Author Spotlight: Amy Metz, Part 2

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Today on Reade and Write I welcome Amy Metz back to the hot seat. She’s been here before, back in June of 2015, to discuss her book Heroes & Hooligans in Goose Pimple Junction. She’s back now to discuss her newest release, Rogues & Rascals in Goose Pimple Junction. For those of you who haven’t read any of Amy’s books, I highly recommend them. They’re chock-full of humor, mystery, and Southern wisdom. Good to have you back, Amy!

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Tell us about your new book.

Rogues & Rascals in Goose Pimple Junction was released in May and is the fourth book in my humorous mystery series. The main characters are Wynona and Caledonia, two very different women, but two women who also have more in common than one might think.

How long did it take you to write the new book?

Forever. A least it seemed like it. Realistically, more like a year.

Do you write linearly, or do you write each scene separately and then piece them together like a puzzle? Or is there some other path you take to writing a novel?

I pretty much write linearly. Sometimes I write the first and last chapters and then fill in the middle, but I haven’t done that with the book I’m currently writing. Maybe I should try that.

Tell us a secret about one of your characters- something that’s not in the book.

Wynona has a mother who is a little crazy. Okay, a lot crazy.

Do you have any writing rituals?

Yes, the temperature has to be 74 degrees exactly. I need sweet tea with lemon, M&Ms—green only—and someone to rub my shoulders while I work. Just kidding. I don’t have any rituals that I can think of.

What time of day do you do your best writing?

Probably late at night.

Have you ever been on a writing retreat? And if so, where did you go?

I don’t know that you’d call it a retreat, but I went to the Mad Anthony Writers Conference (http://www.writelikemad.com/) in Hamilton, Ohio, a few years ago. I learned a ton and wish I could go to more of them.

Can you tell us what you’re working on now?

I’m working on book 5 in the Goose Pimple Junction series, Liars & Lunatics in Goose Pimple Junction. I’m also working on a thriller titled Wax Man.

Tell us about the dedication in your new book, if you wish.

Rogues & Rascals in Goose Pimple Junction was dedicated to a man named Robert, who I never actually met in person—we only knew each other online. I met him when I first started writing. He was the best beta reader I ever had and was instrumental in books one and two. He always had great suggestions, was brutally honest, and he kept me writing at times when I didn’t want to. I sent him chapters as I wrote them, and I think that immediate feedback helped me write faster than I do now. He passed away in January 2015 and never read Rogues & Rascals.

Do you prefer to read a physical book (with paper pages that really turn), or do you prefer an ereader, or perhaps audio books?

I actually read more audiobooks than any other form, because I listen to them in the car or when I’m puttering around the house. They also help me get to sleep. I like ebooks when I go somewhere and need to fill down-time while waiting for something or someone. But if you’re talking prefer, I prefer hardback books. I think each form plays an important role!

If you had an unlimited budget, is there something special you would do for your readers?

I’d love to be able to give away gift certificates to bookstores or even paperback copies of GPJ books. Right now it’s just not in the budget.

Remind us where we can connect with you.
Website: http://authoramymetz.com
Blog: http://abluemillionbooks.blogspot.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AuthorAmyMetz
Twitter: https://twitter.com/authoramymetz
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/AmyMetz

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Amy-Metz/e/B008NA07X4/ref=series_rw_dp_un

Where is the new book available?

All four books in the series are available on Amazon.com.

Links:
Murder & Mayhem In Goose Pimple Junction: http://tinyurl.com/zz6vl2l
Heroes & Hooligans In Goose Pimple Junction:
http://tinyurl.com/z45l93p
Short & Tall Tales In Goose Pimple Junction:
http://tinyurl.com/zl8ovc3
Rogues & Rascals In Goose Pimple Junction: http://tinyurl.com/zy9p85r

Goose Pimple Junction Mysteries: http://tinyurl.com/gnclb9y

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Thanks so much for joining me on Reade and Write today!

Until next week,

Amy

Independent motion – can you help?

Nick has an indomitable spirit and there are lessons in this for all of us.

Sue Vincent's Daily Echo

What would you give to make a dream come true if you woke to find yourself living a nightmare?

What would you feel if you could never again walk on a beach? Or go out alone in the snow…feel the stillness of a wood or cross a field?

And then, you found a way…

In 2009, my son was a successful young man with a bright future… until he was stabbed through the brain in an unprovoked attack and left for dead in an alley.

