Thursday, December 29, 2016

Author Interview with Denise J. Bryson


Hi Denise, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself and your background?
Thank you for this opportunity, LaToya. Well, my name is Denise J Bryson, and I was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, where I still reside. I’m the oldest of three girls and three boys. I graduated from Marygrove College with a Bachelor’s of Art degree and currently work for Delta Airlines, where I have been employed as a Flight Attendant for over twenty years. My love for reading and writing began as a kid. My mother, who departed this life a year ago, was an avid reader and lover of horror, with Stephen King and James Patterson being two of her favorite authors. She passed her love of reading and horror on to me, and I started writing in the fourth grade. My first story written as a kid was titled The Last Witch in Salem, and I still have this piece. I didn’t start writing seriously until I was much older, though. Once I finished my latest story titled In The Footsteps Of A Killer, I stepped out on faith and submitted it to Artistic Words Publishing, who ended up liking the story as much as I did. This led to me becoming a signed author. My plan for now and in the future is to keep readers entertained with my intriguing, out-of-the-box storytelling abilities.

What are your ambitions for your writing career?
I am teamed up with a great set of people at Artistic Words Publishing, who are working towards making my books available in bookstores all over the world. I would eventually like to make writing my full-time job and even see my books turned into movies.

Which writers inspire you?
My mother’s favorite author, of course…Stephen King, the master of horror. I want to be the mistress. (LOL!)

What are you working on at the moment?
I’m currently working on the sequel to In the Footsteps of a Killer.


What genre are your books and why did you choose that genre?
I write Horror because it’s what I grew up reading and enjoying. Some of my favorites memories are of my family and me watching horror movies on Saturday nights while eating popcorn. We would scream and hold each other in fright, then laugh at our reactions. It was a hoot.

In ten words or less, can you create a quote that describes you and your writing?
A little horror never hurt anyone.

Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your recent book?
I could see Gabrielle Union, Thandie Newton, or Zoe Saldana playing the part of Leah Moore.

When did you decide to become a writer?
I think writing chose me, because after that 4th grade story, my head filled with ideas. However, it wasn’t until I wrote my first story and declared it done that the stories began to pour out of my head and onto paper.

Do you write full-time or part-time?
Presently, I’m writing part-time because I have a full-time job. However, I’m hoping to change that soon. Sometimes writing does feel like a full-time job, because there are some days when that’s all I will do.

Do you have a special time of the day to write? How is your day structured?
When I’m scheduled to work, I try to get out of bed a little earlier before I have to start getting ready so I can write. On my off days, sometimes I write all day. Then there are other days when I’ll write for only a few hours. I’m not very disciplined yet, but I’m working on it.

Do you aim for a set amount of words/pages per day?
No, I just go with the flow. Some days I might only produce a few hundred words and others I might crank out 1,000 words or more.  

Where do your ideas come from?
I’m a dreamer. I dream very vivid dreams, which most times are in color and in sequence. Some people call them nightmares because it’s horror, but it’s almost like I know it’s an idea for a story. So, I’m usually not afraid.

Do you outline your story before writing it or do you prefer to just see where an idea takes you?
As it is right now, an idea comes to me and I run with it. There are times when I draw up an outline as I go along, then use it as a reference and to keep my timeline straight.

How do you think you’ve evolved creatively?
I’ve learned you have to make it believable. Even if the story is out of this world, you have to make it seem possible. Checking facts also helps. Readers want to know that you know what you’re talking about.

What is the hardest thing about writing?
For me, it’s making horror believable. If you can make it seem possible, the fear becomes stronger and more real. My mission is accomplished when I can have the reader say to themselves, “Oh, that could happen,” as they are reading my work.

What was the hardest thing about writing your latest book?
Well, In The Footsteps of a Killer is about a serial murderer, and unfortunately, women are the usual targets for these types of people. So, the killing of the women was the hardest part. But, again, to make it seem believable it has to be possible.

