L.S. Moore's Blog, page 2

October 2, 2023

Archon 46 in St. Louis!

What a great choice for my first scifi/fantasy con! From the moment I stepped through the magical Gateway Convention Center doors, I was riding the wave of positivity and creativity that permeated Archon!

It was thrilling to sit on a panel with Jonathan Maberry, author of many, many books including one of my favorite series – Rot & Ruin. I’m proud to say that I managed to remain relatively calm and speak coherently. Our panel which included authors: Adam J. Whitlatch, Debbie Manber Kupfer and Shawntelle Madison, discussed What to Expect when You’re Expecting Your Debut Novel. Gotta say, mine was the freshest debut!

After the panel, Jonathan signed his book for me. What’s your favorite Maberry novel?

See the eager, newby panelist fourth from the left? That’s me. This panel’s topic was, “Write What you Know! (But Give It a Twist)” Great discussion! I was privileged to sit among stellar authors:

(Left to right) Archon guest of honor Glynn Stewart, and Shawntelle Madison, Sela Carsen, and Rachel Neumeier.

I finished the weekend exhausted in the best possible way, and sporting a terrible case of elf-ear envy. The costumes were a-mazing!!
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Published on October 02, 2023 14:15

September 25, 2023

At the Association of Rural and Small Libraries Conference last weekend . . .

…my calls of “Anyone need more YA with boy protagonists?” turned heads, and drew people to my table! Tis the season for ghost stories too so I got to meet librarians from small and rural libraries all over the region. I’m so grateful to have been invited! What a fun event! 😄Next weekend I’ll be traveling to Archon in St. Louis with my writing buddy Elizabeth C. Bunce. This fantasy and sci-fi con will be my first time sitting on author panels! Can’t wait!
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Published on September 25, 2023 13:45

August 19, 2023

August 15, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Magazine Features BridgeKeeper!

Kirkus Reviews, a book industry giant, chooses about 20% of the titles they review to include in their online and print magazine. Check out page 222 in the current issue. BridgeKeeper is there!!!

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Published on August 15, 2023 13:43

July 31, 2023

BridgeKeeper Book Trailer

We had a great time creating this trailer. Watch it on Youtube -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qW3Ye...

Beth Bacon animated Cristina Bencina's beautiful cover. My husband, Jim Mobberley wrote the spooky music, and award-winning author, Elizabeth C. Bunce wrote the super fun blurb.

BridgeKeeper goes on sale everywhere August 1st.
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Published on July 31, 2023 13:51

July 26, 2023

Goodreads.com Giveaway!

Ten copies of my debut YA ghost story, BridgeKeeper, are up for grabs! The drawing is open until August 14th. Over 1800 Goodreads readers have already entered!

“In Moore’s YA debut, two brothers must come to terms with their inherited psychic powers and track down a killer before he can strike again. . . Moore relates the story with an assured blend of narrative prose, introspection, and teen-appropriate dialogue. . .


. . .A fast-moving paranormal adventure for teens with heavy themes and an upbeat delivery.”


– Kirkus Reviews
Samwise says discerning readers will – Enter here to win!
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Published on July 26, 2023 16:10

July 17, 2023

Author Interview/Blog Visit

Edgar Award-winning author, Elizabeth C. Bunce, Elizabeth C. Bunce invited me to her fabulously fun #MyrtleMondays Premeditated Myrtle blog to talk about BridgeKeeper.

Check it out.
https://elizabethcbunce.com/blog/
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Published on July 17, 2023 13:49 Tags: elizabeth-c-bunce, myrtle-hardcastle-mysteries

Edgar Award-winning author, Elizabeth C. Bunce invited Laura to her fun and fascinating #MyrtleMondays blog for a chat about BridgeKeeper.

Greetings, Friends! Today I bring you a guest appearance by my friend, YA author L.S. Moore, who is here to tell us all about her upcoming debut, BridgeKeeper! She brings you some brilliant new vocabulary words, a spectacularly spooky ghost story (with more to come), and last but not least… (follow the link to read more)

Elizabeth C. Bunce – Myrtle Mondays!

