Showing posts with label #Connie Vines @connievies_author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Connie Vines @connievies_author. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2025

My Favorite Character(s) in Literature By Connie Vines #Round Robin, #Favorite Literature #Dracula #Bram Stoker


Thank you, Skye, for another great topic! 

"My Favorite Character in Literature".


Naturally, my choice of a favorite literary character has changed over the years.

As a pre-teen, my favorite literary character was Nancy Drew. Prior to that time, I was primarily interested in horses and dogs.

As far as classical literature, Bram Stoker's "Dracula" is my favorite.

Although the story is told in the form of letters, diary entries, and news bits, from Jonathan Harker's point of view, the intensity of emotion allows the reader to become fully immersed in the story.

Dracula chronicles the vampire's journey from his castle in Transylvania to the streets of London.


Excerpts:

🌄

I read that every known superstition in the world is gathered into the horseshoe of the Capathians, as if it were the centre of some sort of imaginative whirlpool. (page 6)

🦇

When the Count saw my face, his eyes blazed with a sort of demonic fury, and he suddenly made a grab at my throat. I drew away, and his hand touched the string of beads which held the crucifix. It made a change in him, for the fury passed so quickly that I could hardly believe that it was ever there. (page 31).

🦇

All was dark and silent, the black shadows thrown from the moonlight seeming full of silent mystery of their own. (page 270).


Why do I re-read this classic novel by Bram Stoker?

There are other classic Gothic novels: 

Frankenstein, Wuthering Heights, Rebecca, Jane Eyre, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. All of which I have read. 


This is the story that calls to me.

                                📕


And to be completely truthful, reading "Frankenstein" caused me to have nightmares. 


It is also why my paranormal stories tend to be of the RomCom variety.

Happy Reading, everyone!


Visit the other talented participants in this month's Round Robin: 

Anne Stenhouse http://annestenhousenovelist.wordpress.com

Connie Vines http://mizging.blogspot.com/  (you are here)

Victoria Chatham http://www.victoriachatham.com


Sally Odgers https://behindsallysbooksmark2.blogspot.com


Bob https://wp.me/p3Xihg-3vC


Skye Taylor http://www.skye-writer.com/









Anne Stenhouse http://annestenhousenovelist.wordpress.com

Connie Vines http://mizging.blogspot.com/  (you are here)

Victoria Chatham http://www.victoriachatham.com


Sally Odgers https://behindsallysbooksmark2.blogspot.com


Bob https://wp.me/p3Xihg-3vC


Skye Taylor http://www.skye-writer.com/


Saturday, May 20, 2023

Emotional Wounds for your Protagonists By Connie Vines RR, #Round Robin, #Writing Tips, #Character Development


Emotional Wounds for Your Protagonists - And how to help them learn to cope/accept



How Do You Discover Your Character's Wound?

When I begin plotting a novel, I have a clear idea of my main characters' likes/dislikes, physical descriptions, and sense of time and place.
However, the motivation is in Blurb form when I begin writing.

I believe a character's subconscious motivation (emotional wounds) falls into these categories: 

Traumatic Events. These are the ones that most readily come to mind because of their dramatic nature. 

Misplaced Trust and Betrayals.
Childhood Wounds. 
Disillusionment.
Injustice and Hardship. 
Isolation.

Crime and Victimization. 
Disabilities and Disfigurements. 
Failures and Mistakes.

My stories feature the first section on choices in romance novels. 
Crime and Victimization in romantic suspense/mysteries. While Failures and Mistakes are universal issues and would color everyone's reality.

How do my characters cope?

Of course, they struggle with this subconscious issue (as do we all). My characters must work through the emotional wound(s) before I type THE END.

This process is often painful for my characters, as well as myself. 


The blurb must give the reader a hint at the motivation and hint at the emotional wounds without 'telling all.'

With a dangerous reputation for taking chances and tempting fate, rugged cowboy Lynx Maddox had one goal in life--to win the coveted Silver Buckle rodeo championship. but when he sets eyes on lovely Rachel Scott, he becomes determined to capture her as well.

