Interview with author

Marc O’Brien

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.

Please allow me to introduce myself… Due to a unprovoked confrontation with the German Measles before birth I was born with a brain injury the University of Pennsylvania diagnosed as Cerebral Palsy. This physical conflict on paper took many things away from me. But due to adaptive equipment along with aggressive creative rehabilitation techniques, I won back some recreational experiences learning basic horseback riding skills. This activity also brought acknowledgements like representing the state of New Jersey in the 1983 and 1985 National Cerebral Palsy, Les Autres (translated- the others) Games. These memorable moments were great for college applications, professional resumes and social conversation. Higher education academics is where I studied my journalism background preparing me for being a writer. Unlike my recreational reality, when story telling I enter an imaginative world where anything can happen. This interpretive fiction exercise is safe and can be deleted from my computer screen, if I do not like it.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle”?

The number one challenge I had in writing “The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle” is describing my able-bodied equestrian Danielle Lynne Easton engaging in an actual jumper course. Living in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the time, I used the race book’s individual betting screens while investing my two-dollar wagers and miraculously captured the free-flowing motions that a show jumper demonstrates while competing. When the riding feeling came back, I was able to translate it to words. I guess it was just that Vegas magic which did the trick.

Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

In “The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle” I developed the character ‘Peter King’, the good friend. Name comes from Peter Straub and Stephen King, American horror authors. While being a teenager the horror genre both book and film assisted me in confronting then understanding the definition to the word ‘handicap’. Another writer who influenced me growing up in New Jersey was the late playwright Neil Simon, that is where my romantic relationship vibe comes from and right now, I think the Broadway legend along with the late Arthur Miller are keeping me from writing scary stories filled with gothic death.

Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

Here in the United States, we have everything. Where I have lived, New Jersey has all the settings a writer would want while Nevada’s wonderful challenging desert landscape with scenic mountain peaks featured nice gaming opportunities and Florida’s relaxing beach communities kept the creative juices healthy. All three surroundings not only provided positive living experiences but contributed to my upbeat writing style. To pick a favorite is very difficult.

If I can find the stimulating electricity to write and be creative in a certain place, it is special to me.

Q5. What inspired you to write the book ‘The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle’?

A wonderful aging large show pony, which the farm I rode at rescued while I was enrolled at Barry University in North Miami Shores, Florida. I purchased “Something Special” and changed her name to ‘Jersey Girl’ noting her attitude and respectfully competed in South Florida Hunter/Jumper Association rated horse shows. Originally, owned by the Exorcist actress Linda Blair, I guess the chestnut mare looked the part and was a perfect fit. These experiences had a story to be told and I used a fictional format to spin the tale.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle’?

Decades to conjure up the visions for the story and during this time my journalism style writing developed which is different from long winded descriptive story telling. My one-bedroom Las Vegas apartment was a nice place to assemble everything into the word processor, then put it away until pitching it to Austin Macauley, UK, LTD who picked it up immediately.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

Amazon, Barnes and Noble. Google my name Marc O’Brien. “The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle” can also be purchased at Austin Macauley, UK, LTD.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle’?

I do not want to give away one of the endings in the three-part series, but the cover is a picture right before I graduated with my Bachelor of Arts degree from Barry University. This image is an accurate photo of someone diagnosed with Cerebral Palsy in the late sixties, early seventies and approximately twenty years later, right on schedule, earned a bachelor’s degree. It has come to my attention that my book is on sale at Waterstones in London, that means what I looked like in 1988 is on display, and I think that is a positive international statement.

Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?

I play an improvisational game. Like acting in a theater, I use a prompt, jump start a scene and take it from there.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice you’ve been given about writing?

It all starts with a sentence, more sentences make a paragraph, more paragraphs make a page, more pages make a chapter and when you have many chapters and nearly done pitch it to a publisher. Keep writing, it is a wonderful internal way to figure things out in your own mind and the worst-case scenario is, delete or throw out what you wrote then say, “‘it never existed’, I got it out of my system, and I feel better.” I told myself all this and the mental health strategy works.

