Stay, Girl by Angelica R. Jackson: Reader Review Event & Giveaway

Monday, March 17, 2025
Stay, Girl by Angelica R. Jackson

Today, I'm excited to announce a special reader review event with Angelica R. Jackson. She's been a frequent guest at WOW, and we're so honored to introduce her book to you. Our readers will share their thoughts about her incredible coming-of-age novel, Stay, Girl

Plus, a fun fact? She won runner-up in our Spring 2020 Flash Fiction Contest. This book is a reworked version of that story! We're so excited to have her with us. Best of all, you'll also have a chance to win a copy of this incredible book.

Before we share what our readers thought, here's more about her novel:

Who rescued who? In California’s Central Valley in 1953, the love of a neglected dog helps an abused girl find healing, and the caring family she never had.

Bet Carter’s stepfather is a conman with a history of violence, and he’s trying to force thirteen-year-old Bet into that life, too. His controlling ways make Bet’s world smaller every day, until the death of her ailing mother gives the girl an opportunity to flee to her Uncle Earl’s.

Bet only planned a quick stopover in Amberfields, but after her uncle welcomes her into his home, she keeps finding excuses to stay. Bet wants to help Uncle Earl’s foster dog, Penny, learn to trust again—but how can the girl mend Penny’s spirit when her own is so broken?

Joining a hilarious prank war with her new friend Georgie goes a long way to making Bet feel at home in Amberfields. As Bet’s emotional armor softens, along with her reasons to leave, she finally allows herself to dream bigger.

This heartfelt coming-of-age story will have you cheering for a girl whose determination and optimism help her rediscover the healing power of love.

Publisher: Crow & Pitcher Press
ISBN-13: 979-8986272139
ASIN: B0DNMXFHD7
Print Length: 287 pages

Purchase a copy on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or Bookshop.org. Be sure to add it to your GoodReads reading list as well.

Stay, Girl Reader Review Event


What WOW Readers Thought

"Sacramento, CA, 1953. Penny was one of the dogs seized by the county in a cruelty case. Thirteen year-old Lizabeth "Bet" Carter is on the run from an abusive stepdad after her addicted mom dies. She's heading to her Uncle Earl's. But only cuz Bet promised her mom she'd "go" to Earl's. Bet never said anything about staying with him. In fact, she plans on high-tailing it down to Oregon to work as a cook's helper in a lumber camp with her best girlfriend. As soon as she can make some plans.

But an unlikely yet heartwarming alliance begins to form in this captivating and compelling coming of age tale reminiscent of Where the Red Fern Grows, Marley and Me, and Shiloh.

Well. When Bet shows up at her Uncle Earl’s unannounced, she finds that her kindly uncle has been caring for the sick, skittish beagle on behalf of the county. Uncle Earl already has two dogs, Nap and Josie. But the canine fam soon includes the skittish, half-starved Penny. Just like big-hearted Uncle Earl’s human fam soon includes Bet. In fact, her uncle’s kindness and compassion begin to grow on her. There’s also the neighbor girl Georgie. She has more spunk than a stick of dynamite.

There’s also M & Ms. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Black Beauty. Meatloaf sandwiches. Triple berry pie. “Fartichokes.” Pillow babies. Socks. An underground Railroad. Prank wars. And that about Bet’s photo entries for the Yuba County Fair competition?

But when Bet and Penny wind up in jail…

Oh, wait. You’ll have to read the book yourself to find out what happens next. Dittot why Dog People Are The Best People. Not that I'm biased or anythin’.

Scene stealers: Doc Marsh the vet and Peggy the deputy. And that’s all I'm gonna say about that.

Beautifully written, Stay, Girl has a lively, homespun flavor to it that’s as warm as an August sun. Think The Waltons meets The Incredible Journey, with maybe a little Witness, too.

The author pulls you in from chapter one and keeps you turning pages till the very end. For example, descriptions of Uncle Earl, Bet and Georgie walking working a vegetable garden, Fae canning or stirring up a batch of jam. Or Bet and Penny cooling off in the local swimming hole on a hot summer day put you right in the think of things. Ditto Uncle Earl’s culinary creations and a couple run-ins with mean old Mrs. Ridgway.

Heartwarming, heartfelt, Stay, Girl brims with wit and warmth. It's the kind of book that’ll crawl inside your heart and set a spell. Captivating and compelling, this one’s a winner.

I loved it! So I’d STAY around and grab my own copy now  fize you. Oh yeah!" 

- Kristine of Pages and Paws

"The heartwarming story of the healing power of love.

Stay, Girl is a wonderfully heartwarming story of 12-year-old Bet and a fostered beagle named Penny set in 1953 California’s Central Valley. While timeless and with universal elements, Bet and Penny’s story comes alive in this nostalgic setting of a simpler time and place. Their tale is one of two wounded creatures re-discovering kindness, love, and safety. I couldn’t put it down.

Bet is a determined, capable 12-year-old, conditioned much too soon to depending on herself for her most basic needs. When her mother passes away, she takes off from her home in Sacramento and her abusive stepfather and makes her way, by foot, to her mother’s brother’s home in Amberfields, California, quite some distance away. Bet’s plan for escape had been to join a friend working in an Idaho lumber camp, but she’d promised her mother on her deathbed that she’d go to Uncle Earl’s, and she always kept her promises.

We can only imagine what Bet expected Uncle Earl to be like, considering her experiences with the adults, especially men, in her brief life, but Earl is not that. A former Navy cook, now working at the small town’s diner, he’s a giving and gentle soul and the caretaker for the county for three rescued dogs. A recent addition to his home is a very sick red and white beagle that had been removed from a deplorable situation. Bet feels a kinship with the small, frightened dog she names Penny, and it becomes her goal to heal her and become Penny’s “person.”

The plot covers the summer of 1953, and Bet and Penny’s slow but steady recovery as both become a part of their new home and new community, seeing a side of people they had been denied up to this point in their lives. The author’s vivid descriptions of the setting drew me in so completely I could almost feel the heat and hear the sounds of that long-ago summer, a time when telephones, television, and cars weren’t a part of every household yet. Bet’s story was compelling, with plot twists that changed its trajectory in unexpected ways and kept me glued to its pages.

I recommend STAY, GIRL to readers of historical fiction, especially those who enjoy coming-of-age stories."

-- Karen S.