Rachel traveled the circuit with her famous rodeo rider dad until his fatal accident in the arena. Now, she wants nothing to do with that world--or the men who risk their lives for one brief moment of glory. But her attraction to Lynx becomes too powerful to deny...and his unexpected gentleness is too seductive to resist...

The blurb doesn't tell the reader the emotional wounds the characters are still working through.  

Research is the key. Even if you have personal experience, your experience is colored through your reality, not your character's.

Lynx has dealt with the recent death of his brother. Lynx is now the eldest son and is coming to terms with the new reality. 

Rachel's father was an alcoholic; her mother was emotionally distant. Her grandmother was the only stabilizing factor in her life.

The backstory is backstory. I do not paint the character's past with a heavy brush.
I simply drop in information during a conversation and internal thoughts. Just enough information to let the reader know there's more to be uncovered. And the reader expects to feel the emotions. After all, that is what romance is all about.

Interested in reading more of my blurbs? Or, perhaps, reading the story...click on the provided links:

 




Or any of your favorite online vendors :-)


Thank you for your visit. 

Please follow the links to the wonderful authors participating in this month's round Robin Blog Hop!


Connie








Friday, September 23, 2022

Characters, Reader's Intuition, and Deep-Dark Secrets By Connie Vines, #Round Robin99, #Writing Tips, RRBlog,

This Month's Round Robin Topic: What do you define in your writing about your characters and what do you leave to the reader’s intuition? Is there anything you never tell about a character?


This topic will require a bit of pondering...

👦👧👪📚

 When writing YA/MG fiction,/non-fiction I define my characters, my plotting, and characters' histories and backgrounds down to a "gnat's eyelash" so to speak. In historical fiction, there are many events, though historically accurate, a young reader is not equipped to process.  I address this in the note from the author, and the Q and A at the end of the novel.


🤠👢👩💝

As for romantic fiction, I still research career backgrounds, (my setting are towns/states I'm familiar with (residing or numerous vacations in the area). In the past, I interviewed my characters and kept detailed notes about family histories, etc.  I no longer do this before writing my stories. Why because halfway through the book, my characters defined a different pathway--which led to revisions. I detest plot revisions three-quarters through a 60,000-word novel 😭.

So, now I've become what is defined as a Panster: W-plot outline, scribbled notes about my characters, a title, and away I go.

㊙🔎😮📂

Secrets and mysterious background.

Don't you love secrets/hinted-at but not revealed mysterious background? I know I do.

Everyone has a chapter in his/her life they'd like to keep hidden. Or it may be a secret that would blow the socks off a person. Double O-7's life sounds romantic and exciting until you really think about what he does for a living.

A cowboy, rancher, or banker may see run-of-the-mill-boring until you discover a past event that defined him as a man of honor and courage; or an act of sacrifice and kindness that makes you weep.

Visit my Round Robin band of authors, they have great stories to share!


Happy Reading, everyone

Connie

XOXO


 Skye Taylor http://www.skye-writer.com/blogging_by_the_sea

Diane Bator http://dbator.blogspot.ca/

Connie Vines http://mizging.blogspot.com/

Dr. Bob: https://bobrich18.wordpress.com/?p=10492

A.J. Maguire http://ajmaguire.wordpress.com/

Robin Courtright https://www.rhobincourtright.com/


Friday, July 8, 2022

Friday Featured Author: J.Q. Rose with an "Almost Live" Interview By Connie Vines #News Hound Edition©, #Interview J.Q. Rose, #Podcast, #BWLPublishing, #Terror on Sunset Boulevard

 






Welcome to Friday's Featured Author Interview

The format is a bit different 😊 this week.


Along with our usual interview format, I will add a 'Podcast Link' and a "YouTube" link, where the Author, J.Q. Rose, will read the first chapter of one of her novels.

Story Time!

As you can see in my featured clip, *News Hound* Edition©, we are planning to have fun!

* News Hound* is defined by the dictionary:  An aggressive or energetic journalist.

While I'm not aggressive...well, perhaps a little bit...

I am energetic and highly enthusiastic!


