𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Howler and Prime 📚 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: J.M. Fickling ✍️ . .
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: Howler and Prime written by the author J.M. Fickling is a must read. The story features Sullus, a shadow. Quo was bitter as he was robbed of a glorious death on a mortal battlefield. Ru is a war god and how she achieved that status is a mystery to Sullus. Khul is secretive. He defeated a mad God Vexyl. What happened to the mad god then is a secret.
Once after the lightning and thunder, three mortal men known as Sons of Thunder stood in front of the gods. They were banished to this strange new world. Sullus suggested using the mortals so they can increase their own power. What will happen when the time comes to sentence the sons of thunder unto the Great Trial.
The story is unique and takes the readers into a mysterious Sci-fi world. The world building is unique and I appreciate the author’s vivid imagination in creating this mysterious world. The narration is smooth and I was able to follow the story easily. The cover photo is nice and the story is well paced.
𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Trust Yourself To Be All In 📚 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Amanda Mckoy Flanagan ✍️ . .
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: “Trust Yourself to Be All In: Safe to Love and Let Go” written by the author Amanda Mckoy Flanagan is an inspirational memoir.
Amanda lost her beloved brother Jeremy to a drug overdose. Jeremy was Amanda’s protector who always had her back. The loss of a loved one sets Amanda on a journey of emotional and spiritual health. Through this book, the author is guiding readers to heal from loss. The author advises readers to focus on love, compassion, trust, etc.
Amanda has very well mentioned that we should embrace the pain, and break the chains of generational family dysfunction. We can’t choose not to feel our feelings. Even if we choose that, we won’t be free of our pain. I who suffered mental trauma last year could relate well to this book.
The author’s words are raw. I appreciate her for sharing her personal journey with all of us. If you have suffered loss, grief, etc and are looking for a way to heal then don’t miss to read this uplifting book. The author’s writing style is nice and it’s a must read book.
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: “You’ve Got This Arjuna!” is an interesting Children’s book written by Lissa Coffey and illustrated by Rajesh Nagulakonda. The main character of the story is a little boy Arjuna. He is about to play a soccer game but questions his role and his part. He asked his friend Krishna what he should do.
Read this story to know will Krishna be able to convince Arjuna to play.
The characters Krishna and Arjuna are inspired by the Bhagavad Gita. Through this book, the author is inspiring little readers to learn the valuable messages by Bhagavad Gita. The storytelling skills of the author are amazing. I loved every bit of this book. I recommend this book to little readers.
𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Imryll’s Revelation 📚 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Marc R. Micciola ✍️ . .
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: Recently I got my hands on the short stories written by Marc R. Micciola. His stories are captivating and hook the readers till the last page. In book two of Imryll’s Legacy series, Imryll went out into the Forest of Fanathill. She is searching for her father who abandoned her long ago because of the devil Stepmother.
Imryll and her father finally met and had a lot of things to talk about. While talking with her father, Imryll’s gut told her that her father is hiding something from her. It is difficult for Imryll to decide whom to trust. Read this story and find out whom she will trust. Will Imryll give into the darkness because of the evil spirits that are quite strong?
I loved the storyline of this book. Marc’s writing is easy to follow because of the use of lucid language and smooth narration. The story is to the point and I appreciate that the author has constructed a great plot within just a few pages.
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: Return to Autumn written by the author Rusty Blackwood is a wonderfully written story. The story is set in the year 1978. Cyril Landon and Autumn have a young son Drew Landon. One day, Autumn met with an accident. Duff Taylor, the jockey, found her in an unconscious manner. Duff has always fantasized about this. He couldn’t stop thinking about satisfying his lustful wants.
Duff took advantage of the opportunity and got inside Autumn. He later dressed in Autumn and called Cyril Landon informing him about Autumn’s accident. Cyril was informed about the chances of possible rape when Autumn was examined. Even Cyril suspects Duff but will he confront him? Will Duff’s secret be revealed to everyone?
