Author Archives: Ognian Georgiev

ANDY WEIR: RESIST THE URGE TO TELL FRIENDS AND FAMILY YOUR STORY

Andy Weir is a role model for every self-publishing author on the planet. His novel The Martian was published on paper by Crown in February 2014. The book have already been a huge hit.
Few days ago Andy received another acknowledgement by the readers. He won Goodreads Choice Awards in sci-fi genre for 2014. Our next guest is a very kind and modest person and you will be convinced by yourself with the following interview.

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– Andy, your debut novel The Martian became a huge hit. You described the book with the following sentence:” It’s the story of an astronaut trying to survive after being accidentally left behind on Mars.” But what is the difference between The Martian and all other space or astronaut novels?
– I tried to be scientifically accurate in The Martian. All the technology you see in the book actually exists, and the conditions of Mars are accurately represented. There are a few errors and deliberate concessions to drama, but the majority of the book is real science.
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FAY RISNER: USA IS BLESSED WITH GOOD HEALTH CASEWORKERS

Fay Risner is a veteran among the self-publishing authors. She started to use CreateSpace in 2008. Our next featured guest wrote 38 books. The last one was Doubting Thomas: Nurse Hal Among The Amish.

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– What is your last book Doubting Thomas: Nurse Hal Among The Amish about?
– 7th in the series and my thirty eighth book. Emma Lapp plans her wedding. All Old order Amish weddings follow the same format. Except while Emma handles the wedding plans her husband-to-be is never around. Adam Keim, a mute, writes to communicate. He said he’d be busy all summer at his Furniture shop. Emma accepted that until she found out a woman labeled a man magnet is Adam’s new sales clerk. Emma is called a Doubting Thomas for thinking bad about Adam and the sales clerk. She confronts Adam, and it looks like the wedding might be called off.
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ANDREW MILNER: WRITING SONGS IS AS MUCH CREATIVE PROCESS AS WRITING A BOOK

Andrew Milner’s last novel Card School was released two weeks ago. He is our next guest, who will put some light on his new book. It’s time for another fresh interview.

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– What is your latest book Card School about?
Card School is about a ten year old boy Michael Dawson who loses both his parents in a car crash whilst they are on an overseas mission. He is staying with his Auntie until they get back. He never said goodbye as he believed they would return home. His Auntie doesn’t really want him and sends him to boarding school. He has to grow up fast and begins to believe that the school has a dark side, so sets out to find out what it is all about. The answers at times seem to get a bit too close but one unlikely person comes to his aid but it may all be too late.
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STEPHEN CHRISTIANSEN: ORBBELGGUREN MEANS SPIDER KILLERS

Stephen Christiansen is the author of epic fantasy series Orbbelgguren. If you are fans of dark elves, you will enjoy for sure the books. It’s time now for our next interview. Please welcome Mr. Stephen Christiansen.

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– Stephen, what is your fantasy series Orbbelgguren about?
The Orbbelgguren series has many plot lines that twist and turn and it’s hard to really pin-point anything without giving away the surprise ending. However, among these various plot lines, we see a set of dark elves that learn more about themselves and each other. They grow, mature and develop relationships. They establish depth of character in a world that hates and fears them. As everything they know changes, as war erupts around them, as the world starts to die, they find that they must adapt and change as well.
Each book seems to introduce a little bit of the real plot line and over time the reader will begin to understand what the series is really about. However, expect the unexpected. I think the reader will be pleasantly surprised.
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ERIK AMMON: I AM A MILLION DIFFERENT THINGS

Erik Ammon released earlier this year his book The Rabbit Who Wished He Could Fly. The readers loved the story and gave it an average 4.8 stars from 18 Amazon’s reviews. Our next featured author describes himself as father, teacher, runner and writer. Do you want to know more about him and his works?


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– What is your next book The Rabbit Who Wished He Could Fly about?
The Rabbit Who Wished He Could Fly is the story of Kona, a rabbit, and his bird friends, Bella and Morgan. Kona is often left behind by Bella and Morgan since he has more ground to cover than his friends. Because of this, he feels left out and often wishes that he could fly like his friends. As it turns out, their flying gets them into a bit of trouble and it’s up to Kona to use his rabbit skills to save the day. It’s really a story about being happy with who you are, and also helping your friends when they are in need.
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JOE EVENER: I FOLLOWED MY DREAM OF BECOMING A TEACHER

Every journalist enjoys when he receives interesting answers to his question. I guaranty that! My Q&A with authors are very common, because the main idea is to present the writer and his works. I always add 3-4 questions, which are specially prepared for the individual, who must answer them. Often the answers are short or type of “10 minutes must done job”. This is why my interview introduction is quite compact.
I will not explain why Joe Evener deserved better presentation before you start to read his interview. You will see by yourself. Our theme will be his first book The Heart of Seras: Journey to Seras. The novel was very well received with only five stars reviews in Amazon!