Follow this link to YouTube. J.Q. Rose will read Aloud from her Cozy mystery:

Terror on Sunshine Boulevard #3


For those who prefer the PodCast Version: 

Episode-Three-with-J-Q--Rose-and-Terror-On-Sunshine-Boulevard-e1etgkq




Wow! I've read this for this story, and I agree. The read-aloud had me hooked, too!
☆☆☆☆☆5 out of 5 stars.  
Terror On Sunshine Boulevard
I was totally entertained by this fast-paced mystery. Witty with twists and turns. Looking forward to more mysteries by this author

Connie: 🎤What comes first, J.Q? the plot or the characters? 
J.Q: This question made me examine all my fiction books and stories. I believe I have the character first because I know the person who is the main character, always a strong woman. In Dangerous Sanctuary, I interviewed a female pastor and based the story on her. In Deadly Undertaking, I found the character from my experience as an undertaker's daughter. In Terror on Sunshine Boulevard, the main character was a conglomeration of people I met in our senior community in Florida, plus some of my traits thrown in. So, for me, knowing the character determines the location, time, and plot, which revolves around the main character.

Connie::🎤  Are you a morning person or a night owl? ⏰
J.Q: I'm not sure. What time is the cut-off for being a morning person or night owl? I am usually up at about 6:30 am. I have read not to immediately click on the Internet first thing in the morning, but rather read awhile to help your brain focus. This practice is supposed to help you not be distracted or feel scattered by the Internet once you get on. 

I'm ready for bed at about 10:30 pm, but I usually read for 20-30 minutes (or more if it's a great story) before turning off my Kindle and calling it a night. So, I don't know if I'm an early morning rooster or a night owl. 

What do you think?
Connie: I think you are an early bird 🐦 Which I am not 🦉  LOL!


J.Q. Rose Thank you for visiting Dishin' It Out.

 And for sharing Story Time!

Connect online with JQ Rose

J.Q. Rose blog http://www.jqrose.com/

Facebook http://facebook.com/jqroseauthor

Goodreads- http://www.goodreads.com/jqrose

J. Q. Rose Amazon Author Page http://tinyurl.com/aeuv4m4


Happy Reading,

Connie

XOXO






Saturday, May 28, 2022

Stuck in Your Story? Favorite Ways to Get Things Moving Again. By Connie Vines #RR, #RoundRobinBlog, #Writing Tips,

Ah, the universal problem for a writer.  

Favorite ways to get your story moving again! This month's topic: 

It (writers' block) often appears when the story is running smoothly....that is, until either your hero or heroine refuses to go along with your plotline. This is when 'storyland' begins to get ugly!  😕


What steps do I take? (Whining, crying, or insisting your characters conform, is pointless.--I learned that the hard way).


Coffee, a brief break in my garden, or listening to calming music will often work. 

An idea 💭will pop into my head--or one of the 'characters will tell me what will happen next. 


Other times, nothing seems to work.

This is known as the "Dark Moment" when All Is Lost!

#

Since I write multiple novels simultaneously, I'll pull out another story to edit, work on a blog post, or simply leave the story alone for a day or two. 💻

I may leave the story alone, but subconsciously, I'm still thinking about it and dreaming.


 



I can't say I always come up with a way to complete a story, but I do most of the time.  

Please visit my other author friends and find out how they get their stories moving again.

An author's favorite moment? 

Typing "The End." 


Happy Reading, everyone!

Connie

XOXO

Skye Taylor http://www.skye-writer.com/blogging_by_the_sea

Dr. Bob Rich --- https://wp.me/p3Xihq-2CG

Connie Vines http://mizging.blogspot.com/

Anne Stenhouse http://annestenhousenovelist.wordpress.com

Diane Bator http://dbator.blogspot.ca/

A.J. Maguire http://ajmaguire.wordpress.com/

Rhobin Courtright http://rhobincourtright.com


 

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Are You Reading for Pleasure? Or Reading to Write? By Connie Vines #RoundRobin, #WritingLife, WhatAreYouReading?

Topic: How much reading do you do, both for pleasure and for a work in progress? 


This month's topic required a bit of pondering on my part.

While I'd like to happily confess to reading only for pleasure, this is no longer true.