The story has an interesting beginning and it pulled me into the world of Landon stables immediately. I love the writing style of Rusty Blackwood. The author’s writing is flawless and makes it easy for the readers to read this book. The cover photo is well designed. Great work done by the author in this book.
𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Individual Influence 📚 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Brian Smith and Mary Griffin ✍️ . .
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: Individual Influence written by the authors Brian Smith and Mary Griffin is a must read. It is the second book in Find the “I” in Team book series. Individual Influence is about how we influence others and how others influence us.
In this book, the authors have discussed individual advantages, slowing down, focus, etc. My favorite chapter from this book is focus. For the past few months, I have been trying to improve my focus but I get distracted easily. Living in the present moment can help us to focus. This book will drive you towards knowing yourself better so you can improve yourself and your life. The chapter “Who Am I?” will make us question ourselves and do self-reflection. The author has shared a few questions which we can ask ourselves.
This book takes readers on the journey of finding themselves. The content of this book is something I am glad to read. I have taken many key takeaways from this book. It’s time for me to implement them so I can grow to influence other individuals and Individuals.
This is an insightful read and every individual should read this book. The cover photo and title are suitable. One would definitely learn something from this book that will make their life better. Looking forward to reading more such books by the author duos.
Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.
This question hard for me because I don’t remember a lot. Hello my name is Berandine A. Ziegler, I have Brown hair, smokey blue eyes, I am going to be 58 soon born on D-Day, I live in a town called Barberton, Ohio, I was born here. I live with my husband going on 16 years, everyday a challenge, but I love marriage life, I am a fur mom no human children. I always worked when I was younger in age but I always got laid – off so I always had to find another one, they seemed to fall into my lap. I am very disabled now because of two of my jobs from the past, so is my husband for almost the same reason. I always came back to writing, never knew why.
Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “His Ultimate Path”?
I really didn’t have to much of a challenge, when someone would say a word a thought vision would travel through my head and by my eyes. My husband found all my written journals you think I would be mad but when he said why don’t you finish and publish them? I always have problems with spelling because of my Epilepsy, which I don’t have now. Just poor is all.
Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?
When I was being told I would never be able to read or write. So I never knew what my health issue was I went to the schools library. I always read Edgar Alan Poe, Robert & Elizabeth Browning, Emily Dickerson, but most of all my most favorite St. Francis De Sales, which is also my favorite Church. I also read old poems from the old days.
Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?
My favorite places in my country is all of the Roman Catholic Churches, I am so at peace In God’s House, just being there at mass or my Adoration Hours, I feel so cleansed from the outer world, I also love to go cruising on the open sea waters, I feel free to be my true self, I feel so a live, one with God’s Creations.
Q5. Is there lots to do before you dive in and start writing a book?
There is a lot of work but for certain piece of “His Ultimate Path.” I did have to do some research just to make sure I am on the right path, so I don’t end up using someone else’s words. Since I am disabled I just make sure all my chores are completed for the day, so I don’t have any interruptions.Once I my hand and thoughts get going there is no stopping.
Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘His Ultimate Path’?
This is kind of hard to say because some of the pieces were written way before I met my husband and I was was still fight through my Epilepsy, and some are from a child who is not with us and her poems are about 54 years old, I taught my husband how to write poems until the year 2006. I took a few years to get published, it stalled in the middle of processing for at least 3 more years, while it was stalled I did more research on a few more poems and short stories. When my husband and I finally won our disability cases back in 2018.
Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?
Well all of my books have different publishing companies: “The many Wonders Of Deanie” is from Page Publishing, in New York. “His Ultimate Path” is from Dorrance Publishing from Pittsburg Pennsylvania, My audio book is in New Jersey, a company called audio book network, but all can be found books-a-million barnes & noble, goodreads, I can’t name them all but everywhere you can find books and anywhere you can download e-books.
Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘His Ultimate Path’?
