Saturday, 11 January 2025

The Story Behind the Story with Author Eve Koguce of Jurmala, Latvia, Europe.

 

Let’s welcome our first guest from the beautiful country of Latvia.



I met Eve through mutual author friends and was drawn to her stories.

She has accepted our invitation to share the good news about her novel. I’m sure you’ll enjoy it.

Read on my friends.


  

I’ve been blessed to be born in the best place on the planet. My hometown, Jurmala in Latvia, is a seaside town on the coast of the Baltic Sea with an endless sandy beach. Riga, the capital of Latvia, is the city rich with history and extraordinary architecture. Riga has the largest number of splendid Art Nouveau buildings in the world.

I guess that living surrounded by the beauty of nature and history ignited a creative spark in me. But still, it lay dormant for a long time. I’ve been an avid reader since the age of five. My parents didn’t have to read to me before bedtime for too long, for I quickly snatched the book from them and asked them to leave me alone with reading. I started writing poetry when I was a teenager and also attempted to write a novel. But being a ‘good girl’, I didn’t pursue my passion for writing after school graduation. I spent fifteen years trying to fit into the office work pattern. And although I was feeling miserable and out of place every day of that climbing the ladder process, I managed to build a relatively successful career after an ambitious shift from the private to the public sector. The job I had wasn’t boring. It was actually pretty exciting. I worked with internationally funded projects and met people from all over the world every day.

After my son was born, I had a unique chance to stop and rethink not only what I’d achieved so far, but what I really wanted from life. I made a decision to leave my old life behind, and I’ve never regretted it.

Since then, I published six books. Please visit my website to discover more about my novels. Link is below.

 

Title: “The Accidental Cop”

 


Synopsis:

What if to have food on your table every day, you have to cross the line? Cheat, take bribes, and grovel before people in position of power and influence? Welcome to the “savage 90s”… A personal hell of Roberts Bergs.

To succeed you must play by the rules. Roberts learns the rules quickly. The system run by the Soviet-era ex-militia officers is a good teacher. Who you know counts for more than your abilities, qualifications, and knowledge. The system also doesn’t tolerate disobedience.

Roberts Bergs had to start making difficult choices early in life. With few options to choose from, he settles for available ones. Beggars cannot be choosers, is his motto.

His coursemates at the Police Academy dip their toes into adulthood while still living in the cocoon of their parental homes. For them, life is about parties, new experiences, and searching for their true self. For Roberts, it’s about poverty, hunger, and not being killed by a crazed drunkard with an axe during a patrol shift.


A patrolman of the Public Order Police patrol battalion isn’t Roberts’s dream job. But it is better than not having one. Trudging through the grim slums of the city, his interest in arts, history, and literature is what sustains him.

He believes in human dignity and freedom of choice. He wants to become a lawyer.

Despite the resistance from his superiors, Roberts keeps climbing up the career ladder. The contrast between those who play by the rules and those who believe in honesty and justice becomes starker. Luxury and self-indulgence for the first, and dragging out a miserable existence for the latter.

Is it worth it to remain true to his principles? Or is succumbing to the corrupted and merciless system the only way to survive?

Set in Latvia at the end of the first post-Soviet decade, named by pop culture as the “savage 90s”, “The Accidental Cop” is a blend of noir crime and police procedural with psychological suspense elements.

The ”Accidental Cop” has won several literary awards:

- Honorable Mention award in the 2023 Royal Dragonfly Book Awards contest / Fiction Novel category;
- Finalist award in the Pacific Book Awards contest 2023 / Best Thriller category;
- Finalist award in the Readers’ Favorite Book Award contest 2024 / Fiction Crime category.

 


The Story Behind the Story:

"The Accidental Cop" is set in Latvia at the end of the first post-Soviet decade. The decade branded by pop culture the ‘savage 90s.’ In Latvia, many remember that decade as the craziest time of their lives. Some managed to grab the chances to start making money through all kinds of illegal schemes. Not all of them got away with it. Still, those who did climbed even higher. By the arrival of the new millennium, they were respected businessmen, and their influence spread wide. Even into the law enforcement authorities.

In 1998, the population of Latvia was 2.41 million people. More than half of them lived in poverty. Dry figures provided in official reports hide family tragedies and countless lost and wrecked lives.

