Q: What prompted you to start writing?
A: I started my career as a singer but felt I
needed to express myself by writing as well as interpreting other people’s
songs. Over the years my writing spanned the genres of popular music/lyrics, to
musical theatre, to plays, to script writing.
Q: Describe the genre of your books.
A: The first was autobiographical. The
rest have been paranormal.
Q: Most readers have an all-time
favorite book and author. What are your all-time favorite book and author?
A: John Irving – The World According To Garp – because I was a varsity wrestler too.
Q: What words of wisdom do you have
for our readers?
A: Accept criticism to help strengthen your
work.
Q: Do you ever suffer from writer’s block?
How do you handle it?
A: Only once when I was writing Perverse. I
stopped mid way through, unsure of where to take the story. Six months later it
came to me.
Q: Every writer I know is also, an avid reader.
I know I am. What new author have you discovered lately that you’re reading?
Tell us about him or her.
A: Because of my business I travel every week
which allows me to listen to audio books. I listen to whatever comes out with
no thought or clue as to what the story is about until I listen to it.
Sometimes not having a preconceived notion turns into a nice surprise.
Q: If readers can read only one book this month, why should it be yours?
A: The Judas Robe allowed me to put some
existential ideas I’d had for years into what I hope is a well written,
entertaining mystery-thriller.
Q:
What are you working on for your next release?
A:
“Crystal Vision” will be coming out this year – a YA novel about a 14 year old
boy who believes a beautiful woman in her twenties is being pursued by a demon
– and his family’s part in it.
For more on Larry Rodness, check out his web page, or follow him on Amazon or FaceBook.
For more on Jeff Bailey, check out his web page or follow him on GoodReads or his LinkedIn Blog.
Today's book selection:
Stephen Coonts did a superb job telling a compelling thriller with Jake Grafton and Tommy Carmellini on center stage. You could not mistake that this book was using some of today's news as a plot line for this book. I like writers that take story lines out of reality and then tell a fictional story of what really happened. I do the same thing. The Armageddon File had one of the best and most surprising endings for a thriller that I’ve encountered in a long time. Stephen Coonts continues to be one of my favorite authors and The Armageddon File was definitely five stars.
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