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– Joe, What is your first book Journey to Seras about?
– My book, The Heart of Seras: Journey to Seras is book one in a six part fantasy story. Julie Ayers is a normal fifteen year old living in the quiet town of Sunset, Ohio. Her world is turned upside down by the revelation that she is the savior of a medieval dimension. She must learn to balance life on Earth and start training for a battle against evil she knows nothing about. Her mentor, Marcus Campbell, a warrior from that dimension disguised as her high school English teacher. It was Marcus’s job to find Julie, take her to Seras and train her, all while keeping the fact that he has a dark past a secret.
– How did you decide to write the story?
– I started writing my book series in 2005 during my first year of college (I was 41 years old at the time), after being inspired by a freshman writing class which had the first three books of Harry Potter as textbooks, and Classical Mythology 101. The combination of the two classes fueled the flames of a couple of stories I had locked away in my mind. While I have always had a vivid imagination, I just had to put the idea I had to paper. I got inspired to the point that I could not not write this story. I started to put that together with my love of books, television and movies like Lord of the Rings, Gladiator, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Highlander, The Hobbit and many others. I came up with an idea in which a normal teenage girl is whisked away into a medieval time by a trusted teacher who has a secret and is really a warrior with an even darker secret. Early on I joked that if you could picture Buffy the Vampire Slayer being in Tolkien’s Middle Earth, you would get a good idea of what I was putting together. Julie is the combination of Buffy, and the experiences I have had coaching girls over the past twenty years. Marcus Campbell is in many ways Giles (BtVS)/Duncan MacLeod (Highlander) on Earth, and Maximus Meridius (Gladiator)/Angel/Wolverine in Seras.
– What was the biggest challenge during the write up process?
– The biggest challenge has been and is time management. I have to balance writing with my other passions: family, coaching, and teaching. Plus, I type really slow, so getting my ideas from my head to paper to the laptop takes a long time. Finding time to sit down and write continuously is difficult. As a second year teacher, I spend a lot of my time making lesson plans and grading papers. I try to work in an hour or so of writing every night, even if it’s just a paragraph or two.
– Tell us something more about your main character Julie Ayers? Is she close to someone from your real life?
– Julie Ayers starts her journey as a happy-go-lucky fifteen year old girl. She is a freshman in the small town of Sunset, Ohio, based off of my hometown of Sunbury. Julie loves her family very much, and she is loved by others just as equally. She has an infectious attitude that touches nearly everyone she comes into contact with. Julie is very athletic, and enjoys cheerleading and playing basketball. Through the series we will watch her grow from a girl into a confident young lady. She is based on four central people, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Frodo Baggins, Harry Potter, and twenty plus years of working with high school track and field girls. Throw them all in a blender, sprinkled with my imagination, and there stands Julie.
– How much time did you need to finish the story and to publish it?
– It took me seven years to outline the entire six book series, write my first draft, edit three times (during one edit I decided to change the main character from Marcus Campbell to Julie Ayers. That took a really long time), and get published. I found the second book much easier since all of the “leg work” was done. It took me a year to finish book two.
– Who are you?
– Who I am is a complicated question. On the surface I am Joe Evener, in my second year as a 5th grade Social Studies and Language Arts Teacher at Big Walnut Intermediate School in Sunbury, Ohio. I live with my wife of thirty-two years, Bronwen, in Central Ohio. I am the father of two sons, Joey and Jacob, and grandfather of two, Jacob and Jamison. I graduated from The Ohio State University in 2009 at the age of forty-four, and earned my master’s in 2011. I have been the head coach of the Big Walnut girls’ track and field team for 21 years. Besides writing and coaching, I enjoy reading, and traveling with family and friends.
Beyond that, however, I am a dreamer. I had the dream to change my surroundings, left cushy jobs at two different major companies to go to college and follow my dream of becoming a teacher. While there, I was inspired with my early developed love of reading classics such as Treasure Island, Ivanhoe, Robin Hood, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Robinson Crusoe, and Gulliver’s Travels; and in between being a husband, father, grandfather, working part-time jobs, coaching, and going to school fulltime, I chiseled out my own fantasy novel.
– What are your writing habits?
– My writing habits are pretty basic. I jot down ideas that pop into my head. Sometimes I writing out full chapters if I can’t get to my laptop. Then during the evenings, after grading papers and making lesson plans, I sit on the couch and type away while watching television or listening to music.
– Are you satisfied by the sales of the book?
– Am I satisfied with the sales? Hm…I’m not unhappy with the sales. I would be lying if I said I didn’t dream of being a best selling author, and The Heart of Seras was being picked up for a movie deal. I have a story to tell, a very good story in my opinion. I hope that I do it justice, and that the people who pick it up to read enjoy it. The feedback I have received has been positive, and the people who have read it, have been happy. That is all I can ask.
– What are you doing to promote your book by the best possible way?
– I use social media to promote my book. I have an author page on Facebook, and have joined many groups on there, I have a Twitter account, and I am in Yahoo groups. I have spoken to three book clubs, and have had several local signings.
– When we will see your next novel?