At times of transition, old rules don’t apply while new ones aren’t yet established. Because of that, the 90s were the decade when criminals flourished. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, people were free to start private businesses. But due to holes in the legislation and the overall chaos, you had to pay for “protection” to keep your business running. And the guys who collected the money had effective persuasion methods for those who refused to agree to the rules.

Once, the bell at our door rang. My aunt – Mom’s older sister – and I were in the kitchen. Mom went to see who came. We heard an unfamiliar man’s voice. My aunt went to the corridor in case Mom needed help. I trailed after her.

The man stood at the doorway – Mom didn’t let him in. Before leaving, he looked at my aunt and me and turning back to Mom said: “Bring the money or I’ll cut off your kid’s and your mother’s heads and bring them to you.”

At those times, it was incredibly difficult to keep hope that life can change. And a lot of people didn’t live long enough to see that it actually did.

“We never knew what it was like to be hungry.” Mom once dropped this phrase, years after the worst time had ended. She added that it was thanks to my aunt – Mom’s older sister – and her extraordinary, almost magical, land cultivation skills. In good years – harvest isn’t the same every year – we had a ton of apples and a ton of cucumbers. And this apart from all kinds of berries, potatoes, carrots and I don’t remember what else.  I never knew hunger. I never thought about us not having enough food. So, Mom’s words hit me like a bullet. Mom said that because of Aunt’s excellent cooking skills, we didn’t even notice that for months, our menu consisted almost solely of four ingredients: potatoes, carrots, beetroot, and zucchini.

Roberts in “The Accidental Cop” knows what hunger is. And what it does not only to your body. Still, he doesn’t give up. This is what a reader says about Roberts in their review: “He crawls until he can walk, and walks until he can run. He shows the immense and unimaginable courage it took to survive his circumstances, by taking things one hour, one day at a time, surviving one hour, one day at a time. He clings to hope, and his personal integrity and honour, like a drowning man, until he can potentially surface into a brighter future.”

“The Accidental Cop” gives readers the chance to get a glimpse of what it was like to try to survive in the savage 90s in post-Soviet Latvia. In a way, this book is a tribute to those who either hadn’t lived to tell their stories or, after the grim times ended, preferred to leave them behind.

When I started writing “The Accidental Cop”, I was certain it would be the only story set in the savage 90s that I’ll ever write. Those were dark and sad times for many, including my family. Still, now, after the book is published, I realise that the material I’d collected while doing research is enough for a few more stories. People shared their memories about the most controversial decade of Latvia’s modern history with me. And I feel the inspiration to interweave these memories with fiction to draw a picture of that wild decade on the pages of my books.



 Website: Please go HERE.



A question before you go, Eve:


Scribbler: Where is your favourite spot to write? Are you messy or neat? Your beverage of choice?

Eve: I can’t answer with a description of a picture-perfect, Instagram-style, cosy nook where I can write in silence, enjoying the free flow of inspiration and creativity. Alas, the reality, as it is so often, is a little harsher than retouched images on social media. Having said that, I won’t deny that I like my practical arrangements for writing. I usually write in the kitchen, and my laptop – with a huge monitor my husband brought me so my poor eyesight doesn’t suffer more than it is absolutely necessary – sits on the table hand-crafted by a dear friend of my beloved late Mom especially for her.

I am boringly neat, and my working table is never messy. Yet, it isn’t due to my high standards, but rather because, as I mentioned earlier, my worktable dabs as a kitchen table – or it’s probably the other way round – and it’s impractical to spend time clearing the mess several times a day when my family gathers for a meal.

During the day, I drink copious amounts of tea – Rooibos with orange and cinnamon or with honey and vanilla is my favourite choice of late. I have a cup of coffee after waking up and also after lunch.






An Excerpt from "The Accidental Cop"



******

They found a gruesome scene. Still, if it was a crime scene or an accidental tragedy display remained to be determined.

The operational group got to work, and soon, the place resembled a staged movie set ready for filming a detective story. Everyone moved about efficiently, performing the actions according to their duty list just as actors would play their roles.