"What a fun read. The small-town charm, interesting characters, and, of course, the dogs give this book a warmth and loveliness. While the story made me turn the pages quickly, the heart-felt descriptions and well-developed characters made me want to linger. I loved the surprise twist at the end. While not entirely unexpected, it was perfectly placed and well-resolved. This book would make a great gift for anyone who loves small towns, teenagers, and dogs."

-- Nita S.

"I enjoyed all of the characters in this wonderfully written story. I find myself craving a small town, a pack of dogs, and country cooking. I want meatloaf, grilled cheese, pancakes, and all the goodies lovingly written about in this charming novel. Perhaps a cookbook to follow?"

-- Maria W.

"I was immediately drawn into Bet’s world. I was saddened and humbled by her mother’s passing. Angelica R. Jackson writes with great attention to detail, and the visuals are immersive. I was captivated by the novel. I felt wary about Bret’s uncle Earl, and was both concerned for, and proud of her for trying to follow her mother’s advice.

I was very concerned for the dogs’ welfare, and hoped that Bret would be ok too.

Stay, Girl is a novel about hard circumstances, yet it’s both heartwrenching and heartwarming, yet enjoyable."

-- Katherine H.

"Thirteen-year-old Bet escapes from her controlling stepfather after her mother dies. She plans to stay with her Uncle Earl only a short while then move on, but there’s this little dog Penny that needs to heal from abuse. And she’s making friends. Maybe she can stay a little longer. The book is set in 1953."

-- Susan F.

"This book is described as a "coming-of-age" story but after reading, I'm thinking that an unexpected twist. It's the story of a young girl who has been forced to act like an adult, gradually learning how to be a child again. The character's emotions (and at times, lack of emotions) make this a strong book that grabs your attention. It starts out with fear and secrets but eventually finds its way to normality. I felt the writing was powerful, really evoking memorable scenes. I think this is a great choice if an adult and teen want to choose a book to read and discuss - sort of a parent-child book club."

-- Jodi W.

Congratulations to Kristine of Pages and Paws!
We held a random drawing via Random.org for all reviewers who participated in this event, and it picked Kristine as the winner of the $25 Amazon Gift Card. We will be sending that out to you via email today, Kristine! 

About the Author, Angelica R. Jackson

Angelica R. Jackson, in keeping with her scattered Gemini nature, has published articles on gardening, natural history, web design, travel, hiking, and local history. Other interests include pets, reading, green living, and cooking for food allergies (the latter not necessarily by choice, but she’s come to terms with it). Ongoing projects include short fiction, poetry, novels, art photography, and children’s picture books.

She’s also been involved with capturing the restoration efforts for Preston Castle (formerly the Preston School of Industry) in photographs and can sometimes be found haunting its hallways. 

​She shares a home in California's Gold Country with a husband, a Miniature Pinscher/Nibblonian mix, and far too many books (if that's even possible). She is the author of the award-winning Faerie Crossed young adult urban fantasy series, and her photos are collected in Capturing The Castle: Images of Preston Castle (2006-2016). Her latest book is Stay, Girl, a literary coming-of-age novel about an abused girl and a dog finding healing in each other.

You can find her online at https://www.angelicarjackson.com/, You can also follow her on Instagram or Facebook.

--- Interview With Nicole Pyles

WOW: Congrats on your novel, Stay Girl! What inspired this book?

Angelica: While waiting for my energy to come back after cancer treatments in 2021, I immersed myself in comforting reads with characters facing hardships, whose own resilience and ability to see joy help them get through life. I reread classics like A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith, To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, and nostalgic titles like Okay For Now by Gary D. Schmidt and The Shy Ones by Lynn Hall. Stories that are ultimately hopeful and heartwarming.

Falling into these books reminded me why stories like those resonated with me, whether I’d read them as an adult or a child. I wanted to write Stay, Girl for that vulnerable inner child in all of us, the one who feels lost and lonely. This book would be a throwback to those beloved titles—with no dogs dying! These dogs could live forever within my pages.

I had already started Stay, Girl a few years before, but the focus was darker and the trauma more heavy-handed. I knew it could be lighter in tone and still let Bet feel things strongly, and to give her a safe place to look back on her mistreatment before she moves forward. The dogs—Nap, Josie, and Penny—remind her not to get stuck in loss, and to look for the joy around her. These canine characters were inspired by my own dogs, and writing this book also dropped me back into warm memories of them. I created a page on my website just to feature them.

WOW: I love that you transformed this book to appeal to our inner child. I also loved hearing that this novel is a reworked version of a flash fiction story, "The Devil You Know" (it won runner-up in a WOW contest!). What led you to feel this was ready for novel-length?

Angelica: Almost all my stories start as dreams, which often come to me complete with backstory and emotional weight. Stay, Girl started with the scene in “The Devil You Know” playing out in my sleep, and I knew I needed to write about this resilient girl. I jotted down what I remembered and then went back to work on my series, so the notes stayed forgotten on my computer for a while.

I picked it up again later and had written a few chapters when I got the email reminder for the latest WOW contest. I immediately thought of the original scene and how compelling it was to experience it through dream, so I thought it would be an interesting challenge to shape it for the word limit without losing the impact. And seeing the scene through the lens of flash fiction, where every word has to work overtime, made the same events tighter in the novel, too. 

WOW: What an interesting fact that your stories start out as dreams. I was moved to hear that you wrote this story while undergoing cancer treatments. How did you overcome any obstacles in the writing process during this time?

Angelica: It was definitely a difficult time! First, I was an early adopter of a severe COVID infection, and when my breathing never really cleared up, we found the lung cancer. And discovered it was not a recurrence of my previous thyroid cancer, but a separate primary cancer. Thankfully, my husband was working from home then and his employer gave him the flexibility to arrange his hours around caring for me and driving me to chemo treatments. We also lost two of our pets to pre-existing heart conditions, and tried fostering another dog before realizing our Miniature Pinscher preferred to be an only dog.

I went through a lot of physical and mental changes during that time, as you can imagine. One change that seems to be sticking around, whether it’s an aftereffect of Covid or chemo, is memory issues related to language. I “lost” words, both in speaking and in writing, to the point where my doctor referred me for some cognitive testing. No dementia or anything like that, fortunately, but I continued to struggle.

Online thesauruses became my go-to while writing, because I could often remember related words or concepts, even if I couldn’t immediately bring up the specific word I wanted. “Hmm, it’s a word like ‘power,’ but not that—oh, I was thinking of ‘agency’!” Working that way helped me remake those connections for my speech, too, but not with names. I’m helpless with those now, ugh.

