Saturday, September 27, 2014

Writers4Higher features Pat Spears

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
Pat Spears





Hi, Pat. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


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

I am a sixth-generation Floridian, and I have lived all but four years of my adult life in the Tallahassee area.  I first wrote and published professionally as a social science educator, and it was a series of case studies that I wrote for a Florida history textbook I co-authored that I credit with bringing me to creative writing.  There was something in that experience that lit a fire, and at the tender age of fifty, I decided to become a fiction writer.  I had no idea where one started.  To my knowledge, I’d never as much as met a fiction writer.  Still I was determined.  I audited writing seminars at FSU with the wonderful author, and gifted teacher, Janet Burroway, attended workshops, conferences, and read tons of short fiction, including the works of Raymond Carver, Zora Neal Hurston, Larry Brown, Dorothy Allison, and Annie Proulx.  In the beginning, I wrote really bad stories, but kept working.  Gradually, I began to discover my own voice and was fortunate to have some of my earliest stories published.  I continue to write and publish short fiction. 

The inspiration for my debut novel, Dream Chaser, began roughly ten years ago with the reading of a newspaper story about a family who adopted a mustang mare that suffered a tragic ending.  The story stayed with me for years before I began to shape a different story around what I imagined of that experience for a fictional family. Dream Chaser will be released in August.  My second novel, Wildflowers, is to be released in 2015, and it too is set in north Florida, but in the late fifties and early sixties. 

When I think about my long dormancy before becoming a writer, I remember those twilight summer gatherings with my cousins on Granny’s front porch, pleading with her for just one more of her marvelous stories.  I hope I carry forward a part of her in my fiction and that reader will come to ask that of me.  

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

I sometimes bemoan the likelihood that I won’t get around to all the stories and novels I’ll want to write.  Yet I am enormously grateful for excellent health and the necessities required for living comfortably, so that I may make the best of the time I do have.  While I don’t have a “career-plan” for my writing, I would like for my work to find a faithful readership and that they will always want to know what’s next.  
   
How do you use your talents/time to help others? 

The burdens of working-class lives and their implications for the loss of human dignity is the emotional momentum that drives much of my writing.  My characters are drawn from those so often viewed as the others; marginal voices of men and women whose lives exist outside the realm of social acceptability.  I write to reveal a deeper truth about my characters, to forge a perspective that takes the reader beyond their profane words and dastardly deeds to expose their deeper human spirit.  Simply put, it’s the old adage of not knowing a person until we’ve walked a ways in their shoes.


Would you like to find Pat?

Check out the links to this talented author:


Dream Chaser is available in print and e-book versions through all the regular online retailers (Amazon, Barnes & Nobel, Powells, etc.)
Publisher’s website: www.twistedroadpublications.com

  




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

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist





Saturday, August 23, 2014

Writers4Higher features William Mark

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

William Mark


Hi, William. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!

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

As a kid I was always enamored by movies.  As an adult I developed a love for books and consider myself an avid reader.  What I discovered is that I was drawn to the story, no matter if it was a high dollar Hollywood blockbuster, international conspiracy or the more dramatic and low budget.  If the story was captivating, I enjoyed it.  So, as a writer I strive to tell a good story. 

My grandfather was a great inspiration in my life and my drive to write.  I write under a pen name that is a tribute to him as the name is a variation of his.  He was a college professor for many years and opened up a book store upon his retirement.  It was from his love for books.  As a kid, my brother and cousins used to hang out and run around the bookstore before realizing the value held on the shelves up and down the aisles.  To this day I love bookstores.  The smell brings me back to the days I sat and worked the bookstore while my grandfather was out for the day.  

As I moved through college I was struck by a good idea for a story.  I enjoyed writing whenever it wasn’t for a grade, so I pitched my idea.  He liked it, but added I needed a love interest.  Initially I disagreed, but after a moment of thought and a quick review of the story, I realized he was actually right.  At that point I knew he was perfect to help me create a great story and I was eager to get started.  However, he died shortly thereafter from complications following a necessary surgery.  I continued writing with his spirit guiding me along the way and I try to make him proud.

