Friday, 2 October 2015

Meet Belinda Buchanan as she chats to Sarah Jane Butfield #RPBP


Today I would like to welcome author Belinda Buchanan to my writing blog.


Belinda Buchanan was born in Owensboro, Kentucky in the U.S.  She is the youngest daughter out of four, beating out her twin sister for that title by a scant two minutes.  Growing up, her extreme shyness led to a lot of alone time, during which she began to write down the stories that swarmed inside her head.  She met the love of her life on a blind date and has been married to him for twenty-five years.  During this time they lived in a few different states, but now reside in a small town near Louisville, Kentucky which has been their home for nearly a decade.  Besides being a wife, she is a mother to two boys – one who loves her unconditionally, and one who loves her only when not in public, and a caretaker to a menagerie of animals which includes a hamster, two persnickety cats, and one dog that thinks he’s a person.  She is also a firm believer that Krazy Glue can fix anything.  




Welcome Belinda and thank you for taking the time to chat with me today.

Thanks Sarah Jane, it's great to be here.

Let's get started then
How long have you been a writer and how did you come to writing?
Some of my earliest memories are of me making up stories in my head.  I was probably the only five-year-old who looked forward to bedtime.  After snuggling under the covers, I would close my eyes and daydream.  As I grew older, the daydreaming morphed into words on paper.  For years, I had this story rattling around in my mind about two couples who had an affair and how it affects their relationship when a child comes of it.  I began writing it when I was in my twenties, and for two years, I worked on it non-stop.  When I was at work, and a certain passage came to mind, I’d write it down on a sticky note, and when I came home, I’d empty my pockets of those notes and plop myself down in front of the computer and type them in.  Back then, my writing space consisted of my PC mounted on top of a small wooden filing cabinet with the keyboard resting on a TV tray.  I’d sit on the couch and plunk away with my first born (my cat, Lance) beside me.  Two years, later, “After All Is Said And Done” was finished.  Of course, it wasn’t long before life happened and I put the manuscript in a drawer and forgot about it.  Then, when my youngest son started kindergarten a few years ago, I pulled it out, dusted it off, and fell right back into step with my first love. 

What are the best and the worst aspects of writing?
The best part is the thrill and exhilaration I feel when I’m creating dialogue and characters.  It’s an adrenaline rush that is comparable to nothing else.  The worst part of writing is that I’m taking the intimate most parts of me and putting it out there for the world to read. 

What inspires you to write?
Just about anything and everything.  My mind is constantly turning.  I can hear a song on the radio and take a passage from it and turn it into a scene that I’m working on.

Who or what has had the greatest influence on your writing and why? 
Without a doubt that would be my husband.  He is my biggest supporter, fan, and love of my life all rolled into one.

Do you have a writing schedule? How often do you write?
I’d like to say that I have a writing schedule, but the truth is I don’t.  After I get the kids off to school, I come down to my office in the basement and start, but the best laid plans of working till they get home sometimes fall to the wayside.  I steal every second I can and usually fall asleep thinking about a paragraph or scene that I’m not happy with.  I’ll wake up two or three hours later, and my mind immediately picks right back up where I left off with it.  It’s an endless, and sometimes frustrating cycle.

Tell us a little about Tragedy at Silver Creek and how you came to write it? 
Tragedy came from my previous novel, The Monster of Silver Creek.  A few weeks after I’d published it, I found myself continuing the story in my head because I realized there was still so much to say.  A couple of months later, I began writing it as a stand-alone sequel.  The story deals with a small town in Prairie County, Montana whose residents are reeling in the aftermath of a serial killer’s reign of terror, none of these more so than former deputy Jack Collins, who feels as if he is slowly drowning as he struggles to adjust to his new—and unwanted—job as chief of police. The pressure soon begins to take its toll when the body of a young woman, bearing the same puncture wounds as the killer's previous victims, is discovered. When the body of a young woman, having the same puncture wounds as the serial killer's previous victims, is discovered, Jack must determine if this is a copycat crime or the work of a possible accomplice—either of which—could put the killer's only surviving victim in grave danger.  As Jack delves deeper into the murder, his vow to keep the victim safe, combined with the secret he's been harboring, begins to take its toll.  His sudden inability to confide in his wife, Cheryl, causes their home, which was once a haven for him, to become just another source of tension.  An overzealous news team, a threat from his not so distant past, and a mayor who wants the murder swept under the rug, only add to the pressure surrounding Jack as he struggles to do what's right.