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Published on July 17, 2023 13:05

July 12, 2023

Kirkus Review is in for BridgeKeeper!

"In Moore’s YA debut, two brothers must come to terms with their inherited psychic powers and track down a killer before he can strike again. . .

Moore relates the story with an assured blend of narrative prose, introspection, and teen-appropriate dialogue. From the outset, Will (the narrator) and Seth demonstrate a strong and endearing fraternal relationship that evokes the Hardy Boys, and their introduction to the supernatural world carries distinct Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? vibes, albeit with a darker edge. . .

A fast-moving paranormal adventure for teens with heavy themes and an upbeat delivery." - Kirkus Review
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Published on July 12, 2023 13:35

May 16, 2023

The Quiet Ones – literary horror e-zine interview with Laura on writing and BridgeKeeper’s debut.

What does it mean to cross over the Void and into the embrace of eternity, and who among the living bears responsibility for the souls yet to make the journey? In BridgeKeeper, author L. S. Moore grapples with existential questions; the fear of death and the fear of truly living, in a debut that is equal parts bone-chilling and heart-warming. The Quiet Ones is proud to present, in conversation, L. S. Moore.

TQO: Leading off, we’d like to congratulate you on your debut. BridgeKeeper is a beautifully enthralling story, rich with a wide variety of noticeable influences for a broad audience. We got notes of the CW show Supernatural, the film The Sixth Sense, and novels like Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book, and Victoria Schwab’s City of Ghosts. Can you speak about your actual influences and what drew you toward the modern-day ghost story? Did we get any correct?

LSM: Thank you so much. I’m certainly happy with this list of authors! They’re some of my favorites. I have to give the show Supernatural credit for kicking off my writing life though. My first novel, actually the first piece of fiction I ever wrote, was fan-fiction for the show. When I was a child, long before I knew there was a name for the stories running through my head, my
imagination supplied fan-fiction adventures inspired by the books, movies and television shows I loved. I’m not sure why, but the impulse to write those stories down didn’t hit me until rather late in life. My sons were in their early teens and fans of Supernatural too. I’m sure that had something to do with it. I spent over a year writing and revising the story, wandering away from the canon of Eric Kripke’s creation, adding my own characters and conflicts. . . People all over the world followed along as I
posted a chapter a week. I even won an award! There’s no emotional high like having fans of your fiction! That novel was the first and last piece of fan-fiction I ever wrote, but I never looked back.

TQO: What were some of the unique challenges you encountered in crafting BridgeKeeper from its inception all the way to publication and what advice would you give other writers who might be experiencing similar hardships?

LSM: I’ve learned that there’s no right way to become a writer. You either are one or you’re not, even if you’re the only person who knows it. By far my biggest challenge was, and still is, learning to write. Before I submitted an early draft of BridgeKeeper for my first professional critique, I’d never taken a fiction writing class. My mentor gave me encouraging feedback, but I wanted to do better. I asked her if I should go back to school to earn another degree? My first was in theater, a whole different kind of storytelling. She told me that college was a valid choice, but she also suggested a different path. She introduced me to the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, SCBWI. My local chapter was very active, and still is. I lucked into the most incredible critique group, started attending workshops and retreats, and discovered excellent books on the subject. Twelve years later, here I am. Maybe not the shortest road I could have taken, but it fit into my lifestyle with work and kids. It’s been a wonderfully
intense journey.

TQO: In BridgeKeeper’s world of magic and mystery, it’s a powerful choice to tell the story from the point of view of the sidekick who, himself, has supplemental special powers. What lead you to that creative decision and how did it inform your craft as you developed the novel?

LSM: I’m a sucker for characters based on regular people fighting past ordinary weaknesses and flaws to discover the hero inside themselves. I’d go out for a beer with Robin rather than Batman any day! Standing in the shadow of their partners, sidekicks have many more challenges to overcome. They’re not as powerful, gifted, self-assured or driven, but have to face the same dangers and conflicts. It makes them much more interesting to me. For readers, especially teens, I think it’s easier to imagine yourself as
the sidekick rather than the person up on the pedestal. It’s not such a huge leap to think, Yeah, I’m a kid like Robin… I could do that too. In early drafts I told the story from different points of view, but I always came back to Will, the younger brother.

