Friday, March 31, 2017

Deadly Circumstances: Mary O'Reilly Paranormal Mystery Book 16 by Terri Reid


Mary O’Reilly has her hands full this time with several ghosts from the past, a case of mistaken identity and a murderer!

Mary O’Reilly is seven months pregnant and discovers she has an active and angry poltergeist in her house.  Ghosts standing in her closet waiting to speak with her and her husband’s friend who has changed completely.  Mary’s hands are full as she goes about solving the mysteries to each case while also discovering the thrills of being pregnant – like hiccups at a most inopportune time!

Joining Mary in her quest are Stanley, Rosie, Mike, Ian and of course her husband, Bradley.  However, we are treated to a new person – Ann Charles’ mom!  Yes, the mother of the well-known author of the Deadwood series.  Together they sleuth and solve each case with some very surprising twists and turns.    

Mary questions the choices she will be faced with at the end of this book when her son is born – what will she have to give up?  Does she have to give everything up? 

Very well written with reliable and solid characters that bring the reader into the O’Reilly family.  At the end of this book, more than any other (probably because my father’s death is still too fresh) I cried.  I read with tears streaming down my cheeks because Terri Reid GETS IT!  She knows her audience very well and she knows that they will feel the sadness AND joy of her characters. 

This series is one I have faithfully followed from day one.  I wait for each new one because I know it will be exciting, interesting, engaging and most of all – I can become a part of the story.  Reid’s writing style allows the reader to jump in and go along for the ride; and most importantly to feel what the characters feel. 

One last item that fascinates me with Terri Reid.  Each of her covers features a tree – each tree symbolizes what happens in the book.  This cover shows a full tree, growing and branching out still full of life – that is what this book is about as well: growth, life and fulfillment.
Not one to be missed!

A full 5+ star review for creativity, mystery and writing style.  

Click here to purchase.

Thursday, March 23, 2017

The Heaviness of Knowing (The Conscious Dreamers Series, Book 1) by Sharolyn Brown

WordsAPlenty was given a copy of this book in exchange for an honest and fair review.



Trapped in a world with her gods, Roxal knows what they are asking her and others to do is questionable.  Each movement, thought and breath is monitored; if she wanted to, could she warn the earth girl Lauren of the danger?  Connected through their dreams, Roxal on planet Trebor and Lauren on Earth, they must work together to right the wrongs. 

A well written science fiction thriller with action, emotional moments, strong women and heroic escapades, the author Sharolyn Brown captivates the reader. 

Brown sets the tone of Trebor’s totalitarian styled dystopian world with descriptive details that place the reader into the book easily.  Brown develops the characters realistically, the plot is well written with details that has the reader experiencing the same emotions and feelings as her characters – fear, trepidation, annoyance, loss, love. The decisions that the main character, Roxal must make are ones that impact far more than herself.  

Skillfully, Brown creates her worlds, plot and characters so that her readers can’t help but start to examine their own lives.  For some of the readers, they are ones we ask of ourselves everyday – do I get involved?  What will I do? How can I not help?  Like her characters, her readers will begin to question, if they too are experiencing a “Heaviness of Knowing” in their own lives. 

I cannot wait to read the second book, as I am sure it will be just as exciting as the first one.  I enjoyed the growth of both Roxal and Lauren in book one, I am curious to see whether their paths cross in “one of their realities” or if they forever remain dream pals leading a resistance.

WordsAPlenty awards this book with a five-star rating for Brown’s amazing skill at drawing the reader in and making the connections to the characters realistic as well as challenging her readers to look more closely at their own actions and beliefs.  Well done!

Click here to purchase your copy.



Monday, March 13, 2017

Interview with Paula Houseman, Author of Odyssey in a Teacup and Apoca[hot]lips

  Paula Houseman, Author


Covers of her books




1.      What were your goals and intentions in this series of books, and how well do you feel you achieved them? 
I had something to say. I have a viewpoint that’s outside of mainstream thinking—a mode of being that’s helped me through difficulties. And I wanted to get it out there. Initially, I intended to just blog about it, believing it had nothing to do with the book I was writing, which was a collection of unrelated, humorous short stories. But it had everything to do with it!

It’s a way of life and humor is very much a part of that. And once I let the idea weave its way through the stories, they all started to come together to form chapters of a novel, Odyssey in a Teacup. I carried the theme into the next book, Apoca[hot]lips, and it’s continuing in Book 3.

I feel I’ve achieved my objective because couching ideas in humor is a non-aggressive way of getting a message across. Whether or not the reader responds to it consciously, at the very least, it will have planted a seed.   

