Showing posts with label whodunit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label whodunit. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2018

FEATURED CHARACTER: RITA MOREAU'S SISTER HILDEGARD





ABOUT THE BOOK

When mobsters frame her aunt, one psychic dives headfirst into a criminal conspiracy.
Mary Catherine, MC for short, inherited her family’s psychic abilities and a knack for trouble. When her fortune-telling aunt is accused of murdering a Russian mobster and refuses to defend herself by revealing what she saw in a card reading, it’s up to MC to divine the truth.

But if MC isn’t careful, she could end up sharing a jail cell with her aunt … or swimming with the fishes.

The Russian and Aunt Sophia is a madcap cozy mystery novella that could only take place in Florida. If you like surreal plots, well-rounded characters, and quirky comedy, then you’ll love Rita Moreau’s psychic whodunit.

Dive into The Russian and Aunt Sophia to solve a clairvoyant mystery today!


Book Details:

Book title: The Russian & Aunt Sophia, (A Mary Catherine Mahoney Mystery Novella)

Author: Rita Moreau

Genre: Cozy mystery, Novella #1

Self Published (January 16, 2018)

Print Length: 77 pages
Touring with: Great Escapes Book Tours








ABOUT THE CHARACTER


“My name is Sister Hildegard. I am the mother superior of the Order of the Sisters of Saint Anthony. Saint Anthony is the saint you pray to when you have lost something (or you are lost). My order contains a secret society of nuns who are psychic, including me. It comes in handy when Saint Anthony is busy, and trust me, he is busy.”


INTERVIEW WITH RITA MOREAU'S SISTER HILDEGARD


Sister, how did you first meet Rita?

Through my childhood friend, Sophia. Sophia is her aunt.  We were told she had a knack at finding things. Part of it her training with the IRS and part of it her DNA. She is a reluctant psychic. We were desperate since we had lost a very old jewel which some say contained supernatural powers. We ordered her to find it, and she did (eventually).

Want to dish about Rita?
She is easily scared by nuns but then who isn’t?

Good point. Why do you think that your life has ended up being in a book?
The author attended the play, Late Night Catechism and found out that nuns are not supported by the Catholic Church. We’re on our own.  She then visited her high school nuns, the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur in Cincinnati, and they told her about the audit of Catholic nuns by the Vatican.  She decided to weave all that into her third book Feisty Nuns.

Tell us about your favorite scene in the book. 

In chapter 11 when we were all in the back seat of Limo Louie’s Cadillac Fleetwood and on the way to Jennifer’s party. We had fun drinking shots out of little red solo cups and comparing our outfits.

Did you have a hard time convincing Rita to write any particular scenes for you?
No, she pretty much obeys my every command. She is a product of parochial schools just like her protagonist, Mary Catherine.

What do you like to do when you are not being actively read somewhere? 
Sit and meditate in the Garden of Saint Hildegard which sits on our convent property.

Do have any secret aspirations that your author doesn’t know about?

I’d love to see the author’s books made into a movie.

If you had a free day with no responsibilities and your only mission was to enjoy yourself, what would you do?

Take a Zumba class.



What impression do you make on people when they first meet you?
I scare them. I am very tall, and I wear my habit unlike modern nuns who wear everyday clothes.
How about after they've known you for a while?
After they have known me for awhile I still scare them.

What's the worst thing that's happened in your life?
When the Vatican decided to audit our order because they decided nuns were out of line and were challenging the all-male priesthood. It pointed out the secondary role nuns, or for that matter women, play in the church. I learned you will get stronger if it doesn’t kill you first.



Tell us about your best friend.

Sister Matilda is short and petite but she carries herself with the same stature as someone as tall as I. She is a walking Wikipedia on any subject. She has a deep love of history. The nuns at the convent do their best to avoid her because it will lead to what they have dubbed: history time. God forbid you ask her a question by accident.



What are you most afraid of?

Flying insects.

What’s the best trait your author has given you?
Strength of character.
What’s the worst?
Impatience, especially with my friend Sister Matilda and her love of history time.

What’s Rita’s worst habit?

Cannot write fast enough. In today’s world an author needs to produce books quickly.



How do you feel about your life right now?
I worry for my order since we do not get any assistance from the Catholic Church. We are getting older, and there are no younger nuns to take our place. If we live long enough, we will run out of funds. They will separate us and send us to the old folk’s homes.