TQO: Throughout the novel, the theme of family and familial responsibility reigns supreme. What is it about the relationship between siblings that made you choose that angle for your central characters?

LSM: Deep bonds between characters hook me into a story whether I’m writing it or reading it, but there’s nothing like the inescapable blood ties of siblings. Siblings’ brains, bodies and personalities literally develop alongside each other. You can’t divorce your sister. There are no ex-brothers. In real life, few of us test our sibling bonds the way we can test them in fiction. I enjoy exploring how love and rivalry interact, how obligation becomes loyalty. I’m intrigued by the idea that it’s possible for a person you’ve known your entire life to surprise you. You asked earlier about what influences led me to write a modern-day ghost story. I’ll mention a few sets of brothers. Jim Butcher’s wizard Harry Dresden has a brother named Thomas. I loved Rob Thurman’s series with Cal and Niko Leandros. Rot & Ruin by Jonathan Maberry pitted brothers against the zombie apocalypse. Those authors, and my two sons, helped make writing sibling characters exciting to me.

TQO: The end pages of the novel feature images of graves with a caption referencing the “tombstone tourism“ that has taken you all over the country. What are your top five most beautiful American cemeteries?

LSM: Only five? I’ve visited so many! I even found a gem of a cemetery in a grocery store parking lot once! But my top five would start with Genoa, a tiny town in the mountains of Nevada. There were probably only a few hundred people buried there, but their families had lovingly and lavishly decorated the graves with native quartz, personal mementos and hand-carved markers. Each grave told a fascinating story. Also in Nevada, on the hill behind Virginia City is the most evocative old west cemetery I’ve ever seen. The day I visited, there happened to be a full solar eclipse happening. The sun shadows flickering on the tombstones were magical. One more civilized cemetery is Lake View in Seattle. The grounds are gorgeously landscaped, but the best part is the “unkindness” of ravens that claim the stones and monuments there and have for generations. Mount Mora in St. Joseph, Missouri was full of poison ivy the last time I visited, but it has some of the most elaborate and haunting mausoleums I’ve ever seen. And lastly, my fifth favorite cemetery is the next one I find along a country road or sandwiched between two freeways in the middle of a city or preserved in a parking lot. They’re everywhere, you just have to stop and take them in. Cemeteries are great places to write in, by the way. Whether you need a quiet, beautiful spot or a dreary, spooky one, they’re meant to be visited. I find
great character names strolling among the stones. Quirky epitaphs can spark a story idea. You never know what you’ll find.

TQO: Your book also features a gorgeously illustrated cover and chapter headers by Cristina Bencina. What was it like to work with her on BridgeKeeper?

LSM: It’s been a dream! All the credit for finding Cristina goes to my publisher. The chapter headers were her idea, and I love them. That said, I gave input on every image in the book. Cristina was incredible at taking my clumsily expressed ideas and turning them into art. She read BridgeKeeper before she started so all it took were a few reference photos, and a little back and forth on details. I got exactly what I wanted, without knowing it was exactly what I wanted, if you know what I mean. The style and artistry are all Cristina.

TQO: Before we go, do you have any final words of wisdom for our writers and readers?

LSM: For writers, here’s something I wish someone had told me. Don’t saddle yourself with self-imposed deadlines. Ignore that voice in your head that says, If I haven’t published within two years, I’m a failure. Or I’m getting too old for this. Arbitrary restraints like that squeeze the joy out of writing. As long as you’re studying your craft, improving, and enjoying yourself, you’re not wasting time. Find a community, a critique group or workshops and dive in. Also, these days there are many pathways to publication. Everything from online magazines like this one, to mid-sized independent publishers in all kinds of niches, don’t be afraid to explore non-traditional paths.
And readers, thank you so much! I meant it when I said there’s no rush like the rush we get from having
fans. Keep reading and please support the authors you love by posting reviews.

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Published on May 16, 2023 14:24