2.      What are some of the references that you used while researching these books?
I googled a lot! Still, when it came to important facts like laws and rules and procedures and timelines, I didn’t want to misrepresent the truth. So I called the relevant organisations and asked the necessary questions.

But probably my greatest research came from my favourite book, Woman Who Run With the Wolves, by Clarissa Pinkola Estés. And that wasn’t about researching the book’s content, but allowing it to help me explore the contents of my own depths. 

3.      What do you think most characterizes your writing?
I’ve been told my writing is very real. It’s bawdy, for sure! But the colorful words and double entendres aren’t there for shock value. They’re not forced. It’s earthy humor—a sacred one.

Writers and readers connect at the most fundamental level of humanness, beyond all the social categories that can divide us. And that’s where I write from.

4.      What did you enjoy most about writing these books?
I’m not a plotter; I’m a pantser—I fly by the seat of my pants. So I didn’t feel bound by a specific plan. I let the characters and the story lead me. And that made the experience mysterious and much more interesting. I just never knew where I was going to be taken, or end up. So, I was the reader as much as I was the writer.

And writing is the one place I can always be all of me. I love that it moves me. If I’m laughing or crying or raging as I write, I know I’m on the right track. If my writing isn’t stirring my passions, I can’t expect it to stir the reader’s.

5.      What was the hardest part of writing these books? 
I didn’t find writing the books hard. And that might be because I’m not attached to any writing formula that’s at the risk of not working. I know the creative process is messy, but I trust it. Even being taken into some dark places isn’t what I’d call hard. Challenging, maybe. It’s probably akin to wading through raw sewage at times, but I’ve been there so often, I know that under it all, there’s that warming and inspiring sacred obscenity ... the ‘holy shit’!

I guess the part that I did find hard came after I’d finished the books—checking through the editor’s comments, and then scanning the manuscripts after they’d been formatted for ebook and for paperback to see if it everything was correct. Both are laborious and require a lot of focus. And then, there’s the necessity of promoting the books, when I’d rather just be writing.

6.      Where did your love of books/storytelling/reading/writing/etc. come from?
As a baby boomer, I grew up at a time when the catchphrase ‘Children should be seen and not heard’ still held sway. ‘Children’ really just meant girls. Women. But I was pretty feisty, and I was in trouble a lot because I’d laugh at inappropriate times and I had an up-yours attitude!

I had plenty to say and I wanted it to be heard. It just wasn’t what my family wanted to hear. Being hamstrung made for a difficult childhood and adolescence. Reading allowed me to escape into the alternative realities books offered. Writing has allowed me to create alternative realities. More than that, though, it’s allowed me to be heard as an individual, and as a woman. 

7.      How did you become involved with the subject or theme of your books?
It was about twelve years ago. I’d read Estés from time to time and I found her views uplifting. She shows us that folk tales contain fragments of what you find in the uncut, no-holds-barred ancient myths. And that we don’t just read or tell stories, we live them.
It raised questions for me, not least, if there are only remnants of the original stories in our current ones, then what’s missing from my whole story and my life?
Reading Estés’s book reminded me that it was the wild aspect of me that had gone underground—the ‘Wild Woman archetype’, she calls it. So it answered my question ... but only to a point.

And then, as providence would have it, I was drawn to a sociology course at university that also promoted the archetypal approach. The main text was Care of the Soul, by archetypal psychologist Thomas Moore. In it, he exposes what he calls the ‘salvational fantasy’: Our desire to be saved from our shadow side, which makes us turn to magic bullet solutions—whether that’s a person, vitamin, exercise or diet regimen, or therapeutic modality.

At first, I hated what Moore had to say because I realized I was hostage to this fantasy. I wanted my wild woman back, but I also wanted to be rescued from the darkness where she resides! Like most people, I’d understood the idea of bettering myself meant heroically wiping out ‘undesirable’ aspects—negative thoughts and feelings and impulses. But these things are innate; you can’t erase them. And it’s unhealthy to deny them a place in our psyches and lives.

When I started to embrace this archetypal model that holds a place for everything, life became easier. I got that ‘rising above’ stuff isn’t a sign of bravery; diving into it is. Discovering that my story was much more comprehensive than a fairytale-like framework helped me become accepting of all of it. And once I did that, the aspects I’d been ashamed of didn’t have to clamor for attention as much.

8.      How long have you been writing?
It began with journal writing twenty-five years ago. Both my parents had died within seventeen months of each other, and apart from the grief, I was left with an avalanche of feelings over having had aspects of me tamped down. I needed to find a safe space to let loose without fear of being judged or shamed. Writing gave me that. And the audience of one grew to include others when I started university. I still had a lot to say, and it was very well-received. It evolved from there: submitting the odd poem to the university’s student publication; joining an online writing community; and then writing my books. 

