Showing posts with label this. Show all posts
Showing posts with label this. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Chris Stralyn - This Time You Lose

We are pleased to have Chris Stralyn with us today to share with us her book This Time You Lose.

Where do you currently live?
I live in Michigan with my husband, family, and a small menagerie of cats.

Tell us a little bit about your life.
My life is pretty low key. I work full time, raise a family, and write when I can. Interestingly enough, I never intended to be a writer. Short-order cook, security guard, safety officer, childcare provider, and teacher were all titles I’d worn – but never writer. Then I entered an essay contest for “The Worst Vacation Ever” and won. Writing became my new hobby, and soon I had several articles in print with local publications. This was followed by a short story, The Khaki Pants, which was published by RDR Publishing in an anthology that went on to sell over a million copies.

A suspense thriller was my next undertaking, and in 2008 This Time You Lose was named a finalist in the TNBW Strongest Start Novel Competition. Four months later it earned the distinction of being a TNBW Readers Choice Top Ten Novel, and has remained on the Top Ten list ever since.

Have you written anything that you were too afraid to let anyone read?
Yes. When I first finished This Time You Lose, I was afraid to let anyone read it. Two reasons: 1, I was afraid no one would like it, and 2, I had a job at the time working for a very conservative boss, who would frown upon the use of violence and language in the story. Even though I am nothing like the characters in the story, I didn’t want it to impact my job.


Did you experience anything you’ve written yourself?
Yes and no. Had a bit of a rough go of things early in life, so am no stranger to rough language and violence. But thankfully, I have never experienced a home invasion.

Who are several of your greatest literary inspirations?
I grew up reading Stephen King, still love to read him, but I also enjoy James Patterson.

What kind of education have you received, and how has that affected your writing?
I have two, 2 year degrees in unrelated fields... but I’ve never taken a writing class. Took the required English Comp classes in high school & college...but never an actual writing class. I think my lack of formal writing classes has been a wonderful advantage. I learned to write by reading. As a child I read everything I could get my hands on, from Hardy Boys Mysteries to First Aid Handbooks, I was never without a book in my hands. So I guess maybe I learned through reading how to put sentences and stories together. Many writer friends have struggled with their writing because they worry about how they are supposed to write. I just write what sounds right to me – and so far that’s worked.

How much research time customarily goes into your projects?
Depends on the project. I tend to research as I write, so if I come across something in my writing that I need to research, I stop and do it. I try not to get sidetracked, just learn what I need to know and get back to writing.

Who is your favorite literary character?
I like strong women characters. Too many women in fiction are meek and wait around for their hero to “rescue” them. I’ll take the strong female character who makes things happen on her own every time.

Who is your favorite character of your own creation?
Lisa Kaamp - the heroine in This Time You Lose. Although Lisa starts out quiet and shy, when pushed to the limit she becomes one very strong and resourceful woman. One reviewer called her “a tough cookie” and ranked her high on the 'Bad-ass Heroine' list. I guess I’d agree with that.
If you were ever to write an autobiography, what would its title be?
Mixed Nuts

Tell us about your featured book.
This Time You Lose is an intense read. It is the terrifying story of Lisa Kaamp, who operates a small childcare business out of her home in the sleepy little town of Nogeksum, Michigan. Highly respected and known for going the extra mile for her daycare kids, Lisa thought she had handled every daycare emergency possible.

But nothing prepared her for the nightmare she now faced. Lisa awakes one morning to find herself bound and gagged, four strange men in her home, and the daycare children being held hostage in the next room. Terrorized by her captors as the authorities work to meet the ransom deadline, she tries negotiating with the men for the release of the children, and soon realizes that at least one of them has no intention of letting anyone go. With the deadline quickly approaching, Lisa must do the unimaginable to protect the children and get everyone out alive.

Why did you write that?
Years ago, a neighboring community was plagued with a series of home invasions. A childcare provider myself at the time, I wondered what would happen if one of these invasions occurred in a childcare home. A woman home alone, caring for up to a dozen children in a deserted, middle-class neighborhood made the perfect target for one of these invasions – and thus my story was born.

Is there anything special you would like your potential readers to know?
This Time You Lose is an intense read. It will raise your blood pressure, cause you to put off your household chores, and keep you up late into the night. Don’t start reading This Time You Lose unless you have several hours free; it’s the kind of story you won’t want to put down.

