Author Interview: Michelle Benningtonย 

Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, Iโ€™d like to welcome Michelle Bennington, author of Devil’s Kiss, for an author interview with The Reading Bud.

About The Author

Born and raised in the beautiful Bluegrass state of Kentucky, Michelle Bennington developed a passion for books early on that has progressed into a mild hoarding situation and an ever-growing to-read pile. She delights in spinning mysteries and histories. Find out more on her website:ย http://www.michellebennington.comย and follow her on her social media profiles.

You can find author Michelle here:
Author Websiteย |ย Facebookย |ย Instagramย |ย Twitterย |ย Goodreads


Interview

Welcome to TRB! Please give our readers a brief introduction about yourself before we begin. 

I was born to a blue collar family of construction workers, farmers, and factory workers. I was one of the few people in my family to go college.ย ย Iโ€™ve always loved books and since the age of 13 wanted to be a writer. But when I was younger, in the place I lived and in a pre-Google era, there werenโ€™t many resources to guide and facilitate my growth in writing. Later, once I got to college, I was introduced to world of writing workshops, craft courses, and a host of other resources, which vastly improved and honed my craft. Since then, Iโ€™ve published a few short stories and poems, but writing books was always the primary goal. Now Iโ€™m aiming for other goals within the industry. When Iโ€™m not writing, I hold down a full-time job. And when Iโ€™m not working (which is rare these days), I enjoy crocheting, painting, dancing, reading, ghost tours, distillery tours, traveling, and hanging out with my family.ย 

Please tell us something about your book other than what we have read in the blurb?

I really wanted to write a book that featured Kentuckyย ย in a positive light. That was incredibly important to me. Also, I named my character Rook after my grandmotherโ€™s favorite card game, Rook. So I wove a few real-life things into the book.

What is that one message that you’re trying to get across to the readers in this book?

I donโ€™t really have a message planted in the book, but I suppose, if thereโ€™s a takeaway, it could be summed up in one word: Resiliency. My characters go through things, horrible things, but they remain hopeful and resilient.ย 

Who is your favourite character in this book and why?

I think my favorite character is Prim. Sheโ€™s a sassy grandmother who has seen hard times and though sheโ€™s petite and delicate-looking, sheโ€™s tough, wise, and takes no guff.

What inspired you to write this book? An idea, some anecdote, a dream or something else?

The book concept first began with a half-baked idea about an amateur sleuth who is also a part-time college instructor. I happened to also be a part-time college instructor at the time. While I was generating ideas around that, my husband and I attended a ghost tour at the Buffalo Trace bourbon distillery. Because Buffalo Trace has a long history, there are a few places on the property that seemed a little spooky to meโ€”especially at night on a ghost tour. That gave me the idea of a murder mystery taking place at a distillery. Then not long after that, I read an article about the Pappy VanWinkle heist, which was a BIG deal in the bourbon industry because Pappy is a rare 15-25 year old bourbon and is quite expensive. Then the ideas began swirling and soon the plot forย Devilโ€™s Kissย was born!ย 

How long did it take you to write this particular book?

From conception to publication, it took me about four years total. The actual writing and completion of the manuscript was two years. Then, because I really wanted to do the traditional route first, it took another two years to find an agent and publisher. Once I landed the publishing contract in January 2020, I had to wait an excruciating 18 months! Taking the traditional path to publication has definitely put my patience to the test.ย ย But thatโ€™s a character flaw in myself that I needed to work on anyway.

What are your writing ambitions? Where do you see yourself 5 years from today? 

I have a long list of books I want to write and publish. A few are already written and need revision or rewriting; a few are partially written and need completion; and many are just idea-seeds right now.ย ย I want to be a full-time writer. I want to write in a few genres (historical, mystery, romance, fantasy, paranormal). While I enjoy writing the fun stuff like cozy mysteries (and I have no intention of quitting those), I do want to write some upmarket books and serious historical fiction, too. I want to grow my YouTube channel and start a podcast, teach some writing workshops, sit on conference panels, maybe even start up my own indie press.ย ย I want to finish the screenplay Iโ€™ve started and I would love to have any of my stories picked up for movie / TV production.ย ย Thatโ€™s where I see my next five years. Will all that happen? Who knows? Iโ€™ve always operated with the notion of โ€œDream Big, Work Hard, and See What Happens.โ€ But I go into my plans knowing that I wonโ€™t get everything I want, work for, and dream for.ย ย I might get a much smaller version of what I hoped for. And thatโ€™s okay.ย ย Of course I get disappointed when things donโ€™t go as I expected or when I worked really hard for something that doesnโ€™t come to fruition. I accept that it wasnโ€™t meant for me and move on.ย ย I try not to dwell too long on disappointments because itโ€™s a waste of time. I just get right back to work.