The title I am not sure if that was an accident because I was working on some research a story called “His Ultimate Path” Then a e-mail came through from my publisher, the next step was the title and cover. I didn’t have a title for it then as I was typing God must of been using my hands because “His Ultimate Path” is what was written. The cover was from a vision I was seeing through my eyes for many years.
Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?
For my reader’s I guess things are always fresh because I make some things funny in both of my books I make some funny, sweet, and thought provoking always about everyday things in a persons life, but they are all messages of hope, written by people who in a public’s eye didn’t have any hope. As for keeping things fresh for myself well every time I write and complete something my husband does the editing for me and after he is done and God approves he erases it from our minds even though our names are there and so is the date and time we still don’t remember any of them.
Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice you’ve been given about writing?
I actually have never been given any advice about writing, I did a lot of research and going to many different English classes, to try and understand or figure out what I needed to learn to self teach I tried many different writing school in the mail and they didn’t help, so I went back to looking for more books. I also tried to enter some writing contest didn’t work. This was long before my husband, I also took some typing classes at night school, some poetry classes from libraries many classes many libraries no advice along the way it just clicked one day.
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: “UNLIMITED: The 17 Proven Laws to Success in a Workplace that was not Designed for You” written by the author Eugina Jordan is a must read.
Eugina who was born in communist Russia in 1970 grew up with a single mother. She graduated from Teacher’s college in Russia and moved to Canada. Because of marriage, Eugina moved to the US and after suffering domestic violence for six years, she decided to be a single mother.
Success in the corporate world wasn’t easy for the author as she was an immigrant, a single mother and with no engineering or marketing degree. The seventeen laws that the author has mentioned are related to: self-awareness, courage to speak up, networking, support system, purpose, etc.
This book is for those who want to succeed in the system by becoming unlimited. This book inspires the readers to become the best version of themselves by becoming unlimited.
The worksheet given at the end is thought provoking. The author motivates the readers to help other women, people of color and immigrants so they can be in a leadership position one day. It’s an insightful read. Those who are looking for a growth in their career should get their hands on this book for the great tips shared by the author.
𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Shackles of a Freeman 📚 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Don Alexander ✍️ . .
🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰: Shackles of a Freeman written by the author Don Alexander is a historical fiction novel that takes the readers to the 1850s when a few brave people fought against slavery.
The main character of the story is Lewis Sheridan Leary. He was born in March 1835. While growing up in North Carolina, Lewis learned that black people are treated differently. One day his family received a letter from Lewis’ eldest sister Catherine-Ann and she informed her family that Oberlin-Ohio is a safe place to be as a black person.
Lewis’ father had a slave named Luke. When Lewis helped Luke to escape, Luke died as a free man. Lewis had heard about the freedom of black men and women in Oberlin. He decided to settle in Ohio. Read this story to know what Lewis would do to fight against slavery.
It’s a gripping read and I couldn’t put it down until I finished it. The narration is smooth and strong. The writing style of the author is amazing and I was able to follow the story easily. This story will stay in my mind for a long time. Those who enjoy historical fiction should definitely get their hands on this book.
Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.
People seem most infatuated with the mundane details, so I’ll start there: My name is Margaret Beaver, I’m seventeen years old, and, occupation wise, I am an author, poet, novelist, memoirist, educator, photographer, artist, and self-proclaimed philosopher; at home, I’m the annoying little sister, frantic cat mama, and an average disaster with more books than wall space. I’ve lived in my hometown of Plano, Texas my entire life, and it was here I first hatched my creativity at the age of five, at which time I developed the fanatical habit of drawing with colored pencils on the walls, marking on furniture with Sharpie markers, and sketching the occasional illustration to accompany a fictional story I would swear to be true. At eight years old, I wrote my first semi- formatted novel, a forty-seven-page abomination about spontaneously dying butterflies, and I still keep the original manuscript shamefully tucked away in a drawer in my bedroom.