What are 3 of your favourite lines from your new release?
Cheryl closed her eyes and took a deep breath, allowing aftershave, soap, and all things Jack to fill her senses, while the sound of his heart beating softly against her ear, drowned out the rest of his words.


Katie stared at her mother’s face, entranced by its utter beauty, and yet at the same time, horrified by its indifference for her.


Jack shook his head inwardly as he began drawing the zipper of the bag closed.  There was nothing fascinating about a corpse, and the fact that people wanted to see one at all absolutely amazed him.


Jack’s chest crackled as it rose and fell.  “It doesn’t matter,” he finally said.


That was four. Sorry, it was really hard to choose just three.

Who is your target audience?  
A good portion of my readers are women, age thirty-plus, although there are a large number of men who read them as well.  Most of my characters are in their thirties.  They are mature and have careers, and I think that’s a part of what draws my readers in, as they can certainly identify with the ups and downs of trying to have it all.  They travel down the same tumultuous path I have laid out for my characters, going around every hairpin curve and trudging up every steep hill with them—coming through the other side of it, weary but satisfied. 

Are reader reviews important to you?
Very much so.  When you’ve poured your heart into something for the better part of two years, it’s rewarding to hear back from readers.

Do you have any blogs/websites?

Who are your favourite authors and what book are you currently reading?
I grew up reading Danielle Steel, and even though there have been many authors since her, I think that I’ll always gravitate to her books.  I just downloaded “Woman With A Secret” by Sophia Hannah.  I can’t wait to get started on it.

What would your friends say is your best quality?
I’m a great listener and sympathizer. 

Do you have any other writing projects to tell us about? 
Now that Tragedy at Silver Creek has been released, I’m going to take a couple of months to reintroduce myself to my family and clean my house. J  Then I’m going to get started on writing, The Safe Choice, which is about a pregnant woman facing the difficult decision of staying with her deadbeat boyfriend whom she loves for inexplicable reasons, or marrying her best friend. 

If you could share one thing about yourself that you would like readers
to know, what would it be? 
That I can be bought with a KitKat.

I love that you can be bought with a chocolate bar, I am the same, but my chocolate of choice would be a Twirl!

Thank you for a great interview, Belinda.

Readers, here are all the links you need to check out Belinda and her books.
Thank you for reading and be sure to share, tweet  and comment :)

Sarah Jane


Book trailer for The Monster of Silver Creek





Book Links:
After All Is Said And Done - Amazon   Barnes & Noble  itunes
Seasons of Darkness - Amazon  Barnes & Noble  itunes
The Monster of Silver Creek – Amazon  Barnes & Noble  itunes
Tragedy at Silver Creek – Amazon  Barnes & Noble  itunes







Rukia Publishing pages:

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Big Book News... John Searancke has a spectacular new release!!! #RPBP


I have some amazing book news, my talented friend John Searancke has a new release. Take a look and be sure to share the news!


http://smarturl.it/Prunesebook

Prunes for Breakfast 
ebook available NOW!!

 http://smarturl.it/Prunesebook

John Searancke


Prunes for Breakfast 
by John Searancke
This is the story of John Searancke's parents, told mostly from the side of his father, Eddie Searancke, from the time of his calling up in early 1940 to his release from a prisoner of war camp in Germany in 1945, thence his return to England to try to pick up the pieces of his old life. Nothing could ever be quite the same afterwards. The letters take readers through five captivating years, telling of the ups and downs, the plots and counterplots, as Eddie rose through the ranks to end his war as a captain, elevated to that rank in the field as his troops faced the formidable might of the SS Panzers. The letters also reveal where his battle came to an abrupt end, in an orchard surrounded by the enemy and captured after a series of bloody skirmishes as the British army spearheaded its way from the beaches of Normandy. The journey as a prisoner across France and Germany in a truck, with comrades dying each day, may be as hard to read as it is to tell, particularly when a new life and new harsh rules had to be learned and rigidly enforced in a prison camp in northern Germany, the final destination. This is written as part memoir, part fictionalised retelling and partly in letter format; John draws together all sources to recreate the five years of war and hardship that the letters span.

