Labels

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Review: The Psychic By Margarita Felices




Forbidden Mind by Kimberly Kinrade will be FREE Oct 2-6 on Amazon for launch of Forbidden Life.

Revamp by Beck Sherman will be FREE Oct. 3 and 4 on Amazon.




The Psychic

Title: The Psychic

Author: Margarita Felices

Published: May 22nd 2012

Publisher: Books To Go Noe

Kindle Edition

Pages: 26








Goodreads Synopsis:





Beryl Parker grew up in the old world of fairgrounds and con artists. After years of wedded bliss with Charlie, they had managed the best con ever! But a year later, Charlie dies, leaving Beryl penniless and in hiding. One day while walking through a local market, she sees a sign for a fortune teller and sits nearby to listen in on what was going on. It was perfect! Such a great scam. It wasn't long before she's set up her own stall and five years later, she's living in a grand Victorian house in the best part of Cardiff. She has money in the bank and takes luxurious holidays. But Beryl should watch out who she reads to, because sometimes they come back for more.




My Review:




The following review is my opinion and not a paid review. I got The Psychic by the author Margarita Felices as a free download from Amazon.

Beryl Parker's and her husband Charlie were con artists. When Charlie ups and dies on Beryl she is worried what she is going to do without Charlie. She's like "how is she going to pay the bills?" "How is she going to survive with out Charlie?"

Then one day Beryl decides to set up her own little scam. Beryl decides that she will become a forture teller after she sees someone else doing the samething.

It is not long before Beryl's little scam pays off. She is making a lot of money and has her own little house a grand Victorian with money in the bank.

The Psychic a great little read. While it is a short story it reads like a full length novel. The Psychic was one of those little reads that you just can't put down. You want to keep reading to find out what is going to happen next.







Look for Margarita Felices on the web:


Goodreads - Margarita Felices

Goodreads - The Psychic

Twitter - Margarita Felices

Facebook - Margarita Felices





Buy The Book:

Amazon

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Wishlist Wednesday #27




Forbidden Mind by Kimberly Kinrade will be FREE Oct 2-6 on Amazon for launch of Forbidden Life.

Revamp by Beck Sherman will be FREE Oct. 3 and 4 on Amazon.




Wishlist Wednesday is a book blog hop where we will post about one book per week that has been on our wishlist for some time, or just added (it's entirely up to you), that we can't wait to get off the wishlist and onto our wonderful shelves.







  • Follow Pen to Paper as host of the meme.
  • Please consider adding the blog hop button to your blog somewhere, so others can find it easily and join in too! Help spread the word! The code will be at the bottom of the post under the linky.
  • Pick a book from your wishlist that you are dying to get to put on your shelves.
  • Do a post telling your readers about the book and why it's on your wishlist.
  • Add your blog to the linky at the bottom of the post on Pen to Paper.
  • Put a link back to pen to paper somewhere in your post.
  • Visit the other blogs and enjoy!






On My Wishlist




The Last Witch (Incenaga, #1)
Title: The Last Witch (Incenaga, #1)
Author: Debbie Dee
Paperback:
Pages: 246
Published: September 12th 2012
Publisher: Dolce Books







Goodreads synopsis




For generations the Incenaga Witches have been forced to use their power to fulfill the wishes of others until they are drained of their magic and left to die. Desperate to protect his infant daughter - the last surviving witch - Emmeline’s father escapes with her to the forests where he vows to keep her hidden from the world and from the truth.

Sixteen years later, Emmeline is discovered and finds herself in the grip of a traitor who will stop at nothing to get what he wants, even if it means abusing her power until she dies. As she fights to regain her freedom she is faced with a choice between a prince who offers a lifetime of security and a common gamekeeper who has no idea of her power, but offers his heart.

But who can she trust when her power can be used against her?





Why did I choose The Last Witch for this weeks Wishlist Wednesday?



This sounds like no other book about witches that I have read before. The witches use their power until they are dead? The Last Witch sounds very intriguing.





Look for Debbie Dee on the web


Goodreads - Debbie Dee

Goodreads - The Last Witch

Web Site - Debbie Dee

Twitter - Debbie Dee

Facebook - Debbie Dee





What is on your Wishlist Wednesday?

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Top Ten Tuesday #26










Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created here at The Broke and the Bookish. This feature was created because we are particularly fond of lists here at The Broke and the Bookish. We'd love to share our lists with other bookish folks and Each week we will post a new Top Ten list that one of our bloggers here at The Broke and would LOVE to see your top ten lists! the Bookish will answer. Everyone is welcome to join. All we ask is that you link back to The Broke and the Bookish on your own Top Ten Tuesday post AND add your name to the Linky widget so that everyone can check out other bloggers lists! If you don't have a blog, just post your answers as a comment. Have fun with it! It's a fun way to get to know your fellow bloggers.




For future Top Ten Tuesday topics, check them out here!

This weeks Top Ten List

Top Ten "Older" Books You Don't Want People To Forget About (you can define older however you wish. Basically just backlisted books you think are great. Basically the point is to share books that could be forgotten about in the midst of all the new releases)





Roots: The Saga of an American Family Title: Roots: The Saga of an American Family

Author: Alex Haley

Roots is a very favorite book of mine. I loved reading this book. I also loved the movies.













Queen Title: Queen

Author: Alex Haley

Queen is also a very favorite book of mine. I loved reading this book. I also loved the movies.













Palomino Title: Palomino

Author: Danielle Steel

I loved reading Palomino. It is my favorite book by Danielle Steel.












The Stand Title: The Stand

Author: Stephen King

The Stand is one of my favorite books. I could and have read it over and over. I loved the movie too. The movie was not as good as the book.












The Dark Tower Series Collection: The Gunslinger, The Drawing of the Three, The Waste Lands, Wizard and Glass, Wolves of the Calla, Song of Susannah, The Dark Tower Title: The Dark Tower Boxed Set

Author: Stephen King

I loved The Dark Tower Series. I loved all the characters. Like Roland, Eddie, Jake ect...













One Past Midnight: The Langoliers Title: One Past Midnight: The Langoliers (Four Past Midnight)

Author: Stephen King

I guess you have already figured out that Stephen King is one of my favorite authors. The Langoliers is also one of my favorite books and movies.













The Thorn Birds Title: The Thorn Birds: A Novel

Author: Title: Colleen McCullough

I read and Watched The Thorn Birds. I really loved both. I have read and watched both more than once.













A Little Princess Title: A Little Princess

Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett

I loved reading and watching A Little Princess. Shirley Temple was a great actress. I have watched most of her movies.













Dead World Title: Dead World

Author: Shaun Jeffrey

I loved reading Dead World because I think that Shaun Jeffrey is another Stephen King. He puts more in his stories than just the plot itself. I think that Shaun and Stephen has more to say than what the story that they are writing are telling us.










