Sunday, June 25, 2023

Meet My Fellow Wild Rose Press Author Jill Piscitello and Read About Her Beach Mystery, Released Today

I read the review of A SOUR NOTE, (a Music Box Mystery) Jill's newest title, in the Hippo, a New Hampshire newspaper. I didn't yet know her, and was pleasantly surprised to see that she's another author at my publisher The Wild Rose Press. I contacted her, and she is my guest today, release day!

About Jill

Jill is a teacher, author, and an avid fan of multiple literary genres. Although she divides her reading hours among several books at a time, a lighthearted story offering an escape from the real world can always be found on her nightstand. 

A native of New England, Jill lives with her family and three well-loved cats. When not planning lessons or reading and writing, she can be found spending time with her family, trying out new restaurants, traveling, and going on light hikes.


Q&A With Jill


When you get an idea for a book, what comes first usually? Dialogue, the characters, a specific scene? Or do you plot it out before you write?

The overall theme for a book usually presents itself first, and characters soon follow. For the first few chapters, I just write. But at some point, I crave more organization and draft an outline. 

So, what do you have planned next?  Or is that a secret? 

I’m currently writing the second book in the Music Box Mystery series.

Any advice for new writers?

My advice to new writers is to do something, anything, toward your writing goals at least five days per week. This might entail writing 200 words or 2,000 words. But even a quick skim of your outline, or twenty minutes of research, or fifteen minutes reviewing a writing resource is something.

Do you have another occupation, other than writer? If so, what is it and how do you like it? 

I am also a teacher and love my day job.

What do you love that most people don't like and wouldn't understand why you do? 

I enjoy washing and folding laundry set to the tune of a Hallmark movie or HGTV. Why I find this chore relaxing is anyone’s guess.

What do you dislike that most people wouldn't understand?

I despise having my fingernails or toenails filed. No manicures or pedicures for me!

What's the main thing that you could get rid of that would give you more writing time?

The internet is a huge, but necessary, distraction. It’s so easy to get lost in a black hole of research on a particular time period or other topic related to your book that writing doesn’t happen.

What's your favorite book of all time and why? What's your favorite childhood book? 

As an adult, I have so many favorite books from a variety of genres. Choosing only one is impossible. But Pippi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren was 110% my favorite book as a child. I couldn’t get enough of her hilarious antics. Pippi’s unpredictability and all-consuming joy for adventure was the antithesis to my rule following nature.

What is your favorite quote? 

I have a long list of favorite quotes and share one every Monday on social media. “You’ll never do a whole lot unless you’re brave enough to try” by Dolly Parton is at the top of my list. This quote is relevant to anyone trying something new. 


Connect With Jill


Website


Twitter


FB


Instagram


Amazon Page


Good Reads


BookBub



About A SOUR NOTE





When murder provides a welcome distraction…

On the heels of a public, broken engagement, Maeve Cleary returns to her

childhood home in Hampton Beach, NH. When a dead body turns up behind her

mother’s music school, three old friends land on the suspect list. Licking her

wounds soon takes a back seat to outrunning the paparazzi who spin into a frenzy,

casting her in a cloud of suspicion. Maeve juggles her high school sweetheart, a

cousin with a touch of clairvoyance, a no-nonsense detective, and an apologetic,

two-timing ex-fiancé. Will the negative publicity impact business at the Music Box—

the very place she’d hoped to make a fresh start?

 

Excerpt

With his mouth set in a grim line, he waited.

If anyone else had enough nerve to presume she owed them an explanation, she would respond with a solid mind your own business. Instead, the seventeen-year-old still inside her refused to tell him to get lost. “He was hiding money in his office.” This was one of those times when learning how to wait a few beats before blurting out inflammatory information would come in handy. Each second of passing silence decreased her ability to breathe in the confined space. She turned the ignition and switched on the air conditioner.

“How do you know?” His volume just above a whisper, each dragged-out word hung in the air.

“I found it.”

“When were you in his office?” He swiped at a bead of sweat trickling down the side of his face, then positioned a vent toward him.

“Last night.” When would she learn to bite her tongue? Finn’s switch from rapid-fire scolding to slow, deliberate questioning left her unable to swallow over the sandpaper lump in her throat.

“Where was Vic?”

She stared at the back of the building, wishing she’d kept her mouth shut. “He’d left for the night.” If she averted her gaze, she could pretend his eyeballs weren’t bugging out of his head, and his jaw didn’t need a crane to haul it off his chest.

“You were at the town hall after hours? Did anyone see you?”

“A custodian opened his door for me.” She snuck a glance. Sure enough, features contorted in shock and horror replaced his boy-next-door good looks.

Purchase A SOUR NOTE 

Amazon

Barnes & Noble


 


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