What is the easiest thing about writing?
I think the easiest thing about writing is once I have decided where I want to take my readers the flow of the story just sort of comes. I can get going and before I know it things get revealed that sometimes even I didn’t see coming.
  
How long on average does it take you to write a book?
Well, my very first story (not the one I wrote back in fourth grade) took twenty years for me to pen. In The Footsteps of a Killer took nine months. I can write a short story in a day, and longer stories can take me anywhere from nine months to a year to complete.

Where do you see yourself in five years?
I envision myself being a full-time writer who has several books on the shelves and maybe a film or two in the works.

What advice would you give to your younger self?
Start writing sooner. Don’t doubt your ability to bring the written word to life. Just do it.

Which famous person, living or dead, would you like to meet and why?
I would like to meet Vincent Price. He was the most awesome horror actor. A lot of his roles he did without the aid of makeup. His face was his instrument, and he used it well to scare the crap out of you.

If you could have been the original author of any book, which book would it have been and why?
Braham Stoker’s Dracula. It is classic horror at its best, and the story never dies. It has been told over and over again. It was alive then and still is to this day.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
Learn the craft and all of the ins and outs. While I’m grateful for what I’ve learned so far, it would have been better to study writing in school first. Don’t get me wrong. School isn’t the only place where a writer can be born. However, there are certain business practices I would have been aware of beforehand, but it’s all good. I think my stories have grown more because of my life experiences.

Connect with Denise J. Bryson:

Twitter: Denise J Bryson@OneBlackRoseDJB



Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Author Interview with Deborah Watkins


Hi Deborah Watkins, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself and your background?
Deborah Watkins is a Retired Deputy Superintendent for the New York State department of Corrections and Community Supervision.  She currently resides in Buffalo, New York.  A single parent, she is the proud mother of twin sons.  One is a graduate from the University of Pittsburg with a degree in Finance with a minor in Economics.  He is currently in a Commercial Banking training program for a major Bank.  The other son is currently enrolled in Buffalo State College majoring in Industrial Technology and will be graduating in the Fall of 2017.  He is also presently employed with a Real estate development Company in Buffalo, NY.    Deborah is a graduate of Medaille College of Buffalo, NY with a Master’s in Organizational Leadership.  She holds a bachelor degree from Canisius College of Buffalo, NY in Business Management.  


Deborah’s love for reading was the catalyst for her writing career.  An avid reader, at one point in time she would read a book a week. Deborah started a newsletter for her family leading to their first family reunion.  The family especially the elders loved the newsletter and encouraged her to keep it up.  While attending a workshop Deborah had an epiphany she should write a book. She attended workshops and discovered her purpose.   While in graduate school, Deborah became proficient at writing papers and just about all of her professors marveled at the quality and effectiveness of her writing.   She self-published her first book in 2014 From Mediocre to Marvelous live a fulfilled life.  She has a new Book due to be released February 2017 Some will be King Makers a single mother's journey raising African American males.  She is presently working on a fiction piece.


Deborah loves to of course read, go to the gym, travel.  She is a member of Toastmasters international and active in her club.  She is involved with her graduate college alumni groups.  She volunteers at a soup kitchen once a month, and is an active member of her church.


What are your ambitions for your writing career?
I just want my books to reach the masses.  I want my books to brand me as an Inspirational speaker.


Which writers inspire you?
I would have to say most African American writers.  However, Maya Angelo I know why the cage bird sings and the subsequent series was the first book that actually made me laugh out loud.  


What are you working on at the minute?
I just finished Some will be King Makers and working on getting it self-published.  I am also writing a fiction book about females working in the prison systems.



What genre are your books and why?
My books are inspirational.  My purpose in life is to help people find theirs.  I am always the person people come to for advice.  I am told that I have a lot of wisdom.


In 10 words or less can you create a quote that describes you and your writing?
We were all put on this earth for a reason.


Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book?  
My books are not fiction.  However, if my book on raising black males were to made into a movie, I guess Angela Bassett


When did you decide to become a writer?
I attended a workshop on purpose and had an epiphany moment, around 2011.  


