Sunday, May 24, 2015

Writers4Higher features Mary Jane Ryals



Hi, Mary Jane. Welcome to Writers4Higher.


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

            Well, I was doomed to be a reader and writer, as my mother and grandmother were English majors. Mama read Mother Goose to me as I was barely talking, and I’d recite verse to their dinner friends. I read classics for juniors at eight years old--Brontes, Twain, Poe, Dickens, Stevenson, Alcott and others.
The natural world figured prominently; the times seemed safe, so I wandered  in woods for hours, dreaming of gingerbread houses and wicked witches and floating down Mississippi-type rivers. I liked the idea of homeless and parentless children—the world was whatever I decided it was, in fact, and was luscious. I liked how people in these books struggled and usually survived. When they didn’t, I was intrigued. 
Those books fed my imagination and gave me a sense of social justice. I love language, too, and it’s power to change us. I’m concerned about social justice. I love language and its power to change us.
For example, when I wrote Cookie and Me, I wanted to be honest about my southern cultural learned behavior of racism. Cookie is black, and the narrator, Rayann is white. They become friends despite the culture that tells them this is completely wrong. They learn about each other as people. Rayann has more to learn than Cookie does. I won a book award for the novel, it was because I didn’t mind taking risks. Unless there’s risk, there’s no real story.
My new novel, Cutting Loose in Paradise, I wrote to teach myself how to learn plot. My dear friend Sue Cerulean urged me to take the manuscript out of the drawer out and work on it. Meanwhile, she worked on her non-fiction book, Coming to Pass, a collection about the peril our Gulf of Mexico is in and her lyrical observations of the gulf’s beauty and life.  
Cutting Loose was my attempt to talk about damages to the waters, and how they affect the poorer people living along our Florida gulf, not to mention all the animal life there. Since I grew up here, I made certain that nature and place was a big “character” in the book, as Eudora Welty says. The animals had voices—I’d make up words to imitate animal sounds, particularly the birds that inhabit the water areas.
Sue helped tremendously with the book. A bird expert, whose friends are water experts, Sue helped me cobble together a mystery about how people and animals and plants all need each other.
I also wanted the main character to be a single mom. They never get their due, even though they are matriarchs. And I wanted the mom to be a bit sloppy. I didn’t want a perfect mom. I think we owe it to mothers to let them be humans, not “The Madonna.” And the character named Madonna, a friend of the single mom, is my ideal of a gulf girl—nutty, fun-loving, compassionate, smart and not necessarily educated, and sometimes all the wiser.
  
Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?

I have in my contract a clause that says my next book must be looked at by Pineapple Press first. I’m honored to be with Pineapple. The editor suggested that I wanted to write a series of mystery novels, and I jumped on this chance. To get a publisher in these times makes me pretty darn lucky. I think I’m in this for the next decade, as I’m a slow writer and a crazy rewriter. My husband, Michael Trammell, also a writer, says the folks who revise get published. Now that this book is out, all I want to do is write poetry. I get bored easily. I need poetry to take me back to the tight writing I used to do—few words to say much. I bore myself with exposition.