WOW: I've never been great with names, either! You told me recently writing this novel helped you immensely during that time. Mind sharing with our readers why that is?

Angelica: I mentioned above that writing helped me with some issues with memory and language, but writing from Bet’s point of view also allowed me to reflect on surviving a childhood with my own mom. As an adult, I finally learned to prioritize my own mental health over trying to excuse or accommodate hers, and to set up healthier boundaries for myself. Bet comes to that realization a lot earlier in her life, and will have a brighter future for it, I think.

For anyone else who has decided to go no-contact with a parent, they will recognize that I ended up grieving for the mom I never had as much as grieving the loss of a relationship with my actual mother. That’s another parallel between myself and Bet, and something that has helped me find peace of mind.

WOW: That's excellent insight. What advice do you have for writers who are undergoing stressful times and have a hard time focusing on their writing?

Angelica: My advice is that you can’t wait for things to settle down, because there will never be a perfect time to write. In my younger days, it was always, “I’ll wait to really commit to this project when I finish school, or once we’ve moved to a quieter place, or…”

But the truth is, your writing time will not wait for you. You have to make an effort to carve it out around all the other things life throws at you. It’s not new advice, but maybe this is the one more time someone needs to hear it to actually make a difference in habits.

With all that said, my personal bane is social media. I will click on Facebook without even realizing I’ve done it. I am retraining myself to take mental breaks out in my garden, rather than to lose myself in reels or clickbait. Still Writing: The Perils and Pleasures of a Creative Life by Dani Shapiro is an excellent collection of reminders of why we write, in spite of…well, everything.

You can see samples of my garden on my Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/angelicarjackson/

WOW: You are an incredible gardener! What are you working on next that you can tell us about?

Angelica: I’m working on a Gothic or horror short story that is a reworking of a full-length historical novel. And I do mean full length—Spirits From The Vasty Deep was the first book I ever wrote, and the manuscript was over 160,000 words, since I indulged myself with developing every side plot and minor character. I had whittled it down to about 95,000 words by the time I queried agents with it, and it got a lot of attention, but no one took it on.

I reworked it several times over the years, but during the lockdown I gave it a complete overhaul and cut 2/3 of the manuscript. Then I changed gears to work on Spellmeet, the last book in my YA UF series, and didn’t come back to Spirits until I finished Stay, Girl. I had every intention of tackling it as a novel-length project again, but as I read through the pages I thought were worth saving, I realized these core scenes could possibly stand on their own as a shorter work.

I’m currently moving some things around and creating new framing, and hoping that it will all come together in a new and worthwhile way. Even if it doesn’t, I never feel like I’m wasting my time, since I learn something about myself and my writing with each attempt.

WOW: I love that and that you are still learning. Thank you so much for joining us today! We look forward to seeing more of you again.

Book Giveaway! Stay, Girl by Angelica R. Jackson

***** BOOK GIVEAWAY *****

Enter to win a print copy of Stay, Girl by Angelica R. Jackson! Fill out the Rafflecopter below for a chance to win. The giveaway ends March 30th at 11:59 pm CT. We will choose a winner the next day and announce in the widget as well as follow up via email. Good luck!

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Interview with Jennifer Paquette: Q1 2025 CNF Contest Two-Time Runner Up

Sunday, March 16, 2025
Jennifer’s Bio:
Jennifer Paquette is the founder and retired artistic director of a theatre program for young people. She now enjoys hanging with her gaggle of granddaughters, and co-producing/directing Voiceover work out of her home studio with her partner in all things, Jason. She is a prize-winning essayist (Eden Mills Literary Contest, Stratford Writers Festival) whose creative work has appeared in The National Arts Centre’s Canada Performs Series, Canadian Stories Magazine, Memoir Writing Ink. and elsewhere. She credits the community of writer friends she meets with regularly for inspiring her. Jennifer has been a contest reader for the Amy MacRae Award for Memoir since 2021 and is the author of two early reader books. Find her at: jenniferpaquette.ca 

If you haven't done so already, check out Jennifer's award-winning essays "New Ride" and "Goodwill" and then return here for a chat with the author. 

WOW: Congratulations on placing twice in the Q1 2025 Creative Nonfiction Contest! How did you begin writing your essays and how did they and your writing processes evolve as you wrote? 

Jennifer: Both essays were written for a bi-weekly writing group I belong to. “New Ride,” an account of a day spent with my 90-year-old mother came easily, requiring less editing than much of my writing. As the day unfolded, I knew I would write about it, so I made a point of observing, taking in the details. It may be interesting to note that I wrote the photograph section first and built the rest of the piece around it. The process for “Goodwill” was different. It was originally a much longer essay. It lacked focus. I played with tense and voice, trying it in first person, then third person, before landing on the idea to use both. Editing it down to under 1000 words gave the piece clarity (thanks WOW! for that word count!) 

WOW: We’re glad to play a role in the success of your essays! Thank you for sharing your process. What did you learn about yourself or your writing by creating these essays? 

Jennifer: Writing “New Ride” helped to unlock some of the mystery surrounding my relationship with my mother. The decision to pay attention, to witness and record the many versions of her has resulted in a deeper sense of compassion for us both. “Goodwill” tells the story of a time in my life I had been avoiding writing about. It took years to work up the courage which, in the end, was a good thing. Writing nonfiction, particularly about a traumatic experience, requires enough distance from the event to understand its larger meaning. When a photo of me in “the dress” recently surfaced, I began to write, knowing the dress was somehow key. It was. The third person narrative around the dress helped to temper the brutal immediacy of the diary entries and gave the piece a forward focus. 

WOW: From your bio, it sounds like your writing community has been very influential for you. How did you build your writing community? For any readers here who are new and/or still building their writing communities, do you have any tips for doing so? 

Jennifer: I can’t say enough about my writing community. It developed out of a writing course we attended together five years ago. The course came to an end, but we decided to continue meeting, even zooming our way through the pandemic. I strongly recommend registering for writing classes/workshops/courses. Connecting with other writers can be such a source of motivation and inspiration. 

WOW: Which creative nonfiction essays or writers have inspired you most, and in what ways did they inspire you? 