The only person who distorted the general picture of professional diligence was Zalamans Kohs, the forensic medical expert of the Latvian State Police Central Authority Forensic Department. He mumbled while doing what he was supposed to do, not trying to suppress a whistle of surprise, a chuckle, or a hiccup – whichever impulse was appropriate to demonstrate a reaction of his body or mind.

“What a waste, what a waste,” he muttered under his breath, fussing over the dead bodies it was his job to examine and identify the reasons for their turning into such, “isn’t it always a waste? Of course, it is. Even if you were a poor bastard whom no one would miss, it’s still better if you had lived. Yes, yes, life is sacred…Life is a gift….”

Roberts entered the basement that the police had been called to check after he, Edgars, and the forensic team ensured the place was marked as a crime scene and the interest from neighbours ran dry. Edgars refused to go down to look at the bodies saying it wasn’t his job and he wasn’t interested.

It wasn’t the adrenalin from the macabre sight that drew Roberts in. He didn’t feel any looking at the remains of what used to be a living creature with hopes, dreams, and people who cared about them. His interest wasn’t purely professional, either. He didn’t see himself examining yet another crime scene in five years. Still, his life was now connected with crime and investigation. He had recently passed a Criminal Forensics exam successfully. It was a unique opportunity to compare theoretical knowledge with practice, even if the subject wouldn’t have been his first choice for testing if he had one.

Koha kungs[1],” Roberts greeted the forensic medical expert respectfully. He didn’t have to feel the smell to know Zalamans’s breath betrayed alcohol consumption. The not-so-faint vodka aroma was an inalienable part of Zalamans Kohs’s image, and one which he did nothing to distance himself from. If it was a coping mechanism or an indulgence, Roberts didn’t know. It was a fact, though, that Kohs was the best forensic medical expert in the country, and not a single superior officer would accept a complaint about his drinking. So, nobody ever thought of complaining, and Kohs’s permanent inebriated state was treated more like an oddity rather than a protocol violation.

“Oh, good day, young man!” Kohs raised his head from the dirty tabletop he was examining with absorbing intensity. “What a pleasure to see an intelligent face among this…,” Kohs cast a glance around the dirty, sordid space, his face incredulous as if he had just seen it for the first time, “…chaos.”

“I hope I’m not disrupting your work.”

“The fact that you’ve thought about it at all means you aren’t.” Kohs turned away and made a wide gesture with both hands. “Tell me, what do you see? Never jump to making assumptions before you’ve looked at the crime scene properly. Never mix the order. First, watch carefully. And only then – think.”

Roberts looked around the basement.




Thank you for being our guest this week, Eve. I now have a copy of this book and am looking forward to reading it. We wish you continued success with your writing.



And thank you to all our amazing visitors and readers.

Don’t be shy. Leave us a comment below. TY.










Saturday, 4 January 2025

The Story Behind the Story with Anne Smith-Nochasak of Nova Scotia, Canada.

 Let’s welcome our first author of the new year.



Anne has a new novel she’s excited about, as are her readers.

She kindly accepted my invitation to share the SBTS.

This is not her first visit and if you missed the one before, please go HERE.

Read on my friends.

 

 

I grew up in rural Nova Scotia, and now reside there full-time after many years living and teaching in northern and isolated settings. In retirement, I teach part-time, work on my property, and enjoy the many aspects of writing life. My stories have grown from my experiences and perceptions of the world around me. I have completed three novels: A Canoer of Shorelines (a story of homecoming, family, self-acceptance, and love), The Ice Widow: A Story of Love and Redemption (a love story but not a romance, in which youthful infatuation becomes something unique and special in maturity), and River Faces North (the beginning of a dystopian trilogy set in rural Nova Scotia, in which saving River will mean the saving of much more.)

 

Title: River Faces North (Taggak Journey, Book 1)




Synopsis:

The year is 2036, and the land once known as North America is ravaged by environmental decay and ruled with an iron fist by the oppressive Millennial cult known as The Elect. Seventy-eight-year-old Flo is documenting what might be, in her opinion, “the last history of the world,” while managing the diverse, odd, and sometimes dangerous individuals hiding out in her rural Nova Scotian swamp. Flo clings to her granddaughter River, the only light left in this otherwise dark existence. Her Inuit-born son and his Salish partner, River’s parents, have escaped to Quebec to lead the resistance. There is no one left for Flo to trust now, but she holds onto the belief that change is possible and she diligently prepares for the revolution.

