Blog Archives

A Sense Of Wonder

Author Interview
Rosemary K Tompkins Author Interview

The Zodiac Traveller follows a teenage boy on a quest to prove his claim as the heir to the Kingdom of Adastra. What was the inspiration for the setup to your story?

The inspiration for my story, I guess, came from Tolkien’s ‘Lord Of the Rings’. I’m probably one of his biggest fans, and while I didn’t even try to compete with Tolkien (not many authors can) in my opinion anyway he is one of the best. So I went ahead and gave it a shot. And the other is my great interest in astrology.

What was your favorite character to write for and why?

Oh definitely Galaxius. I particularly liked writing about Boris the character in Scorpio, among others.

What was your approach to writing the interactions between characters?

My approach to writing the interactions between the characters came mainly from a sense of wonder and innocence something you don’t see much of these days.

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

I am 3/4 way into writing my next novel which is totally different from this one. It is romance fiction, I haven’t named it yet. ‘Tulips from Amsterdam’ Maybe?

Author Links: Amazon | GoodReads

After his father had been killed, a teenage boy discovers that he is the true heir of the Kingdom of Adastra. He bears the task of a long journey which takes him through the lands of the twelve zodiac signs.

As his father lay dying he handed Galaxius an Amulet with three missing stones.
“Take this and wear it always”, his father had croaked. “You must locate the missing stones and the Tablet, it will prove who you are.”
Little did Galaxius know what lay ahead of him after setting off to fulfill his fathers last dying wishes.

Along the way he meets a dragon, a donkey and a friend named Starlet.

Galaxius soon learns how valuable the Amulet is when they are pursued by an enemy in the form of a shape shifting crow, the enemy that killed his father.

Can Galaxius fulfill his fathers dying wishes or will he also die trying, just like his ancestors before him?

Unusual Endeavors

Thomas LeBrun
Thomas LeBrun Author Interview

Hiding in Plain Sight shares your storied like with readers and shows them the obstacles you overcame and the lessons learned along the way. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Throughout my life, I have followed individuals that have followed their own paths, whether it is in sports, business, or unusual endeavors that most would say impossible or people were just lucky. Along my route “less traveled” time and again people told me that I couldn’t do something whether that was in my weightlifting, martial arts world, or the close protection business. I guess I was inspired to prove to these people, these naysayers I could do anything I put my mind to. My underlying message is that nothing is impossible. The setup was the fact I live in a small town and that I have traveled to 45 countries from a business I created out of nothing but the will to succeed.

I appreciated how candid you are in the book. What was the hardest memory for you to share?

My parents, their decline, and the care they needed before their passing. My decision was to do everything in my power to make them comfortable.

What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?

Be patient with your dreams, find mentors to help you achieve various steps of your process.

Nothing is impossible. Be true to yourself. Develop your own can-do attitude.

Find resources that may re-frame your mind and get you out of a negative mindset.

Create depth in all that you are and present life with the best version of yourself

What do you hope is one thing readers take away from your story?

The one thing I hope readers take away, I hope they are very inspired to create their own path and legacy.
Never give up

Author Links: Instagram | LinkedIn | GoodReads | Facebook

Multi Award Winning Book; HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT – My Life & Adventures Protecting Celebrities is the inspiring true story of how a boy with a firm purpose behind his dreams, overcame many personal obstacles, challenges, sacrifices and injuries to forge a life dedicated to ensuring the safety of others When Tom LeBrun was 5 years old he was like most kids his age, full of energy, dreams and imagination galore. But, unlike other kids, young Tom had a stated purpose. He told his Dad that, one-day, like his hero SUPERMAN, “I want to fly around the world protecting people.” This purpose and passion created his journey.

Thomas LeBrun has been active within the Executive Protection industry for over 3 decades. often being the advance agent in the world’s most dangerous of cities, Mexico City, Johannesburg So. Africa and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil being a few of them. His consistency in his studies both in the physical and academic world has resulted in clientele in the entertainment, corporate and HNW arenas of the highest caliber. The academic element includes subject matter in Anti-Terrorist studies through ATAB (Anti-Terrorism Accreditation Board), Maritime Security as it has to do with Anti-piracy issues and Crisis Risk Management as well as various Executive Protection courses. Thomas LeBrun has received Tactical Hall of Fame accolades as the 1999 and 2005 Executive Protection Specialist of the Year.