Jennifer: My community of writers. They have very different styles, and I admire them all. We have the luxury of meeting in person and reading our stories aloud. I learn so much, just by listening. And Joan Didion. I love this quote from her The Paris Review interview, 2006: “You get the sense that it’s possible simply to go through life noticing things and writing them down and that this is OK, it’s worth doing. That the seemingly insignificant things that most of us spend our days noticing are really significant, have meaning, and tell us something.” 

WOW: That’s a powerful quote. And it’s wonderful that you draw such inspiration from your writing community, too. If you could tell your younger self anything about writing, what would it be? 

Jennifer: When I was a kid, I’d sit at the kitchen table with paper and pen and an essay to write. I’d moan and groan that I didn’t know what to write and my mother (a teacher) would say, “Just write. It will come.” That has been my mantra ever since. Also, don’t imitate or compare. Allow your own voice to surface and trust that it knows best. 

WOW: Great advice and poignant mantra. Thank you for sharing your writing with us and for your thoughtful responses. Happy writing! 


Interviewed by Anne Greenawalt, founder and editor-in-chief of Sport Stories Press, which publishes sports books by, for, and about sportswomen and amateur athletes. Engage on Twitter or Instagram @GreenMachine459.
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Switching Gears to Creative Nonfiction

Thursday, March 13, 2025

 

For the past several years, I have focused my writing efforts on podcast scripts (true crime reporting) and novels. Lately I’ve been feeling restless almost to the point of being burned out and have had the urge to work on a few essay ideas, inspired by reading the work of the WOW! Essay Contest winners. 

I’ve always struggled with this art form, thinking that the only way to write an essay was in chronological order and with a thesis statement much like the ones my high school teachers expected from us. But creative nonfiction is much more than that, and in my opinion, it’s more difficult to execute it well than writing fiction! Learning that you can use literary devices found in fiction to strengthen an essay had made the process much less daunting for me now. 

There are many topics that arise time and time again in creative nonfiction—personal relationships, parenting, health issues, death, family members with memory loss, love, trauma, cultural observations, lifestyle choices, and much more. But it’s the way you execute these themes that really make a piece stand out. 

One essay idea has been nagging me for a while, and yesterday I sat down to finally write a first draft. I’ve been trying to process something that happened in my neighborhood this past year, where a couple were arrested and charged with neglect in abuse of their 1-year-old daughter (they also had two other children at the time). I wove in heartbreaking lines from the initial news reports, like “Medical reports said that the child had a bruised head, protruding ribs, abrasions on her genitals and a sour smell.” Interspersed with these details, I shared the thoughts and feelings that we as a collective neighborhood felt, knowing the children were living in a volatile domestic household in the months leading up to the arrests: 

“We knew it wasn’t a good situation. But we also tried to mind our own business, because you never know what is really going on behind closed doors. Unfortunately, we should have paid more attention, because we really didn’t know what was going on behind those closed doors.” 

Writing this first draft was cathartic, and helped me get out of the writing “funk” I’ve been in. I have another essay idea I want to tackle, too, that’s more of a revision of an existing piece, and it includes a possible experience with what I believe was a guardian angel. 

Writing is such a big part of my life that I can’t envision ever giving it up, but I believe it’s a good idea for us to take breaks or switch gears occasionally. For me right now, that means more reading books for pleasure and working on something outside of my normal scope of work. 

What helps you when you require a change of pace with your writing? Do you prefer fiction or nonfiction? 

Renee Roberson is an award-winning writer who also produces the true crime podcast, Missing in the Carolinas. She’s currently seeking representation for a novel about, what else? A podcaster trying to solve a mystery. Learn more at www.FinishedPages.com and www.MissingintheCarolinas.
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Gearing Up to Revise

Tuesday, March 11, 2025
I have to admit. I told my accountability group that I was going to revise my early middle grade novel, Three Rivers Robotics. But really? I just wasn’t feeling it. 

Ever since Barnes and Noble changed their stocking policy to limit hard covers to only best-selling authors, there has been a lot of angst and anxiety among middle grade authors. Then Ingrams limited the backlist titles that they list. Can we say more angst and anxiety? 

It made it really hard to get myself to work on this particular book, but I powered through the first draft. Now that it is time to revise, every time I go online someone says the middle grade market is dead. That is not exactly the thing to keep a writer motivated. 

But the last three weeks I’ve been too busy to check social media.
Sure, I pop on occasionally and like my husband’s Facebook posts. After all, I do want him to empty the drier. But I haven’t been reading all those other discouraging posts.

I’m not going to give up reading altogether. So I’ve been reading a new middle grade novel. It has taken me just over a week which is really slow for me. But I love the characters. The setting is so real that I can tell you exactly what town inspired it. And the plot hooked me from the start. This book, The Secret of Moonrise Manor by Stephanie Bearce, is a must read if you want to write middle grade fiction. 

What does this have to do with my own motivation?  As I was reading, a thought popped into my head. My main character can still be my main character, and his sidekick is fine too. But other than that? Sorry. Everyone else has got to go. Or they at least need to seek new employment because my setting is no longer Three Rivers Robotics. It is now a science makers space for tweens. Which means there will be a whole new group of secondary tween characters. Of course, all of this means that my plot will need to be adjusted. 

I liked my plot in the first version, but the secondary characters? I never liked them. And I do mean any of them. But I pushed myself through because I just wanted to finish a draft.

I’m glad I did because now I’m thinking about how to improve it. And I’m taking my inspiration from an amazing middle grade book. 

Anxiety is easy to come by right now. And that can make it hard to get deep into a project. My advice to you? Don’t look for inspiration on social media. Instead, pick up something written by an amazing author. Not sure who that would be or what to read? Ask and maybe someone else reading this can help you. There is always someone here reading the most fantastic book that I’ve never heard of. 

--SueBE

  • Click here to find her newsletter.
Sue Bradford Edwards' is the author of over 60 books for young readers.  

She is also the instructor for 3 WOW classes which begin on the first Monday of every month. She teaches:

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Interview with Anne Walsh Donnelly Runner Up in the WOW! Q1 2025 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest with: "Eruption"

Saturday, March 08, 2025
Congratulations, Anne! It is my sincere joy to introduce you to the lovely Anne Walsh Donnelly who is a runner up in the WOW! Q1 2025 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest with her submission, "Eruption". I interviewed Anne in 2019 (check that out here!) and I'm delighted to be with her again today. Please take a moment to check out her submission as well as all the other talented writers who submitted their work! After you've read "Eruption", pop back here for our engaging interview!

