Wednesday, 29 September 2021
A Slice of Cake With... Mike Van Horn
Wednesday, 22 September 2021
A Slice of Cake With... M.W. Duncan
This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with M.W. Duncan.
M.W. Duncan lives in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. He has written The Carrion Virus Series - Carrion City. The Athena Protocol and The End Tide. Upon its release, Carrion City became an Amazon Bestseller in the Horror and Post-Apocalyptic categories. The fourth and final book in the Carrion Virus Series, This War Will Last Forever, was released in July 2021 by Britain’s Next Bestseller.He is currently writing the Esworth Equipoise series which saw Down From the Sky released by Severed Press in May 2021.
Independently, he has written and published Only The Dead: An African War. The first of three novellas which he intends to go back and finish one day.
Outside of writing he works in local government but dedicates his free time to making writing his full-time career. He has a passion for music, reading and gaming.
He has two cats, Horus and Nina.
What kind of books do you write?
I’ve been writing since I was quite young. I still have my first story ever written, typed out on a typewriter and illustrated by me. I guess I only really considered trying to make writing something more than a hobby in about 2012. I had some time on my hands and decided to try and write a full-length novel. I feel like I have all these stories and characters in my head and if I didn’t get them down onto paper, I would regret it.
In 2014 I signed a publishing contract with Severed Press for several books so that has kept me motivated.
I don’t particularly like working a 9-5, well 8:30 to 5 really. My ambition now is to try and make writing successful enough that I can perhaps work a traditional job part-time with my writing making up some of my income. I’m realistic though, it’s not my main driving force to make lots of money from writing. I’ll be happy to just tell my tales and get my books out there.
Can you describe your writing why?
I’ve been writing since I was quite young. I still have my first story ever written, typed out on a typewriter and illustrated by me. I guess I only really considered trying to make writing something more than a hobby in about 2012. I had some time on my hands and decided to try and write a full-length novel. I feel like I have all these stories and characters in my head and if I didn’t get them down onto paper, I would regret it.
In 2014 I signed a publishing contract with Severed Press for several books so that has kept me motivated.
I don’t particularly like working a 9-5, well 8:30 to 5 really. My ambition now is to try and make writing successful enough that I can perhaps work a traditional job part-time with my writing making up some of my income. I’m realistic though, it’s not my main driving force to make lots of money from writing. I’ll be happy to just tell my tales and get my books out there.
Share with us your favourite passage from the book you enjoyed writing the most
This is the beginning of my novella – Only The Dead: An African War. It was my first foray into the publishing world back in 2013. It holds a special place in my heart.
The heat created a dancing mirage on the road before me, a twisting of my vision, there for a moment before disappearing. I wiped at the sweat on my brow, and swatted insects away. It was a fact of Africa. It was a fact of Liberia. There were flies, and worse. Twice since arriving in Zorzor, I’d seen scorpions scuttling through the town, once even over my boots. Small, delicate almost, but with deadly stingers.
I stepped off the porch of the manor house, a building that wouldn’t have looked out of place on a turn-of-the-century plantation in southern states of America. It was the grandest structure in Zorzor, made of a reddish brick and wood. The once-white paint now clung scantily, peeling, reducing the building to a poor mockery of what it once must have looked like. Most of the buildings were crude huts with corrugated iron coverings for roofs. I slung my AK-47 over my shoulder and stepped out onto the dirt road. Shell casings were thick on the ground. They crunched and clinked underfoot like pebbles on the beach.
Dropped in the middle of the jungle, this island of calm was restive compared to many regions of Liberia. Zorzor was still, stagnant, and full of soldiers, only no battle was being fought. At least, not yet. I was with LURD rebels, Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy, fighting the corrupt government of President Charles Taylor. Described by many as the worst tyrant West Africa had seen, he clung to power and a fictional legitimacy. His forces controlled less than half the country.
Tell us about your latest project
I dipped my toe into sci-fi this year and released Down From
The Sky through Severed Press. I’m currently editing the sequel – The
Plenipotentiary. The series revolved around the planet of Esworth. The Terran
Cooperative have set up a colony on the planet, building humanity’s first city
outside of our solar system – Uriah’s Hope, but the rapid progress has awoken a
new enemy which will threaten the whole of humanity.