Shatter Me (Shatter Me, #1) Title: Shatter Me

Author: Tahereh Mafi

Shatter Me was one of the best books that I have read.













What is on your Top Ten?

Monday, October 1, 2012

Blog Tour: (Guest Post + Excerpt) Quinn Checks In By L.H. Thomson




I would like to welcome L.H. Thomson to The Avid Reader today. Thanks for stopping by L.H. Check out L.H.'s book Quinn Checks In and Guest Post on "Why I love writing". Thanks to Making Connections and L.H. Thomson for allowing me to be a part of this tour.




Quinn Checks In banner






Quinn Checks In book cover

Book Title: Quinn Checks In

Author: L.H. Thomson

Series: Liam Quinn Mysteries

Genre: Hard-boiled mystery

Published: April 4th 2012

Publisher: J.I. Loome

Kindle Edition:

Pages: 200






PURCHASE

Amazon US (Kindle)







SYNOPSIS

QUINN CHECKS IN




Liam Quinn is back in his hometown Philly after three years in the pen for forgery. Now the ex-boxer, ex-art student has been given a chance to make amends by working as an insurance investigator, restoring a little of his family's pride and getting another chance at Nora Garcia de Soria, the woman of his dreams.

But a gallery heist isn't what it seems, and pretty soon, Quinn is running out of people to trust. The biggest mobster in town, a sweetheart named "Vin The Shin," is calling him out; a steady string of lowlifes want his head, and the local police think he's hiding something.

Hey, when trouble comes knocking?

That's when Quinn Checks In.







REVIEWS

QUINN CHECKS IN




Four Stars from #1 ranked, #1 followed Goodreads.com Reviewer Jennifer Hall, AKA Traveller:

“Here is a PI story that doesn't deal in death, that doesn't reflect just black-and-white, and that makes you wonder where the Quinn series is going to go. I for one, certainly plan to find out, and have booked a copy of the next Quinn already. Oh, and not to mention: there's a little dash of romance as well, that keeps you wondering about how it will develop as the series continues.

“Time will tell, but for now, I'm with Quinn.”



Five Stars from R.P. Dahlke, author of the popular Lalla Bains series:

“Liam dodges bullets, punches… okay, some not so much, mob-types, and all sorts of lovely women in this bright, witty and wonderfully complex first in the Liam Quinn mystery series.

“Highly recommended!”



Five Stars from Goodreads.com reviewer Beverly Ashauer:

“Throw in some fist fights, murders, family problems and a mom who wants him home every Sunday for dinner and you have a really great book. Oh, and I forgot about the girl he has loved forever, but can't get up the nerve to tell her. Quinn's life is quite an action-packed adventure. I will certainly read more books by this author and hope he has a long series with Liam Quinn as the main character!”







EXCERPT

QUINN CHECKS IN




MY FAMILY’S NEIGHBORHOOD is called Fishtown, and it’s about as glamorous as the name sounds.

The narrow old brick-and-wood buildings are attached, block on block, crammed together tight, tall and skinny, dark hues and wood shingle siding. Many of them are multi-family and still others – like my parents’ house – were just the most that young immigrant families could ever hope to afford back in the day. The streets between them are no wider than modern alleys, decades of beaten down, repaired and patched asphalt worn to a near-glassy smoothness in the occasional spot.

The neighborhood has been filled for years by the ranks of the blue-collar working man: firefighters, cops, dock workers, construction workers, garbage men, mailmen, teachers and transit drivers, all crammed in with their wives and husbands and kids and grandparents, like shoes stored in a box one size too small, then piled on top of one another in a corner cupboard.

Nearly everyone here is Irish, or Italian or Russian. But everyone displays their Star Spangled Banner in some prominent spot on their house and means it, too. Every person here, no matter how well off they’ve been, has a father or a grandfather who’s willing to smack them silly still, and sit them down and lecture them about life in the old country, and how good they’ve got it now.

In summer, when the mercury climbs high, the humidity swelters and the sidewalk feels like it might melt, the close quarters can boil over into trouble, with nowhere good for all of that pressure to go, long-time next-door neighbors coming to rapid blows in short, unsustainable explosions of passion.

But more usually, you see the best in people, a kind of hum of activity as they blow off that steam, of guys in football jerseys and long shorts swapping stories on the stoops while sharing a tall boy, and kids playing in the street, hanging around Central Pizza for a slice or a hoagie, maybe cooling off under an open hydrant; it’s a real village in the city, if you come from here.

Even though it’s gotten a little more upscale in recent years, with musicians and artists enjoying the affordability, people have thought of Fishtown as low-rent for years. But that’s fine with us. When you lived here, you at least knew who your neighbors were. My parents, Al and Maureen, raised five kids in one of the those tiny houses, with my dad walking a beat for twenty years and manning a precinct desk job for another ten after that.







GUEST POST

WHY I LOVE WRITING




Hi Avid Readers, and thanks to Nancy for letting me tell you a little about myself. I guess it's appropriate to talk about why I love writing, and it started with my folks.

When I was a kid, my folks had some strange ideas about parenting. It wasn't uncommon for me to go to the pub with my dad when I was a little boy and have a pint of "shandy" -- a bit of beer, a lot of 7Up. We were also allowed a little wine at Sunday dinner and to stay up until 10 p.m. And they absolutely refused to spend much time reading me children's stories.

Those ended by age four, which is when they bought me my first mystery. Well, sort of: Live and Let Die, by Ian Fleming. Within a year, I'd already mapped out my career path: special agent with a licence to kill. When that didn't work out, writer seemed a realistic fallback.

Now, it may sound a bit premature for a four-year-old to read a book in which a CIA agent is thrown into a shark tank. And I'd be lying if there wasn't bed wetting involved that night. But my parents had been told I had a gift for the gab and language, and as long as I could read at an adult level, they though, I might as well start.

Of course, this was probably quite a bad idea, given some of the nasty stuff that's written at an adult level. I was about to crack "The Wanting of Levine," a quite excellent 1970s parable about American politics and capitalism, when my mother yelped, ran across the room and plucked it out of my then-five-year-old hands. Years later, reading the handful of sex scenes, it seemed pretty tame. At five, it would have confused the heck out of me.

I suppose, however, that the upside of taking on adult fiction and literature early was that I absorbed it like a sponge. I probably write detective novels now specifically because my father gave me a book called "The Girl, The Gold Watch and Everything" to read as a six-year-old. It was by John D MacDonald, and though not one of those in his famous Travis McGee series, it was an introduction, and the P.I. potboilers followed shortly thereafter.

