Saturday, August 3, 2013

Writers4Higher features Doug Dandridge

Welcome to Writers4Higher




The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way writers use their talents and life energies to uplift humankind. Writers4Higher doesn’t promote religious or political views. Authors are asked to answer three simple questions: simple, yet complex.


This issue, Writers4Higher features

Doug Dandridge




Hi, Doug. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


Tell me about yourself. Your book(s), your life, your inspiration.

I was always in love with fantasy and science fiction.  I started reading Robert E Howard when I was eight, and Heinlein soon after.  Asimov, Moorcock, Van Vogt, the golden age of science fiction.  I read Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and War of the Worlds at an early age as well, and devoured Frankenstein and Dracula at nine.  You could say I had a love affair with the fantastic in all its forms at an early age.   I used to stay up late at night, well past my bedtime, to watch Shock Theater on TV Friday nights, and would try to watch every science fiction and horror movie that came on.  This was followed by Lost in Space, and then the classic Star Trek.  And many of the movies and shows were really bad at that time, with hokey special effects and second rate actors.  There wasn’t a lot of fantasy back then, at least not that I can remember.  The real treasure in science fiction was the literature, as written by the old masters and the talented newcomers.  Now when the rare occurred and one was translated to the screen, big or small, they were almost always horrible.  Comics were another big part of my life, and of course the movies and TV shows made of them were even worse than the scifi.  Today that has changed.  The big name actors line up for the big budget, special effects laden extravaganzas that are modern fantasy, scifi and superhero movies.  And sometimes the scripts are actually good as well, though more often than not they are not as good as the books they are based on.
I was also the little scientist growing up, reading books on astronomy, playing with my chemistry set, watching the moon launches.  I really wanted to be some kind of scientist when I grew up, but two things interfered.  I really didn’t know what kind of science I wanted to study, and I never really grew up.  I was just as interested in magic.  I didn’t believe that magic actually existed, but I liked the idea of it.
I spent my years in the Army, then a succession of majors at FSU, followed by Graduate School in Clinical Psychology at Alabama.  School didn’t work out, and that’s a story in and of itself.  So while looking for a job after losing one I wrote an anger fueled non-fiction book about graduate school and the field of psychology.  One hundred thousand words in two weeks.  That never went anywhere, but it allowed me to write other books, once having proved that I could accomplish that task.   Wrote two more books that first year, both awful, and then wrote the first one that actually was worth anything.  I fell for an agent scam that cost me three hundred dollars, probably cheap for the lesson learned, and avoided agents for many years, only submitting to the few publishing houses that accepted unsolicited manuscripts.  After fifteen years of trying and failing to get published, mostly with rejection letters that acknowledged my talent but stated a belief that there was not a market for the kind of story I wanted to all, I tried self publishing, which has turned out to be a success story.
What really inspires me to write what I do is the poorly thought out work I see on TV and in the movies.  There are still a lot of great books out there, but I will go to see a movie, like Independence Day for example, that has so many plot holes I feel like I am going to fall through the floor on the way out of the theater.  I am inspired to turn out well thought out stories, using as much of the real world as I can put in them.  Real physics, real biology, real human interactions, at least as far as I can understand them.  I think most times I succeed.  Not always, but more often than not.
My books?  I could write a book on my books.  I have sixteen on Amazon, and am always working on one or two more.  I have two series of hard, far future science fiction, one doing extremely well, the other good enough.  I also have a series that is a mix of High Fantasy and Military Technothriller that is doing well enough, though I was warned in the past to not cross genres like that.  But I have never been one to listen to advice I didn’t want to hear.  A true High Fantasy, several stand alone Military Scifi, and the one Vampire book finish the list.  Some people have told me The Hunger, the vampire book, is quite good, but it just isn’t selling.  I may just have to let that one rest and concentrate on scifi.

Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?