For the last thirteen years I’ve worked as police officer and held many different positions such as patrol officer, Field Training Officer, Robbery Investigator and Homicide Investigator.  I have also worked as a SWAT Officer for over four years.  As a cop I patrolled the most dangerous beats looking everywhere for the outlaws, drug dealers, and thieves.  My initial draw to the job was a bit of a cliché.  I wanted to help people, but will admit the foot chases, guns, fights and car chases may have held a fair share of the influence.  But as I got into the job, I realized that I was driven by finding the person who tries to get away with it.  That translated into a tenacity that has earned me a reputation of always finding the guilty.  But with that tenacity comes passion, and with passion comes disappointment.  This disappointment is bred from the flawed Criminal Justice System that has been perverted to the point of disgust.  However, I learned and accepted that it is the only one we have.  I’m still working on how to fix it.

So, I’ve actually chased a suspect down a dark alley, pointed a gun at a suspect with the anticipation of taking his life, and hunted a homicide suspect, sat across the table from rapists, murderers and robbers and gotten a confession.  Needless to say with my experience, I have plenty to fill the pages of many novels.   But, I hope to tell a story that is real and gives the reader the experience that they are in the hip pocket of the police officer as he moves through the case, problem or situation. 
In From Behind the Blue Line, I use a culmination of real stories mixed with creative fiction to tell a story of revenge, trust and justice in the eyes of a father.

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

Fame and fortune.  Then I wake up.  Honestly, I see myself still striving to build a base of readers.  Throughout my life and in many endeavors, from little league to police work, I have always pushed myself to be the best at what I do.  I recognize that is a tall order in the world of fictional writing, but I feel that my dedication to writing good stories that push the envelope and painting an intriguing picture I will find success and hopefully a spot on the New York Times best-seller list.

My second project is in the editing stage and a third is underway.  I have many fans demanding a sequel to From Behind the Blue Line, so I have that percolating in the hopper as well.  I’m excited to continue writing and only need the time, not the inspiration.  I have ideas for many other novels and even in different genre’s other than the crime thriller.

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

I have traveled around the state teaching criminal investigations and victim advocacy and enjoy it immensely.  I also have gotten involved in a youth leadership program started at my agency that I see tremendous potential in reaching young people.  It serves to provide guidance and real world building blocks on finding success as well as leading others in the future.  I see the program expanding fast throughout the country and becoming widely accepted.
  
Outside of that, I focus my energy in the lives of my three children and my beautiful wife. 


 Would you like to find William?

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, August 9, 2014

Writers4Higher features Scott Archer Jones

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

Scott Archer Jones




Hi, Scott. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


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

I'm currently living and working on my fifth novel in northern New Mexico, after stints in the Netherlands, Scotland and Norway plus less exotic locations. I've worked for a power company, grocers, a lumberyard, an energy company (for a very long time), and a winery. Now I'm on the masthead of the Prague Revue, and have a novel this summer, Jupiter and Gilgamesh, a Novel of Sumeria and Texas – with Southern Yellow Pine Publishing.

Jupiter attracts trouble like spare change, and he's also crazy, living high atop a grain elevator. His biggest problem is a traumatized teenage girl camped in the bottom of his elevator and hiding from a meth-head mother – should he help? And won't the village think he's a sexual predator? Problem two is his twenties-something lover Kate, insatiable and sybaritic, running the relationship. While he tries to unsnarl his tortuous feelings for this dynamic woman, he fights eviction from his home. If that's not enough, Jupiter is befriended by a laptop that claims to be Gilgamesh – the first hero of literature and a bloody-minded Sumerian king.

As for inspiration, what writer wouldn't be tickled to work on a book with an ad executive, a blood-splattered Sumerian, a twenty-five-year-old Ishtar, and a café full of Texans, bless their hearts.


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

The next book is named Hold These Fears and after that it's Fortuna. I want to write well-crafted books selling to an audience that gets a kick out of quirky characters and fraught relationships. Then I want to sell the screen rights of two or three books where the directors win the Cannes Film Festival, the Newport Beach Film Festival, and Sundance. By that time I'll be ninety, and I'll retire to Scotland.

