Thursday, May 28, 2026

Q&A with J.D. Amato

  

Photo by Sela Shiloni

 

 

J.D. Amato is the author of the new middle grade graphic novel The Endless Game. He is also a television showrunner, and he is based in Astoria, New York.

 

Q: What inspired you to write The Endless Game, and how did you create your character Fred?

 

A: Being a kid is complicated! So, I wanted to tell a story that took the feelings of that age and made them real and larger-than-life. And while the story is about a group of kids and their lives, I chose Fred as the lens because when I was his age, I also found myself in a new town, making friends for the first time, and figuring how I fit into the world. So, it felt appropriate to use his point of view to understand this world.

 

Q: What do you think Sophie Morse’s illustrations contributed to the book?

 

A: They are everything! Sophie’s work (and Sara [Calhoun]’s color) is so full of life, character, and warmth— it immerses the reader not only deeper into the story but into the feelings of the world. And beyond illustration, Sophie was a vital voice in helping me work out story and character. This book was a true collaboration between us in every facet.

 

Q: The School Library Journal review of the novel says, “This is an adventurous and fun tale about finding a place to belong to, even when it feels like an impossible task. Amato weaves in underlying messages about fitting in, friendship, and carrying on traditions.” What do you think of that description?

 

A: If readers take away those themes, I think Sophie and I would be ecstatic. Belonging is such an important part of identity— it’s something many of us begin seeking as children and spend our whole lives pursuing in different forms. I would consider it a huge success if our book helped people process that journey.

 

Q: Did you know how the story would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: I tend to write forward! I have an idea of where a story could escalate, but I tend to let the story twist and turn and then ask myself how characters might earnestly respond. As someone who came up as an improvisor, I like it when characters can surprise me as I write!

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Sophie and I are already plotting for the next book in the series. I’m also working on a feature film and a few television projects!

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: For more updates on the book, follow me @j.d.amato on instagram and Sophie @sopharium!

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Max Talley

  


 

 

Max Talley is the author of the new novel Santa Fe Psychosis. His other books include Peace, Love & Haight.  

 

Q: What inspired you to write Santa Fe Psychosis, and how did you create your character Jackson Bardo?

 

A: I had lived in Santa Fe and thought New Mexico would make a good backdrop for a crime story. There are fine Tony Hillerman crime novels set there, but the area hasn't been overused, like say Los Angeles, San Francisco, or New York.

 

I've written crime short stories (which is how the novel started), and my last novel, Peace, Love & Haight, had crime mixed in among the cults, communes, drugs, music, and ‘60s vibes, but I'd always wanted to write a pure detective novel.

 

Jackson Bardo was an attempt to create a flawed protagonist that a reader could eventually relate to. He served in Iraq, and even though the novel takes place at least 10 years after, he is still affected by his time there. Bursts of anger, confusion.

 

As a private investigator, he has trouble with authority, doesn't like taking orders from police officials, and often follows his own inner directives—which gets him in trouble. I like having friction between the detectives, who have to work closely together to solve a case.

 

Q: The book’s subtitle is “A Hardboiled Crime Thriller”--how would you define “hardboiled,” and what are some of your favorites in that genre?

 

A: I tend to think of hardboiled as tense, adult, dark, psychological crime fiction. The stakes are higher, there's more danger. In missing person and kidnapping cases, the longer it takes to locate them, the more likely a victim may already be dead.

 

Hardboiled heroes are often antiheroes, shrouded in moral twilight. Maybe the detective(s) had problems with alcohol or drugs, or was violent in interrogations.

 

Sometimes they might have psychological issues from serving in a war, or suffer depression, or have a trail of broken marriages due to being obsessed with the case they're on. They can be sullen and antisocial loners.

 

They seek justice, but the darkness they've experienced, from whatever happened in their past, has taken them to the edge. They waver between doing things the correct way and achieving their results by any means necessary.

 

Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, Jim Thompson are masters. Some favorite hardboiled novels are The Big Sleep, The Maltese Falcon, No Country For Old Men, and Devil in a Blue Dress.

 

Q: How was the novel’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: Possibly a few levels to the title. There is a released prisoner in the story who seeks revenge against detectives Jackson Bardo and Diego Juarez. He is violent and psychotic.