He was found almost immediately by passers-by who saved his life. By the time we arrived at the hospital, Nick was being prepared for emergency brain surgery. We were allowed to see him, for a few minutes, to say goodbye. He was not expected to survive…


Over the past couple of years, many in the blogging community have come to know my son and know…

View original post 485 more words

Author Spotlight: B.K. Stevens

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Today on Reade and Write I welcome B.K. Stevens, author of short stories almost too numerous to count (most of which appear in “Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine”), fiction, and non-fiction. She is the recipient of the Derringer Award (from the Short Mystery Fiction Society) and has been nominated for the Agatha, Anthony, and Macavity Awards. It’s an honor to have her here today discussing her book Fighting Chance.

Tell me about your book.

Fighting Chance could be called a cross between The Hardy Boys and The Karate Kid: It’s a young adult mystery laced with action and adventure, but it’s also a coming-of-age story about a teenager growing into adulthood while studying a martial art. When seventeen-year-old Matt Foley’s coach and mentor is killed in a sparring match at a tae kwon do tournament, the police decide it was a tragic accident. Matt’s not so sure. With help from a few friends, including the attractive but puzzling school newspaper editor, Graciana Cortez, Matt learns the coach’s opponent, Bobby Davis, is a brutal, highly skilled martial artist, the central attraction at an illegal fight club. Now, Matt’s convinced someone hired Davis to murder the coach. But who would want to harm the coach, and why do it at a tournament? Matt’s efforts to find the truth pull him into some dangerous conflicts. To improve his self-defense skills, he joins a Krav Maga class taught by a man who becomes his new mentor. Matt suspects that he’s going to need those skills, that some day he’ll have to face Bobby Davis himself. Fighting Chance was a finalist for both the Agatha and the Anthony awards for Best Young Adult Novel.

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Who is the audience for the book?

When I was teaching high-school English in Cleveland, it was easy to find outside reading novels to recommend to girls, not so easy to find ones to recommend to boys. Often, when I started to recommend a book to a boy, he’d interrupt with a question straight out of The Princess Bride: “Does it have any sports?” So I started toying with the idea of writing a sports-oriented mystery for teenaged boys. And since my husband’s a fifth-degree black belt, using martial arts as the sport seemed like a natural choice—I’d have an expert advisor I could consult without leaving the house. But I don’t want to define the audience for Fighting Chance too narrowly. The novel has several strong female characters, including Graciana. When a high-school book club read Fighting Chance, I was pleased to hear that both girls and boys enjoyed it. And adults who have read the novel have said they enjoyed it, too.

Tell me about the setting of your book—how did you choose it, what kind of research did you have to do, why did you choose it?

By the time I started writing Fighting Chance, my husband and I had moved to central Virginia, and that’s where I decided to set the book. We lived for several years in the small city of Lynchburg, then moved to the small town of Farmville (site of the recent vice-presidential debate). I’ve enjoyed getting to know this part of the country and the students I’ve met here, so I created a fictional small city/town called Ridgecrest, which I’ve imagined as midway between the sizes of Lynchburg and Farmville.

What was the hardest thing about writing the book?

One of the big challenges in writing Fighting Chance was making the martial arts scenes realistic and exciting—since I wanted to make the book appeal to young people interested in martial arts, I knew that was important. I was lucky to have my husband to choreograph those scenes, but in order to get things right and make sure I knew how to describe them, we had to act them out. And since he knows a lot about martial arts and I don’t, he always got to play the winner and I was always the loser—ouch. I often had to cry out, “Stop! Let me write that down before I forget it!” or “I didn’t quite get that—let’s do it again.” The process took a long time, and it sometimes got uncomfortable. But I’m pleased with the way the scenes turned out—my editor told me she found them gripping, and that was one of her reasons for deciding to accept the novel.

If your book were made into a movie, who would you like to see playing the main characters?

As I was writing the book, I had one actor clearly in mind—Chuck Norris. He’d be perfect in the role of Aaron, the Krav Maga teacher who becomes Matt’s mentor.  Thanks to my husband, I’ve seen all of Mr. Norris’s movies (most many times), and I think his gentle, encouraging demeanor is just right for Aaron. As for Matt and Graciana, I don’t know the names of many teenaged actors, so I’ll say Matt could be played by a seventeen-year-old Mark Wahlberg, and Graciana could be played by a seventeen-year-old Eva Mendes. And I think William H. Macy and Karen Allen (first and fourth Indiana Jones movies) would be great as Matt’s parents.

Tell me about some other books you’ve written.

