Meet S.C. Alban

sc_albanWelcome today to S.C. Alban, who writes both adult and YA fiction. S.C. Alban was born and raised in Northern California. She is the eldest of three children and often spent much of her childhood playing make-believe with her two younger sisters.

After graduating from university, where she majored in English literature, S.C. traveled for a year. She ultimately moved back to Northern California where she currently resides.

Her adult contemporary fantasy books, The Strega Series novels, will be published through Foster Embry Publishing (A Life Without Living – May 2019, Barely Living Alive – Fall 2019, and Death Before Dying – Winter 2020).

S.C. is currently working as an assistant editor for the growing boutique publisher, Lakewater Press, out of Queensland, Australia. During her time there, she’s had her hands in various projects from slush pile reader, to assisting acquisitions, to producing book trailers, working with the social media coordinator, to working directly with the editing & development department under the guidance of editorial director (and Angel), Kate Foster.

She currently resides in the gorgeous Sonoma County with her family, three cats, and three (terribly) lazy guard dogs, and considers herself pretty darn lucky to live in such an amazing place.

Her book ,A Life Without Living, The STREGA Series, Book 1, comes out today, May 21, from Foster Embry Publishing. It’s 350 pages long. The cover is gorgeous and the title is very compelling.

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Kate Martins appears to have it all – a good career, a beautiful home, and an amazing husband. What more could a woman ask for? But when Kate’s recurring nightmares begin to cross over into her waking hours, she discovers that her perfect life is not at all what it seems. It isn’t until she meets a mysterious stranger that Kate begins to question who she truly is and where she comes from.

Why did you decide to write this series?

I wrote this book because I’ve always had a fascination with witches and folk magic. I’m also a sucker for a tragic love story. I’m drawn to the dark stuff, the stuff that doesn’t always turn out like you want it to, and I wanted to write a love story that had that tone. Also, I wanted to write a novel with a heroine that was an anti-heroine of sorts, but has growth over the series.

What genre is your series?

There’s been some debate about exactly where this book/series would go among my friends, but I’d say this novel falls strongly in the contemporary fantasy genre. However, my sister is adamant that it’s a paranormal thriller all the way.

Do you consider your books character-driven or plot-driven?

Though there are bits of internal revelation by the characters, the series is a plot-driven roller coaster.

What makes your series unique?

I think what makes my book unique is the fact that my characters are terribly flawed and seem to make their lives more difficult with every choice, and somehow they’ll need to figure out how to make everything work out. That, and the focus on Italian witchcraft. My characters practice Stregheria. Of course, creative interpretation about the tradition is exercised, including borrowing form other traditions, is employed. But I think the way I combine the many traditions from all over the world is what makes the book unique.

Do you plot ahead of time, or let the plot emerge as you write?

I am a very loose plotter. I have an ending. And perhaps a few points along the way, but mostly I like to see where things lead.

How do you develop the names for your characters?

It’s silly, but whenever I hear a name I like I write it down in a journal I have set aside for name gathering. Also, I’ll say dialogue out loud using the names and imagine scenes and character interactions to see if the names match the person and go with the other characters.

How do you decide on the setting?

I tend to write about places I’ve been to and have experienced. Which makes a wonderful excuse to vacation. I try to travel as much as possible to get as many setting ideas settled in my brain. Then, I just mix and match to make the setting work for the story and characters.

Do you have a writing mentor?

I don’t have a writing mentor, per se, but I’m super lucky to have so many colleagues who I look up to that have definitely taken on a “mentor”role at one point or another. The writing community is such a supportive place to learn and grow.

What’s your writing schedule? Do you have a favorite place to write?

My writing schedule is so chaotic right now. I typically write at night, but after a day of teaching, that doesn’t always happen on a regular basis. Weekends are always good, though. I usually do some writing every weekend. And, my favorite place to write is in the lounge at my local bowling alley. I know it sounds bizarre, but it’s rarely busy and surprisingly quiet. Plus, the bartenders are really nice there and let me hang out in the coveted corner comfy couch for hours without any problems.

Anything else you’d like to add?

I just want to thank Foster Embry Publishing for breathing new life into this book, and series. I’m so excited to finish Kate and Gio’s story and share it with the world.

I also want readers to know that a portion of all sales for this series will be donated to The National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA). It’s the largest nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting individuals and families affected by eating disorders by providing support, and as a catalyst for prevention, cures, and access to quality care. As someone who’s been affected by an eating disorder, I know the work NEDA does is lifesaving, and I want to make sure I do whatever I can to help support them.

Where can readers find you?

Readers can find me on my website, my Amazon author page, or on Twitter.