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

            Here’s my favorite question of the three. David Brooks’ new book about how our “resume” selves (titles, skills, productiveness, who we know) has overshadowed our “moral” selves (the selves we are deep inside that we want people to talk about at our funerals, for instance).
            I struggled with that without using those words. I left the safety and security of a full time academic position at Florida State to write more and to do something more meaningful to me. I didn’t even know what that was. Many thought I was making a huge mistake. But it was the best decision.
            I stumbled onto a job at TCC tutoring English writing in the Learning Commons. I absolutely love this work. I meet with students from every part of the world, from every age returning to or beginning college. So many people are struggling with standard English. I had no idea, having spent much time in English department situations at FSU or other university situations.
For instance, in the Learning Commons, I’ve met a young Hispanic women who told me her mom and siblings had to leave Central America because the mafia there taxed them on their business outside their home, and threatened to kill them. They didn’t have enough food, so they left to come here. She has a strong work ethic, and appreciates the help with her many papers.
            I’ve met a deaf African American man who said his paper had some sexual content, and Was I sure I wanted to read the paper? It was a fun paper to read about how we need sex education, and I enjoyed communicating with him entirely through writing notes back and forth. He thanked me profusely on paper when he left. I put the paper on my frig.
            I met a South Korean man who wants to be a Physical Therapist, and he told me that South Korea is the Italy of Asia—that they love food, parties, just being joyful. Who knew?
            The people I work with are varied as well. For instance, I know two women from Iran who call themselves “The Persians.” I love talking with them about beauty, fashion, the Ottoman Empire, poetry, dance, and a whole lot of other richness.
            Anyone who tutors has to pass a pretty rigorous test, so I get to work with really smart people. One woman works with a playwright, and they’re rewriting and putting on the Greek plays as zombie stories. She’s always asking me if I know anybody who can act.
            Librarians work in the same building, in the same big room, so to speak. They have the best inner lives of anyone I know. We all know they’re smart, but I’m learning how well they can research anything. One African librarian has showed me a website of migrant worker camps in the 30s in Florida, and has showed me a site for how to do cool styles for African and African American hair.
            So my new work is not very lucrative, but it lets me give back my easy knowledge of American grammar and sentence structure, spelling and overall thinking about organizing one’s writing towards helping struggling people move out of where they are and into something better for themselves. And what they give me back is worth a billionaire’s fortune.
            I also still teach, mostly English at TCC and Flagler College Tallahassee. I sometimes teach Business Communication at FSU. I like and need the variety. And I have a lot of hope for the next generations. Being in touch with them keeps my thinking young. I try to stay a little outside the box in teaching, and I can do this by not having a full time job. And these stories, these stories, they enrich my writing.





PRAISE FOR CUTTING LOOSE IN PARADISE
 “Glorious writing and a good mystery aren’t the only draws to Mary Jane Ryals’ new book. Readers will root for big hearted, loose-lipped, pool-playing, hair-cutting LaRue Panther and her charming kids and friends. But they’ll also root for the underdog parts of Florida that she loves and yearns to protect.” — Lucy Burdette, best selling author of the Key West Food Critic mysteries. 

“Mary Jane Ryals’ beautiful book Cutting Loose in Paradise depicts three strong dynamic women on a lost island, St. Annes, in the Gulf of Mexico, dealing with the murder of one of their own, a woman who reportedly shot herself in the heart. However when LaRue Panther, hair stylist, reports to the funeral home to fix the deceased’s hair for the funeral, she discovers no bullet hole in the body; instead, a cut throat. Ryals isn’t writing a who-dunnit, exactly. More like an environmentalist’s nightmare. The story takes place in the dark times of the BP oil spill, at a moment in time before oil and oily birds and fish began to wash up on the shore. There is a lot of denial going on. There is a beautiful hopelessness on the island, working class people dreading what was coming. The news keeps showing the gargantuan jet of oil on the Gulf’s floor, gushing oil for months. No one knows what’s going to happen.” — Philip F. Deaver, 13th winner of the Flannery O’Connor Award for Short Fiction


Thank you for joining us at Writers4Higher!
Rhett DeVane, Southern fiction author and blogmaster

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Writers4Higher welcomes Susan Mary Malone, editor and author



Hi Susan! Welcome to Writers4Higher.

Tell me about yourself, your business, and the connection with the writing world.

I’m an award-winning author and editor, with 6 Traditionally published books to my credit (2 novels and 4 works of co-authored nonfiction), and nearly 50 books I’ve edited sold to Traditional publishers.  The latest is Randy Denmon’s post-Civil-War Historical novel, Lords of an Empty Land, which sold on a 2-book deal to Kensington. 

I spend my days immersed in a world of words!  Writing, editing, teaching writing.  Is there another way to live?  LOL.

How do you work with authors?