What aspect of Rita’s writing style do you like best? 
Her voice.

If your story were a movie, who would play you? 
Why, myself of course.

Describe the town where you live. 
Fish Camp, a small Florida town near State Road A1A.

Describe an average day in your life.
Busy, putting out fires.

What makes you stand out from any other characters in your genre?

I’m a nun and I’m very tall.

If you could be “adopted” by another writer, who would you choose?
Mary Higgins Clark.

Will you encourage Rita to write a sequel?
Yes. We need the money. She regularly donates funds from her book sales to the sisters.





ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rita Moreau is the author of the Mary Catherine Mahoney Mystery series.

A workaholic by nature, upon retirement, Rita Moreau began work on her bucket list, writing a book. Traveling the national parks with her husband George in a vintage Bluebird motor home, (on George’s list), Rita completed her first novel, Bribing Saint Anthony. Back home she completed Nuns! Psychics! & Gypsies! OH! NO, Feisty Nuns and The Russian & Aunt Sophia. Rita and her husband live in a postcard called Florida where he has fun telling everyone he is the author’s husband.

When not writing, she joins PatZi Gil on the Joy on Paper radio program with Book Buzz Mysteries or you can find her teaching fitness classes and doing her best to keep busy. She loves connecting with readers.



Connect with Rita:

Website  |  Facebook  |  Radio  |  Goodreads  |  Amazon

Buy the book:
Amazon 





Monday, February 8, 2016

FEATURED AUTHOR: LAUREN CARR




ABOUT THE BOOK


Police Chief David O’Callaghan and Chelsea Adams’ wedding day is fast approaching. Unfortunately, at the last minute, David discovers that there is one small problem to be taken care of before he can tie the knot—divorce his first wife!

Lauren Carr takes fans of the Mac Faraday mysteries to the Big Apple in this nail biting adventure. In Cancelled Vows, David, Mac, and Gnarly, too, rush to New York City to dissolve David’s marriage to an old girlfriend—and he’s got five days to get it done. When murder throws up a road block, it is up to David’s best man, Mac Faraday, and Gnarly, K9-in-waiting, to sort through the clues to get David to the church in time!



INTERVIEW WITH LAUREN CARR


Lauren, what do you think is hardest aspect of writing a book?

Timing. I write full time. However, even so, it is difficult because when I really get going at a certain spot in a storyline and the words are flowing freely, reality will come crashing in. My son gets home from school and I need to stop in the middle of a conversation. Or I’m in the middle of a pertinent scene or shootout and suddenly, it’s six o’clock in the evening, I have people bleeding out on the streets, and I’ve taken nothing out of the kitchen to cook for dinner.

Seriously, not only is it frustrating, but it is those types of interruptions that can cause the type of mistakes in continuity that readers may pick up after the book is released. For example, in Kill and Run, in one scene, one reader noticed that Jessica sat down twice during a conversation without standing up before sitting down the second time.

I have no choice but to blame my family for picking up this nasty habit called eating. It wouldn’t be so bad if they knew how to cook.

I hear you. What’s more important – characters or plot?
Characters! Hand down!

Now, don’t get me wrong. I thrive on finding unique and interesting murder cases for my books. So plot is very important. You can have a fabulous group of characters but if the plot doesn’t grab you, then you aren’t going to stick around. I have read books with fabulous, interesting characters—but it was very hard to read the books because as great as the characters were, nothing happened.

However, no matter how great the plot is, if you don’t care what happens to the characters, then you aren’t going to get past chapter three. I can’t tell you how many books I’ve stopped reading because I really didn’t care if the characters lived or died.

I have found that really intriguing, interesting, fun characters, once they come to life — which is if they are fully developed, will make a great plot. That happened in Cancelled Vows. Dallas Walker started out as a minor character, who ultimately stole the book and took it on a roller coaster plot because she is such a great character. That wouldn’t have happened if she wasn’t such a fascinating character.

What do you think makes a good story?
Twists and turns in the plot that leave the reader breathless. I have a rule when I write. When my reader expects me to go in one direction, I purposely take them in the opposite direction.

What do you know now that you wish you knew then?
Being an author is a business — treat it like one. When I first started getting published, my husband, who is my business manager and has a law degree in business law, kept telling me that this is a business. He wanted receipts and when I would be offered a personal appearance I would be so excited — until he started asking questions like, “How far away is that? How much gas are you going to use getting there? How many books do you expect to sell? Are we going to make money or lose money?”