Further than it has so far.  I am doing well so far, developing a base of loyal fans who are asking when my next book is coming out.  In my best selling series, Exodus, I have sold 25,000 ebooks of the first three, 12,000 of book 1 alone.  I want to build on that momentum.  I have been asked what I would do if I were offered a conventional publishing contract, and I honestly have to say I just don’t know.  In some respects that would be the dream come true, as I would have an editor and a cover designer, though from what I hear I would still have to do most of my own promotion.  But there would be the cost of not being able to produce as much as I want, some limitations put on me by the publisher.  But right now I’m just enjoying the ride. It as such a relief to leave my state job and become my own boss.  Those people are crazy in State Government, and they were making me crazy too.  Now I can do what I love, travel when I want, even looking forward to buying a house in the near future.  I am going to Dragoncon in Atlanta at the end of October, and will be taking a master level writing class focusing on science fiction, with some well know authors as guest lecturers.  I would like to go to Europe and call it research or a future series.  I’ve got my first taste of living the dream, and I want more of it.  I think if I work hard and continue to keep doing what I have, I will continue to attract fans and sell books.  That means listening to those fans, maybe not doing everything they want, but paying attention.  Constantly learning and growing.  And I might just petition the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writer’s of America to join without being signed with a major publisher

How do you use your talents/time to help others?

I am really a big animal lover.  I have four cats at home, and would have dogs if I owned my own place.  I use some of my earnings to support animal charities, big cat rescue, the Humane Society, various organizations that support the preservation of nature. People where I used to work would ask me why I didn’t support human charities, and I would answer that my heart is with the animals who can’t defend themselves.  On the writing front I am always willing to lend a hand.  I contact people online all the time who ask me how I am getting sales, and I tell them what I did.  I’m not sure all of what I did got me where I am, but it’s the only way I know how to help them.  I belong to many writers groups online, at Facebook, and use that medium to help.  I have tried to help some people who really didn’t want the advice, other than a one sentence secret on how to get ahead.  Unfortunately there is no such secret.  I had to work a lot of years to get something out there that people wanted to read.  I had to take risks in putting it out where people could criticize it.  And everyone else has to do the same.  If they want to listen I will give them my advice, for what it’s worth.  If not, then I will wait till someone comes along who wants to learn.  I had to learn a lot of hard lessons, I would like to make it easier for the next person to come along.









 




Would you like to find Doug?

Check out the links to this talented author:


Exodus 3:  Exodus 3 on Amazon

We Are Death, Come For You:  We Are Death, Come For You on Amazon



Be sure to visit the Writers4Higher Market! We have gear for the writer in you.

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist





Saturday, July 20, 2013

Writers4Higher features Saundra Kelley

Welcome to Writers4Higher




The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way writers use their talents and life energies to uplift humankind. Writers4Higher doesn’t promote religious or political views. Authors are asked to answer three simple questions: simple, yet complex.


This issue, Writers4Higher features

Saundra Kelley




Hi, Saundra. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


1.            Tell me about yourself, Your books, your life, your inspiration:

I am a writer, born and bred in Tallahassee, Florida. With five generations on my dad’s side—in the Woodville/St. Marks area, and seven on my mom’s—Cody and Monticello . . . white sand, red clay and blue/green water permeate my sense of being. I am also a professional storyteller—a traveler with a rate card for hire. I tell the legends and stories of Florida, of my family and the world. Always, Mother Earth is the star.

I was a shy child—the one you never saw on the playground after school. That’s because I went straight home to grab a book and slid into my favorite place under the old oak tree with my cat. Dreaming about trees, animals, and faraway places consumed me then and it still does. I was a ‘creative’ from the time I began to talk, so when I learned to read and write, it was a given words were going to be my thing. My mother, who named me after an author, gave me full access to her library and bought horse books for me to read that I still have. A discussion about how I diverted from that life would clutter this page. Let’s just say that I eventually found my way back to the path and it feels good. Now, let us examine the journey I took to rediscover that illusive trail.

After divorce, I returned to Florida State to finish my neglected studies, attending with both of my daughters and walking the aisle with one. When I graduated, it was to embrace a not-for-profit service career. I used my writing skills at work, and fiddled around with stories, but due to lack of self-confidence, refused to identify myself as a writer. It took repeatedly trying to fit into jobs that were not right for me, nearly losing my mind and practically everything I had including my health, before I allowed the creative part of me to achieve its rightful place. I found it again during the years I lived on Alligator Point on the Gulf of Mexico, and took great joy in writing about that wonderland of nature’s artistic pleasure.