Okay, this is a long one!  But I’ll try to be brief J

I'm a developmental editor (as opposed to just a copy editor), so my work is very, very thorough. The market is very, very specific as to how books must conform to different genres and sub-genres, which isn't terribly apparent from the outside.  I take an all-encompassing, multi-pronged manner to this, as all manuscripts—from first-time writers to seasoned ones—need a great editor to dig down to the bones and then bounce everything off of.  The most successful method for bringing a manuscript to publication is to attend to all aspects of it under one large umbrella.

To that end, I first do a thorough substantive edit (genre-specific when called for, including a host of examples and suggestions and discussion, all over the pages, illustrating every point made), an in-depth and comprehensive critique (15-30 pages, correlated specifically to the manuscript and delving into characterization, plotting and pacing, organization and structure, flow, voice and tone, all literary devices and stylistic elements, and overall substance).  

The second part of this process, mentoring, then begins with unlimited follow-up/coaching through revisions and beyond.  Once revisions are complete, you’ll send it back to me for the third step—a copyedit/review of the revised manuscript.  That way, we both know the book is truly ready to market. 

I'm an editor of the old school—entirely hands on—so I don't just send the work back and say good luck. And a big part of my job is teaching all the elements of great fiction and nonfiction, so that writers absolutely can apply that to their next works.  Most importantly, I'm here as coach for as long as they need me.

You can see some of my authors' books on my website, along with what they say about working with me: http://www.maloneeditorial.com/books.htm

Do you write as well as contribute through your business? Please share!

Oh, do I ever write!  LOL.  I’m working on a novel now that’s set in a Texas vineyard and winery. Tough research!  But I’m quite up to the task J  I have a novel coming out in September.


I also blog 5 days a week http://www.susanmarymalone.com/blog/ 

I write in the mornings, then edit through the afternoons.
 
Please connect with me on FB:



And Twitter:



Thank you for joining us on Writers4Higher, Susan!
Rhett DeVane
Southern fiction author and blogmaster


Thursday, April 23, 2015

Writers4Higher features author Ann Mock

Writers4Higher welcomes author Ann Mock.



Hi Ann, welcome to Writers4Higher!


1.   Tell me about yourself.

I grew up in the South and have always loved the towering oak trees and beautiful southern landmarks which makes the southern United States like no other part of the world.  I knew if I ever wrote a novel it would need to take place where I have lived most of my life, which is the South.

Twenty years ago I visited a Southern mansion in Vicksburg, Mississippi, that had survived the War Between the States because it had been used as a hospital for wounded soldiers. I was fascinated by a Union cannonball that was still lodged in the door frame over a century later. This inspired me to start my novel, “The Union of the North and the South”.

My husband and I have often traveled through the deep South by car, but steaming along the Mississippi on the American Queen steamboat gives one a completely different perspective and made it very special. The experience gave me so many ideas for my novel.

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

I haven’t decided if I will do a sequel. Writing a book was more work than I ever dreamed it would be, but I learned so much and thoroughly enjoyed the process. I was so honored to earn the five star rating from Readers’ Favorite book review company and if I am well received you never know...

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

I love animals and I am using some of the proceeds from the sell of my book to help our local humane societies.


I hope my readers come to realize the power of forgiveness and the happiness it can bring to your life.






Thank you, Ann!
Rhett DeVane
blogmaster and Southern fiction author
www.rhettdevane.com

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Writers4Higher takes a new direction...whoot!



Well now. I've taken a little break from the blog and it's time to put on my running shoes and head out.

The Writers4Higher blog is my way of giving back, of highlighting some mighty fine literary folks.


Up until this point, I have focused on authors. But what about all of the other hard-working people in this field? Yep, they deserve recognition, too.


So tune in. In addition to more talented author types, you shall be introduced to editors, designers, and marketing people. If I can tie down a muse long enough to ask a few questions, maybe even one of those wispy types.


It is true; we never do anything alone. Without the aid of other experts, a writer is just someone else yammering in a vacuum.