Anne’s Bio:  Anne Walsh Donnelly lives in the west of Ireland, writes prose, poetry and plays and loves to experiment with form in her writing. She is the author of the poetry collections, Odd as F*ck, and The Woman with the Owl Tattoo, both published by Fly on the Wall press. 

Her novel, He Used To Be Me, was published by New Island Books in 2024. Her essays have reached the top 10 in WOW's Creative Nonfiction Essay Contests several times for which she is eternally grateful. 

Facebook: AnneWalshDonnelly 
Instagram: annewalshdonnellypoetry 
X: @AnneWDonnelly 

Interview by Crystal J. Casavant-Otto

WOW: Thank you for writing such a personal essay and thank you for joining me again today. It's always lovely to be reunited with a long-time friend. Your writing is as always a joy and pleasure. Let me ask you this Anne, what was your intended take-away with writing Eruption? 

Anne:  Thanks to you all at WOW! for publishing it. What is the take-away I’d like readers to gain from reading Eruption? To be honest I don’t have one. What the reader gains from reading this essay is outside of my control. All I can do is hope that it resonates with the reader in some way. 

WOW: That's a great point - thank you for your transparency. Anne, who is your support - what have you found to be most supportive in your writing life as well as in life in general? You are clearly an accomplished author - are there other writers/readers in your life who help you through? 

Anne: I am fortunate to have many supports both in my writing and in life in general. My family of course, particularly my two (now young adult) children. They were quite young with I started writing 13 years ago and I can still remember their excitement when they discovered I was writing. They were planning my first book before I even thought I was capable of writing a book, my daughter was going to design the cover and my son said he’d look after the ‘business’ side of things! I’ve been fortunate too to have encountered many fellow writers who have been very supportive and encouraging and who believed in me even when I didn’t believe in myself. And of course the Creator of all creators has been with me all my life, giving me the strength and courage I needed to make some pretty tough life-changing decisions for both myself and my children. 

WOW: I'm sure your bravery inspired your children and it warms my heart to hear how supportive they are of you and your writing career. This is such a wonderful tidbit about you! What advice would you give to others (specifically females) when it comes to self care, authenticity, and finding their voice?

Anne:  Just be you and don’t get too hung up on all that ‘on-trend’ stuff we’re supposed to be doing, like being authentic and finding our voices. Sometimes doing nothing and just ‘being’ is enough. I nearly killed myself trying to find my voice! What I didn’t realise was that it was already within me, I just needed to give it time to emerge. As for self-care the most loving thing you can do for yourself is to stop doing, stop striving and be as gentle to yourself as you would be to a baby. 

WOW: I love that advice - now we just need to hear and follow it. I admit, the follow through is what's a struggle for me. Hopefully if you say it to me often enough it will eventually sink in!

That said, what’s next for you dear Anne? What are your writing goals for the rest of 2025 and beyond? Do you have a new book on the horizon? 

Anne:  I’ve stepped back from writing for now. I’ve been experiencing some ‘writer burnout’ over the past few months. It’s been hard to accept that I need to take time out but I understand why I need to. I’ve been writing for 13 years, in addition to single parenting my two children, working a day job and coping with chronic pain, and in that time I’ve published two poetry collections, one short story collection and a novel as well as having some of my plays performed. And of course I’ve been successful with my creative personal essays thanks to WOW. So I’ve exhausted myself in more ways than one and now I’m practicing what I preach i.e. spending more time ‘being’ rather than ‘doing’. 

 WOW: I love that you can acknowledge that need and move forward with it. I wonder if that's something that's come with age? Do you have advice for your younger self when it comes to making decisions, believing in yourself, and/or writing? What would your current self say to the younger you? 

Anne: Listen to your inner voice and trust it. Ignore the nagging self-doubt. You are more lovable, more precious and more talented than you think. 

WOW: You give the best advice - thank you again for sharing your wise words with us. Speaking of advice, what advice do you have for others during turbulent times? What works or doesn’t work for you when it comes to dealing with stress and the pressures of everyday life? 

Anne: What works for me is my belief that there is a transcendent force working its magic in the universe. When things are really tough I repeat a quote attributed to the 13th Century English mystic, Mother Julian of Norwich. She says: “All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well…for there is a force of love moving through the universe that holds us fast and will never let us go.” I find the thought that - there is a force of love moving through the universe and holding us - very comforting.

WOW: Oh Anne - that's absolutely beautiful! I hope you're feeling better soon and back to writing. You have such a poetic nature and I enjoy reading your works. Thank you again for your time today and always and congratulations again my dear!

And until we meet again - may your paths be abundantly filled with enough lemons, sugar, and sunshine to make the most delicious lemonade you've ever tasted!

Hugs,
~Crystal

Today's post was penned by Crystal J. Casavant-Otto

Crystal Casavant writes. Everything. If you follow her blog you have likely laid eyes on every thought she has ever had. Her debut novel, It Was Never About Me, Was It? is still a work in progress and shall be fully worthy sometime in 2025. She has written for WOW! Women on Writing, Bring on Lemons, and has been featured in several magazines and ezines relating to credit and collections as well as religious collections for confessional Lutherans. She runs a busy household full of intelligent, recalcitrant, and delightful humans who give her breath and keep her heart beating day after day. 

Crystal wears many hats (and not just the one in this photo) and fully believes in being in the moment and doing everything she can to improve the lives of those around her! The world may never know her name, but she prays that because of her, someone may smile a little brighter. She prides herself on doing nice things - yes, even for strangers! 


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The Day After His Crucifixion - Interview with Merikay McLeod (and Join our Reader Review Event)

Wednesday, March 05, 2025
Today is the beginning of the Lenten season for the Christian community, the perfect time for Merikay McLeod's Christian historical fiction book The Day After His Crucifixion. Merkay shares her thoughts about the challenges of religious writing, tips for successful writing and more in today's interview.  If you are a Christian woman curious about Jesus and the women in his life, don't miss this book.

We're also inviting readers to participate in our Reader Review event. Sign up and receive a copy of the book! You don't need to be a blogger to join in on this event. Anyone who can leave a review on Goodreads and Amazon or Barnes & Noble can participate and receive a copy of The Day After His Crucifixion. By leaving a review, you'll also be entered in a drawing to win a $25 Amazon Gift Card!