As River approaches her twelfth birthday, the Elect’s sinister plans threaten to tear them apart. Forced into a breeding program euphemistically dubbed “The Resurrection,” River faces a grim fate. Determined to defy the tyranny, Flo and River race against time to ensure River’s escape. There will be pain and sacrifice, but there will also be hope—and great love.

Through three books, the stories of some unlikely heroes, little people who set out to save the earth, will be revealed.


The Story Behind the Story:

While a student at the Atlantic School of Theology many years ago, I completed a thesis in the area of eschatology, the study of the “Last Things.” The future of our world and its ending have always fascinated me, and I consider this set of novels to be the secular retelling of my thesis. That is, I have taken a religious topic and turned it into a very human story. Like my main character, Flo Hardy, I have a very practical spirituality.

Ons spring day I was dabbling with ideas, writing short reflections and imagining characters. In one, I sketched a delightful old “rebel granny”, the kind who allowed no nonsense but perhaps secretly took her grandchildren white water rafting. Initially, she sounded comedic. As I got to know her, I realized she was wise, passionate, perhaps slightly off-centre in her perception of the world, and someone I would want by my side if the world were ending.

Someone like my late Aunt Ila—a battle axe with a heart of gold.

In another file, I was musing on my late husband’s history, and wrote: “It begins in fire, and it will end in fire.”

From there, it was a quick jump to the plot! And when the third part is completed, you will see that it is indeed fire that begins the story, that ends the story, and that fills the hearts of our unlikely heroes in between.




Website: Please go HERE.




A question before you go, Anne:


Scribbler:
Where is your favourite spot to write? Are you messy or neat? Your beverage of choice?


Anne: Currently, my favourite spot to write is at my old desk in the loft, overlooking the woodlot with a dog at my feet and a cat draped across the back of the chair. I sometimes have coffee, but usually just have a water bottle close by. It is a mess indeed, with cat hair, dog hair, and strewn papers.




An Excerpt from River Faces North

This excerpt begins our story.

A Rebel Grandmother Takes Her Last Stand. (Concerning June 2035)

I grip River’s hand tight to my side. We stand among the scraggly weeds, the bent stalks, the dead leaves that mark the place where once I had a driveway.

It is June. The heat and humidity pack around us here in the stifling bush; the sun pulses already and it is only six o’clock.

June is no longer lilacs and flowers and plants bursting green from the rich loam. It is waves of heat rolling over a dull landscape, the month that begins the grim journey to the mist and stickiness of fall. The heat clings to the skin, and then there is rain pounding over the unyielding soil, with no relief to body or earth. We work in the night, groping through the darkness and the bugs, senses alert for the first taste of smoke. Even beside the pooling flood waters a fire will rip through the earth without pity. I almost welcome a sudden, cataclysmic end to the world, all things considered.

The tears press my eyes, oozing and burning.

I force my chin up and raise my free hand.

My heart swells as I gaze after my son. He is straight and tall like his father, strong in the ways of the Land, like him with that quick grin, the light in his eyes.

I squeeze River’s hand. The tears are pushing hard and my body is spasming, straining to hold them back. My son and his partner stride down the hill, shoulders set, nylon backpacks snug to their shoulders, canteens bobbing at their sides. Down at the bend, they pause, a trace of dust scuffed up by their battered hiking boots.

My free hand lifts high, an open hand, a hand of blessing.

I have precious little faith left, but I still bless them.

And they smile and turn, a dazzle of light in his eyes, so like his father, and they vanish.

Beside me, River moans as the sobs shake her body. Her tears stream.

My Skye sits at her side, ears perked, tense and watching.

Here is where River and Skye and I will make our revolutionary stance.

It will be a secret one, and it will bring down the Elect.

When River turns thirteen, you see, they plan to take her.

Let them try.

I am a rebel grandmother, and this is my apocalyptic niche, my last stand, with all my secrets and my memories.

I stand tall, still clinging to River’s hand. Today is my seventy-eighth birthday. Blow out the candles and make a wish. Wish for Jacob and wish for Reah. Wish for River, and Skye, and me. Wish for a breeze that is not a tornado, for a spring shower that does not rip out the hillside. Wish for a campfire that does not rain down fire on the earth. Wish for a long and happy life for your loved ones. And for the desert to bloom with joy.