Are you working on any other stories presently?

I am working on a lot of things presently. When I signedย Devilโ€™s Kissย with Level Best Books, they gave me a three book deal. So, Iโ€™ve already written the second book (Mermaid Cove,ย slated for release in 2023) and will soon begin plotting the third book,ย Unbridled Spiritsย (2024). This week I signed another 3-book deal with Level Best Books for a historical mystery series set in 1803 England. The first book,ย Widowโ€™s Blush, is due to release October 2023, with books 2 and 3 coming out in 2024 and 2025, respectively. Iโ€™m also currently working on a Southern gothic cozy mystery, calledย Dumpster Dying,ย that I intend to self-publish by October 2022. In addition, Iโ€™ve started the rough draft for a historical fiction based on a true crime. I have no idea how long it will take me to write that manuscript because I want it to be upmarket, closer to literary fiction. However, I do anticipate that it will be a 2-3 book series because it involves a ton of characters. I also have begun writing a screenplay, but since I knowย nothingย about writing a screenplay, Iโ€™m having to educate myself as I go.ย ย And lastly, I have two completed manuscriptsโ€”a romance and a historical fictionโ€”that need to be revised. My plan is to start revising one of those once Iโ€™ve completedย Dumpster Dying. The romance I plan to self-publish and the historical fiction I would like to see traditionally published. But weโ€™ll see what happens there.ย 

Why have you chosen this genre? Or do you write in multiple genres?

Well, the very first book I wrote was a romance. Honestly, I chose that because I thought it would be easier and therefore I could use it as a means of training myself how to write a novel.ย ย One of those statements is true. I did, in fact, learn a ton about writing a novel, but it wasย notย easier to write a romance. The romance genre doesnโ€™t get enough credit, I think. Itโ€™s really hard to grow a believable love relationship between two characters and keep that thread running through a whole book. But I didnโ€™t like writing love scenes. Itโ€™s one thing to read them, but writing them felt awkward for me. So I thought, โ€œWhy am I not writing mysteries?!ย ย I love mysteries, thrillers, forensics, true crime books, shows, and movies.โ€ It was a simultaneous lightbulb and โ€œDUH!โ€ moment. Because I love historicals, I paired that with a mystery and came up withย Widowโ€™s Blushย and later wroteย Devilโ€™s Kiss.ย Right now mystery and its subgenres are my primary focus, but I do eventually want to branch into romance, fantasy, and historical fiction.ย 

When did you decide to become a writer? Was it easy for you follow your passion or did you have to make some sacrifices along the way?

My writing journey was a long, circuitous route. I began dreaming of being a writer when I was 13 after reading an Edgar Allan Poe anthology. I fell in love with his writing and wanted to impact others the way his writing impacted me. I fashioned a journal for myself and began writing. I wrote a lot of really bad poetry imitating his style. Then in high school my English teacher praised a passage I wrote for a creative writing assignmentโ€”and read it in front of the whole class as I blushed and sank lower and lower in my chair. Afterward, everyone sat quiet, looking at me as if seeing me for the first time (many of them probably were seeing me for the first time). It was embarrassing and exhilarating at the same time and something sparked for me that day (Iโ€™m ever grateful to Mr. Campbell!). But my road to writing was not an easy one. I grew up in an environment that left me with little or no self-esteem or confidence and some mental health issues. I thought, โ€œThatโ€™s a dream for other people, not for a small-town girl from Kentucky.โ€ Add to this that I didnโ€™t have much in the way of resources: computers, internet, books, writing groups, etc. that help so many people develop and hone their writing skills. I tried off and on for years to write and publish, but it always felt like I was in the dark, that I didnโ€™t know what I was doing.ย 

Through college, even though I continued to receive praise, minor publication, and even small awards for my writing, I was far too shy and reticent to share my dream with anyone or to try to find someone to help me hone my skills. It still felt out of reach. I decided to go into teaching instead.ย ย I did that for a while, but writing was always in the back of mind. I thought if I was a teacher then I could write during the summer months. But I was not very happy in teaching and left that. Then several years ago I came to two conclusions: first, Iโ€™m not getting any younger and second, I want to die with as few regrets as possible. And I knew that I would regret never chasing my dream of being a published writer. I was already regretting putting it off as long as I had, that I had let so many years slip by.ย ย So I went and found as many books about the craft of writing that I could find and began reading. I read as much fiction as I could find. I took all the writing workshops I could find and afford. I had to overcome perfectionism. I pushed myself to try to get published and was repeatedly rejected. At first, it stung, but I knew I needed the rejection to make myself better. I got all the feedback from anyone who would give it. Again, sometimes it stung, but I knew that I needed it to produce better writing. My confidence began to grow (my husband was crucial in the growth of my confidence and self-esteem). My biggest hurdle was completing that first novel. But once I did that, it was like the universe opened up to me, as if I had deciphered a secret code. And long story short, I just kept pushing. Resilience. I guess my story always comes back to resilience.

