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Retirement. Publishers, thank you for the many years of reading pleasure you gave me, but all good things must come to an end. Due to failing eyesight I am forced to retire. I can no longer review your books, and any that you send will be donated to the local library, unread. Do not send any more. I can only read for a couple hours every day, and this does not allow me to finish a book in reasonable time. I will be devoting time to my own books from now on, and reading on a personal level. Books that interest me. I prefer paperbacks and hardbacks, not eBooks. My eyesight has been failing the last few years, and I cannot handle hundreds of review books any more. My books are still available for review. Anyone interested in reviewing any of them, they are found in the Link to Tom’s Books On Amazon. Contact me for pdf copies at fadingshadows40@gmail.com

Showing posts with label Joanna Senger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joanna Senger. Show all posts

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Reservation Ravaged

Professionalism is one thing, confidence another. A local Indian tribe, the Kanache, asks California P.I. Hermione Daggert to find the man who camped out on their reservation over a year before. Filled with confidence, her qualifying exam behind her, she sees only a find-the-man assignment. How hard can it be? However, over the past year, that section of the reservation has gone from withered and uninhabitable to aggressively hostile. When the land claims the life of a beautiful San Tobino socialite in a fiery car crash, Hermione gets a new client. Her job? Find out why.


Reservation Ravaged (Cozy Mystery)
By JoAnna Senger
ISBN #978-1937769338
Price $11.66
183 Pages
Rating 5-Stars

“Entertaining And Easy Reading.”

The mythical town of San Tobino, California, and characters from “Betrothal, Betrayal, And Blood,“ return in this new mystery. Denning & Daggert Investigations is hired by the Kanache Indian tribe to investigate a possible curse on their land. The land of the reservation appears ravaged, and nothing will grow there except thorny weeds, scorpions, and rattlesnakes. A young boy falls into a ravine, losing a leg in the accident, and the land seems cursed. Newly licensed private investigator, and partner in the investigative company, Hermione Daggert is assigned the case.  Following leads, she discovers that the chief – Broken Drum – had ran a Gypsy family off the land the previous year, and since then their land has been dying, and the accident of the young boy happened. Hermione finds the family, and learns that they did, indeed, place a curse on the reservation. The Kanache accepts her findings and sell the land. The new owner sets up an Institute of Holistic Health school, but more accidents happen. The police think there may be murder involved. Again, Hermione is hired to investigate the new accidents on the land, this time by the new owner.

Hermione was a waitress at Milady’s, the setting of JoAnna’s previous novel, but now works with P.I. Emma Denning, and assisted by police detectives Karl Kelly and Vito Kostowski. The story was easy reading, and the characters interesting, but the mystery unraveled a bit too easy. To be honest there was a lack of suspense, and I’m not sure if the case was actually solved by anyone, or just by dumb luck. However, it was a good mystery, and the writing is superb. Cozy mystery lovers will find it a lot of fun. Highly recommended.

Tom Johnson

Detective Mystery Stories

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Interview With JoAnna Senger

Interview With JoAnna Senger

I first became aware of JoAnna Senger through her short stories for Barbara Custer’s Night To Dawn magazine. Her writing style easily pulled me into the stories. A few years ago, I read her first published novel, “Betrothal, Betrayal, And Blood”, and was blown away by her writing technique and storytelling ability. JoAnna’s more recent novel, “Reservation Ravaged” just released by NTD also seems to be taking the mystery world by storm. I figured it was time we conducted an interview with this talented lady.

Tom: JoAnna, thank you for sitting down with me for this interview. First, how about telling your fans a little about yourself, your family, and where you live?

JoAnna: I still consider myself a Midwestern girl despite decades in California and now Arizona, still root for the Kansas City Chiefs even though I can’t remember the last time I saw them play live in a stadium.  My family consisted of a mom, dad, little brother and a half-sister.  Only my brother and I are left. Although I still own my home in California, I have to say that I much prefer living in Arizona in the City of Surprise, a small city around 130,000 in the Phoenix metropolitan area. 

I went to Stephens College, a girls’ college in Columbia, Missouri, where I received a Bachelor’s degree with a double major, French and Economics.  Graduate school at the University of California at Berkeley during the 60’s provided me with enough current events to last a lifetime and a Master’s degree in economics.

I am equally comfortable in the world of words and the world of number. 

Tom: From reading your short stories, and now your novels, it is easy to tell you are an experienced writer, how did you get your start, and what is your background?

JoAnna:  You’re really taking me back.  When I was in the fourth grade, we had a choice about a project, and writing a story was one of the choices.  I wrote and illustrated (Lord help us) my first story:  Roo-lah and the Elephant Herd, no doubt influenced by my thorough attention to Tarzan comics.  I have worked as a financial analyst, a computer programmer and systems analyst, a compensation specialist, a Human Resources consultant, and recently as a paralegal.  SO…I’ve written just about everything from technical documentation through legal briefs into fantasy.