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

It's not much, but I'm Treasurer / VP Operations of a private 501.C3 public library and President of a firewise (wildland fire) coalition. I sit on the Sustainability Committee and the Wildfire Planning Committee of the village of Angel Fire.


Would you like to find Scott?

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, July 19, 2014

Writers4Higher features Brinn Colenda

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

Brinn  Colenda




Hi, Brinn. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


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


I have always been in love with books. When I was a kid growing up in Virginia and North Carolina, I read everything I could get my hands on--mysteries, histories, biographies, thrillers, Reader's Digest, Boy's Life, it didn't matter. During the summers, I would stay up all night reading. Completely intellectually undisciplined and stuffed full of useless trivia, I read my way into the Air Force Academy by acing multiple-choice standardized tests. I quickly learned that I was not nearly as smart as I thought I was...something that has been repeatedly re-emphasized as I continue to meet amazing people on my life's path-- there are lots of intelligent, talented, and wonderful people on this planet.

I had the good fortune to spend two years working in the U.S. Embassy in La Paz, Bolivia, as the Chief of the Air Force Section of the U.S. Military Group-Bolivia. I checked out in the embassy Beechcraft C-12 Super King aircraft and flew all over that gorgeous country, going places that most Bolivians had never visited. Tour completed, I won a Post Graduate Fellowship at the Hoover Institution of War, Revolution and Peace at Stanford University. Again, I was surrounded by people with enormous intellects-- Nobel Prize winners, former cabinet secretaries, ambassadors, tenured professors, and the like. All seemed fascinated by my stories about Bolivia. Eventually, I got the message-- if these well traveled and educated people did not have a clue about Bolivia, then non-Nobel Prize winners, non-former cabinet secretaries, non-ambassadors, non-tenured professors, etc probably wouldn't either. So, I started writing the stories down. As I am a great fan of thrillers, I decided to write a thriller located in Bolivia, based on my experiences, suitably enhanced of course (I am a pilot, after all!).

Then life intervened and my wife and I welcomed three baby boys into our lives within the space of twenty months. Yikes! So, I put the writing on hold for more than a decade. Eventually, I started working with the manuscript at night. With the help of some really good (and extra patient) writing coaches, I finally beat it into shape, even won an award. The result was a political-military thriller, The Cochabamba Conspiracy.

Now I was hooked on the euphoria of writing. So I wrote book two of the series -- Chita Quest, published by Southern Yellow Pine Publishing. The story takes the reader from New Mexico to Vietnam, China, Mongolia, and ultimately, the city of Chita in Siberia as Colonel Tom Callahan tries to unravel the mystery of what happened to his father who was shot down at the end of the Vietnam War. As he starts his quest, friends and associates begin to die violent deaths. Coincidentally, in Chita Quest, Tom Callahan is aided by Asian governments who are concerned about the growing power and militancy of the Russian president who is attempting to gain concessions and power in Asia-- much as the real President Putin is attempting in Eastern Europe today.

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


I plan on expanding this planned Callahan Saga “Trilogy” into a six or seven book series, extending backwards to the end of the Napoleonic Wars, then bringing it forward to the beginning of the Cochabamba Conspiracy.

Book #3, which will take place mostly in and around New Mexico, is about halfway done. I am also trying my hand at short stories.

I would love to use my writing as a way of traveling and giving talks. I love to meet people. If I can inspire people to read more, to write more, to think more, I will be satisfied.

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


I was a teacher in the Air Force, specifically a jet pilot flight instructor. I love to teach, especially working with young people. When we first arrived in Angel Fire, I became a ski instructor and an accredited snowboard/freestyle skiing judge. Eventually I became the Series Director for the New Mexico Series of the United States of America Snowboard Association (USASA) where I was in charge of all the official snowboard and freestyle skiing competitions in New Mexico.

Currently, I am an elected Village councilor for the Village of Angel Fire.

