Tuesday Takeover: Inspiration for the Darracia series by Michael Phillip Cash

Cash - Article

Well, the baby’s shoelace is tied in a knot so tight we should just cut it off. Then her endearingly beat up sneakers, (tennis shoes to the rest of the world outside of Long Island) will be all dirty with brand, spanking new white laces. That won’t do. An hour later, Daddy vs. the knot, Daddy wins. She’s crying though, “What….What?  You’re in the laundry? Okay…I’ll give her a bottle.”  Nothing better than Daddy and baby time with a lukewarm bottle, milky bubbles drooling from her pursed lips. I check Amazon, relief that Stillwell is ranked, worried the number is lower than before. I look at the computer, my keyboard stares blankly back at me, but I hear my wife call,”Get Alex off the bus.” “Sure, no problem,” I respond, happy to help. The corner is freezing, my hands numb, my mind blank. The air is sucked from my lungs as if I stepped into a vacuum. Other parents sidle up next to me, as we stand in a circle searching for warmth. We smile at each other, our eyes streaming from the cold. The bus arrives and the kids bounce off, scarves unbound, mittens flopping, so we all take a minute to rebundle our bundles of joy. The walk back to the house is filled with stories about Jaden, Aiden, and Evan. The house smells of sausage and peppers, rice boiling over, and my daughter is screaming with delight that her older brother is home.

“Help with homework?” No problem, a pleasure, let me check Amazon first. Stillwell is up, a higher number, relief expands in my chest.  Listen to my son reading his new book, the words forming first silently as his mouth tries them out. He is triumphant, thrilled with the freedom of being able to read for himself. We proudly reread the book for the entire family.

Dinner is noisy, my daughter loves to squish her food and I can’t take my eyes off the ooze squeezed through her tight fist. It’s delicious, tart and sweet, like my family life. The golden light from our kitchen fixture bathes us in homey warmth. Beds, bath, more books, this time Daddy and Mommy do the reading. Then the sound of the house settling down, heat clanking in the old pipes, hiss of radiators, the kids yawns of satisfaction of a day jammed with activities.

It’s quiet, the computer screen lights the room, a beacon of judgment. It dares me to look up Stillwell one more time, accusing me of procrastination. The house is dark, my mind like a wax tablet waiting for impression. Nothing comes, not even interruptions. Please wake up, I urge my little girl. Call for me so I can walk away again. I can’t end this story, my characters have gone as silent as a tomb and won’t tell me what to do! What was I thinking? A full time writer? Who does that? Should I check Stillwell again? How can I end this book to get on with the next? I am drowning! The water is closing over my head and I can’t breath! Wait…can’t breath? I pause holding my breath. That’s it…I turn to the closing chapter of my next book in the Darracia series. I think I got it.

Michael Phillip Cash is an award-winning screenwriter and novelist. He’s written eleven books including the best-selling Brood X, Stillwell, The Flip, The After House, The Hanging Tree, Witches Protection Program, Pokergeist, Monsterland and Battle for Darracia series. Learn more about Cash here: http://www.michaelphillipcash.com/

Cash photo

Feb 29, 2016 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Tuesday Takeover: Inspiration for the Darracia series by Michael Phillip Cash

Tuesday Takeover: A Time To Every Season by Caroline Gill

writer's block cat

As a writer, I want to tell the very best story I can. A new story, a journey into the unknown not

yet taken a thousand other times. For me, the crux of each novel begins with a dream. No,

really. Not a dream of what I will do or where I will travel, that’s not what I mean. Each of my

novels begins with a big, plump pillow and a warm, insanely soft blanket. Cats are probably

artists and writers too, it occurs to me.

Ode to Nap time, that’s what I mean. Nap time, the event in a day children resist more than any

other. The same event most adults long for in the middle of a crazed and hectic schedule. There

are numerous studies (scientifically recorded and all) about the restorative properties of an

afternoon siesta. Between 20 minutes and an hour, not longer and that’s all I need for inspiration to strike.

I put in my bright orange silicone earplugs, drink a cup of hot cocoa or tea, close my eyelids and

put the problem in front of my mind: What happens next? I ask a thousands layers of myself,

sleeping, dreaming, subconscious. Replaying the current scene in my head, I get up to the crux

point and fall asleep. And into that dream I wander, sorting through a hundred choices each

character might make, sifting each like sand through my fingers, until I find the right one.

It is right I can tell because it fits perfectly with what has gone before and opens new horizons

with its invention. That’s when I know where the story goes or sometimes how it will get to the

next point in the plot.

Unexpected, revelatory, restorative nap time: an author’s best friend.

And chocolate.

Bio:
Caroline A. Gill went to school at UCLA and NIU. She married the love of her life. Facing the world with children made her aware of how vulnerable they are. Weaving tales of courage, she tries to find hope. Living near the great California Redwoods, she finds a sense of the finite and infinite touching. The creative world is like that, especially when authors feel inspired.  She’s the author of Flying Away, a YA dystopian, supernatural paranormal fantasy. www.authorcarolineagill.com

Caroline Gill

Feb 16, 2016 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Tuesday Takeover: A Time To Every Season by Caroline Gill

Cover Reveal: Released (Vagabond Circus, #3)

I feel for the people in my life. I’m demanding, stubborn, and have unrealistic expectations. And yet, the people I work with don’t disappoint me. It amazes me sometimes. As an author, I really work with fantastic professionals. And often I’ve praised Andrei Bat, my cover designer, for his work. He deserves it. And after designing ten covers for me, he might need therapy. But still he should be proud. Here’s what I sent him when we started work on the final cover for Vagabond Circus series.

