Interview with Michele Emmy, Author of Pieces of Eight

A while back we published Pieces of Eight by Michele Emmy, and recently we unveiled the new cover for the book, shown to the right. So, it’s about time we post her interview.

Michele lives in Littleton, Colorado with her husband and son. A homeschool mom and tutor, she has written scores of parenting and education articles for newspapers and magazines, as well as fantasy and science fiction stories and novellas. A Clarion graduate, decades of daydreaming finally paid off when she won the Colorado Gold award for fantasy.

Hex-A-Gone is her first novel full length novel and we’ll be publishing it in April. Pieces of Eight is an ecofiction novella about a desperate Wetworld confronting the reality of the world above.

Soaring ocean temperatures are destroying the oceans, the scorching heat and putrid waste slaughtering its denizens. A desperate Wetworld sends one of its own to Dryworld to assess and mitigate the threat. But as their emissary struggles to understand and confront their foe, she realizes that if Wetworld wins its battle for survival, something more vital will vanish forever.

Now, let’s get to know Michele a little better.

Q: How would you describe yourself/life in seven words?

A: Obsessed with recipes. Delighted when sentences work.

Q: Besides being a writer, what other types of jobs have you held?

A: I’ve worked as a nanny, homeschool mom, tutor, presidential campaign staffer, customer service representative, medical practice manager, community and commercial barter club owner and operator, magazine editor, and social media advisor.

Q: How do you go about researching for a book?

A: That’s the beauty of writing fantasy. I don’t have to. I make it all up.

Q: What would you like your readers to come away with after reading your book?

A: Mostly I want them to enjoy themselves while reading.

Q: If someone wrote a biography about you, what do you think the title should be?  Explain?

A: Seriously? Because that’s what I said to my husband when he popped the question, and it kind of exemplifies my attitude towards life in general.

Thanks to Michele for sharing a few things about her life and writing process. Now here’s a teaser from the beginning of Pieces of Eight that you can get on Amazon in eBook.

Pieces of Eight Opener

The language of octopi has no words, no concepts. Only senses. Thousands of them, distinct, each a harbinger of the world unfolding around us. The cease of motion when a predator glides past, the taint of death eddying around it. The cloying stench of coral, comparable to a human with questionable oral hygiene. The soft crack of newly hatched eggs.

We cannot smell, you say? Sounds are muted underwater, shadows distorted? To you, perhaps, who smell only through nostrils, hear only through ears. Wetworld creatures do not separate the senses—they are as tangled as a kelp canopy, accentuating one another.

Even when we hunt, we do not destroy, but envelop. Predator and prey become one as we consume, are consumed, and as part of some new entity, consume again. It is our dance, and we dance it through eternity. Wetworld exists, how would you put it? All for one and one for all.

Octopi are solitary creatures. We lurk in caves, nestle in crevasses—except when on the hunt. Then we glide, a deeper black against dark water. We unfold, senses prickling, until sustenance appears. And then we lunge. Buoyed by a blinding determination that temporarily thrusts aside our shyness—we MUST feed! we WILL feed!—we envelop what we need and retreat, sated. But not merely by flesh—it is the essence of our prey that sustains us, connects us. We savor this feeling, this unity, until our bellies shrink once again and hunger drives us outward.

That was all I knew of life. To me, it was enough. Until the day you plucked me from my world, and altered yours forever.

Interview With Marin Resnick, Author Of Fall Night Fun

We are excited to announce we’ve been working with a new children’s book author. ArmLin House Productions will be publishing Marin Resnick’s second children’s book, her first titled Scary the Scared Iguana. Her new book, Fall Night Fun, is about Apollo the horse and Jerry the squirrel, best friends that live on a farm and venture out to find pumpkins during a crescent moon and the Halloween harvest.

Marin is a mom, writer, and coffee lover who splits her time between Hunterdon County, New Jersey, where there are more horses than people, and Ocala, Florida, the Horse Capital of the World. When Marin isn’t driving her daughter up and down Route 95 to horse shows, she enjoys trail walking and spending time with her dogs ( Onyx, Tommy, Violet, and Molly) and God.

When asked, “How would you describe yourself/life in seven words?” she answered, “My daughter says I am Sofia Petrillo.” I had to chuckle, more so because Sofia is one of my all time favorite television characters.

Here are a few other interesting things about Marin, who I am so looking forward to working with on future projects along with Lauren Curtis who illustrated Fall Night Fun.

Q: What are your passions in regards to giving back to the community and/or world?

A: So many. After living in Florida, I realize that there are many homeless veterans, and they are not always able to care for themselves. I think it’s really important to take care of them, and each other. In Florida, there seems to be an understanding that when someone needs help, you just take care of them. That goes for helping if someone has lost a dog, or if a veteran is hungry, you feed them, to holding open doors. There’s a saying in Judaism that everyone needs to do a mitzvah a day, and the world will be better. That has become apparent with my time in Florida.

Q: Who are your writing influences?  What authors helped you find your own writing style?

