Ask the Author: Susan Liberty
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Susan Liberty
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Susan Liberty
Writer's block is challenging. I tend to write whatever comes into my mind, and then I go to sleep. The next morning, I read what I wrote, and more often than not, I delete it. Somehow this process clears my mind, and I'm able to write again.
Susan Liberty
The best high in life is to create a world for readers to get lost in for a few hours.
Susan Liberty
My best advice is if you love to write: take classes, hone your craft, and let your words flow from your brain onto the pages.
Susan Liberty
Oh, I’m very excited about A Vow to Love and Protect, Promise Series - Book 2. Devilan’s journey continues, only to discover with its twists and turns, that the life he lived in Brooklyn was filled with lies, secrets, and betrayal.
I’m finishing my edits, and then it’s off to my editor, Jessica Hope Jordan. A Vow to Love and Protect will be published in the fall of 2019.
I’m finishing my edits, and then it’s off to my editor, Jessica Hope Jordan. A Vow to Love and Protect will be published in the fall of 2019.
Susan Liberty
Most often, my inspiration to write comes from past experiences that are personal to me. There are times world events move me to write. It's always something that hits me emotionally. Though all my stories are fictional, they do touch lightly upon truth issues: what a person perceives to be true versus the real truth. Broken Promises also touches gently upon social issues: child hunger and abuse, family structure, and social norms.
Susan Liberty
The idea for Broken Promises came from my unique upbringing. My father, Edward John, was a biker. His biker name was Teddy Bear, later shortened to Ted. Dad's use of colorful language, fascination with guns, and muscle cars was a regular part of my life.
My grandfather, Roy, was an old Irishmen. He never stopped with his stories of the Italian Mafia, and all the ways the Italians wronged the Irish.
And my grandmother, Rosie, loved romance novels. She'd read the last two chapters first, wanting her HEA. On my grandmother's deathbed, I thanked her for the gift of reading. Years later, I devoted my time to writing, and Broken Promises flowed from my brain onto the pages.
My grandfather, Roy, was an old Irishmen. He never stopped with his stories of the Italian Mafia, and all the ways the Italians wronged the Irish.
And my grandmother, Rosie, loved romance novels. She'd read the last two chapters first, wanting her HEA. On my grandmother's deathbed, I thanked her for the gift of reading. Years later, I devoted my time to writing, and Broken Promises flowed from my brain onto the pages.
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