I read one or two books a week in genre fiction (not the genre of my current WIP) for pleasure. In years past the number of novels, I would read solely for pleasure numbered one or two each day. 

Sigh. 

Publishing has changed; authors have (sort of) adapted.

More and more of an author's day is spent on promotion via social media, developing book trailers, book covers, contests, and cross-promotion projects.

Egad!  

Unfortunately, this leaves less and less time for writing ✍ and even less time for sleeping 😴


🕵Here's the pondering I mentioned at the start of this post:  most of my reading falls into these categories: 

• Research for my WIP.
• The craft of writing. 
• Promotion, promotion, and more promotion.

All of my novels and novellas have recipes included; recipes that I have adapted from family recipes or are my personal favorites. Therefore, I have no one to blame but myself for this foray into kitchen time!!  🥣🥄🍲🍪 










Happy Reading,
Connie
X O X O

Visit the talented authors participating in this month"s Round Robin Blog Hop!  


 Dr. Bob Rich https://wp.me/p3Xihq-2BH   
 Rhobin L Courtright http://www.rhobincourtright.com

Friday, March 25, 2022

Spotlight: Alison Lohans, Featured Author Interview By Connie Vines #Author Interview, #Alison Lohans, #YA Novel, #Saskatchenwan Writers Guild

Today's featured guest: Alison Lohans



 Connie:  Alison, thank you for stopping by today. Please tell us about your current release.


Alison: Timefall is a “mature” young adult/adult speculative fiction novel. It evolved over thirty-plus years and is among my favorites of the 30-some books I’ve published. It’s had a very bumpy journey in the publishing world with two very small presses – first published in 2010 and 2012 as a two-book series by a tiny press that soon afterward changed hands. The new owner promptly jettisoned all YA titles. I was very fortunate to find another small press that was interested, and who published it in 2018 as one book under its present title. It was named one of the finalists for the Canadian 2019 Prix Aurora Awards in the YA novel category. Then COVID came along – and this second publisher suddenly was no longer able to continue business as usual. For the second time, those many years’ worth of work went out of print. Unwilling to let it go, in 2020 I re-issued Timefall on an independent publishing basis with Amazon.

Connie: Genre?

Alison: Young Adult speculative fiction, featuring time travel, teen parenting, psychic phenomena, and climate disaster


Connie: What was the inspiration for this story?

Alison: Once in a very long while, a galvanizing image will come to me that begs to become a story idea. That was the case with Timefall. For some unknown reason in 1984, my mind’s eye saw a teen girl and her baby – and somebody in a robe was trying to take her baby away! I had no clue what this was all about. The image kept nagging at me even though I was working on, and publishing, other books.

Quite a few years passed before the image crystallized into a tangible story idea. At the time I was very interested in the day-to-day issues faced by teen mothers, issues their peers can’t fathom…and so, Katie and her baby Tyler were “born”. Psychic phenomena have fascinated me for a long time, and Katie’s baby (unbeknownst to her) has incredible psychic powers. The stakes were raised enormously by developing Iannik (the guy in the robe, a thousand years in the future) as the last in a long line of Seers. A lonely misfit with unruly, flawed Sight, who’s able to open the time channel between worlds, everyone fears his powers. Add to this the daunting problem of male infertility in Iannik’s world, and imminent climate catastrophe in Katie’s and Tyler’s present-day world, and all the parts were set in motion.


Connie: What, in your opinion, what’s the difference between a good book and a page-turner?

Alison: Plot-driven page-turners can keep us gripped as we read, carrying us along on an exciting journey. But to my way of thinking, a really good book is layered and gives us a lot to think about, stretching us. It will provide us with multi-dimensional characters who are dealing with important, heart-felt issues in a world that are crafted with nuanced, image-packed language that transports us into another kind of existence, and lingers with us long afterward. Just my take on this question, anyhow!


Connie: Do you have a favorite paragraph/line of dialogue in this novel?

Alison: A clip from Iannik’s point of view in Aaurenan, a thousand years in the future, where things are about to go devastatingly wrong. (Note: Due to male infertility in Iannik’s time, his life-partner Lieda became pregnant via complicated other means that can’t be explained here.)

