Category Archives: Interviews
Genuine Vulnerability
Posted by Literary-Titan
If I Had One Wish: I’d Wish That You Were Here centers around a lonely snowman who makes a simple wish to spend time with his friends and learns an important lesson about missing loved ones. What inspired you to write this book?
The inspiration for If I Had One Wish truly came from observing the universal experience of missing someone. I noticed how children, in particular, can grapple with feelings of loneliness and the ache of absence when a friend or loved one isn’t around. I wanted to create a story that acknowledged these feelings in a gentle and comforting way. The idea of a snowman, so inherently temporary and perhaps prone to a certain solitude, seemed like a perfect vessel to explore this theme. Wynter’s wish is relatable to anyone who has ever yearned for the company of someone special, and I hoped to show that even in their absence, those we love leave an indelible mark on our hearts.
Wynter is a charming character. Where did the inspiration for his traits and dialogue come from?
Wynter’s charm really stems from his earnestness and his simple, pure desire for connection. I envisioned him as someone who is kind and thoughtful, but perhaps a little shy or hesitant as he navigates his loneliness. His dialogue was crafted to reflect this – direct, heartfelt, and unpretentious. I thought about the way children often express their emotions very openly, and I wanted Wynter to embody that genuine vulnerability. His interactions with the bunnies and cardinals are meant to be sweet and a little whimsical, reflecting the joy that can be found in unexpected friendships, even as he holds onto the memory of his dear friend.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
The most important idea I wanted to share is that the love and memories we have for those we’ve lost never truly disappear. While Wynter’s wish for physical companionship is understandable, the real magic happens when he discovers that his friend is always with him in his heart. I wanted to convey that it’s okay to miss people deeply, and that these feelings are a testament to the love we shared. Ultimately, the book aims to offer a comforting message to children who are experiencing loss, assuring them that they are not alone in their grief and that the bonds of love endure, even when someone is no longer physically present.
Can we look forward to more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?
My next title, already in the works, is a Christmas rhyming poetry book for toddlers filled with bright, cheerful artwork. I have also just published a Halloween book for children, ages three through twelve, about a scaredy-cat named Boo! A delightful book, written in verse, that offers a little lesson in bravery and compassion. Of my children’s poetry books to date, Boo, the Scaredy-Cat’s Spooky Night is both my favorite and, I believe, my finest work.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: August E. Allen, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Children's Books on Death & Dying, Children's Books on Emotions & Feelings, Children's Holiday Books, childrens books, ebook, goodreads, If I Had One Wish: I'd Wish That You Were Here, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Defenseless Sea Life
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Tralls of Colum follows two siblings from the Tralldom of Colum, who face challenges tied to environmental changes, friendship, courage, and discovery. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I was a primary school teacher for many years, and on rainy days, I’d tell my class stories of the tralls and their battles to protect their environment.
I noticed that after a storytelling session, my young audience would become more conscious of their effect on the surroundings and more interested in the local flora and fauna.
So, when I retired from teaching, I decided to publish the stories in the hope of reaching a wider audience
and making more children aware of the ways they could protect their own environments.
What were some ideas that were important for you to personify in your characters?
The Tralls of Colum was written for two of my grandchildren, and the main characters Jai and Emi were fashioned on them. They are often complimented on their co-operation, resourcefulness, perseverance, and tolerance, and I wanted to focus on those characteristics in the hope they would resonate with, and influence, my young readers.
What were some goals you set for yourself as a writer in this book?
I live near the coast, so I often see the deleterious effect that plastic waste is having on our beautiful oceans and our defenseless sea life. I wrote The Tralls of Colum to highlight those problems and make our younger citizens aware of the problems that we will face in the future if we don’t act to rid all our waterways of this dangerous material.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?
The Trall Series consists of five published books, and each one revolves around a different environmental problem.
The Tralls of Nindarry – displacement of people due to mining.
The Tralls of Mundi – watercourses, aquifers, lakes, and rivers being diverted or polluted due to mining.
The Tralls of Maruchus – the dangerous effects of fracking on the environment.
The Tralls of Colum – the danger our oceans and sea-life face due to plastic waste.
The Tralls of Nosa – the danger faced by native flora and fauna when invasive species are introduced.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
When Emi overhears her grandfather and two of his chars making plans for them to leave their ancestral lands she is devastated but the next morning a huge island of fresh green kelp and thousands of plump jellyfish miraculously appear off-shore, and she quickly realizes this precious gift from Mother Ocean will change everything.