Once the editing is done, I’ve got a couple of other books I wrote over the last year, a standalone sci-fi – The 457 Incident and a zombie novel – What Comes After. They both need a second edit from me before I start sending out enquiries for them.
What is your favourite cake?
Do rock cakes count? My granny used to make the best rock cakes, especially good when they were fresh out of the oven with a light dusting of sugar. If rock cakes don’t count, I’m a sucker for a Victoria Sponge.
You can connect with M.W. Duncan here:
Instagram – mwduncanwriter
Twitter - @MarkWDuncan
Facebook - @mwduncanwriter
Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Mike Van Horn.
If you would like to take part in A Slice of Cake With... please fill in the form found here. I'd be delighted to have you.
You can also support my writing endeavours and buy me tea & cake - it's what makes the world go round!
Wednesday, 15 September 2021
A Slice of Cake With... Barbara Nadel
This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Barbara Nadel.
Trained as an actress, Barbara used to work in mental health services. Born in the East End of London, she now writes full time and has been a visitor to Turkey for over twenty years. She received the Crime Writers' Association Silver Dagger for her novel Deadly Web, and the Swedish Flintax Prize for historical crime fiction for her first Francis Hancock novel, Last Rights.What kind of books do you write?
I write two series of books, both contain accounts of unlawful killings. My first series is set in Istanbul Turkey and revolves around the lives and cases of two police officers called Cetin Ikmen and Mehmet Suleyman. Together they investigate frequently complicated cases in the megacity on the Bosphorus, many of which highlight Istanbul's rich historical past and enormous diversity. My second series is set in the London Borough of Newham and concerns the activities of a pair of private detectives called Lee Arnold and Mumtaz Hakim. Again diversity and history sometimes come into play as well as the very modern problems surrounding life in a city that has become very much more fiscally divided in recent years. However, for both my 'teams' the main thing they have to face is the reality of death - that of other people as well as the possibility of their own.
Can you describe your writing why?
The reasons why anyone writes are many and complex. I've always wanted to find out about things, I'm nosey! In addition, growing up amongst people who were mentally ill, I think that right from a very young age, I wanted answers. Why were my relatives not like other people? Why were they ill so often and what did that mean? I think in part that was the reason I studied psychology at university and then went on to work with mentally ill people in hospitals and the community. I think the 'why' of my writing is an extension of that. Crime and the psychology of crime are areas of study that raise as many questions as they answer. I am fascinated by how one person can take another one's life and what effect that may have upon those investigating those incidents. The dark side of the human condition.
Share with us your favourite passage from the book you enjoyed writing the most
A favourite passage is hard to select. But I have chosen this one from the beginning of a Turkish Cetin Ikmen book I wrote in 2015 called Land of the Blind.
The thought had insinuated itself into his head almost before he'd noticed. Sin could be so easily fallen into. And he had just plummeted. Now he began to cry. There was fear. Doubt was a terrible sin and to sin meant that when death came he would not walk in the gardens of Paradise. He begged and begged for forgiveness, his voice slicing the silence, the power of his words causing the candle flame to gutter and twist. Afraid he'd blow it out by accident, he stopped. The flame became stable again and he prayed in his head.
God was listening and He did care. All his life he'd done exactly what those more educated in the words of the Koran had told him. Not one request had ever been denied. Bar that moment of doubt, his soul was pure. His mind said, And your body?
A noise came out of his mouth. Like a squeal. Then he began to shake. 'Oh God,' he said. 'Oh God!'
Hearing his own voice tremble was not a comfortable thing. He begged. 'Please, please help me. I'll never do it again. Never.'
And he waited and he waited. But no help came. He wanted and didn't want water and the candle flame guttered again in time to his sobs. Still no relief came, no rest from the reality that he had been buried alive. Which he had been.
Tell us about your latest project
My latest book, which is the 23rd in the Turkish Ikmen and Suleyman series is called Forfeit.