Then it was the great British-style detective writers: Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, P.D. James, Ngaio Marsh. By the time I was in my teens, I'd read thousands of books and by 18, I was working full time as a newspaper reporter, occasional magazine feature writer and general loudmouth. I have to seriously question whether I would've taken that route had my parents gone from "Go Dog Go" to "DIck and Jane", rather than skipping me ahead to a tale about a voodoo priest politician and a cool-as-ice British agent.

Crazy, but it worked. In a pretty direct way, then, I can say I owe them my love of writing. They weren't often the greatest at parenting. But they were pretty awesome parents.

LH Thomson is the author of seven books, including Quinn Checks In, a new series about Irish-American ex-con Liam Quinn, and the Max Castillo Mysteries set in Spain.







ABOUT L.H. THOMASON




Quinn Checks In Author

A 20-year veteran newspaper reporter and editor, L.H. Thomson has written seven novels. When he’s not writing strange newspaper and web columns about the impacts of neuroscience on sociology or the losing ways of his beloved Toronto FC, he lives in Edmonton, Canada with his wife Lori – a quality assurance manager for a major utility company who helped develop the Liam Quinn character – and their six adopted pets, who didn’t make the process any easier at all.







FIND THE AUTHOR

Blog

Books on Amazon

Quinn Checks In







Be sure and check out all the other stops on the tour.



TOUR SCHEDULE




Oct. 1st - Nancy The Avid Reader - Guest Post/Excerpt

Oct. 2nd - Cherie Reads - Review/Excerpt/Giveaway

Oct. 3rd - Flora - Excerpt

Oct. 4th - Amanda - Excerpt or Guest Post

Oct. 5th - Trish Musings of a Writing Reader - Guest Post

Oct. 6th - Making Connections Blog

Oct. 7th - Alana

Oct. 8th - Nikki - Review & Excerpt

Oct. 9th - Samantha Mullins - Review

Oct. 10th - Kristine - Review..Guest Post..Giveaway

Blog A Quote #19







Blog A Quote is weekly meme hosted by Michelle Chew Writes. Each week we will be sharing a quote from our favorite books. For more info and to sign up visit Michelle Chew Writes.





My quote for this week



Of Poseidon (Of Poseidon, #1)

Of Poseidon By Anna Banks



“I said, you'll have to prove that I ran into you on purpose. That I meant to cause you harm. And besides, I checked with you at the time---"

"Emma."

"---and you said you didn't have injuries---"

"EM-MA"

"Did you hear me, Galen?" I turn around and yell at the remaining spectators in the hall as the bell rings. "CHLOE IS DEAD!”





Of Poseidon was the first book about mermaids that I read. I loved it. The ending was kind of shocking. It was an ending that left you wanting more. I can't wait to read the next book in the series called Of Triton. I have a while to wait because it is not expected to be published until 2013.









What is your favorite quote?

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Blog Tour: (Book Playlist + Excerpt) Above the Universe Below By Elias Barton




I would like to welcome Elias Barton to The Avid Reader today. Thanks for stopping by Elias Barton. Check out Elias Barton's book Above the Universe Below and his Book Playlist. Thanks to Full Moon Bites and Elias Barton for allowing me to be a part of this tour.




banner






cover

Book Title: Above the Universe Below

Author: Elias Barton

Genre: Fantasy, Dark

Publisher: Iron Glass Press

Ebook/Paperback:

Pages: 332









PURCHASE

Amazon US (Kindle)

Amazon (Print)

Amazon UK (Kindle)







BOOK DESCRIPTION

ABOVE THE UNIVERSE BELOW




For two years running (2011 & 2012) Above the Universe Below was was a semi-finalist in Amazon.com's Breakthrough Novel Award and Publishers Weekly:

"Brilliant writing carries this pleasantly odd tale of an agoraphobic artist, Carder Quevedo... Carder's road is not an easy one, but readers will be rooting for him in this unusual and beautifully written book."

An agoraphobic artist in our world but a grim reaper in another, Carder Quevedo hides at home, immersing himself in the paintings which commemorate the strange deaths he's witnessed. He ventures into public only when necessary, scrambling to his hospital job to extract corneas from deceased donors or darting to the diner to share a meal with Darren, his only friend. That's Carder's existence - and he's content.

Until...

Haika changes that. As the bored, beautiful owner of an art gallery - who also happens to be married - she stumbles into Carder in a chance encounter and soon becomes obsessed with his art. As they forge a quirky, electric relationship, Carder is reluctantly pulled into Haika's social world of wealth, status and the peculiar characters that come with it. Carder is pushed further to the edge when his teenage niece visits, rebelling against her ultra-conservative upbringing. All the while, Carder's hidden history threatens to ruin his developing chance at normalcy, and on the opening night of his art gallery show, his past finally catches up to his present and wreaks havoc upon them all.







EXCERPT

ABOVE THE UNIVERSE BELOW




Haika’s mouth is obscured behind an empty Styrofoam cup riddled with repeating arches of gentle teeth-marks she’s bitten into it like colorless rainbows perforating white sky. She meets Carder’s gaze with a mischievous smile, enjoying the role of spectator and anthropologist. She’s relaxed, as if sitting in a bubble bath with a goblet of wine in hand, reading this all in a novel someone lent her.

Love.

That’s what Haika is: love. Not just love for Mike or art or New York. Haika is love in every moment. She’s loving to Carder, to his relatives, to the Carlisle boys. But she’s more. She’s love in the cloudless sky above, in the honey she brought for tea, in the music she tries to soundtrack Carder’s life with, in the thrift-store clothes she’s wearing, in the ascot knotted at her chin, in her bare feet sliding through what would once have been war-torn grass, in the sadness sometimes hiding in the corners of her lips. She brings love to every moment… something Carder has never seen in another person. Ever. He obsesses over every detail, and gulps down the harrowing thought that he’ll one day lose her. He tries to be love like Haika is, to laze on the hammock of friendship hanging from her eyes right now. He fills with gratitude. This has actually happened. She had actually been in his life, and no one can take that away. Carder could live off it for decades and fully plans to.