In February of 2020, just a month before I started seriously pursuing poetry, I exercised my impulsivity and submitted two of my very first poems ever written, which strangely enough elected me Topical Winner two consecutive times for the Live Poet Society of New Jersey’s “Of Love and Dedication” and “Inside of Me” publications (beginner’s luck). Featured in one publication would soon become the first poem of my collection and a fan favorite, “Sad boy.” After that, I submitted more poems for consideration and came up empty every time. The next month, I began the initial stages of composing inkwells. out of sheer boredom (and spite). I was fifteen years old when I received my first publishing contract with Pegasus Elliot MacKenzie Publishers, and inkwells., debut poetry collection chronicling my struggles with mental health, was published thereafter in June of 2022.
In terms of recency, my debut novel (excluding the dying butterfly incident), Flowers for Papa, is finally coming to a press near you in late 2023. Accompanying it is also my second poetry collection, Seasons: August’s Collection. While my editors are tackling those catastrophes, I’m attempting a student’s aspiration of graduating high school without incident.
Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book inkwells.?
For how sensitive the content is, writing inkwells. was easy. It was a very easy, smooth, deliberate process. I came up with a poem very few days—sometimes I wrote multiple poems in one day—and then once I began feeling better and my symptoms were more manageable, I collected all those pages and all those files on my computer and compacted them into one document. It was never my intention to actually do anything with the poems—I hadn’t meant to write as many as I did—but after I realized I had scrawled almost twenty thousand words of pure illness, I had to comprehend the fact that I had accidentally created something that was such a genuine, unaltered, and unrestrained demonstration of the realities of mental illness. I knew I had always wanted to be a writer, but I had wholly expected to enter the literary industry by way of some fiction novel I had completely made up; I never meant for any of this.
I’ve been asked so many times—by strangers, by friends, by publishing houses— “What is your reasoning for writing this?” “What are you trying to achieve?” And the answer is very simple. For people not dealing with mental health problems, particularly anxiety, depression, or PTSD, many of the poems in this collection can feel very dark and unsettling. But this is not a work restricted to one group of people; this is not a one-sided argument. For people who aren’t struggling, this collection is knowledge; for people who are struggling, this collection is validation. These poems can be very redeeming and comforting, in that they support the notion that that no one is ever alone in their condition and there are many others who are trying to cope as best they can. Of course, I can’t speak on behalf of the entirety of the mentally ill population, but I can provide you with the knowledge that this is what someone could be feeling.
The only real challenge of the work, outside of surviving myself, was the ordering of the poems. I couldn’t decide if I wanted to group them together based on their degree of darkness or if I wanted to leave them miscellaneous. All in all, I ended up leaving the order miscellaneous because this order reflects the fluctuations of mental stability—one day you’re fine and then you’re not. So don’t be surprised if you read this wonderfully optimistic poem and then you turn the page and suddenly you’re subjected to something comparable to hellfire. That is life with mental illness.
Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?
My writing, fiction or nonfiction, novel or poem, can technically be categorized as belonging to the Young Adult audience. Only, I struggle with that label because it has somewhat of a negative connotation. YA books are received as if they’re only meant for kids, as if they have nothing truly important to deliver besides empty entertainment, and that they are incapable of broadening your perspective on certain issues and having some sort of development or impact to your person. One book that comes to mind for this example is Looking for Alaska by John Green. It is a truly phenomenal novel that reaches incredibly intimate and universal depths, yet it’s restricted to the kids’ section where not many adults would venture to. For one, I really love being able to bring a sentimentality and a depth to a uniformly juvenile genre, and I much enjoy the fact that my work is rather a compound of elements amalgamated to craft a well-rounded piece suitable for the Young Adult genre, but also containing the knowledge and lessons relevant to older adults or those struggling with mental health, self-harm, or suicidal tendencies. As a sufferer of those things myself, I strive always to make my message true and genuine, and especially when it comes to circumstances I closely identify with. I want, always, to confront the great concepts of life—love, meaning, morality, family, death—and my intention for writing is for my audience to reconnect with those uncomfortable yet inevitable elements—elements that are responsible for making life whole.