I am a member of the Vietnam Veterans of America and serve on the board of directors of the David Westphall Foundation which helps maintain the New Mexico Vietnam Veterans Memorial State Park, the first Vietnam memorial in the United States and a model for The Wall in Washington D.C.


Would you like to find Brinn?

Check out the links to this talented author:

Brinn Colenda's Blog
Brinn Colenda on Goodreads



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

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist





Saturday, July 5, 2014

Writers4Higher features Andrea Brunais

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
Andrea Brunais




Hi, Andrea. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!

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

After many years in newspapers, I’m now a sort of “backpack journalist” writing news releases and creating video news stories for Virginia Tech. More than just a marketable skill, writing has been a way for me to satisfy a drive for creative expression while expressing certain truths about the world. I was lucky enough to learn, early on, that a good writer isn’t expressing himself or herself; the best writers express the reader.

My first novel, Night of the Litani, was set against the civil war of Lebanon of 1975. I wanted to keep readers enthralled while helping them learn about the Middle East in a way that did not vilify ethnic groups including Arabs, who were horribly stereotyped then and still are. I strove to make a page-turner but at the same time earn critics’ respect. I’m happy to say I succeeded on both counts, though I’m sad to say the book did not make me a household name!

In my new novel, Mercedes Wore Black, I create a contemporary scenario where readers can experience the changing face of journalism as well as be introduced, up close and personal, to some of the fragile Florida environments I’m blessed to have visited. As a journalist, I’ve flown 10,000 feet above Crystal River watching a federal wildlife agent count manatees, and I’ve also been out in the shallow, glittering waters of Tampa Bay where seagrasses and tiny shrimp and other sealife gain footholds. I’ve also seen some old Florida pols in the Legislature wheel and deal, so that’s another setting I wanted to share with readers. Finally, I’ve seen the puppet-masters control the Florida Legislature – the special interests who spread big money around and thwart the public interest.

My inspiration comes from those authors such as Kurt Vonnegut, whom I once met, who subscribe to the school of thought that “writing is easy. You just open a vein and bleed.” (Digression: The Quote Investigator attributes the saying to Paul Gallico, author of The Poseidon Adventure, in the 1946 book Confessions of a Story Writer.) The best writers eschew the easy, clichéd strings of sentences that often pepper one’s first drafts. One of my great college writing teachers, Thomas E. Sanders at the University of South Florida, said: “There is no great writing; only great rewriting.”


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

I hope to continue writing about my characters Janis Pearl Hawk and Leah St. Clair, fueled by their passion for good journalism and the environment. Their adventures could spawn a series of Florida-based novels. I can’t wait to see reader response! I also hope, one day, to employ my writing skills on behalf of vulnerable populations, when I have the luxury to write without worrying about monetary gain.


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

I mentor young women writers on the job, and I also do what I can to promote women novelists. I’ve been doing book reviews for various publications for years and go out of my way to review women’s work because so much of the media favors men. (If you don’t believe me, do a count!) As a journalist, I wrote a lot about child abuse in Florida. I found that many politicians are oblivious of the fact that some 40 children a year die from abuse or neglect. One day I’d like to devote myself full time to improving the prospects of children at risk of abuse. On a personal level, I also hope one day to write important things down for my children – to share with them the principles and beliefs I’ve tried to live by. And I hope my fiction continues to be an avenue for the expression of values, even as its primary goal is entertainment.


Would you like to find Andrea?

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 21, 2014

Writers4Higher features Mitch Doxsee

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

Mitch Doxsee



Hi, Mitch. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!


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

My love of the ocean is mirrored in my love for writing. I was born on Marco Island, Florida and lived with my grandparents for the first years of my life. My grandfather was a fishing guide, and I would cruise through the Ten Thousand Islands with him on many of his fishing trips. My book, Dismal Key, is the product of me trying to capture those days with him before he died of cancer. As I told my wife, I just wanted one more ride with him. Dismal Key is that ride. While human trafficking was never an issue we ran into while fishing, it is an issue that hit home with me when I did a missions trip to Amsterdam with Youth With a Mission (YWAM) during my college years. Working with YWAM opened my eyes to the horrors many of these girls go through. Moreover, it made me realize that human trafficking is not something that happens overseas, it happens in our own backyard. Just drive down I-75 and you see the billboard signs for massage parlors advertised every few miles. These are nothing more than cover ups for prostitution. Many of the girls working there are not there by choice.