I do not want to tell this story.

But I will. For you.









Your story sounds intriguing and something to look forward to, Anne.

Thank you for being our guest this week.

We wish you continued success with your stories.




And a HUGE thank you to all our readers and visitors.


Feel free to leave a comment below.

Saturday, 28 December 2024

The Story Behind the Story with Author Suzy Krause of Saskatchewan, Canada.

 Let’s welcome Suzy to the Scribbler

 

Our last post for 2024 is actually the beginning of featured guests from the River Street Writing publishing company

This week you will meet Suzy and read the SBTS of her newest novel.

Read on my friends.

 

  

 

Suzy Krause is a writer and music lover from the Saskatchewan prairies. Her first novel, Valencia and Valentine, was inspired by her time as a debt collector and the song Heart by Stars and was an Amazon Editors' First Reads Pick. She wrote her second book, Sorry I Missed You, after walking past a house with three mailboxes that looked like it could possibly be haunted. It was also a First Reads pick, and was a bestseller on Kindle and Audible. Her third book, I Think We've Been Here Before, is due September 2024 in Canada and December 2024 worldwide and has been optioned for TV. It was inspired by a recurring dream about the end of the world that was oddly comforting. Her books have been translated into Russian and Estonian.

 

Title: I Think We’ve Been Here Before


 

Synopsis:

Marlen and Hilda Jorgensen’s family has received two significant pieces of news: one, Marlen has been diagnosed with a terminal illness. Two, a cosmic blast is set to render humanity extinct within a matter of months. It seems the coming Christmas on their Saskatchewan farm could be their last.

Preparing for the inevitable, they navigate the time they have left together. Marlen and Hilda have channeled their energy into improbably prophetic works of art. Hilda’s elderly father receives a longed-for visitor from his past. Hilda’s teenaged nephew goes missing, and his mother refuses to believe the world is ending. All the while, Hilda’s daughter struggles to find her way home from Berlin with the help of an oddly familiar stranger. For everyone, there’s an unsettling feeling that this unprecedented reality is something they remember.

As the planet holds its collective breath to see what happens next amid chaos, denial, acceptance, and hope, this one family determines to live every moment as if it’s their last. Because, well, it just might be.


 


The Story Behind the Story:

This book was born out of a recurring dream I had for a while where the world was ending. I'd always wake up from this dream feeling calm and comforted, wishing I could go back into it—which was so weird, I thought. It was an objectively terrifying dream: me, standing on a hill, watching a burning ball of flame coming straight at me, knowing it was The End. But I wasn't scared.

A friend told me that people often have dreams about the end of the world when, in real life, they're leaving something behind, moving on to something new. She said dreams can be a person's brain trying to make sense of stuff that's weird or hard or unprecedented. This seemed accurate to me—a lot of big things in my life were changing at the time. And it made sense to me, that these dreams might be my subconscious working through these changes. Maybe I was trying to comfort and reassure myself. Maybe, underneath all of the uncertainty and fear, I knew that the changes were good.

Anyway, it got me thinking about that phrase, 'the end of the world,' and how often in life it really does feel like the world is ending: we change our mind about something big, we move to a new job or a new place, an important friendship shifts or ends. 'The end of the world' has such a negative connotation—but it's often so necessary and even beautiful, for a thing to end, even a good thing. We say, "Calm down, it's not the end of the world." Well, so what if it is? Maybe what comes next is going to be better.

So I wanted to write a book about the end of the world, but I didn’t want it to be a disaster novel, a terrifying depiction of everything on fire. I wanted it to be calm and comforting, a story about relationships and love and grief, a story about life as much as it is about death.



Website: Please go HERE.


A question before you go, Suzy:

Scribbler: Where is your favourite spot to write? Are you messy or neat? Your beverage of choice?

Suzy: I love writing in coffee shops. There’s something about knowing that others in the room might be working on creative things of their own, being able to watch the people that come in and out and draw inspiration from them. Feeling like you’re part of something even while you’re doing something as solitary as writing. I get a latte if it feels like a special occasion, coffee with cream otherwise. 





