Interview With Lorraine Zago Rosenthal, Author of Always and Forever, and Giveaway!
How to Get Unstuck in Your Writing Journey
Captive Heart at Brantmar Castle by Celeste Fenton: Blog Tour & Giveaway
What could be better than reading and loving a book and then finding out there's more? Characters that feel like old friends are off to have more adventures! And it's happening today with a welcome back visit from author Celeste Fenton with the second book in her Mysteries of a Heart series, Captive Heart at Brantmar Castle. More suspense, more romance, more mystery and a new twist...Scotland. Join us as we celebrate the launch of this book with a giveaway and an interview with the author.
Gabby Heart travels to a remote Scottish castle with her best friend, Abe-a bestselling children's author-expecting misty views, historic charm, and quiet time to plan their next book series. But Brantmar Castle holds more than ghosts of the past. When the women are taken hostage, Gabby must rely on her instincts, her resilience, and the help of men who may not deserve her trust to survive. Meanwhile, on Dost Island, young residents are vanishing without a trace. As those left behind scramble for answers, unsettling clues emerge-leading to a dark motive no one could have predicted. From the storm-swept highlands of Scotland to the rocky shores of New England, Captive Heart at Brantmar Castle blends mystery, emotional grit, and simmering romance in a story where secrets run deep... and time is running out.
Captive Heart at Brantmar Castle Giveaway
Interview with Tracy Buckner, First Place Winner of WOW! Q4 2025 Creative Nonfiction Contest
--interview by Marcia Peterson
WOW: Congratulations on winning first place in our Q4 2025 Creative Nonfiction essay competition! What prompted you to enter the contest?
Tracy: Thank you so much! I’ve followed WOW! Women on Writing for years and have always admired how the website celebrates women’s voices in all their raw, messy, beautiful forms. I’d entered before but never placed, so this time I told myself I’d do it for the joy of sharing — not the outcome. “Two Lost Souls” had been sitting quietly in my folder for months, waiting for me to be brave enough to send it into the world. I finally realized that if a story keeps tugging at you, it’s probably because it still has something to say.
WOW: “Two Lost Souls” is a powerful essay, and a bit unsettling. What inspired you to write this particular piece?
Tracy: The piece grew from a memory that never quite let go. One of those moments that feels ordinary on the surface but haunts you years later. I wanted to explore the intersection of compassion and regret, the way we sometimes recognize pieces of ourselves in someone else’s pain. Writing “Two Lost Souls” was my attempt to make sense of the helplessness I felt as a young woman who wanted to save someone but couldn’t. It’s about loss, yes, but also about empathy—how seeing another’s struggle can awaken something deep and enduring in us.
Tracy: Write it before you’re ready. You’ll never feel perfectly brave or perfectly healed, and that’s okay. I learned from Chelsey Clammer to start with what you can bear to say today, even if it’s only a sentence. Later, you can shape it into something truer and stronger.
For me, writing about hard things isn’t about reliving the pain. It’s about reclaiming it, giving it form so it can finally breathe outside of me. And if you’re scared, that’s a good sign. Fear usually means you’ve found the truth worth telling.
Tracy: I’m currently revising several essays and developing a humor-infused collection of Southern stories called Spillin’ the Sweet Tea. My focus right now is consistency. I am learning to show up for the page every morning, even when the words come slowly. I’m learning that writing is less about waiting for inspiration and more about keeping the door open so it can find you.
WOW: Thanks so much for chatting with us today, Tracy. Before you go, can you share a favorite writing tip or piece of advice?
Be curious and kind — especially to yourself. Don’t rush to judge your early drafts; they’re just your heart clearing its throat.
And I have to quote one of my favorite books, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft by Stephen King. He says, “Writing isn't about making money, getting famous, getting dates, getting laid, or making friends. In the end, it's about enriching the lives of those who will read your work, and enriching your own life, as well. It's about getting up, getting well, and getting over. Getting happy, okay? Getting happy.”
So write the story only you can tell, in the voice only you have, trust that someone out there needs to hear it, and most of all…get happy!
Holiday Giveaway & Review of Hummingbird Moonrise
The past two years have taken their toll on Arista Kelly. Once an eternal optimist, now she has faced the darkness and must recalibrate what true happiness means for her. Meanwhile, Shane, her ex-boyfriend, is pulling all the right moves to help keep her sane from her heightening paranoia. But it doesn’t help that Iris, her Great Aunt Bethie’s friend, has disappeared.
Still, one additional trial remains. While searching for Iris, Bethie and Arista stumble upon a grand revelation in the eccentric woman’s home. With the discovery, they realize their run of chaos and loss of kin may have roots in a curse that dates back to the 1940s—the time when their family patriarch first built Arista’s cottage in the redwoods and crafted his insightful Ouija table.This pursuit will not follow their accustomed recipe of adrenalized action, but the high stakes remain. Will the mysterious slow burn of unfolding events finally level Arista’s entire world or be fully extinguished, once and for all?