Emi and Jai are determined to collect as much of the unexpected bounty as they can before the sea creatures devour it all but unfortunately, their dugout is overturned by a mysterious creature. Emi is almost drowned and Jai is lost at sea, and sadly, their exploits were in vain because the kelp and jellyfish are not what they seem. They are an unknown substance that is inedible and very dangerous for all living things.
Eventually, the tralls are forced to leave their beloved tralldom and begin their trek south in search of a new home.
Could this signal the end of the Tralldom of Colum?
The Tralls of Colum is the fourth book in The Trall Series – a collection of environmentally-themed portal fantasies that are set in the Sunshine Coast region of Australia. Each book in the series can be read individually but when read in sequence, they introduce the reader to an enchanting world full of unforgettable characters and locations..
The series is suitable for competent middle-grade readers.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Children's books, Dragons & Mythical Creatures Fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fantasy for children, fiction, Gayle Torrens, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, series, story, Sword & Sorcery Fantasy, The Tralls of Colum, writer, writing
Reputation Is Paramount
Posted by Literary-Titan

Gods of Glenhaven follows a middle-aged couple and their teen daughter trying to navigate a failing marriage and broken family dynamic in a talkative small town. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I love suburbia for many reasons. What fascinates me most about it is that it seems like the goal is to eliminate as many of the hardships and vicissitudes of life as possible. In the suburbs, you try to capture and keep the good things, while either ignoring or reframing the bad things you can’t manage to avoid. And reputation is paramount — you don’t want to become known as anything other than an upstanding person who loves their job, their children, and their community.
Do you have a favorite scene in this story? One that was especially enjoyable to craft?
I especially enjoyed writing the scene in the Home Depot, which takes place the morning after the Rites of Initiation at the high school. There are seventy naked people slumbering amidst the lumber and wheelbarrows, and a stunned police sergeant has to sort it all out.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
The value of the social contract is the big theme. This is why I needed Gods (who don’t play by the rules) and the potential for humans to have unusual power, which might encourage them to break the terms of the social contract.
Can fans expect to see more releases from you soon? What are you currently working on?
I like to write short comedy pieces — my work has been published in McSweeney’s, Points in Case, Weekly Humorist, and other magazines. I’m doing a lot of that kind of writing while also beginning work on a second novel, entitled Little Dan.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
When Greek gods sweep into the quaint suburban town of Glenhaven to untangle their messy love lives, the helpless mortals don’t stand a chance.
Christian Orr, struggling with work and erectile dysfunction after discovering his wife’s infidelity, has just moved into what his daughter Francesca calls the Divorced Dads Apartment Complex. His high-powered attorney ex, Sloan, is jaded and restless, leaving precocious Francesca caught in the crosscurrents of change.
Enter Dionysus-“Dee”-the god of wine, sex, and questionable decisions, who shows up searching for his estranged wife Ari and their teenage son Maron. After three thousand years of Dee’s antics, Ari has had enough. She’s struck a deal with Zeus to start fresh-as a mortal suburban mom. And what’s more normal than falling for a regular guy like Christian? If only Dee would stop tearing through Glenhaven in his quest to win her back.
Drunk on Dee’s wine, the residents of Glenhaven form chanting covens in the woods, participate in ecstatic rituals, and experience divine revelations-all while Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” loops faintly in the background of their lives.
Gods of Glenhaven is a hilarious, poignant, and confronting novel about the universal fears and follies of the human condition, and the joy and freedom we can experience by letting go.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, dark humor, ebook, fiction, Gods of Glenhaven, goodreads, Greco-Roman Myth & Legend Fantasy, humor, indie author, kindle, kobo, legend, literature, myth, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Stephen Statler, story, writer, writing
Self-Deprecating Humor
Posted by Literary-Titan

Spelled in Ink centers around a gifted but snarky mage on a supernatural heist that suddenly goes wrong. Where did the idea for this novel come from?
Plenty of inspirations for my novels come from my travels. This one was inspired by a trip to the French chateaus of the Loire. We visited both Clos Lucé and Chenonceau, and I found them both so magical that I simply had to write about them. Da Vinci was an amazing person, and the exhibition in the chateau gave me plenty of food for thought. I always have paranormal elements in my novels, and Magical Realism is a thing for me. This one borders on urban fantasy; I simply wanted to have more magic than in my other series, the Magical Misfits Mysteries. I also wanted something faster-paced. Poor Cyn and Dan are almost constantly on the run….