Or, maybe it’s all a fantasy.

Tom: What writers influenced you, if any, and whom would you say your writing style most resembles? And are your stories more plot driven or character driven, do you think?

JoAnna:  When I was seven, my parents gave me a wonderful Christmas present: “The Tin Woodsman of Oz,” the first book that I could read myself.  Smitten with the Land of Oz, I went on to buy all the books in the series, and I still have them.  L. Frank Baum was followed by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (The Yearling), William Faulkner, Ann Rice, Agatha Christie, Joyce Carol Oates, Stephen King and many others. 

I strive for a style similar to Faulkner’s with respect to abrupt pace change and like Christie’s for subtlety.  With respect to mysteries, I particularly like those mysteries where “who-dun-it” becomes secondary to the extraordinary discoveries made along the way. 

As for plot versus character, I suppose I would put character first.  It seems to me that the characters act according to their nature, and their actions become the plot.  Yet, I usually think of a broad plot outline before I refine the characters.  Once refined, the characters become real to me and, often, I can’t give them up.

Tom: Tell us about your short stories, and a bit about your most recent novel, and which do you prefer writing, novels or short stories? Or do you have a preference either way?

JoAnna:  The novel is most natural to me.  A few of my short stories are stand-alones, and in the future, I will submit only stand-alones to magazines such as Night To Dawn and save the continuous stories for a novel.  I think of writing a novel as similar to making a quilt, which I also do.  Sometimes you need to take a break, and the short story or a table runner does the trick.

Tom: You point out that the human monster is worse than any imaginary creature, and I agree. There is a touch of horror in your first mystery novel, “Betrothal, Betrayal, And Blood”, involving a human monster. But besides horror and mystery, do you consider writing other genres down the road, and if so, what would they be?

JoAnna:  I have written a few children’s stories, as yet unpublished, and sometimes wonder what it would be like to write a column for a newspaper.  So many challenges ahead!

Tom: In your first novel, “Betrothal, Betrayal, And Blood”, you had some very interesting characters, in particular the police investigators and a certain female P.I., are these based on anyone you know (lol)? As you are aware, I’m already a fan of your lady P.I., and hope to see more of her!

JoAnna:  In truth, I see myself, family, friends, and acquaintances in every character I write.  I’ve heard it said that writers just write about themselves and use different disguises.  A former colleague read a very early version of Betrothal, Betrayal, and Blood and saw me clearly in the lady P.I.  I was so flattered! 

When I have strong feelings about someone, that person will definitely wind up in my writing.


Tom: I haven’t read your latest novel, “Reservation Ravaged” yet, so tell us about the story, without giving anything important to the mystery away. Where is the story set, who are the main characters, what the plot is about, that sort of thing. Is this a sequel to “Betrothal, Betrayal, And Blood”?

JoAnna:  “Reservation Ravaged” is set in the fictional city of San Tobino on the Central California Coast, that least known region of the best known state.  The same characters appear as well as a few new players.  However, the book is standalone and does not require the reader to be familiar with the “Betrothal, Betrayal, and Blood.”

Hermione Daggert, now a certified California Private Investigator with her apprenticeship and state exam behind her, is quite confident about her ability to handle an assignment on her own.  A local Indian tribe, the Kanache, asks her to find the man who camped out on their reservation over a year before.  Filled with confidence, she sees only a find-the-man assignment.

How hard can it be?

However, over the past year, that section of the reservation has gone from withered and uninhabitable to aggressively hostile.  When the land claims the life of a beautiful San Tobino socialite in a fiery car crash, Hermione gets a new client. Her job?

Find out why.

Tom: What do you find to be the most exciting part of the creating process to either novels or short stories?

JoAnna:  Ideas come over me and demand my attention, nag at me, give me no peace until I start writing.  The flow of words and the images in my mind invite me into another world, the world I am putting down on paper and yes, I often do write my very first drafts in long hand, a chapter at a time.  This first act of writing, the very beginning of a novel, transports me to another world where I am all-powerful and everything will be as I have said.  Then, I discover myself writing something completely different than what I was thinking, and we’re off to the races.  If I’m using my laptop, I don’t even look at the screen and just write what I see in my mind’s eye.

Weird?  You bet.

Tom: Along the same subject as above, what do you find to be the most difficult area in the creating process?

JoAnna:  Making sure that what I see so clearly in my mind’s eye actually becomes words on the page. I have absorbed the characters and events so thoroughly that I sometimes forget that the reader has not. 

Tom: Besides family and writing, tell us about any hobbies or community services you may be involved in, and any other activity you would like to mention.