A: Sue Shapiro is one of my major influences. The author of the book The Jap Chronicles, Isabel Rose, is another because of the structure of her books. My favorite Sue Shapiro quote is about when you write a book that upsets everyone, that’s when you’ve found your voice. That is some solid advise.

Q: How long does it take you to write a book?

A: Depends. A children’s book I can write quite quickly because it’s about the same length as an article for the newspaper. The Ocala Experience, which will be the first nonficiton adult book I’m taking on, could take a bit longer.

Q:Tell us a bit about your main character(s)?

A: The main character is Apollo, and he is my daughter’s real horse. She asked me to write a book about him. The other is Jerry, named after my late father, who loved the horses and loved to watch me ride, so it was only suitable that Apollo’s bestie be named Jerry.

Q:Tell us a little bit about the next book you’re writing.

A: The Ocala Experience is all about my most recent trip to Ocala, and how I thought it was going to be just this change of residence for the season. But it actually wound up being a journey through my past, so I can get to the future. A lot of childhood wounds healed and a lot of other stuff happened. And I’m hoping this experience will help others.

Look for more from Marin here on our website soon. Fall Night Fun will be in stores late June or early July, so make room for it on your kids summer reading list.

Interview with Wendy Spurlin, Founder of ArmLin House

Hello, and welcome to my interview, although it’s more of a brain dump. I figure it’s fitting to go 1st person considering I’m the one who posts the interviews in this blog.

Who am I, and why did I decide to start a publishing and video production company? Well, there’s the fact that it’s what I know best. I’ve been a writer forever and have written all kinds of stuff. The only thing I love to do more is create artwork, which is another huge part of what we produce in children’s books and videos.

If we start from my very beginning, I was born in the south suburbs of Chicago but have lived more years of my life in Colorado. Don’t worry, I don’t plan to go through a boring chronological recount of my life. It’s just that these two places say a lot about who I am: comfortable in the big city and even happier isolated in the woods. Since you can get lost very easily in either place, where I’ve lived could explain why I’m most comfortable in my own head.

I’ll bring up life during COVID next, because it really changed my direction. Before it hit, I was running a writers critique group and trying to finish up book 2 in my main fantasy book series. Let’s just say that editing my own fiction frustrates me to the point I’m in physical pain. It takes me forever. No surprise, I can be a very unhappy fiction writer. Anyway, I spend a lot of time on distractions, writing the nonfiction I love, helping others refine their stories, and picking up odd jobs. Anything to avoid my own book. COVID was a perfect distraction! I did something very drastic…I want back to school in my 50s. I completed 3/4 of an Associates in Multimedia, Graphic Design, and Illustration. I had so much fun! My doing this kind of surprised everyone, especially sing I had vowed never to take another college course in my mid-40s. Education is another one of those distractions, and I could never settle on a degree. A story for another time.

After all the years I’ve been a writer, doing various work here and there, helping others has always been something that comes naturally. Bringing my long-time art talent back into the mix, relearning art from a digital perspective, has been a perfect complement to it all. What I’m doing makes me happy, so why not apply it to a business.

Speaking of visual arts, I had no idea how much I’d prefer to tell stories with pictures. Best lesson I got out of college in old age. LOL! Biggest surprise was taking an Adobe After Effects class and falling in love with video editing, which is a key area I’m focusing on for ArmLin House, working hard to bring in lots of clients who want to venture into representing their stories with video.

But I also had a chance to reconnect with my roots by taking a drawing class where we used old school media to draw stuff like the still life I’ve shared here. I’ve always had a talent for copying what I see, so this was a fun assignment. Back to my living in my head, spend some time doing this and that’s where you’ll be for hours upon hours.

I really look forward to talking to everyone out there in many more blog posts. There will be more interviews with all the authors joining us, and I’ll be sharing my knowledge as well. And I’ll be introducing you to all my artist friends I love working with. There’s just so much going on already with the company and there’s much more to come.

An Interview with Miranda Tanner, Author of The Mutant Monsters of Marsden Mountain

ArmLin House Productions welcomes Miranda Tanner to our team of children’s book authors. As you’ll see, she’s unapologetically herself and her imaginations is incredibly vivid. When asked to describe herself, she says, “Friendly, fun & spontaneous. Sprinkle of mom, Pixiedust.”

In Miranda’s book series, a chemical spill flows through a town and turns animals and inanimate objects into unique monsters with vibrant personalities. After humans force them to relocate, these spunky creatures build a community, make forever friends, and find their authentic selves, all the while experiencing life through valuable lessons about acceptance, manners, kindness towards others, and more… 

When asked how the ideas for this series came to mind, she says, “My son Wyatt used to ask me to watch or read things to him about silly monsters. He was never satisfied. So one day I asked him what kind of monsters he wanted to see, and I started drawing. He named several of them: Ugh, Pierre, Boo, Flaps, and Vee are just a few. Then one day I decided to start writing about them in poetry–I journal through poetry. Then it just kept going. And now my son Maverick is into it, and he’s my assistant.” 