What is your favorite season of the year, and what makes it so?
I love Summer. Warm weather, sunshine, cookouts, beach time, and bonfires. What could be better?

When you think of the word “Writer” what comes to mind?
Years ago I would have answered that question by saying a stuffy old guy in a sweater, sitting at a typewriter all day smoking cigars and drinking brandy. Now however, I view everyone as a writer....if I can do it, so can you.

If you could pick one thing about yourself that would be passed onto your child, what would it be?
Shenanigans! I am very laid back, have a quirky sense of humor and love practical jokes. My husband...not so much. Therefore, I am very pleased that my son inherited his sense of Shenanigans from me.

How about one thing about yourself that you absolutely wouldn’t want passed on?
My fear of public speaking.

If you had to live in another time period, which one would you choose?
The future. Can’t wait to see what it will be like.

Name one movie that always has a huge effect on you. Why do you think that is?
I love Die Hard. All the Die Hard movies, actually. Why? I have no clue. Maybe it’s the underdog character that triumphs in the end. Or maybe it’s Bruce Willis...he does play the everyman/underdog character very well in many of his movies.

What’s one thing you’ve always wanted to try, but never have?
Skydiving

What is your favorite thing to do when you have a day to yourself?
Snuggle into my favorite chair with a good book, a glass of diet Coke, and a bowl of homemade cookie dough.

First thing you’d do if you were handed a million dollars?
Pay off all my bills. Put some away for my sons college tuition, and then maybe take a vacation.

You’ve been given the opportunity to give a televised speech which will be broadcast on all networks, what do you speak about?
Aaaack! Me? Public speaking? I think I’d donate that opportunity to a local charity or school.

What was/is your favorite thing about your childhood home?
It had a huge back yard with a little playhouse, and plenty of room to run, play, ride bikes, and pitch tents in. I loved camping out in the backyard with my brothers.

What inspires you?
Sunny days. I find I’m very productive when the sun is shining...and get absolutely nothing done when it’s dreary and overcast. Hmm, maybe I should move to a sunnier state – I would get so much more accomplished! 

What do you most want out of your life? Your ultimate ambition, as it were.
My ultimate ambition is best summed up by a Ralph Waldo Emerson quote: “To laugh often and much, to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children...to leave the world a better place...to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded.”



Our thanks to Chris for being with us today. Click your way over to her book below.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Elysa Hendricks - This Heart for Hire

Today we have Elysa Hendricks with us to share her book This Heart For Hire.




What is your name?
For the time being my name is Elysa Hendricks. Once I go into hiding I could tell you my new name, but then I'd have to kill you.

How old are you?
You've got to be kidding! What makes you think that my age has anything to do with my ability to write books? Besides, it's not polite to ask a lady her age. Are you implying that I'm NOT a lady? How dare you! Well, if you insist, let's just say I'm old enough to know what to do and young enough to still want to do it.

Where do you currently live?
For the moment I reside somewhere in the middle of Ohio. For security purposes I've been told not to reveal more.

Tell us a little bit about your life.
Aside from getting ready to go into hiding my life is pretty damned boring. Husband, house, kids, pets. All the usual stuff.

When did you first start writing?
Oh no, you're not going to trick me into revealing my age. I'm much smarter than that. Let's just say a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.

What was your very first story about?
Can't really recall my very first story, but the one I remember was about a wild horse, called Victory Boy:The Great White Ghost of the Plains. As a girl I was obsessed with the four-legged beasties. I think I still have it buried somewhere in my basement.

Have you written anything that you were too afraid to let anyone read?
If I wrote something that bad I'm pretty sure I destroyed it immediately.

Did you experience anything you've written yourself?
Other than falling in love and marrying my bestest friend, nope, I've never done any of the things I write about. My motto is: Boring is good. Excitement is vastly overrated. I save all the adventure and danger for the characters in my books.

Who are several of your greatest literary inspirations?
Arthur C. Clarke, Jules Verne, Issac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, and Piers Anthony to name just a few. I cut my writer's baby teeth on science fiction and fantasy.

What kind of education have you received, and how has that affected your writing?
I's got me educational larning thru the American shcool system. All the ways to the fourtennth grade. Gots my diplomas in Anglish and art and everythang to proves it.

How much research time customarily goes into your projects?
I think every story I've written or will write is a life time project. Everything I've read or seen sticks in my mind and eventually finds it's way into my writing. Because I don't know what I'll need to know until I get to that part of the story, I tend to research as I write rather than separating the two.