That being said, my most influential writers have been restricted to the kids’ section, and particularly John Green, who is my favorite author. I’m talking Paper Towns; The Fault in Our Stars; An Abundance of Katherines; Will Grayson, Will Grayson. Dashing Through the Snow by Debbie Macomber, Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng, It Ends With Us by Colleen Hoover, Girl in Pieces by Kathleen Glasgow, All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven, The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky—these are all novels I hold very highly and works which brilliantly defy expectation or restriction.
Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?
I’m not a very adventurous person simply because my condition has made me terribly paranoid and uncomfortable with the prospect of being in unfamiliar places, with unfamiliar people. I’m very outgoing if I’d simply let myself. Recently, for the first time, my mother and I had driven the absolutely gruesome eight-hour round-trip to Houston, Texas, and we were on the road by 6 A.M. Nighttime and early morning are very beautiful, with all the shops and signs lit up and headlights bounding off the bridges. Everything is so much more fascinating when you’re half asleep. By seven-thirty, we had made it to a place called Ennis and my mom, who is simply so much more exuberant than I am, insisted we stop by the Buc-ee’s we had passed. Long story short, after perusing around with my slippers on and my hands in my pockets, my mother bought us both a cream cheese kolache for the road. My special place will probably change, but right now I think of Ennis, the almost-sunrise, and my mother’s happiness over absolutely nothing.
Q5. Is there lots to do before you dive in and start writing a book?
I’d love to say I have an actual writing process I adhere to, but really, I’m a very disorganized person in general and I truly have no intentions of following any deliberate format. The truth of the matter is: I don’t plot books. At all. I get a very abstract and completely detail-void idea, I write a rough narrative surrounding the vague premise, and then I occasionally dapple in miniature descriptions and try to word it as if I knew what I was doing all along. There’s lots of frantic scribbling outside the margins of my journals with the new ideas I randomly get, and I try to make note of incorporating those details back into the narrative once I review and type up everything I’ve handwritten.
Basically, as I progress, I make more things up and get more ideas. And then I write those down. Nearly nothing is planned beforehand—I’m too eager and overly excited to write when I get a new idea that I bound in immediately—or the things I plan are very monumental and plot- altering events, and I get the vague impressions of things that I want to eventually happen somewhere down the line, but I have no details to patch the storyline together to effectively and realistically get to that point. This leads to me sitting on rather elementary plot points for weeks or sometimes months without writing anything; just purely speculating. But then, I’ll listen to a song, I’ll read a book, I’ll watch a film—and I’m inspired again. It’s a very unruly cycle, going through rapid writing sprees and then lying dormant for such extensive periods, but I’ve always been one to make things harder than they need to be.
There are some projects, also, where I have to do more notetaking than usual because of the potential intricacies in addressing a side scheme. Any notes I make in the very beginning of the process are typically scraped or adjusted later when I figure out what I’m doing. This, consequently, leads me to rewriting entire sections—entire beginnings—once I get a better handle and understanding of my character’s personalities and their ultimate aspirations or destinations. I sketch the initial beginning almost purely as a filler to build on the progress of and to motivate an early draft, and then once my understanding grows of what exactly is going on in my head, I scrap everything that doesn’t align anymore or things that could be better or more vividly explained.
As you can see, it’s a disaster.