About the Book

"Rich in biblical allusions and symbolism, ... the standout to me is McLeod's focus on the gathering of women to share memories of Jesus, a communal space for women where storytelling reinforces faith and offers comfort. Although the outcome is well-known, the journey to get there is both powerful and affecting, beautifully conveyed through McLeod's skillful writing."

-- Jamie Michele, Readers' Favorite Reviews


The Day After His Crucifixion weaves together the lives of the women who followed Yeshua the Nazarene when they gather the day after His crucifixion to comfort one another with personal, heart-felt stories of how the Promised One changed their lives forever.


Eavesdrop on their inspiring conversations and learn behind-the-scenes details of Yeshua's baptism, the Cana wedding feast, and other New Testament events, and discover afresh the power of His love.


ISBN-10: 1662955510

ISBN-13: 9781662955518

Publisher: Front Porch Publishing (April, 2025)

Length: 164 pages (paperback)


The Day After His Crucifixion is available in print at Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Take a moment to add it to your Goodreads list.


About the Author, Merikay McLeod


A Midwesterner by birth, Merikay McLeod spent most of her adulthood in northern California where she worked as a newspaper reporter, magazine editor, newspaper columnist and freelance writer. Her articles and stroies have won state and national awards, Her freelance work has appeared in such magazines as Good housekeeping, MS, Sunday digest, Insight, The chronicle of Higher Education and many others.


Her walk with Jesus is expressed most accurately by the 23rd Psalm. She has long pondered Jesus' respectful treatment of women despite the surrounding culture's view that women were inferior. The Day After His Crucifixion is her first fiction book. 


Interview by Jodi M. Webb


WOW:  Merikay, congratulations on your biblical novella The Day After His Crucifixion. What inspired you to write about the lives of the women who followed Jesus Christ?


Merikay: Two concepts inspired this book: The way Jesus treated women and the women themselves.


Jesus, known originally as Yeshua, was a first century Palestinian Jew. At that time and in that place, women's lives were greatly restricted. Their value was measured in the number of sons they birthed and the kind of household they ran. While it was very important for men to study scripture, women were not allowed to study sacred texts. There were all sorts of cultural and religious taboos concerning the interaction between men and women. For example, men could divorce their wives, but women could not divorce their husbands. And men were specifically prohibited from speaking to women in

public.


And here was Yeshua the Nazarene, something like a rock star with huge crowds following wherever he went, ignoring the taboos. He freely interacted with women, taught them, and welcomed them as his followers. In fact, women were the first to whom he told that he was the Messiah. And a woman was the first to see him after his resurrection.


Considering that patriarchal society, it is shocking that within the gospels there is no preaching on the status of women, yet there are several stories of Jesus' public encounters with women. In these encounters, he treats them with dignity, respect and compassion. He relates to them as equal human beings rather than sexual objects. He is interested in them as persons.


How must that have felt to the women who were used to being considered inferior or worse?


WOW: You are definitely coming at an ageless story from a new viewpoint. What led you there?


Merikay: I loved college and over time I earned graduate degrees in Women's Studies, Sociology, and Spirituality. All of those years of study kept me thinking about the women in Jesus' life and ministry. 


Later, well into my career, I realized that many of my colleagues knew little about Jesus or the world he lived in. They were curious but did not want to go to a church to find out more. After years of deep reflection and research, I wanted to write about Jesus and the women who encountered him. I wanted to introduce readers to the Jesus I had come to see in the gospels. But there have been so many books written about him, how could I say anything original?


I decided to introduce Jesus through the eyes of the women who encountered him. There would be no religious jargon in my book. I wouldn't even use the name "Jesus" but rather his birth name, the name everyone in his life knew him by -- Yeshua. Yeshua the Nazarene.


This book would not be a theological study. It would be a collection of stories. Women's stories. And where to start? Well, nothing draws friends and colleagues together to talk and remember, to laugh and cry, like the death of someone they love. So I started with Yeshua's crucifixion, and let the women take it from there.


WOW: What was the most challenging part of writing this book?


Merikay: Trying to imagine the authentic thoughts and feelings of each woman. Trying to get the story right, so that the reader would also share the feelings and thoughts, the memories, the life-altering experiences. Every time I read another book or study, more concepts about the culture or about women

in the culture flooded me. So, trying to keep the stories brief, the way we share stories with each other, was a struggle. I hope I was able to give each reader a genuine experience of the time and place and people involved.


WOW: At what point did you consider yourself a writer?


Merikay: When I was 14 or 15, I often spent my after school time at the city library. Kalamazoo City Library was a mile or so from our home. I'd walk there after school, and spend time searching the stacks for something interesting to read. Usually I searched the shelves in the young people's room, but one day, just out of curiosity, I wandered out into the grown ups area and began perusing the stacks, just looking at the various titles. 


On an upper shelf, a small, orange book caught my eye. Standing on tiptoe, I pulled it off the shelf. It was entitled: How to Write and Sell Fact and Fiction. I don't remember the author's name, but I remember the impact that title had on me. I suddenly realized that people got paid to write. That you can make money writing.


The world I lived in offered girls very little in the way of employment. You could clean houses and you could babysit. Baby sitting paid 35-cents an hour. A pittance, even in those days. And suddenly I realized I could earn money writing.


I loved to read and I'd often written little stories for myself. But now .... with my new found knowledge, I saw doors opening. I checked out the book, took it home, read it, and it changed my life.


One of the librarians introduced me to the magazine The Writer. It was in the adult periodical area of the library. It was full of articles about how to write for publication. And in the back were several pages describing what kind of stories and articles various magazines wanted.


I became an earnest and enthusiastic student. The book How to Write and Sell Fact and Fiction along with the magazine The Writer, became my teachers.


I began submitting poems and articles and stories. And it wasn't too long before I started receiving checks for my work. In the beginning I wrote little verses for religious magazines. I also wrote stories for children's Sunday School or Sabbath School magazines.


I learned that I could sell the same story to several different religious magazines, as long as the magazine's markets did not overlap. I could sell the same poem or story to a Catholic magazine and a Methodist magazine and a Baptist magazine and a Mennonite magazine and a Seventh-day Adventist magazine, and then the amount I earned per written piece was fairly significant.


You asked when I considered myself a writer. It was back then when I was a teenager, submitting my work to church publications and newspapers.


WOW: How did you writing grow from that young girl with a little book in the public library?