Capture - Released

Yes, I know. It’s pretty awful. That’s why I’m a writer. The world would be full of stick figures if I had become an artist. Andrei is the artist and I believe he’s created one of the best covers yet for me. It definitely captures the magic of Vagabond Circus. Without further ado, I’ll reveal Released for you. Preorder here.

ebook - Released

Feb 10, 2016 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Cover Reveal: Released (Vagabond Circus, #3)

Tuesday Takeover: MELISA’S QUESTION by Ben Starling

Have you ever felt a subtle pressure, heard a distant voice that undermines your Western rational-scientific upbringing? Ever had powerful dreams, fortuitous timings, Jungian synchronicities, or precognition? Maybe you experienced “the zone”, been surprised by tarot, or had some other extraordinary other-worldly experience? All my life, I have. And I ignored them.

I’ve lived my life aware of, but not consciously acknowledging that something different was going on. That was until three years ago. When everything changed.

~ ~ ~

There was something in Melisa’s voice I hadn’t heard before. It was usually so calm, but today the calmness sounded forced. Why had she missed yesterday’s Skype? And why was the video turned off? Whatever her secret, it was a big one.

Three thousand miles separated us, but that would change soon. She was getting ready to leave Canada for her favorite city in the world, London. And in a few weeks, I’d be moving into a new apartment there too. One that would suit us perfectly as we started our new life together.

“Is everything alright?” I asked.

“I—I’m sick. Very sick.”

When the flight landed, I made my way to the hospital in a quaint town on Lake Ontario’s sparkling shore. I pushed through the doors and a series of sterile corridors that led to Palliative Care, unrolled before me. There the voices were hushed and the nurses kind. The doctor spoke so quietly that I asked him to repeat what he’d said. I’d only heard something about “as little as eight weeks.” Or maybe he was shouting, and I just didn’t want to hear.

Melisa and I talked a lot; we sat in silence too, which was, at first, worse. One morning, after the doctor had upped her pain killer to something a hundred times stronger than morphine, she’d asked a question I’ll never forget. A question she came to repeat most days.  That evening, I pushed her wheelchair to a sunspot in the hospital garden. She commented that the butterflies were magnificent this year. The flowers too. Then, turning to me, she asked if I thought anyone knew the answer to her question. Or ever would. I smiled because it was just the sort of thing she liked to think about.

Every day, a little more of her slipped away. She made me promise I wouldn’t be sad. I must find someone else…get on with my life…but she hoped I wouldn’t forget her. Then she asked me to angle her bed so she could look out the window. I wondered why, as the sky looked moody that evening. Maybe she missed the colourful birds that had argued over the peanuts in the feeder earlier that day.

Moments later, the thundery clouds rolled apart and the sun bathed the hospital—her room—us—in soothing beams of silver.

“I asked for a sign,” she explained. “A sign everything would be alright.” Closing her eyes, she sighed deeply. Then she whispered her question again.

“What happens to love when we die?”

Melisa was sedated more now, and she was rarely able to talk. She had begun sleeping most of each day. One morning, the nurse told me they’d heard voices in her room. When they’d entered, she was alone. She’d told them she’d been talking to Archangel Michael. Days later, in a rare waking moment, she’d stared between the nurses tending her and said, “You’re very beautiful.” They asked who she was referring to, and she’d been surprised that they couldn’t see the angel at the end of the bed. When I felt my voice wouldn’t betray me, I asked the nurse if she’d heard of this sort of thing before. She’d said it wasn’t uncommon. Especially for spiritual people.

Twelve noon is a strange time to be overwhelmed by tiredness. But that Monday, I lay down and fell asleep instantly. I dreamed I’d ridden a motorbike up a long gravel drive to a white mansion that I wasn’t meant to enter. Standing outside, I lifted a letter from the saddle bag. The words “Death Certificate” were written on the envelope. I hesitated, wondering if I should open it; before I decided, a ringing phone woke me. It was the hospital. Melisa was gone.

Melisa’s question stayed with me. When, after many months, the numbness began to lift and I was trying to make sense of, well, everything, I cast my mind back to a conversation I’d had years earlier with a Polynesian fisherman. He’d described his vision of the afterlife.

Soon afterwards, I encountered an old school friend, whose mission is to educate people about the plight of the oceans in general and whales in particular. He challenged me to write a book that was powerful, different—that above all, offered hope. So I began to tie together the many strands I was thinking about. I was, if you like, finally acknowledging the subtle pressure; I was listening to the distant voice.

Something in the Water is the result, and it’s dedicated to Melisa. Surprisingly, it wasn’t hard to write. 115,000 words without writer’s block is, I’m told, most unusual. Impossible, even. But what do we really know about the impossible?

What I do know is that while it’s a work of fiction, it’s also the product of observation, research and conviction. It explores love and interconnectedness, death too.  

As the pieces fell into place, it helped me see a silver lining. I hope it also helps anyone who has lost a loved one.

Back to Melisa’s question: What happens to love after death? I hope that Something in the Water goes some way towards providing an answer.

An answer that she, of course, already knows.

What do you think happens to love after we die?

Ben Starling is passionate about marine conservation and boxing, both central themes in his novels. His interest in marine life has taken him across three continents over the past three decades. Starling is the author of two Romance novels, Something in the Air and Something in the Water. Get his first book free here.

www.amazon.com/author/benstarling
www.ben-starling.com

ben-white_headshot

Feb 1, 2016 | Posted by in Uncategorized | 1 comment