And don't forget, this is all happening in November and December. Talk about family drama just in time for the holidays!
Publisher: Black Rose Writing (October 9, 2025)
ISBN-10: 1685136583
ISBN-13: 978-1685136581
ASIN: B0FB5QV948
Print Length: 303 pages
The Sky is the Limit: Nonfiction for Young Readers
In her most recent Muffin post, Ready for November, Jodi M. Webb wrote about the many types of nonfiction books that you might consider reading this month. If you are one of those writers who read through the list and thought, “Oh, I love memoir! I have two histories in my TBR pile and a biography . . .” Maybe just maybe you should consider writing nonfiction for young readers.
In my own writing for the school library market, I have touched on every type of writing Jodi listed except humor. I’m not telling you this to brag. I want you to know about the vast range of books this field covers.
The first thing that Jodi discussed was history. My earliest titles for this market included The Bombing of Pearl Harbor and Trench Warfare. I’ve even been lucky enough to get to write about archaeology starting with my very first book, The Ancient Maya, and then more recently adding The Formative Period.
Although my passion is history, I’ve also written biographies (Ariana Grande and Emmanuel Macron), hobbies (Hobbies if You Like Nature), travel (Gettysburg National Military Park), self-help (Earning, Saving, and Investing), and sports (Women in Sports). But that’s not all. I’ve written science (Evolution of Mammals), pop culture (Spider-Man), geography (New Zealand), and even true crime although the publisher called it American Crime Stories (The Assassination of John F. Kennedy).
There are so many possibilities in writing nonfiction for young readers. Don’t panic if you aren’t interested in writing school library books. You can write for magazines and websites. I got my start writing for Young Equestrian Magazine. I wasn’t an equestrian, young or otherwise, but as a historian the editor know I could write breed profiles which are essentially breed histories. This is also where I started science writing and how-tos as well as columns for parents.
After Young Equestrian folded, I wrote educational how-tos. This was when one of my editors taught me to take my own photos. She told me that if I could make oatmeal look appealing, I would have nailed the skill set. She wasn’t wrong!
There are so many nonfiction markets for young readers that I still haven’t mentioned all of them. There are writers who create lesson plans and educational materials for teachers. Still other writers write test questions. My test questions are embarrassingly bad. No, really. They are frightening. Trade publishers also publish a wide range of nonfiction. A trade publisher is a publisher that sells their list through bookstores and other outlets that sell to the non-school consumer.
If you are someone who wants to write a wide variety of things, consider nonfiction for young readers. There are so many ways to get your work out into the world. You just need to find one or more that are a good match for you.
--SueBE
- To find out more about her writing, visit her site and blog.
Interview with Lufrancia: Spring 2025 Flash Fiction Contest Runner Up
Zachary: A Seagoing Cowboy by Shirley Miller Kamada: Blog Tour & Giveaway
December 1 @ Reading is My Remedy
Ready for November?
November...a time for pumpkin spice everything, beards of all shapes and sizes and red, white and blue "I voted" stickers. But for readers in the know, November is for nonfiction books. Personally I love November because I love celebrating nonfiction books (and by nonfiction I mostly mean history). If you're out there yawning at the thought of a book about the tea trade in the 1800s or battle plans of the Civil War, remember that nonfiction encompasses so much more than just history. What else can you read?
Memoirs/Biographies - There's a newly released 900+ page book about Mark Twain on the shelves but so many more (shorter) books about random people who have led interesting lives.
Hobbies - Whatever your hobby (or wanna-be hobby), you can find a book out there. Recently, I've read about growing dahlias, writing mystery novels, building birdhouses. What do you want to know more about? My son (a fabulous chef) has a cookbook with meals based on meals from Star Wars. See, something for everyone.
Humor - These books can range from biographies of comedians to collections of essays on specific topics to your basic joke books popular with grandfathers of elementary school children. Because every kid loves a Poppy who can tell a good knock-knock joke.
Travel - Imagine my surprise at fellow WOW blogger Renee Roberson's post about a recent trip to Greece when I'm halfway through a book about Greece that is my favorite division - 75% stunning photos and 25% text.
Sports - With cold (and rainy) weather setting in, it may be too nippy for your favored sport. But you can read playing tips, biographies, rehashes of notable games and so may "underdog wins" books.
Self-Help - What do you want to improve? Your diet? Your parenting skills? Your memory? Your home organization? You general outlook on life? Definitely a book for that!
Jodi M. Webb writes from her home in the Pennsylvania mountains about everything from DIY projects to tea to butterflies. She's also a blog tour manager for WOW-Women on Writing. In November, she's blogging about her nonfiction reads at Words by Webb.
Thanks to She Reads Nonfiction for the fun graphics as well as hosting a weekly catch up for participants of #NonfictionNovember on Mondays. You can just read the host's thoughts or answer the writing prompt.




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