Tag Archives for " Author Interview "
Who Is Sonia Young?
Grief and wanting to share the story about the loss of my first born baby. Even though I started writing this book years ago. I have not finished it but I have published two other books.
I don't have a favourite author.
I have a sweet tooth so I would have to say chocolate.
When I am not writing I work as a carer, which I really enjoy. I also like to spend time with the family.
Don't remember having my heart set on anything but after doing work experience at the age of 15 at Castle Hill RSL I decided I wanted to become a Chef.
True stories with spiritual overtones.
7. What was one of the most surprising things you learned from writing your book?
I was surprised with my ability to write poetry.
A few years after my baby died I wanted to write my story but didn't see myself as a writer.
Depends on what I am working on. My Poetic Journey and Hidden Treasures took approximately one year to write. The book I am working on now is going to take a lot longer.
My next book is about my parents. I am writing it with my mother from her perspective. My dad was an incomplete quadriplegic and Mum was his full time carer. They travelled a lot around Australia. First in a Combi with the wheelchair tied to the back, then in a Motorhome. They had some great adventures in between hospital visits and Dad's surgeries.
Hope you enjoyed learning more about Sonia Young.
Would like to be on our list of authors? Become a member today and reap the benefits of being a part of the Author Academy Bookstore!
For more information, please click here.
Who Is Jennifer Navin?
The inspiration for me writing Riding the Rainbow was my daughter Danica who was eighteen months old at the time I put pen to paper.
I wrote the initial manuscript for Danica.
To tell Danica’s story.
To help me try and understand why my daughter was diagnosed at the age of five months old with Cerebral Palsy.
I have no one favourite author. I read a broad range of literature.
Judy Nunn and Bryce Courtney for their wonderful novels of Australian history.
Hannah Kent; her rich and evocative language, so beautiful that you re read and linger over each sentence. Her skill in forming a story from the most elementary facts, that captures the reader in the time capsule of the novel. Amazing.
Maeve Binchey and Rosamunde Pilcher for the wonderful escapism to the Cornish countryside of England.
Dr Mahomed Khadra, a very talented surgeon with an amazing writing skill of telling the facts as they are.
I love a roast chicken dinner.
I love my garden. I really enjoy buying what I call rescue plants and then planting them and watching them recover and grow. The majority of my garden is of rescue plants.
When I was a child and really until senior school, I wanted to do medicine. I then realised that I wouldn’t have the marks for entry to Medicine and all I wanted to do was work and continue learning. Nursing ticked the boxes. I had planned to go to university as a mature age student to do medicine but I met Shane whilst overseas and the rest is history.
What makes a good story? How that person tells the story.
7. What was one of the most surprising things you learned from writing your book?
That Danica’s death was her gift to me and her gift to herself.
She gifted to me time. Time to parent Ashley and Kelsie without the mire of disability. Time to spend freely with Shane. Time to explore and complete further education.
Danica gave herself freedom. Freedom from a body that prevented her from doing so much. She is now free to run with the wind and talk nonstop.
I always liked writing, even as a young person. I dreamt of publishing. A Bucket List wish.
It took thirty plus years fiddling with a pen and paper. In 2010, a health scare with Shane and the following cataclysmic journey found me opening up that corner of my heart to sorely probe that aching wound of October 20th 1988, the day Danica died. It then took a further twelve months with my mentor, editor and publisher to finish and publish Riding the Rainbow.
My next book?!! Well I am writing and it is a bit of a patch work at the moment. Again, it is about family and history.
Hope you enjoyed learning more about Jennifer Navin.
Would like to be on our list of authors? Become a member today and reap the benefits of being a part of the Author Academy Bookstore!
For more information, please click here.
Who Is J.B May?
A busy and overactive mind. I would daydream scenarios and stories constantly. I found that channelling those thoughts and putting them down on paper calmed my mind.
Brigid Kemmerer, I like her writing style and the themes of her stories.
Freshly baked crusty bread with a fluffy centre served with good butter and a pinch of pink sea salt, add some soft cheese and cured meats and I’m in heaven.
Blasting music while singing off key and dancing like a uncoordinated overly dramatic child who snuck on stage at a concert.
I don’t think I ever had a plan of what I wanted to be, at least not that I can remember.
Heart. If it can make you feel something or stir something inside you, then it’s good.
7. What was one of the most surprising things you learned from writing your book?
That I could write a book.
When writing made me happy and that was only a few years ago.
Pre-baby 6-12months, post-baby 12months plus (Babies are hard work)
I have a children’s book called Missing Magic which will be available on Amazon kindle on the 17/9/2020, the pre-sale for this is already up. It’s a fairy-tale approach to discussing infertility with young children. As for the books for older audiences, I have two book concepts outlined at the moment but I’m not sure which one will take centre stage yet. One is a dystopian tale that addresses overpopulation and environmental abuse and the other is a reimagining of a classic fairy tale, snow white.
Hope you enjoyed learning more about J.B May.
Would like to be on our list of authors? Become a member today and reap the benefits of being a part of the Author Academy Bookstore!
For more information, please click here.