Buy Saving Casey HERE |
Hi, I’m Liza O’Connor, author of Saving
Casey and I wanted to share a bit about myself with you.
I love life-endangering adventures.
From diving with the great clear shark to rafting down a twenty-one foot
waterfall, I've done it.
I can fly a plane,
parachute from of plane, and hang-glide out of the way of a plane.
I have deep-sea
fished, fly-fished, and raised fish in the pond I built in my backyard.
I can kayak
clearwater or seas, raft class-four rivers, and scuba-dive into the oceans,
where once a giant stingray attacked me.
I have spent
grueling hot days carefully unveiling diplodocus bones, rode a suicidal horse
up a mountain to fly-fish, and almost enticed a dominant male buffalo of a very
large herd to run me down. (I just had to get closer for a photo op.)
Some of these
activities, I am actually good at. Others, I was lucky to survive. But all of
them make great fodder for my characters to go out there and live life to their
fullest.
Last time I was
here, I left you with a 69 word sentence about how the world needs yet another
blog.
This time I want to
tell you about my debut novel: Saving Casey
I really want to do
this blog interview style, but I feel weird about interviewing myself. Thus, I’ve
drafted Marketing Maniac kitten to interview me. (Because
being interviewed by an imaginary cat is so much ‘saner’ than interviewing
one’s self.)
Marketing Maniac:
Welcome, Liza. So nice to have you. Let me say, I love, love, love your book.
Liza: Thanks, stick
to the script please.
MM: So tell us about
Saving Casey.
Liza:
Eighty-year-old Cass dies and wakes up in the body of a troubled
seventeen-year-old girl named Casey. Cass intends to turn the girl’s life
around, only it’s harder than she expects. All Casey’s troubles have now become
Cass’s and someone wants her dead.
MM: That’s a unique
plot. How did your muse come up with that?
Liza:Actually, I
blame it on all my friends who have teens. I wondered if the teens just ignored
their parents good advice on principle or because it’s simply not relevant to
their problems. That made me question if our life experiences would help at all
if we were in their bodies, living their lives, or if raging hormones simply
take over and trample all that valuable life experience.
MM: And what is your
conclusion?
Liza: For Cass,
those hormones swept away life experience like a Tsunami.
MM: So who's your
favorite character in the book & why?
Liza: That’s hard to
answer, because if I say my heroine (which I want to say) and my dog reads this
blog, then I’ll be in big trouble, because I put my dog, Jess, in the book, in
the first and last chapters. Thus, in those chapters Jess is my favorite. In
all other chapters, New Cass has to be my favorite. She’s funny, sarcastic,
smart, determined, and refuses to be a victim.
Although, as time goes along and we know more about Old Casey, I fall in
love with her as well. Both are remarkable characters, with a great deal in
common with one another. And then there’s hunky, honorable Troy, who loves
Cass, but refuses to go there because of their age difference.
*Liza sighs*
This is an unfair
question. It’s like asking a mother which child she loves the most.
MM: Well, we know
who you don’t love. How many times am I in your book? Eh? Zero, Zip, Zilch.
Liza: Maniac, you
weren’t even born when I wrote this book.
MM: Oh…Never mind
then.
What's your favorite line in the story?
What's your favorite line in the story?
Liza: I feel like a comedian working the wax
museum crowd.
MM: I like that one,
but I also like the first time Cass sees herself in the mirror.
Upon settling down
on the toilet, Cass noticed the floor to ceiling mirror facing her and screamed
at the sight of the creature within it. Short black hair spouted about its
head, black circles surrounded both eyes and fell like triangular knives down
the cheeks. Black lips, stretched in horror as if in a nightmare. Pulling up
her pants, she moved closer to the mirror.
She was a ghoul, an
honest to God ghoul!
The door crashed
open and her father stared at her, fear and panic clear in his eyes.
She touched her
face. “Please tell me these aren’t permanent.”
His panic remained a
second longer as her words filtered into his brain and then he pulled her into
his arms. “Don’t worry, we will get them removed—if you want to…”
“If? Oh, I
definitely want them removed,” she said.
How can I turn
around my life if I look like the walking dead from a low-grade monster movie?
MM: However, readers
be warned. This book isn’t all laughs and snorts. It covers some serious
topics. Expect to laugh, cry, and yell at characters during your read.
According to readers, it’s fast paced, engaging, and emotionally captivating.
Liza: Thanks, Maniac.
MM: It also has a
fabulous book trailer:
MM: Was that great,
or what? Since the trailer makes you want to buy the book, let me provide the
links.
SAVING CASEY BY LIZA O'CONNOR IS AVAILABLE AT THESE SITES
AND MORE:
FOR MORE
INFORMATION ABOUT
LIZA O'CONNOR
&
SAVING CASEY:
MM: I’d like to
thank everyone for stopping by.
*turns to Liza*
That’s it. Can I
have a treat now? I’m starving.
Liza: Me, too. Let’s
go raid the fridge.
*pauses* Oh, you
guys can come too, only be warned: all that’s in my fridge is peanut butter and
broccoli.
MM: Wow, I’ve never
seen people run so fast in my life. They must hate peanut butter and broccoli
more than me. Since, I’m imaginary and
all, can I have some imagined salmon instead?
Liza: *pets Maniac* I
think that can be arranged.
3 comments:
So I'm told some people have come by but are having trouble leaving a comment. So I'd thought I try it myself.
Liza, I love Saving Casey.
Thank you Liza, I love it too.
Great interview. I do like MM.
You sure have done a lot of stuff
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