Novels & Adventures

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Many of our radio guest have discovered their voice through writing novels, books based of real time events or the wonderment of what can be, each of them brings us an adventure to go on. Every book has a the authors interview with us so you can discover their journey to becoming a novelist.


NOVELIST:  Sam Hawksmoor just click on book of choice to buy 

For Sam’s Interview and details GO HERE

HIS BOOKS

FIND ALL HIS BOOKS HERE ON AMAZON

 


NOVELIST Carrie Stuart Parks

Carrie Stuart Parks

Click on books for purchase and to hear Carries story go here GO HER


9781782790167Novelist Cathie Devitt    

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More on Cathie’s story GO HERE   



Novelist Annette LeBox CLICK ON BOOK TO PURCHASE

More on her story of sex slavery and peace  GO HERE

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Mystical Novelist Paula Bates CLICK ON BOOK TO PURCHASE

MORE ON HER STORY AND SHOW GO HERE

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Barrett Clemmensen Powell  CLICK ON BOOK TO PURCHASE

Come here Berrett’s story of Little Lori Leaks journey GO HERE

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R.L. Akers’ GRYPHENS Saga

You’ve seen the big-budget supper-action flicks. You’ve read the books, maybe played the video games. You’ve heard all the conspiracy theories. But this is the real world, the present day. If the unthinkable happened, if we faced an actual, verifiable threat from outside our planet.. What would we do?

       Click here to buy  Prometheus Revealed   Prometheus Rebound  Prometheus Rising

FOR HIS SHOW GO HERE


51exvjajctl-_sx331_bo1204203200_ Gabriella Guglielminotti Trivel: “Antarctic Odyssey a New Beginning

In 2008 she joined a group of people going to Antarctica to face their fears and limiting beliefs to test herself and put into action first hand in a dramatic way what she learnt and then pass it on to others. She wrote this book about it where she describes her inner journey while she was down under with penguins, seals and the ice.

Click on Book to buy 

Her shows GO HERE


Sam Hawksmoor Novels

The Pursuit of Wholeness show presents 

The Sam Hawksmoor Novels

Reposession
The Heaviness J&K
Repercussions
Another Place To Die
Marikka

Sara Troy interviews Sam Hawksmoor of his books and being a writer. 

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Sara Troy interviews Sam Hawksmoor author of J&K 4Ever and many more.

Sam shares his writing experience and his latest books. His has run Hackwriters Magazine for over 17 years and been a writer all of his life.

Sam  what is  J& K 4Ever – all about?

J&KCover1It’s about love in a post-apocalypse.  So many books about our future on this planet are about violence and destruction; I wanted to think about two young lovers who have to exist in this future and their determination to love each other despite all the odds against it.  Jeyna and Kruge are orphans raised in an oppressive city orphanage under the control of the Warden.The City of Bluette is run on extreme fundamentalist lines. Boys are educated, girls are not. We don’t dwell on what happened in the past; just know that a group not unlike ISIS irradiate the world’s oil supply and all of civilization collapsed.  You’d be surprised just how fast it collapses too.  But this isn’t our concern. The books takes place sixty years later and the Ministers who run their city have banned everything. Electricity, even combs, everything is an abomination and all are banished to the scraps to be burned.

Jeyna, not yet sixteen is dedicated to Kruge of the same age. But girls are sold to the highest bidders at 16 and Kruge is sent away to the Scraps the day before Jeyna is to be sold.  Naturally they are devastated and this is their story of fleeing into the wastelands, totally ignorant of the dangers and wholly ill equipped to survive.  It’s like a Road Movie. How they survive in this hostile wilderness is just one element of the book.

540245_208627949264933_14205711_nI loved reading stories about the future that would take me far away from my boarding school in Woodhall Spa or later St James. The future was exciting then and scary. After careers that involved travel and photography and jointly editing the  Hack Writers Magazine it’s pretty much all been about writing. (Add a smattering of gold prospecting in B.C. & Nevada whilst researching a novel) and teaching (running Creative Writing Masters Programmes at Falmouth & Portsmouth Universities). Somewhere back there also writing radio drama (About 35 plays broadcast), I starting teaching ‘Writing for Kids’ which proved to be one of the most popular courses I ran. From there started writing my own YA stories.

What genre are your books?  Your previous book ‘Another Place to Die: Endtime Chronicles’ is also pretty bleak.  That was set in Vancouver and the Baja.

