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Author Interviews

shipley

An Interview with Tabatha Shipley

Tabatha is the author of multiple written works, including the Kingdom of Fraun series. She believes strongly in the power of helping others and is always willing to help out a fellow writer or reader. Find and connect with her on whichever social media platform you love best.

croy

An Interview with Lori Croy

Award-winning author Lori Croy has spent her life creating and telling stories to children. She has six children and thirteen grandchildren who have been the recipients of this creativity and imagination, and now she’s turning those stories into books to share with you. She is a professional communicator and has worked in higher education and government.

crowe

An Interview with Liz Crowe

Liz Crowe, a native of Kentucky and a proud alumna of the University of Louisville, has carved a distinctive path through life, marked by her adventurous spirit and diverse professional roles.

fowler

An Interview with Anne Fowler

I grew up in Toronto and, like many of my generation, pursued a career in nursing. It was not for me and I bailed to join American Airlines as a stewardess, known these days as a flight attendant. My love of travel did not end when I left that job and I continued to visit countries around the globe throughout my eighty-three years! However, the bulk of my business career was spent in human resources, and for almost thirty years I owned the well-known Toronto personnel agency, Hamilton Enterprises.

puerto

An Interview with Evelyn Puerto

Evelyn Puerto reads just about anything, writes in multiple genres, and is the author of the award-winning Outlawed Myth epic fantasy series. When she married, she inherited three stepdaughters, a pair of step-grandsons, and a neurotic cat. Currently she writes from South Carolina.

littlestone

An Interview with Nanette Littlestone

Nanette Littlestone’s emotional stories take the reader on a journey of the heart. An award-winning novelist and gourmet, Nanette believes in happily ever after. Her pragmatic side realizes that most people don’t live fairy tale lives, so her stories explore the struggles we face, the plans that backfire, the heart-wrenching decisions we have to make, plus the joy, the delight, the happiness when we courageously embrace our dreams. It’s all about the love, and good food. She’s the author of the historical novel The Sacred Flame (set in ancient Rome), the contemporary sequel Bella Toscana, the underwater YA fantasy The Heart of Everything, and the first two books in the Irish romance series For the Love of Brigid and Sweet Dreams by Claire.

arfin

An Interview with Ferne Arfin

Ferne Arfin is an American writer in London. Her short stories have appeared in The Literary Review (Fairleigh Dickinson), The Arkansas Review, Wild Cards: The Virago Writing Women Anthology, and other literary magazines. She has worked as a travel writer, an actress, and a creative writing tutor in British prisons. She earned an MA in creative writing from The University of East Anglia. Her first novel, Tunnel of Mirrors, was published in 2022.

bohlen

An Interview with R. Christian Bohlen

R. Christian Bohlen is a bestselling author and an award-winning consultant to Fortune 500 companies, providing instructional design services and developing human performance improvement programs. He has been involved in ministry and church leadership for more than thirty years and worked for over a decade with juvenile offenders as an educator.

lengsfelder

An Interview with PG Lengsfelder

As with any journey, life has offered me more strange twists and turns than I could have imagined. At seven, sure I was destined to be a fireman or a forest ranger, my parents gave me a toy printing press. I thought, I’ll put out a neighborhood newspaper. With a circulation of ten—at five cents a copy—I was hooked: I had readers. I’ve been writing ever since.

hammer

An Interview with Cynthia Hammer

As an eighty-year-old, first-time published author, it is difficult to know what to tell you about my life. I thought I would do something meaningful when I was eighteen, then spent thirty years thinking I would never do something meaningful, and then learned when I was forty-nine that I had ADHD. Diagnosis and treatment for my ADHD made such a huge difference, that I got back to thinking I would and have done some meaningful things.

olsen

An Interview with Maria Leonard Olsen

Maria Leonard Olsen practices law as a commercial litigator in Bethesda, MD, and Washington, D.C. She is an author (50 After 50: Reframing the Next Chapter of Your Life), podcaster (“Becoming Your Best Version”), journalist, TEDx speaker (“Turning Life’s Challenges into a Force for Good”), book marketing coach for female authors, and mentor to women in recovery.

freely

An Interview with Beth A. Freely

Award-winning author Beth A. Freely was born and raised in upstate New York, with a brief and very influential stint living in Great Britain that can be seen in her writing. Today she calls New Mexico home. When asked how long she has been writing, she’ll tell you, “All my life.”

buchner

An Interview with Craig Buchner

Born and raised in the Adirondack Mountains in New York, Craig has lived in Idaho, Oregon, Tokyo, and today he calls Charlotte, North Carolina, his home. All of these places have greatly influenced his work. He is the author of the short story collection Brutal Beasts and the novel Fish Cough.

conklin

An Interview with Ken Conklin

Ken Conklin is a member of the Author’s Guild, the Virginia Writers Club, and the Poetry Society of Virginia. A native of Los Angeles, he has resided in Botetourt County for nearly twenty years. Conklin was presented a 2022 Kegley Award from the Roanoke Valley Preservation Society for his book NORVEL: An American Hero, about Botetourt County native Norvel Lee, Virginia’s first Black Olympic gold medalist. He is also the author of the poetry collection The Zen of Ken. His essays have appeared in the Roanoke Times, Victoria Advocate, Easy Reader, and Microwave Journal.

ruocco

An Interview with Michael Ruocco

Michael Ruocco grew up in Howell, New Jersey, during the roaring 1980s. A decade with much to be influenced by, its colors and sounds were hypnotic. Moving to northeast Pennsylvania by age twelve, Michael only dove deeper into the music, art, skate, and snowboard culture that he’d grown to love. These passions inspired his career in tattooing and led to the success of his studio, Funhouse Tattooing. Along with technical art, his love for finding words to capture a moment has always fueled his desire to write—an art form he feels most alive while creating.

thayer

An Interview with A.P. Thayer

A.P. Thayer is a queer Mexican-American living in Los Angeles. He writes cross-genre speculative fiction and is represented by Helen Lane at the Booker Albert Literary Agency. He has words in places like Dark Matter Magazine, Uncharted, and Neon Hemlock anthologies and is currently on submission with three books. He publishes short fiction and blogs in his Substack newsletter, Strange Speculations.

jacobsen

An Interview with Natalie Anna Jacobsen

Natalie Jacobsen began writing fiction in high school, and after publishing her first newspaper article at age thirteen, she was invited to hone her craft in creative writing programs locally and overseas; in college she turned her interest in storytelling into journalistic endeavors. After graduating, she wrote and photographed for magazines, television, and music studios in Japan for years, fostering her love of untold stories.

broadhead

An Interview with Marlis Manley Broadhead

Marlis Manley Broadhead, a former college instructor of all forms of written communication except Braille, has award-winning short stories and poems in literary magazines—including Kansas Quarterly, Mikrokosmos, Crosscurrents, and Kansas Women Writers. Her debut novel, Trophy Girl, published by Black Rose Writing, was awarded the William Faulkner second prize in 2018. Her second book, Is That Your Mother Calling? Advice That Echoes Down Through the Ages, was based on research of hundreds of people sharing stories of advice they remembered and its effects on their lives.

shannon

An Interview with Jack Shannon

Basically a huge nerd, Jack Shannon’s love of history and the macabre have combined in Brigandine, his first full-length dark fantasy novel. When not writing, he enjoys historical reenactment, TTRPGs, wargaming, spoon carving, brewing mead, and soap making. Time permitting, he is also a husband and father to two small children. He lives in Surrey.