JoAnna:  I am volunteered in the Prosecutor’s Office in the City of Surprise as well as the Police Department and went on to an assignment with a criminal defense attorney.  I love to quilt and embroider, maintaining the traditions of the women in my family.  I am the first generation to be raised in suburbia rather than on a farm or ranch. 

Tom: What advice would you give other aspiring authors hoping to break into the writing field today?

JoAnna:  Remain open to all opportunities.  There are so many how-to’s, and each of them worked for somebody.  It’s all so easy once it happens, and so seemingly hopeless before it happens.  The activities I thought would lead somewhere usually didn’t, and then a casual note led me to a bit of success. Throughout it all was the writing, the world of the imagination, and that is an incomparable experience.  When you realize that you would rather fail at writing than be successful at anything else, you know you’re in the right place.

Tom: Where can fans find – and buy - your stories, and do you keep copies on hand for autographs? Please include website and Blogs.

JoAnna:  My novel and short stories can currently be found in Night To Dawn magazine at www.bloodredshadow.com/ My novels are available in print and electronic format through Amazon and B&N.  I blog in www.joannasenger.com.

Tom:  And now a question from left field.  If you could, would you choose to live in a parallel universe as one of the people in the places you create?

JoAnna:  In a heartbeat.  I would go to San Tobino and live forever having safe adventures with Emma, Hermione, Karl and Vito.  Writing about them is the next best thing.

Tom: JoAnna, thank you very much for consenting to this interview.

JoAnna:  It’s been a real pleasure.  



Monday, September 2, 2013

JoAnna Senger - Guest Blog


What Writing Means To Me
Around the age of four, I fell in love with the letters of the alphabet. Following the philosophy of the day, my parents would not teach me to read but spent dutiful hours reading to me. The letter “y” and the “w” with all its syllables sounded so exotic.  I would hear my parents spell out words (y-e-s spells “yes”), but I didn’t know which of the squiggles in my books was a “y” or a “w.”  Fascinating and frustrating. 
Then…school!  I remember being so surprised at the appearance of a “y.”  What a disappointing letter!  It was squat and had an appendage hanging down below the line.  I thought it should look more like a “b” or a “d.” As time went on, I got used to its appearance and forgave the “y” for laying down on the job, so to speak.  I learned all my letters.  Letters began to make words, words became stories, and then teachers were asking me to write! 
         Was I a big girl or what?!
         Since those grade school days, I have written skits, essays, stories, policies and procedures, legal documents, books, anything else assigned to me, and other stuff just for fun. 
         Writing is so self-indulgent that I often wonder why everyone doesn’t spend their free time with a pen in hand (or a keyboard at their fingers).  Don’t like someone?  Bump them off.  Someone is a pompous jerk?  Hold them up to ridicule.  Spouse is an affront to the human race?  Take a lover…between the pages.
         Finally, serious fiction called to me.  At least, I was serious about writing it, primarily mysteries and horror.  Distinct genres in the bookstores, they are just slants on real life as far as I am concerned.  Mysteries have entertained me all my reading life, so I try to return the favor.  The analyst in me loves the precision of mystery plot development, clues appearing all along the way but in a manner to elude or mislead the reader.  The clues have to be there, the author must play fair.  Without the clues, the book becomes crime detection, another entertaining genre but not a mystery.  I particularly like mysteries in which the reader figures out “who dun it” but the characters don’t, plodding on in dull ignorance of the carnage all around them.
         Like garlic, horror is a strong flavor best introduced slowly until the reader is saturated with its odor.  Of all the literary genres, horror has the most difficulty in achieving respectability, yet its power is the least diminished over time.  Only the romance is as enduring.  The fear of darkness, the sinking despair of betrayal, the panic of confinement and torture, the irresistible urge to open the locked door, these are all horror literary devices and still effective when done skillfully. 
I prefer horror which is just one step outside of daily life, a small but jarring detail only slightly out of place, like a piece of glass in your ice cream cone.  Oh well, remove it and keep on eating.  Licking.  Enjoying all that creamy coldness until you find another piece of glass, and this one cuts.  You look around and everyone in the ice cream parlor is looking at you, and all of them are bleeding from the mouth.  And smiling.
         You get the idea.
         Regardless of what we write or how we write it, those words on paper are our ticket to the grand show: the unbroken human story-telling tradition that began on cave walls, got chiseled into stone tablets, engraved and painted on pyramid chambers, copied laboriously by armies of scribes and monks, and now flies through the ether according to physical principles that most of us poorly understand if we understand them at all.
         Why do we do it?  Paid or not, published or not, successful or not, we just want to tell a story.  It’s the story that matters, not the method or the language or even the writer. 
And we all know it.
JoAnna Senger