Merikay: As I grew older, it was my writing that opened employment doors. I worked in the PR department of the first college I attended. There I learned how to write press releases, and text for university brochures. A publishing house hired me to edit narratives. I freelanced for national and regional magazines writing on social justice issues and fascinating people. I became editor of a weekly newspaper. Then of a woman's business magazine, and eventually went to work in the communications department of Santa Clara University, and later the communications department in UC Berkeley. When I left the San Francisco Bay Area to live in the Gold Rush Mother Lode of California, I worked as a daily newspaper reporter. My work won state and national awards.


After retiring from paid employment, my husband and I began traveling the world and it was only natural to write about those journeys. We wrote six breezy travel memoirs under the byline of Al & Sunny Lockwood. Some were published independently, some by traditional publishers.


WOW: What do you find most rewarding about your work?


Merikay: Today I can look back on more than 50 years of writing and publishing. And all I can say

is that there are so many rewards to writing that I think it beats any other kind of work. Here are four rewards I can think of right off the top of my head:


1. The work itself is rewarding. The researching. Meeting outstanding individuals and interviewing them. Then, shaping a story that's never been told before. Or highlighting an idea that's never had the exact exposure you're giving it. Creating something that's never existed before is deeply satisfying.


2. Being paid for your work, receiving financial acknowledgement for something you alone created is most gratifying.


3. Seeing your work published in magazines, newspapers, journals or books is its own reward.


4. Receiving letters or emails from readers who love your work and want to let you know it, is another wonderful reward.


WOW: What do you do when you aren't writing?


Merikay: I'm almost always writing on something -- a manuscript, a story, etc. I'm also often researching markets that might welcome work from me. But when I'm not writing or thinking about writing, you can often find me watching a house remodel show on HGTV. Or swimming in the

community pool. Or traveling with my Sweetheart husband. We have traveled by car, train, plane and cruise ship. Have visited dozens of UNESCO World Heritage sites, as well as most of Western Europe, just about every state in the Union, much of South America, Canada's Maritimes, as well as Istanbul, Ephesus, and other fascinating places.


WOW: If you could give our readers one piece of writing advice, what would it be?


Merikay: If you enjoy writing, keep doing it. Don't get discouraged by rejections, learn from them.

Also, if you get bored with your work, try your hand at a different kind of writing. I've spent my career producing nonfiction. Now I'm trying something different. The Day After His Crucifixion is my first attempt at fiction. And I'm very excited about it.


WOW: As are we! And I think we should all take Merikay up on her challenge to try something different in our writing.


Join the Reader Review Event!



Readers, if you'd like to receive a copy of the Christian historical fiction book The Day After His

Crucifixion by Merikay McLeod, please fill out this Google Form. Book reviews need to be posted by April 9th on Goodreads and Amazon or Barnes & Noble. We'll be sharing all the reviews in a Reader Review Event and Giveaway post here on The Muffin on April 16th! Besides receiving the book, you'll also be entered to win a $25 Amazon Gift Card!

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Facing Self-Doubt Throughout the Writing Process

Tuesday, March 04, 2025
 

Every now and then, I run into a major sense of self-doubt about my own writing. It's as if a gong goes off in my head, and suddenly, I think: I have no idea what I'm doing. 

This experience came to mind recently when revising a story I've been working on for years. It's been a cumbersome little beast. I've plugged along, made progress, and hope to have a submittable version ready this year. And somewhere along the writing process recently, that thought came to my mind—that nagging self-doubt that says I have no idea what I'm doing.

I'm sure many of us feel that way about writing or other areas of our lives and careers. I've dealt with terrible anxiety about my freelance work lately. And often, the source of our doubt isn't a naysayer or a rejection letter. It's our own head.

Imagine if the doubt we express to ourselves about ourselves, we expressed to other people. Imagine going up to a writing friend and saying, "You're not much of a writer." Or "That isn't even realistic." Or "You think that's worthy of submission? Psh." They'd be offended. Likely, that friendship wouldn't last long.

I'm not saying that there aren't neg heads in the world that say these things. But why do join them? Why do we say these things to ourselves or allow those thoughts to linger? 

I wanted to share a trick if you are in that spiral of negative self-talk or self-doubt. I'm sure most of us have heard this advice one way or another throughout our lives. It's that wisdom shared by radio host Bernard Meltzer. He says, "Before you speak ask yourself if what you are going to say is true, is kind, is necessary, is helpful. If the answer is no, maybe what you are about to say should be left unsaid."

While the adage is applied to speaking to others, the same advice could be said of what we say to ourselves. In fact, you may even want to try writing out negative talk and reply to those questions: is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary? Is it helpful? 

My biggest challenge this year is overcoming anxiety and self-doubt. It's been my beast of burden. Yet, I'm facing it head-on and not letting it stop me. I encourage you to do the same. While there are plenty of hurdles in achieving writing success, the last thing you want is to become the reason you don't continue with your goals or dreams. 

Nicole Pyles is a writer who has been published in Better Homes and Gardens, The Spruce, Tom's Guide, and other outlets. Her fiction has appeared in The Gold Man Review, Sky Island Journal, The Voices Project, Arlington Literary Journal, and more. Follow her blog at World of My Imagination.








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Interview with Bethany Jarmul, Runner Up in the WOW! Q1 2025 Essay Contest

Sunday, March 02, 2025
Bethany Jarmul is an Appalachian writer, poet, writing coach, and webinar instructor. She’s the author of two chapbooks, including a mini-memoir 
Take Me Home from Belle Point Press. Her debut poetry collection Lightning Is a Mother was released on February 7 from ELJ Editions. Her work has been published in many magazines including RattleBrevityHAD, and Salamander. Her writing was selected for Best Spiritual Literature 2023 and Best Small Fictions 2024, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, The Best of the Net, Best Microfiction, and Wigleaf Top 50.  Several years ago, Bethany got her start in the literary world through taking classes offered by Women on Writing, so she’s very grateful for this organization and all that they offer. Connect with her at bethanyjarmul.com or on social media: @BethanyJarmul.

Interview by Jodi M. Webb

WOW: Congratulations on being a runner up in the Q1 2025 Creative Nonfiction Essay Contest for "When the Scheduler Calls and Refers to My Upcoming Procedure as an "Emergency Colonoscopy”. It was a very powerful "life flashing before my eyes" piece with a focus on family. Do you often write about family?