Many years ago, I wrote two college textbooks and a book on Jewish education. My first mystery novel was Interpretation of Murder, published by Black Opal books, a traditional whodunit that offers readers insights into deaf culture and sign- language interpreting. (One of my daughters is a nationally certified American Sign Language interpreter, and my other daughter has significant hearing loss, so hearing issues are important to our family). Last April, Wildside Press published Her Infinite Variety: Tales of Women and Crime, a collection of eleven of my short stories—most first published in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine (I’ve published forty stories in that wonderful magazine), a few first published in Woman’s World, Family Circle, or anthologies. The collection includes stories that were nominated for Agatha, Macavity, and Derringer awards, along with the winner of a national suspense-writing contest judged by Mary Higgins Clark.

Are you in one or more critique groups or partnerships?

I’ve participated in manuscript swaps through the Guppies chapter of Sisters in Crime, and those have been very helpful. Honestly, though, my best critique group is my family. My husband isn’t much of a critic—he’s so sweet and loyal that he likes everything I write—but he’s incredibly generous with his time and insights, spending countless hours discussing ideas and manuscripts with me, often making suggestions that help me solve plot problems and make many other sorts of improvements. My daughters, on the other hand, are ruthless. They’re always happy to rip apart anything I write, to point out problems I’ve missed, and to suggest solutions. My younger daughter is also a demon proofreader. I know how lucky I am to have such perceptive readers so determined to help me make my manuscripts as strong as they can possibly be.

Do you write every day?

I try to write every day, but I don’t always succeed. I think writing every day is an excellent goal, but I don’t think writers should despair if they can’t meet that goal. If I’d told myself that I absolutely had to write every day when I started writing—when I had young children, a full-time job, and time-consuming volunteer responsibilities—I would have given up long ago. Write as often and as much as you can, and console yourself with the thought that not every writer has to follow the same path.

What authors do you like best? What genres do you like best?

I have rather old-fashioned tastes in novels: I tend to prefer authors such as Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, Anthony Trollope, and Mark Twain to more modern ones. I think my preference for traditional novels helps explain my love of mysteries—I like novels that actually have plots, and I like characters that actually do things, rather than characters who simply suffer and feel sorry for themselves. (I say more about this preference in an essay called “What’s Wrong with Mysteries?” which you can find here.) My favorite mystery writers include Dorothy L. Sayers, Josephine Tey, Harry Kemelman, and Dick Francis. I won’t name any living writers because I have many friends who write mysteries—if I mention some, I might hurt the feelings of others.

Where would you like to go more than anywhere else on earth?

I would love to go to Israel. I’ve always wanted to go there, but it’s never worked out—problems with time, problems with money. I’m still hoping I can go there before I die.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

In an 1884 essay called “The Art of Fiction,” Henry James offers the best advice for writers I’ve ever heard: “Try to be one of those people on whom nothing is lost!” James describes experience as a “huge spider-web” that can catch “every air-borne particle in its tissue.” Like a spider web, an imaginative mind “takes to itself the faintest hints of life.” Some people can pass through all sorts of experiences without gaining significant insights into them, or having much to say about them. Other people can grasp at “the faintest hints of life” and use them to create compelling characters and situations.  A writer who’s truly alert may get the idea for a novel from a scrap of conversation overheard in a restaurant.

What is your favorite movie and why?

Like almost everybody else, I love Casablanca—the clever dialogue, the incredible acting, the moving and noble themes. I’ll also mention a movie mystery that isn’t as well known, Dead Again. If you haven’t seen it yet, you should definitely watch it as soon as you can. The acting and directing are wonderful—it’s as suspenseful as Hitchcock at his best—and it’s also a beautifully constructed whodunit. Not all whodunits work well as movies, but this one definitely does.

What advice would you give to your younger self?

I’d say, “Start writing mysteries sooner.” I did a lot of creative writing in elementary school and junior high, but in senior high I got discouraged—I realized I’d never be as good as Shakespeare or Jane Austen, so I gave up completely. I did academic writing but no creative writing until I was in my mid-thirties, when I got an idea for a mystery novel that just wouldn’t go away. That novel never got published—I still hope to go back to it some day, now that I know what changes I need to make—but while I was working on it, I fell in love with writing mysteries. I finally realized that not all writers have to be Shakespeare or Austen. As long as we do our best and work hard at improving at our craft, there’s room for the rest of us, too.

Describe yourself in three words.

curious, hard-working, grateful

Is there anything I haven’t asked that you wanted me to?

I was hoping you’d ask me, “Do you think Fighting Chance would be the ideal gift for any young adults on my holiday list?” My answer would have been, “You bet!”