“Hiding in Plain Sight” is the story of former champion power lifter, Martial arts Hall of Famer, and one of the worlds renowned experts in Executive Close Protection, Tom LeBrun. Learn how he used savvy and dogged persistence to achieve his dream and become a real life Superman.

Her Doomed Destiny

Author Interview
Amir Barghi Author Interview

Sarah follows the story of a woman who’s caught in the grip of an abusive man and is changed by the experience. What was the inspiration for the setup to your story?

The story of Sarah is not a new one. It might have happened for thousands of women in history who were persuaded to marry much older men or sold by their family. Most of them succumbed and accepted their fate but Sarah was different. She apparently had everything a young girl wished to have, even a young sexual partner, and her old husband didn’t care. However, it wasn’t the life she wished to have. She wanted her freedom and it was so interesting to me because few people are like her.

Sarah is an intriguing character. What were some driving ideals behind your character’s development?

Sarah not only has a beautiful face but she also has a beautiful soul. She is not just a sex object. I wanted her lover to see and understood that, too. Sarah betrayed her husband; she broke all societal norms and still wanted to go back. She wanted to make a new family with her lover and live like an ordinary woman but society usually doesn’t forget or forgive such a reckless, bold woman, and either punishes her harshly or simply exiles her. In most stories they don’t have a happy ending. They commit suicide like Anna Karenina or Madam Bovary. I know this is closer to real life, but I don’t like this ending. Therefore, just a revolution could change her doomed destiny and society might ignore her reckless behavior.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

I think love and hate are the most important themes for me to explore in most of my stories. I believe a good story must follow just one general theme, not more than one. As one of my professors always told me: ”A story with too many themes just confuses the readers.” I tried to explore the concept of different types of love in my story, because I think the colonel and Sam both loved Sarah in different ways. The colonel loved her as his possession and Sam loved her as a human being.

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

I have already written 10 books; two were translated and published on Amazon, Sarah and Devil’s Garden. I am actually working on others to translate and publish as well. I think my next book will be the story about a poor girl who manages to rescue a mentally sick prince with music and her magical songs. This time a female character will save the soul of a young man.

Author Links: Amazon | GoodReads

Nightingale has the most beautiful songs among the birds, but never sings in the cage. Sarah, a lonely girl with a lot of expectations, fell into the trap of a man, kept her captive because of her astonishing beauty, but never understood her feeling. First, she tried to adapt to a new life. However, it led her to unwanted change. Finally, she returned to herself when she broke the cage, got free.

Their True North

Author Interview

Scam at Old River follows a computer forensic expert who volunteers to go undercover to infiltrate a dangerous criminal organization. What was the inspiration for the setup to your story?

What happened at Old River is based on a true event. I was there. The actual location I moved to Old River, (which does exist). as it was similar to the actual location. I have an MSc in Computer Science and have spent the last forty years consulting in corporates. A good portion of this work became forensic in nature. This story I have told many times when sitting around a campfire in the bush. It would frequently get comments, “Mike, you should put that story in a book.”

Jack Rhodes is an interesting character that’s well developed. What were some driving ideals behind his character’s development?

Jack Rhodes had to be believable and someone to whom, the reader, men and women of all ages., could relate. Firstly, Jack is not a superhero. Secondly, he has his own internal problems. This, to me, sounds like most people. People need a support structure, no matter who they are. Jack’s internal problems he keeps in check with help from his cousin and their mutual friend. In my view, people do not have a good sense of their True North – their values, their beliefs, their purpose. This is interesting to consider when you meet bad people. I put my thoughts on this into my stories.

I enjoyed the mystery at the heart of this story. Did you plan the mystery beforehand or did it develop organically while writing?

From the original true event, it was a mystery I needed to uncover. When I started writing it, the mystery grew legs of its own and ran down the road. I just followed with my keyboard.

Do you have future books planned starring Jack Rhodes?