– I just sent out book two, The Heart of Seras: The Elders to the company that published my first book. I hope they pick it up, and start the process all over. I would love to see it released by late spring. I also have two smaller projects coming soon. One will be an anthology of works done by my Language Arts students, and the other is a work in a different genre.
– How you decide to start writing a book? Did you have some previous experience in writing?
– I didn’t have any previous writing experiences. My mom always encouraged me to read classical books. I had read Robin Hood, Ivanhoe, Treasure Island, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Robinson Crusoe, Gulliver’s Travels and a little Shakespeare by the time I was thirteen. My best friend, Willie, my brother, David, and I were always creating some kind of story, making our own comic book superheroes/villains, and using our imaginations. I wrote my first story in 4th grade, a little story called “Super Joe” in which I was a superhero and I was protecting the President of the United States. I got a pretty good response from my classmates and the teacher, so I wrote a sequel. In 10th or 11th grade I wrote a western (I wish I still had a copy). After that I thought a lot about writing, I even penned a movie script that never got picked up, when I was in my twenties, but I usually just left the stories in my head.
– You are a track and field coach. Your personal opinion about the amazing results by Usain Bolt–huge talent, great PED or a mixture of both?
– I like to think the good in all people. Usain Bolt is an amazing talent. He is so much fun to watch, and his success is good for the sport. I hope and pray for his sake, and the sake of track and field that it is natural. Too many times our sports heroes have been tarnished. I hate seeing that happen, and I would hate to see that happen to him. Track and field is a purist sport. There is something for everyone. The Olympic Games is my favorite sporting event to watch, especially the summer games, and especially track and field. We need Usain Bolt and others like him to succeed, and be clean.
– As a wrestling coach do you think that USA could be the strongest national Olympic team if so many talents weren’t taken to football, pro-wrestling and MMA?
– That’s a great question. I don’t think pro-wrestling or MMA hurts the sport, many pro-wrestlers and MMA fighters come from the true wrestling ranks. Football is another story, to a point. The thing that holds USA back in the world level is the perception it has at the middle school and high school ranks. Add that to the current idea of wrestling is “gross” or worse to the high school student, and you have a very limited recruiting base. Then, too many times good wrestlers are chased away by bad coaching, not just bad wrestling coaches. The current state of high school sports mentality for parents is “how do I get my son/daughter a full ride scholarship?” This mindset is so dangerous, because parents force this idea on the child to only participate in one sport year round, and ignore potential success in other areas. Then other sports coaches, football, soccer, etc. pick up on this and monopolize the young athlete’s time, not allowing them to try other things. So if a boy is a average to good football player, mom, dad, and football coach convinces him to do year round activities to prepare him for football, ignoring any potential in wrestling. Then you have poor wrestling coaches, who lock into a certain way of coaching that may not suit the athlete, but won’t let the athlete expand their knowledge. Other coaches are just meatheads who don’t mind chasing away younger athletes with drill sergeant mentality, and ignore potential for future success.
– Would you compare the motivation in sports and in writing? What is the difference and where is more difficult to focus-in trainings or in creative part of literature?
– Yes, I would definitely compare the motivation in sports and writing. Preparation is everything. The great Dan Gable once said, (and I am paraphrasing) “I work until I envision my opponent in the shower, and then I work some more.” To be a good writer you must work just as hard as your contemporaries. The planning, the research, reading good works of literature, trying to write better and better. I would say focus in writing is much more difficult. In training in sports, you do have teammates, coaches and the motivation of an opponent to push you through rigorous workouts, and guide you through step-by-step instructions. In writing, it is all self-motivation. There is no one sitting beside you pushing you to write better or to not get distracted. No one is going to say, “aw, Joe, I know you can make a better sentence than that.”
– If you may ask yourself one question in the interview what it will be? (Don’t forget to answer)
– If I could ask myself one question what would it be? That question would be, who are my heroes and why do I look up to them? My heroes range from sports and literature and beyond. In the sporting world, my heroes are Dan Gable, Alexander Karelin, Kurt Warner, and Jesse Owens. They each represent someone who rose up from humble beginnings and achieved success in their chosen field. Dan Gable, to me, is the ultimate coach. Pushing athletes beyond what they think they are capable of doing, and his intensity. Alexander Karelin was so good at wrestling that he made it an art form. I was mad…no, angry is the better word, when Rulon Gardner defeated him. Kurt Warner, is there a better sports story anywhere? It doesn’t hurt, that he played for my favorite football team, the St. Louis Rams. He never gave up, he never stopped working, and his faith in God is inspiring. Jesse Owens, being an Ohio guy, and a track and field enthusiast makes this a no-brainer, but what he accomplished in difficult times, and how he embarrassed Hitler in 1936. Wow!
Then, you have my literary heroes: J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, and Joss Whedon. Storytellers that inspire writers for generations, and generations to come. They are the masters. I only hope to capture a smidgeon of what they did and have done, and (for Joss) what he is still doing.
Finally, Walt Disney. The ultimate dreamer. He rose from troubled times, fired, his character taken from him, and yet, look at what his vision has accomplished. A true visionary.