Where can readers connect with you?

The best place is my website, http://www.bkstevensmysteries.com; I think there’s a lot of interesting stuff there, including a humorous whodunit I wrote as a tribute to my dog after he passed away. I also have an Amazon author page at https://www.amazon.com/author/bkstevens, but I need to work on it—the bio is outdated and boring, and I should delete some things nobody has any interest in reading. I don’t have a Facebook author page, but I do have a personal page at https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003534785806&ref=bookmarks, and I’m always happy to connect with readers. I’m not yet on Twitter or Goodreads or any of the other things I know I should be on, but I’m working on it (or, at least, I’m planning to).

Where can readers find your books?

All of my books are available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Kobo, as well as from their publishers. Fighting Chance is also available at some bookstores.

 

 

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House of the Hanging Jade cover with USA Today (2)

Friends, my third book, House of the Hanging Jade, is just 99¢!

It’s also a Featured Ebook Recommendation today on BookBub. That’s an honor and a big deal for an author, and I’ve watched my sales numbers climb today as a result of the book’s exposure from BookBub. I hope you’ll consider sharing this with your friends and family and that you’ll reblog this post so we can get as many eyes as possible on the sale price and promotion.

Here’s the BookBub link: https://www.bookbub.com/books/house-of-the-hanging-jade-by-amy-m-reade?ebook 

Here’s the Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/House-Hanging-Jade-Amy-Reade-ebook/dp/B0138NHCMO/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1476655599&sr=8-1

Here’s the Barnes & Noble link: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/house-of-the-hanging-jade-amy-m-reade/1122454903?ean=9781601835581

Here’s the Kobo link: https://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/ebook/house-of-the-hanging-jade

Many thanks!

Amy

Automated Out-of-Office Blog Post!

Good Tuesday morning! I’m not putting up a blog post today because I have other plans and I hope you’ll join me.

Today, all day long, I’ll be answering questions on H.C. Bentley’s Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1334025846610530/.

Come on over and ask any questions you may have- I look forward to hearing from you!

Until next week,

Amy

Reader Spotlight: Dru Ann Love

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It is my pleasure to welcome Dru Ann Love to Reade and Write today. If you follow any mystery writers online, you may have heard of Dru. She hosts a blog, Dru’s Book Musings (more about that below), where she reviews many of the books she reads and where authors regularly contribute posts about a day in the life of one of their characters. I’ve had the honor of meeting Dru several times at Malice and Bouchercon conventions.

Welcome, Dru!

How often do you read?

I read 2-4 books per week.

 

What is the name of the last book you finished?

The Queen’s Accomplice by Susan Elia MacNeal.

 

What are you reading now?

Literary Dead by Lois Winston, the second book in the “Empty Nest” series.

 

What is your preferred genre?

Cozy mysteries.

 

How often do you venture outside your preferred genre?

For every 10 cozy mystery books I read, I’ll read another genre. That’s a great way to get out of a comfort zone!

 

What was the last book you read outside your preferred genre?

The Queen’s Accomplice by Susan Elia MacNeal.

 

Are you in a book club?

No, I’m not. I used to be.

 

Where do you obtain most of the books you read- from a bookstore, online, the library, borrowed from a friend, etc.?

I buy most of the cozy mysteries I read. If not, I get from the library.

 

How do you decide which books to read?

If it’s a first book in a new series, I’ll read that first and then it’s whatever mood I’m in for the other books. There are some people who like to read series in the order in which the books are written, then there are others who don’t really care. I have to say for me, it depends on the series. Sometimes I read in order, sometimes I jump around.

 

What is in your To-Be-Read pile?

Too many books to count (cozies, thrillers, suspense and women’s lit).

 

Do you pay attention to especially bad reviews of books when deciding whether to buy or read them?

No, I do not. I know what I like to read.

 

Lots of people don’t have a favorite book for a variety of reasons. Do you have a favorite? What is it?

My favorite book is To Kill A Mockingbird.

 

Where is your favorite reading spot?

The love seat in my living room.

 

Anything else you want me to know?

I’m owner of Dru’s Book Musings (https://drusbookmusing.com/). I’m an avid reader and I love attending author/reader fan conventions. I also love meeting other readers and sharing our love of books.

Thanks for being part of the Reader Spotlight series, Dru!

 

I’ve gotten a great response from people who’d like to be included in the Reader Spotlights. One of the things I like best about interviewing readers is learning about books and authors that are new to me. I also love to know more about people’s reading habits.

Until next week,

Amy