Do you write full-time or part-time?
I write whenever I am inspired.


Do you have a special time to write or how is your day structured?
I do not work at a job.  I am home alone most of the time. So I write whenever something hits me. However, I am more productive in the daytime.  Thoughts come to me all the time.  I have to write them down.  I have notebooks all over the house.


Do you aim for a set amount of words/pages per day?
No thoughts come to me all the time wherever I am.  I have to write them down right away.  


Where do your ideas come from?
Being 57 years old,  I have a lot of life experience I can draw from.  I travel a lot and have friends all over the country and overseas.  


Do you work with an outline/plot or prefer to see where an idea takes you?
My inspirational books were drawn from a need. Once I determine the Idea.  I just start writing and the content evolves.  With my fiction book, I already have the characters now I am working on the plot.


How do you think you’ve evolved creatively?
I am no longer afraid to put myself out there.  This has given me energy to create. I know that I spark emotion in people who read my work.


What is the hardest thing about writing?
Being disciplined enough to sit down and do it.  I can skip days, which is not good.


What was the hardest thing about writing your latest book?
Writing the book was not hard at all, because it was coming from the heart and a place of experience.  I was telling my story. What was hard was convincing myself that it was needed.  


What is the easiest thing about writing?
When you have a passion for something it is easy.  It is like breathing.  Stories are always in our heads writers.  We never stop thinking.  Writing helps us get those stories out of our heads.


How long on average does it take you to write a book?  
Well I only have two books so far and they did not take long at all because they were non-fiction.  It was a matter of me deciding that I had enough information in them.  I would say about two to three months.


Where can you see yourself in 5 years’ time.
I would like to become a brand and maybe having a talk show.


What advice would you give to your younger self?
Go to school for journalism.


Which famous person, living or dead would you like to meet and why?
President Obama.  He had such great resolve.  I would like to know if that is his personality or was he taught that.

If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why?
Native Son by Richard Wright, he was my first love of African American writers.


What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
The writing industry just like any other industry, has a lot of vipers out there.  Learn as much as you can about the business before you invest.  Protect your property and yourself.  Most of us learned the hard way.