Bethany: Thank you! Yes, in fact, my mini-memoir (a chapbook of flash nonfiction essays) Take Me Home, is about family and roots and home. It's about coming to terms with growing up in West Virginia and what it means to belong somewhere even after you've left. 

WOW: You identify yourself as an "Appalachian writer". Can you share with us what that means to you and how it influences you as a writer?

Bethany: I now live near Pittsburgh, PA which is Appalachia, although certainly more urban. I was born and raised in West Virginia, the heart of rural Appalachia. My great grandpas were coal miners. My grandpas were a factory worker and a carpenter. I come from a line of hard-working, Bible-believing folks. The mountains themselves, the creeks and the critters, they all show up in my writing. As well as the destruction of nature, the mining and fracking and polluted drinking water. The sense of belonging somewhere, to a people, even after I’d left home. A deep spirituality and religiosity. The culture, a rich history of storytelling and folk music and pepperoni rolls and moonshine. The friendly and hard-working people. The unsafe working conditions and oppression that has often been experienced by the people living here. All these things influence who I am as a writer and what I engage with in my writing. 

WOW: What an image evoking description! You've been publishing and winning writing prizes for about four years now. When did you start writing? 

Bethany: I've been writing for as long as I can remember. However, there was a period of about five years in my early 20s when I didn't write. I returned to creative writing in 2021, as a new mother during the pandemic. In fact, I took a class through Women on Writing then, and that was near the beginning of my publishing journey. It was in 2021, when I first discovered literary magazines and began publishing my work. 

WOW: Your work takes many forms: essays, poetry, short fiction. Do you have a preference for any particular format?

Bethany: I write short things. Flash essays, flash fiction, and poetry. The large majority of my work is 1,000 words or less. What fascinates me most about writing is what language can do. I like to focus on each word, and writing in compressed word counts allows me to do that. Also, I'm a busy mom of two preschoolers, so it also fits my lifestyle. 

WOW: Aside from being a busy mom, what do you feel is your biggest challenge as a writer?

Bethany: My biggest challenge is balancing the creative mindset and the business mindset. Although being a successful writer means putting some time and effort into the business side of things, If I get too focused on or spend too much time on publications and promotions, it does impact my creativity and how I feel about my work. 

WOW: I think many of us struggle with that particular Catch-22. What is your next goal for your writing career?

Bethany: What's next for me? I'm going to continue to pursue excellence in the craft of writing and help others do the same. I have another poetry manuscript completed, so I hope to find a publisher for that. And in the meantime, just write my heart out. That's pretty much always the plan. 

WOW: That sounds like the ideal plan, considering just how much you've accomplished in your brief writing career. We look forward to reading more!
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What Does Your Book Sound Like?

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Occasionally, I'll receive press releases from authors interested in a review on my blog. I was about to pass on a recent one (it was in a genre I rarely read) when these words popped out at me:


"Each novel will also receive their respective soundtrack."

What? Novels have soundtracks now? I had to learn more.

I contacted Lisa K. Stephenson, author of the Fiona Gold YA Science Fantasy series, to learn more about what goes into creating the soundtrack for a book. Like every author, Stephenson pointed to the desire to stand apart from the many other authors and books on the market as the origin for her soundtrack. She describes her soundtrack as describing the journey of her main character Fiona Gold. In her words:

  • "Hello" is the opening song and describes the need for acceptance, "Hi, Hello, can you hear me?" Fiona wants to be heard by those around her who she believes should want to be a part of the journey with her. 
  • "No Limit" which is where Fiona starts to spend more time in the water and she's taking in the Modiri around her realizing there's really no limit to what they can do, especially for her who happens to be a hybrid. Living on land, her kind is oppressed and most will never rebel.
  • "Who I Am" is a lovely ballad about Fiona finally accepting her Modiri heritage and choosing a side.
  • "Shells by the Sea" is Fiona living her life under the water, happy and carefree, an upbeat afro-pop song. 
  • "December" which closes out this soundtrack is an orchestra number with some amazing vocals to wrap up book 1 and is also a nod to Fiona's underwater home being in the Arctic where The Snows of Khione reside under the rulership of King Khione and Lady Rudita.

She also thinks of the music as a bridge after reading book 1 to get excited for book 2. "I think it adds depth to the story as a whole. I recommend that readers read through the book first and then listen to the soundtrack. When I did that and opened my ears to listen to "Who I Am" for example, I began to cry a bit lol. The song is so beautiful and goes perfectly with the story."

Personally, I listened to "Hello" and "Who I Am" and feel that, just like a book cover, trailer, website, social media presence, music could be another way to attract potential readers' attention. To make them think that your book might be their next read. Stephenson is thinking even bigger about the role of her soundtrack. She explained, "I knew I wanted the music to tell the book's story because ultimately I plan to pitch this novel to movie studios and some of the actors and actresses who I specifically [write] characters around - I believe that since I went into this project knowing it will one day be on the big screen, that adding the music and having a say so in its composition was really important, at least for me."

With that goal in mind, Stephenson held a world wide writing camp for writers, musicians and producers to submit songs. Because she owns the masters of the songs, Stephenson was able to monetize them. The songs are available to stream and purchase for .99 each and whenever they are used on YouTube they generate revenue. At first, it sounds like the perfect promotional tool. But then Stephenson explained that the cost for the five songs, including gaining exclusivity and producing, cost over $15,000, with musicians and writers still receiving royalties.

Eek! So, is music beyond the reach of most authors? That depends on your goal. If you want to monetize a soundtrack with original songs it probably is. However, if you know a musician who is willing to write a song and grant you copyright permission, you can use the tune for your book trailer or website and have your own mini soundtrack. To use any artist's song you have to obtain copyright permission. Independent  musicians can charge as little as $100 while well known stars can charge $10K+. But always get legal permissions or you'll end up paying even more in copyright infringement fees. More about that here.  

Too much work? Try including a list of suggested songs and musicians on your website or on your book club page (don't embed YouTube videos without permission, remember someone else own the copyright to that performance). Having a list of songs to listen to is a great way for readers of historical fiction to immerse themselves in the time period. Or you could avoid the tangles of copyright law with music that is in the public domain (music made prior to 1925), royalty-free or on Creative Commons.

Music is just another way to add another aspect to your readers' experience. If costs for copyright permissions were no object, what songs would be on the soundtrack for your latest writing?

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 and a writing tutor at her local university. Get to know her @jodiwebbwritesFacebook and blogging at Words by Webb


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