Page 192: 

“In the candlelight, Iannik fingered the Seer’s Stone.

This night Lieda’s brow was hot, her cheeks too pink. She had coughed until she lay exhausted. Now she slept, for he had gone to fetch the fever-brew from Daaiv’d. He stroked the hair back from her face, willing all his strength to her. One moon and more days remained before the birth, but restless dreams had shown Lieda crying out with the pains.

Weariness gripped him; he couldn’t remember when he’d last slept. His eyes saw things which were not there, yet also were not Sight. He bundled himself in his outer garments, wrapping both his and Lieda’s scarves about his face. Perhaps Daaiv’d had some other balm that might help Lieda. And – might he also seek some strength for himself? How could he be of service to Lieda, and the daughter, if he himself were depleted?

Snow crunched beneath his feet. Above, the stars clustered thick. In the distance came the howl of coyotes. Iannik uttered his own cry, feeding his pain to the night. There came an answering call. His heavy eyes scanned the great white stillness. Then he raised his arms, offering himself to Aaurenan, an offering of what had once been young and strong.

The night was very cold. It might be dangerous to continue – and was Daaiv’d now sleeping? He mustn’t disturb the healer too often, for Daaiv’d needed his own rest to care for the People. As Iannik turned back, a tightness gripped his belly and then was gone. The breath whistled from him. Within Lieda’s body, the daughter was making ready to join the People.

It was too early. Lieda lay ill.

Blackness squeezed Iannik’s heart….”


Connie: Who would it be if you were forced to live the rest of your life as one of your characters?

Alison: What an interesting question! From Timefall, I’d choose to be Katie, who comes of age in a world that’s very different from the one she was born into.

Connie: What are your hobbies? Do any of your characters share your hobbies/interests? Do any of your hobbies play a part in your novels?

Alison: Music is an important part of my life. I play several different instruments (recorder, cornet, cello, and piano), and also sing, in amateur community groups. Over the years I’ve taught instrumental music as well. Music often plays a role in my books - less so here in Timefall, than in titles such as Nathaniel’s Violin, Canine Cupid, Foghorn Passage, and Don’t Think Twice.

I love animals and presently live with Sebastian my Shih Tzu cross, and a zebra finch. Animals appear in some of my books, particularly in Canine Cupid, released last year by BWL Publishing, and in a middle-grade novel Dog Alert.

Another thing I love is traveling. I find those interesting destinations often trigger story ideas – such as a short horror story that takes place on a cruise ship heading to Alaska; my middle-grade novel Dog Alert set in Canada’s north; another middle-grade novel Doppelganger that plays out on a cruise to ports in Greece and Turkey; and my soon-to-be-released Strong as a Pharaoh (working title) set during a tour of Egypt.

Thanks so much, Connie, for this wonderful opportunity to showcase Timefall!



Bio:

As an avid reader and writer since childhood, I’ve always marveled at the power of “story” to open up our worlds, taking us to new places, and to new experiences, that we’re unlikely to encounter in our daily lives. As opposed to laugh-track-based TV sitcoms (for example) that are geared to reach as many viewers as possible, a book provides a personal interaction between reader and text – a situation in which the reader co-creates the story world through her/his own eyes and other lenses. Likewise, in our writing, we explore characters and issues dear to our hearts. Thus we invite readers into a unique world…which provides a template for sharing experiences one-on-one with people we’ve never met.

Writing fiction provides a fascinating avenue for exploring all sorts of life questions. By “becoming”, and empathizing with, my characters, I grow as I take on new perspectives and explore our shared human journey. Good literature can provide a means of connecting people in this troubled world.


BLURB:

What if you’re a teen mother, and your baby is needed a thousand years in the future?

What if you’re last in a long line of Seers, and survival depends on your flawed Sight?

Two worlds are poised on the brink of collapse: one doomed by its lack of vision, and the other by a vision unfulfilled. Can a group of teens find each other – and more importantly, themselves – in time to save at least one world?


Katie lives with her baby Tyler, her mom, and bratty younger brother, struggling with the isolating realities of teen motherhood. Then she falls into another world…

Iannik is last in a long line of Seers – but his Sight isn’t true, and sometimes things go badly wrong. Everyone fears his unruly powers. Over the centuries, the coming of the infant T’laaure has been prophesied as the only hope for Aaurenan’s survival. Can Iannik summon the Child from the doomed, distant past, to save the future?