And then there’s the processes of poetry, which aren’t necessarily processes either. When regarding the differences between writing poetry and writing prose, there’s, first, the fact that you have total creative control in poetry: you don’t have to use perfect punctuation or capitalization since poetry is more an art than a literature. All discrepancies are essentially excused, and you can format your stanzas and your lines however you please. Poetry, also, doesn’t require as much substance—that is not to say, though, that poetry is lesser. Novels are an entirety; they are a comprehensive and hole-less architecture founded on complete and detailed narratives, the construction of entire personalities and their backstories, and the creation of sometimes multiple converging plotlines. Everything mentioned or foreshadowed has to have a reason, and there is almost always something to be later uncovered. All of this must be thought through, which can be terribly distressing—or some things end up fitting together accidentally. In general, novels obtain a lot more requirements than poetry, and so they take more brain power and can be impenetrably exhausting. But I’ve always had a knack for having a lot to say.
Q6. How long did it take you to write your book inkwells.?
As previously mentioned, poetry generally requires less essence—or the essence is its entirety, and poems are typically rather small. As an art, I would perhaps categorize poetry as one of the less demanding entities—or at least it is for me. In terms of inkwells., the entire collection was more of a relief rather than a hindrance. For example, the situation of inkwells. was rather unique: the reason for its particular rawness and vulnerability is the fact that it was written during and the product of what I would confidently describe as the worst mental health relapse of my life, caused largely in part to the fact that I had been ignoring my symptoms for well over four years—and I take responsibility for that. inkwells. is me taking responsibility.
You see, it is only natural for humans, when they are tired of life, to return to what makes life worth living: art. So practically every time I was experiencing a breakdown, or got severely nauseous, or was feeling particularly suicidal, perhaps—and these symptoms were repetitive, daily events—I would translate that anguish onto the page and write how I was feeling in that exact moment. Every poem included in inkwells. was born amidst some form of chaos, which only adds to its authenticity, I think.
Since my symptoms were so erratic and persistent for the several months I endured the battles of trying to find an adequate medication or searching for a suitable therapist—things that seem a lot easier and more trivial than they really are—I would write. I wrote every day. And since I wrote so often, inkwells. was finished very quickly. I began writing in March of 2020—that same month I started on Lexapro, which practically did me in and I had to switch over to multiple other medications—and finished somewhere in August. I started the photography for inkwells.— I remember the dates exactly—on October 7, 2020, and that lasted until January 31, 2021.
Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?
There are multitudes of platforms, ranging from worldwide wholesalers to local depositories. Most notably, you can find inkwells. on the websites of Pegasus Publishers, Amazon Global Store, Books-A-Million, Waterstones, and Barnes & Noble. It’s also available on IndieBound, which is a great resource to use if you’d like to find out where a book may be located near you. More quaint locations would include SpeedyHen, Browns Books, Bookshop.org, PBShop, Booktopia, Wordery, Discover Books, Blackwell’s, Half Price Books, Interabang Books, Kennys Bookshop & Art Galleries Ltd., One More Page Books, Pretty Things & Cool Stuff, Hudson Booksellers, Patchouli Joe’s Books & Indulgences, The Dock Bookshop, A New Chapter Bookstore, Fabled Bookshop & Café, Black Pearl Books, BookWoman, The Book Nook, BookPeople, Better World Books, WHSmith, and ThriftBooks. I’ve also been in contact with a wonderful co-op located in Downtown Plano which sells vintage clothing and select novels, so it could be arriving there soon, too.
Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title inkwells.?
I came up with the title long before the poem ever existed. Not to spoil, but the final lines of the collection are “I drain myself inside these inkwells / We will overcome,” which essentially mean that I am draining the darkness from myself to create the ink inside the wells, and that from making the conscious decision to drain myself, I am overcoming my previous obstacles and finally returning to the truth that I deserve much better than how I was treating myself. I can’t tell you how I came up with that; I really enjoy vintage items and had recently been gifted a genuine Remington typewriter, and so perhaps I was thinking of ink and stumbled upon the word “inkwells.” Since I had the title picked out, the final operation of the collection, I had decided, was to write the title poem surrounding the word and its notion. I put the period at the end of the title simply because it’s very aesthetically pleasing to me and, like all humans, I am fickle.
