My book began with an idea of two riders, a man and a woman, entering a tiny village in the rain and fog. Though I believed I could never write fantasy due to my having Aphantasia, I couldn't get the story out of my head and the story kept growing around that idea. I soon knew that the man was someone who was called 'the Traveler.' I soon knew that twins related to the woman had been abducted and the story would begin with the man and woman setting out to free the twins. So the title, The Traveler: Quest for the Twins, was actually quite easy to come up with.
An Interview with Erin Foley
Erin is the author of Kapuna: How Love Transformed a Culture, which received the North American Book Award 2015 for Best Travel Non-Fiction and the 2015 Idaho Author Awards First Place in Biographies, Autobiographies, and Memoirs. She studied Art, Photography, and Journalism at Hillsdale College in Michigan, USA. Her passions include teaching inductive Bible studies, urban gardening, good coffee, wombats, family-based care, and, of course, books.
An Interview with Ethan Hirsh
Writer and photographer Ethan Hirsh served four years as an air traffic control officer in the United States Air Force, then worked as a wordsmith and communications strategist in Houston and Kansas City for more than thirty years. His corporate specialties included annual shareholder reports and branding. He has degrees in English and business. Now starting a third decade of “retirement,” he spends much of his time with his wife, JoEl, tending their nature preserve in the Missouri Ozarks. An amateur naturalist, Ethan publishes a photo blog several times a year.
An Interview with Katherine Williams
Katherine Williams was born on the Wirral Peninsula in England. She now lives in rural Connecticut, USA, where she likes to write, work in her vegetable garden, and hike in the surrounding countryside with her new puppy Maus.
An Interview with Honey Lea Gaydos
Honey Lea Gaydos is a writer, visual artist, and professional nurse specializing in mental health. Combining all these interests, she developed an innovative research approach using visual art to explore self-defining memories earning a PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies. In her career as a professor of nursing, she promoted the use of the arts in healthcare environments and advocated a holistic approach to care. Her emotionally evocative artwork has been sold for many years through galleries and exhibitions. Her writing includes scholarly publications, essays and poetry, and a spiritual memoir, Patterns: The Mystical Journey of an Ordinary Life.
An Interview with Jim Wollak
A lifelong devoté of Jane Austen and all her works, James Wollak is a retired financial data analyst and lives in San Francisco, California, a third-generation San Franciscan. He is an avid reader, numismatist, and music lover, enjoying all kinds of music such as classical and opera, Motown and soul, ABBA, Celtic, blues, bluegrass, and zydeco. He also loves silent and classic Hollywood films, and the “Poldark,” “Downton Abbey,” and “Sanditon” series. He is a confirmed Anglophile, and Pride and Prejudice is his favorite novel of all time.
An Interview with Sofia Pires Baquedano
Sofia Pires Baquedano is a Brazilian-Spanish writer and filmmaker. She currently is a film student in university in Brazil, and holds a certificate from the New York Film Academy in Los Angeles. She is passionate about the importance of imagery and beauty in a scene, both on-screen and on-paper. She grew up between Brazil and Spain. this is my worst nightmare please be nice to me is her first novel.
An Interview with Karin Ciholas
Ever since childhood, I have written stories. My mother read stories to me every evening at bedtime, and when I didn't like the ending of the story, I changed it. When my children were little, I made up stories at bedtime. Throughout my teaching career, I published short stories in literary magazines and wrote several plays. I have won eleven prizes from my writing. Writing and storytelling are in my DNA.
An Interview with Mark Katlic
Mark Katlic, M.D., is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Washington & Jefferson College and an Alpha Omega Alpha graduate of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He completed residencies in Surgery and Cardiothoracic Surgery at the Massachusetts General Hospital, then practiced Thoracic Surgery for forty years, first in Northeastern Pennsylvania and then in Baltimore. He was Chair of Surgery for Lifebridge Health System in Baltimore until his retirement in 2024.
An Interview with Bruce Ballard
I'm seventy-one years old, and was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1982. At that point in my life, all I wanted to do was write. I started writing sonnets and haiku about Parkinson's disease, and fiction that went in wildly different directions. Suddenly, I had enough material to make a book!