Still, I was desperately afraid to step out into a sinkhole with no bottom in sight. By that time, my association with the Tallahassee Democrat had netted me the opportunity write a chapter in the environmental anthology, Between Two Rivers, Stories from the Red Hills to the Gulf, edited by Susan Cerulean, Janisse Ray and Laura Newton. That experience brought me into contact with other environmental writers. From that point forward I began to think of myself as a writer—a frame of mind that eventually set me free.

Still, I clung to the safety of home until two triggers conspired to shoot me out of my quasi-safety zone: someone clear-cut a stand of  virgin long-leaf pine in Wakulla County on public lands--one day it was there, the next, gone. Then, while I was living on the coast and playing with an egret named Snow, Hurricane Dennis showed me it was time to leave.

Concerned by the rapid loss of Florida’s native ecology, I decided storytelling in the oral tradition would be my sword. For a time, I saw myself as an environmental Joan of Arc, but no longer. Today I find my ardor tempered by a drop or two of wisdom. Interactive communication is the key to true change.

I moved to Jonesborough, TN and entered the East Tennessee State University masters in storytelling program. It was an intense experience filled with creativity, performance and the expectation of academic excellence. After graduation, I signed a contract with McFarland Publishers to do Southern Appalachian Storytellers: Interviews with Sixteen Keepers of the Oral Tradition for their Appalachian Studies division, index, and all. It was published in 2011.

Once on the track, I couldn’t stop, nor did I try. The result is Danger in Blackwater Swamp, formerly Swamp Woman, begun long ago in a different life. As the story evolved, my passion and love of place spoke through the characters. They became as real to me as my own family, and then evinced opinions not necessarily my own. When the characters decided they had expressed themselves fully and were ready to release me, I specifically looked for a North Florida publisher with a naturalist bent. Southern Yellow Pine Publishing found me; I liked what they were doing and signed on. Danger in Blackwater Swamp releases May 31, 2013.


2.            Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?

I have discovered in myself a sweet blend of the spoken and written word that I find delicious, thus my future revolves around stories; it is my intention to enter the university lecture circuit as a writer, and a storyteller.

As for future projects, there are many. Three children’s books await a publisher. A time-travel historical fiction, working title Red-tail Hawk, will involve some of the characters featured in Danger in Blackwater Swamp. I’ve written enough short stories to generate a collection for publication and performance, and then there is performance poetry.


3.            How do you use your talents/time to help others?

As the president of the Jonesborough Storytellers Guild and a member of the National Storytelling Network, I promote the art of storytelling through mentoring and community service. In addition to our weekly concerts at the International Storytelling Center in Jonesborough, the guild performs concerts at a facility for those with brain injuries, the Veterans Administration Hospital, and for local service groups. Recently, we purchased a cataloging computer for our local library after getting almost 4,000 storytelling resource books donated to their shelves! As such, my community work is reaching out to others so that they may find and explore their own stories and learn to tell them, and to provide pleasant/stimulating entertainment to those who want or need it.


Would you like to find Saundra?

Check out the links to this talented author:



Books by Saundra Kelley:

Danger in Blackwater Swamp, Southern Yellow Pine Publishing 2013 www.syppublishing.com 

Southern Appalachian Storytellers: Interviews with Sixteen Keepers of the Oral Tradition, McFarland Publishers, 2011. www.mcfarlandpublishers.com






 







Be sure to visit the Writers4Higher Market! We have gear for the writer in you.

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist





Saturday, July 6, 2013

Writers4Higher features Norma J. Sundberg


Welcome to Writers4Higher




The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way writers use their talents and life energies to uplift humankind. Writers4Higher doesn’t promote religious or political views. Authors are asked to answer three simple questions: simple, yet complex.


This issue, Writers4Higher features

Norma J. Sundberg




Hi Norma. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


Tell me about yourself: Your book(s), your life, your inspiration.