 

Then there is a general instability among a small percentage of residents. Sort of an outlaw sensibility gone wild, of disobeying traffic laws, rules of civility, the dictates of logic.

 

Beyond that, someone once told me the dating scene was tough in Santa Fe, because the men were all obnoxious jerks and the women were all crazy. A generalization of course, but that played in to my title. And I thought it sounded catchy.

 

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: I hope I conveyed the raw beauty of New Mexico. There is so much wide open space beyond the scattered cities. The mesas, the buttes, the mountains, lakes, pine and aspen forests, and red rock areas are all very special.

 

There is still an Old West feeling there, that outlaws (or modern day criminals) could hide out in canyons and gulches. Because it's easier to get off the grid there, to lose yourself in time. Is it 2026 or 1986?

  

The issue the detectives have in my book is that they can track down and arrest low-level criminals who kidnap teenagers for a trafficking ring. What's harder is convicting the rich, powerful men (and some women) who fund and run the operation.

 

We see the very same things in our current news, where much of the Epstein Files have been released, but punishing the vile participants hiding behind lawyers, their billions, and the redacted names has proven extremely difficult.

 

Crime novels must have action and suspense, but I wanted to be very specific about the environment, about the psychology of the characters, and also to inject a little philosophy.

 

Two favorite authors, Cormac McCarthy and James Lee Burke are experts at blending all those things together into novels about criminals and detectives. I try to follow—several hundred miles behind—in their giant footsteps.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: A novel called The Duke of Barstow. Evan, a mid-40s travel writer, is assigned an article about California's Inland Empire. Instead, he meets Deke Munsen, the titular character, who is sort of the secret mayor of Barstow. He's a combination back room dealmaker, gambler, life coach, guru, and a con artist.

 

Evan's article grows into a novel about the Duke of Barstow, but Deke Munsen disappears after some of his shady ventures go wrong. Evan's book about him is a success, and the publisher wants a sequel so they can sign a miniseries deal with a TV network.

 

Narrator Evan must search for the missing and presumed dead Deke Munsen through tiny derelict towns of the Mojave Desert. The closer Evan gets to discovering the Duke's true identity, the more he begins to lose his own.

 

It's a surreal road trip adventure into the mind, and about how publishers, writers, and their subjects are all trying to both charm and con each other. Hopefully it's funny. The novel is due to be released at the end of the year.

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Thank you for your tireless efforts in interviewing a wide swath of writers about their new books, Deborah. And congratulations on your current mystery novel, Everything She Most Admired. Have you interviewed yourself yet? [Answer: Yes!]

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Max Talley. 

Q&A with Tanja Brown

  


 

 

Tanja Brown is the author of the new memoir Flipping the Script: A Year of Borrowed Time. She is also a school psychologist and an entrepreneur, and she's based in Colorado. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Flipping the Script

 

A: I wrote the book for a few reasons. First, for myself, as I wanted to make sense of the choices I made during the relationship. I also wanted to give women perspective on the lives other women live at this age and that our lives do not have to take a societally predetermined path.  

 

I started writing the book to process an emotionally charged decade in my life. I have been aware for a while how few stories exist about women in midlife making unconventional, deeply personal choices, that work for them. The book became about giving voice to those moments, what it may cost you, and whether it was worth it.

 

We need more of our stories out there. We don’t age out of ambition or desire, and we don’t stop being funny, messy, powerful, exhausted, or hopeful. Midlife and post-midlife are not the end of our story; it’s often when the real reckoning begins. And I wanted to tell that story with honesty, self-reflection, and without apology.

 

Q: How was the book’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?

 

A: I chose Flipping the Script because society has long normalized older men dating younger women, while older women in age-gap relationships are often judged differently. The title reflects reversing that narrative and saying it’s okay for women to love and live outside of traditional expectations.

 

The second part of the title, A Decade of Borrowed Time, came from the emotional reality of the relationship. I was 50 when the relationship began, and there was a 26-year age gap between us. I often felt like I was borrowing this man during the best years of his life, and that our time together came with an expiration date. It felt like a gift and something temporary at the same time.

 

Q: How do your experiences as a psychologist and a memoir writer intersect?

 

A: As a school psychologist and board-certified behavior analyst, human behavior has always fascinated me. I believe exposure in life, whether through relationships, travel, hardship, or social change shapes our thinking, emotional responses, and the choices we make.