Thank you for being our guest this week, Suzy.
Your novel sounds intriguing and we’ll be sure to add it to our TBR list.
We wish you continued success with your writing.

Thank you 

And a HUGE thank you to all out visitors and readers. Feel free to leave a comment below.

Saturday, 21 December 2024

Wow... what a year. 2024.

 

 


Wow!

What a wonderful year it has been for the South Branch Scribbler!

 


Join us today as we uncover a few facts about last year.


125000 visitors


47 guests


 Here's a few of them




Our most popular guest posts of 2024 participating creatives.


Olive Mazerolle of NB, Canada – 711 visits


Please go HERE

 A note from the author: “Over 400 books sold with my goal of helping others obtained many times over. So grateful! - Olive”


Katherine Melanie of Atlantic Canada - 560 visits


Please go HERE


Nancy Cusak of NB, Canada - 501 visits


Please go HERE

Suzanne Casey of NB, Canada - 494 visits


Please go HERE

Sally Cronin of Ireland – 373 visits



Please go HERE

 

This year we even had a visual artist as a guest.

 

Nadine Godin 0f Neguac, NB, Canada – 202 visits


Please go HERE
 

The top pages from the past but visited in 2024.

 

Artist Susan Jardine of Shediac, NB, Canada – 958 visits



Please go HERE


Author Susan Toy of Bequia, Caribbean & NFLD – 783 visits

 


Please go HERE.




A list of creatives who shared the Scribbler pages over the last year.

Ivan Holiday Arsenault. Hollay Ghadery

Susan E. Wadds. Valerie Sherrard

Jon Hurd. SC Eston

Zev Bagel. Brian Francis

Andrew MacLean. Anne Dowdall

Mark E. Shupe. Sally Cronin


A Few More.....



Chuck Bowie. Michelle MacLean

Bea Waters. Gianetta Murray

Chantal MacDonald. Kade Cook

Paige LePage. Stella MacLean

Nicola Davison. Nadine Godin

Olive Mazerolle. Kathy Shuker

Joe Mahoney. D. C. Malcolm

Louise Boulter. Rhonda Bulmer

Sandra Bunting. Tina Lalonde

Angela Wren. Raymonde Savoie


... and a few more ...



Dianne Pennell. Rick Revelle

Joanna Vander Vlugt. Sandra Woods Poulin

Diane McGyver. Suzanne Casey

Katherine Melanie. Em Whelly

Sheryl Doiron-Powers. Joe Powers

Hannah State

 

... and a few more ...

 




Personally I’ve had a great year with the introduction of my latest novel

One Bedroom Ark.

 


*

I participated in another anthology with a group of eight other talented authors know as the Seasonal Collective.

Summer Paths

 *

In the works …

Code Name: Iron Feather 1942

Arriving Spring, 2025.

 

Camp Debert, an army base being built next door to Royal Canadian Air Force Base in Debert, Nova Scotia on the east coast of Canada. Thousands of thousands of men and women will pass through on their way to Europe. Units will be mustered, weapons handed out and training for war. The contractors are still erecting buildings as fast as they can.

The new mess on the army base is partially completed until work stops when the foreman finds a dead body hanging from the rafters. Not a soldier, but an airman.

Everything is hush-hush. The commanding officer has asked for the investigation to be handled by Warrant Officer Stefan Kravchenko of the Air Force Service Police. He’s ordered to Camp Debert, immediately. Upon arrival he discovers the scene is all wrong. The medical examiner suggests it may look like a suicide, but …

 

 * 

The Alexanders Vol 3 1926 – 1930

Fall 2025.

  *

 

Earth

An anthology from the Seasonal Collective, ten authors joining together with their short stories under the theme Earth. June, 2025.

 *

 


The Greater Moncton, Riverview & Dieppe Book Fair was held in July of 2023.

An enjoyable day with curious readers.

50 authors gathered in one place.

Fun!

Planning for the 2025 event is underway and I hope you will join us.

Same place – Riverview Lions Center

April 26, 2025 10 AM – 3 PM.


 Click on FUN! above.

 


Watch next week for the last guest of the year, we are excited to have Suzy Krause of Saskatchewan, Canada. 

 


 



Thank you everyone for visiting, reading and your comments.