My best to all of you, and thanks for reading the Writers4Higher blog.


Blogmaster and Southern fiction author 

Rhett DeVane
www.rhettdevane.com

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Writers4Higher features Linda Heavner Gerald

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

Linda Heavner Gerald





Hi, Linda. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!

  1. Tell me about yourself. Your book(s), your life, your inspiration
I am retired with my husband on the beautiful Gulf of Mexico in Florida. My only son and grandson live in Dallas, Texas. This allows me plenty of time to write. Although keeping up with my husband is a full-time job. Currently, I have five published novels with one on the way.

Beaufort Betrayal is the thriller which started my writing. For over a year, each night, I had a vision. A young woman walked the streets of my beloved Beaufort, N.C., where I have sailed frequently. The woman was not me. And she was in trouble. She had no memory. The sound of the wind gently brushing a halyard against a sailboat mast in the sleepy marina told her she was a sailor, but that was all she could remember. The wave of a man from the balcony across the street caused her to walk in that direction. The man rushed from the house and ushered her inside. Was he a savior or was she entering hell?

Rosemary Beach and Will He? are also Thrillers. Will He? is set in Frascati, Italy. This tale of ancestral lies and deceit set amidst the ruins of Italy required a great deal of research.

Dusty the Island Dog is a children's book, for the child in everyone. Have you ever dreamed of life in the islands? This tale of two real dogs that remain legends in Abaco, Bahamas, is touching. The story begins when Dusty's mother does not return home. The panic and fear consuming her is all too familiar to anyone who has lost a loved one, and particularly helpful for a child who has experienced loss or abuse. Yet Dusty learns that life goes on with happiness waiting.

My current book is Till Heaven Then Forever. Brian and Lily have it all, or do they? If you believe the world's version of happiness and success, they indeed do. Yet Lily feels an emptiness that the allure of wealth can't provide. The man of her dreams, home in the islands, and plenty of money can't fill the hole inside.
Soon to be released, Confessions of an Assassin, set in Bali, Indonesia, is a thriller. This book is my crown jewel!

My inspiration began with Beaufort Betrayal. A need to express myself and demonstrate through my writing that we are all basically the same. Each morning, we set out with our "together" face but inside, we harbor fear and insecurity. Each of us is flawed. Yet there is a love around us, awaiting discovery; in doing so, we find that each person is beautiful and deserves love and respect.
  1. Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?
I would love to say producing a "best-selling novel," but with all of the writers and books, that may be a little difficult. Cultivating readers who look forward to a new book from me would be satisfying. The blessing of writing is such a joy and provides inspiration each day. The act of writing is fulfilling, but saying something that helps lift the strain of life is glorious.
  1.  How do you use your talents and time to help others? 
My goal is to write something of substance. A good book is one you finish with a smile. A great book is one you finish and contemplate for some time, even telling others.
There is so much junk out there, filled with fantasy and distortions. Real life is difficult. What if you are able to read a great story, and take something into your everyday life that may make it better? With my medical background, I hope to introduce issues that face us today. Macular degeneration, depression, and grief are a few topics my books have presented, with current treatments. Most important is to encourage people with goals and dreams not to give up. The American Dream is within reach. Keep believing and doing the right thing while showing love and respect to those in your live. You can find happiness.


Would you like to find Linda?

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, November 22, 2014

Writers4Higher features Vickie Spray

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

Vickie Spray






Hi, Vickie. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!

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

As a young girl, reading literally kept me from giving up on life. Nancy Drew inspired me to use my wit, my determination and my sense of adventure to maneuver within my family of origin and then in foster homes. Alice in Wonderland reminded me that the unseen was not always something to fear and countless other books taught me that language can shift a mood and change a mind. Language can create possibilities and possibilities create hope.

I have written and had published short stories, personal essays and recently, I self-published a young adult novel named Rose Painted Waters. It is a story of a young girl who has a dream of becoming a mermaid at Weeki Wachee, a Florida tourist attraction as a way to survive her family’s propensity toward dysfunction.  I have had some amazing feedback from both adults and young girls and it has been an astounding feeling to offer to readers the same hope of overcoming the wounds of living as I have received by being a reader.