Buy The Final Fence: Sophomores In The Saddle on Amazon

Interview with author Jonathan Fiero

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.

Hi! I’m Jonathan, and this is my first novel. I’ve also been published in a collaborative photography book “A Picture is Worth 1000 Words” by Thomas Brath, so check that out! I’ve always had a love for writing, journaling, or just simply putting my random thoughts down on paper. Eventually my thoughts began to stretch out an become more cohesive to the point where I felt comfortable to share what I wrote with a close friend; she encouraged me to push further.

As for me as a person, I grew up in New York City and Central New Jersey, 9 years in each place. My college days were spent in Philadelphia. Twice I’ve lived in Raleigh, North Carolina, both times fleeing from there in a frantic cross-country trek to the west coast. Southern California for the first 7 years, and I’ve been in the Pacific Northwest for the past 5 years. I mostly just wander around my neighborhood with my dog Moab and work when I have to.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Be Prepared to Die”?

Finding the proper tone and mood often proved difficult. Like any writer, I take from what I know, what I’ve lived. But I need to be in a somewhat cheerful mood if I’m sitting down to write. The challenge with this was the need to essentially “get into character” since I was writing the story from a first-person perspective.

Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

I’ve read a fair amount of varying philosophy throughout my life, and that has always influenced what I write, and to a certain extent, how I write. But as I’ve developed my writing from incomplete thoughts to a published book, several books and others have served me well with their inspiration. The first was probably Paulo Coelho’s ‘The Alchemist’, a bit cliche I’m sure, but reading that book over a decade ago was what reignited my passion for reading fictional literature. It’ll be overtly apparent to any reader of my book; Albert Camus is immensely influential, almost to a comically nauseating level. Reading John Muir while I was working on this book also encouraged and directed much of what and how I wrote.

Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

Of all my travels around the United States, it would be hard to decide on one specific location, so I would have to say the deserts of California. I say deserts, plural, because there are so many varying types of deserts there, and that is what makes it so special. If there is one singular location though, that can optimize life in California away from its crowded cities and shorelines, the desert entrance into Yosemite’s alpine region that sits above Mono Lake. But not just the entrance, the descent out of that Valley Wonderland is really quite the unique experience.

Q5. What inspired you to write the book ‘Be Prepared to Die’?

I had begun writing a different book, in which the main character of ‘Be Prepared to Die’ plays a large roll in. A friend recommended I discuss more about their backstories in that first book I was writing. I didn’t think short descriptions of their histories would do the depth of their characters justice, so I began constructing a prequel storyboard.

Before all this, another friend had come up with the idea that I should write and publish a raw, unfiltered journal. So, I wrote that, and honestly, it was wonderful, and I wish I hadn’t let my emotions destroy it. But it was also very personal. This is not to say I was opposed to putting my personal life on public display this way, it just seemed, for comparison, like I would be trying to sell a self-portrait.

So, I decided to lend my life off to a fictional character. I wrote a few short stories. They’ll still be utilized one way or another. But for this book, what actually sent me down the path toward publication, it was the words I wrote after ordering an Old-Fashioned Roulette cocktail from the whiskey bar near my house. The ‘roulette’ was just the bartender’s choice on the whiskey used. She picked the cheapest whiskey they had. This was the raw quote, the one I wrote the moment I sat down that day, with the intent to write a novel, as I tasted the sharp astringency of a cheap liquor…

“She basically loaded the bullet into the chamber that would be the first shot to fire when the trigger was pulled. There was no spinning of the cylinder, no blind chance, it was murder. Sure, I knew the chance of death was one in six, but no one ever talks of those five chances at life. In this case though, my chances were more like one in a hundred. They say to not waste good liquor on mixers. Sure, I agree. But I’d add, don’t waste a good cocktail on cheap liquor. This hangover tomorrow will be the death of me…”

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Be Prepared to Die’?