What is your writing ritual? How do you do it?

ย I wish I had the time to develop a ritual. I donโ€™t have one.ย ย These days, I write when I have the time. Even if I have only five minutes to write a few lines or a paragraph then I consider myself that much further ahead. I write on road trips when Iโ€™m the passenger. I have an adapter that plugs into my laptop and the car cigarette lighter. I write on lunch break and after work. I write on weekends, vacations, and holidays. I write when Iโ€™m in the airport on a layover. I have written in hospital waiting rooms. I plot and plan stories while driving or in the gym or in the shower.ย ย I donโ€™t mean to make it sound like Iย neverย stop. Of course, I do. But if Iโ€™m on a vacation or visiting family, I get up earlier than everyone else anyway. So, I make myself a cup of coffee, crack open the laptop, and write until Iโ€™m interrupted. Thatโ€™s maybe a whole hour of time where I can easily get 2-4 pages written. Thatโ€™s a good chunk. If Iโ€™m lucky enough to be in a mental flow where the words are pouring out, but I have to stop, I make a few notes on the page of what I want to say next so Iโ€™m ready to go when I come back next time. Iโ€™m hybrid plotter-pantser. I always sketch out where I want my story to go before I begin writing. However, I usually go off course about half way through the book because better ideas always crop up once Iโ€™m in the thick of it. And thatโ€™s okay. I just see where it takes me. So far, with every book Iโ€™ve written I complete the whole rough draft before I go back and edit/revise. But then that leavesย allย ย the revision work at the end and Iโ€™m not keen on revision; it can be so tedious. Itโ€™s the part that takes the longest. I would like to train myself to revise the previous dayโ€™s material before continuing on.ย ย I know of many writers who do that, but Iโ€™m not sure if or how that would benefit me or if I would like that method. I might try it for my next book.ย 

How do you prefer to write – computer/laptop, typewriter, dictation or longhand with a pen?

Computer, definitely.

What are your 5 favourite books? (You can share 5 favourite authors too.)

Five favorite books? Oh, gosh. Thatโ€™s like choosing my favorite ice cream, so Iโ€™ll go with authors: Jane Austen, Daphne DuMaurier, Pablo Neruda, Mary Oliver, CS Harrisโ€”It just doesnโ€™t seem fair that I can only name five! There are so many!

How do you deal with Writerโ€™s Block?

I used to struggle with writerโ€™s block a lot when I was younger. And then I read or heard somewhere that writerโ€™s block is a result of not knowing where youโ€™re going with the story. Thatโ€™s when I started to plot out my stories and that has helped so much. Another thing that has helped is that I usually work on 2 or more books at a time. That way, if Iโ€™m not connecting with one book, I can go work on another. If Iโ€™m blocked on that one, too, then Iโ€™m probably just tired and need a break. So I go do something else for a while. Baking, crocheting, painting, reading, bubble baths, walking or swimming usually help me loosen up my mind.ย 

What advice would you give to aspiring non-fiction writers?

  1. In the beginning of your journey, read all the books on the writing craft that you can find, join a writing group, connect with a mentor, and take writing courses. There are many online and community-based groups and programs that are low cost or free. Writing groups, especially the in-person variety, give you a safe place to fail. And you need to fail. It sounds contradictory, but failure is actually a good thing if you learn from it, grow from it, use it to improve your work, and as long as you donโ€™t let failure intimidate you. You have to keep trying. Some writers get rejected dozens of times before getting accepted.ย 
  2. Youโ€™re not a writer unless youโ€™re writing. Get in the seat and start writing. Even though I donโ€™t have a ritual right now, in the beginning I did. I tried writing first thing in the morning. I made myself write every day, even if all I wrote was a single sentence. I kept doing those things until I developed the discipline.
  3. Understandย whyย you want to write. If itโ€™s to get rich or famous, you will very likely be gravely disappointed. You have to love the work for the sake of the work. Most writers work other jobs.
  4. Read everything you can get your hands onโ€”especially in the genre you want to write inโ€”but books outside your genre will help your writing, too.
  5. Everything you write is NOT gold. Edit and revise without mercy.ย 
  6. Let the first draft be junk. Itโ€™s called first draft for a reason and thatโ€™s what revision is for. Just get it written.ย 
  7. For the beginning writer, find different authors you like and imitate their writing style when you write. It will help you find and develop your unique voice.ย 
  8. For those hoping to go pro: When you submit to an agent or publisher, thoroughly read and follow the submission guidelines. And do your research. Understand how to write query letters and what genres the agent/publisher represents, etc.ย ย 
  9. If youโ€™re serious about writing find an excellent critique partner who will tell you the truth about your writingโ€”not what youย wantย to hear but what youย needย to hear. They are rare, but invaluable.