Tell us about your featured book.
THIS HEART FOR HIRE is the story of a convent reared innocent and a gunslinger with no memory struggling to survive and find love while crossing the dangerous west Texas frontier.

Why did you write that?
I grew up watching sanitized movies and TV shows about the Old West, where the bad guys always wore black hats and good always triumphed over evil. Then I read Lucia St. Clair Robson's book RIDE THE WIND about Cynthia Ann Parker's life as a Comanche slave, Larry McMurtry's LONESOME DOVE and T.R. Fehrenbach's COMMANCHES:A Destruction of a People and my eyes were opened to the harsh reality of the settlement of the American west. THIS HEART FOR HIRE came about because as a lover of romance I wanted to write a book with gritty realism, but also with a sense of hope and a happy ending for the characters.

Is there anything special you would like your potential readers to know?
I love hearing from readers and other authors, so feel free to contact me through my web site http://www.elysahendricks.com or facebook page:http://on.fb.me/wmvVkZ - at least until the US Marshall comes along to hide me from the world.

Where is the one place you've traveled where you've felt most like you fit in?
Sadly I've never felt that I fit in anywhere. Maybe I'm an alien and when the marshalls come they'll be Men In Black sent to take me home.

What activity or hobby, besides writing, do you find most enjoyable?
I love to read, anything and everything. All genres of fiction and non-fiction (except books about math.) Even though my thumb is only pale green - probably because I'm an alien and all the plants on my home planet are yellow rather than green - I like to garden. And I think I've done just about every craft type project out there. I make jewelry and I love watching movies and TV.

What was your favorite childhood toy?
I don't recall having a favorite toy, but I did collect model horses.

What is your most valued personal possession in life? Who gave it to you?
Don't get me wrong I like having stuff, lots of stuff, but it's just stuff. I don't value things. I value the people in my life. I could lose every single thing I own and as long as I still had my friends and family I'd count myself rich.

If you lost the ability to see every color but one, which one would it be?
Yellow. I love the color of sunshine.

How do you treat people you're not fond of?
Hard to say. I like most everyone I meet, which is probably why I'm headed for the witness protection program. I really need to stop taking people at face value and look deeper before I let them be my friend.

What is hiding in your closet as we speak?
Usually the only thing hiding in my closet is my cats. There are also some killer dust bunnies protecting my first manuscript. I do have a sword and some really ugly shoes that hurt my feet.

What do you see as your greatest achievement?
My children, both the ones I gave birth to from my body and those that I created in my mind - my book babies.

What, to you, is absolutely wrong?
Hatred of any kind.

What is the best advice you've ever received?
"Never give up. Never surrender." Galaxy Quest

If you had to explain the concept of "love" to someone who's never heard of it before, how would you?
Wanting the best of everything for someone else without regard for your own needs.

What about "hate?"
Hate is fear turned outward.

You've decided to buy an exotic pet, what do you go for?
Since I've had all kinds of pets from the common ones like dogs, cats, birds, ferrets, mice, gerbils and rats to the wild ones like raccoons and foxes, I think I'd have to try for something really different like Pegasus/Mr. Ed It would be really neat to have a flying talking horse.

What do you classify as an "Adventure?"
Adventure to me is anything that involves even a hint of danger. I have absolutely no coordination, so for me riding a bike or picking up a bowling ball is an adventure, usually one that results in me getting hurt.

If you could learn one new thing instantly, what would it be?
Only one? That's stingy. Guess I'd have to opt for learning a foreign language, but I can't decide between Spanish and Chinese. Both would be useful, but hardly interchangeable.

Finish this sentence. "I sometimes find it hard to..."
Be serious. Considering the vastness of space and time I find it hard to take life seriously. I think Shakespeare said it all:
"Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury
Signifying nothing." - Macbeth (Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17-27)

If you were ever to write an autobiography, what would its title be?
My life is way to boring for me to ever writing an autobiography. Who'd want to read My Plain, Boring, Vanilla Life?

What if it was a biography of your favorite person?
Guess I'd have to break down and write my dad's biography - Vinnie Costanza - King of the World.

To be or not to be?
Or as they say now that people are dropping the 'to be' verb from normal conversation, "Or not? That the question."


Our special thanks to Elysa for taking the time to share some thoughts with us. Give her work a look today; learn how to ride a horse tomorrow.