 

Meet Geoff Nelder

Geoff-IOM-12Geoff Nelder escaped from his roots in the south of England and now lives in the north. He would do most things for a laugh but had to pay the mortgage so he taught I.T. and Geography in the local High school. After thirty years in the education business, he nearly become good at it. A post-war baby boomer, he has post-grad researched and written about climatic change, ran computer clubs and was editor of a Computer User Group magazine for 11 years. He read voraciously after his mother enrolled him in the children’s science fiction book club when he was four, and has written for fun since his fingers moved independently. His experiences on geographical expeditions have found themselves into amusing pieces in the Times Educational Supplement and taking his family on house-swap holidays years before they became popular added both authenticity and wild imagination to his creativity.

Geoff lives in Chester with his long-suffering wife and has two grown-up children whose sense and high intelligence persist in being a mystery to him.

Today, he’s talking about Xaghra’s Revenge. It was published on July 23, 2017. It’s 360 pages and was published by Solstice Publishing. And he’s lucky enough to have a YouTube trailer for the book: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P76jl8qMdEg

Note: Most people pronounce Xaghra as zagra. The Maltese would say shaara.

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When Reece and Zita become lovers, past and present collide as the spirits of their ancestors force them to relive one of the greatest battles of the 16th century.

Xaghra’s Revenge follows the fate of a sixteenth century abducted family, and of two contemporary lovers thrown together by the ancients. Reece and Zita are unaware that one descends from the pirates, the other from the abducted family. While ancient Gozo spirits seek revenge, so do the Ottoman Corsairs, who intend to roll back history, and this time win the siege of Malta.

The history is real. The places are authentic. The tension and excitement are palpable.

“A gripping tale, full of energy and mystery, keeping you wanting for more with every line you read.” John Bonello, First-Prize Winner of the Malta National Book Award

“I liked it. There’s a foreground of interesting characters combined with a skilfully fed-in hint of weirdness.” Jaine Fenn – Hidden Empire series.

Link to buy Xaghra’s Revengehttp://myBook.to/Xaghra

Why did you decide to write this book?

The Maltese islands, not far from Italy, is a popular tourist honeypot for Brits and more recently for Japanese and Americans. Everyone speaks English and it sports an ancient history. While on vacation there I visited a nearby tiny island, Gozo. To my horror I discovered that in 1551 pirates abducted its people, threw them onto a fleet of 148 galleys and after sailing them to Libya, sold them as slaves. Some to row, farm, or to be harem women. Those souls cried out for revenge. I gave it to them.

What genre is your book?

It’s a historical fiction with a strong element of fantasy. It’s also horror and some hot sex  – what genre is that- romance?

Do you consider your book character-driven or plot-driven?

The characters drive the plot. Yep, the plot is crucial here: a revenge for a vile kidnap, rape, destruction of lives act, but the people are larger than life here too. Funny because in April 2018 the hotel in Malta at which I stayed to do the research invited me back to do a signing. A splendidly elegant Maltese lady handed me my euros and asked what historical fiction books I’d read before writing my own. I rattled off a few then added that all of them, like so much historical fiction, focused on the rich, the nobility, royalty and knights. (Fair enough because readers have heard of them and suppose more facts are known blah blah). However, while I reference those powerful players in history, I concentrate on the humble man and woman – ordinary folk to whom extraordinary things happen. “Ah,” she says. “It is good to feature the humble. My partner is a Knight of the Order of Saint John you know.”

I cringed. What if she wants her money back? I needn’t have worried. She works in the Advocate Chambers and often defends the poorer sections of society. In fact she gave me twice the price of the book saying it is worth it. I need a thousand more readers like her!

What makes your book unique?

As above it is the only fiction leading with the peasant victims of the abduction. It also takes point of view from the Turkish pirates—both galley sailor and admirals. It might be the only book featuring one of the oldest buildings in the world. The Ggantija Temples on Gozo in the town of Xaghra are older than the pyramids, older than Stonehenge. Nothing is known of their builders or whether the building is really a temple – common assumption of anything old! I get a buzz when I hug those rocks and they play their own part in the novel.

Do you plot ahead of time, or let the plot emerge as you write?

The plot summary: abduction; fate of the taken; a contemporary couple thrown together by ancient spirits—one descended from the pirates, one from the abducted; finale with the 1565 Siege of Malta—a cusp in time between the Ottoman and Christian empires. All this came while on the pushme-pullme Gozo to Malta ferry after learning of the 5000 abducted. Nuances emerged later as research unfolded new facts and as the characters took hold.

How do you develop the names for your characters?