I am Norma J. (for Jean) Sundberg. I was born in 1933 in Northeastern Ohio and lived there until 1991 when my youngest daughter and I left and came to Tallahassee Florida. Was a difficult time but a chance to break free and keep growing. Met someone in a bookstore who saw me buying a writer magazine, and connected me with TWA, Tallahassee Writers Association, right off.

I've been writing and publishing for close to 60 years. Poetry in newspaper poetry corners;winning prizes in poetry contests; writing letters to the editor about aggravating situations, likethe time change and how it affects kids and cows. It's not the kids and cows who have to change it's the parents and those who milk those cows! Had an article published about the tractor accident; I fell and was run over by a large farm tractor. And lived to tell about it(write about it).

Raising ten kids on a dairy farm kept us very busy. The kids belonged to 4-H and FFA and thrived on successes in those endeavors. My inspiration for the most part was those growing and changing kids. Plus, I needed something that was totally mine! Something for me to succeed in doing. This also kept me aware and in touch with other writers and poets. KEPT ME SANE!

I couldn't wait until I was 80 to START writing. My career was my family. In the 1970s we purchased the family farm. Husband told me I may have to go to work to help supplement the income! I panicked, had no specific skills except working at a grocery store or clerking somewhere. It was at the time of the women's movement that I joined a consciousness raising group. Those gals urged me to try for college.

I entered Kent State University, Ashtabula, Ohio Campus in 1977-78 when I was 45 and my youngest child was two years old. What a balancing act that was. I got involved in anything and everything related to writing. Won the Kaleidoscope award my first year for my work on and poetry in that magazine. Early on I found just the WRITE English professor whose focus was creative writing. It was in one of her classes that I first wrote An Odd Fable. It only took me 30 years to get it published. I've written a weekly column for a newspaper for ten years; edited and wrote a poem and editorial for a church newsletter for ten years. After graduation from KSU with an Associate degree I was asked to teach/instruct poetry classes at their Summer College for Kids. We put together booklets of the kids poems, sending each two copies making them published poets!

Meanwhile, here in Tallahassee the beat goes on. I've been involved in other writer groups, one of which a friend and I started. I belong to BBP, Big Bend Poets and am looking forward to my second book, a book of poems to be published. My Odd Fable was published in 2007 through CyPress Publications. Many of these poems were posted in the church newsletter I edited. The pieces I wrote led to the newspaper columns.

Presently I'm submitting to an on-line newsletter, Extra Innings published through the university of Wisconsin, edited by Marshall Cook, a retired professor from the U. of Wisconsin. Connection with a person I met at the Erma Bombeck Humor writers Conference in 2006 gave me confidence in the marketing aspect of writing. Marketing is a whole 'nuther animal altogether. I have two of her books on marketing that helped immensely with the Fable and plan to dig into them toward the poetry book. Each step leads to another on the ladder of success. I'm still climbing.

Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?

I don't look too far into the future. I'm taking it as I connect with each new step, meeting and networking with other writers, sharing experiences, markets and information through e-mails and on-line newsletters. I'm waiting for the May 2013 issue of Extra Innings for my contribution in print, due out momentarily.

How do you use your talents/time to help others?


I recently did a journals class, re-titling it Writing Your Own Personal History, incorporating writing in journals for women in my daughter's Ward at church. I used handouts toward their own writings. I forward on-line newsletters and writing information to writer friends toward their publishing endeavors or just their enjoyment. I've built a network of writer friends. I've kept touch with the professor mentioned who is now retired. She got her P.hD in writing while I was going to college. I'm active in my church.

The planning for the journals class came about because my daughters and friends were trying to find a way to keep me busy while they planned a Surprise 80th Birthday party for me. They all came up with, “Something to do with her writing!”

Because I was busy gathering materials and writing an outline toward the class, they were able to hoodwink me. My daughter even came by and copied articles and clippings, pictures, putting them on a tri-fold poster thing for the party. I never tumbled that it was for that purpose. She even took a four generation picture along with her. I figured it was part of the class items, family is part of genealogy and journals are an integral part.. Was able to teach “said class” a couple of Thursdays ago!