New Release on Amazon

Friday, 18 September 2015

Authors unite for MacMillan Cancer Support Worlds Biggest Coffee Morning #RPBP




On 25th September, it's time for the MacMillan Cancer Support World's Biggest Coffee Morning. I will be co-hosting a coffee morning at The Coach House in Neath, South Wales. However, to maximise the money we hope to raise for this good cause, which is very dear to my heart, we are putting together some giveaways and competitions in association with some of my fellow authors who have donated ebooks for our event.



The MacMillan Cancer Support message:

The World’s Biggest Coffee Morning is Macmillan’s biggest fundraising event for people facing cancer. We ask people all over the UK to host their own Coffee Mornings and donations on the day are made to Macmillan. Last year alone we raised £25 million and this year we are aiming to raise even more.
DONATE now!






Contributing authors to date:

Shirley Ledlie - Naked In The Wind & The Unexpected Pilgrim
Jacky Donovan - Simon Ships Out
Robert Fear - Fred's Diary 1981 advance copy of the second edition
Jackie Parry - Of Foreign Build & A Standard Journey
Susan Joyce - The Lullaby Illusion
Ann Patras - Into Africa
Victoria Twead - Chickens, Mules and Two Old Fools & One Young Fool in Dorset
Frank Kusy - Too Young To Be Old
Sandra Staas - Aventuras in Spain  a memoir
Tony James Slater - The Bear Who Ate My Pants, Kamikaze Kangaroos, Don't Need The Whole Dog & Can I Kiss Her Yet?
Julie Freed - Naked
Janet Givens - At Home On The Kazakh Steppe
Cherry Gregory - The Girl From Ithaca, The Walls Of Troy
Sarah Jane Butfield - Ooh Matron, Glass Half Full, Two Dogs and A Suitcase, Our Frugal Summer in Charente

Would you like to win an ebook copy of one of these?





                     







                       












VISIT,  LIKE and SHARE our official Facebook page to enter the first giveaway prize draw!!!

















Authors: If any of you would like to get involved by donating an ebook simply email me a jpg cover image and a mobi file copy of your book.
Readers: You can help by liking/sharing the Facebook posts, taking part in the competitions, etc., and donating via the DONATE button at the top right of this blog page.

Thank you for reading and be sure to watch for updates, and giveaways over the coming week.
Please share or tweet this post to increase exposure for this very deserving cause.

Sarah Jane



Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Ooh Matron! Soundtrack - the winners take us back to 1980s in style! #RPBP





On 14th September, I released book one, Ooh Matron, my new nursing memoir in The Nomadic Nurse Series, with a Facebook Launch Party. This was my first attempt at a social media party and I admit to being somewhat nervous, not least in case no one interacted with me throughout the day. As much as I tried to prepare, the reality was that I made it up as I went along responding to the party-goers and the atmosphere created as they started to join in.
The result was over 16 hours of music, movies, fun, competitions and book sales!

One of the competitions set was to help me compile a soundtrack to accompany, Ooh Matron! A nursing/medical memoir set in the 1980s. The eighties theme proved very popular and, as a result, there were over 50 entries!
It has taken me some time to go through the threads to short-list one song from each year between 1981 and 1987.
The winners are the party-goers who nominated the song, so here we go:

The Soundtrack to Ooh Matron!

1981 = The Best That You Can Do (Arthur's theme)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4rT9C5aV5A
Nominated Charles Bradley Cross

1982 = Africa - Toto
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTQbiNvZqaY
Nominated by Rachel O'Flynn

1983 = I'm Still Standing - Elton John
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHwVBirqD2s
Nominated by Samantha Parker

1984 = You're The Inspiration - Chicago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQmqU7OF-TI
Nominated by Susan Joyce

1985 = The Power of Love - Huey Lewis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkAVfsw5xSQ
Nominated by Shontae Brewster

1986 = A Kind Of Magic - Queen
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0p_1QSUsbsM
Nominated by Julie Haigh

1987 = (I've had) The Time Of My Life - Bill Medley & Jennifer Warnes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNnbffydhVw
Nominated by Martin Papworth

If your name appears on the list contact me on Facebook to claim your ebook!