It’s great naming characters. It’s like having children without the pain! Stjepan (the 1551 Gozo farmer) is Albanian / Croatian but I found it on a list of genuine Gozo dwellers of the time. Love its unusual sound. His wife was Lydia until a Maltese beta reader told me there is no letter y in Maltese.

Some of the names are of real historical characters of the time. Rais Dragut and Sinan Pasha were real leaders of the Ottoman / Turkish invading forces.

How do you decide on the setting?

I live in chilly, rainy Britain and often have the urge to write of a hot, dry setting. Hence while the story sets itself in historically accurate Mediterranean islands and a hot, arid Libyan desert, my heart encouraged that.

Do you have a writing mentor?

I have a group of writing mentors – one very large composed of the world’s greatest writers of all time and quite crucially, a small group of fellow writers in a critique group. It’s run by the British Science Fiction Association. We send each other our stories – fantasy, hard SF, time travel, historical fiction if it has a alt-history slant, and surreal stories.

What’s your writing schedule? Do you have a favorite place to write?

I used to have a schedule of getting home from my teaching job, marking and planning lessons in the evenings then write stories afterwards, often around midnight for a couple of hours. When I was told to retire early with a full pension (I was becoming deaf) I could write in the daytime too but I didn’t follow a schedule. I aim for 2,500 words a day but often fall short. I’ll write anywhere given half an hour peace. Have laptop, will travel. However, I really enjoy a writers’ retreat in Methana, Greece and go there for a couple of weeks every year.

Anything else you’d like to add?

I’d like to add a thousand dollars to my royalty income. Thanks for asking!

People often ask me from where I get my story ideas. I think I must have inherited a creative gene from my father who helped produce one of the first science fiction magazines in the UK. He’d illustrate them including the cover art. I thought all dad’s did that! To trigger that quirky gene, I’d go for long walks or bicycle rides. Perhaps the enriched oxygenation of my brain helped the ideas to spawn. It did with my ARIA Trilogy when halfway up a steep Welsh hill I suddenly thought how lucky we are that amnesia wasn’t infectious. I stopped. Wrote down that thought and hence was born-as far as I know- the world’s only novel on infectious amnesia.

Where can readers find you?

Webpage and blog: http://geoffnelder.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/xaghrasrevenge

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/geoffnelder

 

 

 

Meet Kim Beall

KimBeallAmusedKim started sneaking into the basement to read her parents massive collection of science fiction, fantasy, and gothic romance when she was nine years old, and she spent her teenage years writing reams of Awesome Novels. This might have worked out better for her if she had not written them during math class. Today she’s promoting Seven Turns, a genre-busting mystery-romance-ghost-fantasy story.

About the book:

Callaghan McCarthy has ninety nine problems, and believing in ghosts is not one of them. The ghosts around her find this very amusing, and they need her help with a problem of their own. She has arrived at Vale House, an “authentic haunted bed and breakfast!” with everything she owns in the back seat of her car in a desperate bid to find inspiration for her next novel before her fans give up on her forever.

As Cally comes to know and love the eccentric denizens of the run-down southern town the locals call Woodley, USA, she begins to realize she has wandered into the midst of a host of secrets nobody will talk about in front of people who are Not From Around Here. While a disembodied internet entity and the ghost of a teenage Taino pirate attempt to help her understand her new role among them, she must prevent a murder, a fire, and the exploitation the innkeeper’s sweet mentally ill daughter, all while navigating a world of ghosts and faeries without whose help she will not succeed.

All this she must do while struggling to hold onto – or must she let go of? – her sanity.

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What’s the page count and publication date?

Seven Turns is 358 pages long and was released on May 8! Both the ebook and print versions are available now on Amazon and on the Solstice website.

Ebook: https://amzn.to/2x1pkPV

Print: https://amzn.to/2IAmxCK

Why did you decide to write this book?

I love stories that are built in worlds you can return to again and again. It’s almost as if some settings become beloved characters in their own right. The world of literature has given me so much pleasure and opportunity for personal growth. When I made up my mind to give something back by contributing something myself, I wanted to create a town that is every bit as much a main character as the people in the story, a place people will love to return to and visit, regardless of which main character the current volume is about (there will be several, eventually!)

What genre is your book?

Hah, that’s the question I love to hate! It takes place in a modern, but somewhat run-down, small southern town, and has elements of cozy mystery, but the mystery isn’t really the focus of the story.

It also has a touch of romance that just kind of snuck in there. I didn’t plan it – it just happened – but all the best love affairs happen that way, don’t they?