I considered him a wet blanket. After all, I was an author — an artist! Once, I accepted a speaking engagement at a library that was over five hours from my home. I drove five hours there in the pouring rain, spoke to a full house. They were so engaged and had so many questions, I was there twenty minutes longer than expected. Then, they all rushed out to borrow my book. I sold one book. I didn’t even make enough money to pay for the gas.

Now, I do treat my writing and book promotion like a business. I rarely make public appearances because I get more promotion for my time spent online via blog tours and guest blogs. I’m still an artist—an author, but I’m also a business person.

I agree wholeheartedly with that. Do you have any marketing tips you could pass on to indie authors?
Think of marketing as one of those chores that’s all part of the business — not an option. In every profession there are things that you have to do because it is part of taking care of business. Lawyers have to keep up on new laws — otherwise, they could make mistakes that will land their clients in jail. Doctors have to deal with insurance companies and forms or they won’t get paid for their services.

Authors have to deal with marketing or readers won’t know about their books and if readers don’t know about their books, they won’t buy them. If readers don’t buy your books, then you won’t make money.

A best-selling author told me to spend one hour a day working on marketing — using social media and the Internet. Within a year of taking her advice, my books started making best-sellers’ lists, and I am now in the top-100 police procedural authors on Amazon. I now spent three-four hours a day working on marketing.

How often do you tweet?
Every single day. I have an assistant who does my tweeting using Hootsuite. But I get in every day to promote fellow authors via retweeting their posts.

What do you love about where you live?
The beauty and silence of the mountain—and the view of the valley, too.


What’s your favorite thing to do on date night?
Going to a fabulous new restaurant, getting waited on, and trying something I have never eaten before — followed a sinful dessert. Then, going home to a clean kitchen and not have to wash dishes.

What's your favorite treat for movie night?
Ice cream encased in chocolate fudge Magic Shell.

What's the biggest lie you ever told?
I don’t know if this would constitute as my biggest lie, but it my most embarrassing lie. Years ago, some friends of ours moved, and they gave us a propane gas tank for their gas grill. It was an older tank and didn’t fit our gas grill. My husband tried exchanging it for a tank that would fit our grill, but no place would take it. He tried taking it to the dump, leaving it with the garbage collector — no one would take it. We had this tank literally for years, and it was rusting, and we couldn’t get rid of it. So, one day, I was taking one of our empty gas tanks in to exchange it for a fresh tank and my husband suggested that I take this old tank and just leave it on the curb at the exchange when no one was looking and let them deal with it.

Well, my then seven-year-old son went with me. When we got there, I carried the one tank in and placed it next to the bins with the gas tanks, and the other, I just took out of the car and placed it over on the other side, in plain sight, but far enough away from ours in order to pretend I had nothing to do with it.

Well, when the clerk came out to unlock the bins to take out a fresh tank, he saw the old tank and of course, asked if it was mine. I said it wasn’t.

Right then, my son says, “Yes it is.”

“No, it not,” replied.

Tristan then looks worried. “Don’t you remember, Mom, you took it out of the back seat of our car and put it right there.”

He looked at me like I had lost my mind. “Don’t you remember, Mom? It was only a few minutes ago when we first got here, before you went inside.”

Meanwhile the clerk is looking at me.

Finally, I said, “Sorry, I don’t recall that at all.”

Then I took Tristan home and told him to talk to his father — after all, it was all his idea!

What drives you crazy?
My son is seventeen years old. That about covers it.

Name one thing you’re really good at and one thing you’re really bad at.
I’m a gourmet cook, and my husband says he married me for my cooking.

I am really bad at cleaning up after I cook. I’m horrible at cleaning, period. Yet, my husband was a navy officer and had done three tours on aircraft carriers. So, he is very particular about cleaning, which makes it worse. For that reason, a cleaning lady is a necessity. No matter how bad things are financially, a cleaning service has to be in our budget.

What’s your least favorite chore?
Cleaning—because I am really bad at it. I simply do not see dirt.