Thank you, author Michelle, for your insightful answers!

About the Book

Devil’s Kiss

Rook Campbell is broke, divorced, jobless, and in desperate need of steady employment, which is hard to come by in the small town of Rothdale, Kentucky. With the help of her friend and neighbor Bryan, she lands a good job at the Four Wild Horses Distillery and meets an attractive co-worker with lots of dating potential. Her life is finally headed in the right direction until a co-worker dies under suspicious circumstances and a shipment of rare small-batch bourbon goes missing. Worse, her personal life begins to unravel as her beloved grandmother falls ill. Normally she can depend on her ex, Cam, for help, but his new fiancรฉeโ€™s jealousy is getting in the way. As the body count rises, Rook becomes ensnared in discovering whoโ€™s committing the crimesโ€”or she might be the next to die.


You can findย Devilโ€™s Kissย here:
Amazonย |ย Goodreads

If you are an author and wish to be featured as our guest or if you are a publicist and want to get your author featured on TRB, then please get in touch directly by e-mail at thereadingbud@gmail.com

Book Review: Wrecked by by Nick Stephens

Book Details:

Author: Nick Stephens
Release Date:ย 
30th April 2022
Series:
Genre: Psychological Thriller, Mystery, Suspense
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 141 pages
Publisher: Reading Between the Lines pub.
Blurb:
Sam has been stuck on this deserted island for some time. How long? He has no idea. He was just about to give up on trying to survive when Desmond crashd ashore. Unfortunately, not only does Desmond not offer any hopes of rescue, he appears to be insane. Sam must survive the island and Desmond while he attempts to remember who he is and how he got there.

Desmond found himself stranded after his plan for murder goes awry. Perhaps Sam will learn more about himself as he uncovers the truth about Desmond. Perhaps he will find himself descending into madness. Wrecked is a thrilling novel full of suspense, twisting and churning like the rough tides of the open ocean.
Will Sam survive long enough to piece together his past, or will the island, and Desmond, destroy any shred of hope he has left?

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Wrecked by Nick Stephens is a brilliantly written psychological thriller novel that I thoroughly enjoyed reading right from the very beginning until the last page!

This book had a really good concept and the execution was spot on. The characterisation was great and I was able to feel a connection with Sam, the main character, and wanted to see how things would turn out for him. And boy, I was not expecting the end to be the way it turned out to be! Absolutely loved the way the book ended. The tension and suspense ran tight and high throughout the book and I really appreciated it as it made the book an un-put-down-able read!

I would strongly recommend this book to all psychological thriller readers. This book has a great premise and an amazingly written plot that’ll blow your mind!


You can also read this review on:

Goodreads


Amazon


Author Interview: Richard Scharine

Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, Iโ€™d like to welcome author of The Past We Step Into, Richard Scharine, from Atmosphere Press, for an author interview with The Reading Bud.

About The Author

Richard Scharine is from rural Wisconsin. A professor emeritus in the University of Utah theatre department, his honors include University Professor, University Diversity Award, and College of Fine Arts Excellence Award. Dr. Scharine has published two scholarly books, five book chapters, and many articles. A Fulbright Senior Lecturer at the University of Gdansk in Poland, he has directed a hundred plays and acted in seven foreign countries, including the title role in Oedipus at Colonus in Athens, Greece. The smartest thing he did was to marry Marilyn Hunt Scharine.

You can connect with author Scharine here:
Author Website


Interview

Welcome to TRB! Please give our readers a brief introduction about yourself before we begin. 

I attended a one-room grade school.ย ย Disadvantages:ย ย No plumbing or indoor bathrooms.ย ย Having to work to the nearest farm with a bucket for water.ย ย Advantages:ย ย Taking 8thย grade eight times if you paid attention.ย ย (Seven in my case because I skipped a grade.)ย ย Going to the library meant only walking to the back of the room.

Please tell us something about your book other than what we have read in the blurb?

In eleven of the twelve stories a woman gives advice to a manโ€”almost always the character based on the author.ย ย Sometimes she shares with him.ย ย Sometimes she blames him.ย ย The title,ย The Past We Step Into, was taken from Amanda Gormanโ€™s inauguration poem.

What is that one message that you’re trying to get across to the readers in this book?

Weโ€™re aware of most of what happens in our lives, but it may take a long time before we recognize its importance.ย ย (I call it โ€œthe unawareness factor.โ€)

Who is your favourite character in this book and why?