I guess they are Dystopian.  ‘Another Place to Die: Endtime’ is set in the present day.  It was stimulated by what if we had something similar to Ebola break out in North America – but faster acting and totally lethal. A pandemic where none of the antibiotics work.  How quickly would civilization break down?  We already live in a world where antibiotics are failing and super-bugs are winning.  Here I wanted to give the young protagonists a chance to survive.  Kira with her dog Red and Liz and her family escape to the Baja thinking it will be safe, but Liz soon finds out that isn’t so. And a young couple that head out to the Islands and discover that no one is going to let them land.  I like setting my characters a challenge and see if they can overcome the odds.

What draws you to this genre?

A perfect sense of Doom.  I think when I was young I was scarred for life by reading Albert Camus ‘The Plague’; it is still one of my favourite books. Perfectly contained, a microcosm of a walled city where every day you could die and can’t escape.

How much research do you do?

Lots.  You can’t just make it up.  And I enjoy the reading before I write. Whether a pandemic or any other situation, you need to know just how fast things could disintegrate. What are the government protocols and the likelihood of them being obeyed.  With J&K 4Ever, I was researching various doomsday scenarios but wanted to avoid writing that typical guns and bunker psychotic story of brutal survival.  I chose to think about the period after all that. Think about how long a car takes to rust to death, civilization will crumble in the same way and every time it tries to recover – something will get in the way. I just hope people get to the read the book before Trump speeds up the end of the world.

When did you decide to become a writer?

Been writing pretty much since a teenager. I wrote scripts first as I went to film school and those were mostly turned into radio dramas.  I enjoyed that period of my life, even if it was the exact opposite of what I intended.  Turns out radio need to be very visual.  Sadly radio drama has virtually disappeared and there’s a great firewall around the BBC Drama department to prevent anyone else getting in.

Why do you write?

Why do you breathe?  It’s not easy question to answer. But sometimes I get very down and think I’ll never have another idea ever and then I can just be driving somewhere or walking by the beach and suddenly there it is. Bang and I’ll know what I will be doing for the next year of my life.

Do you write full-time or part-time?

When I am writing, every day.  Although I run a web magazine Hackwriters.com, so of course I have to work on that every month too.

Do you have a special time to write? How is your day structured?

I write by hand, take breaks, read it through, try to plan at least one or two chapters ahead so I don’t get too lost and only reluctantly admit it if I hit a brick wall and have to unravel and start again from a key point.  I know some writers, like Patrick Ness who write the last line first but there is no way I could do that.  With J& K I had an end for a few months, then suddenly knew I needed a different end and that made all the difference to how I perceived the book.

With Another Place To Die, I wrote it twice. There’s a deleted first edition that was more about the adults surviving. Then I decided it would work better without them and totally rewrote the whole book and added new sections that had been a strand I discarded in the first version.  I’m not sure I’d do that again, but my Masters was in adaptation from book to screen and so it’s taking a different viewpoint on a book and seeing alternate ways of telling the story emphasizing the visual.  I imagine almost every writer wishes they could go back and change something in a book once published.  Sometimes it’s hard to walk away from a story and the people you have created.  I still think about Kira and Red and wonder what they would be doing on Salt Spring Island now a few years on.

Where do the your ideas come from?

Headlines. Situations, Observations – the never-ending capacity for some people to be wholly unreasonable, or resentful; or inhumane.  An act of kindness, a feeling about the way things are trending, a feeling of unease… ideas come from any direction.

How do you think you’ve evolved creatively?

I like to try things new. In the beginning as I writer I’d be very concerned with plotting, but as I have matured it became more important to develop characters and let them lead the way. My characters are very important to me and it’s hard to let go. I always get very involved in them and the writing process. It’s very real to me.  A book I wrote two years ago, Marikka, is based on a real life tragedy about a stepfather who burned down his home and killed his family when facing a repossession by the taxman.  Marikka is the daughter who fled the fire thinking she’d be blamed.  Her real father has been looking for her for years unbeknownst to Marikka and he enlists the help of a young girl who can read objects, a psychic.

Anya, the psychic was based on a real person I met in Spain.  She became a very important part of the story – wholly unplanned for, but it brought the whole book together and if you took her out of the story it would be diminished.  It’s recognizing that sometimes a character can evolve beyond what you intended.  Readers always ask me to write something more about her.