 

Writing a memoir naturally intersects with my professional background because both involve observing patterns of behavior, self-reflection, emotional resilience, vulnerability, and the way people, including me, adapt, grow, and struggle against societal views.

 

Q: What impact did it have on you to write the book, and what do you hope readers take away from it?

 

A: Writing the book was incredibly cathartic for me and gave closure in the sense that it further clarified that my choices were the right ones for me at the time.

 

It allowed me to reflect on not only the relationship itself, but also on aging, identity, love, motherhood, loss, and the ways we evolve through life experiences.

 

Writing the book and receiving feedback from readers also taught me that I may have wrongly approached the life with my then-partner in some ways.

 

I was indeed still very insecure about people my age and how they perceived me while living a life with a man that much younger. I worked hard to become the professional that I am, and outdated stereotypes were certainly affecting me, at least to a small degree. 

 

What I hope readers take away from the book is that life does not end at a certain age, and that love, passion, growth, and self-discovery can happen at any stage of life. I also hope it encourages people to question societal expectations and to live more authentically and fearlessly, true to themselves.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: Right now, I am dedicating 2026 to myself. I am focusing on my health, mental peace, and creating a more authentic and balanced life. I’ve been shedding responsibilities as a business owner and even some relationships, in order to finally breathe more freely as a woman who has entered a new chapter. 

 

Writing the book has been incredibly healing and unexpectedly helped me reconnect with close friends and meaningful relationships that I had lost along the way. Rebuilding those connections has opened many new doors, personally and creatively.

 

I’m also traveling a great deal simply for the joy of it, and I find myself writing every night during my trips, whether it’s ideas, cultural observations, social dynamics, or scenery that may eventually become the backdrop for a thriller I hope to focus on in 2027.

 

At the same time, I am carefully considering if and when I want to share another deeply personal nonfiction work. It would be centered on life with autism within a family, and my experiences as both a mother and an Autism Center ABA provider.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

May 28

 


 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
May 28, 1908: Ian Fleming born.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Q&A with Samuel Garza Bernstein

  


 

 

 

 

Samuel Garza Bernstein is the author of the new biography Roddy McDowall: An Actor's Life--From How Green Was My Valley to Lassie to Planet of the Apes. His other books include Cesar Romero: The Joker Is Wild. He lives in Porto, Portugal, and Los Angeles.  

 

Q: What inspired you to write this biography of actor Roddy McDowall (1928-1998)?

 

A: I was bouncing around ideas with my agent, Lee Sobel, and he mentioned there's never been a bio of Roddy McDowall. I was shocked. Roddy deserves a bio! So my first impulse to write about him came from a kind of righting-a-terrible-wrong headspace. I was vaguely aware of a supposed 100-year moratorium on accessing his archives, which, thankfully, is not true.

 

The thing is, when people have thought about his story, I think they've gotten distracted by notions of gossip and Roddy keeping everyone's secrets. From my perspective, the gossip isn't the main course. Is there some magical story about something Elizabeth Taylor did in bed that's going to change my life? Not really. Everyone had sex. We get it. What about Roddy McDowall’s work? What about his extraordinary life?

 

I also identified with Roddy as a child. I wanted to be an actor when I was a kid, so I could look at his early years and imagine myself living through him vicariously.

 

In looking at him as an adult actor, when I was coming of age, Roddy was a regular on every television drama in existence. I watched him on Fantasy Island as the Devil, on Hotel with Elizabeth Taylor as her friend and agent, on a Mae West TV biopic as a vaudevillian drag star. I wanted to grow up and be like him – vaguely British and handsome and funny and worldly… And I also had a crush on him. 

Q: How did you research his life, and what did you learn that especially surprised you?

 

A: His archives at Boston University are extraordinary. I think he basically saved every piece of paper he ever touched. It was difficult because the library in Boston has very limited hours when the collection can be physically accessed—just 11 hours per week.

 

I couldn't justify traveling to Boston for as long a stay as would be required, so I actually had to hire assistants to take digital photographs of things I needed to read. My two assistants took over 10,000 photos. 