There is also a ghost who becomes a very major character – but no, this is /NOT/ a horror story! I don’t care for gore and mayhem, and I’m writing for other people who don’t care for it either. Any evil in my fictional world has its roots in the desires and aspirations of ordinary humans, just like in real life.

Oh, and there is a race of people living at the edge of the meadow who aren’t strictly human, but you had better not let them catch you calling them “faeries.”

So, I don’t know, what genre would you call that? I have been trying since I started writing it to pin down the answer to this question and have had no success so far. I’m only thankful that Solstice Publishing was willing to take a chance on this weird genre-bending author when so many others were not.

Do you consider your book character-driven or plot-driven?

Absolutely character driven. The characters do seem to tell me the plot when I don’t know what to do next, though. Maybe it’s not the book, so much, but me who is driven by the characters.

What makes your book unique?

There is that weird blend of different genre elements I mentioned above but, mostly, I think what makes it unique is the quirkiness of many of the side characters, who are themselves affected by the quirkiness of the place in which they live. I have tried to weave an enchanting atmosphere that will cradle and soothe the reader even amid the chaos.

Do you plot ahead of time, or let the plot emerge as you write?

I call myself a “plantser.” That’s a cross between a planner and a pantser! I make plans. I know where I want to start and where I want to end up. I have a rough idea how I intend to get there. I even make outlines! But it often happens, when you start actually writing, that the story has other plans. I’ve learned to trust this and go with it – even when it sometimes takes a sharp left turn into territory I had no idea even existed!

How do you develop the names for your characters?

This is always hard for me. Mainly I start by establishing their ethnicity, and then I search for names that are popular in that culture. I don’t want something too common, but I don’t want anything that sounds too contrived, either. My main characters have names that actually mean something in the ancient languages of their ancestors (I’m kind of a linguistics nerd) though the characters themselves are generally not aware of the meaning. I often spend weeks and weeks intensively searching for just the right name. When I stumble upon it, I know instantly that it’s the right one.

How do you decide on the setting?

The setting decided on me! Sometimes I suspect it really exists, out there somewhere…

Do you have a writing mentor?

No, but I have had encouragement from some of my favorite authors: I will always be grateful to Charles de Lint for telling me to stop whining and start writing. “You know the drill: Writers write. So do it.” I’ve also received reassurance from Marly Youmans (my all-time favorite underrated modern author) that I am not, in fact, obligated to pick a single genre and stick to it if I ever want to see print. Now, if I were to make a list of authors who have encouraged and influenced me without my ever having corresponded with them, it would go on for pages, so I’ll save that for my blog someday!

What’s your writing schedule? Do you have a favorite place to write?

Having a schedule and sticking to it has made all the difference between actually writing and just talking about it. I have found I must defend my writing schedule fiercely. The moment I created it, life immediately began to conspire to throw me off it, but I have been very stubborn about fighting back. I write three days a week from nine to three at my favorite local coffee shop (may I plug them? It’s the Wake Forest Coffee Company, whose shoes Starbucks is not worthy to shine!) Sometimes I’m on such a roll that I stay longer or go back on the weekend. They have a wonderful guitar and cello ensemble, “/Clairvoyance/,” who plays there on Sunday mornings. Perfect ambiance to which to write – I will have to dedicate a book to them one day!

Anything else you’d like to add?

Just that, as I mentioned above, I’m so grateful to Solstice Publishing for being willing to take a chance on a non-genre-adhering author such as myself. I hope they find out it was worth the risk!

Where can we find you?

Website: http://www.kimbeall.com
Blog: http://www.kimbeall.com/blog
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kimbeallauthor/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KimBeallsGhost

Author Interviews

Hey everyone,

I’ve been reflecting on the previous incarnation of my blog and website. From 2012 to  2015, I had an active blog. Every week, I hosted a mystery author, asking everyone the same questions. I really enjoyed reaching out to authors and learning about their books and their writing process.

This time, I’ve decided to mix it up a bit and broaden the scope. I’ll interview indie authors writing in the following genres: mystery, thriller, suspense, romance, sci-fi, fantasy, dystopia, historical fiction, literary.  I’ll include a bio, author photo, book cover photo, and links to books and social media platforms. I’ll be running these interviews every other Friday.

Some sample questions:

  • Why did you decide to write this book?
  • What genre does your book fall into?
  • Do you consider your book character-driven or plot-driven?
  • What makes your book unique?
  • Do you plot ahead of time, or let the plot emerge as you write?
  • How did you develop the names for your characters?
  • How did you decide on the setting?
  • Do you have a writing mentor?
  • What’s your writing schedule? Do you have a favorite place to write?
  • Anything else you’d like to add?

Are you interested? I’d love to connect!

Nancy