Babs BookMark Issue 2 | Page 50

TB: Of the books you’ve written, which one is your favorite and why? Ummm, they are all my babies. I can't love one more than the other, because they all carry a part of me in them. That's like asking a mother who her favorite child is. Though, I'll share a secret, Amy is my favorite child. Okay, she's my only child. But when it comes to my books, they are all my darlings. The finished ones more so than the unfinished ones on my hard drive. And since most of my protagonists are a bit cray-cray, I'm not gonna pick one, because they all talk and who knows that they'll do to me. TB: What books have most influenced you as a writer? Does Weekly Reader count? Highlights? I'd have to say, To Kill a Mockingbird. The way Harper Lee turned a phrase made me re-think writing. I loved how she got into her character's heads. Each one had a unique voice. Stephen King's The Shining, kept me awake at night. When a book can continue to scare the stuffing out of you weeks and months after you read it, so much so that you turn the cover around on the bookshelf, so you can't see the title, you know it's powerful. TB: What do you find to be the most challenging part of writing? Easy, breezy question. The hardest part for me is sitting down and doing it. I am a procrastinator. My absolute worst trait. If I'm working on a tough scene, I'll find myself cleaning out a closet rather than siting down and working though the scene. And I hate cleaning, so that says a lot. And the most rewarding? Having someone, I don't know, tell me they loved my novel and can't wait for the next one. It makes the time spent worthwhile and fills my heart with joy. If I can connect with a reader like that, it's like fuel in my tank.