BOOK PLAYLIST/SOUNDTRACK

ABOVE THE UNIVERSE BELOW




  1. VAST "Here" – Chapter 1, Salmon Belly, as Carder journeys through NYC’s subway system, we get a glimpse into his life and mind. YOUTUBE


  2. Bat For Lashes "Daniel" – Chapter 2, Drawing Him In, when Haika meets Carder, something inexplicable draws her to him, an enigma which she’s never before encountered. YOUTUBE


  3. Porcupine Tree "Lazarus" – Chapter 5, A Reaping: ‘Bis, when a seven-year-old Carder finds himself in another world where he meets a savage, dying beast. YOUTUBE


  4. Prisma “Glide In” – Chapter 7, Close to the Gate, when we enter Carder’s home overwrought with a maze of dark paintings. YOUTUBE


  5. Patrick Wolf "Bluebells" – Chapter 13, The Battlefield, when Carder leaves the city and meets with his sister, Lucy, and retrieves Mandy. YOUTUBE


  6. IAMX "Running" – Chapter 15, Potato Chip Fingerprints, Vines & Viviennes, when Carder runs the bridge. YOUTUBE


  7. Royksopp "Vision One" – Chapter 24, Creep Crawls Toward White Light, the night of the gallery show – a collision of worlds. YOUTUBE


  8. Tori Amos "Precious Things" – Chapter 25, Happiness Found with Multiple Stab Wounds, when Carder and Mandy merge and leave everything behind, running the streets of NYC. YOUTUBE


  9. VAST "Touched" – Chapter 28, The Fury, The Sound, The Wine Country, when escapes to a cottage far away, his feelings for Haika emerge. YOUTUBE


  10. William Fitzsimmons "So This is Goodbye" – Chapter 29, What’s Washed Away, when Haika realizes that not only has she likely lost Carder, but home has disintegrated as well. YOUTUBE


  11. Imogen Heap "Can’t Take It In" – Chapter 33, Dawn of the Undead, when Carder returns, bringing Haika a gift from another world. YOUTUBE


  12. Guns and Roses "Welcome the Jungle" – Closing/Chapter 35, An Unexpected Party, when Carder finds himself in a new world and encounters an interesting party. YOUTUBE



ABOVE THE UNIVERSE BELOW - A soundtrack to the novel.2 by Elias Barton on Grooveshark






ABOUT THE AUTHOR




Author

Elias Barton has lived on the edge of an active volcano, worked in a Bible factory and is the author of the novel "Above the Universe Below." He was a semifinalist in both 2011 and 2012 for the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. He currently resides in Washington DC where he befriends gargoyles, feeds unicorns and combats two cats who try to smother him in his sleep.







FIND THE AUTHOR

Website







Be sure and check out all the other stops on the tour.



TOUR SCHEDULE




Sept. 24th- A Bit of Dash (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Sept. 25th- Juniper Grove (Interview/Giveaway)

Sept. 26th- A Dream Within A Dream (Review/Giveaway)

Sept. 27th- I am, Indeed (Review/Excerpt)

Sept. 28th- Community Bookstop (Giveaway/Promo)

Sept. 29th- The Avid Reader (Book Playlist)

Sept. 30th- Musings of a Writing Reader (Guest Post/Giveaway)

Oct. 1st- Beach Bum Reads (Giveaway)

Oct. 2nd- Fighting Monkey Press (Guest Post/Giveaway)

Oct. 3rd- A Bibliophile's Thoughts on Books (Guest Post)

Oct. 4th- Day Dreaming Book Reviews (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Oct. 5th- Paranormal Fans For Life (Excerpt/Giveaway)

Oct. 6th- Off the Page (Interview)

Oct. 7th- Reader Girls (Book Playlist/Giveaway)







TOUR SCHEDULE LINK


This tour was put together by FMB Blog Tours

Friday, September 28, 2012

Blog Tour: (Review + Excerpt) The Last Degree By Dina Rae




I would like to welcome Dina Rae to The Avid Reader today. Thanks for stopping by Dina. Check out Dina's book The Last Degree and my review. Thanks to Full Moon Bites and Dina for allowing me to be a part of this tour.




The Last Degree, The Last DegreeTour ButtonFMB






The Last Degree, The Last DegreeBook CoverFMB

Book Title: The Last Degree

Series: Book #1

Author: Dina Rae

Genre: Action, Adventure, Crime, Paranormal, Political, Suspense, Thriller, Christian

Publisher: Dina Rae

Ebook:

Words: 93000









Purchase for only $1.99

Amazon




The Last Degree will be FREE Sept. 27th – 28th!







BOOK DESCRIPTION

THE LAST DEGREE




The Last Degree is a fictionalized account of how Freemasons and other secret societies set up the world for takeover. Ancient writings foretell a ‘Shining One’ who emerges as the world’s prophet. A murder of a Most Worshipful mason resembles a secret oath. A cop gets too close to solving the crime. Paranoid preppers go underground, preparing for war.

Headlines such as the Norway massacre, meltdown of the European Union, unscrupulous media, animal die-offs, Middle Eastern unrest, and U.S. shrinking power make the plot relevant to present day. This book is an ode to Christians, Birthers, 2012ers, Truthers, preppers, and/or other conspiracy junkies who enjoy Dan Brown, Jesse Ventura, Brad Meltzer, Alex Jones, Jerry Jenkins and Tim LaHaye.







EXCERPT

THE LAST DEGREE




Dan O'Leary, James's arms dealer and militia consultant, drove his Hummer down the long gravelly entrance. He felt their eyes watching him through the security cameras mounted within the trees. He imagined what kind of soldiers he could mold them into. The road ended in front of the log cabin. He paused with awe. Years ago he remembered selling James his ammunition while the place was still under construction. Wonderland looked more like an extravagant spa retreat than an underground bunker.

As he began to unload his vehicle, James came out to greet him.

“Wow! Quite a PSS you built!” Dan exclaimed.

“You mean primary shelter site? I’m learning the lingo. Thanks for coming. Good to see you. You brought plenty of stuff with you. Just leave it here. My staff will put it inside. They are dying to meet you. Nine men and two women. The girls are married to two of the guys. Both nurses. Everyone will be participating,” James said.

Dan toured Wonderland for hours, taking notes, drawing maps, and looking for weak spots in their security. He found a secluded area perfect for military drills. Once they descended underneath the log mansion, he could no longer play it cool. “James, James, James! You've out done yourself. This place is amazing. Guys, this was nothing but piles of dirt, trailers, and some framework the last time I've been here.”

After the tour, Dan was served a special dinner of grilled venison from a recent hunt. The energy and camaraderie between everyone was infectious. They were slowly melting his aloof exterior.

“Did you know that others, including FEMA, are building camps just like Wonderland all over the world? I've seen some of the construction in Costa Rica, South Africa, and Tahiti. Of course there’s the Denver Airport. But I've got to tell ya, Wonderland is like the Taj Mahal of all of them. You should be very proud. I can see your dedication and excellent craftsmanship. You're making my job less demanding.”

During dinner they talked about the changing world, the UN, and globalization.




Check out The Last Degree Prequel as well—Be Paranoid Be Prepared!







REVIEW

THE LAST DEGREE




 

The following review is my opinion and not a paid review. I was given a copy of The Last Degree from the author for a review via Full Moon Bites.