That sort of depends on whether the question is this book or a book. I wrote that first paragraph sometime in the Spring of 2021 and had a complete manuscript by early Autumn in 2022. But it was the Summer of 2018 when the idea to write something that resembled a personal journal of my life was born.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

All of the large online retailers will have my book available in paperback ($16.99) and eBook ($7.49) formats. It can also be purchased by author direct from my Etsy page, shop name “TheBottleRocketPress” ($16.24), shipping included.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Be Prepared to Die’?

For the longest time the book was going to be titled ‘The White Curtain’, named for the quasi-inanimate antagonist of the story. But upon seeing the first cover from the publisher I used, I realized that regardless of the tone I had in my mind for what “The White Curtain” represents, others would read it as ‘flighty and airy’.

One day I was walking to work, listening to a band, Streetlight Manifesto. It was a long instrumental part of the song, but the rhythm matched the chorus, and though I had heard that song likely well over a hundred times, the chorus lyrics escaped me “you’ll be left behind” and in my mind I resolutely sang “be prepared to die”.

As for the cover, my initial intent was a white curtain or cloth of some kind that looked tattered and ominous, somewhat covering the image of a sailboat trailing off toward the setting Sun. After a few discussions with the design team, I provided a few images, the two being used for the cover being my first choice for each part of the cover design. The dingy room is meant to represent the Room in the Underground and all of the reality of my life that was placed into the book, while the illustrated sailboats represent carrying the story off into the fictious waters of literature and the protagonist’s search for freedom.

Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?

I find it’s best to write my thoughts by hand, out at bars or restaurants, or in a park. After having spent so much time with this book, transcribing my handwritten journals, I’ve started to alter my process, where now I’ll write a few starting paragraphs, but continue on with the thoughts at home.

Constantly reading while I’m writing also helps the flow of my stories to not become stagnant. I’m a big believer in the concept that all ideas come from other ideas. Sometimes it’s tone, sometimes it’s structure or something else, but other novels are an excellent source of fuel to ensure readers aren’t stranded in a monotonous book.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice you’ve been given about writing?

I think most of the advice carried over from my years of art training and photography. But I think that advice rings just as true for writing and any other art. Create for yourself sure, I think that is an important part of art. But also, create for others, not with the intent to sell, but with the intent to share. I think any good piece of art, novels included, should allow the audience to see themselves in the artwork, and not just the creator.

Buy Be Prepared to Die on Amazon

Death Never Sleeps

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Death Never Sleeps 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Davis Grace ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
Death Never Sleeps written by the author David Grace is the first installment in the Chris Hunter book series. The story features Detective James “Big Jim” Donegan and his partner Chris Hunter. The latest case is about a call girl who was strangled and then put into the wood chipper.

While solving the case, Big Jim often asks questions from Chris. Chris knew that these questions were a test to teach him something. While investigating and questioning Johnny-Boy Watkins, they found out that the strangled girl was one of Johnny-Boy’s girls. Darja Novoriska was roommates with Fatima. They both worked for Johnny-Boy and had plans to leave him soon. Darja was making good money for Johnny-Boy but who killed her?

The writing style of the author is nice. The language used in the book is lucid and I was able to follow the story easily. This book kept me on the edge the whole time. The way Big Jim kept on teaching something to Chris is something I really liked. The story is well paced. Those who love reading crime fiction should definitely get their hands on this book.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Fate of a Prince

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Fate of a Prince 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Hannah Gaudette ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Fate of a Prince” written by the author Hannah Gaudette is the first installment in the Destined Duology. King Edwin Tala and his wife Amelia gave birth to a son. They named him Lance Tala. It was painful for Edwin when he realized that their firstborn would not live long enough to be king. He was a baby born for sacrifice. 

Kyden has been living a life of scavenging. Since the age of twelve, he has been on his own. His mother married a man who isn’t a good step-father. When Prince Lance Tala was in Eaglewood, Kyden stole from him. The punishment for theft against the royal household is imprisonment. Kyden didn’t want to go to prison. Prince Lance asked him to be his manservant. He even paid coins to his step-father so Kyden could be a manservant for Prince Lance. 