What is the hardest thing about writing?

Getting anyone to read your drafts and comment honestly.  It’s a responsibility and hard to get people to commit to reading 100,000 words and making notes.  I await notes for my next book, already finished and since it is 130,000 words long, a real labour of love.  Sometimes you get surprising comments that are really useful or ones like I got for The Repossession, which was, kill the pig, get rid of the boy, and put down the dog.  Happily I ignored all.

There’s nearly always a dog in your stories.

Never intentional, but lots of kids have dogs in their lives and they are very important parts of the family, often the only thing they really trust.
So Kira in ‘Another Place to Die; Endtime’ is essentially saved by her dog, Red.  Their bond is strong and no matter how hard it is to keep a dog alive in that situation, she and the dog are one in her mind and that has to be remembered.  In The Repossession trilogy Genie bonds with the farmer’s dog and that’s entirely about needing someone to trust that won’t pass comment.  It was the devil’s job to keep that dog there in the story and address its needs.  I’d be in the middle of a tense scene and suddenly looking around for the dog, what the hell did I do with the dog…

In J&K 4Ever it was totally accidental that Yip is prominent. But although the dog falls in love with Jeyna, he is trained to betray her and can’t help himself.  SO yes, dogs are important to my stories.

What was the hardest thing about writing your latest book?

There was a slight interruption when I had a heart attack and then my mother died.  I had to wait to come back to the story and find my groove.  When I write I like to keep going to the end.  With J&K I needed to look more closely at what I was saying and where it was going.  The break allowed me to question what I was doing and I had to make some changes following feedback that gave Jeyna and Kruge better focus.  It’s important to be able to accept a reader may have a different viewpoint to you and might well be right.  I chose not to look at a wider America, just concentrate on the immediate horizon of what the kids discover.  No one knows what really happened, it’s mostly hearsay.  In sixty years the ones left have few skills, are mostly illiterate, disease ridden, scared to move away from what they know. Imagine England after the Romans left.  It took just one generation for them to forget 400 years of history.

My next book was similarly interrupted by circumstances, but happily I was on holiday back by my favorite beach in Biarritz and suddenly I was able to start writing again and wrote 50,000 words quite quickly with all the enthusiasm of when I first started it.

What is the easiest thing about writing?

I’m not sure there is anything easy about it.

How long on average does it take you to write a book?

Longer now than it used to be, either I’m slowing up with age or more critical.  A bit of both.

Do you ever get Writer’s Block?

Not when writing no.  Sometimes I wonder where it’s heading but I always heed Raymond Chandler’s advice and if stuck have someone burst through a door with a gun in their hand.  That’ll do it.

Any tips on how to get through the dreaded writer’s block?

Go for a walk by the beach in Biarritz.  Works every time for me.

Which country do you like the most to visit?

I love the Atlantic beaches in France, the colour of the earth in South Africa, the lakes and mountains in British Columbia, the fantastic waves lashing Florida in a storm. (I was in Miami during a hurricane once).

Do you read much and if so who are your favorite authors.
Paulo Bacigalupi is my favourite writer and closely followed by Patrick Rothfuss who wrote ‘Name of the Wind’ and I’ll toss in Leigh Bardugo who wrote the Grisha series.  All of them are hugely imaginative, fluid writers who create amazing characters.

For your own reading, do you prefer e-books or traditional paper/hard back books?

Paper.

What book/s are you reading at present?

Just finished ‘Heyday’ – a history book about events that took place between 1852 and 1862 – Gold rushes and invasions of Japan and China. The creation of our modern world really.

Tell us about the cover and how it came about.

J&K was designed by Dominic Robson, who designs all the Hammer & Tong books.  He decided to go for an abstract concept rather than literal look and it’s certainly different.  It evolved over a couple of months. I’d originally asked for a rusted cover but he talked me out of it.

Do you think that the cover plays an important part in the buying process?

Yes

How are you publishing this book and why?

Hammer & Tong publish all the Sam Hawksmoor books now and it gives me more control.  It’s faster than the traditional route and although it is hard to get noticed in this crowded world, they find a niche their own way in the world. All available on Amazon of course.

What would you say are the main advantages and disadvantages of self-publishing against being published by mainstream publishers?