Investigating the death of a popular reality TV star, Ikmen and Suleyman find themselves drawn in to the world of Istanbul's Syrian refugee population. Struggling to make their mark in a culture not their own, some of the refugees have been forced into criminal activities and the man found dead with the TV star was a Syrian with a dubious past. While Suleyman attempts to juggle his complicated romantic life between his girlfriend, Ikmen's daughter Cicek, and his gypsy mistress Gonca, he and Ikmen explore the magical world of the middle eastern oral storytellers. Do they in fact still exist or are they entirely mythical?
What is your favourite cake?
My favourite cake. Now there's a
question and a really hard one! I basically love all cake! But I think that
probably my favourite is a rose-flavoured Turkish cake called Gullac. Made from
layers of cornstarch pastry infused with rosewater and stuffed with walnuts.
It's sweet, sticky and utterly delicious. Traditionally it's eaten as part of
the iftar meal which breaks the Ramazan fast every evening, but I try to get
hold of it as often as possible.
You can connect with Barbara on Twitter @BarbaraNadel
Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Mark Duncan.
If you would like to take part in A Slice of Cake With... please fill in the form found here. I'd be delighted to have you.
You can also support my writing endeavours and buy me tea & cake - it's what makes the world go round!
Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. Never miss out on future posts by following me.
Wednesday, 8 September 2021
A Slice of Cake With... Veronica Scott
This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Veronica Scott.
Veronica grew up in a house with a library as its heart. Dad loved science fiction, Mom loved ancient history and Veronica thought there needed to be more romance in everything. When she ran out of books to read, she started writing her own stories.Seven-time winner of the SFR Galaxy Award, as well as a National Excellence in Romance Fiction Award, Veronica is also the proud recipient of a NASA Exceptional Service Medal relating to her former day job, not her romances! She is a member of the Science Fiction Writers of America (SFWA) and was honored to read the part of Star Trek Crew Member in the audiobook production of Harlan Ellison’s The City On the Edge of Forever.
What kind of books do you write?
Action, adventure and romance are the keys to all my books, whether the plot is set in ancient Egypt of 1550 BCE for a paranormal tale or in the far future, out in the galaxy for science fiction romance. The women are strong and confident and the men are sexy Special Forces soldiers, no matter what era I’m writing. (Yes, my Egyptian Pharaoh has a tough military unit known as ‘Pharaoh’s Own’ who are the special forces of their day.)
Tuesday, 7 September 2021
Tuesday Poem - Sea Witch Shanty
There once was an evil witch o’ sea
Who would gladly try to capture thee
When the winds whipped up and the boat sank low
She’ll stretch her hand and strike her blow
Beware when you sail on the seas so brave
Or you’ll end up in her evil cave
Pay your tribute and pay it quick
Or you’ll be drowning in the drink
This witch o’ the sea she speaks to the dead
Never satisfied she wants your head
Collecting souls, she’s black to the core
A necromancer always after more
Beware when you sail on the seas so brave
Or you’ll end up in her evil cave
Pay your tribute and pay it quick
Or you’ll be drowning in the drink
The sea witch she did lose her lover
Never will she ever find another
She whip up a storm in the blink of an eye
And we’ll never hear your dying cry
Beware when you sail on the seas so brave
Or you’ll end up in her evil cave
Pay your tribute and pay it quick
Or you’ll be drowning in the drink
With blackened eyes and scales of green
It’s a sight you wished you’d never seen
Her smile is lined with razor like teeth
She’ll dig in her claws and sink you deep
Beware when you sail on the seas so brave
Or you’ll end up in her evil cave
Pay your tribute and pay it quick
Or you’ll be drowning in the drink
This witch rules the sea with an iron fist
And always demands sacrifice as gift
It cannot be paid with jewels or gold
Give her souls before their body grows cold
Beware when you sail on the seas so brave
Or you’ll end up in her evil cave
Pay your tribute and pay it quick
Or you’ll be drowning in the drink
Shanty taken from The Bone Thief, out November 12th, 2021. Pre-order your copy here.
Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. Never miss out on future posts by following me.