When Kyden’s step-father asks him to put a sedative in Prince’s food, will Kyden do it? Will his step-father really free his mother? Read the story yourself to know what happens next. The language used in the book is lucid and easy to follow. I appreciate the vivid imagination of the author in writing this story. The cover photo of the book is nice. The narration is smooth and strong. I had a great time reading this book. Great work by the author in the first book in the series.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Interview with author Sarah Mirza

1. Please introduce yourself so that the readers will get to know you better. 

I am an author who lives in South London with my  teenage daughter, my long suffering boyfriend and our dog called Peppa. I am also a part time criminal lawyer.  I juggle my time between my career, writing and looking after my family. I feel very blessed.

I was born and brought up in Essex but have been living in London for the past 25 years.  I am currently writing a series of short stories with positive messages in them, aimed at the 2 to 7 year old age bracket. I was inspired to do this by my love of Aesop’s fables which my father read to me when I was young.

2. What is your inspiration behind your book “Little Bird”?

The main message of the book is about self-belief and what you can achieve if you have it. For me a bird’s first steps to taking flight was a good way to convey that message to a young audience.

3. When did you realize you want to be an author?

I always loved writing and would often dream of writing books. When I was growing up  though, it always seemed a little out of reach. Today, things are very achievable if you put your mind to it.  I decided to make that dream a reality in 2022 and wrote my first book The Cat and The Dog.

4. Please tell us something about your book “Little Bird”?

This is a short and simple story following Little Bird through the days of the week while he develops his 5 senses and then takes his step towards flight. The cycle follows that of many small birds who are in the gestation period between 7 – 15 days, and then develop the same 5 senses we have. It is hopefully fun, inspiring and educational.

5. For which age group is your book “Little Bird” suitable for?

2 – 6 year olds

6. What is your favorite Quote?

If you mean from the book then it is the note from Little Bird to the reader at the end of the story, but you will need to read that for yourself.

If you mean generally, it would be ” I am the master of my ship, I am the captain of my soul, ” by Ernest Henley. It’s very powerful!

7. What do you like the most about your country?

That there are so many opportunities and you can be whoever you want to be. Freedom to choose your own path is so important.

8. What suggestion do you want to give to parents of little readers regarding a reading habit?

I  would say read as often as you can to your child. Definitely read bedtime stories. Encourage your child to pick the books they like. Find books you enjoy to read aloud. Make up your own stories. Have fun with it!

9. What does literary success look like to you?

To write books that I am proud to call mine. To inspire young children into a positive way of thinking and to have a loyal following.

10. Lastly, who is your inspiration in life and why?

Without a doubt, it was my dadHe was the most positive and brilliant person I have ever knownHe had a never ending supply of determination, strength and humanity. He was a GP who saved many lives, helped many people and had the most amazing adventurous life.  His name Karamat means Miracle.

Buy Little Bird on Amazon

Lawless Tradition

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Lawless Tradition 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: P.D. Blackwell ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
Lawless Tradition written by the author P.D. Blackwell is a unique read. Through this book, the author is opening the reader’s eyes to the forgotten biblical facts. Through this book, the author wants to highlight how the alterations to the Christian faith have produced the multi-denominational Christendom of the 21st century. When this Christendom was compared to the 1st century original, it was realized that the original meaning was a bit lost. 

In this book, the author has described with examples how certain meanings are not conveyed properly to the believers. He has explained the true meaning of God and Jesus. The author has mentioned how one shouldn’t consider themselves equal as God. There is a difference between being united with God or thinking of someone as equal to God.

This book is an easy read with many scriptural references. The author has shared valuable information in this book and I appreciate his passion for God. Non-fiction fans couldn’t afford to miss reading this book. I strongly recommend this book especially for Christians.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

Interview with author Jeff Campos

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.

Hello Everyone. My name is Jeff Campos. I’m 63 years old and I have been working on a sci-fi/fantasy book since 1999. I am also a mechanical pencil artist that draws storyboard outlines as well as a first time author.

The idea for the book came about back in 1999 when I was working 3rd shift at a now-defunct electronics company in Salem, New Hampshire as an electronics incoming / in process / final inspector.