Cyn is such a fantastic main character. What was your inspiration for her traits and dialogue?
I prefer characters who break the mold, that’s why she–while grounded in Europe–isn’t purely of European descent. Fortunately, my kind Indian friends made sure I didn’t introduce any bloopers when it came to the Indian part of her heritage. The voice is typical–or so I’m told. My MCs seem to suffer from self-deprecating humor, are intelligent and resourceful, and that makes for some snappy comebacks. I love writing dialogue. Apparently, it’s one of my strengths, or so I’m told.
What is the most challenging aspect of writing a mystery?
Getting the “trail of breadcrumbs,” i.e., the clues aligned so the ultimate conclusion is not only logical, but the reader also has a chance of working it out for themselves. Getting that right requires a lot of careful planning and mapping. Spelled is also a heist, which means I had another plotline to distract from the murder, but it still had to fit.
Can you give us a glimpse into the next book in the Da Vinci Mysteries? Where will it take readers?
The next one, Cursed out Loud, will take readers to Da Vinci’s home country and even his birthplace – Vinci in Tuscany. This book is stronger on the murder mystery aspect. To get hold of the next part of Vinci’s treatise, Cyn and Dan take part in an oldtimer rally. The winner gets the treatise. Well, that’s the theory. When a rally organizer is murdered, things go sadly pear-shaped… I’ve also been asked about the romance – yes, it develops during the series, and the next instalment makes their attraction very clear. But be warned – I’m anything but linear….
Author Links: GoodReads | Bluesky | Facebook | Website | Amazon
With the goddess Kali’s death curse hanging over her head, dark witch Cyn is running scared.
To get help, Cyn must sell her services to DAFT, a top-shelf supernatural society.
The mission is tricky—find Leonardo da Vinci’s missing formula to protect the witches’ fading psychic powers from modern hi-tech. The last thing she needs is more trouble.
Trouble is what she gets.
Mysterious ongoings at the maestro’s final residence in France throw Cyn’s assignment off track, leaving her with a murdered man, Dan the magic-hating art thief—and a pet tortoise.
Now Cyn and her new criminal sidekick Dan must solve the puzzle and flush out an invisible foe, who might or might not be an undead Da Vinci.
Of course, the killer strikes again.
And misses.
Given their clashing characters, backgrounds, and a slow-burn romance sparking between them, Cyn and Dan are a team forged in hell. But, hey, a little creative chaos can work wonders…
“Spelled in Ink”, the first book in this suspenseful series of paranormal cozy murder mystery and fantasy novels, will keep you laughing—and guessing—right to the very end. If you like witty and strong female characters as written by Janet Evanovich, Kristen Painter, Helen Harper, and Colleen Helme, this short and fast-paced novel will have you rooting for team Cyn and Dan.
And now go up and click Read Now or Buy Now to find out why it’s never a good idea to mess with watersprites!
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, humorous fantasy, indie author, kindle, kobo, Lina Hansen, literature, mystery, nook, novel, psychic mysteries, psychic suspense, read, reader, reading, series, Spelled in Ink, story, suspense, writer, writing
A Chance For Redemption
Posted by Literary_Titan

Whispering Shadows follows a man with a terminal illness who keeps this information from his wife, only to die in a tragic accident and awaken in a world between life and death, with a need to find redemption. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
Many years ago I was told of a man who had been diagnosed with Terminal Cancer, and that he would be fortunate to see the year out. Unfortunately, not the most uncommon of revelations, except that he not only refused any form of treatment but also decided in his ‘wisdom’ to withhold the diagnosis from his wife, at least until he felt the time was right! One Winter’s night a few months later he died in a high speed car crash, quite alone, with no other persons or vehicles involved. The effect on his partner was naturally immense, but equally, the discovery of his diagnosis, along with the projected time left to live, and something she could not forgive. Was it suicide or an accident? The fact that he could not bring himself to confide in the one person who should have been at the head of the list was something that has stay with me. Perhaps something he would have attempted to rectify should there be an afterlife, a chance for redemption.
Ethan’s journey in the afterlife takes readers on a complex journey of love and loss as he tries to find forgiveness. What do you think were some of the defining moments in Ethan’s development?
