Author takeover by fellow author Lauren Nalls who's story, Loose Ends appears in A Journey of Words from Scout Media along with my story, The Flying Tiger.
Author Name: Lauren Nalls Title of your AJOW story: Loose Ends Post a brief synopsis of your AJOW story: A woman flies home to see her terminally ill father one last time. Through her own preparation, she is able to guide her family though the doors of death, and in the process, gets to know her dad, herself, and her own strength. What inspired you to write this story? Therapy. Writing is always therapeutic. My greatest hope is someone will read my story and better know what to expect so they can spend calm, focused, last moments with a loved one How long have you been writing? Since I was small, like so many other authors. I was first published in 2012, so I guess professionally since 2012. What genre do you usually write in and why? Literary Fiction. Historical Fiction. I love conveying feelings, detailed scenes, and beautiful periodic moments. What else are you working on writing at the moment? My current WIP, “Dear Jonah” is a story spanning the lifetime of a tortured mind, and my second WIP “American Gypsy”, is set in a 1930’s-40’s era traveling carnival. Both are coming-of-age novels. What advice do you have to give to new writers? Number one: realize you don’t know everything, or, maybe, anything at all. Be humble, be willing to take direction. Don’t get hurt by honest feedback, you can take it or leave it, but everyone is a potential reader. Have a thick skin but think seriously about what your readers are telling you. Read in your genre, read outside of your genre, educate yourself, write, pay the money for good editing, and believe your editor. Repeat this process forever. How can people discover more about you and your work? www.LaurenNalls.com Lauren Nalls Author and Poet laurennalls.com|By Lauren Nalls
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Author Name: Lauren Nalls
Title of your AJOW story: Loose Ends Post a brief synopsis of your AJOW story: A woman flies home to see her terminally ill father one last time. Through her own preparation, she is able to guide her family though the doors of death, and in the process, gets to know her dad, herself, and her own strength. What inspired you to write this story? Therapy. Writing is always therapeutic. My greatest hope is someone will read my story and better know what to expect so they can spend calm, focused, last moments with a loved one How long have you been writing? Since I was small, like so many other authors. I was first published in 2012, so I guess professionally since 2012. What genre do you usually write in and why? Literary Fiction. Historical Fiction. I love conveying feelings, detailed scenes, and beautiful periodic moments. What else are you working on writing at the moment? My current WIP, “Dear Jonah” is a story spanning the lifetime of a tortured mind, and my second WIP “American Gypsy”, is set in a 1930’s-40’s era traveling carnival. Both are coming-of-age novels. What advice do you have to give to new writers? Number one: realize you don’t know everything, or, maybe, anything at all. Be humble, be willing to take direction. Don’t get hurt by honest feedback, you can take it or leave it, but everyone is a potential reader. Have a thick skin but think seriously about what your readers are telling you. Read in your genre, read outside of your genre, educate yourself, write, pay the money for good editing, and believe your editor. Repeat this process forever. How can people discover more about you and your work? www.LaurenNalls.com Author Name: K.N. Johnson
Title of your AJOW story: Dead Head Mile Post a brief synopsis of your AJOW story: A postman skis his route in a remote, snowy region only to discover someone or something arrived before him. What inspired you to write this story? I came across the true story of Snowshoe Thompson, the legendary skiing mailman, as well as folk legends of the Loup Garou and Sidehill Gouger. I’m intrigued by how stories, both true and legend, morph with time. I think many folk legends grew out of people trying to understand the world around them with the limited knowledge they had. When someone is experiencing pure fear, imaginary creatures may seem very possible, very real. How long have you been writing? Since childhood. I remember a Halloween where I cried to be a princess, but we had nothing of that sort in the house. My mom dressed me in my dad’s shirt with pens in the pocket, popped a men’s fedora on my head with a paper proclaiming “PRESS”. She handed me a clipboard and said, “Well, you’re the writer in the family.” She was right, of course. I’d create little newspapers about family events, miniature magazines for Barbie dolls, children’s books in scribble pads, and even tiny, folded notes for my mother denouncing her for not buying me enough books. My room was consumed with my writings and paper creations. My poor mother! What genre do you usually write in and why? In general, I write horror. Or let’s say, those are the stories I seem to complete. For many reasons, I was a fearful child plagued by nightmares and this led to a strange pursuit of everything paranormal, haunting, or reality-bending. I’d like to think writing in this genre works out my own fears, but I still have the nightmares. Now I just write them down. What else are you working on writing at the moment? I’m revising my debut novel, tentatively titled “The Birthling”. I’m easily distracted with other ideas, though, and am also working on stories about an Amberola that foretells the future and a couple so obsessed with digging for treasure, they risk their most important treasure of all. What advice do you have to give to new writers? Read writers you love and try to figure out why you love their stories. Then, make time to write. Write absolute rubbish just to get your story down. You can’t be a writer if you don’t write, write, write. How can people discover more about you and your work? (Link to your blog/facebook/etc) Facebook: www.facebook.com/knjohnsonauthor Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B01KUNOBP6 |