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Friday, December 23, 2016

Book Spotlight: The First Lady’s Choice by K.K. Harris


The First Lady’s Choice
When life seems to throw the biggest curve ball, where do you go? How do you dodge it? Where is your safe-haven? When the chips seem to fall in all the wrong places, who are you supposed to run to?
Church folks can be some of the messiest folks alive. Jump into this tale to see what choices this first lady will be forced to make. Shaky vows or unconditional love, which will she choose?
***EXCERPT***
“Who is it?” A deep voice asked through the door. The sound of the voice always brought a sense of calmness to my fragile nerves but today it seemed impatient.
“…” As bad as I wanted to shout my name, the frog in my throat didn’t allow it. It was a given that he would look in the peephole anyway so I could never understand why he would always ask. Finally, the locks began to turn and the door was opened.
“What are you doing out so late?”
“Sorry to interrupt… I…” I couldn’t form a complete sentence to save my life. Here I was standing on a friend that I had practically written offs doorstep late on a Friday night. My life was in utter turmoil and sadly, my mind was tempting to slip into the gutter.
‘What the hell is wrong with me?’
“Megan, what’s going on?” Tremaine asked. He sounded generally concerned.
“Tre, is everything okay?” A female voice said on the other side of the door. I never imagined someone else would be here so late.
How stupid was I not to realize he would have company. Tre was a very attractive young man with women all over Dallas chasing in behind him. Common sense would have told me he wasn’t alone because he never made a move to invite me inside. He had only stood in the gap with one massive arm braced at the top of the doorframe and the other holding the door. While he spoke with his female company, I made the conscious decision to leave.
“I apologize for interrupting your evening, it’s nothing. I don’t know what I was thinking.” I rambled out attempting to flee as quickly as possible. The intense look he shot at my retreating form didn’t go unnoticed. Like a bullet, his hand shot out to pull me to stop abruptly.
“What the hell…” He was trying to focus in on something. In the process of looking everywhere but directly at him, I almost forgot the real reason I came here.
“Just go back…”
“What is that on your face?” He questioned.
“Oh, that…”
“Yeah, that…”
“It’s…”
“Don’t you dare tell me it’s nothing? Who did this to you?”
“Tre, calm down,” I tried to get him to lower his voice.
“Calm down? CALM DOWN?!”
“TRE, we are in the hall remember?”
“Come inside.”
“No, I don’t want to intrude.”
“Come on,” he pulled me into his apartment despite my many attempts of pulling away. In the back of my mind, I feel some type of way showing up on his doorstep this way but I didn’t know where else to turn. I have always despised being helpless but here I am, what I hate most. Desperate… Destitute…. Destroyed… A disaster… A damsel in distress well on my way to becoming bitter.
My name is Kanika Harris and I pen under the name K. K. Harris. I have been in the writing game for four and a half years with sixteen books under my belt. In the beginning, the entire idea of publishing seemed impossible to achieve. Through the grace of god, I have come out a victor because I never gave up my dream, just altered it a little. Today I am a self-published author on the rise with amazing talent in several different genres.
From the very first book, I have dedicated my hidden talent to creating my very own book covers. Since then it has turned into a full-blown business and create for others in the game. With each and every cover I create, I give my full creative attention as if it were my own. Every artist desires to have a cover to speak for the words inside and I strive to do that and more. Visit www.passionpgm.wix.com/graphics for custom and premade covers.
I love reading paranormal romance. It is a guilty pleasure. As for writing, I love to write in all genres. Whatever idea comes to mind via vision, dream, or random idea-I go for it. My favorite authors would have to be Sylvia Hubbard and EJ Brock. I have all their books.




Thursday, December 22, 2016

Author Interview with Sharon D. Moore


Hi Sharon, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself and your background?
I am a 50-year-old former military brat who works in the insurance filed by day and is a writer by night. I currently reside in Creedmoor, North Carolina. I attended UNC-Greensboro as well as North Carolina Central University where I studied Fashion Merchandising and Marketing. I caught the reading bug early and have fond memories reading the Betsy books as a child.
I consider myself to be a well-rounded reader and regularly support authors in a variety of genres, That variety feeds my craft, as does my longtime experience living all over the world and being thrust into numerous situations in which I was regarded as “the other.” In neighborhoods, classrooms, work environments, churches and social situations, I frequently discovered I was the only person of color… occasionally, one of very few people of color. Themes of inclusion and the search for identity or home have, as a direct result, found their way into my personal philosophy and, ultimately, my writing.
It was in the late nineties that a fellow church member encouraged me to share, in written form, my many spoken positions on weighty matters. The outcome of my taking that advice was a stint writing opinion pieces for a small, local newspaper, followed by another for the “singles” section of my [then] church’s newsletter; an online e-zine; and Anointed, a print magazine.
After a series of dreams in 2001 and 2002, which prompted me to begin journaling my dreams, I realized I had wandered into the premise of my first novel and, consequently, with over two million words under my belt, my first fiction series. I officially caught the author bug, but never had a work published until I finally submitted her first novel in the fall of 2015 and was signed to New Season Books.

What are your ambitions for your writing career?
I want to write quality books that people can feel, enjoy and come away better after reading them. I want to tell complicated stories that mirror life in all of its beautiful ugliness.

Which writers inspire you?
Wow. I read a lot and admire so much about so many authors. My short list would include Bernice McFadden, Walter Mosely, David Baldacchi, Natalie Baszile, Ernessa Carter, Alexander McCall Smith, and about 30 more authors whose names come to mind.

What are you working on at the minute?
I am working on the second installment in the Under The Shadow Of The Almighty series as well as toying with another novel that I wrote back in 2007 but never published.

What genre are your books and why?
So far everything I have written would be classified as African American fiction.