What are you working on now?
For 2016, I am aiming for four books, one for each series. Cancelled Vows is the eleventh installment for the Mac Faraday Mysteries. At the end of April, Lovers in Crime will see the third installment for that series, Killer in the Band. Readers will get to know more about Joshua Thornton Jr (J.J.), Murphy’s identical twin brother. J.J. has graduated at the top of his class from law school and is returning home to spend the summer studying for the bar exam. However, to the Thornton’s shock and dismay, J.J. decides to move in with Suellen Russell, a lovely widow twice his age. The move brings long buried tensions between the father and son to the surface. When a brutal killer strikes, the father and son must set all differences aside to solve the crime before J.J. ends up in the crosshairs of a murderer.

In September, fans of the Thorny Rose Mysteries will see the second installment for that series, A Fine Year for Murder. I’m also planning to close out the year with a November release of Murder for the Holidays. This is a Mac Faraday Mystery that will include some flashback to an earlier case involving Patrick O’Callaghan and Robin Spencer.

Then, in November, Mac Faraday fans will see a Christmas mystery entitled, Murder for the Holidays. This mystery will include a flashback to an older murder case involving Patrick O’Callaghan (Mac and David’s father) and Robin Spencer.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

Lauren Carr is the international best-selling author of the Mac Faraday and Lovers in Crime Mysteries and the Thorny Rose Mysteries. Lauren is a popular speaker who has made appearances at schools, youth groups, and on author panels at conventions. She also passes on what she has learned in her years of writing and publishing by conducting workshops and teaching in community education classes. She lives with her husband, son, and four dogs (including the real live Gnarly!) on a mountain in Harpers Ferry, WV.



Connect with the author: 
Website    |   
Blog    |    Twitter     |   Goodreads 

Facebook:
Lauren's page    |   Gnarly’s page   |   Lovers in Crime Page  |    Acorn Book Services page  


Buy the book: 
Amazon 

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Character Interview: Police Chief O'Callaghan

A Blue Million Books is very happy to feature Lauren Carr's newest book, A Wedding and a Killing, a Mac Faraday Mystery Book 8. Lauren's a little busy, what with the new release and all, and Amy's busy getting the second book in the Goose Pimple Junction series ready to publish, so GPJ's Tess Tremaine sits down with the chief of police of Spencer, Maryland, David Patrick O’Callaghan, to get the lowdown on Lauren and her mystery series.


About the book:

When Mac Faraday decides to do something, there’s no stopping him ... even murder!

Not wanting to wait until their big day to start their life of wedded bliss, Mac Faraday and his lady love, Archie Monday, decide to elope to the little church where his ancestors had all married — along the tranquil shore of Deep Creek Lake. However, before they can say, “I do,” the sanctuary erupts into chaos when Gnarly finds a body in the church office.

“Of course Mac Faraday can’t get married without a killer making an appearance,” author Lauren Carr says about A Wedding and a Killing, the eighth installment in her best-selling mystery series.

Readers will find that Lauren’s latest whodunit reveals just a touch of sibling rivalry between Mac Faraday and his half-brother, Police Chief David O’Callaghan. When the Deep Creek Lake murder unviels a cold case in New York, Mac Faraday rushes off to clear the name of a local citizen, while David O’Callaghan focuses on the homicide at Spencer Church.

“Characters take on a life of their own, if you let them,” Lauren says. “Readers, and the author, become bored if the character is allowed to stagnate. David O’Callghan has really grown since It’s Murder, My Son. When I first introduced David, he was young. What he lacked in confidence, he made up for in determination. In A Wedding and a Killing, David feels compelled to solve his case on his own when Mac starts making headway in New York — if only to prove to himself that he can.” 

In A Wedding and a Killing, Mac and his team discover more questions than answers. What kind of person walks into a church and shoots a man for no apparent reason? How do you solve the murder of a man who has no enemies in the world? Which of the seemingly kind-hearted church members is really a cold-blooded killer?

Then, there is the all-important question, how long do Mac Faraday and his lady love have to wait to get married?


About Police Chief O'Callaghan:

In his early thirties, David Patrick O’Callaghan is the son of Patrick O’Callaghan and his wife Violet.

Patrick O’Callaghan was the legendary police chief of Spencer, located on the uptown side of Deep Creek Lake in Western Maryland. He had a reputation of being one of the most clever and courageous police chiefs in the area. Since his death after a long illness, David has taken over his father’s position. While he’s got big shoes to fill, he does manage to hold his own.

Being the son of the police chief in a resort town in which most of the residents are listed in Who’s Who is a mixed blessing. On the downside, David did not enjoy the luxuries of his school friends. However, being the police chief’s son did give him a certain social standing.