Ethan’s discovery that an afterlife exists, his wife believing he committed suicide, and subsequent determination to prove that it really was an unfortunate accident, along with an overpowering need to explain what took place on that snow-laden day and obtain her forgiveness for his deception. The rare permission granted to revisit earth and seek out the person now imbued with Gen’s life force and the people and places it would lead him to.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
I think the paths that different people take throughout their lives, and the realisation that so much is destiny or at least outside of our control, the idiom ‘what will be will be’ comes to mind. Also the good that resides in everyone, the need to love and be loved, however deep it might be hidden. It never fails to amaze at how couples first meet, often by the slender of chances, only to spend a lifetime together accepting the other as their predetermined soulmate.
What is the next book that you’re working on, and when can your fans expect it out?
The story of an RAF pilot in the Second World War who inadvertently saves the life of another, a German pilot, albeit seriously injured, and the bizarre happenings that follow their lives from that moment forward. Inspired by a true story, one that results in a friendship that survives the terrible events of the war and is rekindled by a chance magazine article followed by a phone call that would reunite both the men and their families in their later years. A book that will hopefully be completed early 2026.
What if death wasn’t the end of your story, but the beginning of a greater search – for truth, for forgiveness, and for the soul you lost?
Ethan Turing wakes to a world forever changed. A routine medical appointment delivers a devastating diagnosis: he has only months to live. Reeling from the news, Ethan keeps it from his beloved wife, Gen, intending to shield her from the pain. But fate intervenes when a tragic accident on a snow-covered London street leads to his untimely death.
Presumed a suicide, Ethan’s demise leaves Gen in anguish, unaware of his terminal illness. As she grapples with grief, she discovers she is carrying their child – a son she names after Ethan. Tragically, complications during childbirth claim her life, leaving their newborn orphaned.
Yet, Ethan’s journey doesn’t end with death. His soul is intercepted by enigmatic beings who recognize his potent life force. Offered a chance to transcend his fate, Ethan embarks on a quest to find Gen’s reincarnated soul. Granted the opportunity to return to Earth, he must identify her among six individuals scattered across the globe. Only by looking into their eyes can he discern her true identity and seek the forgiveness he so desperately craves.
Whispering Shadows is a poignant exploration of love, loss, and the enduring bonds that transcend time and space. Paul Flintham weaves a tale that challenges the boundaries of life and death, asking: can love truly conquer all?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Metaphysical & Visionary, nook, novel, Paul Flintham, read, reader, reading, romance, story, time travel, Whispering Shadows, writer, writing
My Nightmare
Posted by Literary_Titan
The Other Side follows a young detective who is killed in the line of duty, and instead of ascending to Heaven chooses to reside in the Veil, where he has to destroy an ancient beast set on feeding on the living’s souls. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
First, I want to thank the entire team at Literary Titan for their hard work and dedication with helping independent authors. Thank you for everything you do. To answer your question we must travel back to my childhood. When I was eleven years old I began having a recurring nightmare where I had passed away and become a ghost. I would follow my family around the house trying to get their attention, but no matter how hard I tried, no one could see or hear me. As if that wasn’t bad enough, I would realize something was with me in this in between world. I couldn’t see what it was, I just knew it was wicked and it wanted my soul. This unseen entity would chase me through the house and I would always wake up, sweaty and with my heart pounding, right before it could get me. Like most nightmares of your youth it faded over time. But the impression it left on me never diminished. So when I decided to write my first novel, it was a no-brainer for me to write about my nightmare.
Mitch is an interesting character with his flaws, yet he remains likable and relatable. How do you go about creating characters for your story?
I really enjoy creating characters. It’s my favorite part of creating my stories. For years I was a warehouse manager, and part of my job duties was hiring new employees. I always enjoyed interviewing prospective team members. Every person is unique, and it was always interesting learning a little bit about that person’s background and why they wanted to work for the company and why they thought they would be a great team member. And that’s how I create my prospective characters. I have them sit down and do a full interview inside my head and write down their responses. Of course, it’s more personal and thorough than a mere job interview, but the same principles apply. I learn everything about my characters and have fun doing it.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
I wanted to explore love, the power of family, and the goodness in the human soul in the face of unimaginable horror. The Other Side is a horror novel, but that doesn’t mean we can’t highlight some of the positive aspects of the human condition. Mitch shows us all the power of love trumps the power of evil. He’ll do anything to protect his family and friends. And I believe it is important to highlight the positive aspects of humanity because most of what you see on the news and online highlight the worst parts of us. So yeah, The Other Side is a horror novel with gory depictions and an enigmatic, evil villain, but at its heart is love, family, and the power of good triumphing over evil.