Is Katie’s baby the one who holds all the answers?


Wow! Sounds like a great story!

Please follow these like for more about Alison Lohans and BUY LINKS:

https://www.alisonlohans.wordpress.com/

https://www.facebook.com/alisonlohanswriter

https://www.amazon.com/Alison-Lohans/e/B001K7ZEYO?ref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/563063.Alison_Lohans/blog

https://skwriter.com/find-saskatchewan-writers/alison-lohans

Alison is a member of: 

The Writers' Union of Canada; CANSCAIP; The Saskatchewan Writers' Guild; the Children’s Writers’ Round Robin; Saskatchewan Romance Writers

Where Timefall can be purchased, in both print and ebook formats:

ourlittlebookshop.

https://www.amazon.ca/Timefall-psychic-loner-post-apocalypse-travel-ebook/dp/B08LT63TVS\

https://books2read.com/u/bPXLkY


Happy Reading everyone!

Connie

XOXO




Friday, January 7, 2022

Interview with Author J. Q. Rose By Connie Vines #J.Q.Rose, #BWLAuthor, #Memoir, #Author Interview, #Contest

 

J. Q. Rose 

Today's featured guest is J. Q Rose.

Thank you for stopping by today. Please tell our readers about your current release.😃

Arranging a Dream: A Memoir 

J.Q.: I am celebrating the first birthday of my book, released January 1, 2020! The story is about the first year we (my husband and I) were in the flower business in Michigan, 1975-1976. 

Coincidentally, the book was released 45 years to the day my husband Ted and I became business owners. 

We moved, with our one-year-old baby girl, all of our earthly belongings to Michigan to make our dream of owning a greenhouse operation come true. We knew nothing about the flower business, designing flowers, commercial greenhouse operations, and had no family or friends in the area. Through tears and laughter, we cultivated a loving marriage, juggled parenting, and dug deep to root a thriving floral and greenhouse business.

Connie: What comes first, J.Q?  the plot or the characters? 
J.Q: This question made me examine all my fiction books and stories. I believe I have the character first because I know the person who is the main character, always a strong woman. In Dangerous Sanctuary, I interviewed a female pastor and based the story on her. In Deadly Undertaking, I based the character on my own experience as an undertaker’s daughter. In Terror on Sunshine Boulevard, the main character was a conglomeration of people I met in our senior community in Florida, plus some of my traits thrown in. So, for me, knowing the character determines the location, time, and plot, which revolves around the main character.
Connie: What was the inspiration for Arranging a Dream: A Memoir? 
JQ: The real inspiration for the story was planted in the 80s when a writer in my writer's group brought in a journal penned by her great, great, great grandfather, who was a minister in England in the late 1800s. She read his entries in the journal, taking us back to his times. I was so moved by his writing, I decided it was necessary to record our lives and times for future generations. 

I began teaching workshops on writing life stories in 2000 to encourage folks to record their lives. I wrote right along with the participants, so I had many stories about my life—vignettes over the years. I finally took the time to sit down and write about this first year we were in business.

 A memoir is just a slice of life, not the entire story from birth to the present. 

ConnieAll novelists conduct extensive research, even when writing fiction. So, please tell us about your literary pilgrimages.

JQ: We made trips back to Atlanta, Illinois, my hometown, to help me remember locations and stir up memories. Atlanta is home to me, even if I have lived in a few different places. It will always feel like home because memories of my family, my childhood experiences will remain in my heart forever.

Connie: How long did it take you to complete this novel? 

JQ: I thought about it for a long time, but I began writing in 2006. I wrote off and on during those years but really got serious in 2018. I set aside an appointment with myself to write every day after lunch.  

The book was scheduled to be released in June 2020 by BWL Publishing. Still, when Covid hit in March 2020, my publisher, Jude Pittman, realized the effect the stress had upon authors trying to meet a deadline while overcoming the pressures of dealing with the pandemic. She asked if anyone needed more time to finish their books. I admitted I needed the time because I couldn’t focus on finishing up the manuscript. 