 

In terms of surprises, the normalization of Roddy McDowall’s romantic partners among his friends and colleagues was a very happy discovery. From studio execs to costars, from family to friends, everyone (except his mother) knew and interacted with Roddy’s partners.

 

The humor with which he, Montgomery Clift, Noel Coward, George Cukor, Sal Mineo, and any number of other gay men treated their sexuality in the volumes of correspondence Roddy leaves behind is also fascinating. These were not people hiding in closets, ashamed or frightened. They were relatively open with everyone within their communities. 

 

I’ll also go on the record pushing back against anyone who wants to characterize this book as “outing” Roddy. Even in our present cultural and political moment of sometimes intense hostility toward inclusivity, we are living in a world where being gay isn’t a scandalous revelation unless it is evidence of profound hypocrisy.

 

If someone is shocked that Roddy was gay they just haven’t been paying attention.  

Q: Do you have a favorite among McDowall’s performances?

 

A: I love the obvious contenders: How Green Was My Valley, Lassie Come Home, Cleopatra, Planet of the Apes, Fright Night.... but among my lesser-known favorites are a transitional performance in the 1952 low-budget Monogram film, The Steel Fist. He plays a student coming into adulthood while fighting a fascist regime.

 

As a child, his performances were full of stillness. Feelings and moments of understanding played across his face with remarkable impact. As he began transitioning to adult roles, his work could often become a bit fussy. He knew the marks he was supposed to hit, so he would sometimes show us how he was getting there. With The Steel Fist he rediscovered the power of stillness.

 

I love him in a bonkers 1969 movie called Angel, Angel, Down We Go, where he plays a pan-sexual hedonist and spends much of the movie half-naked. He is starring with his friend Sybil Burton Christopher’s husband, Jordan Christopher, in a cast that includes Jennifer Jones, Lou Rawls, and Holly Near (who would later become a famous lesbian folk singer and songwriter). It is a mess of a movie, but everyone seems to be having a wonderful time.

 

Roddy is also wonderful in his last TV anthology performance, for Kraft Suspense Theater in The Wine-Dark Sea as a drunk trying to prove his best friend didn't commit a murder.

Q: What do you hope readers take away from the book?

 

A: Be your best self. Find your best life. Fear nothing.

 

Roddy McDowall invented himself as an adult after a childhood where his identity was crafted for him by others. He made the decision to be a force for positivity. He approached every personal and professional situation determined to leave things better than he found them. His life is a blueprint for finding a life of meaning and purpose.

 

His career could have crashed and burned so many times over 60 years, and yet he always approached his struggles with humor, grit, and flexibility. You can be the star of the show and yet share the spotlight. You could be funny and bitchy in private but use that humor to build people up, not tear them down.

 

I passionately believe that we can all learn to be better, happier, more interesting people by following his example.


Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I just finished writing 10 episodes for the fourth season of After Forever, which streams on Amazon. I'll be the co-showrunner shooting those episodes in New Orleans in the fall. And I just signed a contract to write a book about the cultural impact of Eartha Kitt! 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: I am being held captive by a pack of elderly dachshunds. Send help.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Perrin Pring

  


 

Perrin Pring is the author of the new novel Cash and Gravity. She is a park ranger, and she lives in the Rocky Mountain West. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Cash and Gravity, and how did you create your character Chevy?

 

A: It was inspired by a cross-country drive with my husband. We started talking about technology that could change the world, and the conversation morphed into a big what if premise. What if the government quit funding science and corporations pursued science instead? What would that world look like? How would society work?

 

And from there, I realized I had a pretty cool premise for a story, but without characters, all I had was a premise. So we brainstormed Chevy, and then Dolon, and Izan. At the time I think my husband thought we were just passing time while we drove across Nevada, but I was like, I could write this! And so I did.

 

But Chevy changed A LOT while I drafted. I wrote the story in 2020 and it sold in 2025. In that time I got multiple promotions, moved twice and got an MFA in creative writing from the University of Riverside California, Palm Desert, and so the Chevy we dreamed up on that fateful car ride half a decade ago was only a shadow of who she is today.

 

Q: How did you create the world in which the story is set?


A: I am not a huge fan of dystopia fiction because I find it really hopeless. I also think that the 2020s have been really tumultuous in America.

 

I wanted to write a story about a near future where things did not all go right, but people were still hopeful and doing their best. And Chevy is always doing her best, despite often messing it up. And the more I spent time learning who she was, the clearer the world became.