Thank you to everyone who visited, took part or sent their best wishes, before and after the party. The level of support has been outstanding and very humbling. I hope you enjoyed the celebrations and for those who now have a copy of Ooh Matron! I hope you enjoy the first part of my nursing journey.

http://bit.ly/OohmatronAWS

5.0 out of 5 stars Just what the doctor ordered! 15 Sept. 2015
Format:Kindle Edition|Verified Purchase
Having recently worked within the NHS, I was immediately drawn to this memoir by an accomplished author of the genre. Once started I found it difficult to put down, easily captivated by this collection of amusing, poignant, but overall honest accounts of the author’s adventures and misadventures as a young nurse in the 1980’s. Beginning as a naive 16yr old we follow this young girl as she steps into the world of student life, bedpans and hypodermics. There were lots to fondly identify with as the author captures the period perfectly. I laughed out loud at the hilarious antics, and was sobered by the genuine emotional moments that all health professionals will recognise. This is a book that will make you laugh and cry and you’ll feel better for it - The perfect prescription.

An entertaining, amusing read – just what the doctor ordered!




Friday, 11 September 2015

Breaking News! Final days of introductory price memoir Ooh Matron! #RPBP


With excitement building for readers who have pre-ordered, for me it was anxiety, until today. The first Advance Reader Copy Review went live on Goodreads. 
5 stars from an experienced reviewer and big medical memoir fan, Julie Haigh, who is very well-read in this genre! Only a little bit of pressure there then to get it right :)



5 stars *****

Ooh-it was great! I LOVED it!

I've read all of Sarah Jane Butfield's previous memoirs about moving abroad to Australia and France and really enjoyed them. I must say, I do have a soft spot for medical memoirs-I love them-and I certainly LOVED this! Even in the early section, I was feeling eager to read it, it was catching my interest immediately. I was due to start work and had to keep nipping back for a quick look at 'just a bit more' before I had to go. The book starts where Sarah Jane is just sixteen, it's the early 80s and she begins training to be a nurse. There's quite a bit of introductory matter before it gets going-but I still found this enormously interesting and relevant-eg. the explanation of the title, and the review from an advance reader makes it sound so tempting too-you just have to read on! There's quite a trip down memory lane with the mentions of the Carry On Films. I loved getting to know the young Sarah Jane after having read all her other books set in more recent times. This is a really refreshing change hearing about her earlier life. It's packed with info about the tasks the student nurses did, the things they learned. Later, there was more nostalgia-I had forgotten about this TV series-General Hospital! Next subject covered is student nurse life-and partying! Some very helpful links are included to explanations of things-eg the Australian lift-and a YouTube video link to illustrate this also-what a great idea. I love the rhyming chapter title-and there are a few chuckles here, their antics! Next, she worked on the geriatric ward as part of her training. There's a great insight into the tasks she had to do serving her time district nursing. Here are mentioned the various bowel procedures! Many times in this chapter I was thinking: oh yak, oh no, oh my goodness-the things she had to do! A very interesting chapter. I also enjoyed the bit of history about the area which tied-in. Next placement is at a maternity hospital. There is such an amusing scene, I loved how this was written, a lovely chapter with a chuckle at the end. A really feel-good read at this point. Obviously, with this profession, there are harder times too. Oh, I really enjoyed this! Just my sort of book. It's been really interesting to hear about the different and varied medical fields she's worked in. So varied, more placements include caring for patients who have attempted suicide, on the operating theatre site suite and on the children's ward. Practical jokes are played on the students, Sarah Jane was on the receiving end of a few of these. We get to hear about workplace affairs-I love behind the scenes books like this! An excellent inclusion is a chapter written by Sarah Jane's step-daughter, Claire, who has just completed training as a nurse and she gives a comparison of how it is now to go alongside Sarah Jane's experiences in the 80s. A period of training and working in the A & E brings some aarrrggghhh tales! I like how she explains things as she goes along AND includes a glossary at the end as well of quite a few medical terms/diseases etc. I've read quite a few medical memoirs so I'd heard and knew most of these but I think it's a good idea to have this for people who haven't read many or any of this type of book before. An assortment of amusing, interesting, surprising and emotional stories. A pleasure to read. Her best yet!

How do we celebrate this new series? With a party of course!

OOH MATRON! Launch day party takes place on Monday 14th September, be there or be square. 
We have lots of fun and prizes lined up! Join in now, on the link below, as there will be some pre-party activity and chances to win copies of 'Ooh Matron!' and other books.





Until release day, you can pre-order your copy for £2.99 or £1.99 
Find the links to all the pre-order bookstores on my author website link below.


What's it about?