A co-worker, who was also a D&D Dungeon Master at the time insisted that I join his online Dungeons and Dragons game once he noticed some of my drawings I had brought into work to work on during break times and lunch times. He then asked me to create two D&D characters with a backstory for each in order to join the game. For the first character, I chose to draw a warrior drow elf named Bathryck who spat at horses most of the time for his persona profile. As for the second character, I chose to draw a priest-like character named Cardinal Rigor Mortis whose bio was as an anthropomorphic half hawk, half human-like avian wearing robes and such coming from a strange kingdom.

My co-worker loved both characters and their personas so much that he wanted both for his online game. But I told him that he could only have the drow elf, Bathryck, for his online game. Disappointed, he then asked why I wouldn’t let him have the other character? That’s when an ‘epiphany’ of sorts came to me that I told him I liked the avian character so much at the time that I was going to write a book about Cardinal Rigor Mortis and where his origins came from.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Grythwood Chronicles – Book One”?

Never having been a writer before, I sought out an editor who would help make the necessary changes needed to make the book ‘readable and understandable’ to those who chose to read my work about my characters.

BTW, the 30 something count of characters, human and anthropomorphic, came from the one character I saved from becoming an online D&D game sensation, Cardinal Rigor Mortis. It almost seemed to me that the other characters in the book flowed out of him as well as the lands they lived in. There are also several backstories I have written on each of the 30 plus characters in the book that I am saving for the next book. I will leave it on that note before it becomes a spoiler.

I still face challenges financially and in what direction I want to go with the book(s) in as publishing and the necessary feedback I need, good and bad, to inspire me to keep writing. People inspire me as I go along with whatever my creativity level is at during the day. Not to say what I won’t write at all but my mind wanders with the many ideas that come across during my moments of inspiration.

Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

Kipling, Dumas, Tolkien and believe it or not, the book Treasure Island. I guess it was because I had to write a book report in junior high school about it because the instructor I had at the time was a major history buff.

Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

I guess where I grew up in Massachusetts at times I tend to take road trips across the state to the Berkshires and surrounding places of interest. Car shows and antique shows / swaps meet my interest as well. Hammond Castle in Gloucester, Massachusetts is one place I’ve visited many times since a school trip there back in the 1970’s. It has a mystique when one walks through its corridors and rooms where the inventor John Hammond and his wife lived until he passed on in 1965.

There are other places in the world I would like to visit as well, England and Switzerland are two of them.

Q5. What inspired you to write the book ‘Grythwood Chronicles – Book One’?

See the above answers to the questions Q1 through Q5.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Grythwood Chronicles – Book One’?

Since 1999 (see Q1). And I’m still working on it. It was named ‘CandleJack’ at one time ( and I owned the domain for 24 years) but the name actually belongs to a Warner Brothers Freakazoid cartoon character that’s copyrighted.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

At the moment, none. But I hope to resolve that as soon as I can.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Grythwood Chronicles’?

The person who did the artwork for the cover for the book committed suicide a couple years ago due to his deteriorating health. He came up with the concept art of each of the characters that are described in the book using his own artistic license. His name was Bill Blankenship and he was an amazing 3D and 2D artist as well as a friend. I still miss him.

Grythwood comes from the mountain range on the island of Ornathys in the book. The editor I had at the time mentioned that as a book title to replace the ‘CandleJack’ title of the book.

Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?

Just reading subjects from certain books that pique my interest such as gothic architecture or medieval history as an example.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice you’ve been given about writing?

Keep reading and writing when you can. Budget your down time during life’s shortcomings to invest in your mind for both. And if a review is a bad review on your book, remember…it’s only just a review. There are positive points within the feedback. You just have to look closer at it to find the positive within.

Joe 6 Pack Straightens Out

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Joe 6 Pack Straightens Out 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Winsor Smith ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Joe 6 Pack Straightens Out” written by the author Winsor Smith is a must read book. Winsor, who has been a habitual drinker, took a challenge to abstain from alcohol for 30 days. The habits he developed during his sober month stayed with him and brought long term changes in his life.