One of the biggest things that has kept me motivated through all this has been keeping a sense of humor. Sometimes it can get pretty warped! But it's better than crying uncontrollably.





Would you like to find Norma?

Check out the links to this talented author:





 






Be sure to visit the Writers4Higher Market! We have gear for the writer in you.

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist




Saturday, June 15, 2013

Wow! Writers4Higher One-year Anniversary post.



Welcome to Writers4Higher!

     Here I am, starting year two as the host for the Writers4Higher blog. (I do look a bit like Piggy the muse cat at this point.) Thank you to all of the authors that have taken time from their busy lives to share a bit about themselves. And to all of you readers that make the blog a success.
    I never imagined when I started this blog, how many delightful, talented people I’d have to opportunity to know a tad better.
    Writers don’t feel comfortable crowing about themselves. While we can dole out drama and pathos, murder and mayhem, and sweet sultry love, the marketing part of this business often defies us. But how will others know us if we don’t squawk a bit? As my funny Southern mother often said, “It’s okay to toot your own horn, just don’t crank up the whole band.”
    So many folks toil behind the scenes, giving back through their writing, charitable contributions, and just plain everyday goodness. This crosses political, social, and religious boundaries, to a place of common humanity.
Writers answer “a calling.” Most live other lives, yet still manage to cull precious time to hunker down and create. Hours poring over dialog, characters, plot lines, pacing and syntax, not to mention the constant editing and revisions. All, to make sense of life, touch others, and communicate.
    This writing life should not focus solely on competition. No! The perception of lack creates more of the same. What if, instead of scrabbling for a foothold by stepping over fallen comrades, we help each other? Applaud success, high-five the book contract, or be the first to bring the Ben and Jerry’s with two huge spoons when that rejection letter or email arrives.
    Plenty to go around. No need for a constant literary dogfight. These days, opportunity shines from myriad sources.
    This is the spirit behind Writers4Higher. As a fellow author, I understand those dark places where defeat and self-doubt lurk. I also grasp the joy of that perfect moment when it all comes together.
   As for me, I continue to learn. Will I crow here? Nope. This place is my means to help others sharing the same path. Visit my website—it is the place where I had to crow.
    My best to all of you!

    Rhett DeVane


I recently heard back from several of the W4H family. What are those crazy kids up to now? Here are a few:

Donna Meredith: Her thriller pitting hydrologist Summer Cassidy against a corrupt CEO, “Between a Rock and a Wet Place”, is ready for submission. She’s working on the second in the series, “Fraccidental Death.” 

Malcolm Campbell: He’s been busy as ever. Here are some of his projects: Short story: “How the Snake Bird Learned to Dry It’s Feathers” – appeared in Quail Bell Magazine – inspired by the Anhingas perched around Wakulla Springs 2013.  Emily’s Stories: Fantasy e-book collection of three short stories – “Map Maker” (Tallahassee setting), “Sweetbay Magnolia” (St. Marks setting), “High Country Painter” (Glacier Park setting) 2013.  Moonlight and Ghosts: Paranormal e-book short story set in Tallahassee 2012.  Cora’s Crossing: Paranormal e-book short story set at Marianna’s Bellamy Bridge 2012. The Seeker: Magical realism/fantasy novel coming out this spring 2013.

Doug Alderson: Since my interview on Writer4Higher, I have a new book out, The Great Florida Seminole Trail, published by Pineapple Press. The book is a guide from north Florida to south Florida of Seminole Indian historic and cultural sites that reads a bit like a travelogue. The book evolved from my friendship with Seminole families over the years, having helped organize the Tallahassee Museum's Native American Festival for several years and by my 30-year involvement with a Muscogee Creek ceremonial grounds in which Seminole families sometimes visited. People say to write what you know, but I try to write what I want to know, so the book was an excuse to dive more deeply into Seminole history and culture. I'm also working on finishing a novelette I started fifteen years ago and I hope to wrap that together with some short stories for a collection. I always have a project going to help keep my mind and imagination active.