The Last Degree is about the Freemasons, the Illuminati and other secret societies wanting to take over the world. It is written in different POV's which is good I think because you get to know what each character is thinking and feeling. They will do whatever it takes to rule the world. Whatever it takes means murder, blackmail, embezzlement ect...

Then you have what are called the Preppers who are trying to stop the Freemasons from taking over the world. The Preppers build their own little worlds and stock up on all different kinds of supplies. Like weapons, food and whatever you need to survive an apocalypse.

I usually don't read many books of this nature but when I read the summary I knew I had to read this one. It was my chance to learn or find out more about the Freemasons and the Illuminati. Yes, I am one of those that thinks that this could one day happen to us. Maybe not in the same way but it could happen. They are some things in the book that I do agree with and think that we as human beings should already have done. I believe that we are one so therefore we should do away with imaginary borders.

I can not begin to comprehend all the research that Dina Rae must have put into writing this book. It is brilliantly written. Between all the characters in the book and the way she would go from the present to the past. The Last Degree is one of those books that will keep you on the edge of your seat hanging on and you just have to know what is going to happen next. You don't want to put it down and when you have to it is definitely not because that is something that you want to do.

Don't forget that you can get The Last Degree for free on Amazon Sept. 27 and 28. Today is the last day. Click the link above.





ABOUT THE AUTHOR




Dina Rae Author pic

Dina Rae is a new author here to stay. As a former teacher, she brings an academic element to her work. Her two novels, Halo of the Damned and The Last Degree, weave research and suspense throughout the plots. Her short story, Be Paranoid Be Prepared, is a prequel of sorts to The Last Degree, focusing on the James Martin character. Dina also freelances for various entertainment blogs.

Dina lives with her husband, two daughters, and two dogs outside of Chicago. She is a Christian, an avid tennis player, movie buff, and self-proclaimed expert on several conspiracy theories. When she is not writing, she is reading novels from her favorite authors Dan Brown, Anne Rice, Stephen King, Brad Thor, George R.R. Martin, and Preston & Childs.




FIND THE AUTHOR

Website

Blog




Be sure and check out all the other stops on the tour.



TOUR SCHEDULE

August 1st- whoopeeyoo :D (Playlist Post/Excerpt)

August 2nd- Kaidans Seduction (Review)

August 3rd- Crazy Four Books (Book Play List Post)

August 4th- Tricia Kristufek (Guest Post/Excerpt)

August 5th- Full Moon Bites (Author Interview)

August 6th- Winged Reviews (Guest Post)

August 7th- A Bibliophile's Thoughts on Books (Excerpt/Giveaway)

August 8th- Books & Beauty (Guest Post)

August 9th- Where Fantasy and Love Take Flight (Author Interview)

August 10th- Redheaded Bookworm (Book Playlist Post/Giveaway)

August 11th- Crossroads (Promo Post)

August 12th- FireStarBooks (Author Interview)

August 13th- Sweeping Me (Promo Post)

August 14th- Kristy Centeno (Author Interview)

August 15th- bibliophilia (Excerpt Post)

August 16th- Howling Books and Design (Excerpt/Giveaway)

August 17th- Crazy Chapters (Promo Post)

August 18th- The Book Connoisseur (Book Playlist Post)

August 19th- Heart Of A Wolf (Promo Post)

August 20th- Nazish Reads (Author Interview/Excerpt)

August 21st- Off the Page (Book Play List Post/Author Interview)

August 22nd- Breathe In BooKs (Guest Post)

August 23rd- The Jeep Diva (Book Play List post/Giveaway)

August 24th- Blood, Lust and Erotica (Giveaway/Author Interview)

August 25th- Of the Underworld (Excerpt Post)

August 26th- Lizzy's Dark Fiction (Promo Post)

August 26th- Black Hippie Chick's Take on Books & The World (Review/Giveaway)

August 27th- Books & Beauty (Author Interview)

August 28th- Simply Infatuated (Author Interview)

August 29th- Reading in the Nude (Book Playlist Post)

August 30th- I HEART BOOKS (Excerpt Post)

August 31st- Christie's Book Reviews (Promo Post)

September 1st- Beach Bum Reads (Review/Author Interview)

September 2nd- D VonThaer (Book Review)

September 3rd- Simply Infatuated (Guest Post)

September 4th- Kenra Daniels (Promo Post)

September 5th- Donna's Blog Home (Review)

September 6th- The Bunny's Review (Author Interview)

September 7th- My Seryniti (Review)

September 8th- Book Devotee Reviews (Promo Post)

September 9th- Laurie's Thoughts and Reviews (Author Interview)

September 10th- Abbey Ann's Bookland (Book Playlist Post)

September 11th- Cocktails and Books (Book Play List Post/Giveaway)

September 12th- Book Club Sisters (Review/Character Interview)

September 13th- Darkest Addictions Book Reviews (Review/Excerpt)

September 14th- I am, Indeed (Book Review)

September 15th- Housewife Blues and Chihuahua Stories (Excerpt Post)

September 16th- A Bit of Dash (Reivew/Excerpt)

September 17th- For The Love Of Film And Novels (Giveaway/Guest Post)

September 18th- Moonlight Gleam's Bookshelf (Author Interview)

September 19th- Words I Write Crazy (Review/Excerpt Post)

September 20th- Book Lover's Hideaway (Guest Post/Giveaway)

September 21st- My Seryniti (Author Interview)

September 22nd- Melissa's Eclectic Bookshelf (Guest Post/Giveaway)

September 23rd- Reading with Holly (Promo Post)

September 24th- Day Dreaming (Guest Post)

September 25th- Queentutts World of Escapism (Review/Giveaway)

September 26th- Proserpine Craving Books (Book Excerpt)

September 27th- Book Review Club Blog (Guest Post/Giveaway)

September 28th- The Avid Reader (Book Review/Excerpt)

September 29th- Holly Adair (Book Playlist Post)







TOUR SCHEDULE LINK


This tour was put together by FMB Blog Tours

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Blog Tour: (Interview + Giveaway) The Night Budda Got Deep in It By Ron D. Smith




I would like to welcome Ron D. Smith to The Avid Reader today. Thanks for stopping by Ron D. Smith. Please be sure and check out Ron D. Smith's novel The Night Budda Got Deep in It. Check out my interview with Ron D. Smith. Oh and before you leave be sure and enter the giveaway!




Budda banner






Budda

Book Title: The Night Budda Got Deep in It

Author: Ron D. Smith

Published: August 1st 2012

Ebook:

Pages: 176








BLURB

The Night Budda Got Deep in It




Fifteen-year-old Budda (Butter with a souther drawl) Jessico leads an unremarkable and anonymous life in suburban St. Louis. He’s not unpopular, because someone would first have to notice him. Except for the tormenting by his older brother, however, Budda is content. He follows his father’s rules and stays out of trouble. Then, at the urging of Blood Mama (his birth mother), a voice only Budda hears, he catches a bus to Kentucky to rescue his former foster sister, Addie.