Being with a traditional publisher means you have a better chance of reviews and of course being sold in bookshops.  But if they don’t support the books or the sales team doesn’t push them, you will not succeed and it’s heavy road to disappointment for most writers.  I speak from experience in this.  I have a book just come out in translation in Turkey right now (TOZ) but only found out by accident. Traditional publishers really have no interest in their authors and pay a pittance.

How do you market your books?

By hand and online.

Why did you choose this route?

That’s the route you take if you go it alone.

Would you or do you use a PR agency?

Not sure there would be a profit in it but I am not averse.

Do you have any advice for other authors on how to market their books?

Do it better than me.

What part of your writing time do you devote to marketing your book?

Not enough clearly. Since I never use social media if I can help it. I am a dinosaur.

What do you do to get book reviews?

Struggle

How successful has your quest for reviews been so far?

Moderate.

What are your thoughts on good/bad reviews?

Some reviews are malicious or unthoughtful but overall I have been happy with most. You have no control so best to roll with it.

Did you do a press release, Goodreads book launch or anything else to promote your work and did it work?

Not much traction with Goodreads on the last book. Might have a go with that when the e-book comes out in June so that people have a choice.

Did you get interviewed by local press/radio for your book launch?

My last book in the local press but they spelled my name and the title wrong!

Why do you think that other well-written books just don’t sell?

That’s always a mystery to me.  I have reviewed some fabulous books that should be best sellers but for some reason their publisher didn’t get behind them.

What do you think of “trailers” for books?

I’d like one but it’s beyond my budget at the moment.

In what formats is your book available?
Print now and kindle (as of June)

What is your favourite motivational phrase?

As one door closes another one slams in your face

What is your Favorited positive saying?

I am not known for any positive sayings.

What is your favourite book and why?

Catch 22 – funny, surreal, probably the best WW2 novel ever that really captures the absurdity and horror of war.

What is your favourite film and why?

Buster Keaton’s The General
It’s audacious, hilarious and shows silent film at its peak.  Much was lost when sound was added.  Keaton hired a whole army as extras and it cost a fortune to make. I saw it with a full live orchestra and it blew me away.

Where can you see yourself in 5 years time?

Still looking for the next story

What advice would you give to your younger self?

Get a paying profession.  Start a pension.

Which famous person, living or dead would you like to meet and why?

Every time I think I would like to go back in time I remember everyone smokes and spits and probably haven’t had a bath in at least a year.  But I’d love to have a drink and listen to Mark Twain talk.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Keep the day job

Where do you see publishing going in the future?

Robots will write everything.  It might even be good.

LATEST BOOK GIRL with CAT Blue. BUY FROM  HERE

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How can readers discover more about Sam’s work?

go here

samhawksmoor.com

samhawksmoor.com/contact

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P14/38a Don’t Drink and Fly..a Witches Tale

Originally Aired FROM September 23rd on Positive Living Vibrations with Sara Troy and her guest Cathie Devitt. Have a listen with instant listening 

Don’t Drink and Fly

9781782790167“Bernice is a witch living in Glasgow. She loses her way in her life and wanders off the beaten track looking for the garden of enlightenment. Bernice is a witch with many skeletons in her closet. She has an addictive personality, works as a holistic therapist, and struggles to maintain any intimate relationships. Her spells are not always as accurate as they could be, often the result of her having a few too many goblets of red wine.
When mysterious letters start appearing at her door, she begins to think about her childhood and, with the help of her long-suffering friend Maggie, tries to come to terms with her past and the family she left behind. But nothing in Bernice’s life is ever simple…

Cathie Devitt Born in Glasgow Scotland April 1958 Cathie was part of a huge Catholic/Irish family. Born into a family of 4 children. (3 girls and 1 boy.) Cathie was not the oldest, nor the youngest nor the favoured son. She was just “The other one” Whilst her siblings sailed through conventional lives, Cathie was always the wild one who had to be warned to behave when visiting friends and relatives. Un-harnessed creativity she says. When Cathie was about 13 years old her mother came home to find a strong smell of emulsion paint greet her at the front door. Cathie’s father gave his wife a cup of tea and said, “She’s creative, just let her express herself.” Cathie had the radio on full blast and was happily painting cream and blue clouds in the bedroom of the family’s council (social housing) flat ( just happened to be the colour of the paint that she had found under the kitchen sink). Inspired by her own artistic talent, Cathie kept going until the paint tin was dry. Result?- clouds on the walls, the ceiling, the door and painted over her grandmother’s solid mahogany  bedroom furniture that was  a family heirloom.