Pat MacEnulty: I am working on a screenplay based on my memoir. The working title of the screenplay is "Hindemith's Darling." I'm also one of the workshop leaders at the Sun Magazine Writers Retreat at Wildacres in April.

Julie Cantrell: I’m excited to tell you I am wrapping up final edits for the sequel to Into the Free. The second book, When Mountains Move, will be released September, 2013 and will continue the story of Millie Reynolds as she navigates the next phase of her life. I enjoyed seeing where her journey takes her, and I hope readers will join her as she heads to the beautiful Rocky Mountains of Colorado.

Olivia deBelle Byrd: I am still actively selling Miss Hildreth Wore Brown-Anecdotes of a Southern Belle. Because of your recommendation, it is at My Favorite Books in Tallahassee.

Marina Brown: Well, the novel, Land Without Mirrors, continues to do well. I am speaking before book clubs and doing signings and have only five-star ratings from Amazon, even receiving notes from readers in Germany and South America! This year I will bring out a collection of stories, Walking Alone Together, from my years as a hospice nurse, inspired by amazing people who, in their last weeks and even hours, experienced growth, joy, and sometimes the only true epiphanies of their lives. I am working on two new novels. One, set in Italy... near the town of Pitigliano. It is a place where la malocchia, the evil eye, still impacts people's lives.The other novel is set in Rhett's southern soil: Houston, Mississippi, in this case. The story of a 50-something divorcee, still a sexy babe, who's accomplished a lot in becoming a bank manager, and who has decided to go back and rebuild the little place in the woods where she and her mother once lived. Other than that, I continue to write for several nationally distributed design magazines and freelance for newspapers, including the Tallahassee Democrat. I'm still playing cello with the Big Bend Community Orchestra and dancing flamenco with Fuego Flamenco and tango with the Tallahassee Tango Society.

Ginny Stibolt: My second book "Organic Methods for Vegetable Gardening in Florida" has been released and I'm in the middle of a whirlwind three-month book tour with 32 events, both speaking engagements and garden fests.

Susan Malone:  Hey Girlfriend, Amazing it's been a year!!! And yes--new book out for me!  “What's Wrong with My Family?  And How to Live Your Best Life Anyway,” by me and my bro. We've been having a ball promoting it.  What fun!

Mary Kane: I just completed my final draft of a screenplay based on “Southern Justice.”  What an interesting new challenge it was to convey a story through dialogue and limited action description.  Without narrative and my opportunities for smart-mouth commentary, it sure was a challenge.  Now I'm working on my next book.  It involves the same groovy set of characters.  This time the case is an environmental class action.

Adrian Fogelin: What's new with me? Last year's title, "Summer on the Moon," has been getting some good traction. It won the silver medal in the Florida Book Awards and has been selected as an honor book for the Society of School Librarians International Book Awards. I just completed the next book in the "Neighborhood Series." The title is "Seven," and it involves a kid with a magic hat, an abandoned garage in the woods, and a mysterious missing uncle. My next book will be a late life romance suggested by my agent as a good topic. I don't think he bargained for how old my characters are going to be. Let's just say they're in a nursing home. No words have hit paper yet, but they're filling my brain and are about to spill. In addition to my own work, I continue to edit novels as part of my "book coach" service. I'm having a great time visiting and dinking with the fictional worlds created by other authors.

Bob McKnight pens a popular political blog and is an ABC TV commentator on political happenings in Florida. Senator McKnight's Blog

Tricia Booker continues to spread laughter and joy with her blog about motherhood, life, and lunacy in the Sunshine State.

Gale Massey works hard at her craft. Every time I see her on Facebook, that woman is attending a workshop or retreat. She’s also had success with her newspaper articles.

Tim Dorsey’s latest novel “Riptide Ultraglide” has been released. As usual, Tim has all kinds of craziness going on—a Serge Storms Cruise set for March of 2014, and now Serge’s Glades Jamboree has been slated as an annual event, end of October.

Shelagh Watkins continues her success with Mandinam Press, in the UK.

Anne Petty released her new novel “The Cornerstone” recently. We hold Anne in our thoughts and prayers as she faces her latest challenges. Love to you, Anne!