As soon as Budda reaches Louisville, he goes to a McDonald’s for the first time in his life where he meets the resolute Baresha, a fellow runaway on her own adventure. Then Budda’s mission to find his sister goes downhill. He hitches a ride to Valkyrie, Addie’s hometown, in hopes of saving her from some danger Blood Mama won’t reveal. Instead, Budda encounters her blood kin, led by the ominous Odyn Starkwether and his violent brother Dickie.

A drug shipment controlled by the Starkwethers has disappeared and so has Addie. The brothers have a mess to clean up, and Budda is soon in the middle of it. At first, Budda goes along willingly, if it will help him find Addie. Before long, though, Budda realizes it’s sometimes better to stay put.








BUY NOW LINK

The Night Budda Got Deep in It




Amazon Kindle

Amazon Paper Book

Smashwords

Barnes & Noble








The Night Budda Got Deep in It

Chapter 1




Budda finished the plastic-sheathed copy of Oliver Twist and jammed it into his overstuffed backpack. The book wouldn’t be due back at the school library for another week, but he already considered it stolen, because he would never return to Kirkwood High. He had never pilfered anything before. Never so much as broken curfew. And now he was running off to Kentucky. With a stolen book. With money he thieved from his brother. My, what a rebel he had become.

The library book had more or less engaged him until the end, though Budda could have made do with half as many words — a good portion of which could have been Swahili, for all he knew. He’d only decided to read the book to look and feel smarter, though that objective hadn’t been met.

Budda fantasized about a Dickens spin on his own story, one where a mysterious benefactor or long-lost relative would rescue him from his crummy life. Or, at least, what passed for crummy in the mind of a kid who felt oppressed by his loathsome big brother and fretful father. He met the basic requirements. He never met his birth parents, and he was running away from the one who raised him. Budda could envision destiny leading him to reunite with the parents he never knew, or possibly a rich, doting relative who would support him for life.

Never mind that Budda had never been to Kentucky and knew no one there except for Addie. And never mind that his family life wasn’t as bad as he imagined. Try to convince a 15-year-old differently when he has his mind made up, and see how far you get.

No Oliver Twist ending for Budda. His birth mother, who gave him up when he was a day old, overdosed in the Sikeston Motel 6. Her body was in full hypostasis when the manager discovered her the next day, a crust of vomit on the carpet where her face lay.

If she were still alive, she couldn’t have sworn on a Gideon who Budda’s biological father was. At best, she could narrow the list to three lamentable candidates — give her that much credit — but none of them had rich relatives or were prone to doting on anything other than a bottle of Old Grand Dad. Budda’s parentage was Missouri dead-end hill trash to the core. His adoptive family, even the oafish brother he hoped would someday lose a limb in a wood chipper, was quite a few steps above that.

Budda’s birth mother, the one he called Blood Mama, had kept him company ever since his foster care days. She rode with him now on the Greyhound. She was no ghost to Budda, because she was still alive as far as he knew. (The story of the Motel 6 would have to wait a while.) She was more like an invisible advisor, a constant presence who counseled him, though often wrongly, on every aspect of his life. He knew nothing about the real Blood Mama, other than that her tweaking habit had kept her from keeping him. He pictured her alive somewhere down in the Boot-heel, working on getting her life straight. Budda would give her plenty of time to make the right ways stick, and then he’d go find her, too, just like he was doing with Addie.

It was Blood Mama who convinced him to give up on his family and to take after Addie. Blood Mama said his foster sister needed saving from something, though she had been short on specifics. Budda had a feeling Blood Mama wasn’t sure herself what the trouble was. It didn’t matter. Budda had pined for his sister since she had moved out. Once he found her and rescued her from whatever mess she was in, he would start a new life in Kentucky. It couldn’t be any worse than life in Kirkwood.

Blood Mama currently advised Budda on what he should do about his father.

Don’t you think I should call him? Budda asked.

You’ll just get him riled up more. If you’re running away, you need to make a clean break of it, Blood Mama said.

I don’t want him to be worried. You know how he is. He’ll think somebody abducted me.

So you think he’ll quit worrying if he knows you run off from home and crossed three state lines to find the girl instead? Just let him be.

I won’t call him, but I should at least text him, Budda said, thumbing the keys on his phone. I won’t say where I’m going, but I’ll tell him not to worry.

Well then, he’ll be sure to sleep sound tonight, won’t he?

Budda usually listened patiently to what Blood Mama had to say, which took up a good deal of time, because the woman had an opinion on everything. With all that listening, Budda didn’t have much time for talking. The less he spoke, the dumber people thought he was. Budda didn’t fight that perception, because he believed there was a good amount of truth to it. He didn’t remember anything about his first foster family, but he theorized he had been dropped on his head, because even simple ideas came alive in his brain only with great effort, as slow to ignite as rain-sated firewood.

Budda didn’t talk out loud to Blood Mama, but he sometimes moved his lips and even gesticulated when he got lost in conversation with her. For that, kids at school thought he wasn’t only slow, but a bit off upstairs. Future wacko hobo material. That didn’t make him unique at Kirkwood High, but it didn’t guarantee a lot of prom dates either.

By the time the Greyhound reached Effingham, Illinois, commercial bus travel had lost its appeal for Budda. His bony butt was not contoured for long trips, and this was the longest one he had been on. Even worse, the driver maintained an uncomfortably cold cabin. Budda shivered for much of the trip, because he hadn’t brought anything warm to wear — it had been unseasonably mild for mid-October when he left St. Louis. Proper preparation was not his strong suit.

According to Budda’s phone, which was a scratch-and-dent, double hand-me-down Nokia from his dad to his brother to him, it was a little after eight in the evening. The aquamarine display flashed another text message from his father, which Budda deleted without reading. He turned off the audio alerts so he wouldn’t be tempted to answer when his father called or texted again, which he would do repeatedly, because the man was most in his element when he had something big to worry about. And this was a whopper.

It soon wouldn’t matter how often his dad tried to reach Budda. The Nokia’s battery was on its last bar, and he had neglected to pack its charger.

In a span of a few hours, Budda would visit three states that were new to him. He had never been to Illinois until that night, even though he lived only twenty minutes the other side of the Mississippi. He’d always imagined Illinois was just like East St. Louis from border to border. He had heard enough stories about the city across the river that he pictured it as an endless string of beer and shot bars, low wattage strip joints, and condemned two-stories that had transformed into crack houses. He also believed psycho killers prowled for innocent teenagers in every dark alley. Budda came by these ideas through his father, who had warned Budda and Lando about the atrocities that awaited them in the Land of Lincoln.