My books are a series, The Scam Series. The second book which has just been published is called Scam at Five Mile Road, set in Plymouth, Michigan, where there is a Five Mile Road. Plymouth is close to Detroit – the definitive automotive city. I did a lot of consulting in the automotive sector, so I based the story on a particular forensic event. Once again, I followed the mystery down the road with my keyboard.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

BASED ON TRUE EVENTS

After a night out celebrating the conclusion of a successful assignment, computer forensic expert Jack Rhodes, wakes up with a beautiful woman in his bed, an almighty hangover, and someone is pounding on his door. He answers, and the large stranger asks for the woman by name. The stranger goes on the attack. Jack thinks he’s in the middle of a relationship drama.

Drawing on his martial arts training, Jack subdues the assailant. He calls the police, but not before learning the woman has hidden incriminating files from a dangerous man. When the police arrive, the woman has disappeared.

Through his connections on the force, Jack volunteers to go undercover and discover the truth. It becomes a dark and menacing path into the hidden underbelly of San Francisco’s business and criminal element where murder, exploitation, fraud, and betrayal are a way of life. He needs to make the connections, get the proof he needs and find the woman fast. But to do so means facing his demons, a darkness within, and a past he cannot escape.

The Curse of Clansmen and Kings

Linnea Tanner
Linnea Tanner Author Interview

Two Faces of Janus follows a brash aristocrat as he navigates the perilous politics found in 2 B.C. Rome. What inspired you to write a story about Lucius Antonius?

I’ve always found the legacy of Marcus Antonius (Mark Antony) to be one of the most compelling accounts about political corruption, betrayal, and family tragedy. Iullus Antonius was the only son of Mark Antony who Caesar Augustus spared and raised almost like a son in the imperial court. When it came to light in 2 BC that Augustus’s daughter, Julia, was having several affairs and that Iullus was her primary lover, the emperor demanded he commit suicide.

Very little is known about Lucius Antonius except that he had to conceal that he was exiled in Massilia (modern-day Marseille) for his father’s crime as a traitor. I often wondered how Lucius reacted to his father’s disgrace and how it impacted his life. Answering this question inspired me to write the historical fantasy series, The Curse of Clansmen and Kings, and Two Faces of Janus. Lucius is cast as a villain in the series, but his back-story propels what he does and hopefully makes him more relatable.

Why did you feel a short story format worked better for this story rather than a full length novel?

The short story allowed me the opportunity to explore the immediate impact that the death of Iullus Antonius had on his son, Lucius, and for rest of the immediate family. The revelation of how Lucius was devastatingly impacted will be unveiled in the fourth book (Skull’s Vengeance) of my historical fantasy series. Further, I’m also considering a standalone historical fiction novel about the earlier life of Lucius Antonius.

What surprised you the most about Lucius Antonius real life story?

Though Lucius had to conceal he was exiled in disgrace for his father’s crime, the senate decreed that all honor be paid to him at this death. His ashes were laid in the family sepulchre of the Octavvi. This suggests that he was able to restore his standing in Rome. There is conjecture that Lucius’s son/grandson was Marcus Antonius Primus, a general who secured Rome for Vespasian to be emperor after Nero’s downfall.

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

I am completing Book 4 (Skull’s Vengeance) in the Curse of Clansmen and Kings series which should be released later in 2022.

Author Links: GoodReads | Twitter | Facebook | Website

A young nobleman confronts a specter from the past that could threaten his family’s legacy.

A brash young aristocrat, Lucius Antonius anticipates Emperor Augustus Caesar will support his lofty ambitions to serve as a praetor in the Roman justice system in 2 BC Rome. As the son of the distinguished politician and poet, Iullus Antonius, Lucius prays to Janus, the two-faced god of beginnings, to open the door for him to rise politically. But he is unaware of the political firestorm ready to erupt in the imperial family.

Augustus must confront evidence that his daughter, Julia, has behaved scandalously in public and that Iullus is her lover. The prospect that Julia might want to marry Iullus—the only surviving son of Marcus Antonius—threatens to redirect the glory from Augustus to his most hated rival beyond the grave. Caught in the political crossfire, Lucius must demonstrate his loyalty to Augustus by meeting all of his demands or face the destruction of his family’s legacy and possibly his own life. Will Lucius ultimately choose to betray and abandon his disgraced father?