Thus, the release date was moved to January 2021. I was relieved to have the extra time to get myself together, not just for writing, but for living through the upsetting and mind-blowing time when the first waves of the pandemic swept through. 

Connie:: We can all certainly relate to those days. 
Do you have a favorite paragraph/line of dialogue in this novel? 

JQ:  Arranging a Dream is a story about my husband, Ted, and me when we purchased a flower shop and greenhouse operation in 1975 in Michigan. We were at odds with the previous owner, Hattie, because we wanted to make changes. The following lines in the book always make me want to stand up and cheer for us!

***
Chapter 19, Sabotaging Easter, p. 94

As Hattie strolled through the showroom, she spotted a terrarium Ted had planted in a glass aquarium. Instead of fish, the container was partially filled with soil and plants. He added little figurines of woodland animals, blue rocks for a stream, rocks, and more natural pieces to make a cute scene.

Hattie studied the beautiful creation then looked at the price tag. “Good luck selling that!” she snorted. The price was $28.00, a high-ticket item in 1976.

We sold it that afternoon.

NOTE: $28.00 in 2021 dollars is equal to $144.66!!!

Connie::  Are you a morning person or a night owl? ⏰
J.Q:  I’m not sure. What time is the cut-off for being a morning person or night owl? I am usually up about 6:30 am. I have read not to immediately click on the Internet first thing in the morning, but rather, read awhile to help your brain focus. This practice is supposed to help you not be so distracted or feel scattered by the Internet once you get on. 

I’m ready for bed at about 10:30 pm, but I usually read for 20-30 minutes (or more if it’s a great story) before turning off my Kindle and calling it a night. So, I don’t know if I’m an early morning rooster or a night owl. 

What do you think?
Connie: I think you are an early bird 🐦 Which I am not 🦉  LOL!

Connie: What are your hobbies? 
JQ: I love reading, playing board games and cards, taking photos, watching Netflix, and traveling. 

Do any of your characters share your hobbies/interests? 
They don’t share my hobbies so much, but some traits like not being confident in the kitchen and hating housekeeping.

Connie: This is a question dear to my heart: Do you have any pets? 
J.Q.: We don’t have pets now, but I had a dog when I was a girl, and we had several cats and a precious dog when the kids were growing up. 

My daughter is the bookkeeper at an animal shelter, so the opportunity to get a pet is always there. However, we travel too much to have a pet. 

Connie: How about an unusual pet? 
J.Q: Do an alligator, turtles, and a snake qualify? My grandson has a bearded dragon. Not fond of that creature though !!

Connie:: J.Q. thank you for visiting "Dishn' It Out Blog" today. 
I've enjoyed our visit, and I'm confident our readers welcomed a look into your fascinating life! 

Is there anything else you'd like to share with us?  

JQ: It was so much fun starting off the birthday celebration at the Dishn’  It Out Blog with you!

Let’s make it a party by gift-giving!  I am gifting an eCopy of Arranging a Dream: A Memoir to a lucky commenter. 

Connie::  J.Q., what a great idea!
We will give our readers until January 11, 2022, at Midnight (PST). 
(the winning commenter will be notified.) J.Q. Rose is so excited! 
As am I.  I always look forward to reading a J. Q. Rose book!

I've asked J.Q. Rose to share links to her website, buy links, and more!

 

Remember to post a comment to win a Free eCopy!  



Current Release: Arranging a Dream: A Memoir by J.Q. Rose


Buy Links: Click here to download from your favorite bookseller  https://books2read.com/Arranging-A-Dream


Paperback available at amazon.com-https://www.amazon.com/Arranging-Dream-J-Q-Rose/dp/0228615542/


Connect online with JQ Rose

J.Q. Rose blog http://www.jqrose.com/

Facebook http://facebook.com/jqroseauthor

Goodreads- http://www.goodreads.com/jqrose

J. Q. Rose Amazon Author Page http://tinyurl.com/aeuv4m4


Thanks for stopping by, everyone!

Connie

XOXO

 

Romance Reviews

The Romance Reviews