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

Honestly, I never knew I had a novel in me until I began to write one. At this time I am working on a follow up to Dismal Key. It will be the conclusion. I have a few ideas for other books, and I will begin exploring those options. It would be nice if my writing took me to a tropical island with a house! But I don’t see that happening any time soon.

How do you use your talents and time to help others?
I use my talents every day. I teach English to seventh graders. I am fortunate that I have a supportive administration that encourages me to break out of the mainstream when introducing my students to literature.  I try to make them strong readers to help them become strong writers. If they fall in love with reading, I can almost assuredly make them at least understand the importance of proper communication through the written word. It often gets challenging. However, this leads to the greatest rewards.


 Would you like to find Mitch?

Check out the links to this talented author:


Twitter: @doxsee77



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

Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist





Saturday, June 7, 2014

Writers4Higher features Nancy Springer

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

Nancy Springer




Hi, Nancy. Welcome to the Writers4Higher family!

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

            When I was a little kid, elementary school age, I used to pretend I had a camera behind my eyes that recorded everything I saw.  My mother was an artist – watercolors, oils – and her favorite word seemed to be “Look!” as in look at the sky, the bird, the tree.  I didn’t have nice clothes or many toys, but I did have acres and acres of rural New Jersey farm, forest, swamp and riverside where I could look all around.  I’m about sixty years older now, and I still don’t have nice clothes or many toys, but I have a huge, ever-growing collection of eidetic memories on which I draw for my writing.
            When I was a little kid, one day I looked at a new thing called television, and it frightened and repulsed me like nothing I’d ever seen in nature.  I tried never to look at it again if I could help it. Thus began my lifelong, instinctive avoidance of popular culture in favor of deeper rivers that run quietly, a tendency to stay away from crowds, clear my calendar and to watch birds more than movies.
            In my teens, the hodgepodge inside my head began to overflow, so I started to hoard it in notebooks.  I made lists of  groovy words (yes, I was a hippie), bumper stickers, trenchant graffiti, jump-rope chants, imaginary birds, symbolisms of colors, jewels, planets, animals . . .world without end, and notebooks couldn’t encompass it all, especially not as I studied English Literature in Gettysburg College.  In my twenties, living in rural Pennsylvania, I started to write novels – just as a hobby, mind you, another way to fill notebooks.  I didn’t have nerve enough to admit, even to myself, that I wanted to be a writer.  I just wrote.
            I was addicted to my writing; I had to write every day.  Writing was my “fix.”  Seriously.  I did it as an alternative to becoming drowned in Valium.  Back then nobody knew much about childhood depression, but in hindsight, I’m sure I had it, and I know darn well that it continued  into my adulthood, then intensified when I married and had children.  I saw doctors, of course, but frankly, they weren’t much help.  Ultimately, it was my writing that saved me.   
            How?  Very briefly, like this:  At the time I knew only that I had compulsive daydreams and that I had to get them down on paper by writing fantasy.  I didn’t know that the struggling characters were myself and me.  I had no idea why I was imagining situations so extreme that my forbidden emotions might actually be allowed to surface. Having depression had made me feel so worthless that I was astonished to be able to sell books such as THE WHITE HART and THE SILVER SUN for publication and even more astounded that people read them.  But after the first four or five books I began to realize that, in writing about gallant, loyal, compassionate protagonists I might actually be expressing my own personal values, in which case I was not a bad person.  A fan wrote me praising my depictions of friendship and love.  Love?  Me?  Holy catalpas, was I not totally unlovable after all?
            Ten fantasy novels gave me a decade of such insights and strengthened me so much that once more I wanted to use my “camera eyes” on the real world.  Instead of mythic fantasy, I wrote contemporary fantasy, aka magical realism, set in small towns and shopping malls.  I felt so much better that I bought myself a horse, fulfilling a childhood dream, then started writing children’s books and poetry about horses.  By now, my kids were in school and I could have found a job, but my royalties made that unnecessary.  I wrote, went trail riding with my friends, got back in time to greet my kids when they came home from school, took cross-country camping trips with my family, and kept growing as a person and a writer, venturing into some serious topics in YA, including crime, abduction, missing persons, and mystery.
            I realize, writing this, that my life has a different texture than most people’s. It’s not lumped into the dates of new jobs or locations or even publications.  On the average I published a book a year, and I lived in central or western Pennsylvania; it didn’t matter where. I do not have a hometown or any sense of belonging to a group.  Doris Lessing says writers must create a space, a quiet place in which the voice of story can speak.  Having been a loner since childhood, I have space galore. You could plop me down anywhere and I’d find something to look at/write about.
            Although not many lumps in my life, there were a few big bumps .  My divorce - my husband didn’t like me once I got well and strong.  And the empty nest, and menopause, which messed up my body chemistry enough to throw me back into depression for a while. 
            But by then the doctors were able to help me.  Also, I had learned how to look out for myself.  Eventually I started going to singles dances – that was weird – where, against all odds, I met my wonderful second husband.  We’ve been together for fourteen years now, and he’s the reason I’m living in the Florida panhandle and loving it. 