M.R. Street has a new book, “The Werewolf’s Daughter”. She’s busy with signings and promotion.

Chuck Sambuchino continues to speak and teach and also pens a wonderful blog for writers. This man is a whirlwind!

Barbara Kiger is preparing for the release of her next novel.

The others? They're in a mad whirl--doing the work of writing.
My best to all of you, my Writers4Higher family!
Rhett DeVane

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Writers4Higher features Debora Coty


Welcome to Writers4Higher





The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way writers use their talents and life energies to uplift humankind. Writers4Higher doesn’t promote religious or political views. Authors are asked to answer three simple questions: simple, yet complex.


This issue, Writers4Higher features

Debora Coty




Hi, Debora. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!



 

  1. Tell me about yourself. Your book(s), your life, your inspiration.

I’m a late bloomer as far as writing goes. At the age of 45, when my youngest chick was about to fly the coop, I was sitting in a dentist office one day praying about what Papa God had in store for me. Even after 25 years as an orthopedic occupational therapist and 20 years teaching piano, I knew there was something else I was supposed to be doing, but I had no idea what. I reached down, picked up a magazine, and randomly flipped it open to an ad for a writing contest. A lightbulb flashed on inside my head. I heard that beloved still, small voice whisper that it was time to follow my childhood dream of writing for His glory.
Since that time almost ten years ago, I’ve been blessed with over 120 articles published in international magazines, newspapers, and trade journals, and book number twelve just released in February.
I consider myself the poster child for “It’s never too late to follow the dreams the Lord places in your heart.”  If He wills it, He fulfills it, regardless of the obstacles.
Fear, Faith, and a Fistful of Chocolate is the newest release in my “Take On Life” series. Like the award-winning Too Blessed to Be Stressed, and More Beauty, Less Beast released previously in the series, F3 (as I affectionately nickname it) has been described as truth gift-wrapped in humor. All three deal with issues with which many women struggle on a daily basis: stress, self-control, and fear.
My writing style is conversational and witty. I enter into a woman’s heart through the back door where we sit at the kitchen table, kick off our shoes, sip our lattes, and get real with one another. Walls come down, excuses melt, and lives are changed as we join hands and tackle this faith-life together.  
My goal with Fear, Faith, and a Fistful of Chocolate is to help women find comfort, healing, power, and peace through our struggles with the often paralyzing and debilitating fears that prevent us from fulfilling Papa God’s purpose for our lives.
Within the pages, I share lots of scripture application and real-life stories, along with practical tools for confronting and disabling our personal fear monsters. Because tolerating our fear monsters only makes them growl louder. At the end of each chapter, I’ve included a discussion question section called, “More Pluck, Less Chicken,” which enables the book to be used in Bible Study groups as well as on an individual basis.

  1. Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?
Well, I never saw it taking me here, so that’s a tough one to answer. I plan to keep walking through the doors Papa God opens, crawl through the windows, and will excitedly look forward to each new twist in the road He has forged for me.

  1. How do you use your talents/time to help others?
I have been enjoying an unforeseen speaking ministry for the past five years (I've spoken to more than 150 groups), and keep in touch with many women I’ve met personally or online who need a friend in faith for encouragement and spiritual growth.
Having promised Papa God that I’d always be open to helping others like me who were called to a writing ministry but hadn’t a clue where to begin, I mentor aspiring writers and hold free writing workshops. I also teach at writing conferences and retreats, and co-founded the annual Florida Inspirational Writers Retreat.
A dedicated children’s ministry worker for the past 35 years, I’m currently “The Bible Story Lady” to nearly one hundred preschoolers at my church. I love it because I get to wear a crazy flower-covered hat, sing goofy songs, and dance every Sunday – the perfect job for a closet boogieholic!
I also enjoy developing relationships with new friends through Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and my blogs (one personal and one for aspiring writers) which can all be accessed through my website,www.DeboraCoty.com. There are also reviews, book excerpts, and some wonderfully fun 2-Minute Stress Buster videos there that will brighten up your day. 




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Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist




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