Sarah Jane has no career aspirations, all she wants is to leave school, work as a cashier at Woolworths and get married. Then everything changes and she finds herself wearing a fluorescent pink uniform and studying to get into Nursing School. What inspired this surprising change of direction? What happens when she leaves home to live in a garrison town with a housemate who is a party animal? The big question being, is she really cut out to be a nurse? 
Let's start at the beginning with Sarah Jane as a sixteen-year-old country girl, a bit old fashioned but who has a mischievous sense of humour and who suddenly decides she wants to be a nurse! 

"This funny, yet poignant nursing memoir has Sarah Jane's trademark honest writing style which shines through in every story she tells. From starting her student nurse training in Essex to coping with patients in happy, sad and heart-breaking situations. It gives you a young woman's view into the realities of entering the world of nursing in the 1980’s. A highly entertaining and informative memoir which was able to take me from laughing out loud to having welled tears of empathy." S. Brewster 

Enjoy some 1980s nostalgia

Sunday, 30 August 2015

Meet Charles Cross #RPBP

Meet debut author Charles Cross, who has just released his book of poems entitled, If I Settle Down.

Charles Cross lives alone in East Tennessee where he is buried alive underneath the dogged pursuit of credit card companies and unpaid student loans.


I recently interviewed Charles for my Rukia Publishing blog take a look here. This is a talented author who we will be seeing a lot more of....Watch this space and remember who told you first!

Get your copy of this new release at:
B&N 
Goodreads 
Amazon ebooks
Amazon paperback

Saturday, 29 August 2015

Part 2 in my 'Behind the scenes' series - today featuring The Black Rose #RPBP


Welcome to the behind the scenes series from the Rukia featured authors. Today we welcome back The Black Rose for part two of the making of The Yugoslavian.
If you missed part one you can find it here

We would love to get your feedback so please leave a comment.

The Making of The Yugoslavian – Part Two

In Search of the Perfect Cover Photo

Here we go, this was a challenge. I started laying out book covers back in 1995. I tried images that looked like postcards, searched the Internet for images to purchase, created a plain cover…nothing quite fit the story. In 2012, when I gave myself a deadline to publish the story, I again started searching for the perfect cover photo. It had to be a photograph that captured the mood of the novel. Unlike my other series, The Killing Game Series, which is more of a dark drama, this story always gave me a sense of the color gray or blue.

Again, I searched online. The years made a difference on what could be purchased from stock photo companies. I searched, but nothing was right. Being a photographer, I almost always have some form of a camera in my possession. In the morning when I’m out in the yard with my pup, I’m usually photographing her. (Last count was about 8 years ago and I had a little over 17,000 photographs of her. I can only imagine how many I’ve taken since.) The view from the yard is spectacular, especially in winter. I had spent a good deal of time photographing the woods and I was intrigued by the trees across the lake approximately half a mile away. I spent several days the winter of 2013 capturing images. I transferred the photographs to my computer, not actually examining them because I could take 100 or so in any one session.

Spring came and I thought perhaps a cemetery would give me the atmosphere I sought. I wrote to two of the larger historic cemeteries just outside of Manhattan, gained permission to photograph there and found several worthy statues. Even with the fabulous shots I took, the cover wasn’t coming from that session.

Typically the way I photograph is shooting a series of the very same subject, changing lighting, angle, etc. Most of the time I will do what I call a sweep, using the motor drive at high speed to reduce blur when not using a tripod. That sometimes provides hundreds of photographs to examine and look through. That is time-consuming, but a valuable practice because each millisecond the light changes and the captured essence in one shot may not have been in the shot before or just after.

I went back and began reviewing all the winter shots I had and there were three photographs, taken in succession, of three different locations of the trees across the lake all on February 11, 2013. The first was taken at 1:00 pm, the second at 1:02 pm, and the third at 1:03 pm.





Nothing was taken in between. The time lapse was me moving from one location to the next. Three individual scenes, all beautiful and secretive. My goal was to see the trees across the lake while simultaneously creating a mystery as if someone is looking through binoculars or perhaps a rifle scope. Someone who is hiding, someone who doesn’t want to be seen. The winner was obvious. After manipulating the color to bring out the blue emotion, the end result was:





After changing the hue, finding the right lightness and adding the text, the front cover was perfect for the story. This is the final product.