 Where do you see your writing taking you in the future?
I hope to write uplifting and spiritually inclined stories for the new media that is becoming available in our culture. Just like independent music and self-publishing, which have created a venue for musicians and writers, the internet has created a platform for all types of content. I think we change our world by offering stories that help people see better ways for conflict resolution, relationship to self and just general alternatives to lower consciousness reactions to a confusing world.   In my generation men had three options when they were upset about a circumstance of life. One was to wash their face in the bathroom. Next time you watch an old movie watch for it! They always lean over the sink put water in their hands and put it on their face. The other two options for men are to get angry and get drunk. That’s it. And women have had fewer choices though that has changed in recent media. Cry and well….cry. My point, and I see I have stepped onto a stump, is that media is a powerful medium and we could evolve into a species that uses media to help us transcend our fearful natures and I hope to be a part of that evolution.

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

I have a spiritual counseling practice in Tallahassee and my main endeavor as I see it, is to assist others to become their own healer. We each have an amazing ability to walk as humans on this earth from a place of love, strength and wisdom. But we have been told too many stories that we have accepted as truth and those stories have had a detrimental effect on how we view ourselves and others. My clients come to me so they can examine these stories and write their own story based on that internal love, strength and wisdom. I have begun a spiritual memoir based on my journey of healing, study and what I have learned about our desire as human to match that glorious inside Self with our daily lives.    

I have also founded a website called evolvetalk.com where local healers, teachers, social entrepreneurs and impassioned way-makers come into my office studio and videotape their ideas and practical applications for creating better lives, community and world. The video is then distributed throughout all social media and on their website. My hope is that Tallahassee can experience their local talent and the ideas expressed, like local farming, progressive education and alternative medicine thereby shifting our community toward a more conscious way of living. When I write for my evolvetalk show, “The Inner Within” I must find language that can convey ideas and concepts in ways that open people’s hearts and minds to the possibility of their life-given greatness.  I figure if I can help people know their beauty they will choose to be more kind, live an awakened life and become who they came here to become.


Would you like to find Vickie?

Check out the links to this talented author:

Contact Info:

Websites and Social Media

Amazon Listing-Both in Print and Kindle










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

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist





Saturday, November 8, 2014

Writers4Higher features Roberta Burton

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

Roberta Burton




Hi, Roberta. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!

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

I have lived in Florida most of my life, and in Tallahassee longer than any other place. I came to Tallahassee to get my doctorate, but the Universe had other lessons for me in this town. One of those lessons was that I was destined to write a novel. However, it was not until I learned of OLLI, the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at FSU, that I began my journey. I started by writing pieces for our small Writers’ Group. Our group began finding teachers to instruct us. I took online Writer’s Digest classes until I began to form my novel. I continue to take classes online and with OLLI. I bought books whenever one was recommended until I now have an entire wall of writing books. I attended writing conferences and took writing workshops, until finally through this wonderful community of writers, I have a published novel. I have also learned from reading novels, sometimes as many as three a week in many genres.

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

I have begun my second novel about Lee Lindsey, another literary fiction tale with a philosophical twist on time. This tale features an antagonist, as well as at least one other character, from The Burgundy Briefcase. A third planned novel features yet another character from the original book.

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

My blog is set up to answer, free of charge, relationship, addiction, and domestic violence questions from anyone who has a question in these areas. I just ask that the questioner use a pseudonym. I critique work for other writers and write reviews. I am a sometimes coach for writers who ask for accountability. I am always available to listen whether about a life problem or to a piece of writing.



The Burgundy Briefcase is available in print and e-book versions through Amazon.





Would you like to find Roberta?

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





Deep Thoughts, Bruises and All. First of all, Happy Holidays . No matter your outlook or what you celebrate, I wish you renewed ...