To learn more about Joe Evener check out his Blog
Facebook page
Twitter

Take a look at his book
The Heart of Seras: Journey to Seras

RAOUL WIENTZEN: I WANTED TO BE A WRITER SINCE EIGHTH GRADE

Three months before the official release of The Assembler of Parts the book received huge positive feedback (av. 4.9 stars from 57 reviews). The Raoul Wientzen’s novel is available now on kindle. Let’s hear more from the author about him and his novel

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– What is your book The Assembler of Parts about?
– The main theme of The Assembler of Parts is the central role of forgiveness in completing the full humanity of people. Forgiveness, in fact, is the missing part that everyone needs to have perfect love. And the irony of forgiveness is that it would not be possible were it not for the imperfections in creation, i.e., evil in creation, both moral evil and physical evil. The Hitlers, Pol Pots, mass murderers, the tsunamis, earthquakes, infecting bacteria, malignant cancer cells, all of imperfection in creation, become necessary in order to perfect love through forgiveness.
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ELIZABETH DAVIES: THE MAIN THING IS THAT PEOPLE ARE ENJOYING MY BOOKS

Elizabeth Davies released her latest novel The Spirit Guide in August. The readers’ feedback was very nice (av. 4.5 stars from 23 reviews in Amazon). We’ve got a chance to speak with Elizabeth about her books and next projects. Let’s say welcome to our next featured author.

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– Elizabeth, What is your last book The Spirit Guide about?
The Spirit Guide is set in the Middle Ages,and is about a young woman called Seren who has an unusual gift – she sees spirits, the shades of the dead.Terrified of being accused of witchcraft, a very real possibility in twelfth century Britain, she keeps her secret close, not even confiding in her husband. But when she gives her heart and soul to a man who guides spirits in the world beyond the living, she risks her secret and her life for their love.
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SARA F. HATHAWAY: MY BOOK REFLECTS UPON THE IMPORTANCE OF FAMILY

Sara Hathaway’s debut novel Day After Disaster was published in the Summer. The book was received very well with average 4.5 stars from 26 reviews. We’ve got a chance to speak with the author about the story and her next projects.

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– Sara, What is your book Day After Disaster about?
Day After Disaster is an apocalyptic, adventure novel, featuring a dynamic young woman, mother and wife, Erika, who is thrust into a world turned upside down by a series of natural disasters. Finding herself alone in a city mutilated by this disastrous situation, she must save herself. Once free of the city confines, she desperately tries to navigate through the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains to get back home to her family. Not knowing if they are alive or dead she must call on all of her survival instincts to plot a course through this broken environment.
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PEN (PENNY WHITE): IF I DIDN’T WRITE, I WOULD SIMPLY IMPLODE

Penny White, aka Pen, is a very active self-publishing author. She was bitten by the writing bug at the age of ten (copyright of the sentence belongs to Pen). Her latest novel Nero’s Fiddle was published a month ago. Pen’s interview is №100 on the blog, so it’s kind a special one. Let’s go to our next Q&A guest, who has interesting things to share.

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– Pen, What is your last book Nero’s Fiddle about?
Nero’s Fiddle is about an Electromagnetic Pulse attack crippling the United States. Captain Beverly Mossberg is assigned the task of getting to Washington, DC on foot to assassinate the terrorist before he strikes again.
– How did you decide to write the story?
– I listened to an audiobook called One Second After by William Forschten. It was about an EMP attack on the community level. I began to visualize my own version of an EMP attack on the United States. It had a larger feel to it and my heroes were women.
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