Lynne, the wife of the narrator, appears in ten of the twelve stories.ย ย Two are told entirely from her viewpoint:ย ย In โ€œHiroshima 1964โ€ she has a miscarriage, and in โ€œYemajaโ€ she is diagnosed with a fatal disease.ย ย (Believe me, that isย notย the most important thing in the story.)

What inspired you to write this book? An idea, some anecdote, a dream or something else?

I didnโ€™t even know I was writing a book until I wrote the 12thย story, โ€œDanton on the Kaw.โ€ย ย At that point I realized I had written a cycle of stories about the same set of characters, set from the 1940s to the early 21stย century, but with a gap from 1964 to 1977.ย ย The events of โ€œDanton on the Kawโ€ happened in 1970.

How long did it take you to write this particular book?

Iโ€™m an academic and Iโ€™d written two books and a score of articles and reviews in that genre, but I didnโ€™t begin to write โ€œfictionโ€ until my sister died in 2006.ย ย She was the last of my family from that generation (including my wife), and as my academic career slowed down I began investing the richness of their characters in situations where they didnโ€™t always find themselves in real life.

What are your writing ambitions? Where do you see yourself 5 years from today? 

Given my age, my ashes will probably be found at the base of the tree that Westminster College planted by the Arts Building in honor of my wife.ย ย If I survive (given my age), I have a lot of stories yet to tell, courses yet to teach, and on-stage roles yet to play.

Are you working on any other stories presently?

Right now Iโ€™m working on a story called โ€œHarvest,โ€ which centers on a nine-year-old Wisconsin boy taking part in his first grain harvest in 1947, but the characters who shape his life are a cousin (who never appears) with almost God-like abilities and a hired man with a dark past.ย ย โ€œHarvestโ€ will also be the title of the book, if Atmosphere Press is willing to include a number of other stories Iโ€™ve written.

Why have you chosen this genre? Or do you write in multiple genres?

Children always make up stories.ย ย Mine were initially based upon 15 or 30 minute radio programs (Superman,ย Tom Mix,ย The Lone Ranger, etc.).ย ย My father, who had to go to work in the 6thย grade, always had magazines and books around the house.ย ย My favorite wasย Collierโ€™s, especially the single-page science fiction stories by Ray Bradburyโ€”many of which I still remember today.ย ย As a literary historian, I fell into the habit of teaching history through stories (80 minutes of stand-up).

When did you decide to become a writer? Was it easy for you follow your passion or did you have to make some sacrifices along the way?

Beats me!ย ย Following army service, I discovered theatre in my second junior year of college.ย ย After a Berlin Wall-based call-up was over, I was accepted into graduate school solely because in those pre-feminist days my wife had been accepted and they felt they hadto take me.ย ย Sixteen years later, I had directed 45 plays and the University of Utah hired me strictly as a classroom teacher.ย ย Iโ€™ve acted in seven foreign countriesโ€”always with an academic groupโ€”and I believe the connection between acting/directing and writing fiction is imagination.ย ย I always see pictures and hear dialogue when I write.

What is your writing ritual? How doย youย do it?

I donโ€™t sit down until I have something to say (or a deadline).ย ย Even then I put it off as long as possible.ย ย Itโ€™s mid-afternoon before I touch the laptop and Iโ€™m there until the early hours of the morning.ย ย I donโ€™t work from handwritten notes unless the story has a particular routine and time period to cover, e.g. a summer of riots and rehearsals in โ€œDanton on the Kaw,โ€ or a farm to farm grain harvest in โ€œHarvest.โ€

How do you prefer to write – computer/laptop, typewriter, dictation or longhand with a pen?

The great thing about a laptop computer is the ability to start over again, and to save something that isnโ€™t right at this moment, but may be useful some other place in the manuscript.ย ย You young whipper-snappers have no idea what it was like to write before the days of saved documents and copy machines.ย ย Imagine a 1964 graduate thesis written on a typewriter using four carbons to make five copies.

What are your 5 favourite books? (You can share 5 favourite authors too.)

Iโ€™ll stick to Americans and also eliminate playwrights.ย ย As a child of the โ€™30s I was first introduced to Sinclair Lewis and John Steinbeck.ย ย I read every word Thomas Wolfe ever wrote.ย ย (Thank God he died before he was 38.)ย ย Look Homeward, Angelย is the most nourishing book I ever read, in that when we were breaking bivouac during a War Games exercise, somebody threw my copy into the egg crate of a mess truck.ย ย I also read nearly every book John Updike wrote, Kurt Vonnegut going back to when he wrote forย Collierโ€™s, and twenty years of short stories inย The New Yorker.ย ย Alice Munro is almost exactly seven years older than I am, and should she go first, I am planning a Mr. Spock Vulcan mind-meld to get inside her brain.ย ย That girl can reallyย mess with time!ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย 

How do you deal with Writerโ€™s Block?