Handsome and charming, David was, and is, popular with the ladies. This proved to be a curse as well as a blessing when David’s relationship with his first love ended due to his own infidelity.

Unfortunately, David’s childhood did have some dark periods. As he grew up, David came to realize that his father, while faithful to his mother, was in love with another woman — the world famous mystery author Robin Spencer, whose ancestors had founded the town of Spencer.

A loyal and honorable man, Patrick O’Callaghan remained faithful and committed to David’s mother. But jealousy and bitterness would often drive her to emotional breakdowns, which would mean long commitments to a mental institution. Unable to care for David on his own, Patrick would send David to live at Spencer Manor with Robin Spencer, who David had come to love like a second mother.

As an adult, Patrick O’Callaghan revealed a family secret to his son. As teenagers, Patrick and Robin had a baby out-of-wedlock. Her parents had sent her away to have the baby and had the boy put up for adoption. Eventually, Robin’s parents had broken the young couple up. By the time Robin returned to Spencer, Patrick had already married David’s mother.

David had an older half-brother. No one knew his name or where he was.

After Patrick O’Callaghan’s and Robin Spencer’s death, their son, Mac Faraday, arrives at Spencer Manor, which he had inherited from his birth mother. During Patrick’s terminal illness, she hunted Mac down in order to tell Patrick about what had become of their son.
Intrigued, and determined to fulfill his father’s wish, David embarks on a brotherly friendship with the retired homicide detective. In no time, Mac Faraday becomes not only David’s brother, but his best friend as well.


Tess Talks with Police Chief David Patrick O’Callaghan

Hey, Chief. I heard you were a handsome man, and I must say I heard right. Tell me, how did you first meet Lauren?
I met Lauren Carr while she was writing the first Mac Faraday Mystery, It’s Murder, My Son. It was so much fun that she invited me back for each book after that. It isn’t like she could do a Mac Faraday mystery without me. After all, I am now the police chief of Spencer, Maryland.

Want to dish about her?

She has a weakness for ice cream slathered in Magic Shell.

I wonder if Slick serves that at the diner. Anyway...tell us about your favorite scene in A Wedding and a Killing.
The motel scene. Don’t get excited. In A Wedding and a Killing, a murder is committed in a church office. This murder reveals a cold case in New York. So, Mac goes off to New York to investigate that, while I investigated my case in Spencer. I believe this is the first time Lauren allowed me to work a case alone without Mac’s help.

We were tracking a missing suspect’s credit card charges when we got a hit that her card was used to book a motel room in Breezewood, Pennsylvania, a town off the turnpike. My deputy chief and I rushed to the motel to nab our suspect. We had an army of Pennsylvania state troopers, and Bogie (my deputy chief) and me ready to break in and take our suspect into custody.

Well, I don’t want to give away the plot. Let’s just say we were in for quite a surprise.

Sounds exciting! Do you have a hard time convincing Lauren to write any particular type of scenes for you?
Love scenes. I don’t know what it is with Lauren, but she keeps closing the door on me. Up until The Murders at Astaire Castle, I had quite an extensive love life. I admit it. I’m a sucker for a lovely lady. I’ve had my heart broken more than its fair share.

But now, I am in a committed relationship with Chelsea Adams. But Lauren refuses to give me any love scenes. Oh, yeah, we get to kiss and hug and what-not, but when the clothes start coming off, Lauren slams the door and keeps the reader out.

What’s with that, Lauren?

Yeah, what's with that, Lauren? Give the man some love. Okay, Chief. Tell the truth. What do you think of your fellow characters?
They’re my family. Growing up as an only child, with my mother being away sometimes, and Dad working all the time with such an important job, I guess I would wish that I had a brother or someone who I could lean on sometimes.

Robin Spencer was cool, but sometimes I felt in the middle because my mother hated her so much. I’d feel like I was betraying Mom when I liked Robin. It wasn’t until I was grown up that I put everything together about what was going on.

I’m still shocked at how quickly Mac and I clicked to become not just brothers, but best friends. I look at him and I see Dad.

Then, there’s Archie Monday. She used to be Robin Spencer’s editor and research assistant. She’s gorgeous. She’s also like the sister I never had.

Mac and she are getting married. Well, that’s why the book is called A Wedding and a Killing. They were trying to elope when Gnarly found a dead body in the church.