“Don’t ever, ever cross that bridge,” Dad said. “It’s easy to get lost over there. If you do, I’m afraid I’ll never see you alive again. Your name and picture will be on the front page of the Post-Dispatch when they find chunks of you in some industrial waste dump.”

What a sunny outlook the man had, yet Budda had never doubted him. Until this night, Budda had been the obedient son, the one who was never tempted to sneak across the river to that devil’s playground, or anywhere else beyond a two block radius of home. Now he had flushed away all that built-up trustworthiness, because he was overcome with the need to see Addie, the only one in his family who had ever treated him like he had more going on upstairs than an earthworm.

The Illinois that Budda saw now wasn’t at all forbidden-looking, unless a guy was allergic to corn or other grain crops. There wasn’t much to the Illinois color palette, just monochromatic beiges as far as he could see, with not a stripper or crack whore anywhere in sight. When the sanguine sun dropped past the meridian on its way to California, the landscape became speckled with the lights of remote farmsteads. Those must be some lonely people living out there, Budda thought. He hoped Kentucky wasn’t like that. He preferred suburbs like Kirkwood with lots of lights, people, and signs to tell you where to go if you got lost.

Budda switched to a different bus in Indianapolis, which was not as full as the first one. He regarded a girl about his age who sat near the front of the bus. Budda couldn’t make out what she looked like, if she was pretty or plain, but she was the only other young person on the trip, and she seemed much more acclimated to bus riding than Budda did. She got on, sunk into her seat like she was in for the long haul, and plugged in the ear buds to her iPod. He admired and envied her lackadaisical demeanor, as though she had ridden a thousand buses just like this one and nothing could faze her. Conversely, he was sure all the other passengers knew just by looking at him that he was a novice at bus travel. He was the one who couldn’t walk down to the street corner without his father wanting to put a tracking device on him.

Budda mused about what he might say to the girl if given the chance. He had never said more than a word or two to any girl other than Addie, who wasn’t really his sister in a blood or legal way. She had left the Jessico home and moved back to a God-knows-where-hamlet in Kentucky. Addie had told him the name of the place, saying it was near Louisville, which she pronounced “Lou-vull”, like the middle syllable wasn’t worth the effort. Budda remembered that part well, but he couldn’t quite grab hold of the name of Addie’s hometown. He was sure it was stuck in his memory, but buried in there so deeply that he couldn’t bust it loose.

That was another important detail he should have nailed down before he left St. Louis. Taking a minute to scan the Louisville area on Google Maps would have helped him summon up the name of Addie’s town, but he didn’t think of that. That and the fact he didn’t have his sister’s phone number would indicate that his journey wouldn’t go well, but Blood Mama said Budda was just being whimsical. Tomato/tomahto.

The bus pulled into the Louisville station shortly after two in the morning. Budda could tell as the bus crossed the Ohio River that Louisville’s skyline was smaller than the one in St. Louis. He trusted that would make it easier to find Addie. He was for sure going to put everything he had into the effort, because he could never return to St. Louis. His brother would kill him the second he got back inside the front door.

Budda didn’t know what to do now that he was in Louisville. He had no plans for how to start looking for Addie. Second thoughts started to creep into his head just as he was about to step off the bus.

Don’t turn into a weenie on me already, Blood Mama said. You’re not going anywhere but to find and rescue your sister.

I think this was a bad idea, Blood Mama. I don’t even know where to find her, and you’re not telling me what trouble she’s in. What if it’s something I can’t get her out of?

Too late to think like that. Besides, you don’t have enough money for the bus ride back home.

I bet they have a Western Union here. The one in St. Louis did. I could just have Dad send me the money.

You’re not going back. You got to go get your sister, Blood Mama said.

What if she doesn’t want to be gotten?

This isn’t the time for what-if’s. You’ve got to get off your rear right now and start looking before something real bad happens to her.

Panic began to stir in Budda’s gut. If Addie was in such a mess, others were more capable of helping her. Maybe he’d call his dad after all. Blood Mama stopped him before he could pull the phone from his backpack.

This is something only you can do, she said. Nobody else knows the girl like you.

The bus from Indianapolis to Louisville had been less than half full. As soon as the passengers had departed and retrieved their luggage, they quickly dispersed into the city. It was like the terminal had already closed for the night. No one was inside but a woman who swept the lobby floor. Only Budda and the girl from the bus remained in the lobby. The girl asked the janitor if she could suggest any cheap restaurants nearby that stayed open late. That’s the kind of question a smart girl would ask, Budda thought.

“There’s a big McDonald’s up on Broadway that stays open,” the woman said, continuing to corral a pile of paper coffee cups and other trash with her broom. “It’s at Second Street, which isn’t too far. A cab ride wouldn’t cost much. There’s always one or two waiting out front.”

“I’m not real excited about paying for another ride after I just paid for this one,” the girl said.

“Don’t think about getting there on foot. A girl your age ought not to be out walking alone at night,” the custodian said, sounding more like a mother than a Greyhound employee. “You go on and let the taxi take you.”

Unworried, the girl said, “I can do just fine by myself. This place’s a lot smaller than Indianapolis.”

“Maybe,” the woman said. “But that doesn’t make it any nicer. You stay alert to your surroundings.”

The girl strode with confidence toward the exit, an Old Navy overnight bag swinging off her arm. It dawned on Budda that he hadn’t eaten since lunch at school. He decided McDonald’s was where he needed to go, too. It might also be a good idea to keep an eye on the girl, in case she encountered any of those bad elements the Greyhound woman warned about.

The girl walked up Seventh Street and then turned left at Broadway where traffic was heavier. Budda wondered if downtown St. Louis was just as busy at two on a Friday morning. He had never been there that late to know. His dad strictly enforced a ten o’clock curfew on weeknights and ten-thirty on Fridays and Saturdays — no exceptions. The man fretted incessantly, like he still believed in the Boogie Man. He wouldn’t let Budda, Lando, or any of the foster kids that had come through their rambling three-story home, play in the backyard unless he could watch them. He said you never knew when a rampaging maniac would come smashing through their privacy fence and carry them off. And then who would be sorry? This remained the man’s dreadful outlook, even though Budda was approaching six feet and Lando was five-ten and pushing hard against 275 pounds. If anyone needed to worry about being carried off, it was their five-six, 140-pound father.

The parade of foster kids, many of them used to much more lax living environments, hated the house rules even more than Budda and Lando did. Addie bristled most.

“I get no privacy around here,” she said. “It’s gotten to where he’s standing guard outside the bathroom when I take a pee. He knocks on the door and asks if I’m okay in there.”

