This was a labor of love, and to quote Shakespeare, “the course of true love never did run smooth.”
Martha Jean Johnson – 5 June 2025 Continue reading
This was a labor of love, and to quote Shakespeare, “the course of true love never did run smooth.”
Martha Jean Johnson – 5 June 2025 Continue reading
Comments Off on IndieView with Martha Jean Johnson, author of The Queen’s Musician
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In my mind, she had been abused and violated – I wanted to tell her story and give her a voice.
Sam Davey – 3 June 2025 Continue reading
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Posted in Indieview author, Interviews
I started the book quite a while ago but had to shelve it because I didn’t want my father to read it. In order to tell the story, I inevitably revealed the workings of some of his tricks and illusions. He would have been upset so I just couldn’t see it through.
Katy Grabel – 31 May 2025 Continue reading
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So, it made all the sense in the world to write a crime thriller where the protagonist is a former Army counterintelligence agent (like me), battling PTSD (like I did), who gets in too deep with a criminal plot (which I have thankfully avoided—at least so far).
Jeremy D. Baker – 29 May 2025 Continue reading
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Starting on the morning my son was born, I began writing a sentence each day about a moment I wanted to remember. Sometimes it was something simple — we went for a walk or sat in the grass. I kept this practice going for his first 100 days of life.
Talia Gutin – 27 May 2025 Continue reading
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I always love my characters (even the nasty ones) because they allow me to “be” somebody else.
Diane Wald – 27 May 2025 Continue reading
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When I was a sophomore in college, I took a literature class on the expatriate writers who gathered in Paris after the first World War (Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Dos Passos, and Sherwood Anderson, among others). An optional book on the class syllabus was Living Well is the Best Revenge by Calvin Tomkins, the very first biography of the Murphys. Over the decades that followed, I never stopped thinking about them …
Kirsten Mickelwait – 27 May 2025 Continue reading
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There was a hit-and-run that killed a small child in my neighborhood about twenty years ago. I noticed a police officer there in the afternoons filming the intersection. I learned he was one of the first officers on the scene and was devastated by it. This image stayed with me.
Karen F. Uhlmann – 25 May 2025 Continue reading
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The character’s kind of reveal who they are to me over time. I find I learn more about the character’s as I write the story. It’s a very strange experience—but wonderful!
Catharina Steel – 22 May 2025 Continue reading
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Since few people outside of Peru seem to have heard about the many cultures that thrived long before the Incas and the famed Machu Picchu, I wanted to bring one of them to life. I chose the Nasca culture because it faced environmental issues that are relevant to today’s world and is also full of enigmas and mystery.
K.M. Huber – 20 May 2025 Continue reading
Comments Off on IndieView with K.M. Huber, author of Call of the Owl Woman
Posted in Indieview author, Interviews