As for the book cover, I really love digital design and often create my own random book covers with completely fictitious titles out of my own sketches. The font was easy enough: I had largely incorporated the use of my typewriter for the photography element of the book, so I knew I wanted the font to resemble that of a typewriter. (I dabbled with attempting to create the cover by typing the title directly on my typewriter, but that never came to fruition.) I knew for a long time I wanted the scheme to be primarily black and white—very minimalistic, as I much prefer book covers to be—and ended up inserting the image of a whim because it was, simply, a very beautiful clip of a photograph I had taken for “it doesn’t have to make sense,” a poem in the collection. I put a monochromatic filter over the image, and it was very beautiful. With some slight adjustments made by my publicity team, the cover was finalized. I always intended the cover to be simple yet refined, and I believe it turned out very well.
Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?
Taking breaks—often. In all aspects of my being, I am a very obsessive worker; I’ve had teachers and counselors at my school tell me to calm down and walk slower at my own pace or else I’m going to give myself an ulcer. I can’t handle having things to do and knowing they’re sitting there, waiting for me to do them, and very often I go into panic attacks if I’m overwhelmed with tasks and don’t know where to begin. Needless to say, taking breaks is very difficult for me; I want to keep working until it is all finished, completely neglecting any of my own needs or my potential exhaustion, and then I will rest and then I will take care of myself only when the deed is done. There’s a very debilitating perfection that surrounds me as well: I don’t only want to get everything done, but I want to get it all done to the highest extent possible or else I’m remarkably disappointed and unfulfilled—for a long time, until I do well again. It’s been a significantly lengthy process for me to realize I can give myself permission to rest when I need it; grind culture can be very helpful in terms of motivation but also very injurious, too, and I urge everyone to listen to their bodies and, frankly, disobey the demands of others—including yourself. Exhaustion and burnout are genuine health issues, and you could be left recovering for the rest of your life.
The same goes for readers regularly consuming sensitive media. I’ve read very graphic and emotionally discomforting books over strenuous world issues or the horrific memoirs of amazing people I’m still attempting to fathom, and what you dump into your brain is also what you dump into your stomach, and it can make you very sick. inkwells., in particular, is very impressionable and perceptive and can incite distress at certain intervals. This is why I strive to always be aware of the wellness of my readers and put trigger warnings on all my books. As written, “Under no circumstances should any reader compromise their mental health to analyze or endure mine.”
Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice you’ve been given about writing?
On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction by William Zinsser. I received this novel as required reading during my time in AP Language & Composition in the eleventh grade, and I would refer to it as singularly the most fruitful nonfiction I’ve ever experienced. I read it all through the winter months and upon January second, my class was tasked with the assignment of dissecting out three primal quotes which we connected with in the text, and to analyze and expand upon them in our own writings. As a writer who specializes primarily in their area of optimal entertainment—romantic fiction, historical fiction, science fiction, just any fiction at all—I found myself at utter despair with having to read the devil of all book genres:
the memoir (which is highly coincidental considering my first publication was nonfiction). Some of the most intimate sentiments have come from pure logic, and that pure logic has come from Zinsser: “I don’t like to write; I like having written”; “I think they get that permission by being born”; “Writers who write interestingly tend to be men and women who keep themselves interested. That’s almost the whole point of becoming a writer. I’ve used writing to give myself an interesting life and a continuing education.” The narrative is composed on the entirety of making one feel less otherworldly, admitting the truths and realities of the completely condescending and mentally exhausting processes that is writing, and providing what could be largely considered as the Holy Bible of nonfiction writing: beneficial and substantial for any writer or reader across any genre. Even above that, Zinsser instates and emphasizes the comprehensive lessons of a student bent to the mold of traditional educational algorithms:
everybody loves to learn and create—but not for a grade or under a time limit or having to turn around and prove themselves to superiors. To students and anybody at all: You mustn’t be reduced, and you don’t have to prove yourself to anybody. And even more: just because you love your occupation or profession does not mean you are immune to the stress or the treachery of it.