“It’s for our own good. He’s just trying to keep us all safe,” said Budda, parroting what he had heard Dad say many times. As an adoptee who took his father’s last name, he felt it necessary to defend the man to his temporary siblings.

“Nobody can guarantee anyone’s safety,” Addie said. “If the Boogie Man chooses to come after you, a 43-year-old environmental engineer in tie dye and granola sandals won’t do much to scare him off.”

Until Addie came to live with them, Budda hadn’t felt suffocated by his father’s relentless fretting about imagined dangers. Lando often complained about their father too, but then, he was a chronic complainer. Budda had tuned him out a long time ago. With Addie, Budda began to see things differently. Any time Budda broke a rule, even something harmless like reading a comic book in bed after lights out, he was overcome with guilt for days. But Addie had a different type of conscience. She ignored curfew, ate what she wanted when she wanted, and came and went from the house as she pleased. She didn’t always come home alone either. Budda was certain that she had sex with at least two different boys in her room when their parents were away. And she got away with it.

An orange rear-loading garbage truck rumbled to a halt along the curb just ahead of Budda. A man in a backwards Atlanta baseball cap hopped off the back, thwacked off the lid to a public trash can and dumped its contents in the crusher. As the truck geared up and moved past Budda, he spotted a brown stream of stale beer and other ooze leaking from the back corner of the truck, right where the man rode.

My Lord, you could never get me to live in this place, Blood Mama said. Too much stinky-stink.

Budda had to agree. He wasn’t getting a pleasing first impression of Kentucky. But his ride across Illinois taught him that he should hold off on making any snap judgments.

It’s just normal city smells, he said.

You’re an expert on all things urban all of a sudden? Just keep your eyes on what you’re doing. There’s bound to be all sorts of nasties out on a mild night like this. I can’t wait until we get out of the city and into the country where the girl is.

Blood Mama wasn’t helping Budda conquer his fear of the strange city. Few people occupied the sidewalks, but anyone of them could hide a weapon. He closed his gap behind the girl to about twenty feet. After another block along Broadway, the girl turned abruptly, with something in her raised right hand that Budda couldn’t identify in the shadows.

“I got pepper spray, and I’ll use it on your ugly face if you come an inch closer,” the girl said.










INTERVIEW

Ron D. Smith




The Avid Reader: What inspired you to write The Night that Budda Got Deep in it?

Ron D. Smith: I knew this kid on the margins who had a lot of potential but didn’t realize it. The world is full of people like him, people who most of give little thought to. I wanted to write a novel in which a kid on the fringes of society could begin to see his own worth.



The Avid Reader: When or at what age did you know you wanted to be a writer?

Ron D. Smith: It was so long ago that I don’t remember. However, I knew I had some potential in high school when my teachers laughed at my writing—the good kind of laughing.



The Avid Reader: What is the earliest age you remember reading your first book?

Ron D. Smith: I think I was twenty-three.



The Avid Reader: What genre of books do you enjoy reading?

Ron D. Smith: I like many genres—from thrillers and mysteries to literary or dystopian—as long as the characters are fully-formed humans who aren’t totally bad or good.



The Avid Reader: What is your favorite book?

Ron D. Smith: That’s a tough one, but A Tale of Two Cities is near the top. Love, danger, sacrifice… it has all the classic elements.



The Avid Reader: You know I think we all have a favorite author. Who is your favorite author and why?

Ron D. Smith: It changes daily, but I’ll go with Dickens at the moment because I just mentioned one of his books. He also gets a mention in The Night Budda Got Deep in It.



The Avid Reader: If you could travel back in time here on earth to any place or time. Where would you go and why?

Ron D. Smith: I would like to go back and hang out with Abe Lincoln n the White House, but there’s a catch. I can go all day without electricity, but I like indoor plumbing. Did they have that in the White House when Lincoln was there? If not, that would be a deal breaker.



The Avid Reader: When writing a book do you find that writing comes easy for you or is it a difficult task?

Ron D. Smith: It’s often painful to write, especially the first draft. The late screenwriter Michael Kanin is often quoted as saying, “I don't like to write, but I love to have written.” That pretty well sums it up for me.



The Avid Reader: Do you have any little fuzzy friends? Like a dog or a cat? Or any pets?

Ron D. Smith: The last time we got a dog, I told my wife she could get anything as long as it wasn’t a little yippy dog or a poodle. She came home from the pound with a toy poodle. Lulu is a good dog, though. She’s sitting next to me now.



The Avid Reader: What is your "to die for", favorite food/foods to eat?

Ron D. Smith: There are two kinds of macaroni & cheese. Good mac & cheese and better mac & cheese.



The Avid Reader: Do you have any advice for anyone that would like to be an author?

Ron D. Smith: It sounds trite and overused, but write every day, even if it’s your grocery list. The more you write, the sooner you’ll find your voice.










ABOUT THIS AUTHOR






Ron D Smith author

I started my adult life as a journalist, but gave it up when I realized I wasn't going to become Walter Cronkite. I grew up in small towns in Missouri and Iowa, which make my adopted hometown of Louisville look like Manhattan.

I envy the dialogue of Daniel Woodrell, the sense of place of Silas House, and how Wendell Berry makes writing seem deceptively easy. I appreciate Elmore Leonard for being Elmore Leonard. I don't write like anyone but me.













ONLINE LINKS

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Goodreads










GIVEAWAY




Giveaway USA ONLY

15 E-books and 5 Print Books




a Rafflecopter giveaway



Be sure and check out all the other stops on the tour.



TOUR SCHEDULE

9/10 The Bunny's Review Interview and Giveaway

9/10 Kristy Centeno Spot Light

9/11 Crystal's Book Corner Spot Light and Giveaway

9/11 Jenn's Review Blog Interview

9/12 All Things Writing Spot Light and Giveaway

9/13 Lissette E. Manning Review

9/13 Off the Page Interview and Giveaway

9/13 My Chaotic Ramblings Interview

9/14 Sweet Southern Home Spot Light

9/14 The Book Hoard Spot Light

9/17 Crossroads Spot Light and Giveaway

9/17 The Book Tart Interview

9/19 T B R Review and Giveaway

9/20 Disincentive Reviews Spot Light and Giveaway

9/24 Andi's Young Adult Books Spot Light and Giveaway

9/26 The Avid Reader Interview

10/1 My Secret Romance Spot Light and Giveaway

10/2 My Cozie Corner Review and Giveaway

10/2 The World of Jesse Kimmel-Freeman Review, Interview, and Giveaway

10/3 Books, Books, and More Books Review and Giveaway

10/5 On Emilys Bookshelf Review, Interview, and Giveaway

10/5 Comfort Books Review







Innovative Online Book Tours, Innovative Online Book Tours