Quite often I get scolded for obscuring my name. But the story is about the characters, even if my heart and soul are behind each and every word. Writing is an art. Once you have committed your story to paper, finding the perfect image to reflect what your heart has transcribed is sometimes the hardest part of the entire writing process. It is said,“You can’t judge a book by its cover.” They’re right. Just as you can’t judge a book by its title (another thing I hear about from people). Yet it is true. “A picture is worth a thousand words.” And even if everyone doesn’t see the wintery mystery of someone spying through the trees in this cover, my heart is content in knowing no other image could take its place.

In the end, the perfect cover photograph was right in my backyard…

If you would like to connect with The Black Rose or see more of her photography or get a copy of The Yugoslavian here are the links you need:

http://smarturl.it/TYTBR (Amazon)
http://smarturl.it/YugoslavianBN15 (Barnes & Noble)
Amazon look inside feature
The Yugoslavian page from theblackrosenyc.com
The soundtrack to The Yugoslavian
Book Trailer The Wanted Man
Tess Travel Journal YouTube


Friday, 14 August 2015

How fiction authors develop an idea into a captivating novel #RPBP

http://smarturl.it/YUGO15


Welcome to my guest blogger today The Black Rose. Ever since my first read of The Yugoslavian, I have been a huge fan of her work. It always interests me, as non-fiction author, how fiction authors develop an idea into a captivating novel and what other elements need to be considered  to maintain authenticity. I hand you over to The Black Rose for part one of this insightful guest blog.







Hello Sarah Jane, thanks for inviting me to talk about how I work and what goes on behind the scenes. I have divided this feature into two parts. The first part includes talking about writing The Yugoslavian without actually being in Sarajevo. What motivated me and the decisions for the story line along with why the book is more pro-Serb than anti-Serb. In the second part, I talk about my decades-long search for the perfect cover photo. I stressed over it—it had to be perfect. Tried a few things that didn’t do it for me and eventually found the perfect cover in my own back yard…literally. 

The Making of The Yugoslavian – Part One

Writing it without having been there 
I’m not certain how it happened, but it did. I was in the throws of writing The Killing Game and one day I looked at a photograph of a man and directly into his eyes, a man from the former Yugoslavia. In my head, I heard a man’s voice, “Write a story about my country.” I heard that voice in my head so clearly as if whoever he was right there with me. Whose voice was it I heard? God’s? My favorite, Archangel Michael’s? Or someone else’s? It was difficult to know, but it was an idea I could not let go of. I tried not to think about it, but again, within about fifteen minutes to half an hour, I was busily typing the opening sequence on my computer.At that point, I had written the story from beginning to end inside my head and it was now clamoring to get out. This was during the Christmas holiday of 1994 when the siege for Sarajevo was hot and heavy. I had read and listened to the news about the war, but I did not quite understand it. The press painted the reason behind the war as “ethnic cleansing due to religious differences” but that sounded so bogus. So I started to dig. I started asking questions and found that most of the facts were cloaked in the propaganda of the war’s side effects. I started searching for people from the former Yugoslavia and I found them. I asked questions and received many different points of view--it was a bit mind boggling.

From all the information I gleaned, there was more confusion than sense to be made of it all. That, in essence, was the crux of the war and would be the backdrop of my story. Misconceptions, lies, deceptions, loss and, lost causes gave me only a few choices for conjuring a story about a place I had neither traveled to nor seen the war up close. Actually, I’ve never seen war up close. I have seen a lot of things in life but not war. So how do I write about it?

First, I had to decide what the story would be about. That took a whole of two seconds. I write about interpersonal relationships (let’s call it IR for this segment).And what sort of IR would this story be about? Naturally a man and woman, but not the typical man/woman relationship. War would cause issues, would it not? Are they both from Yugoslavia or from somewhere else? If they were from the same country, they might be clawing to get out of there. If from different countries, how would they get in? Or better, why?

At the time, there were several movies in the works about this situation but my story had to be different. Nothing yet told the everyday stories of those who fought to stay alive in this war. I wanted my story to be about that. No one spoke about the everyday heroes that stove to help others who could not help themselves. The news made it sound as if the civilian populace were rabid dogs,fighting with anyone and everyone to get what they could. And that was only when they cared to report on civilians other than the major atrocities. But the press has always been about sensationalism because that sells newspapers. I wanted something different. Something that would speak to the heart and soul of the people.

The answer was obvious. A man from Yugoslavia and a woman from America. But what would bring her out of her comfortable existence in the US to a war-torncountry? It did not take long to formulate the answer, which was a concern since I first heard about the war—the children who had lost their parents? Yes, an orphan would be something motivating to bring the heroine from her safe environment. It would be enough to make me want to find her. So the story would be about a man from Yugoslavia, a woman from America, and an orphan.