Probably the best way to introduce Miranda is with her poem about herself mixed in with a few of her mutant monsters.

Norfa, the sassafras monster with crass.

Miranda Tanner is an artist, a writer, and avid gardener.

 Lover of cheese, proficient wanderer.

She collects earrings & Halloween costumes.

In spring she gets excited when the flowers bloom.

Her favorite color is green,

She loves movies that make her scream.

She dislikes being told what to do,

And prefers to wear comfortable shoes.

Walks over running.

Tea over coffee.

Sushi over steak.

She loves to make mistakes,

And learn different lessons, 

in life there are many more questions. 

Her favorite plant is ivy.

She especially loves a great tamale. 

She lives life for fun, especially enjoys the sun.

Judge, the loudest town jewel.
Barkles, looks like a cat and barks like a dog.

Mardi Gras is her culture

Bright colors are her infrastructure.

She never meets a stranger,

Always ready for the danger.

Pleased to meet you, my new friend.

Thanks for reading until the end.

Be on the lookout this spring for The Mutant Monsters of Marsden in Genesis. It’s our first official release of a children’s book, and we’re honored and looking forward to sharing this FUN, colorful, and uniquely creative book by Miranda Tanner with readers.

An Interview with Dr. Martha Lucas, Author of the Catholic Daughters of Catholic Mothers Memoir

Dr. Martha Lucas holds a Ph.D. in Research Psychology as well as a degree in Chinese Medicine. She has more than 20 years of teaching and speaking experience. While Lucas loves practicing Chinese medicine and writing, her absolute favorite role in life is that of grandmother.

In Catholic Daughters of Catholic Mothers, Dr. Lucas candidly recounts memories of her Catholic daughter’s childhood. The book beginning with her parents choosing which saint to name her after and continuing through her Catholic grade school education, taught by nuns, the founders of America’s parochial schools. This memoir portrays strict discipline and rules of a system where independent thinking was discouraged. Everything was forbidden, everyone was a sinner, and every bad action could result in “going to Hell.”

Dr. Martha Lucas holding Catholic Daughters of Catholic Mothers

How would you describe yourself and your life in seven words?

I love my family and my work.

Besides being a writer, what other types of jobs and careers have you held?

My careers have included Practitioner of Chinese medicine, Research Psychologist, Professor, Administrative Assistant, and even a waitress at Krispy Kreme.

I’m particularly proud of my Pulse Diagnosis Biofeedback and Balancing course that I teach worldwide. And my course that focuses on treating fertility challenges in men and women, which was born while treating one of my daughters who has an autoimmune condition.

How did you juggle life, learning, and career with motherhood while your children were growing up?

Probably not very well when my children were young, and I was a single mother working part-time and pursuing my Ph.D. I am blessed that all of my children are fine and they have good lives, but they do remember (and like to remind me) about living what they called “the ghetto life” of being home alone while I worked or was at school.

Maybe this is why I am so committed to being available to my grandchildren. While I love practicing Chinese medicine and writing, my absolute favorite role in life is that of grandmother. I adores my grandchildren and spends as much time as I can with them.

How did the idea for your book come to you?

Over the years, just thinking about being a Catholic daughter has shaped my life. In my adulthood, I started to question church authority while grappling with my own identity. I found myself becoming what I call an “ambiguous” Catholic. It influenced me to help other women move through the emotional issues that religious influences during childhood can create.

What was your favorite scene or section to write?

I really enjoyed writing the chapter on Confession, mainly because it seems so ludicrous–almost funny if it wasn’t so wrong and sad–to have 7-year-olds feeling like they have to make up sins in order to please the priest in their confessions. What 7-year-old has sin?

Catholic Daughters of Catholic Mothers A memoir and Guided Journal paperback book with books2read.com/catholicdaughtersjournal link to buy.

This book also has a guided journal, the questions based on my experiences and desires to help others discover their truth. It allows readers to explore their Catholic mother-daughter ties and reflect on important life lessons. And the questions will help anyone, even if they aren’t a Catholic daughter of a Catholic mother.

What other projects are you working on that you would like to tell us about?

I’m writing an anti-aging guide book about how to age as well as possible. I’m also writing a book about feeling the unconditional love of a grandchild and the sadness that happens when they grow up and that unconditional love seems to go away.

I teach Chinese Medicine courses worldwide including a Mei Zen Cosmetic Acupuncture System for face and neck, which is one of the best ways to keep our skin looking younger. In order to enhance the aging process even further, I have created My Zen Skin Care, a natural skin care line that uses Chinese herbs and essential oils with active cosmeceuticals to benefit your skin.

Thanks to Dr. Lucas for taking the time to tell us about herself. Use the links below to learn more about her life and career.

CONNECT WITH DR. LUCAS

books2read.com/catholicdaughtersjournal (Where to Purchase Book)
acupuncturewoman.com | myzenskincare.com | lucasteachings.com
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