 

Q: The writer Ivy Pochoda said of Chevy, “Pring ushers in one of the most badass main characters in recent memory.” What do you think of that assessment?

 

A: Ha. I mean, I love it? It’s super flattering, and I hope my work lives up to the hype.

 

Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?

 

A: Oh, this novel has been redrafted and redrafted and redrafted. I have no idea how many drafts I wrote. When I started it had four POVs, Chevy was male, Izan was female, and all sorts of other things were happening.

 

I always knew the end though, although I altered it a little once I got several years in. But this novel is a lecture on the power of revision. Never quit revising, even though you hate it.

 

Q: What are you working on now?

 

A: I am currently finalizing book two to turn into Diversion Books. So Chevy and the crew will return!

 

Q: Anything else we should know?

 

A: Thank you so much for taking the time to read my work and interview me. It’s really humbling. I appreciate it so much.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb 

Q&A with Paul A. Barra

  


 

 

Paul A. Barra is the author of the new novel Quo Vadis, Deputy?. 

 

Q: What inspired you to write Quo Vadis, Deputy?, and how did you create your character Deputy Sandy Buford?


A: I live in South Carolina and was inspired by the cultural changes I’ve experienced there over the last 50+ years. In 1969, the state officially banned racial segregation in schools and government; that critical year was also in the immediate aftermath of the assassinations of Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, the Tet Offensive, the space race, and Vietnam war riots.

 

It seemed to me to be a fine time to drop into Horry County a local guy who’d been away, especially since Myrtle Beach (in eastern Horry) was “the bomb” in the ‘80s, which is the time period many of my readers might remember.

 

I wanted the setting to be rural and Southern for their edification. Since one of the changes in the South in general was the so-called second Northern invasion, when folks from snow states settled here by the thousands beginning in the second half of the 20th century, I wanted to use the Roman Catholic church to exemplify some of the changes locals saw.

 

1969 was post-Vatican II, but many parishes in smaller dioceses such as Charleston (encompassing all of South Carolina then and now) still said mass in Latin, chanted by a priest who kept his back to the congregation, making the water and wine ceremony seem to be a hidden rite.

 

Catholics were less than 4 percent of the population of South Carolina, most of them in the city of Charleston then; Catholicism was a mysterious religion. The novel is meant to be a thriller/mystery. 

 

I made up Sandy because his name sounds Southern, and he’s young enough for the action scenes and old enough to be a veteran when many American young men were not. He’s also a local boy with roots in the sandhills of Horry County and an experienced lawman — just the person to react to changes in the South as he struggles to solve a crime.


Q: How was the novel’s title chosen, and what does it signify for you?


A: I wanted some Latin in the title, but a familiar expression, and thought the book by Henryk Sienkiewicz and the famous ‘50s film by the same name might pique readers’ interest, especially when they saw it connected to a southern lawman.

 

“Quo vadis?” is also the sort of colloquial Latin that a ‘60s priest schooled in the language might use in a casual secular conversation. It means “where dost thou goest?” or “what’s up?”


Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?


A: I knew only that the instigating crime would be the murder of a hip-pocket lender — and that’s because people outside the South would probably not have heard of the practice — and that the setting would be the rural reaches of the Horry County in 1969.

 

Everything else came to me as I wrote, necessitating many rewrites and not a few debates with my editors at Level Best over plotting, with many thanks to them.


Q: How important is setting to you in your writing?

A: I think readers want to get a vicarious experience when they read fiction, so I work hard on setting in my novels. I hope Carolinians recognize some things I go on about and that others are treated to a learning experience formatted as a mystery.

 

They should recognize that the crime, its investigation, and its solution may be made up, but that the flavor of the land and its people is authentic. That’s the balance I strive for when I write novels. Setting is often the first idea that occurs to me when I begin brainstorming a new work.


Q: What are you working on now?


A: I’m deep into what I hope will be considered another literary thriller, set on a sea island off the southern edge of South Carolina. Things happen in a Gullah-Geechee community to a protagonist who has no reason to be in such a place except for an unusual skill set that makes him special to someone who's spent time there. It’s modern-day mystery in a place that time forgot.

 

--Interview with Deborah Kalb