In 10 words or less can you create a quote that describes you and your writing?
A bold rollercoaster that leaves you feeling breathless.

Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book? Wow. My book has a couple of leads but the character of Jason White would be played by Morris Chestnut.

When did you decide to become a writer? I never really decided. I just did it and that’s what I ended up being called. I never made the decision. It seems to have been made for me,

Do you write full-time or part-time?
I am a part-time writer.

Do you have a special time to write or how is your day structured?
I really don't have a certain time that I write. I get it in when I can get it in. I have to have to be alone though. I do not write well with ‘people noise’ around me.

Do you aim for a set amount of words/pages per day?
No I don’t but I am wordy when I am in creative mode so I can easily write a few thousand words in one sitting.

Where do your ideas come from?
The Under the Shadow of the Almighty series came from a dream that stalked me for months. Another work I have yet to publish is loosely based on my past dating history. There is also series I want to write was borne of my imagination.

Do you work to an outline or plot or do you prefer just see where an idea takes you?
My initial approach to the Under the Shadow of the Almighty series and the first installment, Hidden In Plain Sight, was to simply write what I saw/felt in my dream. With this second installment, I have opted to use an outline since I am pulling from what I wrote 15 years ago and having to clean it up, etc.

How do you think you’ve evolved creatively?
I am learning to say more using fewer words. I am also learning the value of taking the reader ‘there’ versus being safe in my writing. Initially I wrote like I was transcribing a documentary. I have since learned that it is okay to let the reader see and feel what I saw and felt.

What is the hardest thing about writing?
Keeping the word count to a minimum! LOL If I had my way, Hidden In Plain Sight would have been about 180,000 words long.

What was the hardest thing about writing your latest book?
The hardest thing was allowing people into what I experienced in my dreams. I lived with the complete story so long that it is personal. I struggled to get the story out with clarity. I want the reader to see the mental movie I saw in my head. It’s hard to describe something to someone who has not had the same experience, been to the same place, etc. that you have.

What is the easiest thing about writing?
Dialogue. For some reason, dialogue comes easy for me. Keeping the narration concise is the hard part.

How long on average does it take you to write a book?
It’s hard to say. I think it took me roughly eight or nine months to write the two million (plus) word series back in 2002. I had the luxury of toying with the first installment off and one for 14 years. Working on cleaning up and rewriting the second installment will be the true test of how long it takes me to actually write a novel.

Where can you see yourself in 5 years’ time?
I would love to see my work on the large or small screen. I would like to have at least one novel, from each of the three series I want to write, published and doing well with readers.

What advice would you give to your younger self?
You have stories to tell. Sit down and write. I wasted so much time in my twenties doing nothing when I could have been writing.

Which famous person, living or dead would you like to meet and why?  This is hard. There are so many people. I have grandparents and great-grandparents I never got a chance to know before they passed away. There are celebrities as well as biblical and historical figures I admire. I guess if I had to only choose one, I would want to meet Jesus in the flesh.

If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why? You don’t ask easy questions do you? *smile* If there was any book I could have authored it would be Through The Looking Glass/Alice in Wonderland

What advice would you give to aspiring writers? Die empty. What I mean by that is that they should empty every story in their head out onto paper so that by the time they close their eyes for the final time; they have given all they have to give to the world. They should write even when they aren’t sure where the story is going or what they will do with it when they are finished. They should write and allow every emotion to flood the page – holding NOTHING back. It is easier to take something out than to add it later on. EMPTY everything on the page without apology. Tell your story like you are talking to someone without the 5 senses. Give them eyes to see your story, ears to hear the voices, nostrils to smell the scents in the scene, etc. Don’t be afraid to take them there into your story with you.


Website: https://www.SharonMoore.net

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/AuthorSharonDeniseMoore
Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, and Youtube:  @sharonmwrites

Amazon Author Page: Sharon D. Moore

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/SharonDMoore

Hidden In Plain Sight


Also autograph copies with a personal message from the author are available at www.SharonMoore.net.