Will this novel be the start of a series, or are you working on a different story?
When I wrote The Other Side I meant for it to be a standalone story. Since then, I’ve had hundreds of readers asking me the same question. So now, I have plans on making the adventures of Mitch and Sophia into a trilogy. But first, I have another novel in the editing phase of production and I’m putting the finishing touches on another manuscript. So stay tuned!
Author Links: GoodReads | Bookbaby
After being shot and killed in the line of duty, and passing up his chance to enter heaven so he can watch over his family, Mitch finds himself in The Veil, a dangerous plane of existence where unwanted souls and unspeakable evil dwell. Now an ancient beast that feeds on the souls God doesn’t want has its eyes set on Mitch, and it won’t stop until it possesses his soul.
What follows is a battle between good and evil with the fate of every soul in the living world hanging in the balance. Can Mitch destroy the ancient evil and protect his friends and family? Or will the beast from the pits of hell take Mitch’s soul and be unleashed upon the living world?
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Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, horror, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, supernatural, The Other Side, thriller, Timothy Palmer, writer, writing
Such Myths Should Not Be Dismissed
Posted by Literary Titan
The Great Flood in Legend, Science, and History explores one of the world’s most enduring legends, the Great Flood, and examines geological evidence alongside stories from Mesopotamia, the Bible, Greece, and Native American legends. Why was this an important book for you to write?
This was an important book to write because research into other topics indicated that a major event involving extraordinary flooding definitely occurred about 5,000 years ago, which is about the time that Noah’s Flood is considered to have happened. The evidence used is almost entirely geological and archaeological and comes from orthodox academia.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
Important ideas to share are that myth and legend might indeed be based on real events and such myths should not be dismissed as based solely on the imaginations of our forebears. This book shows that a flood such as Noah’s did occur and was caused by the close approach and pass-by of a cosmic body such as a comet.
Did you find anything in your research on this topic that surprised you?
Probably the most surprising thing was the abundance of scientific evidence testifying to a great flood as having occurred in the deep past.
The Legend of Atlantis & The Science of Geology is a fascinating series that sheds new light on geological events. What can readers expect to learn about in Volume IV of the series?
Volume IV of the series for the most part addresses the archaeology of the Mediterranean region, from Greece to the Levant and around to Egypt, where the evidence is analyzed and compared with the standard mainstream interpretation. This region is home to a considerable number of archeological puzzles that are difficult or impossible to explain via standard doctrine. The book also examines the surface geology of Egypt and North Africa and finishes up with an exploration of the enigmatic buildings on the Maltese Islands.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
This book takes a very different approach to the Great Flood, and floods in general, as compared to academic geology or archaeology. As before, the book deals with the legend of a great flood in a serious, open-minded, and scientific way, in an effort to determine whether there is something behind these flood legends, or if, indeed, they can be dismissed as easily as orthodoxy claims.
The Great Flood legend, and many others are first discussed, including those of the Makah and Klallam we examined in volume 1. The book then deals with how geomythologists treat the Great Flood legend. Unsurprisingly, modern geology gives these legends no credence whatever, and explains the Flood in the usual fashion of a mere local flood exaggerated into a great global disaster. That or a bolide impact causing a tsunami or a sill-overtopping flood into the Black Sea.
Considering the parallels between the Great Flood legend and those of the Makah and Klallam, a comparison seems compulsory, and, as we recall, the nature of the Native American flood descriptions suggested a cosmic body as being the most likely cause, which cause might possibly be the same for the Great Flood in Mesopotamia.
The first part of the book, therefore, examines the Flood from the point of view of legend and makes a case for why the legend cannot be so easily dismissed.
Building on that conclusion, the second part of the book addresses the Great Flood, and major floods in general, from an entirely scientific viewpoint. We begin with the early days of modern science in the sixteenth century and the first efforts to explain the Flood scientifically. Two scientists, Edmond Halley and William Whiston suggested a cometary cause, the reason being that there appears to be nothing on or within the earth that could cause such a flood as described in the Bible.