Culture Changes Quickly

Judith Bice
Judith Bice Author Interview

Hey, White Girl follows a young woman as she traces the fracture of her family through the tumultuous 70’s and begins to understand the complexities of family, race, and privilege. What inspired you to write this book?

I come from a large family and each of my siblings has navigated our childhood in their own way. I’ve been fascinated by studying my own family and other families that I know and analyzing how differently siblings turn out as adults, even with the same “raising.” Cultural influences can impact children in wildly different ways depending on the age of a child, which can account for some of the differences between siblings. I believe this is especially true in tumultuous times when culture changes quickly. So I imagined studying a fictional family that way.

About the time I started thinking about this book I left a teaching job in a privileged private school to teach in an inner city classroom. I was so struck by the difference in what was available to students, and how the lack of resources was impacting educational opportunities. It became clear to me that if a child of eight is academically behind because of lack of resources, no matter their intellect, they will always struggle to catch up to the children with the resources, even if those children are not ahead of them intellectually. So I envisioned what that would look like in a school with smart Black kids who did not have the resources offered to them that most White kids had.

Making that career move also brought back memories of when I had been bussed in Richmond. I remembered the quality of the schools declining year by year. I remembered the ratio of Black and White students changing overnight. When I returned to that same area of the city decades later, there had been no change. I started researching, paying attention, and reflecting on the great inequity of schools just a few miles apart from each other. And when it came to racial differences, I wanted to explore what would happen if relationships between kids were authentic, despite their races, and in spite of adult prejudices.

I enjoyed how authentic and grounded this story felt. Was there anything taken directly from your life and placed in the novel?

I had fun looking back on the 1960s and 1970s. Nell is older than I was then, but there are plenty of scenes that I pulled from fuzzy memories, or took bits and pieces from stories I’ve heard. As I’ve mentioned, I was bussed, and many of the school references are from my own memories: the worn floors, the old furniture, the covered books, the gym suits that never fit. The encounters with other students were also informed by some of my own experiences.

I did look through yearbooks, old magazines, and advertisements to mentally put myself back in that era. I watched old TV shows on YouTube and kept a Pinterest page of images from clothes and hairstyles to the right Coke bottle shape for those years. I went back through my own mother’s recipes, and found perfumes that were popular then, because I think our senses can put us into a mindset faster than anything. And I listened to a lot of period music. Music can take you places, too.

Probably the thing that is taken most directly from my life is the feeling I’ve tried to convey about that era. This crazy juxtaposition of hope and fear. Hope, because when you’re a teenager all the world is ahead of you and almost anything is possible. This was the era of man landing on the moon, of Vatican II, of Civil Rights, of women starting to see they didn’t have to live the lives of their mothers. Fear, because sometimes the world felt like it was spinning out of control. It was the era of Vietnam, of assassinations, of fallout shelters, of racial violence. That sense of hope and fear that I could recapture with music and perfume and the metallic taste of TAB was what came directly from my life.

What were some ideas that were important for you to convey in this book?

At first, I thought it was mostly about how families learn to navigate cultural changes differently and still try to be a family. As I wrote, and reflected, and learned from my own writing, so many other convictions came to the surface. It was important for me to honor the Black experience of bussing, even though this was about a White girl bussed to a Black school. I realized that the Black kids were affected too. They had schools they were proud of and rooted for and those identities were muddied when all the students were moved around. I’d never seen this addressed before, especially from a White POV.

The more I wrote, the more I became aware of my own privilege as a White woman. I wanted to reveal that process in a natural and almost childlike way. I wanted Nell to learn for herself through her Black friends what their experience was, so she could appreciate it. I didn’t see the point of writing a book about white guilt. Nell was born White. Venetia was born Black. Neither had the choice of their birth color. They just were who they were. It was important for me to try to create characters of compassion, people we would like to emulate. And I wanted both Black and White characters to be those people.
Another idea that was important for me to convey was that Nell had fewer obstacles and more choices than her Black friends did. Often, White people are blind to that fact. We think we earn all that we get, but the obstacles for others are often hidden by our ignorance. If we sharpen our awareness, if we pay attention, if we listen, we will see what we haven’t seen before, like Nell did. And if we can change how we see the world, our eyes are opened to how we can change the world.

