develops as she continues to write new books.


Buy link for Curse Breaker

Friday, June 30, 2017

Guest Post - Judy Alter Author of "The Color of Fear"



The day my library flooded
It was a book lover’s worst nightmare. In the spring of 2016, one of Texas’ spring storms hit in the night with hail and rain driven sideways, hard as nails, against the house. My nine-year-old grandson and I watched it, counting our blessings that no windows shattered. Eventually, the storm moved on, and we went back to bed. Next morning when I woke up I went into the kitchen and smelled—wet. I can’t explain how I knew—it wasn’t mildew or anything, it was simply a wet smell.
I was dramatically downsizing my library from the eight overcrowded bookcases spread throughout the house. I was also having a new roof put on the house. The roofers had finished all but the flat roof over the add-on family room, and they’d protected it with a huge tarp. My daughter had spread my large overstock of juvenile and young-adult books on the couch in the living room. We intended to have a special sale for moms at the elementary school across the street, where my grandson attended school and his mom knew lots of other moms. We were ripe for a disaster.
The wet smell unnerved me, and I waited until Jacob got up and then sent him into the family room as a willing scout. He ended up ankle deep in water. Everything was soaked—books, new long L-shaped couch, table, and chairs. The new supersize built-in TV dripped water, and the floor was awash.
Daughter Jordan organized a work crew before I could even begin to think clearly. The contractor remodeling my garage into a cottage for me and the owner of the roofing company were on their hands and knees, mopping up water. A neighbor was sweeping water into a bucket. Jordan established a line of runners who carried dripping books to the front porch where she sorted damaged from ruined. There were none untouched.
I am forever grateful to all those who helped for hours that day. I was awaiting surgery on a severely disintegrated and painful hip and could do little but wring my hands and say thank you. I hope to this day they know how grateful I was and am.
Fortunately, most of the books I wanted to keep as I downsized were already boxed and stacked in another room. Many more had gone to libraries, Goodwill, and the like. The children’s books were a loss because I would have preferred to put them in the hands of children, rather than destroy them. Insurance did compensate me to some degree for lost revenue.
The real tragedy was my entire cookbook collection, which had been on the chest-high top shelf of one bookcase. I lost practical books that had belonged to my mom and I still used, and I lost coffee table books, like one from the Four Seasons that I had treasured for years and Terry Thompson Anderson’s Texas on a Plate, a new acquisition that I loved for its layout and design as well as its recipes. I lost the odd occasional one—a Santa Fe cookbook, one devoted to pasta (I can’t even remember the title), the I Hate to Cook Cookbook, several from various junior leagues, and so on. A particular loss: my mom’s battered Good Housekeeping Cookbook, so old and used that the index had fallen off, and my vintage Joy of Cooking.

It could have been worse—injuries, fire, lasting damage to the house. But to see all those books, pages wrinkled and twisted, covers bent beyond saving, broke my heart. I’ll never forget that day.



An award-winning novelist, Judy Alter is the author of several fictional biographies of women of the American West. In The Gilded Cage, she has turned her attention to the late nineteenth century in her hometown, Chicago, to tell the story of the lives of Potter and Cissy Palmer, a high society couple with differing views on philanthropy and workers’ right. She is also the author of six books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries series. With the 2014 publication of The Perfect Coed, she introduced the Oak Grove Mysteries.

Her work has been recognized with awards from the Western Writers of America, the Texas Institute of Letters, and the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame. She has been honored with the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement by WWA and inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and the WWA Hall of Fame. http://judyalter.com/

Skype: juju1938

Buy link for Murder at Peacock Mansion:

Buy link for The Gilded Cage

Monday, May 15, 2017

Ordinary or Extraordinary by Carl Brookins






Do you ever feel as though you are being watched? We’ll get to that later.

We lead wildly varied, compelling, interesting, fascinating weird and frustrating lives. We are authors.

We meet and talk with top law enforcement people, hobnob with some of the worst criminals of the era and we are privy to many government secrets. We are authors.
We spend our lives in mean garrets, chewing beef jerky strips and slurping weak tea, or sitting pool-side with slippered feet, being served mimosas and crumpets by a bevy of nearly dressed models. Yes, we are authors.

None of these scenarios are, in my experience, wholly accurate. Neither are they entirely incorrect. In my admittedly limited experience, authors are likely to be a broad mix of life’s experiences. Indeed so, and I’m limiting my remarks here to my personal life and observations of authors of crime fiction. Your experience may vary.

A friend who has achieved broad success as an author has a fairly precise routine. In the morning, he repairs to a nearby coffee shop to write, often long-hand, for a few hours. Every day. Even when he travels, he tries to find the time, in the morning, to write. I have a similar routine. Because I started my fiction writing while I was employed full time, and because I wanted access to most of my psychic energy, I established a routine of rising early in the morning and writing for at least two hours before leaving for the college. Now retired, I still spend at least a couple of hours in the early morning, at my computer, writing a story or working on my current novel. Or, like this particular morning, working on the draft of this article.

So, here’s my typical scenario. I consider myself a typical (hah) author of crime fiction. I’m also a small-time publisher and I review crime fiction for several sites.

Mornings, because my energy levels are higher, I write. Most mornings I’ll work at any of several writing projects that are current. I have no specific goals—number of words, number of pages—so I accomplish whatever I accomplish.

Afternoons I read, do research, write reviews or short pieces, address a variety of tasks associated with being a writer and publisher. The telephone, rings, the carpet needs vacuuming or dishes must be washed. Yes, it may surprise some, but most of the working authors I know, those who try to publish a new book every year, also have ordinary or routine lives. And they travel to make presentations to groups, appear at conventions, answer fan mail and attend to family life.

Readers of this piece should not be surprised to learn that most active authors of crime fiction lead fairly ordinary lives, although we may sometimes experience a heightened level of frustration at our experiences with the publishing world. Be that as it may, among the joys of being an author, is our opportunity to do research. We develop access to experienced members of the legal, law enforcement and business communities that many citizens may never experience. Such contacts are not always in the most pleasant circumstances, visits to autopsy labs, for example. But in general, most of the successful authors I know like to learn things and we are always watching and listening. Waiting at the airport to board an airplane, I overheard a six-word jargon-laced phrase from a passing vendor. That phrase triggered an explanation of important actions in a story I was working on at the time.

Yes, when you are around authors, if you get the feeling you are being carefully watched, it is probably true.





Brief bio and links for Carl Brookins:
Before he became a mystery writer and reviewer, Carl Brookins was a counselor and faculty member at Metropolitan State University in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Brookins and his wife are avid recreational sailors. He is a member of Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, and Private Eye Writers of America. He can frequently be found touring bookstores and libraries with his companions-in-crime, The Minnesota Crime Wave.

He writes the sailing adventure series featuring Michael Tanner and Mary Whitney. The third novel is Old Silver. His new private investigator series features Sean NMI Sean, a short P.I. The first is titled The Case of the Greedy Lawyers. Brookins received a liberal arts degree from the University of Minnesota and studied for a MA in Communications at Michigan State University.

http://www.carlbrookins.com/
@carlbrookins

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Come and enjoy a time of conversation with author Carl Brookins as he talks about translating his sailing adventures to fiction and creating fictional characters that feel like old friends. Brookins is a member of Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, and Private Eye Writers of America. He can frequently be found touring bookstores and libraries with his companions-in-crime, The Minnesota Crime Wave.