As for Gnarly, the German shepherd Mac inherited from Robin: Well, Gnarly was the only K-9 to receive a dishonorable discharge from the United States Army. They refuse to talk about it — saying that it’s classified. Having seen how smart and conniving Gnarly can be, I have to wonder why.

Gnarly is pretty much his namesake—he’s gnarly in every meaning of the word.

I wonder if he would like Ezzie. We should get them together. If you had a free day with no responsibilities and your only mission was to enjoy yourself, what would you do?
Go fishing. My father and I used to go fishing all the time – usually when he wanted to talk to me man-to-man. It grew to the point that I would cringe when he would suggest we go fishing. Now what does he want to talk to me about, I would ask.

Now that he’s not here, I miss those trips and talks.



What impression do you make on people when they first meet you? How about after they've known you for a while?
First Impression: That I’m quite young to be the police chief. I’m in my early thirties, but I’ve had a lot of experience in my young life.

After knowing me for a while, I hope that they come to realize that it’s not smart to underestimate what’s behind my piercing blue eyes.



What's the worst thing that's happened in your life?

Without a doubt, it would have to be when my mother stabbed me in the chest with a fork.

Yikes!

I was, and am, a major in the marines—Special Forces. I’m now in the reserves. I did two tours overseas and fought terrorists. I’ve been in gunfights. But, emotionally, I was never prepared last year when my own mother, suffering from Alzheimer’s and dementia stabbed me in the chest with a fork. It went in pretty far, too. I had to go to the emergency room. Of course, I’m the chief of police and word did spread.

Bogie, who happens to be my deputy chief and godfather, took my mother to the nursing home. She’s been there ever since.

I try to visit her, but when she sees me, she thinks I’m my father and becomes agitated. The doctors have even told me not to visit her alone, but to take someone with me. Me — chief of police — and I can’t visit my own mother by myself for fear that she’ll attack me.

That must be just awful. What have you learned from that experience?
Well, as an adult, looking back at what I saw in my parents’ marriage — I can see that jealousy can literally make you sick. My father was in love with another woman. Yes, he loved my mother, but he was in love with Robin. He swore, and I believed him, he kept true to his marriage vows. He and Robin never cheated on my mother. But there’s no denying that they had an affair of the heart.

Those can be tough to deal with – for all parties involved.

Still, Mom refused to believe that my father was faithful. And, even when she knew that his heart was someplace else, she refused to let him go. It was like she was punishing him — and I was an innocent victim in all of it.

That is just dreadful. I'm so sorry.

But, when I go to see her at the nursing home, I see that she is the one who really paid the price. Her jealousy ravaged her mind and body like a cancer.

Jealousy can eat you up, it can.

I refuse to live my life like that.

Describe the town where you live.
Spencer is the Martha’s Vineyard or Hamptons of western Maryland.

Located in the corner of Deep Creek Lake, Spencer consists of Spencer Mountain. The Spencer Inn, another part of Mac Faraday’s inheritance, rests on the very top of the mountain.

Most of Spencer’s wealthy residents are seasonal. They flood into their summer homes from May through September, or even into October after the fall foliage. Then, they will come back for skiing at the Spencer Inn.

We do have a few year-round residents. Mac Faraday, who lives in Spencer Manor at the end of Spencer Point, is one.

Describe an average day in your life.
There’s no such thing.

Ha! I hear you. Well, it's been a pleasure getting to know you, Chief. You'll have to come over for tea sometime. Promise?

About the Author

Lauren Carr is the best-selling author of the Mac Faraday Mysteries, which takes place in Deep Creek Lake, Maryland. A Wedding and a Killing is the eight installment in the Mac Faraday Mystery series.

The owner of Acorn Book Services, Lauren is also a publishing manager, consultant, editor, cover and layout designer, and marketing agent for independent authors. This year, several books, over a variety of genre, written by independent authors will be released through the management of Acorn Book Services, which is currently accepting submissions. Visit Acorn Book Services website for more information.

Lauren is a popular speaker who has made appearances at schools, youth groups, and on author panels at conventions. She also passes on what she has learned in her years of writing and publishing by conducting workshops and teaching in community education classes.

She lives with her husband, son, and three dogs on a mountain in Harpers Ferry, West Virgina.


Connect with Lauren:
Website | Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads 

Buy the book:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble
Visit Lauren's author page on Amazon.com to purchase her other published works.