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

            Just within the past year or two I’ve been undergoing a tremendous change as a person who writes.  For the first time in my adult life, I don’t have a novel in the pipeline for publication next year. I’ve slowed down.  I no longer feel driven to write every single day.  This may be because I’ve been writing non-stop for forty years and could use a break, or it may be because my emotional needs are being met in my real life for a change, or – it doesn’t greatly matter.  If anything, it’s better this way.  Now when I write, it’s for the joy of words and the love of story.
            This way of writing is so new to me that it’s hard to say where it may take me.  It’s already found me a totally unexpected place as author of a Publishers Weekly “Soapbox.” I have a feeling I may be doing more blogging, social outreach, and writing about writing.  But I’m also working on my current novel, just a little differently.  For once, I’m taking my time.
           


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

            I’ve always wanted to help, and necessarily I do it my own way, quietly, day to day.  I give money, not to charities, but to individuals or families in need, anonymously.  Also, I have rescued so many dogs and cats I’ve lost count, and I make sure to have them vetted and neutered.  When I see a turtle crossing the road, I pull over and give it a lift to the other side.  I try to create a wild animal sanctuary on my property.  I share Schweitzer’s reverence for life.
            I volunteer for the local library, and back in Pennsylvania I volunteered at an animal shelter and a horse rescue, at a community center thrift shop, at March of Dimes Horseback Riding for the Handicapped .  I’ve heard that one of my books, COLT, has influenced at least one young reader to make equine therapy her career.  Other fans have let me know that my books inspire them or console them.  This always surprises me, but I hope my books do help people somehow.
            I don’t know whether the following counts as help or annoyance, but as I’ve gotten older, past middle age, I’ve become willing to deploy my mouth in public.  If I hear anyone calling a boy “girly,” I speak up: “That is a huge compliment.”  Last week I heard a woman say, “Children are people, too,” and a man answer, “No, not really.”  I turned on him like a mother bear protecting her cubs.  Poor guy, he said he was joking, and I do have a sense of humor, but a joke is seldom just a joke.  When I was a kid, people joked about women drivers.  Now they don’t anymore.  They know it isn’t fair to put women down.  I wish they wouldn’t joke about children either. 
            Or about mental illness.
            Occasionally I say so.  I know I’m opening a can of anacondas whenever I speak up, so I try to be discreet, but there it is:  I really want to help get rid of the stigma and ignorance that still darken the lives of people with psychological disorders.  I’ve tried to do this through writing, but the topic does not seem to be marketable, or maybe I’m too close to it.  What I can do is tell my story in venues such as this.  My writer-for-higher purpose  can be to show that mental illness is just that, a sickness, a normal challenge of the human condition, and it can be treated and cured.. 
            I’d like to thank this  wonderful blog for allowing me that opportunity.
            





Would you like to find Nancy?

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 ...