I know what I did, but I wouldnโ€™t recommend it.ย ย At the beginning of 2020 I had stopped writing.ย ย โ€œDanton on the Kaw,โ€ the last and longest story ofย The Past We Step Intoย (located in the exact middle of the book), was fifty years in the making, based on the Vietnam War protests and Civil Rights riots in Lawrence and at the University of Kansas, where I was working on a PhD in the summer of 1970.ย ย I saw no way of dealing with it.ย ย Then I was diagnosed with cancer, and then the chemotherapy didnโ€™t work.ย ย The answer, eventually, was Imbruvica, but before that was available I experienced some colorful hallucinations, the best of which I wrote as a short story which I hope Atmosphere Press will consider for my next book.ย ย When I got out of the hospital almost exactly two years ago, I couldnโ€™t walk but my mind was clear and, thanks to the pandemic, no one could go anywhere anyway.ย ย In the summer of 1970 I was obsessed with Georg Buchnerโ€™s 1835 revolutionary play,ย Dantonโ€™s Death.ย ย Danton was an actual hero of the French Revolution, until it occurred to him that the only way of continuing the revolution was to kill more and more people.ย ย At which point he โ€œtuned in, turned on, and dropped out.โ€ย ย Shortly thereafter he was on the guillotine.ย ย Shortly after I was home, the protagonist of โ€œDanton on the Kawโ€ was trying to produceย Dantonโ€™s Deathย in the midst of an actual revolution, interacting and in one case, casting, actual participants in the revolution.ย ย As Iโ€™ve said, that story turnedย The Past We Step Intoย into a book.ย ย My methodology is not practical, but I can walk now.

What advice would you give to aspiring non-fiction writers?

For heavenโ€™s sake, write from your own experience.ย Already suffering from writerโ€™s block in 2018, I took a college class with other hopeful writers.ย ย My young classmates, whose accumulated ages roughly approximated mine, lived in a world of sexual and economic threats, reasonable fears, uncertain futures, and about the same number of intriguing possibilities.ย ย And I never read so many cliches in my life.ย ย Look around you, I would have counseled.ย ย Of course, given my age, I didnโ€™t have to โ€œlook around.โ€ย ย I looked back, and wrote โ€œSaturday Night in front of the IGA, which became the first chapter inย The Past We Step Into.

Thank you, author Scharine, for your insightful answers!

About the Book

The Past We Step Into

โ€œTime is the school in which we learn

Time is the fire in which we burn.โ€

โ€” Delmore Schwartz

A young couple finds themselves hip-deep in sex, social change, the Arts, Civil Rights, politics, warfare, and โ€” ultimately โ€” children, as they negotiate the paths of self-discovery spanning over fifty years and four continents.

In the twelve stories of Richard Scharineโ€™s The Past We Step Into, we experience the America we remember, the America we want to forget, and the America we dream of achieving.


You can find The Past We Step Into here:
Goodreads | Amazon | Barnes & Noble

If you are an author and wish to be featured as our guest or if you are a publicist and want to get your author featured on TRB, then please get in touch directly by e-mail at thereadingbud@gmail.com

Book Spotlight: Devil’s Kiss by Michelle Bennington ๏ฟผ

Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, we are featuring author Michelle Bennington for her latest release Devil’s Kiss releasing this May!

Devil’s Kiss

Book:ย Devil’s Kiss: A Small Batch Mystery
Author: Michelle Bennington
Series: A Small Batch Mystery (Book #1)
Publication Date:ย 31st May 2022
Page Count: 274
Genre:ย Cozy Mystery, Suspense
Publisher:ย Level Best Books


Synopsis

Rook Campbell is broke, divorced, jobless, and in desperate need of steady employment, which is hard to come by in the small town of Rothdale, Kentucky. With the help of her friend and neighbor Bryan, she lands a good job at the Four Wild Horses Distillery and meets an attractive co-worker with lots of dating potential. Her life is finally headed in the right direction until a co-worker dies under suspicious circumstances and a shipment of rare small-batch bourbon goes missing. Worse, her personal life begins to unravel as her beloved grandmother falls ill. Normally she can depend on her ex, Cam, for help, but his new fiancรฉeโ€™s jealousy is getting in the way. As the body count rises, Rook becomes ensnared in discovering whoโ€™s committing the crimesโ€”or she might be the next to die.

You can find Devil’s Kiss here:
Amazon | Goodreads


About The Author

Michelle Bennington

Born and raised in the beautiful Bluegrass state of Kentucky, Michelle Bennington developed a passion for books early on that has progressed into a mild hoarding situation and an ever-growing to-read pile. She delights in spinning mysteries and histories. Find out more on her website: http://www.michellebennington.com and follow her on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and GoodReads.