As the natural sciences developed during the eighteenth century, much of the evidence seen all over Europe was interpreted as due to large-scale flooding, and the term “diluvialism” came into use. While it was initially thought that the flooding in question was due to Noah’s Flood, by the end of the century it was generally held that the evidence implied that a much different and far more powerful flood was involved.
By the early nineteenth century, Noah’s Flood had been abandoned as the cause of the evidence by the majority of geologists and a much more dynamic flood was envisioned. Again, a comet was proposed as the cause and diluvialism remained a general belief until Charles Lyell published his books in the early 1830s, promoting uniformitarianism, which denied the reality of major flooding as ever having occurred.
Since Lyell was inspired by the theories of James Hutton, who advocated an infinitely old earth with geological change happening too slowly to be observed, we take a close look at Hutton’s famous Siccar Point unconformity. Contrary to Hutton’s conclusions, this book finds that Siccar Point represents a catastrophic event and not a long slow sequence of gradual change.
An examination of two long-recognized outburst floods due to natural dam failures follows and both are, in fact, found to be misinterpretations of the evidence by the geologists involved.
The book then moves to the realm of archaeology and we begin with Leonard Woolley and the evidence of a major flood in the valley of Mesopotamia. Woolley found exceedingly thick layers of sediment at the site of Ur of the Chaldees, and other such layers were found at many other sites. While the evidence was “explained away” as a number of individual floods, a close study finds that they are all synchronous and due to one flood, the Great Flood of legend.
Further, a cuneiform tablet shows a comet in the sky at 3123 BCE, close to the estimated date of the Flood from other evidence. Hence, this book proposes that the Great Flood occurred in 3123 BCE.
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Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, Joseph O'Donoghue, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Great Flood in Legend, writer, writing
I then had a story to write!
Posted by Literary Titan

Snoodles in Space: Escape from Zoodletraz follows a Zoodle who breaks a rule by getting a pet, he winds up in a prison no one has ever escaped from. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The inspiration came from my illustrator, Andy Case. In November 2023, he released his first album, Leap of Faith. There were three songs that came one after the other that set up the story in my head. Literally, it was one song after the other! “Lost Souls in the Dark” had that guitar rift that remined me of U2’s “Sunday Bloody Sunday” but in a darting kind of way, and I pictured Snoodles flying through space to rescue our heroes. The next song “Break Free” had a slower guitar play and reminded me of a spaceship slowly rising from the planet. Then came “Should Have Sent a Card”. It is a hysterically funny song about someone trying to write a love song and failed. Because he failed, he sings out “I should have sent a card!”
I then had a story to write!
In your story, Droodle meets some amazing new characters. What was your inspiration for their characters’ interactions and backstories?
Well, they are inspired by Pop Culture! Swifty Swoodle is definitely Tayor Swift. Grandfafoodle was inspired by the crazy father of Dick VanDyke in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. The Trash Can Cats was inspired by seeing a bunch of cats around a trash can looking for mice in NYC.
What were some goals you set for yourself as a writer in this book?
This is the fourth book in the series. I couldn’t write a book just to write a book knowing that it was not up to the first three. I had to write something that would surpass them, and make the universe of character bigger and the story crazier. I felt with this book, it was “mission Accomplished!”
I hope the series continues in other books. If so, where will the story take readers?
We will find out that Cloodle did not come from the planet Zoodle! Similar to the Superman story, Cloodle is a baby on a planet that is disintegrating because of global warming, and he is put in a small spaceship with his poodle, Krazoodle, and lands on the planet Zoodle. Strap up because you will be in for quite a ride?
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
Enter a cast of brilliantly bonkers heroes: noodle-powered scientists, intergalactic musicians, talking cats with trash can drum kits, and a villain so cranky he reads self-help books about revenge. There’s also a Jalapeño Popadoodle Noodle, a flying Balloonadoodle, and something called a Cloakadoodle Swoodle Car. Don’t ask, just roll with it.
This wackadoodle tale is packed with vibrant art, making it perfect for young and old readers who love silly stories, bold visuals, and absolutely zero boring parts.
Whether your kid’s obsessed with noodles, aliens, or saying the word “Groodle” over and over again, Snoodles in Space: Escape from Zoodletraz! is the laugh-out-loud ride you’ve been waiting for.
Time to get ready for your NEXT GREAT ESCAPE!
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens books, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kids books, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, Snoodles in Space: Escape from Zoodletraz, Steven Joseph, story, writer, writing