9.      What inspires you? 
With my first book, I didn’t have to look past my own childhood and adolescence for inspiration. But the more I unearth the innate comedy in the tragedy, the more I understand just how absurd life is. And it’s that ridiculousness that inspires me!

10.  What do you like to read in your free time?
Mystery | thriller | suspense novels. I love whoddunits, particularly, Sandra Brown’s books. She combines mystery with romance and sex.

11.  What projects are you working on at the present?
I’m writing Book 3 in the series. But I also have to commit time and energy to promoting the other books, and to blogging (which I don’t do often enough).

12.  What makes your books stand out from the crowd?
Without having read the many thousands of books in my genre, it looks like a difficult question to answer. But I think it’s actually quite simple. When I write, I’m being uniquely me; I’m expressing my essence through that particular medium. It doesn’t make me better or worse than any other writer. Just different. In the words of Dr Seuss, ‘There is no one alive who is Youer than You.’ So, because no one can be Me-er than Me, that’s what sets my books apart from the rest!

13.  When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
A couple of years after I started university, I realized what I most loved about the whole experience was essay writing. And I was fortunate in that I had very encouraging tutors & lecturers who applauded my unconventional take on things. It inspired me to become more daring in my essays. But then in my final honours year, I came up against a brick wall. I had to deal with traditionalists, who were scathing in their criticism of my thesis—both my approach and my ideas. In the end, I tried to take on the establishment, but even those who commended my paper and supported me were made to back down. It was disheartening. But it was a turning point. From then on, I decided no one was going to shut me up again! I finished my first book a couple of years later, and I also started blogging.  

14.  What question do you wish that someone would ask about your books, but nobody has?
There’s no one question that comes to mind. But I’d like to think my books raise questions in the readers about themselves—ones they might not have considered. Like what I asked myself all those years ago: What’s missing from my whole story and my life?

Links:
Author Website: http://paulahouseman.com
Author Profile Page on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/PaulaHouseman


Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Apoca[hot]lips by Paula Houseman




Paula Houseman’s Apoca[hot]lips is an amazing new romantic comedy.  In Apoca[hot]lips we see where Ruth Roth moves on after her divorce and discovering that Ralph is NOT her cousin!  We see Ruth take on her mother and father, neighbors, come to terms with her ex-husband, her children and her new “in-laws” who have special and unique ties to her and her family!
“Everyone fought for a front row seat at the window after I closed the door.  We watched the cops make their way across to Portnoy’s.  Light seemed to be giving Dark a mouthful.  They stopped in front of her yard, surveyed it from the footpath.  I saw the diamond shape in her blinds get bigger.  And Lighter.  Her eye must have nearly popped out.”
I loved the interaction between her and her neighbor!  It made me recall with a huge smile all the neighborhood fights I witnessed between my dad and the crazy guy across the street.  I laughed until my husband asked if I needed to see a doctor!
Then there are the incidents involving her mother, Sylvia.  Houseman relays the incidents with humor but also with eye opening insight into what was really being said or done and how her mother might have actually felt.
“Over the years she’d crafted a whole bag of tricks to make me feel responsible for her misery.  When one, or ten, didn’t’ work, she’d pull another out of the hat.  I didn’t’ always see it for what it was.”
Paula Houseman is a very talented author with a profound ability to be both funny and perceptive.  Her style of storytelling is down to earth, real and importantly funny!  There are moments of gravity, of course, but through it all her gift to her readers is one that is almost a therapeutic session.  She shares insights, emotions and the reality of relationships that both captivates and helps to ease one into looking at things in a different light.
Sure, sometimes it is easier to go to bed, throw the blankets over you and hide for the rest of your life but where is the fun in that?  Where is the growth in that?  Houseman takes real life and gives it to her audience; it is said that laughter is the best medicine.  So if you’re in need of a good laugh, run do NOT walk to the nearest online or physical book store.  Paula Houseman’s Apoca[hot]lips is the book to get; prepare for hours of laughter as well as a book that will stick with you longer after you turn the last page. There will be times when you cannot help but think back to her book and begin laughing.
Her character development is spot on, she is consistent from book one to book two.  Her plot is well written and strong.  The strength of her plot is demonstrated through dialog and her character development as well as witty descriptions.
I honestly have not laughed so hard or felt so connected to a story.  Absolutely brilliant!
WordsAPlenty awards this book with a five-star rating for it's entertaining humor, solid plot and brilliant creativity of the author, Paula Houseman.

Click here to purchase.