You can find author Michelle here:
Author Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Goodreads


If you are an author and wish to be featured as our guest or if you are a publicist and want to get your author featured on TRB, then please get in touch directly by e-mail at thereadingbud@gmail.com

Book Review: Infernal Relations: A Quintessential English Comedy by P.S. Rover

Book Details:

Author: P.S. Rover
Release Date:ย 
4th April 2022
Series:
Genre: Literary Comedy, Humour
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 270 pages
Publisher: Forte Books
Blurb:
Eloping Has Never Been So Criminal
Another academic season is in the offing at Lockwood Institute, the eclectic finishing school for those who’ve been barred elsewhere. When Spencer and his interloping cousin, Monty, are summoned back for a special assignment they quickly find themselves in the thick of it with a trophy-hunting Brigadier on a quest to slay a mysterious beast, while his daughter, Natalia, proves a temptation too much for the fantastical Monty. This heady concoction provides the perfect ingredients to rock institute life to its foundations.

As one staggering revelation unfolds after another, does Spencer have the fortitude to cope? Monty couldnโ€™t possibly have done what people think, could he? Is he culpable? Is he capable? As Spencer desperately tries to pull Monty’s chestnuts out of the fire, a head-spinning discovery awaits them. Skulduggery is afoot!

โ€œIt IS funny. Just what we all needโ€

Cassandra Clark (Acclaimed author of the Brother Chandler trilogy and more.)

“A great story.”ย 
โ€“ LoveReading

“An intricate and well-written book. Filled with atmosphere … I enjoyed reading it and would recommend it to other literary fiction fans.”ย 
โ€“ LoveReading

“The beauty of this book is in the writing. Rover has a wonderful way with words and I found myself laughing out loud at several lines where Spencer gave his unusual views on life around him. I thoroughly enjoyed Infernal Relations by P.S. Rover which I have awarded 4.5 stars.”
(Whispering Stories)ย 

“Rover is excellent at crafting unique sentences โ€ฆ with a poetic touchโ€ฆ Readers will leave the book impressed by his ability to squeeze all the juice out of the English language.โ€ย 
(Independent Book Review)

“A rollercoaster ride”ย 
(Independent Book Review)

This book will especially delight fans of:
The Ransom of Red Chief (Oโ€™Henry), The Harpole Report (J.L. Carr), The Ascent of Rum Doodle (E.W. Bowman), Diary of a Nobody (Grossmith), Augustus Carp Esq., James Thurber, Mark Twain, Wodehouse.

Review

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Infernal Relations by P.S. Rover is a brilliantly crafted booking roaring with intricately woven English humour.

I recently happened to re-read The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer for my book club’s genre challenge and reading this book right after that one was like stepping into a different version of the same book. I don’t mean that both the books are the same, but what I do mean is that the author of Infernal Relations heavily draws from the sense of nostalgia that is invoked while reading Mark Twain’s masterpiece. I might not have noticed it so acutely had I not just finished re-reading TDOTS right before picking up this one! But I am glad that happened because it made the reading experience of this book even more enriched. The differences in both the books were pretty evident and both the books are very different, yet they are very similar (again you’d notice it only if you’re very observant or, like me, had recently, read both the books so close to each other.)

Moving on from comparing the two books, I loved this book a lot. The writing was marvellous and I enjoyed the lyrical quality of the prose, which is so rare these days, to find in contemporary fiction. I liked how the author used his brilliant sense of humour and an acute sense of using phrases to his advantage to bring out the subtlety of satire in the best possible ways. I chucked more than I was expecting and giggled probably more than I should have. The story had a great flow and the pacing was really good and kept the flow very smooth. I enjoyed reading this book right from the beginning to the very end.

I am not a literary expert, although I am somewhat of a self-proclaimed book aficionado, and hence I’d like to say that, for me at least, the author’s style resembles a lot to that of the revered Mark Twain and therefore, I really really enjoyed his writing and in fact, I am looking forward to reading more of his works in the future (hopefully soon!)


You can also read this review on:

Goodreads


Amazon


Audiobook Excerpt Reveal: Ballad Of Jasmine Wills by Lee Rozelle๏ฟผ

Welcome to TRB Lounge. Today, Iโ€™d like to welcome author Lee Rozelle who’ll be sharing a couple of excerpts from their latest audiobook Ballad Of Jasmine Wills.