I had written a sketch before I found sites documenting the atrocities of this war.My sketches consist of cohesive thoughts laid out in the order they will occur, usually needing the details filled in later. So I wrote this sketch before I read about the prison camps held by all three warring sides: Muslims, Croatians, and Serbians. Mind you, when I use these ethnic titles, I am speaking about the military sides of the war, not the civilian population. However, nationalist ideologies do bleed out into the civilian population. But my story is about one man, with only the ideology of what is right by God’s laws. It was my goal to tell the story of a man who, though not of Serbian descent, was raised by a Serbian family. In this situation, alesser man might have been swayed by his nationalist ancestry and turned on the very people that gave him a beautiful life. In the heroes own words:

“Sergej told me that you won’t turn your back on a friend. A friend is a friend until that friend proves otherwise,” she said.

“If I do not keep my word, what sort of a man am I?” he asked, briefly reflecting on private thoughts. “Even if no one else mattered, how could I turn my back on the one person that took me in when I had no home? How could I turn against the one person that gave me everything when I had nothing, even after I stole from her? How could I ever turn my back on Mrs. Tomić?”

For now, I am not going to go into details about what caused the war. Read the book and you will get enough information to understand its cause without belaboring the war itself. Read the book and you will be pulled into an adventure, less about war and more about love and honor. Through those emotions, your heart will feel the story. It will feel the plight of those souls stuck in the middle of warring factions, fighting for all they felt was right. And when it comes to the end you will either relate to the characters and say to yourself, that’s exactly what I would have done. Or you will slam the book shut and say getting involved was stupid. Regardless, you will have felt something and that, in the end, is what writing is about. Love, hate, sorrow, joy—whatever the emotion, the point is that you felt it while you were in the story.


Don't miss part 2 of this feature here very soon!


The Yugoslavian available at:
Amazon:
http://ow.ly/P9qrG
Check out the look inside feature:
http://ow.ly/Qv7lm 

Visit The Yugoslavian page from the author website theblackrosenyc.comhttp://ow.ly/Qv7HZ 






Monday, 10 August 2015

Monday update from Sarah Jane in the world of memoirs! #RPBP

http://smarturl.it/OFSCAA


Hello!
I must be getting old because time seems to be going so fast of late, or is it that my life is just so busy!
August is turning into a busy month in my world of memoirs. The month got underway with the wonderful news that Our Frugal Summer in Charente was voted by readers to be one of the top 50 self-published books of 2015 worth reading. This culinary memoir continues to receive glowing 5-star reviews from readers interested in cooking, frugal living, gardening, France and the continuing story of our family travel adventures. 
Meanwhile I have been working on The Nomadic Nurse Series and I am preparing for the release of the first book in this new series of memoirs based on almost three decades in the nursing profession. Ooh Matron! is on pre-order now at all distributors! Release date 14th September - watch for news of the launch day party!


Sarah Jane has no career aspirations, all she wants is to leave school, work as a cashier at Woolworths and get married. Then everything changes and she finds herself wearing a fluorescent pink uniform and studying to get into Nursing School. What inspired this surprising change of direction? What happens when she leaves home to live in a garrison town with a housemate who is a party animal? The big question being, is she really cut out to be a nurse? 
Let's start at the beginning with Sarah Jane as a sixteen-year-old country girl, a bit old fashioned but who has a mischievous sense of humour and who suddenly decides she wants to be a nurse! 

"This funny, yet poignant nursing memoir has Sarah Jane's trademark honest writing style which shines through in every story she tells. From starting her student nurse training in Essex to coping with patients in happy, sad and heart-breaking situations. It gives you a young woman's view into the realities of entering the world of nursing in the 1980’s. A highly entertaining and informative memoir which was able to take me from laughing out loud to having welled tears of empathy." S. Brewster 


http://bit.ly/OohMatronNook
http://bit.ly/OohMatronKobo
http://bit.ly/OohMatronApple
http://smarturl.it/OohMatron15PO (Amazon)


All of this book promotion work is in addition to my other newish role as a grandmother (or nanny) to the gorgeous Shane now 10 months old and getting cuter and more mobile by the day.


So without further ado I bid you farewell as I get back to work.

Be sure to pass on my new release news!
Take care and have a great week.
Sarah Jane