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

I’ve tossed around ideas with other writers and readers about continuing Nell’s story, or telling Donald’s story or another family member’s, and therefore expand that idea of how differently family members can absorb cultural change. But I spent over eight years working on Hey, White Girl and I actually don’t feel like I’m finished with it yet. Of course it’s published, but I believe this story needs to find its way into the greater world, and it’s my job to see that happen.

I’d like to foster discussions around the book’s themes with other adults who have lived it. And I’d like to support teachers and librarians looking for materials that will expand their students’ knowledge about our history, especially when it comes to perceptions about race, privilege, and responsibility. I suppose I want to do what Fergy asked Nell to do: change things from the White side.

Author Links: GoodReads | Twitter | Facebook | Website

In the summer of Woodstock and the moon landing, a traditional Virginia town forces its Black and White students to cross the city and integrate the schools, unraveling the predictable white path of the Randolph children and the plans their parents had for them.

Nell Randolph tries to make the best of her first year of high school at a black school. Her mother is unnerved by the changes she sees in Nell and arranges for her to transfer to a private girls’ school. The Vietnam War is raging in the background, inciting fear of the draft for Donald, Nell’s older brother, who involves Nell in decisions that change the trajectory of his life. Even the stability of their church life is challenged when a new priest comes to town.

Hey, White Girl by Judith Bice is told by an older Nell as she traces the fracture of her family through the lens of Civil Rights. Her memories and reflections reveal she is only at the beginning of understanding the complexities of family, race, and privilege. The reader is drawn into the narrator’s experience and compelled to examine with her the personal consequences and responsibilities of cultural change.

A Story Of Its Own

Author Interview
Brant Vickers Author Interview

Fedor is a thought-provoking coming of age story following a young circus performer that travels the world with P.T. Barnum’s Circus in the ‘80s. What was the inspiration for the setup to your story?

I worked for many years as a Special Education teacher and for many of those years with kids with autism. I have a memoir (Chucky’s in Tucson) about my years in this field and how I was a reluctant recruit, but more than thankful and honored to have had that career. Several times I brought up Fedor’s picture on the Internet while investigating different types of disabilities and one of my students with autism was extremely interested in his picture and his life. He asked if we could find out more about him and one thing led to another and I also became interested. I was dismayed there was scant information about him. I began imagining what his life might have possibly been like. This (Fedor’s life) intersected with the timeline of the expansion of the 19th-century American circus and the Black Tent sideshow. It grew, under P.T. Barnum, from a modest endeavor to the enormous spectacle I present in the novel. A story of its own.

Fedor is an interesting character that was deftly created. What were some driving ideals behind his character’s development?

We know Fedor spoke three languages and I supposed he was an articulate, intelligent, thoughtful human being, as I learned many of my students were. During those years teaching students with, sometimes, severe disabilities I learned they were smart (in their own way), genuine, kind, at times challenging, but some of the most exceptional people in the world. In the research I learned how huge and important the sideshow was in the circus. Well into the 20th century people made a living by exhibiting themselves for money. There were no social services, possible medical procedures, or family support for them. It wasn’t a rationale, but a necessity for them to actually live. They developed families, friendships, love, compensations and a much different but still a vocation.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

We still have people born every day with exceptional gifts and disabilities. I wanted to explore what has happened in the past and how we’ve grown as a society and world. We’ve moved on from the Black Tent and sideshow, but to know our past and what passed for entertainment can teach us today how to treat the differences between us, not with horror or revulsion, but to know that people are still human and possibly intelligent and interesting. As Mark Twain, a circus devotee, said to Fedor, “You can’t throw too much style into a miracle and you, my friend, are a miracle.”

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

I’m working on another YA novel set in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s in West Los Angeles. It’s about the friendship between two boys with realistic gritty details of the era and their paranormal experience in abandoned movie studio lots. Hopefully within the next year it will be ready to go. Thanks again for the review and interest in Fedor’s remarkable life, travels, and experiences!