About the Book

Ballad Of Jasmine Wills

A zany twist on the Southern Gothic, Ballad of Jasmine Wills is a wild and heartfelt tale of abduction and revenge, body shaming and media fame. Lee Rozelleโ€™s debut novel is the story of overweight banker Jasmine and her kidnapper, the enigmatic reality TV mastermind Preston Price. Trapped inside an egg-shaped studio in the secluded backwoods, Jasmine is tortured with haute cuisine, brainwashed with self-help videos, and badgered with cardio exercise routines for her growing mass of livestream fans. Filled with flashbacks of adolescent nuttiness and ennui in the 1980s, Ballad of Jasmine Wills goes bizarro to explore links between reality TV and the real, intervention and exploitation.

You can find Ballad Of Jasmine Wills here:
Author Website | Amazon | Goodreads

Audio Excerpt #1
“Jasmine and Suzie Work Outโ€

Overweight banker Jasmine Wills has been kidnapped, placed in an egg-shaped dome, and forced to watch self-help videos. Suddenly a monitor pops on and she hears techno…


Audio Excerpt #2
โ€œThe Ossobuco Catastropheโ€

Reality TV chefs Annon Martiz and Morris make a special Mediterranean meal for kidnapped Jasmine.


Audio Excerpt #3
โ€œPrestonโ€™s Deliveranceโ€

Preston searches for Jasmine in the woods but finds a gang of suspicious-looking pig hunters instead.


About The Author

Lee Rozelle

Lee Rozelle is the author of the novel Ballad of Jasmine Wills and nonfiction books Zombiescapes & Phantom Zones and Ecosublime. He has published short stories in Cosmic Horror MonthlyHellBound Booksโ€™ Anthology of BizarroShadowy Natures by Dark Ink Books, If I Die Before I Wake Volume 3, and the Scare You to Sleep podcast

Learn more at leerozelle.com

If you are an author and wish to be featured as our guest or if you are a publicist and want to get your author featured on TRB, then please get in touch directly by e-mail at thereadingbud@gmail.com

Book Review: Sidelined: How Women Manage and Mismanage Their Healthย by Susan Salengerย 

Book Details:

Author: Susan Salengerย 
Release Date:ย 
10th April 2022
Series:
Genre: Non-Fiction > Health
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 224 pages
Publisher: She Writes Press
Blurb:
DONโ€™T MAKE ANOTHER HEALTHCARE DECISION WITHOUT READING THIS BOOKย 
โ€œIf men had cramps, theyโ€™d have cured this by now…โ€
โ€œI told my doctor about my pain for years, but he told me it was all in my head…โ€
โ€œMy doctor removed my IUD without anesthesia because โ€˜there arenโ€™t any nerve endings in there.โ€™ Boy, was he wrong!โ€
These and countless other comments from women whoโ€™ve suffered at the hands of the healthcare industry are frighteningly commonโ€ฆ but they donโ€™t have to be.ย 

Sidelined: How Women Manage & Mismanage Their Health discloses how women have been marginalized and hesitate to take control over their own healthcare. But whatโ€™s behind this nationwide medical crisis?ย 
Too often, women:
ยท Ignore their symptoms to avoid being โ€œdifficult.โ€
ยท Downplay their suffering out of fear of being branded โ€œhysterical.โ€ย 
ยท Are reluctant to question their doctorsโ€™ assessments, even if they donโ€™t seem right.
The end result could be inferior care, which can lead to serious consequences.
In Sidelined, writer and researcher Susan Salenger explains why women are misdiagnosed more often than men, and why their symptoms often go unrecognized or even disputed.ย 
This book teaches readers how to:
ยท Take charge of their health.
ยท Communicate their medical needs with their doctor.
ยท Make informed decisions about their own healthcare.
ยท Leave their appointments with answers instead of just questions.

Knowing how to advocate for your own healthcare can mean the difference between healthy outcomes and years of needless agony or even death.
This important womenโ€™s health book equips readers with the knowledge, language, and skill sets they need to overcome the gender bias that is present in the medical industry and get the best healthcare possible.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Sidelined: How Women Manage and Mismanage Their Healthย by Susan Salengerย is a keenly essential and extremely well-researched book on women’s health that should be read by all women and even men so that they can know the challenges and help out and, when required, take better care of their partners, mothers, sisters and friends.

This book simply BLEW my mind as it had so much relevant and essential information that I had not been expecting at all. I mean, of course, I was expecting some information and advice, but this book turned out to be a whole treasure trove of valuable insights, practical examples and experiences, advice on what to do, how to do and what not to do and if to do something then how exactly to do it. This book even covered the misconceptions harboured by doctors themselves and how these could be way more harmful to patients that the disease itself. So ladies, start by choosing the right doctors and gynacs for yourself. No more going for the douche doctors who think period pains are “just in your head.”

To summarise in one sentence, this book is a must-read for all women and even men, who have women in their life whom they really love. I would strongly suggest this book to EVERYONE on this planet! GO, get this book and read it!


You can also read this review on:

Goodreads


Amazon