During the challenge, the author had written notes of his high and low moments. This book is written from those notes. By breaking bad habits, we could get more free time which we could use to do something productive. Winsor started taking Spanish lessons and reading a book.

I am a teetotaller and I enjoyed every bit of the author’s journey. This book is not just for a habitual drinker but for everyone who wants to break bad habits and develop good ones. The author’s journey inspired me to take a month’s challenge for the habits I want to build and break. This is a well written book. I am glad to read it.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Ancient Friendship for Modern Men

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Ancient Friendship for Modern Men 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Don Owens ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Ancient Friendship for Modern Men: How to Build Lasting Friendships & Adventures from Ancient Ideas” written by the author Don Owens is a must read. In this book, the author has mentioned how technology which was supposed to bring us close to other people has made us even lonelier. 

When Don was fifteen years old, his parents told him that they were moving to Texas because of his father’s job. Don wasn’t happy to move away from his friends at school and church. After moving to Texas, he had many acquaintances but not a close friend. 

The kindness of Don’s friend Tim left a permanent impression on his heart. Tim’s kindness and the author’s faith in Jesus inspired him to intentionally build friendships.

The writing style of the author is amazing. The content of this book is great. I have never come across a person in my life who intentionally builds friendship. It is good to know that the author puts effort into it. There should be more people who seek intentional friendships and know how to be a true friend. I strongly recommend this book to more and more people.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Interview with author Don Owens

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.

Don Owens is president of The Port Royal Society, a U.S.-based non-profit organization promoting the reading and application of ancient books. He travels, speaking about his passion for books, people and business at conferences for different companies, churches, and seminaries. He is also a CEO of an insurance group with offices in Fort Worth, Texas; Campeche and Merida, Mexico; San Pedro Sula, Honduras; and Managua, Nicaragua; he has served within this group for twenty-five years.

An avid outdoorsman, Don enjoys hiking, kayaking, and mountain and gravel biking. He spends a quarter of the year in Leadville, Colorado. He and David Rutherford cofounded The May Club, a men’s fraternity focused on building friendships and sustaining relationships throughout life. The club is in its thirtieth year.

Don has been married to Danae Owens for thirty years. They have two children and one grandchild.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Ancient Friendship for Modern Men”?

The book covers a 20 year process of building friendship and discovering and reading ancient writings. Over this period of time I discovered the value of ancient thought in the application of our relationships today. It was difficult to get men to talk in detail about the deep meaning of friendship in their lives as men are taught to not show too much emotion. Over time I was able to have great conversations and gain insight as the barriers fell and men offered more thoughts on their experiences and feelings.

Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

The ancient writers are the key ingredient. Seneca, Aristotle, Homer, Xenophon, Cicero and Plato. Their works are just as important today as they were 2000 years and more ago.

Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

Leadville, Colorado. I discovered Leadville in 1996 while traveling through Colorado. The town is mentioned in a Jimmy Buffett song called, “Incommunicado” so I felt I needed to see the town. I returned many times each year for over two decades and eventually bought a home there. The mountains, lakes and seasons are joy. I am an avid hiker and paddler and love the area and the people of Leadville.

Q5. What inspired you to write the book ‘Ancient Friendship for Modern Men’?

I had a need in my own life to cultivate friendship and I learned a great pattern for developing friendship. Like me, I’ve watched men lose friendships or struggle to develop new friendships in the business of life. I wanted to share a simple process for building friendship built for ancient wisdom.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Ancient Friendship for Modern Men’?

I spent a year putting the book together and re-reading important material related to the project.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

Amazon.com / Ingramspark.com

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Ancient Friendship for Modern Men’?

The book is designed to introduce people to ancient writings and ideas and show their relevance to our lives today. The cover is the philosopher Aristotle on a motorcycle. Imagine an ancient individual living an adventurous life in modern times.

Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?

The book spends time on the different influences from the past and talks about the many types of relationships to cultivate in our lives. Friends in proximity, casual meetings, spouses, co-workers and others.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice you’ve been given about writing?

A quote often attributed to Ernest Hemingway taught me how to get started with writing, “You simply sit down at the typewriter, open your veins, and bleed.”

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