Author Links: Amazon | GoodReads | Facebook | Website

“You can’t throw too much style into a miracle, and you, my friend, are a miracle,” Mark Twain says to Fedor Adrianovitch Jefticheff, also known as Jo-Jo The Dog Faced Boy. Fedor lives, travels, works, and loves among the haunting cast of performers in the Black Tent Sideshow of P.T. Barnum’s Circus in the late 1880s. 

Fedor not only survived, but also profited by being a memorable and unforgettable human curiosity. Along with being an intelligent and avid reader of Tolstoy, Twain, Alcott, and Melville, he has remarkable interactions with a myriad of other world-renowned characters, one being Nicholas II the Russian Tsarevich. This proves that more than just being a “sideshow,” there was a lot of individuality and heart to this “dog-faced boy.”

Richly authentic, dramatic, beautifully written, and always thought-provoking, Brant Vickers tells Fedor’s story in an epic account of this young man’s extraordinary life.

To Protect Them At All Cost

Miz Marta
Miz Marta Author Interview

Delilah & Samson Adventures World follow a courageous young girl and her dog as they go on adventures, saving animals in need and stopping the people responsible. What was the inspiration for the setup to your story?

Well other then the fact that I love animals, my inspiration was a dog I once had named Samson. He was a big strong male German shepherd dog. Plus, an adorable young girl that I personally know named Delilah. I put the two together creating this book. That’s why I named the book; Delilah & Samson Adventures World. Is quite a pretty long story to tell, so I will have to leave that part out. Character Delilah cares and loves animals so much that her only wish is to save and protect them from the hands of abusers, and that’s where big bad dog Samson comes in. It is quite a fictional story for children of all ages.

What were some educational aspects that were important for you to include in this children’s book?

From a child’s early age, they should be taught about all kind of different animals that exist within our world. All kids love animals, they love hearing stories about them and they especially love playing with them. When we educate children on animals such as where they come from, or what they like and don’t like, or what they eat and don’t eat and so forth, it creates an inner appreciate as care for animals. It also helps children to develop an emotional bond with their own pets as well as any future pets they choose to have. It is also important for children to understand that just like they need care and love from their parents, animals need it too from their owners. It is through pets that children gain insight into wild and domestic animals. By observing their behavior, children learn about animal instincts and intelligence. There is so much to discover about animals, that children exposed to nature develop a sense of wonderment and appreciation for life. And most important of all, having a pet gives children the opportunity to become a caregiver. Recognizing their pet’s needs and comforting them helps children learn how to feel the way others feel, becoming more empathetic to them. The best thing about animals is that they are non-judgmental. Children know that no matter how bad of a day they are having, a pet is always there to listen and be a source of affection to them. Many children find comfort in shedding a tear or sharing their secrets with their family companion. Plus children who grow up with pets are generally less fearful of animals. The sole purpose of the book is to teach children about caring, loving and respecting animals. To protect them at all cost and not abuse them in anyway possible as animals can feel pain just like us.

Was there anything from your own life that you placed into this story?

Yes, I sure did. In growing up I had my own pets, and I cared and loved each one of them. One of those pets was my dog Samson who unfortunately I no longer have. Even as an adult, I continue to have and own pets. I actually have one cat that I adopted few years ago, and I have five other stray cats that I look out for by feeding them everyday, and keep an eye on their health. My cats vet actually has profiled me as an animal rescuer. That actually makes me feel super good.

What is the next book that you are working on and when will it be available?

Well the present book that I am working on has nothing to do with animals, but I am making sure that this time around the book will be much better in it’s editing as writing. I do apologize that Delilah & Samson Adventures World was not edited correctly by publisher. Book was rushed by publisher therefore failing in it’s corrective editorial settings. And even as so, I do appreciate the fair reviews it has received on its own.

Author Links: GoodReads | Twitter | Facebook | Website

This fictional story following the adventures of Delilah and her dog companion Samson, their adventures start out when Delilah is a child till the time she is in her teenage years. With heroic elements, Delilah is a voice and force to be reckoned with when it comes to saving the lives of innocent animals. Before each story, there is a short introduction about different animals,, teaching children basic facts and providing entertainment as well.