Cathie’s mother says that her daughter’s first words were, “But Why?” and her second “But why not?”

Some things never change.

“I wrote and performed in my first play at primary school aged 11 years. Life took over and writing was consigned to work related bumff the quality of which somehow stopped me from being sacked or evicted.”

“I studied at Glasgow and Strathclyde University whilst working and bringing up my two daughters alone. Oh what fun we had! Tears, tantrums, hormones and hooch. (The girls sometimes kicked off too.) The studies resulted in bits of paper that no-one ever asked to see but somehow greased the rungs of the career ladder high enough to ensure that the three of us never went hungry.”

The flame of desire to write has flickered on and off, but never been snuffed out. Encouraged by publication in various genres, Cathie Devitt moved on to support others by facilitating creative writing workshops. Cathie has also written and performed drama workshops in a corporate environment to showcase company policies and practices, such as Health and Safety and Equality in the workplace. Add to that writing and performing in Festival Theatre and training as a laughter yoga therapist and you can see why Cathie Devitt is in a class of her own.

Cathie has very little time to dedicate to her own pleasures. Work and family commitments make sure of that. However, to release her Diva within Cathie has-

Trained as a laughter yoga leader

Performed as an actress and stand up comedian

Zip slid in the forest and tackled rope bridges and swings

Explored various countries and cultures whenever the opportunity arose

Loves her daughters two dogs (Lhasa Apsos) Darcy and Sparkle

Embraced Creative writing

Fell in love with a poet when she was 50!

Always keen to try new activities – has enjoyed taster Hatha Yoga, hot stone massage and meditation.

NOW for filling her DIVA she has written her first trilogy bring us the adventure of Bernice the wine loving Witch………………


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0011 What do Cranes and Sex Slave Trafficking have in common?

 Positive Living Vibrations with Sara Troy and her guest Annette LeBox and the discovery on sex trafficking. Originally Aired: 07-04-2013

annetteheadshot-copy1-150x150Annette LeBox was born in England in 1943 during the Second World War.  Her father, a Canadian soldier, was killed on D-Day at Juno Beach.  After the war, her mother, a British war bride, brought one-year-old Annette to Canada by ship, landing at Halifax’s Pier 41.

Annette was raised in Ontario, but during her twenties lived in Britain, Ireland and Spain before moving to her present home in British Columbia.  Through the sixties, she worked as a nurse’s aide, store clerk, bartender and bunny at a copycat Playboy Club, before becoming an elementary school teacher.  In 1994, she took a position as a Faculty Associate at Simon Fraser University, where she began Narrative Research under the mentorship of Dr. Ted Aoki.  It was through this work that she developed an interest in writing.  Soon after earning a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia, she published her first picture book, Miss Rafferty’s Rainbow Socks.

Many of Annette’s books are inspired by nature she has to date written six books, and we will discuss them today, but what intrigues me is what took her across the seas to China to discover more about cranes, but led her into another direction all together, today we are going to talk about her love of cranes, her many books on crane adventures but also how a book of a different topic altogether came about from that trip to China.

CircleCranes_FINALAfter retiring from teaching, she decided to go to China to do some research on Cranes but found a world that would lead her to write a magical realism book that has shown a shameful light on modern day slavery. 

In 1996, HarperCollins published Annette’s first picture book, Miss Rafferty’s Rainbow Socks.  Since then, Annette has had four picture books and two YA novels published.

A new children’s book “Peace is an Offering,” is available now and I will be interviewing Annette on this book and others in July. 

Many of Annette’s books are inspired by nature.  She was a founding member of a local environmental group, the Pitt Polder Preservation Society, a major stakeholder in the conservation of two regional parks, Blaney Bog in Maple Ridge and Codd Wetland in Pitt Meadows.  These ecosystems harbour both Greater Sandhill cranes and wild salmon.

Annette divides her time between her home in Maple Ridge and her remote cabin in the Cariboo region of central British Columbia, where she enjoys cross-country running and skiing, skating, hauling brush, and reading by the fire while listening to the howling of the wolves.

Annette is married to Michael Sather, an avid birdwatcher and fellow ‘craniac.’


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